Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC)

 - Class of 1942

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Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC) online collection, 1942 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 220 of the 1942 volume:

™ ■ I WAKE FOREST COLLEGE LIBRARY C AUL M O- ACCESSION NO. T V 3 co .£ GIFT OF BOH THE YEARBOOK FOREST, AND f n THE HOWLER 1942 DF WAKE FOREST COLLEGE, WAKE WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA «■ DEDICATED TO ELLIOTT B. EARNSHAW Throughout his life of many interests Mr. Earnshaw ' s achievements have been designated superlative. As a Wake Forest itudent he made a name for himself as one of the best tennis players ever to grace the courts of any institution. For about twenty ?ears he coached the racquet teams and later turned to golf, quickly becoming, as he still is, a first-flight player. For thirty-five years as Bursar he has had to face the financial problems of students, faculty, and the expanding college, vie has met every demand with a sense of understanding and friendship, inspiring in every student and colleague alike the highest admiration and respect. Thus, in recognition and gratitude for the versatile gentleman he is, we inscribe this, the 1942 Howler, to him. 74339 THE PANORAMA OF A YEA XO America 1941-42 brought great changes. In the clutches of another world war, she was forced to face days of cuff-less trousers, sugarless coffee, tire-less cars, peaceless living. But Wake Forest remained essentially the same. Hearkening to the call of a national emergency, boys left for war, girls came for learning, courses were altered drastically, campus activities were hit hard. But tradition was still foremost. CONTENTS AUTUMN: Administration and Faculty Freshman Class Informal Dances Organizations Football WINTER: Sophomore Class Junior Class Basketball Honorary Fraternities Mid-Winters SPRING: Sponsors Fraternities Track Senior Class Graduate Students Law School Publications BOWMAN GRAY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Administration Classes Fraternities m ■ I Corner, 11a t , J„t , , llaU, H£U HL,, JoAtoon g$mU-n SSou vn g ay SfaooltfJU I L AUTUMN iJAST autumn, almost a thousand boys came to Wake Forest. More than two-thirds of them had been before; they knew their way around. They took a hasty look at the campus and the buildings, then turned to greet old friends, slap one another on the back, chat with the professors, gaze after the new co-eds. To the two hundred and fifty-two freshmen, however, Wake Forest was a new and fascinating place. Before, they had thought of the administration and the faculty as mythological characters ; the bursar and the registrar were nothing more than names in the college bulletin. Now they saw them in the flesh and came in contact, and in conflict, with them. Still the freshmen continued to live in a world apart from the rest of the student body. But it was not long before all four classes fused to form a single unit. The football season was underway, and the Deacons had hopes of a fairly successful year. The fraternities began their an- nual campaigns to pledge up likely freshmen, and talk was spread about a pledge dance, Homecoming, - m - -. . and trips to Boston. The two century-old literary societies and the other organizations likewise attracted their share of attention. In most cases, however, campus life settled down to the familiar routine of attending classes three or four hours a day, going to th e post office at chapel periods, snacking at the Soda Shop and Book Store, undergoing the exactness of a physical ed. course, and taking in an occasional movie or pool-room bout. This was early autumn . October and November came and brought with them the fairly successful football season, the pledge dance, Homecoming, the trips to Boston, and the blossoming of the roster of campus organizations. The nip of winter was in the air. •«   _ . ADMINISTRATION Till UMAX I). KITCHIN B.A.. M.D., LI.. IX. F.A.C.P. President o till )f stu- dents and professors which comprise the personnel i Wake Forest College are four able hum: the presides the dean, the bursar, and the registrar. The preside) is the general, the guiding hand whose duty it is to coi trol the destinies of a college in a world of strife, arm demands, and strict government regulation. The dea is the president ' s right-hand man. a tireless laborer wl seeks constantly to keep relations between students an the administration as amicable as possible. Handlir all the pecuniary troubles which arise from the threa bare purses of the students is the long suffering bursa whose many attributes have been already lauded. Tl registrar is a sort of top sergeant, herding all the unde lings of the student body into their proper places and taking extreme care that they depart not from them. These four men of Wait Hal] are the administration of Wake forest: Dr. Thurman D. Kitehin. authority on Medicine and leader of men; Dean Daniel B. Bryan, wizard of education and counsellor of the wayward: Elliott B. Earnshaw, custodian of the college treasury and cheerful money handler; and Grady Patterson, master of clocklike precision and compiler of statistics. Somewhat apart from this administration is yet I ther executive, the dean of the law school. Dale Stansbury. Under his jurisdiction arc a little group of bar-minded hoys with legal ambitions. These he rules with efficiency and ran ' understanding. Daniel B. Bryan, M.A., Ph.D. Bean of the College of Liberal Arts Elliott B. Earnshaw, M.A. rsar, Secretary of the Board of Trustees Dale F. Stansbury, B.S., LL.B., J.S.D. Dean of the School of Law Grady S. Patterson, B.A. Registrar ;- r k At the beginning of the scholastic year we had a staff (if four in the chemistry department. Now we have three. Dr. Nevill Isbel] of the department is on leave id absence and with the chemical warfare division of the army. He is now Captain Isbell. Jack Webb, teaching fellow in the department, is doing something scientific and mysterious for the army in London. His place is being filled by Paul Cheek. Pictured at left are, seated, Dr. Black, department chairman, and, standing, Dr. Wv.itt. two Of the survivors. Looking down at Ids desk is Dr. C. B. Earp, pro- fessor of Greek at Wake Forest. Dr. Earp has filled the chair left vacant at the retirement of Dr. (.. W. Paschal in 1940. He is also a profound Latin scholar. One of the newer me the campus, his friendliness and competence have distinguished his presence here. If you ' d like to know anything about the life-cycle of the sheep liver fluke, how to dissect a shark or pin hack an earthworm, the men here pictured can tell you. They are Dr. Bradbury, Dr. Cocke, Mr. Leatherwood and Mr. Allen. Biologists, all, they stain a mean slide. Below is Dr. Hubert Poteat — or we could have said, here is the Latin Department. This year we present his without his pipe, a regular journalistic scoop, since, so far as we know, this is the only picture of its kind extant. Right, seated and standing around table in varying attitudes of nonchalance are assorted mathematicians. Left to right, they are: Jones, department chairman, Copeland, department neophyte, and Professors Gay, Carroll, and Raynor. This is the calmest department on cam- pus, because they know that it ' ll all work out mathematically. The pipe-smoking gentlemen posed si jovially in front of the freshman file: are, below, from left to right, Dr Henry Broadus Jones and Dr. Edgar Estes Folk. The joviality is not a pose in this case, and is probably due tc the fact that neither one has to peruse the themes on Why I Came to Wake Forest, which stuff the pigeon-holes. Above are the men of the modern language department. They know who had a word for it. Grouped around their table, in apparently the favorite pose of the Howler photographer, they are Messrs. Browning, Seibert, Parcell, Berry and Archie. French, German, and Spanish is their business. Left, Mr. Hagood looks haughtily at Webster and the dictionary stares right back as Mr. Aycock shows some of his etchings to Mr. Drake, and Mr. Brown just reads. Don ' t let the un- cluttered table throw you. Absent from the department is Max Griffin, who is studying at Chapel Hill. Left, Drs. Binkley and F.asley and our newly-acquired Mr. Carver here do something or other of obviously rather vital import for the religion depart- ment. Or could it be that the good professors arc posing for a picture? Below, we have two gentlemen who arc making musical history in a school which has had little of it. MacDonald. right, is head of the department. Hester, left, is his assistant. Here we see then laugh- ing at a sheet of music. One of Hester ' s arrangements ? Another new member of the faculty is shown above with one of our well-beloved old-timers. Dr. Parker, on the left, is shown seated in the office of the physics depart incut with Dr. Bill Speas, famed for over twenty years at Wake Forest for wit. intellect, and sly freshman- baiting. The physics department is one of the several Wake Forest departments to contribute a member to na- tional defense. Dr. Sherwood Githens is now with the army air corps in a research capacity. To the right of us are Dr. I). 1!. Bryan, and Professor .1. I.. .Memory. Jr., professors in the department of education. They arc pictured in the dean ' s office, be- cause you guessed it. Dr. Bryan is also dean of the college. Both have important duties in addition to teach ing. Mr. Memory heads the college publicity bureau and docs invaluable service in helping part the wily alumnus fr his dollar. This pensive tableau, right, is the staff of the department of social sciences. Their specialties, Greece, Rome, the Renaissance, America before 1860, the Law of Diminishing Returns. The} ' are Messrs. Stroupe, Pearson, Clonts, Rea, and West. Since the war there is a good deal of Interpretation of Current Events in the Light of Past Experience. Below pictured, right to left, Dr. Reid and Mr. Oates of the philosophy- psychology department. They are seated in the seminar, apparently perusing one of the thousand-or-so books of a technical and philosophical nature which line the shelves. Above we have a juridical conference, featuring Professor White, and Dr. Stansbury, Dean of the Law School. In triumvirate at the table, left, are professors Lake, Timberlake, and Baer. Law school includes courses like Contracts, Criminal Law, Personal Property, Equity, Torts, Mortgages, Negotiable Instruments and Debtor ' s Estates. If you ' ve ever been in the toils of the law in a traffic violation, the idea that anyone could know enough about the subtle nuances of juris- prudence to teach it is wonderful. We stand in awe. - ' .■  • i.. i. STUDENT COUNCIL JOHN ELLIOTT GALLOWAY President To maintain and perpetuate the high ideals for which Wake Forest has ever been respected and to promote common interests and general welfare of our college community — that through- out the year has been the purpose of the Student t ' oimeil, led by President John Elliott Galloway. The Council began work in September with decisions to devote chapel periods to discussion of the honor system, to appoint a secret committee for choosing men for Who ' s Who In American Colleges and Universities, and to uphold sanity in Wake Forest ' s unique dance problem. Since December 7 the Council has collaborated with faculty in interpreting college wartime policies. In addition it has ac- tively sponsored the drive to purchase a $1,000 defense bond. One of its knottiest tasks was revision of the student con- stitution. With the Legislature, the Council unravelled all knots and worked out a document which will simplify duties of future councils. Other accomplishments were effected behind closed doors— th,- unfortunate hut essential duties of discipline and trial. The Stud, lit Council has met onee a week, two times a week, three times a week, worked hard and done its job and done it well. For nineteen years, since its birth in fact, Wake Forest ' s Student Legislature had been in a coma. This year the crisis approached and the legislature faced alternating fear of death and hope of resuscitation. Too long the Legislature had been inactive, the Student Coun- cil ruled, and President Clarence Bridger and his members could decide to abolish themselves or make themselves an active, vital governing body. The Student Legislature chose the latter and thoroughly reformed itself. President Bridger was elevated to a position on the Student Council, the Legislature declared that it would meet at least once a week to work as a wide-a%vake lower house, and it was decided that fifteen members instead of eighteen members would make up a quorum. Immediately after its reformation, the Legislature put itself to work on a complete revision of the student body constitution, working out a compact, to-the-point set of rules. The Legislature of 1942, stormy as its course has been, has effectively charted the way for legislatures to come, and it can only be hoped that these legislatures will fulfill their duties as actively as has been done this year. ■ ■ CLAREXCE BRIDGER President STUDENT LEGISLATURE Left to right: Paul Baker, Everett Berger, Clarence Bridger, Everett Jo Horace Kornegay. ill Burgwyn, Fiesh men 1942 WHEN two hundred and fifty-two students regis- tered at Wake Forest for the first time last fall they could not quite understand why they wire required to wear little black and yellow badges with the words John Doe, Freshman cm them. The badges made them feel conspicuous, even made them feel inferior. But fresh- men pinned the emblems on, wrote their names on them, and it was not long before they did understand. Every upperclassman who passed a freshman would not merely say. Hello ; he would look at the badge and say. Hello. John Doe. And soon lie could call the freshman ' s name without referring to the badge. Thus the freshman ceased to he an organism wandering about tin ' campus. He became a friend to uppcrclass- nien. to his fellow classmates, and to his faculty. As he became a friend, he regained confidence which had been lost upon entering college. He came to be drawn by the fascinating lure of a really active campus life and soon began to try his mettle in polities, in sports, in debating and publications, and in religious groups. He learned the professors and the anecdotes about them. He performed his duties as a pledge and soon was initiated into his fraternity. He read the student body handbook and tried to learn its rules. And when ex- aminations came around, he rose to take his place among the envied upperelassmen. In short, lie began to take part in all activities, and when he began to take part, he was no longer a fresh- man. He was a Wake Forest man. First roic: Adams, Arthur Henry Adams, Jack Clifton Aldridge, Harold Fisher Allen, Charles Insley Allen, LeRoy, Jr. Anderson, James E., Jr. Arnette, Evander Charles Augusiewicz, Edward J. Second rote: Baker, William Prentiss Barber, Arthur Drayton Batchelor, James Russell Beam, G. M., Jr. Beck, Adam Wayne Bennett, Romy Olive Best, Clarence Dowell Best, Hush Elrov Third row: Black. William Winston Blake, Paul Edward Bland. Delmar Earl Bland. William Herbert Bradbury, Kenneth Ray Brantley, Russell Harold Brogden, Jeffery Monroe Brooks, William Jasper Fourth row: Bryan, Fulton Brewer Bumgarner, Edwin Murl Bunn, Thomas Davis Burnett, Thomas Jesse Burns, William Edward Burrus, Roy Grady Bvrd, Jack Morgan Bvrd. William Carev, Fifth roxv: Campbell, Frederick Bruce Carter, Derb Stancil Chambers, David Irvine Chapman, Clyde David Cheek, Thomas Sidney Chesson, Arthur Sanders Chobany, George Christian, Berniee Joseph £%■£ FRESHMEN 1942 First row: (lark. Henry Githens Clark. Walter Calvin Cline, Jack Joseph Conn, Aaron Maynard Connelly, Owen S., Jr. Connor, Charles David Cox. Louis Graves Crowder, Maxey Jeffers Second row: Crumpler, Robert James Davis. Aaron Heide, Jr. Davis, James Matin sou. J r Dougherty, William Franci Doyle. Wilbur Smith Drake. Norman Shermai Driver. Cecil Elwood Third row: Elam. Douglas Burncttc Kwan. Randy Faison, John Howard, III Farabow, Kola Bruce, Jr. Farnum, Norman R.. Jr. Fesperman, Joseph Claude Finch. Sigma James Fisher. Frank Thomas Edmonc Wi Fourth row: Foreman, Richard Alexander Fowler, Henry Jackson Francis, Marvin Anthony Frazier, Rawls H. Garrison, Paul L. Gentry, Jack Dunlap Gerard, Walter Bennett Giles, Charles Ogburn Fifth row: Gillikin, Lloyd Thompson Glasgow, Jesse Edward Glass, Ernest Wilson ( dass. Roy Seymour Glenn, Richard Recce Clover. Eugene Basil Godwin, Xorman Earl Goodwyn, William Leggette, Jr. fb rs n f 0fy f ' l t s F R E S H MEN 1 9 4 2 ■ mmm Gore, John Solon Gray, William Henry, Jr Green, Charles Francis Greene, Carl W., Jr. Greene. Ray Lee Hagaman, Hugh Bernard Haigwood, John Hancock, Elvin Thomas Hansell, Ralph Edgar Hargrove, Francis Irwin Harrell, W. Dwight Harris, E. Ledbetter, Jr. Hauser, William Kerr Hawkins, Leo Franklin Hayes, Frank Edgar, Ji Hayes, James Wells Hedgpeth. Wm. Lawrence Henry, James Ernest Herring, Thomas Lindsay Highsmith, Chas. W. Hill. Theo Riston Hipps, Donald Hugh Hoi ' stetter, Carl Holder, Reginald Britt Hollomon. James Wilson Holmes, Ralph Benton Holt, Wetzel Hooper, Edwin Willys Horner, James R. Howard, Walden B. Hudspeth, George Lee Huffman, Harry S. Hulin, James Franklin Johnson, James William Johnston, Thomas Shull Jones, Jimmie DeCalb Jones, Pelham Thomas Jones, Willis Hobbs Josey, Claude Kitchin Josey, Dan Edmundsun 8 A FRESHMEN 19 4 2 33 y Karmazin, John Kinlaw, Stacy Hillmrn Knott. William Allan Kornegay, Horace R. Lanier, Russell Leatherwood, Charles Ii. Lingle, Ray L. Little, Garland Grey Lucas, William Scott Lyles. James Curtis McAllister, James, Jr. McClure, Claude. Jr. McCollum, Marvin Frank McDonald, Wm. Alfred MeKeel, M. Filmore, III McLean, John Evans McLean, Robert John McLeod, Win. Franklin McMillan, Robert LeRoy Mallory, Lowry Marshall. Roht. Dean Martin. Clarence Honeycutt Mattern. James Wilfred Matthews. Donald Gilliam Maunev, Lewis Ewell Meredith. John Seott Meyer. Max Herman Miller. Cameron Eugene Miller. Loviek Moone. W. Clifton. Jr. Mooney, Aubrey Morris. Charles L. Namey, Mike Esber Narron, John Arthur Nelson, Clifton Earl Nelson. Ke th I... Jr. Neinetz, Albert Micheal Neshit, Floyd Archie Newsome, Robt. Taylor Nicholson, II. M.. Jr. F RES H M E N 1 ) 4 2 First row: Norville, Charles King O ' Bannon, James William O ' Briant, John Archie O ' Brien, Wyatt Conner Ogden, Bryan Kneass Overton, Spurgeon Douglass Owen, Marion Boyd Page, Donald W. Second rota: Parker, Earl Hoyt Paschal, Don Lee Pastrick, Carl Clarence Pate, Robert Franklin Person, John Williamson Pierce, LeRoy Courtney Pittman, Isham, Jr. Pittman. John William Third row: Plumbo, Joseph Poe, Lewis Poe, William Edward Powell, Charles Gregory, Jr. Pruett, Samuel Richard, Jr. Pruette, Frank Hancock Pryor, William Watkins Quisenberry, James Rice Fourth row: Rawls, Eben Turner Ray, L. Banks Register, Scott Rhodes, Hughes Jennings Riggan, Percy Lee Robbins, William Hadley Robinson, Sankey Wright Russell, Ernest Parker Fifth row: Sacrinty, Otis Mac Salpeck, James Frank Sandlin, Bryan Osborn Sapp, Carl Freeman Sawyer, Robert Jerome Seife, Marvin Kanner Senter, James Carlton. Jr Shankle, B. C. FRESHMEN 1942 First row: Shedlock, Walter A. Shelton, James Ferguson Shepherd, Robert M. Shuford, Forrest Herman, II Silberfein, Buddy Singleton, Marcus Glenn Skovron, Edwin Small, Murray Second row: Smith, Joseph Andrew, Jr. Smith, Nelson Hudson Smith. Ransom W. Smith, Warren Woodlief Sparkman, George Bascom Spivey, James Thaddeus Spruill, Charles Burden Squires, Cedric Pridgen Third row: Stamps, George Moreland Stanley, Ruby Gorden Stephens, Edwin Worth Stroud, David Swain. John Paris. Jr. Talley, Constantine li. Thompson, Mel J.. Jr. Thompson, Nobie He Fourth row: Tomlinson, Eugene Bertram, Jr. Topor, Stephen Theodore Turlington, Roscoe Harold Tyson, Frank Umphlet, Wallace William. Vinson, William Harvey, , Waller, Harry Belt Ward. Demming Mortoi Fifth row: Ward. Edward Lee Ward. Harry Potter Ware Charles Ingersoll Webb, William Hayes Wedel, Richard Wesley Wells, Donald Ray Wentz, .(aims Ira Wethington, L. Elbert F R E S II M E N 19 4 2 First row: White, Charles Thomas, Jr. W hite, Henry Lee White, James Ganell White. Linney Ray Whitfield, Hassell Long Whitney, Hovt Snider Second row: Wilhoit, Robert Marion Williamson, B. Wingate Woodall, Charles Marion Woodard, Gilbert Etheridge Woodard, Wingate Worth Yarborough, Wj ' lie Moore Have a chew TERNITY RUSHING FOR twenty-eight days the Wake Forest freshman is a little god set up on a pedestal. As he wanders somewhat aim- lessly about the campus, he is suddenly beset by hordes of fraternity men, all with the consuming desire to snatch him and lure him away to the house, where await soft divans, records sweet and hot, cigars and cigarettes, and plenty of friendly smiles. The average freshman enjoys to the fullest being the center of attraction in a bunch of his supposed superiors, and he usually goes back for more. This freak of college life is what is known in student handbooks as the rushing season. After doing all in their power to get new men. fraternities sit back and wait for the freshmen to decide. Then comes the time either for gloating or frowning. But whatever the case, the pedestal lias fallen, and the little idol be- comes an object of lowly pledge duties. The chosen few. The band plaj INFORMAL DANCES WITH a blast of trumpets and a swish of evening -owns, the informal phase of Wake Forest dance activities was initiated with a fine start for the year on Saturday night. October 25. The occasion was the annual Pan-Hellenic Council Pledge Dance in the Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh. The fraternity pledges assumed the limelight at this event, because it was in their honor that the dance was being given. While the new men were celebrating their Editor ami frii-nil. After the (lance - waiting for the car - ' I victorious fraternal affiliations, the old members were beaming ' with justifiable pride over the men they had pledged up. Yet still another victory was celebrated at the dance, namely, that of Wake Forest ' s win over Carolina only five or six hours before. This gridiron activity lent added meaning to the occasion. It was a gala affair, that Pledge Dance. However, the other two members of the trilogy of in- formal hops were to prove virtually equally as en- joyable. Almost exactly one month after the Pledge Dance, the freshmen and sophomores played genial hosts with their annual ball. Under the directorship of Gerald Wallace, the dance proved a sparkling success. T he place was the Carolina Hotel Ballroom, Raleigh, and the melodies both sweet and hot were furnished by our own Frank Faucette ' s orchestra. The grand finale to the street-suit dance season was the Junior-Senior dance, which occurred December 6 at the Woman ' s Club building in the Capitol City. Again Frank Faucette ' s band furnished the music and featured Freshman Vocalist Danny Mills. Jive pre- dominated and everyone came home happy, thus ending the year ' s informal dance cycle with a resounding bang. The dance is the thing at the Junior-Senior. All organizations arc brought to a focal point at the tree ORGANIZATIONS YKKYIiODY who is anybody at Wake Forest belongs to an EVEEYBOI organizatio Why. not one student in a hundred passes by a notice-bedecked magnolia without scrutinizing. After all, there might be one calling a meeting of his organization. Ami magnolias covered with organization announcements arc fascinat- ing in themselves. It was they which gave birth to the Howler; it is they which cause visitors to Oh and Ah and How original when they an, 1,1c over the campus. For the colors painted on the magnolia notices annually put Dr. Beid ' s color spectrum to shame. There arc big blue words in imitation to the Phi Society Smoker ami bright red proclaiming that s one will speak to the Eu ' s. Important looking cards send a call to I, and re- hearsal or debate squad meets. Again, glaring notices urge attendance Davis expounds at convocation or an SPU gathering. The Glee Club and the Octet and the honorary frats communicate with in- cumbents via the magnolias. Students are invited to come to Sunday school via the magnolias. Magnoliae Grandi- florae serve as bugles to summon aspir- ing actors and playwrights to the dramatic club meetings. Magnolia bark is scarred by thumb tack holes of BSU notices or the International Relations Club or the Monogrammers. Every- thing happens via the. magnolias. And if there is a person who is not affected by the magnolia messages, he is a janitor or a mail man or a worker on buildings and grounds. He is not a Wake Forest man or woman. Bottom: The smoke ' s the thing at a smoker. Mack Byers starts things going for C. C. Hope. Hi First row: Hawkins, Elizabeth Jones, Farnum, Parker, E. I.. Williamson, Jones, Bell. Second row: Beard, D. E. Ward, Dunn, Waller, Williford, Hal Pittman, Robbins, Glasgow, Nelson, Mallory, Wilson. F„„,lh row: R. Pittman, Hope, Behrends, I). N. Williamson, Trlvette Mallorv, Wilson. Fourth row: II. Pittman, Hope, Behrends, O. N. Williams Trivetter, Galloway, Boyer, Britt, Thompson, Ayers. First row: Copple, Harvey, Crisp. Whitaker, Perry, Collins. Second row: Lasate Whitesel, Fortune, Bryan, Elam, Turner, Hauser, Wethington, Cox. Third row: .1. I). Davi .1. M. Davis. Hord, Drake. Fmirlh row: Tobey, Hicks, Highfill. WITH the first fall meeting of the year, a smoker for all freshmen and non-society men, the Phi Society started out one of its most successful seasons in recent years. Guest speaker for this special occasion was R. L. McMillan, a Wake Forest graduate and a former Philomathesian, now a prominent attorney in Raleigh and recent state commander of the American Legion. He was introduced by Dr. J. H. Gorrell, pro- fessor emeritus of modern languages. At Society Day exercises on November 8, the Phi ' s divided forensic honors with the Eu ' s. George Watkins was voted best orator for the day with his oration on College as a Stimulus for Thought. On Founder ' s Day the Phi Society captured all awards, C. C. Hope PHILOMATHESIAN LITERARY SOCIETY and Norman Farnum taking first place in debates and George Watkins again winning in orations. Hope and Farnum upheld the affirmative side of a query sup- porting the eight-point Roosevelt-Churchill world federation plan ; Watkins delivered an address entitled After the Deluge. Emphasis was placed this year on programs in which a large number of the members could participate. In line with this plan, such features as mock legislatures, quiz programs, impromptu speeches and debates, and conversational forums found their place in the regular Monday night meetings. AH the time, however, the main purpose of the Society, to train students in the art of speaking, was kept in mind, and programs were always worked out with this as the main goal. One particularly interesting innovation made by the Society this year %vas its entry into intramural sports. In this field the Phi ' s performed admirably. Athletic highlights were the two football games with the Eu Society, both of which the Phi ' s won, 6-0. EUZELIAN LITERARY SOCIETY THE Eu Society started out on a new year on tile night of September 18, when Claude Gaddy, then superintendent of Raleigh City Schools, spoke to a large crowd of mem- bers, freshmen, and transfer students assembled for the Society ' s fall smoker. The topic of Mr. Gaddy ' s speech was Discovering America. At successive meetings the Eu ' s inducted new men into the group, administered to them the three degrees of initiation, and acquainted them with the work of the Society. A plan of programs was followed the first semester in line with Mr. Gaddy ' s keynote address. On Society Day the Eu ' s won the inter-society debate cup, upholding the negative side of the query, Resolv ed, That the federal government should regulate by law all i.hnls labor unions, constitutionality conceded. Speaking for the Eu ' s were Harold Townsend and Burnette Harvey. A series of interesting programs was offered through- out the year. Robert L. Humber, founder of the Federation of the World movement and authority on international affairs, spoke at an informal open house. Exchange programs were held with Meredith College. Model legislatures and panel discussions formed the bases for several entertaining meetings. FORENSIC SQUAD THE silver-tongued representatives of Wake Forest this year made several trips, beginning in the fall. During November the Debate Squad made a tour of Western North Carolina. Tennessee, and Virginia, where they were tlie guests of Mars Hill College, Eastern Tennessee Teachers College, and Virginia Intermont. All debates on this trip were non-decision hut were primarily to lay a groundwork for later direct clash decision contests. At the Annual Dixie Tournament, at Koek Hill. South Carolina, sponsored by the Strawberry Leaf So- ciety of Winthrop, the squad held its usual place at the top. Bruce Brown and Burnette Harvey distinguished themselves by debating both sides of the query and winning seven of the eight decisions. At the National Extempore Contest held at Duke University on March 14, and at the Grand Eastern Tourney at Winthrop on April 8-1J Wake Forest debaters carried on in their usual invulnerable style. The farce of the entire forensic season was the de- bate which resulted in a challenge by William Jewell College as a salve to the hurt they suffered at the hands of the football team. They lost on the gridiron, and so they sought revenge via the debate squad. Their medium was a non-decision debate which allowed both sides to give vent to the acme of their oratorical prowess. The forensics this year fill from the hands of Prof. Zon Robinson to the capable shoulders of Prof. A. L. Aycoek. It was under his tutelage that the knights of the gavel attained the heights they reached this season. Bvniim Shaw ; ge Watkir, Sam Bern-ends C. ( ' . Hope W. 11. Harvey .1. I). Davis Bruce Brown I ' . II. Hell Harold Townsend BAPTIST STUDENT UNION ■ I ■ I FOR eighteen years the Baptist Student Union of Wake Forest College has served as the link between the student and the local church, and the past year has found it playing an imporant part in campus activities. Composed of unit organizations, such as the Sunday school department, the Baptist Training Union, and tile Christian Service Organization, the Wake Forest B.S.U. is centralized in a Council composed of officers and representatives from the unit organizations. Under the aggressive leadership of John Fletcher, the B.S.U. has readied many students through a strong- enlistment program, including attractive vesper services, the B.S.U. biweekly publication Deacon Beacon, and meetings of the larger B.S.U. Council. Elwood Bagwell, devotional director, raised vesper attendance to a new high. His roommate, Harold Townsend, carried on when Bagwell left for the arm} ' . Robert Forbes and Ernest Glass become co-editors of the Deacon Beacon, succeeding John McMillan, president of the North Caro- lina State Baptist Student Union. tiLto A Mkk John Fletcher James Willett Billy Primm Elwood Bagwell Frank Downing Bill Starnes J. E. Tate Archie Prevatte John McMillan Robert Forbes Ernest Glass John Galloway Howell Perrv Jack Gross Bill Pierce Manley Tobey ■m First raw: Talley, Allen, Gross, Bass, Minshew, Campbell, Harris, Krahenbill. Second row: Bridges, Scott, Chapman, Gibson, Martin, West, Compton, Forbes, Crook, Prevatte, Brookshire, Sparkman, Andrews. Third row: Vincent, Lennon, Green, Perry, Crisp, Emerson, Rich, Dennis, Hasty. Fourth raw: Young, Glass, Brian, Farnum, Parker, Russell, Pruden. MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE CARRYING on the imria.se for which Wake Forest Col- lege was founded, the Ministerial Con- ference, made up of the 106 ministerial students on the campus, serves to help in the training of Baptist ministers. The group, which meets every Tuesday nijrlit at 7:30, lias proa rams at which leading churchmen speak concerning the life and work of the minister. Presidents for the fall and spring semesters were Hex Campbell and A. P. Minshew, respectively. Designed to strengthen the structure of the organization, a constitution was drawn up for the Conference by a com- mittee composed of Hex Campbell, Roger Crook, and Car] Compton. The biggest social event of the year was the annual Prophets ' Frolic held on a week- end in April. After a baseball game in the afternoon, the prophets at- tended a banquet, always the main feature of the occasion. BAPTIST TRAINING UNION COMPOSED of four unions and one forum, the Wake Forest Baptist Training Union makes up one of the two main branches of the H.S.I . With Archie Prevatte as di- rector, the B.T.U. saw many red letter achievements this year. In November the IS.T.U. broke precedent and went over ill a body — ninety strong — to Meredith for a Saturday night social. Another ii vation this year was the monthly joint meetings of all the Training Unions. In February the B.T.U. cooperated with the college Sunday school department in a drive for China relief. All these activities have hen in line with the main purpose of the B.T.U., which, as Archie Prevatte has stated, is to ■ ' train for church membership, stimulate fellowship, anil seek for a Letter understanding of Christian problems. I ' ll,- four unions and the forum meet every Sunday evening at 11:1-5 with an average at tendance of ninety nun. Archie Prevatte, I. High- mi, Worth Bras well, Roger (rook. S Edwin Andrews, Paul Kearns, Charles Allen, Warren Pritchard. Third row: Oscar Harris, John Lennon, Gil Horton. Harold Townsend. ■£, SUNDAY SCHOOL OFFICERS Harold Townsend Gilmer Beck Archie Prevatte Jack Easley J. E. Tate B. W. Jackson Bedford Black 1 H s I SIX classes make up the college Sunday school De- partment. The classes are taught by faculty mem- bers and are managed by student officers. Five pro- fessors who lead classes for the academic school are Professor Paul Berry. Dr. Daniel B. Bryan, Professor James G. Carroll, Dr. Thurman D. Kitehin, and Dr. Albert C. Reid; the Law Class is conducted by Pro- fessor John Lake. These classes, meeting every Sunday morning at 9:50, afford a quiet time for worship and spiritual up- lifting for some hundred students who attend them regularly. Then there usually develops among the classes a spirit of friendly rivalry, and each group strives to make itself the most active. CHRISTIAN SERVICE GROUP THE Christian Service Group, formerly called the Mission Study Group, lived up to its name in a big way in 1941-42 under the leadership of Howell Perry. Throughout the year members of this organization devoted their afternoons to work across the tracks, where they carried on a unique project in vocational education known as the Negro Workshop. Started by Dave Morgan in September, the workshop has afforded colored children an op- portunity to train in manual labor. Tools and donations contributed by interested persons and groups have made possible a successful workshop. Christian Service Group First row: C. H. Allen, J. W. Allen, Wiley Biles. Second row: F. B. Bryan, James Crisp, Jack Futrelle. Third row: Leo Hawkins, Howell Perry, Archie Prevatte. Fourth row: G. B. Sparkman, B. B. Sparrow, L. H. Walker. Fifth row: L. E. Wethington, James Willett. THE BAND A (1 I)r FTER two years of notable p togt e s s .ill Mull, the Wake ng musical unit this ■r. senior from Char- throughout the year, under Donald L. Pfohl Forest Band emerged as a really year. Capably directed by Pat II lotte. the Band constantly improv bettering itself with each performance. The Hand took part as usual in the fall football games and particularly distinguished itself at the Homecoming name with the University of North Carolina. It also participated in many of the local basketball nanus during the winter, and appeared in several parades. Two concerts, one in the winter and the other in the spring, wire the Band ' s other main contributions to the college. The first of these was the Christmas Vespers service, a joint recital with the Glee Club. The second was the annual spring concert, at for the first time an original Fortitude, ' ' dedicated to the 1 Several members of the 1! form a special Big Five Bai all the hands in the Big Five. North Carolina State Music Greensboro in October. Drum Majors: Slawter, Fortune, Jones; Director, Hester. First row: Williams, Connelly, Blanton, Ewan, Hauls. Drake, Hutehins. Second row: F. Harrell, Daniels, Gurganus, Barrows, Miles, Byrd, Singleton, Price, Easley, Godwin, Hinson, Carpenter, Johnson, Quisenberry, I i e a I v . P e a r c e Trudell, Bridger. Third row: Rich- ardson, Yarborough, Sawyer, I. Austin, Crawford, Strickland, Stephens, Massey, Hooper, D. Harrell, J. Austin, Tomlinson, Cray, Hay. Fourth row: Aydlett, Billings, Krahenbill, Overton, Mc- Donald, Bell, Todd, White-el. which the Band performed march by Director Hester. ite Donald Pfohl. and were selected to help d. coi sed of men Iron, This «roup assisted in the Tl a. hers ' Clinic held in The band gets a good workout at pep-meetings OCTET THE Wake Forest Octet was organized during the 1939-40 season by Donald L. Pfohl and has continued since then as one of the most active musical groups on the campus. Composed of eight of the college ' s best singers, it is called upon by various groups all over the state to make personal appearances before them. This year the Octet sang at several alumni banquets in key North Carolina cities, including one for Mecklenburg County alumni in Char- lotte before the Thanksgiving Day football game with Texas Tech. Other performances were given at the North Carolina Baptist Sunday school Convention, where the Octet appeared on the same program with Governor Broughton. and at the Convocation of the North Carolina Council of Churches in Burlington in April. Pierce. Hough, Holt, Willi . Donnell, Farmuu. I ashwcll. ' lulu GLEE CLUB THE Glee Club, during the 1941-12 season, was under the leadership of the new director of music, Prof. Thane McDonald, graduate of the University of Michigan and former assistant director at Davidson College. The Club ' s first public concert was held at the Wake Forest high school November 14, and shortly before Christmas holidays the Glee Club appeared jointly with the Band in a program of special Christmas music. In the spring the group sang for an Easter Morning Sunrise Service and two Sunday evening church services. Despite the fact that the national emergency forced the organization to cancel all extensive tours, the Glee Club made several short trips to nearby towns. In April they held joint concerts with the Meredith Glee Club, both here and in Raleigh. In the spring the Glee Club entered the Pleasure Time National College Glee Club competition, sponsored by Fred Waring ' s Pleasure Time Hour. Recordings were made of Dear Old Wake Forest and two other numbers and sent to New York to be judged along with recordings from 150 other schools from all over the nation. First row: Trudell, Tobey, Highfill, Fisher, Nel- Second row: Hord, J. M. Davis, T e a g u e, Aydlett, Lanier, J. D. Davis, C 1 e c k 1 e y, Kocher, Lindley. Third row: Richardson, Holt, Fortune, Lee, Donnell, Froneberger, C a s h w e 1 1, Kinlaw, Young. Fourth row: Easlev. D. Bunn, T. Bunn, Willis, Sparrow, Logan, Hare, Chapman, Farnum, Little, Harvey. Fifth row: Craig, Mc- Keel, Hough, Harrell, Byrd, Warlick, Saw- yer, Canady, Pierce, Canter. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB UNDEB the efficient leadership of J. E Tate, Jr., and Keith James, the Interna tional Relations Club underwent a process oi revitalization this year. The old constitutior was revised, and girls were permitted to comi into the group. Attendance was exceptionally good at every meeting, and there was a notice- able reawakening of interest in the activities I the club. The regular meetings cons isted of programs built around forum discussions, mock assemblies and individual speeches. Radio programs were inaugurated, and members of the club made eeches before various civic groups. At the end the year, keys were distributed to worthy mbers. The Wake Forest I.R.C. distinguished itself road as well as at home. At the Southeastern strict Conference in Atlanta in March, Larry illiams was elected district president, and ake Forest and Meredith were selected as CO- onsors for next year ' s conference in Raleigh. At the Bi-State I.R.C. Assembly in Charlotte January, J. E. Tate. Jr., was elected presi- nt. Tate also served as tirst vice president of ■ Southeastern District this year. First row: Bill Aver-., Hove,- Chesser, Edward Chow, Warren Coble, James Crisp. W. J. Douglas, Jr. Second row: Norman Ellis, Gilbert Francis, Dave Friday, John Galloway, Harry Hand, Oscar Harris. Third row: W. W. Hasty, Harold Hawkins. I ' al Hester. Bill Hold™, C. C. Hope. Keith James. Fourth row: John McMillan, Billy Primm, Warren Pritchard, (Mis Pruden, I. L. Rich, Jr.. Sam Tarleton. Fifth row: J. E. Tate, Jr.. Herbert Thompson, Arthur Vivian, Boh Waters, Larry Williams, Ed Wilson. iPfcrV Edward Gurgajtus Secretary Harold Townsend Treasurer John Fletcher Vice President Chester Morrison President Bruce Brown Public iti Chairman STUDENT POLITICAL UNION DURING the spring semester of 1941 a new or- ganization came into existence on Wake Forest campus, an organization which was slated to change the entire political set-up of the school. This new organization was a result of the untiring efforts of a small group of enthusiastic students who were in- terested primarily in the advancement of the status of the non-fraternity student in campus politics and in the creation of a two party system which would provide added stimulus to campus activities. Immediately after the founding of this new politi- cal organization, non-fraternity men who were politi- cally inclined rallied to the call, and in a very short time the Student Political Union became a definite and integral part of campus politics, although some time was to pass before the desired power was ob- tained. Candidates for the forthcoming spring elec- tions were chosen, and although there was not much hope for a great victory, tile leaders felt that within a year or so the Union ' s candidates would have much support. This year those same staunch supporters who were responsible for the founding of the organization have, carried on tile work they so ably began last year. They took upon themselves the responsibility of creat- ing a new political party and set out immediately to obtain all possible support. At the beginning of the term new officers were chosen for the year ' s work, and immediately a membership drive was started. Again the non-fraternity men rallied to the call, and the Student Political Union became larger and more powerful than ever. Later in the year it was de- cided that membership should not be limited to non- fraternity men; therefore, an invitation was extended to the fraternities. The success of the organization this year has been largely due to the ceaseless efforts of a small group of students who have worked diligently toward reach- ing their goal. Under the leadership of Chester Mor- rison, president; John Fletcher, vice president; Edward Gurganus, secretary; Harold Townsend, treasurer; and Bruce Brown, publicity chairman, the Student Political Union has made great strides in the political field. Naturally the number of members is not as great as many wish it were, but the fact that the organization has been in existence for only a year well accounts for this. As for the expected shakeup in the political sys- tem, this has not yet come. But it is believed by many that in the very near future the Student Union will become a powerful organ, selecting and supporting the best of men, both fraternity and non-fraternity. If the Union does gain its desired support, no doubt another political party will soon come into existence and the present political system will be done away with entirely. This is the first time in a decade that there has been any real danger of a political upset on the campus. w lfc Cheer Leaders: Dick Proctor, Head Chi ir Leader, and reading clockwise Carl Greene, Oscar King, Lynwood Cherry, Kemp Keece. Co-captain ( arl Givl FOOTBALL IN 1941 P ACING one of the most difficult schedules ever lertaken by a Wake Forest football team Coach 1). C. Walker wa. forced to eal (he untried s .omores in his starting lineup against Duke University. End Jim Copley, tackle Buck J„nes. ami Beddow and Starford, who alternated at center, started ' ,l ' ' ' ■ Johnny Perry took care of the wingbaek position and John Red Cochran moved to the all important tailback position. y v ylktii ' f y J 1 r¥ ii zMl Manager Joe Butterworth  It was soon evident, however, that these sophomores had what it took, and Cochran developed into a passer good enough to rank seventh in the nation in the department of pass completions. Though the Deacons opened with Camp Davis in a smashing victory, they were really looking to the Duke game. The Blue Devils, however, took advantage of the nervousness of the Deac sophomores to score 3-t points in the first sixteen minutes of the game. Johnny Perry stepped into the limelight with a 95 yard kickoif return for a touchdown and later caught a pass from Cochran for the other Wake Forest marker. Ooache It was the next week against Furman that Coach ■ the Deacs hit their stride. Cline caught two touchdown passes and the running attack was click- ing, sending the Purple Hurricane down in a 52-13 defeat. For the next three victories it was this same passing attack that proved to be the main scoring threat. Against the up and coming South Carolina Gamecocks, Cochran passed to Geer for the tying touchdown. Facing the State Wolfpack in Raleigh before 2 3 •) = 9 10 II 16 17 18 IS i: D. C. Walker, Head Football Coac Irector; Murray Greason, Head Basketball and Baseball Henry Bartos, Line Coach. 10,000 fans, the Deacons, with Cochran throwing, used their passes to set up Perry ' s 18-3 ' ard touchdown run. Perry had taken the ball from Polanski on a reverse and received perfect blocking from Preston, Givler and Jones to score standing up. Playing Carolina ' s Tar Heels on Homecoming Day in Groves Stadium the Deacs found that their running game was being stopped so that they took to the air. VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM, from left to right, first ) Whitener. Second row: Heffelfinger, Currin, Rubino, Karmaz Capps, Brown, Hinerman, Cochran, Kapriva, Duncavage, Owen Moser, Zakim, Cline, Preston. w: Starford. Ciccarelli, Beddow, Manieri, Horchak, 1, Geer, Givler, Harris. Third row: Copley, Pruitt, Fourth row: Polanski, Perry, Jones, Nesteruk, Cole, H 9Du n r% ■ +■ ■    .j - JOHNNY PERRY eludes CAROLINA opposition as CICCARELLI speeds to his aid. A moment later the thousands of spectators cheered (and groaned) when he crossed the goal for a touchdown. Top nm-, left l.i right: Ril A horde of Clemson Tiger A weary band of Demon I Beddow, Burnie Capps, Cha surround Cochran as the I) ■iicniis decide to talk tilings Cole. Boh IU-ffi-lnnger, Civ .11 back tries an off-tackle pla during the Clemson contest. r. Bill Starford. WAKE FORES ' I (ifi (AMP DAVIS tt ' AKK FOREST II DUKE 1 I WAKE FORES ' I ' 52 FURMAN it WAKE FORES ' I (i SOUTH CAROLIN W VKE FOREST 7 STATE WAKE FOREST 13 SOUTH CAROLINA U kl FORES ' I i. M IISI! All, 16 WAKB FORES ' I li Bl IS1 ON COLI.EGI 26 WAKE FORES ' I I) i I.EMSON 29 WAKE FOREST 12 GEORGE WASHINGTON WAKE FOREST 6 TES S TECH Cochran dropped back and spotted CI goal line, passed to li Perry took a Hat pass Tar Heel tacklers on a the Tar Heels lost thei to a Wake Forest i levi Playing in Bosto tin nl t, id st st Boston Colli in the Later ok off . And FRANK ZAKIM PETE HORCHAK HERB CLINE RAY MANIERI Big- John Polanski leaves tliree Wolf- pack tacklers behind him in tlie game with State College. Ray Manieri and Pat Preston come up fast to halt a Carolina running play. Manager Joe Butterworth and Dr Morehead aid Jack Ciccarelli, wh was injured in the State game. CARL GIVLER PAT GEER PAT PRESTON JIM COPLEY GEORGE OWENS BUSTER (TURIN TONY RUBINO .mux COCHRAN Cochran intercepts a Blue Devil pass I halt a Duk,- drive as Johnny Perry comes up to help. Pete Horchak and John Polanski look on from the back- ground. Taking a short pass from Cochran, Perry eludes a Tar Heel tackier on his 50-yard touchdown run in the Home- coming game. Center Bill Starford runs into t« Carolina men after snagging a Ti Heel pass. BEVERLY MOSER PHIL HARRIS JOE HINERMAN JACK CICCARELL1 S.J Left to right: FRANK PALMAN WARREN BROWN MIKE NESTERUK JOE DUNCAVAGE BUCK JONES FRANK KAPRIVA Charlie Cole finds a hole in the Carolina line and streaks through behind the blocking of Owens and Rubino. Pat Preston adds his 210 pounds to the pile of Deacon and Tar Heel players. Deacons were victims of several long runs and the lack of a scoring punch. Four times in the last quarter the Demon Deacs drove inside the Eagles ' ten yard line but could only score once. Pete Horchak went over for the touchdown on a quarterback sneak. The Boston College team was high in praise of Wake Forest; Cap- tain Morro called Deacon Co-Captain Givler one of the best linesmen we have faced all year. The tired Deacons found their passing attack bot- tled up in their loss to Clemson, but Cline caught three touchdown passes to lead the Deacs in their victory over George Washington. Finishing up in Charlotte against Texas Tech, the Deacons found the boys from the Lone Star State too much for them. Perry again took a short pass from Cochran and ran 45 yards for the only Wake Forest score. The Demon Deacon team included several individual stars who rated among the best in the Southern Con- ference. Carl Givler, co-captain of the team, was chosen by sports writers as a guard on the All-South- ern football team. Herb Cline ranked among the twenty best ends in the country in pass receiving, catching 19 passes for a total gain of 436 yards. FRESHMAN FOOTBALL ■iXFTEB tying for the state championship for the past three years, the Wake Forest freshmen football team came through with four convincing victories to gain the undis- puted Big Five championship. Victories over Duke, 12-0; Carolina. 12-2; State 26-7; and William and -Mary. 1 i-6, did the trick. I.ik,- the varsity the Baby Deacons relied mainly upon their passing game with Frank Fisher, ISi Brooks and Blake doing most of the tossing to ends Dougherty, Wells, Page, Karmazin, and Kaleevich, Russ Perry showed unusual skill as a punter, and linemen Novick, Royston, -l i . Nemetz and Camp look like varsity material for next year. First row: Herring, Hayes, Blake, Second row: Campbell, Brogden, Third row: Dougherty, Camp, Kal Fourth row: Mills. Fo Fifth row: Holt, Finch, McM Shepherd. Hipps, Wells, Pastrick, WedeL INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL FOR the second year in a row the Hunter Dormitory tagball team won the campus intramural football cham- pionship by defeating the Kappa Alpha team, winners of the fraternity league. John Fletcher, Bill Starnes, Bob Reid and Ace Harris led the Hunter boys to a 19-0 victory in that championship game. It remained for the fraternity league, however, to furnish the thrills of a hotly contested race. Kappa Alpha and Kappa Sigma battled down to the last game without either sustaining a defeat. George Tobey, Levin Culpepper and Leland Kitcliin had led the KA ' s to six victories and one tie. Jack Acree, Hunter Dorm ' s intramural touchball champii « First row: Melvin Moore, Cecil Fuquay, Harold Town- send, Ed Williams, Charles Giles, Warren Pritchard. Bill Starnes. Second row: Ace Harris, Bill Woltz, John Fletcher, Bob Reid, Norman Drake. Eli Galloway, Peahead Walker, Ed McManus and Dewitt Trivette were the leaders for the Kappa Sig boys, who boasted five wins and two ties. In that final game the KA ' s did the only tiling required of them — they played a tie game, thereby giving them the title by the margin of one tie game. Every team furnished its stars. In addition to those mentioned above there were Goon Davis, J. T. Nichols and Johnny Walker for the Sigma Pi ' s, Lefty Vivian and Jim Turner for the Lambda Chi ' s, Jim Little. Bill Bingham and Nub Ford for the Delta Sigma boys, Ev Berger, Cotton Morris and Ed Bishop for the A K Pi ' s, George Edwards and Jim Bonds for the S P E team and Payne Dale and Doug Mclntyre for the Pikas. The All-Star fraternity team consisted of Davis, Bonds, Nichols, Kitchin, Acree, Culpepper, Vivian, Little and Primm. Top: Future ministers, doctors, lawyers, journalists, teachers, and deadbeats become one for all on Gore Field in an intramural game. Every man puts on a Polanski or a Perry or Cochran act with amazing success. Below: Student body president Eli Galloway snags one in a game with Kappa Alpha for the fraternity cham- pionship. Galloway and the Kappa Sigs fought with the KA ' s to a scoreless tie. Forest Duke 111 Devils FOOTBALL SIDE LIGHTS FOOTBALL is played by twenty-two men on a big field. But that is just part of a Wake Forest football game. Thousands of fans take an active part in any competition, and tliis year fans were more active than they have ever been before. For cine week excitement reigned before the season officially open,,! with Duke University. Student Council lloway peps them up, _ _ members adopted a V for Victor} ' motif, and stickers, signs, passwords, greetings flooded the campus. They were all V for Victory — Beat Duke. Before the game a monstrous pep rally was held in Gore Gymnasium and broadcast over the state in a radio hookup. At the game freshmen sat in V formation, the band played the opening notes of Beethoven ' s Fifth Symphony — all was V for Victory. Not victory but vanquishing was the result, however. Wake Forest ' s next big pre-game activity came before the Deacons met State College ' s Wolfpack. In co- operation with Raleigh merchants, the two schools staged a gigantic parade through streets of the capital city. Culture vs. Agriculture was Wake Forest ' s motto. Homecoming was featured with a freshman bonfire dance, fraternity decorations and dancing, and pep ral- lies, many of them broadcast, preceded all other games. Something new in football game sidelights was added when cheer leaders developed card displays, when campus big-wigs began to choose sponsors for games, and when strutting Jack Baldwin dressed in his Deacon ' s frock-tail coat and top hat and put on a one-man circus at every contest. ■ ■ V Kay Kyser attends Top left: Plumed hats removed during heat of game. Top Students watch Wake Forest forge ahead in the State game. !ere ' s to Wake Forest. Bottom left : Freshmen dance to the light of bonfire. HOME Homecoming, when old grads return. A roaring 1 fire us A. K. l ' i wins decoration contest. COMING OCTOBER 25 was a red-letter day for Wake Forest. For that was the day when the beaming- alumni came back to look proudly at the old college campus, to witness a great football game in the new stadium, to inspect the fraternity Welcome Alumni displays, and to return home loving the Alma Mater with renewed vim. It was Homecoming Day. The students, faculty, and athletic coaches spared nothing to entertain the former students properly and •to make it the largest and finest of the traditional yearly Homecomings. Everywhere there was hand- shaking, back-slapping, and fond reminiscences of the old days as former classmates got together for the celebration. Highlight of the day was the football classic between two arch-rivals, the University of North Carolina and Wake Forest. Alumni Secretary Al Dowtin and his staff had worked feverishly for weeks before issuing about 18,000 tickets to those wlio packed Groves Stadium that afternoon. The spectators saw Wake Forest crush Carolina with a score of 13-0. At the between-halves interlude, Alpha Kappa Pi was presented the best-fraternity-decora- tions award, and the Carolina, Wake Forest, and Lenoir High School Bands provided colorful field maneuvers. The victory bell was still ringing as the alumni returned home. : ' Left: They grind exceeding small. Right: Pep rallies help football spirit. Center: The Deacons begin their scoring Top: Students see Tar Heel defeat. WINTER W, INTER came to Wake Forest. And with it, on December 7, came war. To the thousand students of the college this was a crucial moment, and the college heads were well aware of it. Chapel convocations were hurriedly called, and the gravity of the situation made clear to every man. Many students had to leave almost immediately for training camps ; many others signed up for service after graduation. The rest remained in school and waited. The wait was not entirely without its excitement, either. One of the best basketball teams in college annals swept aside formidable opposition to gain a place in the Southern Conference tournament, where it went on to the semi- finals. And then there was the now legendary arrival of the co-eds and the rapid ■ ■■i jr- transformation of the college from a refuge for men into a retreat for both sexes. To Wake Forest students all winters are para- doxes. This one was no exception. First there was the long idyllic period of Christmas holidays, followed by a jolting return to the reality of a stiff examination schedule. Close on the heels of the awarding of the col- lege ' s most prized scholastic honors, memberships in Phi Beta Kappa, came Mid-Winter dances, with all their color and gaiety. Interspersing the joys and toils of winter life came further, more frequent rules from governmental boards. Draft ages were lowered, defense plants offered enticing jobs, ration cards began to be seen here and there, restrictions came on every hand. It was a hard job main- « taining one ' s equilibrium under conditions such as these, but if the student were to hold out to spring he had to adjust himself to them. And he determined to make the adjustment. Times were trying, but he hadn ' t long to hold out. Already his fancy was beginning to turn. ■ ■ all V John B. Roberts, Treasurer Everett Jones. President; Jii Copley, Vice President; Walte Gtsliwell, Secretary. Sophomore Class SOPHOMORE, as any g know. literally means wi there are both the sophos od Greek student ' 2 fool. Dndoubte and the moras in Class of 1944, but a look at the record shows that the wise far outnumber the foolish. After spending the first year at Wake Forest in acclimation, the Class of 1944 settled down to the serious task of distinguishing itself. A few among the many now distinguished are Sam Behrends, Bynum Shaw and Burnette Harvey in debates; Paid Bell. Rudd Friday and Everett Jones in publications; John Cochran, Andy Karmazin and John Perry in football; and Jim Dowtin, .foe Hinerman and Hay Koteski in basketball. And the sophos did not confine itself to studies of geometry, astronomy, or the history of music, because the sophomores proved that they could use wisdom in Other realms. In the fall they showed their g I Wake Forest spirit and their brotherly spirit in pitching with the newcomers, the freshmen, one of the best dances of the season. And Sophos shone when they helped the frosli to fee] at home on the new campus. Only the morns came out when they felt their superiority by haul- ing the dazed men to rat court or selling them postollice passes. Moras men were few. Next year, most assuredly, moras can be dropped in name anil in spirit, for members of the sophomore class will be ■ step nearer their dipl oma, receivers of which are all and always the great wise. mHHHHHI SOPHOMORES 42 Alderman, Allison M. Arendt, Edward Theodore Austin. Irving ' Douglas Ayers, James Hope Bagwell, El wood Wiley Bain, C. D., Jr. Barbour, Charles Thomas Barrows, Robert Knight Beard, Alfred Howard Beavers, John Royall Beck, Gilmer Johnson Beddow, William Morgan Behm, William Lewis, Jr. Behrends, Samuel, Jr. Bell, Paul Buckner Biggs, Isley Murchison Biles. Ervin Wiley Billings, Gilbert M., Jr. Bingham, William Louis Bishop, Edgar Harry Bishop, Frederick Edwin Boyette, Edward Gerods Brannon, Oriee Edison Brantley, William Cain Braswell, Charles Worth Bridger, Robert L. Bridges, Joseph Cleophas Broughton, Joseph Melville, Jr Canady, Jack Franklin Capps, Burnie Robert Carroll, Mary Margaret Cashwell, Walter James, Jr. SOPHOMORE S ' 42 Cherry, Morris Lynwood Ciccarelli, Jack Pete Clarke. Lawrence Clyde, III Cole Charles Pegram Cole, Gene Porter C ' „lr. Nathan. Jr. Collins, Thomas Roy Cook, James Bryan, Jr Cooper, Margaret Catherine Copple, Lee Biggerstaff Craig. Ed Myles Craig, William Kenneth Creech, William Herbert, Jr. Daniels. Harry Douglas Davis. Barry Spilman Davis. John Dixon Davis, Raborn L, DeBerry, Lemuel Early Dixon, Kenneth Pollock Dixon, Wendell Robbins Dowdy, Clyde Downing. Frank Dowtin, James Morgan Dozier, James Hoyt Drake. John William. Jr Earley, Arthur E. Ellis, James Jasper Evans, Joe S. hales. Alton Russell Fisher, Stuart I ' lammia. Dominick Fleming. Thomas Smith tt ft First row: Forde, Elbert Fortune. Robert Jones Fowler, Jobn Alvis Friday, Rudd Rowan Fuquay, Cecil Adair Futrelle, Dean Rae Second row: Gallimore, Richard H. Garrison, Charles Manly Gibson, John William Gilbert, William Bryant Griffin, Thomas Ray Hamrick, Ladd Watts, Jr. Third row : Harris. Walter Frazer Harris, Ralph Hartsfield, Marshall B. Harvey, Wallace Watson Harvey, William Burnette Hatcher, James M. Fourth row: Healy, William Herbert Herring, Harold Carey Hester, Worth Hutchinson Highfill, William Lawrence Hinerman, Joseph Walker Hinson. William Pemberton Fifth roxe: Hipps, Robert Owen Hoggard, Ferris Murtagh, Jr. Holland, Paul Robert Holloman, William Daniel, Jr. Hollowell, Bernard Benjamin Hord, David Fletcher, Jr. v SOPHOMORES ' 42 First row: Horton. C iill i:iiii King In v. Robert Blair Jackson, David Stone Jeffress, William Jethro Johnson, William Harrell Jones, Charles Irving Second row: Jones, Elizabeth Anne Jones, Elmer John J :s, Everett Earl ■ loins. John 1).. Jr. Jones, Robert Edwin. Jr. .love.-. John Robert Third row: Justice, James I ' oy. .Ir. Karmazin, Andrew George Kaufman, William 1. Kearns, Paid Rutherford King. Hubert Tyree Kinl.iw, John Carlyle Fourth row: Koteski, Raymond Albert Lanier, John Thomas Lasater, Roberts Council Lennon, Samuel Judson Lewis. William Herman Liles, Charles Vander Fifth row: Little. William Jack Lynch. Ney Alexander McGougan, Frank Duncan Mclntyre, Douglas C. McKaughan, William Walter McManus, Lawrence Edwin SOPHOMORES ' 42 . -,-.-■-.,... ■ SOPHOMORES 42 Marcowitz, Dayid L. Marks, Charles Hardawa Martin, Howard Blue Martin, Santford, Jr. Mason, Roscoe Edward Massey, Samuel Herbert, Jr. Meares, Jack Miles, Randolph Marshall Miller, Horace William Mills, Clifton Edwards Mills, Danny Raymond Moody, David Marion Moore, Joseph Melvin Morris, Marshall Glenn, Jr. Moss, Bertram Sidney Murray, John Walter Musselman, Frank Butts Nelson, Rollin V., Jr. Nesteruk, Michael Nortbington, Harvey Stith, Jr. Nye, Dewev Franklin Oatneld, John Olive, Halbert Briggs Owen, Charles George Padgett, William Glenn Palman, Frank Lawrence Parker, Charles Council Parker, Clifton G. Pearce, Jakie Pegram, David Eugene Perkins, Darrell Davis Perry, Benny Laster SOPHOMORES ' 42 H Perry, John Wesley Phillips. William Berryma: Pittman, J. Graham Poole. Clarence Franklii Powell, Bert Alexander Powell. Billy Payne Price. William Henry Rarasaur. Hugh Archibald Redfearn, Ruins .Toe Reed, Durward Felton Reeves. .lames Devaughn Richardson, Emmett Wesley, Ji Ripple, Charles Da Rivenbark, Howard Le Roberts, John Brantor Rooker, John Paul Howies. James R. Rowles, Paul Melvin Russell, Thomas Solon Saunders. Harold Oscal Scarborough. William Hall Searight, David Bogart Shaw. Hvmnn Gillette Slawter, Ben Lee Smidt, John Wil lard Snell, Charlie. Jr. Sparrow. Billy Braxton Stallings, Samuel Henry, Jr Stansbury, Alan Painter Starnes, William Reese Strickland. Frederick Bennett Stubbs, James Marion First row: Suggs, Alvin Sweel, Alexander Teague, George Hubert Thomas, Ned Timberlake, Frank J. Tobey, George Whit Second row: Townsend, Gordon L. Townsend, Harold Lee, Jr. Vinson, James Thomas, Jr. Walker, Malcolm Forrest Walker, William Edward Wallace, Gerald Carter Third row: Warlick, Robert Bruce Waters, Charles Edward Weston, Clement Hunter Whitaker, Bruce E. White, Edward Lee White, Paul Barber Fourth row: Whitener, Clyde Winfred WhiteseL, James Warren Whitfield, Jolm Stevens Whitney, Merle C. Jr. Wilkerson, James Otis Williams, Moke Wayne, Jr. Fifth row: Williamson, Edward Lorenza Woodward, Walter Frederick Wyche, Cyril J. Yeattes, John Frank, Jr. Young, Richard Knox M ' 1%. SOPHOMORES 42 R9 ' m Htm ' ataai .a ' . ' aat .da Squinting Joe Greer, ni.it. Throughout the year separately A COLLEGE is made of classes, and classes of individuals. All the classes and all the in- dividuals work together as a unit when cooperation is needed. Each part is directly responsible for and dependent on the other, for without one the others would lie of little worth. At the outset of the school year the freshmen start through the metamorphoses which change a mass of greenhorns into individual class leaders. Tiny hold elections, are pledged, feel their strength, and begin to soar on their newfound wings of freedom from home tics. They uphold the traditions of attending chapel, speaking to everyone, writing English themes, and lounging in the soda shop. Their self-styled superiors, the sophomores, have already been initiated to all the little formalities so sacred to the heart of all. They spend their time toiling over organic, English literature, and in- b . - 4 - , - ' - . . „ £3 all classes worked and together troductory psychology — all the chores con- nected with the honor of sophomoreship. And the juniors, the petty lords of the campus, give their dances, worry over majors and minors, make their trips to girls ' schools far and near, and elect their men for next year. It is the juniors who hope for ODK, study for Phi Beta Kappa, and are most obvious in showing off their learning. While the other classes concern them- selves with various and sundry activities, the seniors sit looking forward to the days when they will be cloaked in caps and gowns. They stand in the shadows and watch their antics of the past three years mirrored in the undergraduates. They mark time as they wait for the final day, count quality points, polish off dangling credits, hold offices, attend class functions, and guide the newcomers with a grace ac- quired after four years of learning. Four classes work separately, but to- gether. They all carry on. Wake Forest goes technical, Top to bottom : Bridger peers through mike; Byers, Nowell, Trivette work chemically; Instructors Allen and Leatherwood teach biology; Lomax, Boyer, Smith draw mechanically. Below: Ferguson makes compounds of elements. ■ Ed Hohgood, Tire President; Bob Pope, Treasurer; Paul Baker, President; Hal Pittman, Secretary. JUNIOR CLASS JUNIOR classes have always had much to say ill the student affairs of Wake Forest College, but the Class of 1943 lias probably had more to say than all other junior classes put together — simply because this year ' s junior class is likely the writingest class in college history. Without juniors to brighten the hopes for the preservation of college history, the presentation of the weekly news, or the provisi if literary efforts, The Howler, Old (. ' „ , ami Iliad,, and The Student would have suffered. It was tin- juniors who were the wheclhorscs of publications, easing the worries of campus editors as for capable men on whom to reply. They did the dirty work, getting information and names and even cleaning offices. But they also did the creative work. They wrote newspaper columns, assembled yearbook data and wrote poems and stories. Representing publications are Donald Britt, Hob Gal- limore. Neil Morgan, Bill l ' rimni. Herbert Thompson, I). E. Ward, and Ed Wilson. ' I ' liese men spend much of their time in recording the exploits of their classmates — the debating of C. C. Hope, the religious activities of John .McMillan, student government work of Paul Baker and Frank Kincheloe, the football playing of Jim Copley. Hay Manicri. Tony Kiihino and Bill Starford, the basketball of Everett Berger and George Witch, and the pin- pong of John Conley. irs write tin Thi ike it. n Hi n JUNIOR CLASS ■ Abbitt, Russell D., Wilson Acree, Jack, Mullins, S. C. Adams, N., Baltimore, Md. Allen, Chas. H., Brevard Allen, J. W., Kannapolis Anderson, G. M., Whitakers Ashley, J. T., Morrisville Austin, James L., Kelford Baker, Paul T., Cramerton Baldwin, Jack, Greensboro Ball, Larry E., Raleigh Banks, W. R., Trenton Barnes, M. R., Wilmington Bass, B. Girtha, Clinton Batten, S. Carlyle, Micro Bell, F. D., Washington Bergen, E. D., Garrison, Iowa Berger, E., Providence, R. I. Bilbro, Wm. T.j Greenville Blalock, P. B., Burlington Boyer, G. N., Winston-Salem Bridgers, Leo T., Durham Britt, Donald E., Clinton Brooks, R. E., Greensboro ? L JUNIOR CLASS Brunner, P.. Baltimore. Md. Byers, F. M., Jr., Canton Caddei.l, II. M-. Hoffman Caldwell, F... Waynesville Campfield, Helen, Forest Cit Canter, Shelton, Wilkesbori Carpenter, W. T., Lenoir Chapman, P. W., Maid... Cheek, Edward Lee, Graham Chesser, R. W.. Atlantic-, Va. Clark, W. J., Jr., Homestead, Fla. Clecklev, I). J-. Brooklyn. N. Y. Coble, Warren Lee, Oakborc Collins, J. IX, Lumberton Conley, John Joseph, West Hartford. Conn Cooke, Wm, A., Jr., Madison Heights, Va Copley, J. T.. Weston. W. Va. Cox, Virginia Lee, Asheboro Cramer, J. R.. Crewe, Va. Crawford, D. H.. Marion Crisp, James Allen, Bre ard Ci iuiin, Hugh M., Oxford Dale, F. Payne, Kinston Daniel, John C, Maxton JUNIOR CLASS First row. Dillard, Sam Booker, Draper Dosxell, Jack Lindon, Climax Douglass, W., Jr., Chesterfield, S. C. Easley, J. A., Jr., Wake Forest Edwards, A. George, Statesville Third row: Ferguson, John E., Greensboro Floyd, Horace G., Barnesville Forbes, Robt. Gibson, Ahoskie Formy-Duval, T., Jr., Whiteville Friday, Dayid L., Jr., Dallas Second row: Edwards, Joe F., Jr., Enfield Edwards, Opie Gray, Spring Hope Ellis, Haggard Cowen, Nashville Falkinburg, J., Pleasantville, N. J. Farrar, John S., Jr., Gastonia Fourth row: Fronererger, Charles A., Gastonia Futrelle, Jack Wm., Ahoskie Gallimore, R. S.j Hong Kong, China Gibson, Alfred F., Louisburg Gordon, Keith Leander, Bethune a • '  „ ks M mt v, JUNIOR CLASS First row: Greene, Claude I... Robersonville Gross, J. S., Rockville Centre, N. Y, Guest, Edwin M.. Laurinburg Ha s, Myron Guy, Marshallburg Herndon, E. G., Jr., Morrisvilh Third row: Holmes, Fred Bullard, Fayetteville Holt, Robert L., Asheville Hope, Clarence C, Jr., Charlotte Hough, Wm. Amos, New London Hunt, Jack, Lattimore Second row: Hightower, Wm. Douglas, Wadesboro Hill, G. M., New Haven, Conn. HoBGOOD, EdWAIIH, ' I ' lllllllasvilli ' Holding, Josephine, Wake Forest HoLi.iNGswoiirii, L. H., Asheville Fourth row: Hutchinson, Philip M.. Mt. Gilead Iley, Bryce Baxter, Harrisburg Ives, James Henry, Chinquapin Jackson, Bernice Wm., Oxford Jeffreys, Joseph !(.. Raleigh JUNIOR CLASS ■ ■ Jenkins, Wm. PL, Aulander Jennings, James E., Raleigh Johnson, W. G., Saint Pauls Johnston, J., Wake Forest Jones, Thos. Lee, Winton Jones, Tommie L.. Spray Kincheloe, F. S., Charlotte King, O., Jr., Wilmington Kocher, M. L., Scranton, Pa. Kornegay, R., Seven Springs Lahser, C. I., Greensboro Lamm, H., Spring Hope Lane, J. Graham, Pinetops Lee, Earl David, Greensboro Lee, J. M., Newburgh, N. Y. Lide, Rohert Wilson, Hwanghsien, China Life, G. Fred, Asheville Little, Thurston, Freeland Livermon, L., Jr., Aboskie Logan, Chas. Otis, Shelby Long, James E., Chesterfield Long, Mrs. J. M., Severn Lubchenko, L., Harrisburg McMillan, John J., Richmond, Va. JUNIOR CLASS Maniehi, R. E., Hopewell, Va. Martin, D. C. II. Asheville Maxwell, Jack Ernest, Washington, D. C. Mitchell, C. Roanoke. Va. Mitchell, Dot, Wake Forest Moore, Anna Jclie, Bethel Morgan, N. I?.. Wake Forest Morris, J., Elizabeth City Move. O. E., Walstonluirii Newton, L. J.. Dunn NOWELL, If. V... Wake Foi OvERBY. C. War. W. Vl Padgett, Joe Carl, Hayesvilh Parrot, II.. Jr., Hendersoi Paschal, B. I.., Siler Citj Pate, M. B., Fayettevilh Patterson, (). F.. Jr., Sanfon Patton, B. J.. Morganton Peace, W. K.. Thomasvil] Pittman, I). C, Fairinon Pittman, Hal W.j Fairmont Pope, Robt. Clyde, Enfield Preston, P. W., Thomasville Prevette, Isaac C. Jr., Pontiac, Mich. HHV JUNIOR CLASS rust roxc: Primh, William Berry, Rome, Ga. Proctor, Richard C, Oxford Pruette, R. S., Jr., Wadesboro Pruett, John Van Buren, Wilson Ray, Wyche Hillman, Goldsboro Third row: Saleeby, Richard G., Wilson Sally, Auhrey Boddie, Durham Savas, Connie Peter, Oswego, N. Y. Sawyer, P. G., Jr., Elizabeth City Seago, Frances Doris, Lilesville Second rorv : Reece, Errol Kemp, Elkin Reece, Wm. Eranklin, Jr., Elkin Riggs, Ahner F.j Elizabeth City Rose, James Lee, Newton Grove Rubino, A. E., Elizabeth, Pa. Fourth ro ' w: Sherrill, Frank H., Jr., Asheville Sherrill, Henry F., Wake Forest Skaggs, Romulus, Thomasville Slaughter, R., Wilmington, Del. Smith, Joe P., Winston-Salem JUNIOR CLASS First row: Star] , William I ' ... Grafton, W. Vs Stevens, Forrest Leon, Broadway Stone, Amos II.. New York, N. V. Summerlin, M. ).. Mount Olive Sylvester, M. Jean, Jr., Lynbrook, X. Y. Third row: Todd, Frank Lesesne, Hendersonville Trivette, I ' . DeWitt, Mooresville Trudell, Raoul S.. Beckley, W. Va. Turner, .1. li. .In.. Griffin, Ga. Turner, James E., Landrum, S. C. Second row: Thomas. James V.. Florence, S. C. Thompson, Herbert I... Chadbourn Tillotson, Rex 1 ' .. Pilot Mountain Timhei.i.akk. Holt. V., Durham Tobey, M. W.. Jr., Salem, Va. Fourth row: Tyner, Hugh Edward, Leaksville Veitch, Geo., New Kensington, Pa. Walker, I). C, Jr., Wake Forest Walker, .John Samuel, Brevard Walker, Luther II.. Raleigh ' - i m ■ . So - • ■ • JUNIOR CLASS it !$ ■n Walters, H.. Baltimore, Md. Ward, D. E., Jr., Durham Ward, Wh. Jarvis, Hertford Way, J. H., Waynesville Webb, Melvin W., Bakersville Webb, Wii. Ralph, Ellerbe Wells, Harold W., Teaehey West, John C, Jr., Dunn West, Wm. F., Jr., Roxboro White, A. G., Henderson Whitmire, J. C, Asheville Willett, J., Erwin, Tenn. Williams, E. J., Jr., Monroe Williams, L. L., Canton Willis, W. D., Black Mtn. Wilson, E. G.. Leaksville Wilson, Robert B., Clinton Windes, Wm. S., Raleigh Wishon, J. H.. Lewisville Yocom, Dean, Birmingham, Mich. YoUNGBLOOD, DwiGHT B., Smithfield Zakim, F., Hendersonville 91 Elizabeth B irds ami chats with Fi CO-EDS INVADE CAMPUS T! UIE tode ore, pre-med student, discusses the orbicularis oris muscle. ord Invasion could have been used conveniently erilie the general world situation in 194] and so far in HI Hi. but here in Wake Forest, the consensus was that never would it be possible for the term to be employed in connection with any situation on the campus or in the town. But everybody lias been wrong. At the beginning of last year women began infiltration. and although they did not literally overflow the build- ings and the grounds, the mere fact that there were more than half a dozen townswoinc ade the whole situation appear like a swarm, buzzing over the hereto- fore calm bachelory that was Wake Forest. Never be- fore had a Deacon been compelled by any qualms of conscience to wear a necktie or shave more than once a week, except when chapel brought some attraction which drew him in, or there was a dance or women were coming. And there you have it! Women! They were the underly- ing cause of most of the particularities of dress and the tension in speech. Ami then the fateful day in January— not the fatal day. because most Wake Forest men. once they were orientated to the new circumstances, reconsidered and were glad when the trustees officially declared that co-eds could enter without special permission. When the news began to sweep over the campus, everybody decided that that indeed was a momentous day. There was opposition at first — antagonism toward this new idea, this radical idea that would change Wake Forest forever. But then the real motive was revealed. Without the admission of women, there might not even be a Wake Forest in a few years — with the enormous exodus of men to the armed forces. The students were reconciled. Gradually the invaders subdued the van- quished. There was not ammunition or guns or machine-gun nests, but the whole affair calmed down to a certain degree of naturalness. The Wake Forest co-ed became a term. Somebody changed the highway marker to For men and women. Plans were made to renovate Bost- wick Hall for the newcomers. And in the minds of many the 108-year-old Wake Forest College became the cosmopolitan University of Wake Forest. Right, top: Champ J. Conley teaches Betli Perry. Bottom: Helen Crutchfield, Don Britt converse. m Above: Co-ed Perry Americanizes Ayers of China. Be- Above: Lib Jones is Wake Forest ' s one Jane Arde low: bmihng Jo Holding dines with Amos Stone. Below: On class with Penny Clark, economics majo BASKETBALL WHEN Coach Murray Greason called his basketball candidates together for their first practice of the season, he was confronted with the problem which every coach has to deal with— that of depending upon untried sopho- mores. The Deacon coach found only Co-captains Jim Bonds and Herb CI in, and Everett Berger back from his 1941 basketball tram. With these three men Coach Greason teamed George Veitch and Ray Koteski, two of his best sophomores. These five men, with able support from Joe Hinerman, another sophomore, Chuck Fineberg, and Jim Dowtin, bore the brunt of the twenty-two-game schedule which the Deacons undertook, winning thirteen conference games and losing five. Their total season record stood at fifteen won and seven lost This team started off the season with two one-sided losses to Loyola and George Washington before the Christmas holidays began, came back to whip George Washington in their second meeting, ran up an eight game winning streak, finished third in the Southern Conference race, and pushed the Duke Bine Devils to the limit before losing in the semi-final game in the Southern Conference Basketball Tournament. Prospects looked indeed dark for the Deacons as the season began. Herb (line, aee center and one id ' tin- main scoring threats, suffered a shoulder injury which threatened to end his basketball career. Without their star center the Deacons lost their opener to the McCrary Eagles. 50-41, despite George Veitch ' s twenty-two points. A tri] rth to the nation ' s capital proved disastrous lor the Demon First row: -Mae Hatcher, Joe Hinerman, Herb ( ' line, Ray K..t.ski. George Veitch. Second row: Everett Berger, Chuck Fineberg, Jim Bonds, Carlton Mitchell, Jim Dowtl Deacons. They found a Loyola team too much for them, 40-26°, and couldn ' t cope with Captain Matt Zunic and his George Washington team, who walked away with a 52-27 victory. The stage was set for the return game with George Washington in Gore Gymnasium. The Deacons finally began to function like the smooth- working ball club they were and walked off the court winners by a 39-36 score. Two out of the next three games found the Deacons losing and losing badly. The Tar Heels of North Carolina found the Wake Forest team rather easy going in Woollen Gymnasium, put on the pressure in the last half and came out with a crushing 51-30 win. The Clemson Tigers invaded Deacontown next, and the Deacons found them little trouble, winning 58-40. Cline had seventeen points and Bonds eleven to lead the Deacs. But the Duke Blue Devils simply walked away with the ball game after the halftime rest with their famed sophomores doing most of the damage. The score was 60-39. Jri. ar i Front roxv : Alden Kuhlthau, manager; Jim Dowtin, Herb Cline, Jim Bonds, Joe Hinerman. Back row: Ray Koteski, Everett Berger, Mack Hatcher, George Veitch, Chuck Fineberg. Top left: Three Colonials overwhelm a Deacon player. Top right: Cline steals the ball from Gustafson of George Washington. Bottom left: Bonds climbs upon a State player for a push shot. Bottom right: Berger and Veitch turn back after a Deacon shot proves good. Deacons took over. Berger sank one and Cline followed up with another to cut the margin to one point. Then Berger intercepted a State pass, passed to Vei teh, who flipped to Bonds. Jim laid up a short shot with one minute to play to give the Deacons a 14-43 victory. Followed two games with the cadets of the Citadel and one with the Gamecocks of South Carolina. The cadets went The,, the Demon Deacons got set for the State forward, sank three long shots in a row midway in invasion of Carolina ' s White Bantams. And the second half to give the Terrors a :i7-. ' Sl lead as the eloek the Tar Heels ran into a zone defense which showed five minutes to go. Here Joe Hinerman entered they couldn ' t penetrate. Only Boh Hose was the hall game. He sank a couple of foul shots after Cline able to slip in that defense occasionally. had tossed in a field goal to cut the margin down to 1,1-38. .Meanwhile .Mm Bonds was ringing up ten Mock of State was good with another long, hut here the points and ( ' line nine to pile up a final 36-20 score and give the Tar Heels their worst de- feat of the season. Encouraged by this victory, the- Deacons proceeded to run up an eight-game winning streak which included two victories each over Virginia Military Institute and the Citadel and one each over N. C. State. Washington and Lee and South Carolina. It was against V.M.I, that Everett Lefty Berger had his two last nights. In the first meeting of the teams in (.ore Gymnasium Berger sank eight Held goals and one foul shot for seventeen points to lead the Deacons to a 1,4-43 win. In the se 1 .name against the Cadets he found the hoop for twenty-three points to pace the scoring again as the hoys in -old and black romped oil with a (if-:if victory. In the l,.,ll game with N. C. State every- thing favored the Red Terrors. The Deacs had just returned from a two day trip into Virginia and were find. They had their win- ning streak to preserve. From the opening whistle it was apparent that the Deacons were experiencing ■ of their off nights. They just couldn ' t seem to hit. And Mock. down twice, 64-40 and 60-51, and the Deacons had to come from behind to nip the Game- cocks, 40-38. With this eight-game winning streak the Deacons were ready to meet the mighty Blue Devils of Duke University, themselves boasting a string of ten straight the Demon Deacons took opening minutes of the In that garni the lead in tl ball game and proceeded to cling to it. Though the Blue Devils managed to tie the ball game up twice in the second half, the Deacons held onto the lead until with three minutes to go Rothbaum of Duke tossed in a field goal and foul shot to put the Devils ahead for the first time, 53-51. And the fresh Duke substitutes ran up a final score of 58-51 on the tired Deacons. The Wake Forest team journeyed over to Raleigh for its second meeting with the Wolfpack. But the Red Terrors simply came back after the half time rest to outplay the Deacons and come away with a close 44-38 win. Three games with teams from the Palmetto State concluded the Deacons ' schedule. On a trip south Clemson was defeated 52-37 as Cline rang up eighteen points. The Purple Hurricane of Furman University went down 43-29, and the Gamecocks of South Carolina found that the Deacons were able to overcome an early lead and win 55-44. With this splendid record the Deacons were rated an outside chance to win the Southern Conference Tournament. But the eco ck players look on helplessly as Cline hook shot. akes good on drawings placed the Deacs against Carolina in a first round game and against Duke in the second round. Again the Deacons used the zone defense to subdue the Tar Heels. They tried the same defense against the Blue Devils the next night, but another closing spurt enabled the Blue Devils to win and go on to take the championship. While Cline, Bonds and Berger seemed to share a major portion of the scoring for the Deacons, George Veitch and Ray Koteski were two players who are not counted on their scoring basis. As far as ball handling and defense work went, they ranked tops. Herb Cline was honored by being selected on the Southern Conference All-Tournament team. ball brings Bonds, Berger and Veitch the run. Ray Koteskfs shot eludes a desperate block by George Wasliington man. FRESHMAN BASKETBALL W, ' AKE FOR- Carolina was able to win both of its games from the EST ' s fresh- Bain- Deacons. man basketball (ram had an exceptionally good record Members of the team which may prove to be varsity of eleven wins and only four losses against some of the materia] next year include Lyles, Kirk. Bakalis Sapp best t.ams in the -tat,-. Playing each team twice, with Gentry, Cline, Dougherty, McCollum and Clark the exception of Raleigh and Durham lii«li schools, only Wake Forest freshmen exhibit the spirit which carried them to victories over such outstand- ing teams as State and Duke. First row: da, try. Batchelor, Spruit!, Stroud, Beam, Kirk, Bakalis. Second row: Hayes, Manager; Cline, Dougherty, Clark, Lyles, Co-t McCollum, Silberfein, Manager. aptain; Nrsl.it, Prevett • - ■. - «, INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL THIS year ' s intramural basketball season saw a new power come to tbe front in the quintet representing Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. From their first game in which they defeated Pi Kappa Alpha 31-19, it was evident that tin- Lambda Chi ' s were the team to watch. In Bill Stafford, Lefty Vivian, Jim Copley, and George Ecker they boasted four of the top-notch players in the league, and ran up five straight victories. The two top teams of last year — Kappa Sigma and Sigma Phi Epsilon — stayed in the running for the championship, but found the Lambda Chi ' s too much for them. The Kappa Sigmas, champions last year, fell before Lambda Chi, 24-23, when Starford knocked in a rebound in the last Green of the Gas House t thirteen seconds of the game for tbe margin of victory. The SPE ' s had started a four-game winning streak and seemed on their way to the title until they met the Lambda Chi team. In this game Vivian and Ecker accounted for twenty-six of their team ' s thirty-nine points to offset the twelve points scored by Duncavage and assure victory. While these two teams were battling for the lead, Alpha Kappa Pi came back after their early season loss to the SPE ' s, 30-18, and won five consecutive games, including victories over Sigma Pi. Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Gamma Eta Gamma and Delta Sigma. Bill Beaver, Parker, Bishop and Kuhlthau were the main leaders in this winning streak. But for the second successive year a non-fraternity team was rated the number one team on the campus before the annual tournament began. Ace Harris, Bob Brooks, J. V. Pruitt and Melvin Jones formed the nucleus of the Beach Combers, which proved to be the best of the non-fraternity league when it de- feated Max Crowder and Charlie Giles ' Cardinals, the foremost contender, 36-32, in two overtime periods. Carlton Mitchell proved to be the standout for his Prophets, scoring twenty points to enable his team to hand the Beach Combers their only defeat of the year. Cole and Camp led the Redskins, while the Abbots, Phi Society, Esquire Club, Old Hotel, and the Gas House proved to be tough opponents. Top: Anxious faces await the ball on a foul shot. Bottom: Another two-hand shot misses the blackboard. PUBLICATIONS BOARD AT Wake Forest there are six publications: the Wake Forest Alumni News, the Student Di- rectory, the Beacon Bran,,,, Old Gold and Black, The Student, and The Howler. The first three of these . ' in- in a class by themselves. In a sense they are somewhat private, being operated by small, efficient staffs composed of nun fr om special tic-Ids of campus activities. The Alumni News is edited by Prof. J. L. Memory, Jr., with the assistance of bis own News Hunan .statV. The Student Directory was this year in the hands of The Student editor Neil Morgan. The Dcacn Beacon is the newspaper of the local Baptist Student Union, co-edited in 1941-42 by Ernest Glass and Robert Forbes. The last three, the most prominent student pub- lications, are put out by the student body, or rather by their elected representatives. The actual power of determining who shall be editors and business man- agers of the newspaper, the magazine, and the year- hook is invested in the hands of twenty men. who meet under the nam,- of the Publications Board. Composing one-fourth of the Hoard are five mem- bers of the faculty: Dr. E. E. Folk, head adviser to all publications, with Dr. II. B. Jones on The Student and Dr. A. C. Eeid on The Howler; Mr. E. B. Earnshaw, business adviser to the publications; and Prof. J. L. Memory. Jr., head of the News Bureau. Six of the Hoard are the three incumbent editors and the three incumhent husiness managers. Elliott Galloway, president of the student body, has a place by virtue of his office. The remaining eight members are class representatives, two from the senior class, two juniors, two sophomores, one freshman, and one man from the law school. Serving as president this year was Hilly l ' rimni. Old (. '  and Black sports editor. First raw: Jim Bonds, Hill Avers, I). E. Ward, Hu ld Friday, Weldon Hull,, well. Second row: Lovlck Miller, Royal Jennings, Don Bradsher, Judson Creech, Bob Waters. Third row: Billy Primm, Johnny Walker, Neil Morgan, Gene Cole, Elliott Galloway. Capstone of every honorary fraternity year is banquet held for new initiates. HONORARY FRATERNITIES AT some time or another in his college career, every student is called upon to write a theme or an essay on Why I Came to Wake Forest. After struggling with his inner thoughts for a while, he comes forth with certain basic conclusions about his reasons for enrolling in college. Some boys find that they came for a good time, with plenty of week- end dates and dances ; others admit to themselves that their excuse for seeking higher education was to play football or basketball; still others think back and realize that what they wanted was political power as a B.M.O.C. But there is always one group who conclude simply that they came to learn. For such men were honorary fraternities created; of such men are honorary fraternities composed. These are the men whose names and faces you see on the following pages. PHI BETA KAPPA Cullegio EDWIN ' RUDY ANDREWS PAUL HUBERT CHEEK CARL EVERETT COMPTON ADOLPHUS WILLIAM DUNN MURRAY LANE GOODWIN HARRY CRAMER HAND aOY ALLEN HARE ROBERT LANSING HICKS KEITH WARREN JAMES AI.DKN ROBERT KUHLTHAU GLENN HOUSTON MILLER WILLIAM ALLAN POWELL WARREN If. PRITCHARD JAMES OTIS PRUDEN MACK FRED SCOTT. JR. WILLIAM SAMUEL TARLETON OWEN NEWBILL WILLIAMSON OLIN TRIVETTE BINKLEY DALMA ADOLPH BROWN CRONJE B. EARP EDGAR ESTES FOLK .1. HENDREN GORRELL ultate henry broadus jones thurman d. kitchin george washington paschal Hubert McNeill poteat albert clayton reid CARLTON PR INCH WEST CARLTON P. WEST President OLIN T. BINKLEY Vice President EDGAR E. FOLK Secretary-Treasurer OMICRON DELTA KAPPA RALPH LEWIS ALEXANDER CECIL CARY ALLEN- THOMAS WILLIAM AYERS JAMES DONALD BRADSHER RALPH HAROLD BRUMET SEAVY A. W. CARROLL JUDSON YATES CREECH JOHN C. FLETCHER, JR. JOHN ELLIOTT GALLOWAY DOCTOR itres in Collegio ROBERT AARON GOLDBERG DAWYER DINCOFF GROSS FRANK MARIMON HESTER PETER HORCHAK JOHN JOHNSON McMILLAN WILLIAM BERRY PRIMM WARREN H. PRITCHARD JOHN EVERETT TATE, JR. ARTHUR CHESTER VIVIAN ERNEST WARD, JR. ALFRED A. DOWTIN EDGAR ESTES FOLK MAX LILES GRIFFIN NEVILL ISBELL THURMAN D. KITCHIN Fratres in Facilitate WAYNE OATES HUBERT McNEILL POTEAT LEONARD OWENS REA ZON ROBINSON DALE FISHER STANSBURY HENRY SMITH STROUPE OFFICERS RALPH H. BRUMET President WAYNE OATES Facility Secretary Issuing forth from the windows the doors and junior to get a hid. unless he happens to lie the tin cracks in the Lea Laboratory almost every one outstanding sophomore chosen during the afternoon is a mixture of the most unbelievable year. There is also another even higher honor odors ever conceived by the brain of man. In for second-year men. the Freshman Chemistry fact, no ordinary person could ever hope to as- Cup. given to the man who makes the highest semble enough originality to concoct such a eon- average in first-year chemistry in his class. This glomeration of smells, running the whole range of vear, it was I.add Hamrick. stenches from the most putrid to the still more Once every two years (.annua Sigma Epsilon putrid. packs u| : of its But these men are f A 1V T TV T A CTY A f A members and sends no ordinary men. In Vj llUlVlri 1 VJf !▼! V him to the fraternity ' s most eases, they are T TIOTT v T national convention. Wake Forest ' s ace Hil SI I A ) 1 This vear it was an chemistry s t u il e n t s extra privilege to go. and most likely they are members of Gamma Sigma For the meet was at Gainesville, Georj Epsilon. For Gamma Sigma Epsilc .posed of Collet men with abilities such as these. Before a student otherwi ml the attraetioTis then-, chemical were enough to draw even the i can he asked to join this honorary chemical fra- ternity, he must have proved to the satisfaction of everyone concerned that he is adept at creating new solutions and odors, handling all sizes and shapes of test tubes, and running off any given experiment in chemistry handbooks. And then in addition he must he at least a strictly scholarly fellow. Recorder Robert Nowell. was the delegate, found everything to his liking. This honorary organization for students of the science of chemistry occupies a high place mi the campus among groups of its kind. When its mem- bers get together, there is certainly no dearth of corking good lab adventures to tell about. First row: Fred Holmes. P.ill II,. I. leu, Allen I.e.-, .Tack Hunt. Second row: Edward Cheek, Murray ii Iv A. H. Pittman, Paul (lick. Third row: A. V. Dunn, Holicrt Nowell, Allen Powell, Ald.n Kiililll.au. Of the one hundred and thirty million people in the United States, there are about three million residing in North Carolina. Of these three million, there are about one thousand who are now at school at Wake Forest. Of these thousand students about one-tenth are preparing for the ministry. From these one hundred, eight were chosen this year to be members of Delta Kappa Alpha, Wake Forest ' s honorary ministerial fraternity. All this gives some idea of the exclusive- ness of the organiza- tion. And a mere glance at the roster of the group is further evidence of the high quality of the men who compose it. Five of the members were among the fifteen on the campus who were taken into Phi Beta Kappa this year: Ed Andrews, Lansing Hicks, Carl Compton, Otis Pruden, and Fred Scott. A sixth, Wayne Oates, now instructor in psychology, was in Golden Bough, honorary scholastic fraternity DELTA KAPPA ALPHA which preceded Phi Beta Kappa. Dawyer Dincoff Gross, familiarly known as Jack, was state presi- dent of the B.S.U. last year. Sole junior in Delta Kappa Alpha is Fred Lipe, whose proficiency as a radio ham is well known to all Old Gold and Black readers. Twice a month these eight men get their Bibles and Baptist hymnals and Sunday school quarterlies and assemble for a fraternity meeting. The group ' s aims are to promote the fellowship a n d spiritual life of the members and to elevate their ideals and scholarship, to create an increased interest in — and an understanding of — their problems, and to give opportunity for con- sideration of the questions confronting the ministry of today. Living up to these ideals, as noble a set of prin- ciples as any organization ever undertook for it- self, is a great goal for a bunch of eight men. 13 HlGr S1 . Dunn, President; M. I). Bell, L. W. Ham :heloe, A. H. Pittman, ake, S. 11. Dillard, li B. Pate, Jr., C. L. Bridger, .1. 1). Bradsher, E. H. Caldwell, G. X. Boyer, •ick, .Jr.. W. II. Price, W. P. Hinson, M. J. Sylvester, H. I.. Moore. Third J. K. Williford, Edward Chow, .1. S. Walker, M. V. Webb. Fourth row; C. Pope, F. K. Holmes, I). E. Ward, P. T. Baker. L ' p in Winston-Salem is the newly established for the type of work undertaken by the fraternity. Wake Forest medical school. Already scores of Down through the years the society lias con- former students here are hard at work up there tinned in the same tenor in which it started. learning how to become physicians of not — how Progress lias been steadily made, naturally, but to take the pulse count of an attractive brunette, the same principles upon which the group was how to diagnose a case of German measles, how to founded remain intact. Now the members meet dissect femurs and phalanges and patellas. twice a nth lor discussions of medical questions Here at Wake Forest there are scores more of and recent progress in the field of medical science students with illusions of grandeur, with dreams and for lectures by outstanding doctors and of someday enrolling professors. All sorts of in- come or another similar in- up at these bi-weekly stitution for these Hippocratic courses. These meetings. For instance there may be a current ambitious chaps arc known as pre-med students. movie on the home life of paramecium or the meta- file best of this group of budding doctors belong morphosis of a bachelor amoeba, or then again to a fraternity which goes under the name of the special feature of the program may be an ad- Gamma Nu Iota. The club was first started hack dress by a visiting botanist on the magnolia in 1937 to bring together worthy pre-medical stu- grandiflora or the quercus alba on the Wake Forest dents. Membership was restricted to those campus. Occasionally, there may even be a panel who could meet the specified qualifications of discussion of such a lively topic as the place of the character and scholarship and general enthusiasm spirogyra in twentieth century plant life. t ;:Z GAMMA NU IOTA JLSL - K j First row: Ralph Brumct. William Windes , Bedford Black, Bob Goldb Harvey, Paul Bell, C. C. Hope, Sam Behre nds, Bvnum Shaw. Third r Williams, J. D. Davis, Melville Broughto n, Jr. Carroll. Second ma: Burnette e Watkins, Phil Highfill, Larry The local chapter of Pi Kappa Delta was estab- lished in 1926. The national organization had existed for some years before that. But the heritage on which the fraternity rests extends far back into the pages of history. If there had been such a group in ancient times, it would certainly have in- cluded in its membership such forensic giants as the Greek Demosthenes and the Roman Cicero. One could well visualize what a meeting in those days would have been. The old agora and forum would have resounded from one end to the other with the storm of the latest philippic against Philip and Alexander of Macedonia or with the sudden revelation of a recent plot of that arch-conspirator. Catiline. Orators back in those days really had fire and blood in their eyes when they got up to speak ; they could pack a terrific punch. And the results they got stood as living proof of their abilities. Not as far as one might think from these speak- PI KAPPA DELTA ers are the present debaters and orators of Wake Forest. They still can deliver fiery, bloody speeches, and they still get their results, although perhaps the purposes of their declaiming are less ambitious than those of their predecessors. They don ' t win any wars or convict any fifth-columnists or oust any government men from service. But they manage to give any opponents who get in their way a good fight, and while they may sometimes come out with their own heads bloody, they are always un- bowed. As high as any tradition at Wake Forest is that of its debate squads. Almost since the school was founded, its students have been winning speaking- honors. Today, Pi Kappa Delta, honorary forensic fraternity, embodies in it the ideas and principles of this phase of Wake Forest activities. The select group of men who compose Pi Kappa Delta are in the club because they have demonstrated their skill on the speaker ' s platform. First row: Joe Smith, President; John McMillan, Edward H row: John Conley, Elizabeth Junes, Bob Moore, Hal Pittman, (I Bill Starnes, Jr., Frank Timberlake, Hugh Transou, Ed Wilson. John Oatfield, Sam Behrends, .Jr. Second Pittman. Third row: Rowland I ' ructte, Every other week a selected group of more bril- guage that can be found anywhere at Wake Forest, liant French .students receive a penny postal card A stranger walking mistakenly into one of these with the simple message inscribed thereon: SPA 7:00 Thursday night meetings might well be will meet Thursday night at 7:00. To the nn- thrown back by the stream of foreign epithets informed this might well mean that some Society which are being hurled about the room by the for tin Preservation of Antiquarians is convening, Sigma l ' i Alpha members. After a few moments but to those who have hopefully struggled under of amazed hesitation, he would hastily turn away. the translations handed them by Professeurs Par- ( vinced that he had stumbled on a Pan American cell, Seibert, and Archie lor years with the ambition Confere ■ or a Pound Table discussi in Robert ;:C ;: t: E SIGMA PI ALPHA :: B::::Z this rather brief an- stick a ro u n .1 a nouncement is clear. It refers to the bi-weekly ses- while, he would find that his time would be well siou of Sigma Pi Alpha. Every fall this organiza- spent. The talks, both in French and in English, on tion takes int. its fold about fifteen of the most the country and the people of France, the occasional erudite French students it can lay its hands on. lectures by of the departmental pedagogues, and it is not long before it acquaints them with and the novelty programs with games and other the us,, of such catch phrases as Comment allez- humor would he much to his liking. For those vous? ami • ' Alhz au diable, and with about Sigma Pi Alpha ' s know what they ' re talking about, the most practical knowledge of the French Ian- and they can put it across. For years the Monogram Club lias been the nightmare of all Howler editors. Where to put it in the annual has puzzled many a harried chief of staff. The organization does not rightly fit in the section of clubs, because it is somewhat a fraternity ; yet it is hardly proper in the fraternity division, for it is a club. But here it is, and every Wake Forest student agrees that it is cer- tainly not a misfit anywhere in the yearbook. All fi e 1 d s of athletics are repre- sented on the Mono- MONOGRAM CLUB Digest and Pic, and to scan the daily papers. They have attempted to foster better relations between Wake Forest and other institutions, and sufficient indication of the fact is displayed in the informal get-togethers they have sponsored for members of rival teams, after games here on the campus. Even State College, Deacon arch-rivals, was entertained. And if anybody can find better sportsmanship, Ripley would be exceptionally interested. This year the Monogram Club be- gan a drive for gram Club. The funds to build a club football players rib the basketeers ; track men run house. It lias been unusually uncomfortable to baseball players over the club room; golf and tennis draw the wrath of Dr. Pearson ' s government class, stars sit quietly, except to take an occasional jesting which was irked often when the club room radio pre- swing; team managers cease to manage at meetings. vented them from hearing the professor from the Since Frank McCarthy refounded the Monogram back row. Now the government students conduct Club, the group has gathered to discuss different personally the fund campaign. The Monogrammers games and matches, to read Es quire and Literary don ' t mind; they are good sports. f ) f f l f A I 1 ! | First row: Pat Geer, President; Art Adams, Bill Beddow, Durant Bell, Jim Bonds, Everett Berger, Joe Butterworth. Second row: Warren Casey, Walter Clark, John Cochran, Charles Cole, Jim Copley, Joe Duncavage, George Edwards. Third row: John Fletcher, Elliott Galloway, Carl Givler, Myron Harris, Pete ' Horchak, Johnny Johnston, Buck Jones. Fourth row: John N. Davis, Bill Joe Patton, Frank Kapriva, Ray Manieri, George Oweii, Johnny Perry, Pat Preston, Billy Primm. Fifth row: Bob Reid, Tony Rubino, Bill Starford, Jack Starnes, Jess Tharnish, Arthur Vivian, Johnny Walker, Frank Zakim. Typical of dates attending Mid-Winter Dances was Frances Shackleford. She arrives in Wake Forest for the affair in her Chrysler and is greeted by (|iiiet, hand- s e Roy Truslow, president of the Pan-Hellenic Council. MIDWINTER This is what Frances and l( dance I, .■II lone rhv lln upper Frankie Masters and his genial AUk- Happily, Frances and Roy enter State College ' s gym, before Saturday night ' s formal, to watch Wake Forest ' s basketball game. They leave saddened: the Deacon team lost. DANCES They watch, and this is what they see. A Masters man goes wild the South American and Roy soon join this tired group: Ed Hobgood, Wilma Wall, Frances Manning. Lost somewhere in this huge crowd are Frances and Roy. Approximate eighl hundred people attended Saturdaj night ' s Frances, rl.nl |„ her flimsy, big-flowered dress, arid the debonair Roy were lost hid soon found by the Howler ' s photog- rapher. MID-WINTER DANCES The Pan-Hellenic President and his charming date later join on the end of lliis conga line, writhing through Ra- leigh ' s Memorial Auditorium. m A week after Valentine ' s Day, when girls from everywhere were filled with exhilara- tion over candy and sweet messages, they eame to Wake Forest for Mid-Winters. For two nights and an afternoon the} ' all thrilled over the music of Frankie Masters and his orchestra. Minutes before the midnight curfew on Saturday night Ad Newton appeared on the stage and crowned Miss Betty Bencini the second annual queen of Mid-Winters, as the Bell-Tone music came to a close. m i Queen of Jf id-Winters. SPRING X O thoughts of love the young man ' s fancy turned. And also to thoughts of golf clubs and tennis rackets, of lying out under the magnolias and swimming in the lake, and, in wistful moments, of the not too distant summer vacations. Especially did his mind begin to wander to romantic, sentimental things now that there were a few scattered co-eds on the campus. Spring fever had caught hold of him, too, and, as Dr. Ben Sledd once put it, he longed to go out into the fields and flop his ears and graze. In short, spring, the season of happy, indolent days, had arrived at Wake Forest, and it was characteristic of the student to treat it entirely as such. He had a chance to work off part of his effervescent enthusiasm in baseball, ■f track, tennis, and golf, and to indulge in some social life at the fraternity spring dances. But for the rest of the time there was work to be done. Particularly did the men in the realm of publications have to struggle early and late to get out last copies of Old Gold and Black and The Student and to publish the 1942 edition of The Howler. And then there was Hell Week, when fraternity pledges boldly set out on adventures concocted for them by the members as preparation for their formal initiation into the orders. And in April came campus elections, with leaders in all classes vying for offices in the student government and publications world. May brought final dances and final examinations, and another year was over. The Howler Presents. y I lu.i J el ma atiietl ROYAL JENNINGS Editor, The Howleb yi i i z Jtauce 1 UilL lanu JUDSON CREECH Business Manager, The Howler -S I li.ij Julia y 1 lataiette (P tita n BILL AYEBS Editor. Old Gold and Black M Mat,, c y jdt 1 ailcc - CLARENCE BRIDGER President, Senior Class 1 „ « a m ■■ 1 .. ■■ . i I M. J ' ) £ V = tduw VI tit (I NEIL MORGAN Editor. The Student -Si Lu ( Uzabetli C t iaa 19 D. E. WARD Business Manager, Old Gold and Black ylil.M ICatLune 111 cit ten JOHN ELLIOTT GALLOWAY President, Student Body 2. i££ •z ' zance ,11 ailiuii DON BRADSHER Business Manager, The Student KKKK yl Lis ylo ui v sj. ven ba tk CICERO VOW President, Law School MF -TgtHr ■iHl H HH U - at i j? tance£ a vettu EDWARD RICE President, Medical School STAFF JEAN JONES MARILYN BELL l- ' OY STEPHENSON BETTY LEE NEISLEB EDWINA WAUGH MARY MASHBURN OMELIA ROBINSON NAN ARWOOD JENNIE LINN MAHY WATSON CORPENIN( ■ H FAVORITES ANNE WINECOFF MARY BRYAN HELEN HOOD ELISE FERGUSON MARIANNA SHERRILL PEGGY GARTH DAPHNE DUNN HANNAH BEARD SALLIE LATHROP ETTA PATRICK IJ1LW Delta Sips take tlii plain evidence this elections. FRATERNITIES THE glowing sun of late fall plays havoc with Sigma Pi ' s on the Ra- leigh road as they struggle for a touchdown in a game with the pledges. . . . Kappa Sig neophytes clean the lawn before alumni return for Home- ,. ing. . . . Down the street the Delta Sigs bask in the shade of their veranda, bulling. . . . Fraternity How. Sinn s. seems afire as l ' ikas rush full speed ahead to decorate the house for the week end. . . . Next door are the KA ' s, anticipating visibly the week end dates. . . . Putting the bee on a few more prospectives are SPE ' s, as they usher a couple of fellows into their chapter room. . . . AKPi ' s sit planning a house party for all tin- guests. . . . Lambda Chi ' s gather peacefully to hear a brother practice before he conducts his orchestra at the dance of the night. . . . Gammas forget law. . . . This is only part of fraternity life, the part which is actually sub- ordinated to the essence of brotherhood and association and mutual „ j k- - S unselfishness which pervade the or- ganizations. It takes the men who have been in school for a year or two before joining a fraternity to see all this. They become aware that the spirit of the brother- hoods they have heard spoken of time and again is no farce. From the time of the pledging ceremony, the months of obeying orders, the trying moments of Hell Week, they realize it. And when the formal initiation is adminis- tered and they have learned the secrets binding tlicm more closely still to their new brothers, they decide they have ex- perienced a new birth and can arise and go now to meet all over the world their brothers in spirit, in heart, in soul. JP Bl : ;t v , { w - Ik. ft gHr EL S r 0 ' : §l5 B Top: Spigot Faucette discards his trumpet to study with Jim Turner. The men, two of the Big Three of Lambda Chi Alpha, are probably thinking of maps but not those on the wall behind. Center, left: Joe Dun- cavage, individualist, amuses himself with solitaire. Center, right: D. E. Ward and Cecil Allen discuss nutmeg rationing at Miss Jo ' s Cafe. Left : Lewis Mauney, SPE pledge, tries to convince Fred Turnage that eight o ' clock classes can be a lot of fun, once you get the preliminaries over. ■ : 4 v m a m , ■ .. m .. George Hubert Teague, imitating Charles Atlas, displays his physique and exerts his authority with paddle in hand, stands guard over helpless Pi Kappa Alpha pledges, as Hell Week begins officially at Number 1, Fraternity How. HELL WEEK STRICTLY speaking, the term hell week refers the birth-dates of long-forgotten dead, barks of strange to the period in which prospective fraternity men dogs and glances of hostile Negroes in the nerve- go through all sorts of rough adventures to prove them- shattering silence of a country lane. selves fit for membership in one of the Greek-letter or- One who has not yet had the thrill of experiencing ganizations. Loosely applied, however, it might well this training period faces it with a sense of foreboding, connote any of several times. To those who have crammed Visions built up in his mind by men who know of untold and crammed for final examinations and learned enough horrors along empty thoroughfares rill him with a feeling in one week to pass all their courses, or to those faithful of something like fear. Accordingly, when his time few mi a yearbook staff who have attempted to write an comes, he is keyed up to the point when he expects entire volume in seven days, college life may have other days and nights of physical and mental torture. periods besides those- ill fraternities that are weeks of Comes hell week. And then, as quickly, it passes and veritable hell. is over. The recent pledge pinches himself to see if But ill general, when the subject f hell week is he ' s still alive and usually finds that he is. He looks broached, one thinks immediately of the week which hack and thinks of what he has just gone through. Most sees the culmination of the student ' s life as a fraternity of it is vague and somewhat blurred in his mind, hut of pledge and is the prelude to his active membership in one thing he is sure. Hell week hasn ' t been easy, hut it the brotherhood. One who has lived through this has been far from being the evil his dreams had built period recalls lon r walks on moonless nights out to the it up to be. He has now taken the last step in preparing tails of the Xeuse. nocturnal searches in graveyards for himself for formal initiation into the fraternity. ■-• m t ™ • fc «  H H H H All Through the Night might well be the theme song of Ed McManus as he watches Kappa Sigma pledge admonishingly. Plot Dog dreams peacefully in one of the dresser drawers in the AKPi House, but it wasn ' t his idea. The Pika n £ s iff rs puni aliment as pled ?es take the ir Hell W eek medi- cine, sleep in cellent hrotherlv fash on. Lambda Chi Alpha neophytes doll up, pose gracefully for Howler camera- man. Note expressions of embar- rassment. PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL Roy Troslow President I)n. I.. Owens Hi Faculty Advise EACH of the nine fraternities on the campus selects After hours and hours of heated debate, the Pan- two of its most dashing men as representatives to Hellenic Council comes to important conclusions. It the Pan-Hellenic Council, a board which exists for the is decided that the band will open with Lookie, purpose of attending to all the business which comes up I kie, Lookie, Here Comes Cookie, that the corsages ai g the fraternities. These eighteen students meet for the girls will be of strawflowers and candytuft, that every Wednesday night and discuss important matters- the Howleh photos will be taken in full dress. It is whether the band at the next dance will open with Dear over this last decision that the Council has cause to gloat Old Wake Forest or Sing of Wake Forest, whether most, for they are the only group in Wake Forest to the girls ' corsages will be of orchids or gardenias, achieve this honor. whether the members ' Howleh pictures will be taken Presiding over the Pan-Hellenic Council this year was in single-breasted cm- double-breasted sport suits. Roy Truslow, senior and SPE from Spray. Ray Morris. II K A Bill Dunn. H K A Bill Joe Patton, l A John N. Davis. K A Horace Miller, - + E Jac-k Euliss, A K II John Daniel, A K II Judson Creech, A X Tom Jones, A X A Bob Frye, K i: Billj Primm, K 2 Jarvis Ward. A 1 Rufus Redfearn, A 2 l Forrest Stevens, - 1 1 Norman Adams. 2 II Wiley Lane, V II I CHI CHAPTER ALPHA KAPPA PI . First row: Paul Baker, Everett Berger, Robert Bridger, Jr., Jo Daniel, Jack Euliss. Second row: Frank Kincheloe, Alden Kuhlthi Jack Lee, Glenn Miller, Amos Stone. Third row: James Wilkers. Clarence Bridger, Edgar Bishop, Wallace Harvey, Darrell Perkii THE gavel rises, the gavel falls. Seniors, juniors, freshmen come to order to the voices of AKPi ' s Babe Bridger, Paul Baker and Horace Kornegay, respectively. But in the chapter room all listen to Babe. He is the mighty supreme of Number i, Fraternity Row. In one corner sit Glenn Miller and Alden Kuhlthau dangling Phi Bete keys, while Lefty Berger thinks of a basketball referee who rubbed him wrong one time. Frank Kincheloe and Miller whisper over the meeting of the Student Council in the Lounge of Wait. Jack Euliss is tickled that Tony Pastor might play for Mid-Winters. Other AKPi ' s don ' t believe it. Euliss says Alice Cla Clarence Bridger, President that all he knows is the Pan-Hel. Council said so. They still don ' t believe it. Dr. Herman Parker, new to Wake Forest and new to AKPi, looks on. He assures his brothers that the law of gravity won ' t work with the fraternity. AKPi can ' t fall with those men, he says. And he ought to know. He ' s physics professor. TAU CHAPTEB KAPPA ALPHA First row: Beverly W. Ball, Gilbert M. Billings, Melville Brough- ton, Jr., Lee B. Copple, Levin li. Culpepper. Second row: John Neelj Davis, George E. Eddins, Edward Hobgood, William I). Mull on, Walter Lewis. Third row: Jesse John Morris, Robert E. Nowell, Charles C. Parker, Clifton G. Parker, Billy J. Patton. Fourth row: William B. Phillips, Hugh A. Ramsaur, William !■ ' . Reece, Phi] (i. Sawyer, Jr., William II. Scarborough, Robert Vann. SEATED before the portrait of Robert E. Lee, inspiratioi and aid to the founding of the Kappa Alpha order, are a grou] of rebels, as George Eddins and Bill Phillips call them. Georg and Bill come from the Narth, and since there are -hapten of Kappa Alpha above the Mason-Dixon line, the group befori Lee tell the two to shut up, didn ' t they take them in and maki decent Southerners of them? Pruette tells Billy Joe I take a drive at Melvil his golf clubs he uses so well on the tram. I ' K Carl Sapp slings a basketball into the room and so body yells to do his freshman team practice nuts Copple and Hobg I view Esquire. In the middle of the It • is a card game. Melville Broughton Dr. Hubert Poteat, faculty adviser, enters. Every- •gues that Billy Joe Patton should have played his ace. President body sits quietly before the picture of Lee. BETA LAMBDA CHAPTER ■Kf -1 = of pi . AMWkM DELTA SIGMA PHI ELEVEN bells ring out on Raleigh Road as the Delta Sigma Phi meeting comes to a close. The feed-box boy is waiting, and the Delta Sigs are waiting. Cecil Allen and Allan Powell unconsciously flash their ODK and Phi Beta Kappa keys, respectively, as they reach for their money. Moochie Cashwell matches Gerald Wallace for a coke and loses. From the end of the hall on the second floor yells Lynwood Cherry, manifesting his potency as Cheer Leader, for somebody to bring him up something on the house or some- body. Pledges Waller and O ' Bannon assume their roles as freshmen and wait until every- body else lias bought. Intramural sharks Jim Little and Nub Forde romp gymnasti- cally through the hall. Pledges eat. But pledges Preston, Hatcher, and Palman occupy no back rows. After all, they are athletic spark plug ' s, and everybody respects their position. No, their size has no in- fluence. Well, not much anyway. Pledge Thompson strolls in. Everybody says why does he have to slave so late on Old Gold and Black? He says lie likes it. They be- lieve him and don ' t bother to find out that he has just come in from a game of pool. One bell and the lights begin to flicker off. Two bells and all is quiet. First row: Jarvis Ward, Allan Powell, Ray Manieri. Second row: Paul Blalock, Walter Cashwell, Gerald Wallace. Third row: Rufus Redfearn, Hoyt Dozier, Frank McGougan. Fourth row: Lynwood Cherry, Harry Waller, Bill O ' Bannon. Fifth row: Mack Guest, James Little, Elbert Forde. Creech, President | W m B Frances Williams ' j £? THETA TAU ZETA CHAPTEE ' | LAMBDA CHI ALPHA SOFT music drifts from stage to balcony in Raleigh ' s Memorial Auditorium as Lambda Clii ' s gather to cheer brother Frank Faucette and liis orchestra on a recent num- ber. For a moment attention is drawn away, as Rudd Friday eloquently makes a reason- able facsimile of a Hoey speech. Standing peacefully near the rostrum, .liaison Creech, twirling a gold watch chain In- got stuck on at Snyder ' s wl.cn he had to buy something to put Ms ODK and Who ' s Who keys on. is being heckled by Bob Gold- berg, who flings two of the same. How ' s the Howled ads, Hob wants to know, anil sets a bet that the yearbook business manager won ' t surpass last year ' s record. Creech takes him up. leaves tin- dance and starts soliciting right away. Football is still i the air. as Lambda Chi members of the team talk over the after- noon ' s affair with Carolina. Varsity players Jim Copley and Hill Starford explain to freshman aspirants Finch, Page, and Ecker why second series 7. 5, . ' t didn ' t work at first. Hilly U ' indcs. debater, debates over the ques- tion. ' 1 ' hc athletes .ask him what In- knows about football. He retreats. Midnight comes. Lambda Chi ' s tile out to moonlight sonatas, snacks, and late dates with some brother ' s girl friend. First rota: William Windes, Frank Todd, Tom Jones. Second row: Henrj 1- ' . Sherrill, Thomas Griffin, Irani, Faucette, .lr. Third row: lloberl Goldberg, James Turner, Jr., William Brantley. Fourth row: Ferris M. Hoggard, Jr., Rudd Friday, Jim Justice. Fifth row: ( ' . I). Bain, Jr.. Frank Timberlake. PI KAPPA ALPHA First row: Bill Belim, Sam Behrends, Furman Biggs, Murk Biggs, E. J. Britt, Lawrence Clark. Second row: Payne Dale, Bill Dunn, Pat Formv-Duval, Ed Gavin, Joe Hinerman, Bill Hinson. Third row: Harrell Johnson, Everett Jones, Howard Livi ngston, Douglas Mclntvre, Clifton Mills, Bob Moore. Fourth row: Rav Morris, Rowland Pittman, Bill Price, D. E. Ward. George Watkins, George Teague. IT is Friday afternoon and tile Pika ' s are assembled at a freshman game. ODK men D. E. Ward, Old Gold and Black business manager; Don Bradsher, Student business head, who occupies space in Who ' s Who, and Who ' s Who selectee George Watkins fumble under the seats for keys which fell when they were showing them to dates. Bill Dunn holds to his Phi Beta Kappa gem, as dames seek to admire it. % ■ « At the moment the Dream Girl of PiKA rises, walks out for refreshment. The fraternity section is immediately evacuated. Down on the field there is time out; Pika pledges Elmer Barbour. Russ Pern ' , and Hassell Whitfield look up disappointedly. DELTA OMEGA CHAPTER KAPPA SIGMA First row: Jack Starnes, Dewitt Trivette, Jack Baldwin, Bagley (iill ngham, Allison Alderman, Bill Ayers. Second row: J. C. Bridges, Donald Britt, Walter Carpenter, Bill Craig, ISill Duckworth, Charles Pi eberger. Third row: Eli Galloway, Ladd Hamrick, Gladstone Hill, Royal Jennings, Santford Martin, Ed McManus. Fourth row: liil Myers, Bill} Primm, Clyde Walker, Bruce Warlick, Ed Wilson, Newbill Williamson. JOHN ELLIOTT GALLOWAY, OI)K. Who ' s III,,,, student body president, minister, and Kappa Sig, may be called the snowflake of the fraternity. He loves AM. lus brothers. Like a snowflake he floats about, smoothing out their troubles, keep- ing everybody happy. At 7 in the morning he wakes Grand Master Brumet and baseballer Primm and tries to arouse Howler editor Jennings. He wants to borrow a tux for him and Ayers to go to an DDK banquet. Brumet and Primm are going, too. Deae lack Baldwin glides ii Williamson as Phi Bote and invokes peace on Duck- worth and all the brothers. Phi presidents Trivette and All A Wilson conjure up something to spring on the lit! ran- society. House Manager Hill Hits through. Starnes calls a pledge meeting, and there is order. 1 ndent lie Alston N. C. ZETA CHAPTER SIGMA PHI EPSILON IT is fall ; it is rushing time. And in the Sigma Phi Epsilon House, wedged in among the fraternity sections of Simmons, there is a part} ' . Somebody opens a window, and, as the smoke from seventy-five cigars clears away, Bedford Black, the SPE omni- potent, can be seen surrounded by a score of dazed prospectives. To them he points out the scholarship and athletic cups, which he swears are sized 16-inch and 20-inch, respectively. To him he calls Neil Morgan, editor of The Student, still groggy from nights of plan- ning the coming issue. Jim Bonds, basketball co-captain, is introduced and football player Joe Duncavage summoned. The freshmen seem to be yielding. But the president docs not stop. Roy Truslow reminds the fellows that Whitener played football, too, and baseball, and Bedford takes the hint and shows the frosh Truslow, Who ' s Who man, president of the Pan-Hellenic Council. Roy is modest, says Bedford also made Who ' s Who. Speak- ers Bell, Davis, Harvey, and Elam are pre- sented, and, orating on SPE merits, take the spotlight from Bedford, who withdraws to the refreshment table. First row: Paul Bell, Bedford Black, Joe Duncavage. Second row: Horace Floyd, Dick Gallimore, Harold Herring. Third row: Charles Logan, Roscoe Mason, Horace Miller. Fourth rote 1 : Neil Morgan, Leonard Perry, Dorn Pittman. Fifth row: Hal Pittman, Graham Pittman, Roy Truslow. Sixth rote?: Fred Turnage, Clyde AYhitener, John Yeattc-s, Jr. ■LiiiLKinnr Paul Wyehe, President Mrs. J. A. Wye] RIIO COLONY SIGMA PI SOMEWHERE between Wake Forest and Raleigh there is a cozy little house. There live the great big Sigma Pi ' s and the middle- sized Pi ' s and the little teensy Sigma Pi ' s, Sometimes they are called the boys from Millbrook. It is three-thirty in the afternoon, and there is nobody at home in the little house far away. Soon a car appears in the dis- tance, stops at the little house by the road. The rattling A-mode] tor almost drowns out the voices of the Northingtons and the Wyches. They get out and go in. Im- mediately they want to know who has been sitting in their chapter room. Johnny Walker comes in. fagged out from the 2-mile walk from the campus, and reveals that he wrote his Greeks there right after lunch. For- rest Stevens appears and says he entertained some Pan-Hel. friends there, too. As the afternoon wears on, other Sigma Pi ' s drift in. Jethro Jeffress and Jim Cook manage to get home in time to drop their books before going out to supper. But Doc Adams and .1. T. Nichols do not come. It is not until late at night that they finally come in. declaring that only whi n the fra- ternity installs a dining room will they ever come hack before supper. All the Sigma Pi ' s do not bother to find out who has been sleeping in their beds but drop on them, exhausted from another journey to Hi.- distant campus of Wake Forest College. Viral row: II. S. Northington, Jr., .1. L. Northing- ton, .Mm Cook. Second row: Jethro Jeffress, J. T. Nichols, .lr„ Forrest Stephens. Third row: John Walker, Cyril Wyehe, Norman I). Adams. m (!5 it GAMMA ETA GAMMA JK BETA GAMMA CHAPTER First row: Lewis Alexander, Lewis Coleman, Tolliver Davis, B Goldberg. Second row: Charles Jarrell, Wiley Lane, David Reavis, J. 1 Tate, Jr. Third row: Cicero Yow, Earle Purser, Gilbert Francis, Hoyle Blanto IT is October 23, 24, 25 in the year of our Lord, 1942, that the Gamma Eta Gamma ' s are having a hilarious time. The scene is the Sir Walter Hotel in Raleigh, and they are hosts to the national Witan of the fraternity, whatever that is. There is no courtroom in t he strictest sense of the word, unless the lobby can be called that. The aforementioned Gamma ' s are talking so, that others around believe offhand that to be able to say a great deal about a little thing is the organization. Aspiring lawyers argue about whether the draft can take ODK-men Alexander, Carroll, Goldberg, and Tate from their midst. Lewis Coleman, student body vice president, and Cicero 143 ident Elizabeth Corbett Yow, law school head, start cooking up a way they can talk the War Department into seeing the indis- pensability of Gamma Eta Gamma ' s to national defense at home. There is a typical lawyer commo- tion as a cigarette girl enters. Who ' s Who men Gold- berg and Alexander prove who ' s who and get to talk to her. Other Gamma ' s sigh. - f v rv r T || 9 • . fe«? ftj. Wj £ ' I .:, le L( , • — i - U First row: White, Chesson, Beck, Galloway, Bell, Kornegay, Bland, Hauser, White. Second row: Woodall, Holder, O ' Brien, Squires, Allen, Robbins, Chenault. Third row: Connelly, Arenclt, Billings, Driver, Crumpler, Sneed, Beard. o-captains: Eli Galloway Dm., nl Bell TRACK TEAM OF all tin sports which the present war lias af- fected most, track semis to be the hardest hit. Because of the expense of the sport, the athletic de- partment was forced to curtail this year ' s track pro- gram considerably. However, the group of track candidates, under the direction of Coach Phil Utley and led by Co-captains Bell and Calloway, began their workouts early this spring. Prospects for a good track team this spring looked good despite the loss of several stars by graduation and by the draft. Joe Freeman, Paul Early, Bill Vanden Dries and Larry Pivec have all graduated. The draft took E. T. Harris, aee high juniper and middle distance runner John lloran. But the biggest loss came when Art Adams, distance man. joined the air eorps. Adams is considered by many to be one of the finest cinder men ever to run at Wake Forest. However, several returning lettermen and a fine group of sophomore prospects more than offset flu- loss of these men. Co captain Bell took care of the I 1(1 and USD yard runs and proved that a year of experience had done him a world of good. Bob I.asater and John Yeattes aided Bell. In the sprints Aee Harris returned and got top-Might u r% assistance from sophomores John Perry, John Cochran and Charlie Cole, all members of the foot- ball team. Ja mes Willett, Barber White, Paul Brumier, Eddie Emerson and Elliott Galloway were counted on to bear the load in the mile and two-mile events. Coach Utley was forced to call on several mem- bers of the football squad in the field events. George Owen, Pat Preston, John Polanski, Bill Stafford took care of the shot, javelin and discus, and Ray Manieri, together with Phil Saw} ' er, were slated for the hurdle events. Cotton Morris, John McMillan and Al Sweel were entered in the pole vault and high jump. Though their schedule was cut, the Deacons had planned to enter the Southern Conference Indoor Gaines at the University of North Carolina, and meets were scheduled with Maryland and Catholic Universities, Hampden Sydney, Newport News Apprentice School, N. C. State College and the University of Richmond. The freshmen cinder team also looked forward to a successful season since they had several men who were rated highly by track experts. Heading this li st were Dick Holder, R. M. Chenault and Charles Woodall, all distance runners. Conley, Robbins, Kornegay, Morris, Beck, Goodwyn, Hulin, O ' Brien, Masserfield, and Parrio all showed promise. With this fine freshman squad the future of track at Wake Forest seems to be bright for a time. The frosh were scheduled to face teams from N. C. State and the University of Richmond and high school teams from Rocky Mount and Dur- ham High Schools. ' ' J- ijSL . J -Lie A St ft tf I WoodalPs final spurt enables him to break the tape winner in the 220-yard dash. Ml f f m f f Top to bottom: Six men await Starter Primm ' s gun. Gal- loway comes into the final lap as Watkins checks the time. The squad watches one of its members in the broad jump. Deacon runners warm up before the race. Jasper Lewis, Vice President Clarence Bridger, President George Watkins, Secretary Thaddeus Banks, Treasurer. fault, for how were they to know that Herr Adolph Hitler would go crazy with international kleptomania, that Mussolini. Hirohito and all their little Blackshirts .•Hid yellow-bellies would follow the omnipotent Fuehrer and leave them nothing to look forward to but army, air, navy, and marine corps? Despite the fact that their immediate future is dark. the Class of 1942, except for the development of a higher seriousness, lias carried on business as usual and achieved great things in scholarship, athletics, pub- lications, forensics, and government And they carried on well that business. Fifteen of them were chosen for Phi Beta Kappa and a number were listed in ODK and Who ' s Who. They played baseball and football and baseball and watched the .names. They debated with honors and edited tile publications. And despite the fact that every day some in their midst left for sonic form of the service, they due ;„ even harder ami pre- SENIOR CLASS 7; ;, ;: . ■ ' ; -- or take their positions in carrying on defense at home. The seniors leave Wake Forest not discouraged but with the distant vision of a world of peace which their years of education will help to huild. OF ALL the years to finish Wake Forest College, one hundred and sixty-five men hail to choose 1942. Of course the choice is not strictly their ■H em n West Orange, N. J. SENIORS 1942 mi Hatcher Alderma Four Oaks, N. C. Cecil Cary Allen, B.S., A 2 S Marion, S. C. Student Council 3; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4; Education Club 3, 4; I. B.C. 3, 4; Glee Club 2, 3; His- tory Department Assistant 3; Pan-Hellenic Council 3; Freshman Advisory Council 4; ron Delta Kappa Edwin Rudy Andrews, B.A. Ramseur, N. C. Campbell College 1, 2; Ministerial Conference 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3. 4: II.S.I ' . Council 1. 2. 3. 4; B.T.U. 1, 2, 3, 4; Euzelian Society 1, 2, President 2; History Department Assistant 2; Religion Department Assistant 4; Delta Kappa Alpha, President 4; Phi Beta E. Atkins, Jit., B.S., K A Raleigh, N. C. Edwin Febebee Aydlett, Jit., B.A. Elizabeth City, N. C. Thomas William Ayehs, B.A., K 2 Toccoa, Ga. Old Gold and Black Staff 1, 2, 3, Editor 3 ; Student Staff 1, 2, 3; Howler Staff 2. 3; Publications Board 2, 3; I.R.C. 3; Journalism Club 3: B.S.U. Council 1; Phi Society L, 2, 3; German Department Assistant 1, 2; Young Republicans Club 1, 2, 3; Vice President 2; T7 «o ' s T7 io Among Students in American Colleges and TJniversir tics; Omicron Delta Kappa. Tiiaddeus Milton Banks, B.S. Cary, N. C. Educati Union on Club 4; Class Treasurer 4; Baptist Training t, 2; Band 1, 2, 3. Feed Gkaham Baetlett, B.S. Greensboro, N. C. Intrame Baplist. ciety 1 ral Basketball 1 ; International Relations Club 3, 4 Training Union 1 ; Philomathesian Literary So Woodeow Batten. B.S. Selma, N. C. Charles Roger Bell, B.A. Gastonia, N. C. Furman Kenneth Biggs, B.S., n K A Lumberton, N. C. Henry Blankenshie, B.S. Asheville, N. C. George Hoyle Blanton, B.A. Forest City, N. C. Roscoe Lee Bolton, B.S. Rich Square, N. C. James Oliver Boxds, U.S., 2 E Kannapolis, X. C. Class Presidenl ' - ' : Publications Board 4: Student Legisla- ,,„■,. J l:.,-. 1...U 1: l ' .a-k.tl.all 1 ' - ' , : 4 1 ' oiaptain 4; K,i.i,ati..ii ■ 1 1 . 1 ■ -. J. 4. .Mtiiic -iMiu Chili 2, ::. 4; Fra- ternity President 4. James Donald Bradsuer, B.S., H K A Roxboro, N. C. Gamma Nu Iola, Tr. ... Manager i: mural Ithletics I Phi s..i.h j .;, Ti II no ' , II ha J. ,..iii ' ; i,).iif Staff 1, 2, 3. 4. I ;:;,..■;, Staff 4; Intra- il 2. 3, Treasurer 4. ( i aim mi Edgerton Bridoer, B.S., A K II Bladenboro, N. _ ' . Fraternity Presidenl I. Gamma Nu Iota. Secretar; I H:i-k..|l..ill 1. Han.l I -■ ' ■ H...I..-V Depart Ill Assist- ant 3; Who ' s Who imana Students ... .I............ Colleges ..... r, il Everett Johnson Brut, B.A., II K A Lumberton, N. C. n I.I Gold and Blacl Staff 1 Student Staff 2; Track 1; Phil H....... Literarj Societ) 1; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, l Wo tow V H vsiiire, B.A. Taylorsville, N. C. Ministerial Conference 1. 2, 3, 4; Euaelian Literary Ralph Ha Brumet, B.A., K i Bristol, Va. Pi I ' r. Kappa Delta 1, 2, 3, 4. Presidenl I, Fraternitj .„|,.„l | n. 1...I. ' 1 ' . .mi 1. . ' :: 4 M.iiiiil. r 4 I.I. ■•■ 1. 1; A.I Wh In 1-..1T I il :l ; [iitrainiiral Atliletics 1 ' - ' . 3, 4, . ' a Who 1. ..; Students ... American Colleges and .,.,.;,,,. Omicron Delta Kappa, President 4 Charles Wilson Bruton, B.S. Mt. Gilead, N. C. Walter Rudolph Bryant, B.S., r II r Lasker, N. C. Tn I ' m ,-k 3: Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3. 4, Phi Delta , g a; Wake Fores! Bar Association; Baptisl Training on 1 . Kii .-han Lil.iaiv Sii.i.-ly 1. Aims Lane Btjllarii, B.S. Ste an, N. C. tli. mistrj Department Assistanl 4 Donald Floyd Bonn, B.S. Raleigh, N. C. Gil . Club 1. 2, 3, 1, Presidenl 4. Tennis Team 3, 4 Joseph Millard Butterworth, Jr., B.S. Baltimore, Md. Int !■ ' ... Clu •amural Atliletics 2, 3, 4; Assistant M ger Varsitj (ball 1; Manaeei Varsitj Football 2, 3, I, Monogram i 2 3, t. Vice President 4; Gymnasium Assistanl , 4. ' Tin ..mas Joseph Byrne, U.S.. n K A Baltimore, Md. Mo logram Club 3, 4; Basketball 1; Baseball 1, 2, 3. Rexford Ray Campbell, B.A. West Jefferson, N. C. Mars Hill ( ' ..II. a. ' . ' 1 ' - ' : M im-t.aial Cmf.-i . n. ■•■ 2. ::. 4 President 2, I; Baptisl Training Union 3, 4; PI.. I. .ma- il,. iai l,it..ai S.iit.ty ' J; Library Assistmil -, :t. St. Pauls, X. ( ' . Warren Coleman Casey, B.A. Dudley, N. ( ' . SENIORS 1942 I IBHIHIHHMH _ HiH Bi M B BH Thomas Leart Cashwell, Jr., B.A. Gastonia, N. C. Mars Hill College 1, 2; Glee Club 3, 4. Ahoskie, N. C. Howler Staff 2, 3; Intramural Athletics 4; PhilomatHesian Literary Society 1; Mathematics Department Assistant 3, 4. Edward HoaShexg Chow, B.S- Shanghai, China Gamma Nu Iota 3, 4; International Relations Club 4; Ministerial Conference 3, 4; Glee Club 1. 2; Mars Hill College 1, 2. Walter Clifton Clark, B.S., n K A Baltimore, Md. Football 1, 2, 3, Monogram Club 2, John Hex] Fred Tillman Collins, B.S. Raleigh, N. C. Carl Everett Comptox, B.A. Wilson, N. C. Delta Kappa Alpha; Ministerial Conference 1, 2, 3, 4; Greek Department Assistant 4; Mars Hill College 1, 2; Phi Beta Kappa. B.S. Hahrell Derrixg Copelaxd Ahoskie, N. C Jtjdsou Yates Creech, B.S., A X A Ahoskie, N. C Howler Staff 1, 2, 3, 4, Business Manager 4; Publications Board 4, Vice President 4; Intra- mural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3. 4; Education Club 4; Fraternitv President 4; Pan-Hellenic Council 3, 4; Who ' s Who Among si h.,!? nts in American Colleges and Universities ; Omicron Delta Kappa. Roger Hawley Crook, B.A. Chapel Hill, N. C. Baptist Training Union 3, 4; Ministerial Con- Helen M. Crtttchfield, B.A. Albemarle, N. C Mars Hill College 1. 2; Meredith Collegt Oxford, X. C Track 1 ; Glee Club 1 ; Philomathesian Literary Society 1, 2; Biology Department Assistant 3, 4; Infirmary Intern 3, 4. s t eelt Davis, B.S., Asheville, N. C. Richard Boyd Davis, Jr., B.S. Greensboro, N. C. Paul Martin Dennis, B.A. Mount Gilead, N. C. SENIOR CLASS 1942 Asheville, N. C. ;,- I. - H0W1 I u Club ::. I . Buz. ety 3, 4, Baptist Student Onion Council ' 3. sv Dcmavuii:, U.S., 2 + E Tamaqua, Pa. row: llih il raw: jiis Edward I .Tun-,- C. Fletcher, B.A. Baltimore , Md. Hum- Charlotte, N. C. rail 1, 2, : ' .. 4; ji,l,:,i,n,r.,| tl,l,.i„v l Conference 1, 2. 3. 4; Tn ck 1, 2, 3, i. Mom Unio gram Club :;. 4; President Baptist St i 4. Ministerial Con 1 2 1 Chi • ' Group i. ' j, 3; Phi S tj .;. SI stfen Manning Kri. ss, b.s. A K II ■ il 1 ' 4. 4; li T 1 1 .2 .: 1 Burlington, N. C. 1 „,,■ r ilii  ; Omicron Delta Kappa. Amch. rs William Dunn, U.S., II K A Leaksville, X. C. Gamma Sigma W. Hammond Floyd, U.S.. r II r Tabor City, N. C. Track l; Pan-Hellenic Council 4; Georgia Tech l. nun Club 3; Philomath s 4i I 2. :: , I ' aii 1 1. Il.n.i- ( ' .Miiiril 3; Winni B ' reshman Chemistry Cup 1; Phi Beta Kappi Georgi Edgar Eddins, Jr., U.S., K A Jackson Heights, N. V. Raleigh, N. C. Henry Frank Faucette, Jr., B.A., A X A Raleigh, N. C. al Athletics 1, Band 1, 2. :i. 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchestra Charles Chuck Fix.: 10, U.S. Brooklyn, N. V. Gomina Nu Iota; Monogram Club 2. ::, l Baske ball 1. 2. 3, 4- Baseball I. 3, 4. Track I 2 Education Club; German Club; Student Ail, In, Enfield, N. t ' . Charles Maddry Freeman, B.A. Raleigh, N. C, Pre in German Club 4; Orchestra 1. 4; Glee rial 2, 3; Euzelian I.h.iii i y Society l, 2. J nix Elliott Galloway, U.A.. K 2; Moultrie, Ga. Tre. ident Student Government 4: Student Council ' ublications Board 2. 1 ; Howi 11: stuff 3; Pool mil 1 ; Track 1. 2, 3, 4, Co-raptain 1 Mono- . I..). 2 3, 1 t.R.C 1 . Ail. 1. 11, Cm 1 4: H S V. Council 2. 3, 4. President .: Mil isti rial Con irei 1. 2, 3, 1; Phi Soeietj 1 2 .: 4; rii ical Education Assistant 4. Who ' Who W Students 11. American Colleges and Uni- 0  !ie«; Omicron Delta Kappa, SENIOR CLASS 1942 HM| HH| li. L. Garrison, B.S. Lincolnton. X. C. SENIORS 1942 Ed Gavin, U.S.. II K A Sanford, . C. Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Philomathesian Literary Society 1, L : Fraternity President 4. Russell P. Geer, B.A., n K A Baltimore, Mil. Student Legislature 4; Publications Board 2; Font 1 I IV. - 1,1, Tit I I ' ities. Chester, Pa. B.S., K r. Tennis 1 J: Track 1; Intramural Athletics 1 2 ?. 4 • • : Baptist Training ! ; Glee I I . t heel Leader 1. Cari William Givler, II. A, Allentown, Pa. Football l. 2, 3 I, Co-captain 4. -Mn uiiAv Las-e Goodwis, B.S. Tyner, X. C. Richard Edward Gordon. B.A. Skippers, Va. 1 nion 1, 2. ?.. 4; Mission Study Group 1. 2, :;, Mini. t. -rial Conference 12 3 4- Euzelian Literarj s !t j I. 2, 3, 4, B.S.TJ. Council. Joseph Philip Greer, B.S. Thomasville, X. C. 01 - C 1, 2; Infirmary Intern 4. is Vmxo Griggs, B.S. Asheville, N. C. t Dixcoff Gross, B.A. Roanoke, Va. Delta Kap] , ,,,n College 1. 2; Baptist Student I oion Council 3, 4: Ministerial Conference 1 2 ■ I P ndi t,t B.S.T) 1. 2; Phi Society 1, 2 - ' President North Carolina B S U 3. 4; Oruicron Delta Kappa. Frank Bl ickburx Gross, B.S., 2 n Asheville, X. C. Football 1. 2; Basketball 1, 2; Golf 4: Glee Club 1; James Clixgman Hamrick, B.S. Raleigh, X. C. II won C. Hand, B.A. Cramerton, X. C. onal Relations Club 3. 4: Phi Beta Kappa. 11. iv Ai.u x Hare. B.S. Durham. X C. Gamma Nu Iota 2, 3: Baptist Training Union 1 : Glee I lub 1 3; Phi Beta Kappa. George G. Harper, B.S. Castalia, X. C. International Relations Club ?., 4, Secretary-Treasurer 4; Kiln, atn in Club l. I ' liiliiniailiesuin Literary Society 1; Library A- :.,m ; 1 Outstanding Seniors To oSS t 9- J5w ied ioseprominent of their number. The balloi sheets were mailed, and few Xf4x i Xiiit£wSfcc$Fthty : vs above the even (nor-,- Gallup would have shuddered to think of other eight hundred eh ty-i-lMit-fs a b that even George the one-cent stamps wasted on some of fche choices — Gallup would be Telucrant to undertake. lint the 1942 there were some pranksters attempting to be cute or witty Howler has stuck out its neck and asked those two or plainly impossible, when they voted for last year ' s hundred seniors to cast their votes for the- outstanding graduates and this year ' s juniors and some unheard-ofs HHHMHH1H j wwqt who were probably next year ' s freshmen. That was the last straw, then, but the Howlek Outstanding Senior Committee took such selections with doses of salt and passed judgment on the whole. And on the whole, the ballots wire conscientiously written and submitted. The results you see on these pages the men who for four years have pushed ahead to win the names of Most Outstanding. These dozen have added to publications and religion, to athletics and organizations. Theirs has been a vital role in the drama of another big year at Wake Forest College. To the one hundred eighty-eight gentlemen who nami d these twelve goes distinction, too. It is up to them to prove they are the gentlemen they are. to congratulate the chosen twelve. And they are to continue to be good sports, to convince themselves jokingly that they would each have been named had they joined one more literary society, a couple of additional honorary i ' rats, or issued a few more cigars when the ballots were mailed. Frank Lawrence Huiill, B.S. Marshville, N. C. Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3. 4: Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Kami 1. 2, : ' ., 4: Orchestra 1. 2. 3; Music Department A-.i-i.M.t l, •_•. ::. i . Hand President 4. OSCAR .lACOB HARRIS, B.S. Valdese, N. ( ' . International Relations Club 3, 4; Ministerial Confei 3, 4; Mars II ill College 1. 2. ■nee Chari.es Arnel Hart, B.S. Wake Forest, N. C. Education Club 4; Mathematics Department Assis ant Wo ow Wilson Hasty, U.S. Jackson, N. ( ' . Made, ,t Council 4; International Relations club :t Baptist Student l niuu 1, 2, :l, 4; Mi. us,,. rial Confer 1, 2. 3, 4. Philomathesian Literary Societj 2. 4; Harold Leichton Hawkins, 1S.S. Gastonia, N. C. Mars Hill College 1. 2; Internal al Relations Club 3 Ministerial I ' .nif, n-iice :i, 4 4; SENIORS 1942 Charlotte, N. C. International Relations Club 4: Band 1. 2; Orche stra 4. Music Department Assistant 2; Assistant Director of Mll-i. ::. 4; William .lew.-ll I ' ulleae 1; Omirriili Helta Kappa Kom in Lansino Hicks, II. A. Raleigh, N. C. Helta Kappa Alpha, President 4; Track 1, 2. :: : German flu I, l, l-.ii , han l.iiei-aiv Suckly 1. 2. :i. 4, President l; Societj l av Speaker -; Phi Beta Kappa. Philip Henry Highfill, .la.. B.A. Roanoke, Va. Pi Kappa Delia: Old Ootd and Black Staff I, 2. 3. 4 ; ll.iwi.lll Staff 1. 4; Ma, teat stall ' 1. ' -. 3: Track 3, 4; Glee Club 2: Euzelian Literary Society I; News Bureau Assistant 1, 2. 3; Library Assistant t: Debate Team 1. William Hi s-ry Hill, U.S. rl -, X. C. Harry Lee Hinson, B.S. Charlotte, X. C. Band 1, 2. 3. 4; Orchestra 2. 3, 4; Music Depar Assistant 1, 2, 3. John Staley Holden, B.S. Louisburg, N. C. El illege 1, 2. Holden, B.S. Wake Forest, N. ( ' , Peter Horchak, B.S. Johnstown, I ' a. Student Council 4; Freshman Advisory Coun I- ' all 1. 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1. 2. 3. 4; Mnmm 3, -I. Secretary 3. 4; Education Club 4; Econ luiiimeiii Assistanl I, Omicron Delta Kappa. James T. Hutchins, B.S. Ual.-it.-ll, N. ( ' . B I 3, l ; Mars Hill College I. 2. Warren James, B.A. Oakboro, N. ( ' . Phi Beta Kappa. al sv cc Depart m Assistant 3. 4; Thomas R. Jaevis, Jr., B.S. Asheboro, N. C. Third rou W. .1. Jeffreys, Jr., B.S. Hamlet, N. C. Frank Louis Kapriva, Jr.. B.S., - II M „ N Robert Kuhlthatj, U.S., A K II Johnstown, Pa. Milltown, X. J. Football 1. ' J. ::. 4; Track 1. 2; Monogram Club Ga a Sigma Epsi : Basketball Manager 3, 4; - ' , ::, 4; Kiluc; .1 (. ' lab 4 Physics Depart 1,1 A .slant 4; l.iln-arv Assistant 2, 3 , Tin Beta Kappa. Roger Sylvester Kxger, Jr., B.S. William Harold Kyles, B.S. Buhl, Idaho W inston-Salem, X. C. Esquire Club Royal Green Jennings, Jr.. B.S., K 2 Thomasville, X. C. Mars Hill College 1 2; Class President 1. Melvin Quinton Layton, B.A. Edenton, X. C. Bv..x W. Kixlaw, B.A. Wilmington, X. t ' . Old Gold and Black Staff 3; Student Staff 3; Ministerial Conference 1 2 3 4- Baptist Train- Howler Stall ' _ ' .:. 4. Editor 4: l ' lnlmaaili.-iaa ,„. [ ' ,,,,,,, 1. j : 4 Kn,..|, r.„. s.,. ,. tx |. ' „„tl,all I - ' . : I M gram Club 2. 3 4 Lltrl-arv Snr|. ' 1 4; (. ' nlll ' in- 1 ' tn 1 ' _ t a | .1 1 . i 1 I ] | Mar- ilill College I . II o ' « Ik, 1 „„ Student ,„ i,„e,ie„n Clients and Universities. Allen Henry I. II ' B.S. Raymond Di Witt Kornegay, B.S. Francis Talmadge Jones. B.S., A X A Asheville, X. C. Linwood Ray Jordan, B.A. Wilmington, X. C. Seven Springs, V. ( ' . .I n, Ear] Kraiienbill, B.A. Princess Anne, Va. Dunn. N. C. Sigma Epsilon; Chemistry Depa is Truett Lennon, B.A. Wake Forest, X. C. SENIOR CLASS 19 42 J vspi u I.. Lewis. B.A. Winifred X. Martin, B.S. George McDonald Moorefield, B.A. Greenville, X. C. Wake Forest, X. C. Harmony, X. ( ' . Internal mini Relations Club 3, 4; Student Politi- cation Clnli 4; Baptist Training Union 1, 2, .;,[ 1 in, n :j, 4; Kiln, .hi. -ii Club :: 4; Euzelian Literary s.mi.iv 1 ' _ ' . :;. 4; Intramural Athletics Mildred Eugenia M ii.hin. B.A. 1. 2. 3. 4: Class Vice President 4; Mathematics 1 ' - Hi ni Assistant 4. Wake F,,r, ' st, N. C. Bruce Moblet Morgan, B.A. ,1.11AM AXI W I.1N11I.1V. B.S. Baltimore, Md. ni Athletics 1. 2. 3, 4; International Re- Ci As npbell College 1, 2; Education Club 4: Baptist dent U , Council ■_ ' , Biology Depart nt In, Shelby, X. (. ' . lent Political Union 3, 4; Phi Delta Omega ; amural Athletics :i. 4: Class Vice President i.il. 2, : Student Political Union :l. 4. 1 Education Clul, 4; Esi|iiiiv tint, 4. Studenl Union 1. 2; Glee I ' lnl, : ' ,, 4. iii.xx Houston Mimiii. B.S., A K 11 - ' • ■ ' iinnan University 1. -: v,:n-l k Staff 1. 2. Baptist Bethesda, Mil. Uav Augustus M s, B.A., H K A 1- ' . Jerome I. ii-ni. Jr., li.S. ' idem c ii i-. Old GoU « , ' ; «■ ■ i. 2. . .,,...!,. Sports Editor 3; Library Assistant 1. 2; Hi, Hurt,, rill, ,tt, N. t ' . Concord, X. C. pi Tei ni- l. 2. ::; Band 1.2. Pan Hellenic Council Educatio Appalati „ Cluh 4; l„l,;i,.,i,r;,l r 1,1.1 ,. - 1 2 3, 4. i.ui Mm.- Tea, Iters ' ■ s A. 1 ' . MlSMIltV. .In.. B.A. :. Treasurer :: ii, 1.,,., m l.irii, , I ' .S., A 2: •!• Boykins, Va. Charxks ' I ' m in Mvers, B.A., K 2: Statesville, N. C. B, l,n.t Training Union 1 2, 3, 4: Mission Studj Cheraw, S. C. Intramu ■i,l Athletics l. 2, ::. 1 ; Dulte University 1. M ni,, 1, 2; Ki-liiriun U.-i.iii-t Mi.-tit Assistant :i. 4; list, rial , ' ' nee 1. 2, 3, I. Presi ,t 4. Phi omathesian Literary Society 1. 2. :: ; Sigma I ' i M|,lia: Basketball 1. 2. :: ; Tennis l . Debate HoWAR , Mojcboi Livingston, B.S., 11 K A Laurel Hill, N. C. Robert 1.. Moore, B.S., H l A Tei „ 3; Societj Treasurer 2 1. muni „ l,,l:i Sl„,l,„t Staff 4: Iiilr.iiiniial Dublin, (In. .Ion n Thomas Xn s, B.S., - II Ubieties 3, 4: Philomathesian Literarj Societj : ' ■ ; Winston-Salem, X. C. 1 ' dward Military [nstitute J. 2 (i, mi,,:, Xn iota; Sigma Pi Alpha; Glee clul, 1, 2. SENIOR CLASS 1942 I LOTO III KB IM I IVERTOX B S Ahoskie, N. C. Itl li li. 1 V : I B ind I ' : I Bi ' SENIORS 19 42 « imm Calvin I ' m keb i; s Shelby, N. C. aseball 4: Intramural Ithleti ! B Mai.vi.n- .1. Parham a S Henderson, X C. Harry Edwarp Paschal, B.A. Wake For. it, N Osi m, Riddick Pi m„ , . .7,,.. n s. Dunn. N. C. William Mox-cote Pi vi.ce, B.S. Hamlet, . C. l Baptisl Student James Howell Perry, B. . Louisburg, X. ( . nion Council 4: Minister I . tuzehan Literary Society 1. 2, James Leonard Perry. B.A., 2 E Louisburg, . ( ' . ia Pi Alpha; Edu cl David Lawrj n-ci Phillips, B.S. ■ lie, N. C. l,J Rowland I ' lruiAx. B.S., IT K A Lumberton, N. C. ,:M ' - ' ■ ' ' Mor, G mm,., ' ■;,, rots ; Philomathesii 1 Carolina State College I, 2. JllHX B. PoLAXSKI, B.S. Buffalo, N. V. William An 4 n Powell, lis.. A 2 Wallace, V ( ' . , nt 4: Chemistry Depart- 4. I ' hi l:, i., K, ,,,,,;, I.am IIi.hm, Presley, B.A. Arden, X. C. I ' i Alpha; Education Club 4. Archibald Covtxgtox Prevatte, B.S. Lumberton, X. C. n, mill IJcl.itM.ii. Club 1. 2. Carter Prevette, B.S. Pontiac, Mich. ■ Jambs Otis Pr ODES, B.A. Seaboard, N. C. Delta Kappa Uplta; internal 1. ,i lull 3, J; Bapti Ministerial Conference 3, 4 inal Relations Club 3. 4 i Training Union 1, ' J Philomathesian Literar; Soriet; - ; Plii Beta Kappa EaRL. I1iit.it Pubs :r, B.A., r 11 1 ' Marshville, N. C. Student Council 4; Old Got ii, n i , stnfl 2 . Baptist Tr ,,,,. . ' ,.,■ , Staff 1. ' - ' inins Hi i 1; Euseliai an Department Assistan I I I .. 1 .... I - - Thomas GrESHAM RaGSPALE, B.A. David I.ii: Reavis, HA.. 1 ' H I ' Winston-Salem, X. ( ' . R i Erxest Hi ii.. B.A. Asheville, N. ( ' . M -ram Club 2, 3, 4 . Baseball -J. ::, 4 Thomas Lexwood Rich, B.A. Garland, X. ( ' . David I.ii Senilis. 11. A. Hubert, X. ( ' . Jlvx Douglas Sawyer, U.S. Franklinton, X. ( ' . Mack Fred Scott, Jr., B.A. Durham, X. ( ' . .1 imes II. Sevier, B.S. Wilmington, Del. Kins Sm v s, ii.s. tmasville, X. ( ' . I. in Jackson Starnes, B.S., K 2 Charlotte, X. C. .,li Team 3, l . Tin Delta Omega . Monogram Club I Thomas Adou-ij Stubbb, .In., U.S. Plymouth, X. C. [erman Club l ,2 . 1.,, Ciiari.es II. Si -,.... B.S. Varina, X. C. Wis,, mi: ElwoOD SwAIN, U.S. Shallotte, X. I ' . Gamma Nu Iota; Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3, 4 SENIORS 194 2 ■■■ H First row: Joseph Addison Talley, I!. A. Burdette, Va. Chowan i ollege 1, 2; Class Vice President Basebt -:.1,j. .,i lub 4 Glee Club I: s I i unii.M ' j ;:. I ' i . -,.l. in 2: Baptist Traini Union !, - 3, 4; Euzelian Literary Si,,iel .:. Ministerial Conference 3, 4. Bruce Edward Tarkixgtox, B.S. Belhaven, X. C. Education Club 4: Phi Delta Omega: Band 1. B.A. Wingate, X. C. Wiii. ' alr lull,-.. 1 2: class President 2: Eiluc ii. .1 1. ::, 4: International Relations Club 1. i Baptist Training Union 3, 4: Euzolii 1 1 l Debate Squad 1. 2; Phi Be Kappa .Ii-s, !• ' . Tiiarxish. B.S.. : II ( haffee, X. Y. Spartanburg, S. C. IIll.lt 1 ' lVSI TltAXSliC. B.A. Boonville, X. C. a Pi Alpha: Baptist Training Union 1. : Band 2, 3j Euzelian Literary Society Hill College 1, - ' Rot Earx Truslow, B.S., 2 4 E Spray, X. C. Gamma n Iota: Intramural Athletic Council 4: Intramural ItliMii • I Pan Hellenii Cou .:. 1 President 4: Who ' s Who I Students in American Colleges and Universities. Claude Baxter Tyson, Jr., B.S. Roseboro, X. C. Sandj Ridge, X. C. Arthur Chester Vivian, Jr., U.S.. A X A Sit, nmit. X. J. Student Legislature 2; Class Yiee President 1, Treasurer :i : HOWI ER Stall 1, 2: Baseball 1. 2. 3, I : I nternational K.-lai ions I ' lub 3, gram ' lul. 3, l . n ho i ' .1 merican ' ' oil ges a In .It. i Kappa Louisburg Clio l. Publici C 3, i . rin George Thomas Watkins, B.A., II K A Durham, X. (. ' . sin. but Legislature ass Pn sident :: Secre- I,, i . i i ' .i cm ... ;:;„, , st.iti l, 2. student Staff 1 2 Basketball 1 2; Tra. k 1 2, ::, 4: Phi s 11 1 2 ; I Debate Team 2, 2. 4 : So. i. tv I ' .iV Speaker 2. 2, I; Konn.lei ' . li.n S|.e,,k. r . I ll I.- il ho l ii.; Students in -I :ovn I ' oil ' . ■ . 1 l:r, r.wli. v Owen Newrill Williamson, B.A., K - Crewe, Va. Old ' ... ' .I .n.. Bind si. ,n 2 .; 1 Managing Editor Pin Be Kapp, Editor 3, .1 SI. ill ::. 4 : I ' ulilieations Club 1: Pliiloinatbesian iglish Department Assistant B.S. William Lee Wolt Raleigh, X. C. u Iota Football 1. 2: Intramura nan Club 1. 2; Euzelian Liter ,s,., ,,.i. 1 , 2 Paul By , ' vcih:. B.S., Hallsboro, X. C. SENIOR CLASS 19 42 GRADUATE STUDENTS I Thomas Manm A s,. Wake Forest, V C, Pa i i II. Cheek, U.S. Graham, N. ( ' . Frank Edwin Li mm. Waynesville, N. C. SPECIAL STUDENTS First row: Bedford Worth Black, Kannapolis; Mrs. L, H. Hollingsworth, Asheville; Mrs. 1 . M. Hutchinson, Candor. Second rem: Bill Vanden Dries, Brooklvn. X. Y.; William McDonald Walker. WUmington; (arr..ll Thomas Wood, Enfield. ;. , ' ASSOl IATION COM- MITTEE in IIR3IEN: J. E. Tate, Jr., Bi b Goldberg, Joe Huff, Wilej Lane, Cicero Yow, Ed G irganus, Charles Jarrell, Bruc ■ Brown, Seavy BAR ASSOCIATION w: r HEN tin- Wake Forest Student liar Associa- tion constitution was adopted in 1940, the law school was on the verge of expanding to provide for an increasing enrollment. Such an Associa- tion was what the students needed as a means of self-government, and it was for tliis reason that tlie group was founded. The purpose of the Assocation was. in the words of the constitution, to form a more perfect anion, to foster legal science, to maintain the honor and dignity of the legal profession among law students, to cultivate professional ethics anil social intercourse among ourselves, and to promote the welfare of the law school of Wake Forest College. But the war came, and the draft reaped heavily from the law school. The result has been that the Bar Association hasn ' t functioned as smoothly as it could during normal times. The most notable achievement of the Association was the completion of plans for the establishment of a legal aid clinic in Raleigh. The faculty of the law school was also hard hit this year. Two professors. Lake and Baer. were lost to the Office of Price Administration in Wash- ington; they were replaced by Drs. Gullev and Miller and Prof. Tucker. First rov Third row: Bartlett, Fred Gkaiiam. Greensboro Brumet, Ralph Harold, Bristol, V.-i. Bryant, Walter Rudolph, Lasker ( ' iiamih.ee, Frederick Garland, Spring Hu| Nelson, Bernard W., Brooklyn, N. V. Nipper, Julian Russell, Raleigh Norman, Winford Walter, Ararat Odum, Marion, Ahoskie Second row: Frances, Gilbert W., Boykins, Va. Gavin, Ed, Sanford Hewett, James Bascum, Washington Myers, Charles Truett, Cheraw, S, C. Fourth row: Pritchard, Warren H., Spruce Pine Reavis, David Lee, Winston-Salem Waters, Robert Edward, Wilmington Yates, Henry Wade, Jacksons Creek, P IRST YEAR LAW UH SECOND YEAR LAW Ball, Beverly W.. Hamlet Brown, Bruce Bailey, Clyde Carroll, Seavy Alexander Wesley, FayetteviUe Coleman, Lewis William, Wilmington Davis, James Toliver, Forest City Dunn, William Arana, Pinetops Gurganus, Edgar .Iauvis, Williamston Martin, James Xello, Wake Idlest Royall, Kenneth Claiborne, Jr., Goldsboro Turnage, Fred Douglas, Ayilen THIRD YEAR LAW Rai ,ewis Alexander, LL.B., r U r Robert Henry Cowes, 1.1. .11. Kannapolis, N. C. Williamston, . ( ' . ciuii,-i-..n I ' : ■ , I,. Grant William Bolmer, LL.B. 2 a e. r ii r Franklin, Pi Alleghenj College 1. 2. Joseph Bascom Urn. LL.B. Mars Hill, N. C I HARLES RlCHARDSON JaRBELL, LL.B. r ii r High Point, N. C. Barristers ' Club 5: X. V. G j Law Society 5; young Democrats ' duo ; Bar AsMi.imiim ii. 7, Law Class Secretarj G Bar Associal : President Young Demo crats ' C 5 Wiley Leon Lank. LL.B., r II r Pinetops, N. C. Philomatliesian Literarj Society 1, 2, 3. 4; I:. in i.NT. ' 1 1, 1. . Imnitu 1 Allil. lii ■ : I ' .i.i- Hellenic Council 1 2; Class Vice I ' m enl Lassiteb DOFFER] Potecasi, X. C. Robert Aaron Goldi i, LL.B. Wi II. S. I ' .i i.un v, Jr. LL.B. K A a x A, r ii r Wilmington, N. (. ' . I.., .il Vice l ' i Iran Everett Tate, Jr.. 1. 1.. I!., r II I ' Woodland, N. C. . ' Club Bar Association- Intra- ' ' 1; ' 1, Prc.nli.iii I i ' Ij.. l-i. -.,1. ,,i I :i ; J. ,. Who , „,.„,, |o Hill College 1, Pi Kappa Delta; Euzelian Literary Sn,„.,, i - :i. 4: ii.nn-M-.- niii, :. 1, . i . - 1 . , ■ t . - Winston-Salem, V ( Team 1. 2. 3, I: Student Council -. 4. Stu I;. 1 1 i isti i mural Athl I ' n mi ' Club 3; Student Legislature -f Students in American College! and r„ P in Brown Byrum, LL.B. Tyner. N. ( ' . Cicero Preston Yow, LL.B., r II I ' Vvm.r.TT Hollowell, LL.B. Wilmington, N. C. ,, , , , T _ Barristers ' Club; Wake Forest Bar Associa- Buenton, .N. (. . tion, President 7. jU BHHOaBBBBBVBBBBVBBBl PASS if ' . ' ■ f ' ,V ■;;;; ' ,;.? fop 7e £ we see a famous huH session made more famous by Oscar King, Hammond Floyd. Earle Purser, and other Gamma brothers. Next we set the Bored-face leading barristers to refreshment table at the Witan in Raleigh. Then, Cicero has just told Valeria Fuller something tunny. Left center, Davis, Lane, Carroll pretend to be browsing, after having been caught drowsing some minutes before. Center the governor entertains Witan-goers. Again Seavy Carroll poses for photographer, this time effacing a hot argument with . ' . E. Tate. First on i)u thin! row is a group of Gammas at the Witan dance. Next, Dr. Baer diagrams a ease to students. Lower left, another eating scene from the Witan. Center, Gammas play Old .Maid with nt lawyer. Lane, Davis, and Vow bring up the rear by seeming really in earnest. LAW SNAPS BBB WHAT PUBLICATIONS CAN DO TO A MAN PUBLICATIONS Old Void and Hack has gone to Zebulon, The Student is on the press, and The Howler is out. What could be more a paradise regained for the publication devils and their angels? They flap their wings, wipe off the flames fr the fiery lake, duct their cigarettes and drop aslee] restful clouds. Down the office row in Student Center there is a whirl that comes of work that took long to do but now is over. The publications giants en mass, „,ov,- from the Old Gold office to tin- inner sanctum of the Howlk,, to the Student working room. Everybody bums cigarettes iron. Editor Ayers until his play out; thru all shift to Editor Morgan and finally to Editor Jennings, who reluctantly buys a pack. Business managers Ward and Creech and Bradsher shuffle about until they get tired of the kidding that they all have raked i„ from their publications. Bight: Williamson, Jennings seem to face the guillotine as Minter declares an emergency. Center left: Ed Wilson takes time out with Morpheus as the siren is about to sound for six a.m.; Editor Jennings however, works hard lie- side him. Center, right: Student editor Morgan yields to temptation, unaware of the chance the 1I..w...k photographer has wailed for for months. Bottom, left: managing editors Gallimore and William- son see something newsy as Dr. Folk tells a fairy tale; Editor Avers lislens en- chantedly. Sk J ft p + . «JMM i _■= — - 1 - • k.MMB  ill Everybody seems almost as if every- body is back in Pandemonium, except that the lake of fire is line — there is i, re work for the year. The good doctor of the publication world. Dr. E. E. Folk, comes to the Old Gold office, and thereafter the journalism crowd becomes stationary, lie goads the newly-elected publications heads with dire warnings that they have hopped into the infernal regions. Then the writers, when the customary one or two or three o ' clock comes, gradually drop out to bed. invoking the richest blessings of galley proof for the coming £ ROYAL JENNINGS Editor-in-Chief THE HOWL THE best friends The Howler has are Snyder, Shorty, and Brown, the night watchman. Snyder has the cigarettes; Shorty stays open, with hamburgers and Pepsis at three a.m.; and Brown, the night watchman, leaves the lights on outside the office so that sleepy journalists can get out of the building. It all amounts to this. . . . Tin: Howleb staff picks the most uninteresting hours to do its work, beginning at midnight and lasting until Ed Wilson drops to sleep over his typewriter. These hours are most convenient, for there is less chance of seeing Conley, the pet peeve of all the publications, the guy who drops by tor three hours ami condemns everything from the staff to the heating system. There is an interesting picture as the Howleb stall works. Imagine it. as the Book Store closes, with Jen- nings, ostensible editor, stocking ii| Milky Ways and one cent mint patties, to last until time comes to send to Shorty ' s, friend number two. Judson Creech comes in from Raleigh and weeps because of failure to sell ER 1942 more than five hundred dollars worth of ads for the day. Then Avers gives the Howler secret knock, known only to the staff, the Monogram Club members. Student editor Morgan, the Esquire Club, Phi Beta Kappa, and John Conley. Bill Clark and Herbert Thompson keep Jennings busy keeping them busy, with Clark sniffing orchids in between assignments. Mc- Millan reports, Primm reports, Carroll appears with writeups, and Conley drops by again. Don Britt, help- less now that it is inconvenient for him to cover his Phi Chi assignment, yells for the most creative work. Williamson yells, and Jennings speaks up again, meekly, mildly, whispering GET TO WORK! Ed Wilson drops off again, as the eight o ' clock bell rings. Shelton Canter rattles the door on his way to work, sees there is little work he can do: the Howler typewriter is now covered by Jennings himself, with the night ' s work on the roller. Canter reads: NOW IS THE TIME FOR ALL GOOD MEN TO COME TO THE AID OF THEIR PARTY, and knowing it to be the Democratic Party, disgustedly closes the door. JUDSON CREECH Business Manager Top row: Peck Sherrill, Herbert Thompson, Oscar King, Frank Todd. Botta Britt, Shelton Canter, Phil Highfill, Growler editor. tames ■ II ■!! HI LI. AYERS Editor-in-Chief D. E. WARD Business Manage! OLD GOLD AND BLACK w: EDNESDAY night his pipe is Dr. Folk, al] the while kidding all the ODK ' s . bargain night at and the Phi Beta Kappa ' s and laughing at John Conley ' s the theater, choir practice, [.B.C. meeting, vespers, home village, Hartford, Conn. At the sports table Billy student council meeting. Pan-Hellenic Council night, Primm, athletic editor in both senses of the word, plods discussion groups, but Old Gold and Black staff members surely on with his staff of Ken Nelson. The business are working, are getting the dope about what is trails- staff folds Collegiate Digests. piriug everywhere els, ' and what has transpired. Actually there are half a dozen turning in their work, writing the heads, ami bumming cigarettes from the editor. The other fourteen drop by occasionally to read the «■ Columnists Highfill and Wilson work on Pegasus ml Pro Huinanitate. respectively, showing no indica- f finishing before the deadline. John McMillan mis from typewriter to typewriter in an attempt to get change and tell their corny jokes. The Student editor. the B.S.U. news written. Managing editors Williamson Morgue, appears. Dr. Folk calmly smokes bis pipe and and Gallimore try to look important as they slip behind the editor ' s desk when he goes out for a call. Gallimore gets there first, and Williamson goes off to the Howler copy-reads proof. There is a stillness of Silent Night as eo ed Lib Jo comes laden with the garden club news, all recent office to borrow another typewriter. Harry Davis comes weddings, and a big story. Don ISritt immediately ap- for the copy, which he knows will be ready an hour later, proves her copy and her. Bob Gallimore works tenderly when the remaining six ride his coupe to Shorty ' s for on his column, In Tim, ' With Wake forest. Herbert an early morning snack anil a curse upon all others who Thompson brushes in and out getting assignments be- have their pictures on the staff page in the annual, and fore settling down to writing. Still serenely smoking claim they are Old Gold reporters. i Hin H HH First rozc: Herbert Thompson, Bob Gallimore, Ken Nelson. Second rote: Newbill William- son, Johnny Walker. Don Britt. Fourth rota: Bill Phillips, H. B. Parrott, Santford Martin. Fifth row: Lib Jones, De Ward, Sam Behrends. Not pictured: Lee Copple, Zeb Jones, J. D. Davis, John Mc- Millan, Seavy Carroll, Phil Highftll. .. .— T HERE are three people who have to work in The Michelozzo Michelozzi into the drawings for such stories aspiring for editor, and Fred, the janitor who cleans it Old Gold Avers or li.S.L . McMillan tell everybody once a month. Rumor has it that business manager about China, fighter of Japan, hater of Japan, friend to Don Bradsher has been trying to locate Morgan sine, the United States. Newbill Williamson, after being his election last year, but, between Neil ' s work in Ha- chased down for a week to get in a story, brings up a leigh and his dates in Durham, has been dnable to do vignette which is invariably vignetted by the editor. s„. Nevertheless, The Student has horn coming out. John Conley, pet peeve of all publications nun. laughs There is no press night and leadline for The Stu- at all editions; he talks sarcastically of all the articles; dent, except two weeks after the third deadline. It is and he refuses to write anything for inferiors to hack then that Morgan scours the campus for possible literary to pieces. But when a meeting of the start ' is called, talent. He doesn ' t have to go far for his poetry, because those in the masthead appear, always anticipating that Burnette Harvey can contact the Muses at a few Howies pictures  ill he made any time. moments ' notice. Herbert Tl pson likes the histori- And Student .alitor Morgan finally gets out a maga- eal stuff. zilie. arranges a date with tin- prettiest co-ed to take a Alan Stansbury takes the history of art. and from picture for the next issne. which is always put off as Ions; the extensive knowledge gained, incorporates tin ' very as possible and the pictures lost for weeks and weeks . . . best of Bacchus and Ariadne ' ' or Hercules Hurling so that more dates can be arranged, with Bob Gallimore, l.iehias into the Sea and all of Fra Filippo Lippi or photographer, as merely an accessory. THE STUDENT NEIL MORGAN Editor-in-Chief DONALD BRADSHER Business Manager H U K ' First iw; Herbert Thomps Paul Bell. Second row: Newbill Willi; son, Ned Thomas. Third row: Furman Biggs f Larry Clark. Fourth row: Romulus Skaggs, D. R. Fouts, Alan Stansbury. Not pictured: Jobn McMillan, Bill Ayers, Bob Gallimore, J. D. Davis, Burnette Harvey, Horace Miller, Roscoe Mason. mm mi . The Bowman Gray MEDICAL SCHOOL of Wake Forest College w: ' HEN in July 1941, the new Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest College was opened, the institution took on the big time name. Wake Forest College of Wake Forest and Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Although the addition of the new school had given to the college a west campus, and al- though this west campus was one hundred miles away, it nevertheless became at once an integral part of the establishment. Though the medical school has been moved, the faculty enlarged, and new faces admitted to its ranks, the im- mortal Wake Forest spirit still prevails. Yet a change lias come to both campuses. The east side is sensing the absence of the white-coated medics and their anatomy labs. The west side, influenced by the men who for four or five years have inhaled the Wake Forest atmos- phere, seems to grow magnolias and friendly smiles, symbols of what they have left behind. BPHffi COY C. CARPENTER, It. A., M.D., F.A.C ' .P. Hi, ni HERBERT M. VANN, B.S., M.A.. M.I). Professor of Anatoxin f; ADMINISTRATION )U an institution to have more faculty members and registrar of a four-vear medical school involves however, this is exactly the situation that exists at for either one of these is a full time job in itself. Bowman Gray. At the head of the medical school Nevertheless, there is such a man .it Bowman Gray, and the College of Liberal Arts is Dr. Thurman D. Dr. Herbert M. Vann has occupied these positions Kitchin. His position is one which demands foresight, for a number of years. Even when Bowman Gray efficiency, and an understanding of human nature. was a two year school, Dr. Vann was the man who Dr. Kitchin possesses all these qualities in addition decided who was to enter, and also who was to leave to being a noted physician and an executive of long as a result of failure, experience. For Dr. Carpenter and Dr. Vann the moving of the Occupying the positi if Dean of the Medical medical school brought a change of environment as Scl I. a po sition which requires an undue amount well as of working conditions. No longer won- they of perseverance, ability to deal with students, and a in close contact with the College of Liberal Arts so brilliant mind, is Dr. Coy C. Carpenter, : of North that they might consult other college authorities on Carolina ' s outstanding physicians. To Dr. Carpenter matters of importance. This meant that they were goes most of the credit for the recent advancement to be called on to make many more decisions, and that of the medical school, for it has been through his they were taking on positions of greater responsibility, ceaseless efforts that Bowman Gray has gained a not only because they were now the administrati if place of eminence a ng the medical colleges of a four year instead of a two year medical college, but America. also because they would be held in,, re or less directly The combined positions of professor of anatomy responsible for the success or failure of the school. STUDENT OFFICERS WELL on their way to becoming doctors of note are the seventy-two medical students who make up the enrollment of the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem. They attend their classes and lectures ; they go on labs and carve up everything from a katydid to a real cadaver; they hang around hospital rooms to observe the patients and nurses. Since leaving Wake Forest, the future physi- cians, pathologists, bacteriologists hare begun to see a set-up -which is very different from that on the mother campus. There are big buildings and hospital beds; there are amphitheater lectures; and there is Winston-Salem itself, which is a far cry from the village in which they have spent their last few years. But the Bowman Gray doctors are not too busy to enter into politics, for as spring comes, they will line up politically with forceps and stethoscopes for arms and will go to the polls. Then will step down Ed Rice, President I of the new institution, Vice President Leslie Morris, Joseph Hester, Sec- retary, and David Smith, Treasurer. ED RICE President LESLIE MORRIS Vice President JOSEPH HESTER Secretary DAVE SMITH Treasurer SECOND YEAR MEDICINE AUSBAND, JOHN A VERA, JOHN , JR. AYCOCK, JAMES B. CHEEK, KENNETH COrH RAX, JAMES I).. .IK. CRESCENZO, VICTOR CRUMPLER, WARREN H. FISHER, GEORGE II., JR. GLOD, ALBERT P. GRIGGS, BOYCE P. HANKINS, J. HANKS II l( T, I. II. I. Aid) HESTER, JOSEPH M. HOBBS, RA LPH SECOND YEAR MEDICINE johnston, harold w. McNeill, claude a. MORRIS, LESLIE NELSON, I. ROBERT POE, WILLIAM D. RICE, M. E. SHINGLETON, W. W. SMITH, D. C. STRINCxFIELD, P. C. THOMPSON, J. J. WHELESS, T. O. WILKERSON, J. LEWIS WOOLBERT, EDWIN S. VOW, E. M. man O O lg| l- J FIRST YEAR MEDICINE First row: ABERNETHY, PAUL ALSOBROOK, W. L. ARRINGTON, T. M. ATKINS, J. I ' ... JR. BAILEY, JEAN BATTEN, WOODROW BEALE, J. I).. JR. Second row: BERRY, JAMES W. BEST, JAMES E. BUIE, RODERICK, JR. CHEEK, JOHN, JR. COFFMAN, JULIA CUMMINGS, LEONARD I . CUTHRELL, MAE Third row: DAWSON - . JOE DIMMETTE, ROBERT M. EISENBERG, SEYMOUR FOWLKES, W. M., JR. FREEMAN, W. H. G UtRISON, BOB GIBBS, STEWART V. FIRST YEAR MEDICINE First row: GOBBLE, F. L., JR. GREENE, JAMES F. GRIGGS, JAMES Y. HILL, W. HENRY HOBBS, HOMER HORAN, ROBERT V. HUDSON, MILES H. Second row: JARVIS, T. R. JEFFREYS, W. J. KING, ROBERT R., JR. LANE, EDGAR W. LOCKHART, WALTER LYDA, EDGAR W. MAUNEY, GRADY, JR. Third row: MAY, JACK MAY, W. JOSEPH PREVETTE, W. C. SAWYER, C. GLENN SCHRUM, DAVID SHIELDS, WILLIAM E. SPENCER, J. T., JR. TILLER, WENDELL H., JR. .. TAL ' KAl ' l ' A CHAPTER phi cm AN unusual circumstance attended the consolidation of the present national Phi Chi fraternity in 1905. Sixteen years earlier, in 1889, at the University of Vermont, the Eastern division of the fraternity had been organized by a group of medical men who saw the need for a brotherh 1 of future medicos on the campus tor tin- purpose of furthering the relationships, both social and professional, among them. In 1894, at the Louisville Medical College, the Southern divisii f the fraternity had been founded by a similar group of students for a similar purpose. The only step needed to he taken for a really complete national organization was to unite the two sectional parts into one compact group: this step was taken in 1905, and thus Phi Chi became one of the foremost medical fraternities. In 1935 the Tan Kappa Chapter of Phi Chi. named in honor of Dr. Thurman 1). Kitchin was installed at Wake Forest. Its success and participation in campus activities at Wake Forest have been unex- celled in past years. No doul.t the group will continue its role of leadership at Bowman Gray. Pledges: Kenneth Cheek, Ellard Vow. I). C. Smith. Joe Dawson. Marshall Arrington, Ed Lane, John May. John Cheek. .lames Berry, Rod Buie, Pinky Prevette, Boh Horan, Homer Hobbs, Walter Lock- hart, Tom Jarvis, William Alsobrook, Joe May. and Leonard Cuumiiugs. CLAUDE MeNEILL President BARBARA 1 1 AWKIN ' . 1 - First row: Leslie Morris, Albert Glod, H. .1. W. Hobbs, M. E. Rice Second row: .1. M. Hester, Lewis Wilkereon, Herbert Hadley. First row: Jim Cochran, Victor Cresccnzo, George Fisher, Banks Hankins, Harold Johnson. Second row: Bob Xelson, Bill Shingleton, J. J. Thompson, T. O. Wheless, Boyce Griggs. CHI THETA CHAPTER JOHN ' AUSBAND President WILLOUISE BUTTS PHI RHO SIGMA IN 1924 a new kind of fraternity was seen at Wake Forest as the Alpha Delta chapter of Chi Zeta Chi, medical Greek-letter organiza- tion, was founded by a group of students who felt the need of a more compact brotherhood for the future doctors of the campus. Years of growth and progress followed the establishing of Chi Zeta Chi, and as a result of the definite success of the local organization it became Chi Theta Chapter of Phi Rho Sigma, national fraternity, on April 16, 1929. Since its inception the Deacon chapter has con- stantly sought to carry out the program of service presented by the mother chapter, and it lias become a distinct part of the social and professional life on the campus. At Winston-Salem Phi Rho Sigma intends to continue its policies, but on a larger scale and in a larger way. It has already begun to exert more attention to the selection of its new men, for on the west campus of Wake Forest College there have been new faces, whereas on the mother campus, when pledging time came around Phi Rho Sigma already felt that they knew whom they wanted. Pledges: Jack Aycock, Paul Abernethy, Jeff Beale, Bob Dimmette, W. M. Fowlkes, Jr., Joe Freeman, Bob Garrison, Bob Greene, Jimmy Griggs, Henry Hill, Miles Hudson, Ed Lyda, Grady Mauney. Glenn Sawyer, Bill Shields. J. T. Spencer, and Wendell Tiller. , j AP-. -a !■• A At , §1 •■■«■■ ' ■■■■ «- ' ' ' MM, ' tfi At the forma] opening students, faculty and other notables gather ' the huge amphitheate THE NEW MED SCHOOL Crumpler gets i .-,1 up. Ed Rice leaps into the swing of things Drs. Black and Bradbury visit the new school on an inspection tour. Top, right, the} ' go out to lunch and find groups of med students gathered at a steak house. Lower right, a member of lab class spies the two professors coming in. Bottom, drawing- blood seems interesting to Ed Rice and Bill Poe, as do the fascinating microscopic scenes in next picture. Bottom, Calvin Stringficld holds his poise before nurses. The professors see such scenes as this before embarking for Wake Forest again. H Top row: Leslie Morris, having two altera listens to Moon River. The next day M it just the same. Either carving ;i cadavei anatomj for more practical study. s. leans towards the better still leans towards the bette Bill Poe follows suit, while- Ed Rice one. Bottom: Camera-shy Dr. Vann enjoys e. Med students forget the more gruesome 1 ' elebrities observe the newlj laid cornerstone of the Medical Building. - Sft THE GROWLER 104-2 ... TO PHILLIP II. HIGHFILL THIS year ' s Growleb is dedicated, as we think it should properly be, to the man who made it all possible— its editor. While this may not be exactly orthodox, it ' s s :thing every yearbook editor in the U.S.A. has burned to do tor years. Further- re, this year ' s Growler editor is a man ,,f such marked genius as to make any other selection for dedication out of the question. Scholar, gentleman, man-of-letters, athlete, raconteur, entrepreneur, globe-trotter, linguist, boulevardier, joiner, master of the mot. wit. philosopher, ami holder of this year ' s Most Venerated Senior Cup, he has taken the pictures, done the research, drawn up the format -and— wall, yes. written this dedication, as well as the rest of the copy. We give you Philip H. Highfill, dr.. who hardly mods introduction to his myriads of friends, admirers, and disciples. .■ L Boudoir scene from Lorna Doone, adapted and dram- atized by Margo Schultz. Big spring production. Lorna in arms of her lo estate, Hunter Hall, ' , Count Minsky, at his baronial rna Doone Act V, Scene 4. DRAMA AT W. F. THE Drama at Wake Forest has been, in the past, rather less than Ibsen would have liked, being limited to the Shakespeare course. Here we have had some rather striking interpolations of the Bard — notably, in the characters of Falstaff and Shylock. While competent, and fulfilling a need, these perform- ances have been limited to the fall semester alone. Moreover, th ey have been the Cornelia Otis Skinner type of thing, that is, one-man performances. So it is witli genuine joy that The Growler de- picts, for tile first time, the activities of the Aeschylus Club. The Aeschylus Club, while built along lines almost identical to Mask and Wig and Princeton ' s Triangle Club, must not be confused with organiza- tions such as, for instance, the Mask and Wig or Princeton ' s Triangle Club, having a depth of pur- pose transcending the frivolity of such organizations as, say, Mask and Wig and Princeton ' s famous Triangle Club. The Aeschylus Club writes, directs, produces, casts, stages, acts, advertises its own show r s. It prints the tickets, it blackmails its audience into at- tendance, it sells soda pop. It ' s gay ; it ' s exciting ! Officers of the Club have been, for the dramatic season: Proe, Conn, Titt, Jones, Tatt, and Twombly — Regent, Vice Regent, Chairman of Committee in Charge of Grease-Paint; Chairman of Committee in Charge of Intermissions ; Chairman of Committee in Charge of Claques and Curtain-Calls ; and Chairman of Committee on Borrowing Extra Chairs from the Philosophy Seminar and Putting Them Back. Of the nine plays presented, only one has failed to gross less than $6.98. Death Scene in Lorna Doone, Act IV, FORENSICS DIRECT-CLASH DEBATE WITH OXFORD. Derek, Clesch, deBett, Chairman, Morga ,EFT TO RIGHT: , deSission ATHLETICS FORENSICS at Wake Forest have enjoyed a successful year, .-it Wake Forest, generally speaking, Generally speaking the team lias been pretty generally speaking, generally. Behrends spoke ' . So did several other fellows. The team debated quite a lot. Why, there ' s no telling how many de- bates the team did enter this year. Smith Carolina, North Carolina, Vir- ginia, Boy, they sure did debate quite a lot. Several of the fellows got prises for stuff. Debating, speaking, talk- ing, stuff like that. Several others didn ' t. One time old Behrends got a prize. For something, I forget. Hocked it. though. Didn ' t bring much. Lots of times the fellows debated and talked and such at different woman ' s colleges. And then after the debates were over everybody woidd get a date and sit around and drink cokes and talk about Life. Girl debaters are very intelligent, espe- cially from V.I.j because they all come from Oklahoma and are very pretty and eight feet tall and they take your mind off debating. Once old C. C. Hope got a date. ALWAYS tin- focal attraction of the athletic year at Wake forest is the Mid-Winter Pentathlon. The event, initiated in 1862 by Trustee dames W. Goldesmilch, to promote in- terdorm good will, is entered annually bv some 325 campus huskies. The finals, held in T. I. Davis Memorial Amphitheatre, are attended by sports figures from all over. Among the events: cross-country potato-peel; in- dividual apple-bobbing; the tarty pull; spin-the-bottle ; and cattle- judging. Winner this year was senior letter- man A. Godfrey Slump, of Red Springs. The Wake Forest Monogram Club. under whose aegis the Mid-Winter Pentathlon is held, this year arranged to make the meet official by having A.A.U. representatives on ' hand to clock tin- various ex cuts. The officials did not show up in time for the meet. but ru r hath it that Slump, wi r of the Godesmilch Cup, bettered the mark for the apple-bob, formerlv held by Whimper of Columbia, by two- tenths of a second. Everything was an awful big success, really. c Heathcliff Quench Man of the year The Growler again selects its Man of the Year. In the past this distinction has carried with it almost certain assurance of success in the world outside. Almost without exception the recipients of this honor have led their fields. We name a few : Murdock F. Beeswax, ' 03, now state champion and national champion corn-husker ; Jamison B. Shirtstud, M.D., ' 12. author of the famous treatise of athlete ' s foot and curator of the Ypsilanti, Mich., Guppy Aquarium; and Fleetwood R. Slough, ' 21, columnist, rabbit- fancier, and for years charge d ' affaires of the U. S. Ministry to Andorra. We present Heathcliff Quench, of the School of Taxidermy, who, by virtue of his diligence, friendli- ness, active participation in intramural sports, service to the Chapel Fund, and all-round squaresbooting, is the unanimous choice of The Growler staff as Man of the Year. Some side-lights on our Man of the Year: Tall, dig- nified, reticent, he is a devotee of the Conga, likes fried-egg sandwiches, sometimes works until 1 1 :30 at night with bis shoes off, and has been tapped for Sawdust and Suture, national honorary taxidermy frat. An ardent Anti-Vivisection Leaguist, his name has been mentioned in connection with the national presidency of that body. When notified of his selection Heathcliff behaved with laudable calm and modesty. I only did, quoth Quench, what any decent fellow would have done. This statement is characteristic of the man. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB President Taint is engaged i profs and a Supreme Court Ji should up our soybean importat 0)ject: Resolved: W INTERNATIONAL Relations Club, shown in session at right, is designed for the pur- pose of strengthening international rela- tions. So help us. We do not know bow they go about it. Apparently Roosevelt, Hull, the rest of the State Department boys and the I.R.C. gang up on other nations. Sounds a trifle ambitious ... to outsiders. But then they do not know President J. B. Taint and his boys. Front row: Ayers, McQuirk, Jvurk, Abbott, Jones, Costello. Second row: Haenfstaengel, Zeller, Zither, Meerschaum, Meecham. Beecham, Queep, Morgan. Third row: Winkum. Blinkum, Nod, Squat, Stoop, O ' Toole, Squint, Wilson. Fourth row: Hickery, Dickery, O ' Leary, Dock, Wodehouse, Leatherwood, Finnegan, Clock ' . Fifth row: We know the faces but can ' t recall the names. Back row: Guests from State College IRC. Hoot-Owl Club t:i E Hoot-Owl Club, whose song 1 Won ' t Be ome Until Morning, has achieved some national ominence, is an organization that more or less up at Wake Forest of its own accord. Informal in character, Hunt-Owl lias no special member qualifications. But once a man lias been tapped for Hoot-Owl it is hound to show. Something about liis eyes (or under them), something in the way he walks, talks and knows train-schedules, will give away the active Hoot-Owl member every time. Hoot-Owl ' s primary aims are to teaeli a man to take it and hold it. to strengthen liis character, make him a bitter spnr-of-tlie-moment conversa- tionalist, improve liis knowledge of the American railway system, and get him home well in ad- vance of liis eight o ' eloek class. Hoot-Owl members are traveling men. and no mistake. Swift operators, they get around. They know the ropes. There has been talk of moving the chapter headquarters from the lobby of the Sir Walter hack to the old chapter-room over Shorty ' s. That will depend on the incoming officers. They are: Chief Hoot. Burgwyn; Lesser Hoot. Wilson; ' Least Hoot. Overton. In the picture, Hoot-Owl members Olson, John- son, and Pennypyncher are shown off to an early start, with loUypops. Pennypyncher is also busi- ness manager of The Growler, which accounts for his affluence. CULTURE ON THE CAMPUS WAKK FOREST has, for many years past, been the inspirational center of visual arts in the South, hut it has been only compara- tive recently that Old Wake Konst has come into her own as a fountainhead of music, both vocal and instrumental. Under the leadership of Dr. Arturo Broadwater and his competent assistant I ' . Merryman Fester. the Wake Forest Fllgne. Chorale, and Fislifrv Society ' s Annua] Music Orgy has enjoyed a sneeess rivaling that of Salzburg, Weimar in the golden days, ami the Berkshire Festival. Huge throngs from every state and many foreign lands have attended the Orgy for the past three seasons. Roads into Wake Forest this year were choked with pilgrims come to do homage to Maestro Broadwater, and they .lid not come in vain. For four solid davs thev were regaled with open-air concerts of every description. Thev had to be open-air concerts. Music, music, music, from six thirty a.m. .mil twelve midnight. Among the gnest- artists appearing on the instrumental programmes this year were the great wood-wind virtuoso .1. Nasal Harrell, tin- world-famous Armenian violin ist Yehmli Hahful, contra-bass ist John Scotl Snyder, zitherist Saelia Kapriva. and tynipanist Igor Overton. These, of course, wen members of iirecl rs at ihith. ibove is a i the final atre, Sask ratll atoon Syn ■a Na .ini. Jacqueli) r. Vocal rinerh of irtists ¥1 La Sea re a. and hass, prof,,, do With the help of Earl Carroll, Harpo Marx, George Abbott, an d the Head Warden of the Kankakee Prison for Delinquent Women, we have finally come to a decision in the matter of our selection for The Growler ' s May Beauty Queen. Not every annual editor is jjrivileged to choose from among a bevy of luscious beauties such as we had before us when the choosing began. But, alas, that works both ways. Not every editor is so hard put to make a selection. Thus it is with a deep consciousness of the honor we have done ourselves, The Growler, and the old school, that we present Miss LaRue Morgue, of Turkey, North Carolina, who graces our pages in a manner which, we think you ' ll agree, is unique in the annals of Growler ' s choices of May Beauty Queen. JOB P. WYATT SONS CO. HARDWARE : IMPLEMENTS DUPONT PAINT OIL VARNISHES HLRREROID ROOFING and SHINGLES SEEDS : PLANTS : Kl LIBS : GARDEN TOOLS 325-327 SOUTH WILMINGTON STREET RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA AS YOU APPRECIATE FINE SERVICE —WE APPRECIATE YOUR FINE PATRONAGE WHICH HAS HELPED MAKE US WAKE FOREST ' S LEAD- ING FOOD STORE MEATS FANCY GROCERIES • Our Everyday Prices Are Designed To Save You Money HOLLOWELL FOOD STORE 2521 . . . Phone . . . 2531 WAKE FOREST, N. C. VciuHi Confe to Inte Carace Hilary Blench, the singing strings of Hunter Hall, in a pensive mood. The POINSETT HOTEL • CAROLINA ' S FINEST • GREENVILLE SOUTH CAROLINA Compliments of GEORGE W. KANE CONTRACTOR ROXBORO Postoffice Building DURHAM 1 1 1 Corcoran St. Bldg. GREENSBORO 603 Jefferson St. Bldg. W. H. KING DRUG CO. • WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS • WILMINGTON STREET RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA CONGRATULATIONS TO SENIOR CLASS OF 1942 Durham Bank and Trust Co. Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation CONGRATULATIONS AND REST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1942 THE COLLEGE SODA SHOP The Friendly Place We Are All for Wake Forest When Rack Don ' t Forget to Come to See lis FRED WILLIAMS SMUT SMITH WAKE FOREST, NORTH CAROLINA ■ ■ ■HHUH SMART CLOTHING ATTUNED TO COLLEGIATE PERSONALITIES FOR EVERY SEASON Hudson-Belk Co. East Carolina ' s Largest Department Store Raleigh, North Carolina EVERYTHING for the MILL GENERAL REPAIRING IN OUR MODERN SHOPS Supplies for Railroads : Contractors : Mills Machinists : Mines Dillon Supply Co. RALEIGH DURHAM ROCKY MOUNT II Hey, Joe! Wonder what we ' re worth on the hoof? ' case Joe doesn ' t know, it cost his country $211 to equip him. Multi- ply that by an army, and you have a tidy sum of money. We ought to know because 14,804 Joes could be completely outfitted with the $3,123,689 this company paid in taxes last year. That ' s equal to $8,558 for every day in the year — or equal to 81,958 per average employee — or equal to 20 cents out of every dollar paid to us for electricity in 1941. We ' re not complaining— those dollars — well over three million of them— will not only help win our fight for Ameri- freedom but they ' ll help support chools, police and fire departments nd other public services that make p our American system of govern- Carolina Power Light Company SPEED VICTORY • BUY U. S. DEFENSE BONDS WAKE FOREST STUDENTS ARE ALWAYS WELCOME AT THE AMBASSADOR ■b i J5 H 5 ■ STATE • . ukajk J|P w ' ' H • PALACE m Esff CAPITOL 5? ■■§ aJ? . and VARSITY THEATRES IV. C. THEATRES, INC. RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA RALEIGH ' S NEWEST We Take Great Delight in Serving the College Students in Hotel Carolina Winston-Salem RALEIGH, N. C. QUALITY We Cuter to W tike Forest Functions ALL PUBLIC ROOMS RECENTLY SERVICE REDECORATED • Robert I. Lee, Mgr. Bobbirr ' s College Pharmacy WINSTON -SALEM, N. C. CONGRATULATIONS • • to the Class of ' 42 Compliments of ..««•«_,.. Crescent THE COLLEGE Drug Co. BOOK STORE E. C. SNYDER, Prop. • ■ «•«_... Winston-Salem, North Carolina The Complete Store On the Campus • We Welcome the l ew Wake BRIGHTEN YOUR HOME Forest Medical School to WITH OUR GOOD W iiistoii-Salem FURNITURE • • ' •Our Delight is to Serve RUGS You Right FURNITURE • SOUTHERN AUCTION • Swaney Drug Store FURNITURE COMPANY Winston-Salem, N. C. RALEIGH, N. C. Compliments of Smokeless Fuel Company CHARLESTON, W. VA. NEW YORK CHICAGO NORFOLK Compliments of R. E. OUINN CO. RUGS — RADIOS and FURNITURE Raleigh, North Carolina FOR GOOD FOOD VISIT THE TOWN STEAK HOUSE IT MUST BE GOOD THE DOCTORS EAT HERE Winston-Salem, N. C. SHOES FOR MEN College men — who make or break men ' s fashions — put the new authentic Jarman Shoes for Men at the head of any class! You Don ' t Have to Rate a Phi Beta Kappa Key to BE THE SMARTEST MAN ON THE CAMPUS! B. b S. DEPARTMENT STORE Wake Forest, N. C. Patronize Our Advertisers REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR and Your Forest and Collegiate Theatres MR. BILL GLOVER, Mgr. BUY DEFENSE BONDS AND STAMPS Phi Beta Kappa banquet. WE SPIN AN OLD YARN Chatham Homespun Cloth for Men ' s Suits has been one of North Carolina ' s distinguished products since 1877. This handsome material, like the fine, strong cloth that was woven by hand in the Blue Ridge, has become famous throughout the country as one of the best wearing fabrics ever made. Today, there ' s a new story about this old yarn. High speed, modern looms weave this sturdy cloth and a famous men ' s tailor makes Chatham Homespun Cloth into Men ' s Suits in all the smart styles. Look at them at your favorite clothing store. Chatham Manufacturing Co, THE MILL IS AT ELKIN, NORTH CAROLINA COMPLETE SURGICAL EQUIPMENT FOR MEDICAL SCHOOLS MEDICAL STUDENTS HEALTH DEPARTMENTS HOSPITALS PHYSICIANS INTERNS Carolina ' s House of Service W. I. Berryhill, Representative Winchester Surgical Supply Co. 106 East Seventh Street Telephone 2-4109 Charlotte, North Carolina Perry H. Ritch, Representative Winchester-Ritch Surgical Co. 1 1 1 North Green Street Telephone 5656 Greensboro, North Carolina sites? $«ilC!  iioKi C© );pSOT0],[f WHEN IN DURHAM PATRONIZE HOTEL WASHINGTON DUKE and TAVERN Excellent Service WE CATER TO FRATERNITY BANQUETS and DANCES Largest Hotel Ballroom in the State ' College Student ' s Meeting Place One of North Carolina ' s Leading Men ' s and Boys ' Stores Noted for its LEADERSHIP in Style, Quality, and Good Service My Mamma done tnli- Make HINE-BAGBY CO. Your Clothing Headquarters We Welcome to Winston-Salem the New Wake Forest Medical School Hine-Bagby Co., Inc. Winston-Salem, N. C. J. 0. JONES, Inc. J.JL Yon really like the New Things when they are new. . . . Come to one of Charlotte ' s Finest Men ' s Stores. HART N II l I M It MARX UNIVERSITY CLUR CLOTHING CLOTHCRAFT FINE CLOTHES J. 0. JONES, Inc. 208-210 South Trvon Street IHHH H B Bl Pole Scene, from Barber of Seville, fall of- fering of the Hester-d ' Oyly Carte Little Opera Group. BIG BUSINESS Depends Largely Upon Efficient Office Administration AN EXCELLENT OFFICE in turn depends very much upon the up-to-date equipment with which it is furnished. It is really a good investment to install in your office every- thing that lends elegance, comfort, accuracy and speed. • KALE-LAWING COMPANY Everything for the Office ' ' ' ' 227-229 S. Tryon St. Charlotte, N. C. PHONE 6185 Compliments of Flower Shop FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION RALEIGH NORTH CAROLINA Compliments of Cocker Machine Foundry Company Gastonia, North Carolina • Builders of Warpers . . . Slashers . . . Beamers Warp Dyeing and Finishing Machinery SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS HOSPITAL FURNITURE INVALID SUPPLIES OPERATING and STERILIZING EQUIPMENT . . . HOSPITAL and SICK ROOM SUNDRIES POWERS b ANDERSON OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. 626 W. Fourth Street WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Telephone 3-1538 For Forty Years the Leading Drug Store of Piedmont North Carolina ' We have a Private Prescription Department in Our Balcony ' O ' HANLON ' S DRUG STORE WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. WELCOME TO WINSTON-SALEM WAKE FOREST MEDICAL SCHOOL SUMMIT STREET PHARMACY Foot Summit Street — Ov erlooking Hones Park THE HOME OF COMPLETE DRUG STORE SERVICE, BUT WHERE PRESCRIPTIONS ARE OUR FIRST CONSIDERATION FOR PROMPT DELIVERY . . . DIAL 2-1144 WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. .-II us a 1 WOl k: Storj -confer •nc ■ on Tes of tl inr •icanc by i o-author , co-pn dii ■,ts of Dro III Clllh rei 1 thr e-acl success llidl III s 1 iree compa les plaj (- ' ill MS manj CO until S III til s writing. C -author i-p •odu ■rs nr ■ Russia! emigri lil rsch and w ill-know Ivi lit u r. r Chi] a-Bill G tnther. IN THIS ANNUAL WERE MADE BY DANIEL SMIT STUDIO 134 Fayetteville Street Raleigh, North Carolina ec£ FINE PORTRAITS PROMPT SERVICE WAKE FOREST COLLEGE Wake Forest, North Carolina Founded 1834 A College of Liberal Arts with an Established Reputation for High Standards, Noble Traditions and Progressive Policies. REASONABLE EXPENSES For Catalogue, Write E. B. EARNSHAW, Secretary New Session Begins September 8, 1942 JAHN OILIER AGAIN JAHN OLLIER EMCRftVIMC CO. Makers of Fine Printing Plates for Black and Color Artists and Photographers 817 W. WASHINGTON BLVD. CHICAGO, ILL. moBH APPRECIATION MK. ELLIOTT B. EARNSHAW MR. A. E. GAGE DR. E. E. POLK MR. JOHN D. MINTER MR. A. A. LUBERSKY MR. JOE HAH 1)1 SON- MR. GORDON BRIGHTMAN MR. JOHN A. DETWEILDER MR. ED LEBER MR. FAYE SMITH MR. JOE TILLOTSON MISS DIXIE FRENCH DANIEL SMITH STUDIOS JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING COMPANY THE DAVID J. MOLLOY COMPANY EDWARDS BROUGHTON COMPANY «m INDEX Page Administrative Officers 22-23 Advertisements 194-206 Alpha Kappa I ' i 135 Autumn 18-21 Band 50 Baptist Student Lnioii 17 Baptist Training Union 48 Bar Association 16] Basketball, Freshman .... 98 Basketball, Varsity 94-97 Bowman Gray School of Medicine 174-186 Campus Scenes 7-16 Cheer Leaders 54 Christian Service Group 49 Class Snaps 80-81 Coaches 55 Co-eds 92-93 Contents 7 I leliate Squad 46 Dedication 1-5 Delta Kappa Alpha 105 Delta Sigma Phi 137 Euzelian Literary Society 44-45 Faculty 24-27 Football, Freshman 62 Football Sidelights 61-65 Football. Varsity 56-61 Foreword ; Fraternities. Honorary 100-109 Fraternities, Honorary, Introduction 101 Fraternities. Social 135-1 13 Fraternities, Social, Introduction 130-131 Freshman Class 30-37 Freshman Class Officers 30 Gamma Eta Gamma 1 13 Gamma Nil Iota 106 Gamma Sigma Epsilon loi Glee Club 51 Graduate Students 160 Growler, The 187-193 Hell Week 132-133 Homecoming 66-67 Howler, The 168-169 Page Informal Dances 10 International Relations Club 52 Intramural Basketball 99 Intramural Football 63 Junior Class 82-91 Junior Class Officers 82 Kappa Alpha 136 Kappa Sigma 1 40 Lambda Chi Alpha 138 Law School 161-165 Midwinters 110-113 Ministerial Conference 48 Monogram Club 109 Octet 51 Old Gold and Black 170-171 Omicron Delta Kappa 103 Organizations 42-53 Outstanding Seniors 152-153 Pan-Hellenic Council 134 I ' i Kappa Alpha 139 Pi Kappa Delta 1 07 Phi Beta Kappa 102 Phi Chi 182 Philomathesian Literary Society 44-45 Phi Rho Sigma 183 Publications Introduction 166-167 Publications Board 100 Senior Class 146-159 Senior Class Officers I 16 Sigma Pi 142 Sigma l i Alpha 108 Sigma Phi Epsilon 141 Sophomore Class 72-79 Sophomore Class Officers 72 Sponsors 1 18-127 Spring 111-117 Staff Favorites 128-129 Student Council 28 Student Legislature 29 Student Political Union 53 Student, The 172-173 Sunday School Officers 49 Track 144-145 Winter 68-71 % % % % %


Suggestions in the Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC) collection:

Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

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Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

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Wake Forest University - Howler Yearbook (Winston Salem, NC) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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