WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA, TUESDA ( -»CT. 29, Z-792. Debaters o Meet avaliers

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1 A FLAT HAT poll on the Presdental electon wll be conducted ths week. We ask all students to cooperate by not fllng out a blank more than once. Remember ths s not Boss Hague's town and you're enttled to only one vote. COLLEGE OF WLLAM ARY Do you or do you not lke the drt column? f you do you better organze a letter campagn to keep t n the PLAT HAT, for ths week may see the last of t. Read the drt column for further detals. VOLUME XXX NO. 5 rner Moss for r.jj.fc. t Wllke-Roosevelt Debate Poltcal Symposum, Ph Bete, Wed. 8 p. m. The House of Burgesses on Wednesday nght at 8 P.- M. wll present n Ph Beta Kappa Hall a poltcal debate between Mr. Lews C. Wllams of Rchmond and Mr. Warner Moss of Wllamsburg. The argument on the sde of Mr. Wllke wll be presented by Mr. Wllams who s comng to the College through the courtesy of the Democrats for Wllke Clubs of Vrgna. Mr. Wllams s one of Vrgna's most dstngushed attorneys. He holds the degrees of A. B. and A. M. from the Unversty of Vrgna, s a member of. the Raven Socety of the Unversty and of Ph Beta Kappa, and s a member of the Board of Vstors of the-unversty. He s a member of the Amercan and Rchmond Bar Assocatons and an honorary member of the West Vrgna Bar Assocaton. Hs frm of Wllams, Mullen, Wllams and Hazelgrove s one of the leadng law frms of Rchmond. He s a Democrat. The argument for Mr. Roosevelt wll be presented by Mr. Warner Moss. Mr. Moss s partcpatng n the dscusson at the request of a group of Democrats and others nterested n the electon of Mr. Roosevelt. Mr. Moss s Professor of Government at the College of Wllam and Mary. He has long been a student of poltcal partes both here and abroad and some years ago publshed a study of poltcal partes n the rsh Free State. Mr. Moss has also taken an actve part n poltcs and s now a member of Mayor LaGnarda's Progressve Commttee for the Re- Electon' of Presdent Roosevelt. Mr. Moss s a Democrat. Current Events Books Avalable To All Students,. R. C. Club Opens Shelves * The nternatonal Relatons Club has bult up one of the most modern small lbrares n ths part of the country on topcs dealng wth nternatonal affars. The club s ndebted to the Carnege Endowment for nternatonal Peace whch sends lterature, books, and speakers. Twce a year ths endowment contrbutes books to the lbrary to encourage the study of nternatonal events. Ths collecton s now stuated n the north east corner of the man readng room and s open to all students, although borrowng prvleges are lmted to members of the club. The most recent books are: Great Brtan, an Empre n Transton by Albert Vton a well balanced revew of the development of the Brtsh Empre. Amercan Polcy r\the Far East, MO, by T. A. Bsson. Ths s a careful study of the record of the Unted States n ts dealngs wth the Par East from 1931 to l!!40. t s one of the nqury seres publshed by the nsttute of Pacfc Relatons. What Germany Forgot, by James ". 'hotwell. Ths book s a pertn- :.! study of the past falure jf 'e.'any n relaton to the present Contnued On Page Two) AUDTONS ll students who are nterest- (.:, n actng and who have not... tepated n plays on ths (; pus wll have the opportunst of an audton on Wednesday -!0U from 3:00 to 6:00 n Wren Theatre Workshop. Audton sheets are avalable s',.-arous dormtores and at the worshop. Canddates should hr prepared to present the se- \ <u d passages wth or wthout'. «."-t- of the copy. PLAT HAT MEET There wll be a meetng of the entre FLAT HAT Staff Wednesday evenng at 7:3ft P. M. on the thrd floor of Marshall-Wythe...All reporters and feature staff members and busness staff must be present for ths meetng. 174 College Men agster Under Conscrpton Act 1113 Sgn Up n Wllamsburg At the same tme that all other Amercan men of draft age were regsterng for potental tranng under the Selectve Tranng and Servce Act, the students and faculty of the college, and Wllamsburg men from 21 to 86 years of age were dong the same thng. Regstraton was held on October 16 at Matthew - Whaley Hgh School. There were 174 college men wthn the age lmt, and of these, 15 were exempt because they all ready belonged to volunteer organzatons such as the Natonal Guard, the Naval Reserve, or some other smlar group men from Wllamsburg proper regstered, and of these 683 were whte and 428 negro. Gardner Brooks heads the local draft board. The rearstrars for the college students were John Hocntt and Harold Dnges. Each enlstng man was requred to fll out a card gvng hs name, home address, name of person knowng that address, age, date of brth and a personal descrpton of hmself. Ths card provdes all the nformaton necessary to the government when the cards are drawn for the drafts. Each man was also gven a regstraton certfcate whch he must carry wth hm at all tmes so that he can present (Contnued on Page Sx) Homecomng Cavalers Bow To W-M Homecomng day, a day antcpated and long awated, a day of rejocng and celebraton, that comes but once a year has come TS Of Season Smash Ht ReYewer Gves Hs Plaudts Hart and Kaufman, the Amercan theatre's No. 1 typewrter clowns, dustng off a few ancent stuatons, peoplng ther comc whrlwnd wth an antc famly of Manhattan dafts, gave ths revewer tympanc dsturbances as a result of the Gargantuan concusson of palms whch accompaned the fnal act curtan not to menton the hystercs of laughter. whch dappled the performance from start to fnsh. Delberately banal, You Can't Take t Wth You s a parlor study n trbe mana, turnng out to be n expertly fabrcated formula comedy geared to farce speed, noddng agreeably to at least one pet natve yarn, Alce Adams, and a dramatc stuaton whch has not grown any younger snce Pyramus and Thsbe. ndeed, so theoretcally threadbare s ths narratve scheme that t takes an gnted dsh of red fre to brng down the frst act curtan, an off-stage exploson to close Act T. These punctuatons are really not necessary, for n creatng Grandpa Vanderhof and hs clan the Grl's famly whch the Boy's famly vews wth alarm the playwrghts have conjured a speces of dramats personae whch transcends plot, hursts the bonds of the establshed thca're, and mounts nto the stratosphere ol* lterary lunacy. Nether author, however, ptchng jests n! o the comedy wth both hands gddy combnatons of pet snakes, prntng-pressed, ex-cemen, xylophones, butlers on relef, etc., ad nfntum resultng n,a vertable psycopathc ward on Claremont Avenue n the Columba Unversty dstrct of upper Manhattan sland gave the audence a moment to relax, a double-moment to take a full vew and recognze the thnness of (Contnued On Page Two) WLLAMSBURG, VRGNA, TUESDA ( -»CT. 29, Z-792 Part of the thousands of hgh chool students that were guests of the college at the Homecomng game last Saturday. We notced that a 1 >t of them wore the W. and M. colors. Put that together wth the fact that we won the game and mpress: ad them no end, and you mght be lookng at a pcture of a lot of prospectve freshmen. Debaters o Meet avalers The Men's Debatng team o College of Wllam and Ma off to a flyng start by sched a debate wth a team from Unversty of Vrgna for a t fve date n the early part of vember. The present presdental ele wll be the topc that s dsc wth Wllam and Mary suppo Roosevelt and Vrgna upho Wllke. Two members wll b (Contnued on Page Two' he t s.11 S!''(! tng d);r s Gala Week~Bm > and gone. Yet ths homecomng was not just another day of celebraton that rolls around yearly, but one that comes rarely. Not often are alumn treated to such a sght as greeted ther eyes Saturday mornng, not often do they see a great, nspred team break all records and tradtons by defeatng a hghly rated team, heretofore unbeaten by a Wllam and Mary eleven. These thngs made Homecomng a truly great occason for all. These thngs made Saturday, October 26 a day to be remembered and to go down n the chroncles of Wllam and Mary hstory. The festvtes began wth the parade of bands, floats, and exhbts at 10:30. The floats were many and vared n form, but there was one fundamental dea to all of them, the dea of beatng Vrgna. That was the underlyng dea of all the floats, and seemed to exemplfy the sprt of the day. The parade was followed by a pcnc luncheon for alumn, and CONTEMPORARY SCENE Sgma P Float Wns Frst Prze Ths float ddn't wn frst prze, but dd happen to get n the way of our camera man' comng parade. The war motve seems partcularly approprate n ths day and age. thrd prze; Sgma P won frst, Kappa Delta second, and Chandler Hall fourth. hgh school students of Vrs who were guests of the eo whle n the dnng halls be brokeloose as the students v cheered the team. Just before the great co started at 2:30 the wnners << best floats were announced. S P wth ts funeral of Yn took frst. Kappa Delta, P K Alpha and Chandler Hall each second, thrd and fourth prkspectvely. (Contnued on Page Thre< s flash at the Ths float wc 1X13- tle Cavaler Men Spemk Up On Wm, and Mary Apparently the old adage, "Famlarty br.-eds contempt," can-1 Last Wednesday afternoon at not be appled to Wm. and M. co- fve o'clock the Women's Debatng ods from the Unversty of Vrgna Team, wth Gertrude Van Wyck n vewpont. charge, met at Phlomafhean Hall Harrs Bradley, the lanky Vrgna band leader, ddn't seem any seven lucky grls to jon ther n the Wren Buldng to choose too enthusastc about the co-eds but wth typcal cavaler courtesy remarked that: the co-eds were very nce, at least what he had seen, of them; the boys n the band had trouble keepng ther mnds on notes; and that he had never heard of the sunken gardens! (He only arrved Saturday mornng.) On the other hand, Lynn Scott, one of the boys who graced the Wllam and Mary campus Frday nght had a dfferent atttude. Mr. Scott, publcty agent for the band, spent the nght n Old Domnon wth the "merry lads" and attended the dances (not countng frequent vsts to the sunken gardens whch apparently mpressed hm very much). t seems that Mr, Scott (ncdentally he was wearng dark glasses at the game) - aded Barrett Hall at eleven o'clock n search of a date and was not thrown out on hs ear. Ths courtesy, along "wth the fact that we have some cute grls, mmedately won hm over to the co-eds. (Both Mr. Bradley and Mr. Scott ntmated that any correspondence receved from ths campus would be promptly answered.) Speakng of over confdence, the Vrgna boys certanly have t n unforgveable amounts. Mr. Brad- (Contnued On Page Sx) Recorded Musc Held n Chapel Every Tuesday 6:45-7:15 Because there have been so many requests from students ths year for programs of recorded musc, Mss Ellen Butt has arranged for a half-hour program of musc every Tuesday evenng after dnner, from 6:45 to 7:15. Students are nvted to drop n at the Wren Chapel for a bt of relaxaton and pleasure through musc! The frst program, to be held on November 5, wll nclude the followng numbers: Beethoven's Egmon Overture, Strauss' Tales of Venna Woods and Voces of Sprng, and the frst movement of Shubert's Unfnshed Symphony. V (C Team Pcks New Members ranks ths year. The tryout conssted of & fvemnute prepared talk on one of the followng subjects. 1. The Unted States should enter the war mmedately on the sde of Great Brtan. 2. The Unted States and South Amerca should form a mltary allance aganst foregn aggresson at once. 3. Presdent Roosevelt should be reelected for a thrd term. Ten prospectve members have done ther best and the remanng tryouts wll be held ths Wednesday, the thrteth, at the same tme and place. The results wll be announced at the end of ths week. Bology Club Sets'-- Swamp Feld Trp For Ths Saturday An all day feld trp through the Great Dsmal Swamp wll be conducted by the Clayton Grmes Bology Club ths Saturday. All nterested students or faculty members are nvted, although frst opton on accommodatons has been reserved for Club members. Old clothes and heavy shoes wll be the order of the day. Those gong wll meet a specal bus n front of Ph Beta Kappa Hall at 7:30 A. M. whch wll take them to the edge of the swamp area. There the party wll dvde, more ambtous members hkng deeper nto the regon, the less ambtous contnung by' bus as far as pos- sble. The entre group wll then meet at the Lake House of "Old Captan Crockett," veteran swamp explorer for nearly half a century, who wll gude them through portons of the swamp where t s possble to go- afoot and fnally take them on hs swamp boat for an exploratory cruse over shallow Lake Drummod n the heart of the (Contnued On Page Two) HALLOWEEN PATY The Y. W. C. A. wll have a Halloween party Thursday evenng n Barrett lvng room at 7:00 o'clock. There wll be a short busness meetng frst. Authorty On Classes Out At 10:45 Tabbed by Lfe Magazne n a recent two page spread as one of the country's ace newspaper-men, Dr. Douglas Sou tha) Freeman, Edtor of the Rchmond News Leader, wll speak on "Current Events" at a specal 11:00 o'clock convocaton n Ph Bete on October 31. Hs talks on current events delvered here over a two year perod from 1036 to 1988 always brought an nterested audence to Ph Bete. Lfe wrote up Mr. Freeman as * man devoted to the South, a men who nterprets current events dramatcally wth a gauge of Cvl War hstory. Wllam and Maryaudences put hm down as a teen analyst of world trends, an nterestng speaker, and a frendly sympathetc person to meet. Mr. Freeman, n addton to hs edtoral dutes, wrtes authoratvely n the feld of Hstory, mostly on the South. Hs Pultzer-Prze wnnng bography of Robert l, Lee, together wth hs Hstory of Vrgna, and hs novel "The Last Parade" have all contrbuled to the envable poston Mr. Freeman holds n the lterary world. n recognton of hs lterary and scholastc achevements, Dr. Freeman has receved twelve degrees from varous colleges and unverstes. He has been Professor of Journalsm at Columba Unversty and a lecturer at the Army V/ar College. At present, Dr. Freeman s a member of the Board of Educaton of the Rockefeller Foundaton and a Trustee of The Carnege Endowment for nternatonal Peace. On Wednesday, November 6th, the Faculty Commttee on Lectures and Specal Events headed by Dr. Wagner wll present a dance rectal by the Wnslow-Ftzmmons Group of modern dancers. The followng Sunday Dr. Eustace Hayden wll begn hs seres of four lectures on comparatve relgons. The concludng lectures wll be gven on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of the followng week. All these lectures are to be held n Ph Beta Kappa at eght o'clock. ar causes r. Fowler's erne The fundamental causes of the Second World War were the falure of the peace settlement and the League of Natons to provde Europe wth securty, and the dynamc polces of Naz Germany, Dr. j Harold L. Fowler, assocate pro- fessor of hstory at the College of 'Wllam and Mary, declared n a rado address over WRNL Frday nght, "The peace settlement of 191U had wthn tself the germs of future wars," the speaker sad. "ts total effect upon the defeated powers was severe and humlatng. They had been led to expect more lenent terms." Ctng as problems rased by the treaty the terrtoral dsposton of Austra and the Polsh Corrdor, dsarmament and reparatons, the speaker sad, "Some of the major provsons of the Treaty of Versalles were deeply resented n Germany. Furthermore several of these provsons were appled and enforced n an unreasonable and unfortunate manner. "On the other hand," he contnued," t s perfectly true thgt certan groups n Germany, notably the Nazs, greatly exaggerate! (Contnued On Page Two)

2 PAGE TWO THE FLAT' HAT Ralph Krkpatrck Harpschordst To Play n Nov. t -agody. v..mnonwealth or Anarchy? by Sr.! /hn A. R. Marrnott. Ths book "Sets forth the more mportant Announcement was made today 'projects' whch, durng the at the offces of the "Wllamsburg Restoraton that followng the custom last four centures, have been formulated for the avodance of nternatonal ntroduced last year a specal war." The Way Out of War by Cesar local concert n the ffth seres of Saerchnger.fThs s,a revew of the festval programs of 18th century events that led up to the present musc wll be presented for Wl world tragedy. lamsburg ctzens n the ballroom» the Governor's Palace, Wednesday evenng, November 20th. The concet wll begn at 8:45 P. M. Ralph Krkpatrck, harpschordst, wll agan drect a group of muscans n both vocal and nstrumental selectons of the sgnfcant musc of 18th century Wllamsburg. Ths season's concerts wll be held for two successve weekends n November 14th through Cth and 21st through 23rd. nformaton concernng the pro-" grams and tckets may be obtaned at the offces of the Restoraton. BKES FOR RENT MR. AMES Boundary and Scotland Sts. j Current Events C & (' SHOE HOSPTAL The Shop of Better Qualty and Servce 314 r,. Boundary St. Look for the Trade Mark A. B. BADBS, Prop. S-4.-S- y-(>< >><> X-^-fr-O-- -^. ~ T," 5T!a,ns1)r«; vpn 1 Co, COAL FUSL OL Concrete and Buldng Supples The Home of Servce Phone 127 ly^^~$~$-q-$-$^l*q-$-$4"b-$4&q&fr&<> COLONS CLEANNG & DYENG COMPANY Prompt Servce Phone 48 FRESHMEN HAVE YOU BEEN Some Motes on War and Peace by Walter Lppraan. Ths pamphlet gves a plan, straght talk on how to reman sensble n ths present crss. Debaters to Meet.(Contnued Prom Page One) lected from the club to oppose a smlar number from Vrgna. Ths debate wll be gven before the House of Burgesses at the meetng after the next one. An open dscusson of the topc wll be held after the debate by the entre audence. New members wll be selected by tryouts and any students, Freshmen or upperclassmen, who were not able to report at the trals held Tuesday nght, October 29, can come to the meetng to be held on Wednesday, November 6th at 7:30 at a place to be desgnated later. Dr. Charles Harrson s the new coach for the Men's and Women's Debatng teams replacng Mr. John Lews. The Two Wllamsburg PENDE1 ; 'OUALTY FOOD STOPES* t * jgater Especally to W. & M.-k! '' Fraterntes and Sorortes } ' Groceres Qualty.Meats Fresh Fruts and Vegetables 9 DR. BRANTLEY HENDERSON^ % Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat. t. Lenses Duplcated Y COLONAL BOWLNG PAPXOE Under the A. & P. Store Open 3 P. M. to 12 P. M. j 7 X> f^4 W' n A{, k&ur,! / :']f M,f.U <}f\ m! &PP& FORMAL DANCE Ths s what happens when you mx Dean Hudson's, band, several co-eds clad lads: presto you have a typcal Homecomng dance scene n Blow Dr. Fowler.(Contnued Prom Page One) the faults of the treaty and tred for poltcal purposes to blame all of Germany's woes upon that docu- ment," Dr. Fowler defned Natonal Socalsm as "a dynamc revolutonary movement whch frst destroyed every trace of democracy and freedo TO 111 (jf ermany and then turned to destroy Europe." "The key to Naz foregn polcy," he concluded, "s the demand for Lebensraum lvng space. Ths goal could be attaned only by German control over all Europe and Htler was confdent he could secure t because he beleved the democraces were on the declne. By makng hs demands pecemeal he could force England and Prance, the chef representatves of the old order, to make one concesson after the other untl t was almost mpossble for them to call a halt. "England and France beleved that by concessons, by,a polcy of appeasement, Htler could be satsfed. They dd not realze that each concesson sharpened hs eagerness for a new attack and made hm more confdent of ultmate success. For Htler, the really decsve acton takes place before the outbreak of war. t conssts n de moralzaton of the enemy. Gven ths true character of the move- mert, compromse, for Natonal Socalsm s death. Once Htler had.a.. X e, the Grand Duchess Olga Ka- trna (well done by Bette Smth) d worked n a Chld's restaurant. The Sycamore's colored help conssted embarked upon hs polcy of e: panson, he could not stop. He s< t loose the tran of events whch!: drectly to the present War." Dr. Fowler's address was tl e of Rheba (Nathale Smth) and second n a weekly seres of tall s Donald (Bll Parry) who mght ve by members of the Wllam a (j wth "Mammy" Jolson when ' t Mary faculty on "The World n comes to vocal nterpretaton. Crss" over WRNL. Next Frd;; at 9:45 Dr. Bruce T. McCully,, One soul n ths three-rng crcus s sane: Alce (Peggy Gldner) structor n hstory, wll dscu who s loved by her boss' son, play- "The mmedate Causes of tl -d by Carl Muecke, whose hstron War." talent was probably most ev- Play Bevew (Contnued Prom Page One) the pece. All the way down from the,s nor madman, gentle, phlosoph t Grandpa Vanderhof, portrayed c fnely by Ed Svetke; Penny, 11 < faddst, equally well realzed 1 % Dot Ogden whch two players nu. be pcked up for ndvdual hono.= all the way down to Father Syc: more (Dyckman Vermllye) mam - facturng llegal freworks n tl ; basement wth the help of Dr. 1 * Pnna.(amusngly nterpreted <, Tony Manz) who came to delv the ce one mornng and just stay< on for eght years; Esse, tl: would-be ballet dancer daught< who makes "Love Dreams" for - lvng, and s marred to Ed (w ' mght have been named Art Co grove had be been around dur. the play's composton) an unen ployed dreamer who ddn't kno < whether he wanted to be a xyl phone player or a prnter, but h: both xylophone and press at ha : n case he ever made up hs mn John Prnzvall was qute effe tve as the ballet-master, Wn* < Russan, ferce, moody, and p vately of the opnon that hs lo>«pupl. Esse, was never, alas, to b come a dancer; he taught her nc«the less (to the crazed tnkle Oo^g rove's xylophone for the snr, - reason that hs compatrot-n-e n evenng gown and a few formal gym. enced n the love scene of the frst ct. Mss Althea Hunt s hghly rel>onsble for delghtful mood of amanty and gaety whch made -hs producton so successful. The. gle cast deftly selected and deted by her to a sharp, keen H>nt of rghtness performed the e lergetc lunaces wth blthe per- 'cton. W.A.B, Bology Club. ') 'ea. Lunch wll be served on the boat, and the return trp made n. me to reach Wllamsburg for! pper. All those desrng to go are re- ;j tested to please sgn the paper on 'e bulletn board outsde Washng- >n 100. The fee wll be $2.00 for m-club members; ths ncludes > 1 expenses as well as lunch. j The Swamp area orgnally cov- ed about 2,200 square mles h ' >uth central Vrgna and North, 'tral North Carolna, but nearly ''0 of these have been artfcally. "fned. Approxmately 950 square rles reman completely nundated,. ke Drummond ncludng on'y, )out 35 of these. Complments of <* '. ROSE'S t 5c, 10c & 25c Store % Alpha Theta chapter of Ph Kappa Tart takes pleasure n announcng the ntaton of C. Poster Jennngs of Toana, Va. on Tuesday, October 22nd. Sgma Rho announces the ntaton on October 14 of Alfred Vandeweghe, of Teaneck, N. J.; John Torma, of Oak, Hll, W. Va.; and Gerr.ard Ramsey, of Wallace, Va. They are pledgng Russell Gulek, Vncent Lascara, Newell rwn, Glenn Knox, Jack Freeman, and John Peterson. Tau chapter of Ph Alpha o nounce the ntaton of Ellot l.ntchell, of Portsmouth, Va.; and tl pledgng of Bernard Goldsten, ' Norfolk, Va.; Larry Leshan,,t New York, N. Y.; and Delvn Jobn, of Norfolk, Va. Gamma Kappa chapter of Kappa Kapoa G nma wshes to a >- nounce the pledgng of Charlotte»X»- --» Dodge - Plymouth GENERAL TMES' TEXACO PRODUCTS j Ayers Motor Co. f Behnd Post-Offce RODGEES CLEANERS 1 Alterng - Reparng Plant:.Rchmond Road j Phone 172M tl Orfee: Prnce George Phone 557R '! ", " 7 l3amsbarg, Va. SGN OF THE GOLDEN BALL PEWTER GFTS SLVER Duke of Gloucester Street t WHTE OPTCAL CO. 1 X Medcal Arts Buldng < t ' % X Newport News, Va. /. <.> Te*v{,,, TY Tuesday, October 29,194 NEWS Stets of Nashua, day, October 22nd. H., on Tuea- Epslon charge, of Theta Delta Ch held an nformal recepton for ther new house mother, Mrs. Charles Blake. Members of the faculty, admnstraton and student body were present. Sgma Rho announces the ntaton of three new members and the pledgng of sx others. The ntates are Gerrard Ramsey, Al Vandeweghe and John Torma. The new oledees are Newell. rwn, John Petoj-,on, Russell Guk, Glenn Knox, \ ncent Lascara and Jack Freeman. A. & N. S T O 1 E S ± SPORTNG GOODS Men's Eeady to Wear Clothng Athletc Supples ><-> '0-4~v-<»4--'J>4-"O-^-4-v > 4-^<>-$-0»-*-^<-^-<> Ferguson Prnt Shop Phone 111 Good Prntng Pastry Shop? <> Fancy Cakes, Pes Bread f % and' Bolls xop>e Sundays Phone 208$? > P. H. TUOSON Staler n Hardware, feed, and Grocerees Duke of Gloucester Street t Goopar Company % < * (ncorporated) X X «j* 4- t WHOLESALE POOD % % SD'PPLS % $ ^ 3406 Huntngton Ave. ^, ^ ^ " ;» NEWPORT NEWS, VA. f t A f " ', v$v,.* ' * f~ ~J -, '-.X J ' "% *\,.- ^ ~\K ;, - WrrL., - ', * /». :,>'*,.-*$. - ^ - -^ < 3 ff \4* < * Jx, Everybody knows what happens when thrst meets ce-cold Coca-Cola. That thrsty feelng leaves and a refreshed feelng comes. Pnre s wholesome, delcous, ce-cold Coca-Cola satsfes completely. S ( THE PAUS fhat RE f^% Bottled under authorty of The Coca*Cola Co. by The Newport News Coca-Cola Bottlng Company, nc. Stadum Servce S'n^R Candy, Tobaccos, Pas'rk.-, Open 7 A. M. - 11:30 1*. THE CEDARS Jamestown Roa 1, Lsted n Duncan Hne., 1!) 10 Lodgng for a Nght TELEPHONE 2«6 Mss M. Margaret Marsh, Mss Elzabeth L. Marsh, R. N., Hostesses hj RON BOUND NN SPAGHETT DNNERS OUR SPECALTY PHONE 7 9 % E. L. DANLEY Watches, Jewelry, Bands 'f and Reparng Prnqe George Street X Wllamsburg 4- See Our New Stock of Assorte Jewelry, Han-made Copper anc Brass Jewelry, Ash Trays and Drnkng Glasses wth Wllam and Mary Seal The College Shop BOB WALLACE, '20 ~ A D 0 RE? j > P. Phonograph Records Prnce George St. Phone 110 H. LAPDOW, Talors Alterng and Reparng Done by Experts Behnd Sororty Court Pcture Framng, Keys f Made. Electrcal Applances, 1 " Pant, ronng Boards. 4-, v' Pennsula Hardware Corp. 4- j \ Phone 115 ^. FOR PRNTlNGl! see the > VEGNA GAZETTE, nc. Phone 192 «;. Rear of Post Offce x ^ L>^ * wmr days and everall LL lw t GUM. BghsP ot y ur L res l l31 g DOUBL1M11TT ^ adds to &e ^^l^psmakeyoux^ouu foelxefaebhed. - add fa nexpelsve jea, Chewng thtf ^ ^ '., ad, your dtgesheps sweeten you ** attractve. Treat youxselt dauy -nnublemnt GUM. ' Bu^sevealpacKajesu u»

3 Tuesday. October 29, 1940 THE FLAT HAT PAGE THEE! HJemmg Re (LP tll By 3l< DeM ' j,pe-::x CARL VOYLES ' *-'.". : - not be too pleased \>un th sports wrters of the slate tn:s week, for these san:.- 3 newspapermen are once agrb ".-u'kng away at ther uauev-u word mlls n atte:r.po n fnd new ways to prase r "\e Wonderful Wzard of Cuv and the restored football ndans of restored Wllamsburg. And Coach Voyles has every reason r.ot to be too pleased wt them. The terrfc buldup that s followng the ndans' smashng 13-6 trumph over a good Unversty of Vrgna eleven last Saturday s puttng" the pressure rght on the local pgskn warrors as they make ready for ther all mportant clash wth the Vrgna Mltary nsttute Keydets ths Saturday n Lexngton. Now, that pressure s just the knd of pressure every coach rghtfully resents. Hs hoys are good, jotarvelously good, he reads days before the game. They can't possbly lose. Why there's ths boy and that boy and so and so. Look how they heat the Cavalers last week, the scrbes reason. All adds up to a vctory for the ndans. n other words the wrters buld up reputatons for the boys, who -just have to lve up to -them'or be sent crashng nto that group of teams that weekly are "upset." nut Voyles knows that boys wll be boys. And that beng the case, they are rather unpredctable. That's why he lkes for the good gentlemen of the press to lay off toutng the ndans to the sky and ratng them favortes to down V. M.. Although, t's really not lkely that the ndans wll be favored throughout the state over the Keydets, t s certan that n many quarters they wll be. So, here's where the aforementoned wrters can do ther beloved readers a good turn and warn them not to expect too me eh from ths Saturday's ndans. They are stll green, very green, as Voyles wll tell you. They are good, yes, but nexperenced. Maybe next year and the succeedng season one wll be able to predct safely just how they wll perform from Saturday to Saturday. But no group of young men n ther second season under a new coach can be expected to gve contnued sterlng performances. Therefore, before the ndans are defntely establshed as favortes over one of the bggest V. M., teams n recent years wth probably the most powerful backfeld and lne n the state, t mght well be n order to stop tor a moment and consder the fact that V. ML. wll be reboundng from a surprsng loss to Rchmond, that Wllam and Mary wll be due to suffer a letdown, that Johnny Korczowsk. Waldo Matthews and Jmmy Hckey, all key backs, are stll not n the best of condton and that the Keydets wll be on home terrtory. Then the consderate one should pause agan, reflect on all that and pck V. M.. We do, but hope we're wrong. Hampden-Sydney Loses Tough One Hampden-Sydney's Tgers, who made such a bg ht here two weeks ends ago n holdng Wllam and Mary to a sngle touchdown for the frst half, lost a heart-breakng decson to Lehgh last Saturday. The Tgers bowed, 7-12, but were Han a?j D el Mary Must Step a Btcl^fbM, f Lo ^l 13 '\m T &.?'/! Strong KeWk-a Prtchard, Muha, Calett and Shelby W Rebound After Losng to U. of Rchmond Wllam and Man '> hopes F< r MmrjJ over a powerful V. M. < football machne S-'Urtay <.;..< v n Ml rest, not on the stur<!j shoulders and legs of Hanw,'eb,, heo of the 13-6'vctory over Vrgna Homecomg Day, and otn_x such backs, but rather on the boys where the spotlght falls not the lnesmen. Matched aganst what has bee" -- -, -= "»«called a dream backfeld of Bosh, ' - «&>> J Prtchard, Nelson Catett, Son Shel- 1 jlfflolesrls ^ett'fh^ by and Joe Muha, the ndans wll l have to stop the vaunted power ;>t- y) *»., Lr, tack of the Keydets before t once j - 1 S<&U lft w gets rollng, or else they wll gw,,.- a f f5> down n ther frst Bg Sx defet j j jf toall ttb of the season. That quartet of Muha, Prtchard, Catett and Shelby has ploughed through the forward walls of Vrgna, of Davdson and of Rchmond wth devastatng force. Thus, t wll be that phase of the Keydet battle plans, whch the ndans must concentrate on stymyng. Rchmond, however, dd eke out a 9-7 trumph over the dream boys, but t wasn't the fault of the latter, for they rolled up 11 frst downs aganst the Spders' three. To do that stoppng of Prtchard, Muha, Catett.and Selby, Coach Carl Voyles wll call on such stalwarts n the lne as Captan Charles Gondak, Glenn Knox and Al Chestnut on the ends, Gary Berry, Marvn Bass and Hank Whtehouse at the tackles, Gerrard Ramsey, John Brodka and Guy Moates on the guards, and Bll Goodlow and Jack Gann at the center post. The backs wll be chosen from Johnson, Johnny Korczowsk, Harle Masters, Jmmy Howard, Jm Hckey, Howard Hollngsworth ard.waldo Matthews. omecon; The game, the outcome of whch s known to all, passed all too quckly for many. A record crowd saw the much touted Vrgnans go down to a 13-0 defeat. The Wllam and Mary stands went wld when the frst touchdown was scored, and the second was receved no less enthusastcally. Between the halves there were exhbtons by both bands and by the Wllam and Mary freshmen. mmedately followng the game, the s t u d e n t s swarmed down town, wldly celebratng ther frst vctory over the Cavalers. The day was brought to a close when at nne o'clock there was a dance n Blow Gym to the musc of Dean Hudson and hs orchestra. After the dance broke up at 12, the majorty of the alumn and students adjourned to the "Greeks" to celebrate the vctory, to do some wshful thnkng about next year, and to allow the alumn to talk about the "good old days when we were n college." Netters Act K S Tenns Balls Wll Soon Be Snowballs A rumor s today makng the rounds to the effect that the offcals are serously contemplatng changng the name of The ntramural Tenns Tournament to the ntramural Snal Tournament. Representatves of the snal contngent are plannng to challenge the racket welders to a contest nvolvng speed and even go as far as to spot them a lead. Here t s nearng the frst of November and almost a month of play has elapsed, but only four fellows have reached the quarter fnals and one of these was by default. The offcals have expressed ther fear that f the netmen don't hurry and play ther matches, they wll have to 'substtute snowballs for tenns balls. on the one-foot lne as the game ended. Approxmately 5,000 saw the tff n Bethlehem, Pa. '» Wllam and Mary's ndans tue perched precarously rght at the top of the Bg Sx state football race today. The Voylesmen are the only club stll undefeated n state competton. They have beaten V. P. 1. and Vrgna, but stll have Rchmond and V. M.. to meet. Rchmond and V. P.. are the nearest rvals, the Spders havng downed V. P.. and V. M.. and the Keydets havng whpped Vrgna.. Both, though, have lost once, Rchmond to Washngton and Lee and. V. M.. to Rchmond, V. P.. WHPPED Washngton and Lee, 21-0, last Saturday, but had prevous defeats at the hands of Wllam and Mary and Rchmond. Washngton and Lee has played only two games, breakng even. Vrgna dropped her two duels wth state teams. Woody Gray may at last get to see Ms own school play a football game next Saturday. Woody s probably the most consstent follower the Wllam and Mary football team has had al year. HE WAS n Rchmond as the ndans downed V. P.. He was n Wllamsburg as they defeated Harapden-Sydney and last Saturday he was agan n Wllamsburg as they downed the Unversty of Vrgna. So next Saturday he may be at Lexngton when the Wllam and Mary forces face V. M.. But ths ardent ndan fan wll not be rootng for the ndans. nstead he wll be cheerng for all hs worth to see them fall. The reason? Woody s a scout for the Keydets. He s also Freshman football coach. He has been followng the fortunes of the ndans n order to get the actual lowdown on how they operate rather than out of keen nterest. But t was becomng such a common sght to see hm n the stands that t seemed as though he must surely be an ndan fan. WOODY MADE a great athletc record for hmself at V. M.. and also at Maury Hgh n Norfolk, where he played football, basketball and baseball wth such former Wllam and Mary athletes as Gus Twddy, Johnny Dllard and Rudy Tucker. Ths Saturday, though, the ndan follower wll be out to scalp hs favorte performers or then agan he may be sent elsewhere. Such s the lfe of a scout, you know. Nobody's gong around sayng Tom Harmon, great Mchgan back, sn't an All-Amercan., Tvr The dream of the Red Man come true. The Cavalers h been slan. Here n Wllamsburg) e mles from the scene of the f struggle between a group of dans and a group of Cava'e? Redskns, Wllam and Mary L f style, of course, are stll rejon t today over the frst setback e\ > admnstered aforementoned f< -> much n the manner that any b l\ of ndans would rejoce over n downfall of Englsh gentlemen. THS MODERN verson, ho - ever, s strctly a football vers and the celebratng s beng do t over last Saturday's sparkh j 13-6 trumph over the Unvest > of Vrgna football Cavalers 1> - fore a Homecomng Day crowd >, 9,000. Despte the brllant f sor., - tmes frantc efforts of Ma. r Frank Murray's No. 1 attacker, V,' Dudley, the determned ndan wu - rors rolled relentlessly, over 11 j nvaders for four full perods 1 > brng Wllam and Mary ts f>' and perhaps last trumph n th; grdron hstory over the tv ) schools. They are not scheduled to ela-. next fall. Chef Voyles called on one of h, bggest ndans, Harvey the Hov Johnson, sophomore fullback, to tl > the clnchng damage to the V gna fghters twce n the thrd p. rod. JOHNSON PLOUGHED over'fo the frst touchdown early n th canto after Garrard Ramsey, brl lant guard, recovered Bll Dudlej*' fumble on the kckoff. Hark Masters' bone-rattlng tackle u loosened the pgskn from. Dudlej'; arms on the Cavaler 22, fro > whch pont the ndans drove ove. Jmmy Howard and Johnson col laborated on the other Wllam an Mary touchdown n a 61-yar march down the feld n the sam perod. Dudley, a constant t h r e a throughout the day, fnally push". the Cavalers themselves acres paydrt mdway the fnal peo when he uncurled a 25-yard pa 1 - from hs own 45 to Bnd Jm Wh on the 30. Whte easly caugl the ball, lt out for the rght sn'. of the feld and crossed" the get lne untouched. THE NDANS came near scor ng agan n the last mnute < play, for Harle Masters ntercep, ed Dudley's pass and ran to th Vrgna three before he was pulldown. Before the teams could l> up agan, however, tme ran out. Vrgna made one serous thre; early n the last perod, but wr stopped nsde Wllam and Mary 10-yard strpe. Jeanne Parquette Heads nfra-murals. Jeanne Parquette s supervsng ths year's women's ntra-mura athletc program, Florence Yacht nn s student manager. Mss Parquette s also n chargv of Freshman basketball and arch ery. Barbara Anderson s assst and ntra-mural manager as wel as beng manager of archery. Mss Yachtnn, who s manager of basketball, s vce-presdent ol the Monogram Club and a membe of the varsty hockey and basketball teams. >k 'U ujmv'bmv: r^js vy ammecm -vrs.'\j m?" 1 *V TD^ V ross <uet!t lean Seeks mean WJ Mem tf ndans Entertan -7 )lke On ''dav j * ' ^ %,v VCTOROUS NDAN CHEFS Captan Charles Gondak and Coach Carl Voyles : esb PwmmB Garnet!1 Le Alea Baby Deacons Wn n Pnal Mnutes The Wllam and Mary Frosh are day slowly recoverng from ther..'t mnute defeat at the hands of le Wake Forest yearlngs, 13-7, d are prmng themselves for 11 er bg game of the year wth the luchmond Frosh. The two teams wll clash on November 15 and the Papooses need.. vctory over ther arch rvals to 'nsh the season wth more vc- >*es than defeats. At present le count s 2-2, THE BABY DEACONS took the ' pooses unaware and wth two mutes left to play they connected m a 28-yard pass from Bob Jordan Jm Copley n the end zone for o wnnng tally, Vctors n ther prevous two..rts, the Papooses were gven a ' rnng of what to expect when M dway n the frst perod Jordan off tackle and dashed 45 yards 1' r a Wake Forest score. John 1 rry kcked the extra pont. Wllam and Mary fought gal- mtly and n the last perod fnal- scored. A pass from George 1 yor to Elmo Parr was good for '."' yards and a frst down on the.'-'*ard lne, Dave Bucher plunged '?r n two tres and Pryor kcked C extra pont. J/'own Hall Tops lug-pong* Loop Brown Hall's femnne paddle H'elders are today settng the pace ' the png-pong league of the wo- 'n >n's ntra-mural athletc pro am, Chandler, Jefferson, East Barrett and West Barrett are tralng the Brownes. n the sororty league the Ch O.rnegas are well out n front of the Theatas and the Alpha CMs, ther nearest compettors. THE SPORTS STAFF Edtor, Bll Dehl; Jmmy "Karebedan, George Young, Bll Careo, Bll Seawell, Florence Yachtnn and Marks Fgley. V.M.. Shows Power, But Spders Score Wllam and Mary has won all of her State games so far,.but has yet to meet some of her toughest foes. Three more games are scheduled for the season and the ndans should see plenty competton n such teams as V. M.., Randolph- Macon, and Rchmond. V. M,. wll probably be the The Wllam and Mary Cross Country team wll be seekng ts frst vctory of ths season when t meets Vrgna here on the newly planned four-mle course from Matoaka Park to Blow Gym on Frday. After losng ts frst race Monday, October 21, to Duke, 15-45, the ndans are therefore more determned than ever 4o crash the vctory column. Knowng that Vrgna has a squad of real speed merchants, the Wllam and Mary harrers arc drllng dlgently n- order to be n tp top shape for the event. Coach Scrap Chandler expects to start sx sophomores, Bll Lugar, Phl Thomas, Paul Couch, Bll Hardng, Bob Sanderson and Stu Hurley. Basketball drlls wll be held three nghts agan ths week, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday beng the evenngs on whch the cagers wll gather at Blow gymnasum. Practce wll start at 7:30. COACH DW'GHT STUESSY has only a small group workng at the present tme, but t wll ncrease at the concluson of football season. Vnce Taffe, Morgan Mackey, Tom and Vrgl Andrews, Lester Hooker, Harold Kng, Sd Brooks, Joe Brehter and Vnce Lascara partcpated n last week's drlls, whch were devoted manly to fundamentals. Sprt Bg- Factor n Locals'Yctory toughest foe, although Rchmond talled a wn over them last week. Sprt wll wn many a grdron n the Rchmond-V. M,. game last. battle from a team wth superor Saturday the Keydets had one of P ersome l the best backfeld combnatons n That's what brought the ndans the state workng, namely: Prtchard, ther trumph over the Unversty Muha, and Catett. These of Vrgna not that the Cavalers boys rolled over the Spders for 11 lacked t, but the locals just had frst downs to Rchmond's three. more. They ganed 181 yards rushng to n fact they had so much that all Rchmond's 25, and 80 yards to last week they drlled an extra Rchmond's 59 passng. Statstcs half hour each day. usually don't le and nether can they wn a ball game. The Keydets excelled n everythng except puntng, and Rchmond's Arthur Jones took the prze at ths, averagng approxmately 45 yeards. Wofford handed Randolph-Macon, another future foe, a 1910 setback Saturday. wo. Homecomngs Not So Successful The Wllam and Mary Homecomng was of course a bg success from the standpont of ts football vctory, but two other southern colleges were not qute so successful. Randolph-Macon's alumn saw the Jackets bow to Wofford College, 0-19, and Wake Forest's saw the Deacons lose, 0-23 to Duke. Topcs Reporters Prase ndans Davd Dashell and Henry Howell, two members of the sports staff of The College Topcs, Unversty of Vrgna newspaper, were on hand Homecomng Day to cover the Cavalers' defeat. Both Dashell and Howell were lavsh n ther prase of the ndans and expressed the optmstc vew that they wll defeat V. M.. on Saturday. S. A. E. Cagers Apparently Tryng To Dsprove Old Adage The S. A. E. Fraternty basketball team apparently s out to dsprove that old adage about "nothng ventured; nothng ganed." For the past three weeks now that S, A. E.'s have been mantanng a clean slate n the nterfraternal Basketball League. But the rub s they haven't ventured forth to play but three games. Yet they've ganed the lead, all ot whch s qute confusng f one tres to apply the sayng. Ths week, however, they have to venture forth n three combats, whch may or may not enhancether prestge. Sgma P stll stands second n the loop wth four wns and one loss, whle Kappa Sgma s thrd wth three and one. Only four games were staged last week, Kappa Alpha. downng Ph Kappa Tau, 32-21, Theta Delta whppng Lambda Ph, 46-14, and P Kappa Alpha routng Sgma Eho, Lambda Ch forfeted to Ph Alpha. AMONG THE, SCORERS the bg nose of the week was hawkeyed Bll Boggs, of Theta,Delta, who flew nto the Lambda Phs and talled 22 ponts. That feat shoved Sweet Wllam nto second place wth 64 ponts n seven games, three less than Bll Howard, of P Kappa Alpha, has made n sx contests. Ace Sullvan, another P Kappa Alpha, s thrd wth S markers. Three Ex-ndans Lose Wth Bulders Three erstwhle Wllam and Mary grdders were n the lneup for the Newport News professonal Bulders Sunday afternoon, but to no aval, for the Bulders dropped a 0-14 decson to the Norfolk Shamrocks n a Dxe Professonal game. The ex-ndans were Gus Twddy, halfback, Stan Kameh, left end, and Clyde Ramsey, a left guard. The Shamrocks are coached by George Strnwess, former Unversty of North Carolna star. JSS-M. mkew Teams wo ns Junor Reserves Lose To Norfolk Two vctores n a hockey trpleheader staged last Frday has put the Wllam and Mary lasses rght on the top of the world today. n the bg three-game program the varsty outft smashed the Apple Club, 4-0, n a half game after whch Mss Appleby, Englsh authorty on women's hockey, devoted the rest of the afternoon to coachng. The Reserves downed the scrappy Rchmond Dvson of Wllam and Mary combne, 4-2, but the Junor Reserves fell befoe a slashng attack of the Norfolk Dvson of Wllam and Mary, 3-8, Mss Margaret Holman's Norfolk femmes assumed an early 3-0 lead, whch they never relnqushed. Joe Brehter does a swell vocal mtaton of Knute Roekne.

4 PAGE FOUE THE FLAT >W Tuesday, October 29, 1040 JULkLj JL JLtf.» JL xtal 'l EDTOR-N-CHEF M«:.T.bsr ftssocoted Cblteede Press Dstrbutor of ' 1 Me&QfeOtSest GAEL MUECKE STAFF EDTOR ROBERT MARSHALL ASSSTANT STAFF EDTOR VRGNA TRPP MEWS EDTOR : WLLAM PARRY SPORTS 'EDTOR WLLAM DEHL PHOTOGRAPHER - GERALD ROSE- ART EDTOR DAVD FORER FEATURE STAFF: Eosanne Strunsky, Wllam Berg-wall, Rhoda Hollander, Bernard Ransone, Joan Wallace, Jmmy Plemmng, Jance Harvey, Harry Barr OFFCE STAFF: Lbby Costerbader, Mar Davdson, Mary Cramer, Conne Stratton, Prekett Carter j l E P 0 R T A L g^tt^ B. Meeks, Sterlng Strange, Mark Lapolla, Howard Shaw, Bll Smth, George Young, Stanley Mlberg, Margaret Alexander, Pogo Brown, Tabb Taylor, Annette Warren, Barbra Bevan, Robert Ellert, Holly Rcks, Else Goad, Jean Horger, Jerome Hyman, Tom Jones, James Levy, Ann Lynch, Carolne Harley, Glora Tyler, Elzabeth Seay, Dudley Woods, Mary Thedck, Kate Rutherford, Grace Acal, Louse Brown, Eugene Hanofee. CRCULAT0N: AL CHESTNUT MANAGER "Boo" Meeks, Bll Clnton, Dyke Vermlye, Ellen Lndsay BUSNESS MANAGER". ~... EUGENE ELLS BUSNESS STAFF: Wllam Howard, Carolne Cooke, Edna Klnge, Dck Bohannon, Foster Jennngs, Jack Hallwell, Natale Nchols, Jane Krkpatrck, "Chp" Cunnngham, M. E. Thomson, Edgar Fsher, Jr., Dors Hears, Marjore Lentz, Frank Mackln, Gene Kellogg, Bob Wenberg, Blly Gll, Betty Darragh, Jean Lafoon Wllam and Mary, 13; Unversty of Vrgna, 6. We just lke to see t n prnt. The score looks wonderful even though we have those Monday-mornng-after-Horoecomng-blues. t probably would be more sportsmanlke not to gloat over the score, but frankly t's wonderful. The Unversty has had t comng to them for a long tme. Many's the tme we've suffered the slngs and arrows of outrageous fortune on a week-end down at Charlottesvlle, when a group of Vrgna boys taunted us wth our scoreless wonder football teams. They used to flaunt.ther strng of vctores n our face, and now alas, or should "we say hurray, them days are gone forever. The Cavalers really played- awful football. Even ther touchdown looked lke a desperate attempt to salvage somethng out of the wreck of a sad lookng bunch of footballers. They couldn't drve. They couldn't hold ther lne. Ther plays were stopped short practcally every tme. Anyhow the score's 13-6, and homecomng s over and Wllam and Mary has more mportant thngs to thnk about than & JwtS. llslf! mmm^t As a source of nformaton, our queston ths week s one of constructve nature, "What would yon lke to see n the Plat Hat?" f any of you have any further- suggestons, please send them. Along. Everythng covered pretty well A. Hanson, '42. How 'bout some revews on.urrent books? Natale Nchols, '42. A drt column wrtten by Meeks that doesn't menton Meeks. C. T. Holbrook, '41. A good sports secton wth plenty of Basketball News. Vrgl Andrews, '41. A lost and found column so can fnd a valuable cuff lnk. W. Gordon, '42. More outstandng feature sectons; smlar to the one concernng the freshmen recepton. Chuck Gondak, '41. How about some stores? Eleanor Ely, '42. A news Revew. Gladys Jones, '41. Some more photographc features of campus lfe. Joan Wallace, '43. thnk that everythng s just rght as t s. -Ed. Svetkey, '42. Better crculaton. Nancy Ryan, '42. How- about a column of sororty and fraternty "gongson,"' or should say, actvtes? Audrey Kemp, '41. Why not more graphc accounts of student lfe-everyday occurrences, as well as )utstandng events. Rave Jennngs, '41. Open Forum Contrbutor ths week: BOB VNNG on "Why Students Should Support Roosevelt." Each week the Open Forum wll be a place n whch any student or faculty member may speak Ms mnd on any ssue. You too can be a poltcal commentator shrewdly gaugng world events or you past achevements. We've got to drve on to a state champonshp. We're not expectng mracles, and the football too can tell us what s wrong by Mr. Rogow are e'-;remely team s bound" to have some slump alter the magnfcent Jajgem's Joto j*f to'. ^Jw Ar> or rght wth everythng, aft heads up football they played last Saturday. We only hope our present crss. A ton and ths column YOUE column. that maybe t mght be possble for us to perhaps beat both V. M.. and then brush by that jnx and roll over Rchmond. C'mon people, let's pray. FOE PRESDENT Wllke or Roosevelt? Thomas or Browder? Or are you for someone else ths electon? Here s your chance to tell theworld what you thnk of that unbalanced budget or that pawn of the captalst class or whatever you call the man you don't want for Presdent. An open forum s beng held on ths queston n Ph Beta Kappa Hall under the auspces of the House of Burgesses on Wednesday nght at 3 P. M. The vewponts of only two partes Democrats and Republcans wll be presented by the speakers, but the audence may carry the dscusson as far afeld as they may wsh. Ths s practcally the eve before the electon and feelng should be runnng hgh on campus over the whole ssue of who shall be the next Presdent of the Unted States and why. Now s the tme to speak up and get an audence, snce ths wll be the last open forum before the electon. Certanly you should take an nterest n the outcome of ths campagn. f you hold yourselves to be free ctzens of a democracy, ths s your opportunty to make certan that you are ready to carry out the responsbltes that every free ctzen should bear. Defense of democracy doesn't just consst of a large army, or conscrpton or a fervent salute to the flag; but t conssts manly of an alve, well-nformed, tolerant ctzenry. The open forum s one way we can lve up to ths standard. Let's make ths open forum an alve expresson of the great tradtons of lberty and democracy whch are so closely assocated wth the College of Wllam and Mary and wth the Cty of Wllamsburg. Let's show the world that the youth of Amerca are tough fghters n the brgade for lberty. MPROVE THE PAPER You wll notce that the nqurng Reporter ths week has as hs queston of the week, "What would.you lke to see n the FLAT HAT?" - That s a queston we would lke to ask all of you. Please st down some tme and try readng somethng else besde the drt column, (whch we don't partcularly lke ourselves) and go over the pape - and take t apart. Does the news coveragee of your meetngs have the proper facts? Has there been an adequate coverage? Have we got the names of all the offcers correctly and most mportant, have we neglected to menton your group at all? f any or toe above questons ft your feelng about the >ade% pleas-c ;orsder t your duty to wrte n and tell us so. ',;.. ms" - -, y*en publsh your remarks n Letters to the Edtor. V)H. m->.ve thng. f you want complete coverage of all your g:. -up functons, see that a publcty drector s apponted at your aext meetng who wll make t hs job to send news n to us every Saturday by 12?0O noon. All such communcatons can be dropped n the FLAT HAT box on the frst floor of the Marshall-Wythe buldng or else brought downtown to the Gazette offce to the rear of the Post Offce, We as Amercans are facng a very crucal era; we are standng on the threshold of uncertanty where a false move may result n chaos and utter destructon of those lbertes whch are so essental and vtal to the very lfe of ths beloved democracy of ours. Lke a shp on a turbulent sea, we are beng tossed by those fanatcal forces whch have swept over the earth lke the colossal waves of a devastatng hurrcane. To gude us out of ths tempest we must select a captan endowed wth all the arts of seamanshp a captan who can by undaunted courage fnd ncredble power of foresght lead us through ths arduous and perlous journey to the calmer waters beyond. We are ndeed fortunate n havng such an experenced person among us; a man who durng the past eght years, has proved hmself worthy and capable of combattng any evl, whether nternal or external, whch mght threaten ths land of ours; a man who has dedcated hs lfe to the mprovement of the- socal and economc condtons of the desttute and mpovershed; a man who s justly haled as a gallant and fearless leader- Frankln Delano Roosevelt. A famlar remark whch s often heard s that our government s the bggest busness conducted n the entre world and, therefore, we should elevate to the presdency, one who would conduct the government n a busnesslke manner. But f we followed such advce would we not be gnorng the fact that we are no longer lmted by the Atlantc and Pacfc, by the Great Lakes-, and the Gulf of Mexco? Would we not be dsregardng recent events whch have ndcated that our securty, our destny, depends upon the astuteness, the shrewdness, wth whch our leaders conduct themselves n foregn affars. Fellow, students, what we need n the '"Whte House s not one whose reputaton has been made as the head of a large corporaton, not one who s well ver3- to Wednesday evenng o'clock n Ph Be. Hall two men wll fa relatve merts of M and Mr. Rooseve.l dates for the presde Unted States. 1L. Moss of the college hs reasons for bel democracy s best.. de* the leaclerslto Roosevelt. Mr., lams wll drve do- Rchmond to speak Wllke. All studen. folk, and the facul vted to lsten and - tons. We beleve we eo, the above paragraph agan from column t one, to the bottom r page n ths FLAT FG SppreCSue ettoct tendance at ths op-. f only the students those party pns won at ths meetng to ;> of ther poltcal c and socal awarenes-- be possble to feel 1 about ths democrat people, by the peoph the people. Never wll the fv ons. Ths s more tl ttle by Max Lerne fact to remember 1 hop nto ths war f somebody to shoot j What are the dea; 1 ' college educaton ft : r tranng be more ; than tomorrow ng the rows of empty :! Ph Beta Kappa Ha 1 young lades and get tl Wllam and Mary. S ft* egh.appa n the Jlke atoj n * Ull l gve ( Or uc- \h. about democracy, Mr. Wllke, and Mr. Roosevelt? s \lv 'At-rd democracy a classroom defnton to be parroted out ' n an' examnaton paper u- hope of an A?- Are Wllk cmd Roosevelt symbolc ^ r,{ -actons much less rpoato to you than your!> ^ Coca-cola and.saturday q 1. dance? Does the though! < tv,omen dscussng po'l ^.J - fro:-: canddates on a Wedn^-a Mr. evenng n a small Vto>to von - town seem to you pretty to re > and nconsequental?!)<- *', u'e 1 ;- consder poltcs a racket to toft alone whch s non^ epealour concern "as long as v< n n and get a job." page, ' e last wth. e at~ -u'um. wear ppear proof tons would btter 'f the td for! v of a. tzen parent anong We thnk we know the.< swers.to all of these queston We ask all the dear young e > - ncs and sophstcates to dvo n tomorrow nght at Ph Bel a Kappa Hall f only n passm-' by on your way for a "date." t should be good for a laugh. t should be pretty funm to see three dozen or so college boys and grls worryng abort who wll wn the electon, d s n the bag, sn't t fellows: No matter who wns t's the same old story, you'll gel yours and after all who au j you to run the country. Well the tme s eght o' clock and t s n the assembh -ts n deas, Hall of the Ph Beta Kanpa ren of Buldng. t s your collt weap- and your country but f you a book t s a T6 W lg for n have fto Bernard Ransone Af ter a two-weeks' absence n whch other com CM tators have been express g ' arous ponts of.vew r, yo r < rgnal columnst has once ; pun been gven a chance to t t!'< nd hs poston. From th s ".rter's pont of vew the op nvns contnually expressed 1A* 1 >, S. M. as well as the pos u- taken agan the wrter f "One Man's Guess" has. t erated the Communst part v me that any European was - a cap talstc, mperalst]''. drugge and that we should < v ml beng "dragged" nto t. f '>- fc week he carred on hs ar r n.ent by challengng the drx 111 at we had anythng n Atorocraey that, was worth fjft ng for. Hs vew s evdently hat of the so-called "c 311 soned youth" group of ou rust-war generaton. He qu s- l >ns the dea that t s wort lghtng for a naton that v 11" e dedcatng tself to the ] mposton that all men are en a ced equal wth certan nalen; U? rghts, fnds daly that th > olght of the Negro, the-jew, the sharecropper and the fac ;< n worker gve the le to,s ton. "repos Such questons nn' be answered. f ths see r g paradox s the net rest t < ' democracy, then ndeed 1 11 re s noed n the art of 'manpulatng stocks and bonds, but rather a statesman who has been tred n the feld of nternatonal poltcs and who has had experence n dealng wth the wly poltcans and unscrupulous dctators of Europe and Asa. Not only has Pres.dent Roosewell traned velt been especally to play an mportant role n the rough and tumble ga; :ne of nteralso he and natonal poltcs, but hs secretary of State, Cordell'Hull, can boast of an ace ornplshment whch not even Rep ublean bgstablshment wgs can deny the <; of a frendly feelng among the South and Central A mercans too'ur southern wards us. Heretofore,, neghbors acted n a frendly way because of fear. The r suspcons of our mperalstc t le sgns were augmented by propc ganda from jealous "old world" st ates who despe to establsh no : only comteal spheres. mercal but also poll (Contnued On P? ge Fve) don't lke the army cot you are sleepng n next year'remember t s also your bed and you made t. Sleep tght lttle solders and dream of the grls and democracy. R.S.M. *» thng worth fghtng for., for one, beleve that there s an answer. Ths answer does not, however, le n the lne of thought taken by Mr. Rogow-, who urged us to fght for the status quo. do not feel wth hm that we should defend our PRESENT SOCE TY wth, our lves. Such a vewpont would lead us to ffcat 4' l pjpoato'e«;p7k,<t'?r.y r dhn+ stood France n ll stead n her tme of need. What R. S. M. has scorned and what Mr. Rogow has only hnted at s the fact that to be successful n any war a democracy must fght for deals yet unrealzed. n preparaton for such a war she must put her house n order. We must not stop wth R. S. M. and lament the falures of democracy. We must realze that although our progress toward our goals s far from complete, yet those goals are not unattanable and must reman before us n our struggle for a truer democracy. The wrter of "One Man's jess" certanly guessed rghtly when he told us, n effect, that we should put our house n order so that we may be a truly unted people. He just as certanly guessed wrongly, however, when he challenged the exstance of any deals that are worth fghtng for. dealsm and the desre to work for a better democracy at home and n the world must be a part of our moblzaton. The paradoxes that so dsturb R. S. M- are not the end result of democracy but only a part of her evolutonary stage. f w,e adopt the communstc pessmsm, or the selfsh atttude of Mr. Rogow we wll have no chance aganst a crusadng Fascsm ether ntellectually, morally or on the feld of battle. * f we passvely allow the dctator phlosophes to trumph abroad, or merely fght at the last moment lke trapped rats n defense of our holes, our chance for success s small. Only f we help Brtan defeat the dctators abroad, and put our house n order aganst the day of complete moblzaton at home, can we survve and have a strong mltant democracy n ths turbulent world. ' ' >. 'Y" -! >.", ~k. ^*C$g$ W>* -' A^&zm&r*'*..' -x^^gjmjk^^- * - ' ' >, ''.''.!/ >» '. - Homecomng'. Wonderful body back and a good tme v>. - John Rnkln took our hnt to the dances and'bobby Cla twns blossomed forth, ths \, Sam fnally got together and Bob was wth Tex Schek. John Lorma and Bee Mehlfelt looked qute chummy wanderng around Jefferson Hall. t's dangerous to have too many grls n one dorm, John. Mke Stousland and Ed Pltt seemed qute happy to have the Holmes twns back. Thanks for gettng a har cut, Mke- Roy "The Pelham Peeker" Merrtt has another new grl. ^Almera Hcks s the lucky one ths tme. What's ths we hear about Kelly beng stood up by hs grl for Norman Funstan. Get a hunch, pal. Looked good seeng Helen Black and Bunky Holland together agan. They knda lked t, too. t ddn't seem rght seeng George Mc- Couch wthout Peggy West and Bll Curry wthout Brandt. Cutest couple of the Week: Dot Landon and Chp Cunnngham.-. Mackey, Vnng and Walker took Homecomng lterally, and off they went. Bg Morgan was datng over n Brow r n Hall before-'he took off though. Congrats to you and Tom Crane' for "13" Club. Edna KHhge and"harry Barr are pretty pally these days. Wonder f he's beng gven lessons n "Klnge 400"? May Queen Shrley Dager was back and was qute the glamour gal at the dance.- The Vrgna boys that stayed over certanly dd enjoy the dance. Especally Erwn Dckey when he was dancng wth the beauteous Buth Mapp. Bll Dudley s afrad he couldn't pass hs work down.here. there are too many beautful women around! Hey, Tommy Brennan -What do you mean lettng a boy from Newport News beat your tme wth Eleanor Eley? A freshman grl near the dnng hall was overheard sayng to that smooth Petersburg heart throb, Ed Motley, "Oh, Eel, you know all the grls on campus want you-to get to know me too." There's a very pretty Freshman grl who has taken a great nterest n hstory of W. & M. before Could ths have anythng to do wth the fact that all research.on that.-.-'?et has to be done wth the assstance of Jack Hudson? Rumor has t that Bob Ellott was beng plenty su.,oto wth Lz Casterbader at the Tr Delta recepton. Watch hm, Lz He tells that to all. the grls. That Martha Ganes blushes easly (we're wonderng why?) That Frank Egeg s followng Kate Rutherford about, and we do know why - Was t the weather or Blle Danson that kept Pozo Brown at the Kappa recepton so long? ncdentally, the Theta recepton was all rght. Most n love of week: Larry Goldsmth wth Gladys Wallace, but s t recprocal? The party at the S. A. E. house Frday was really some affar and they dd lve to tell the tale.- Phoebe Fars and John Brodka are gong ther separate paths and nobody s very happy about the whole affar. Evelyn Cannon was back for the week-end to see Clff Krepps. Those n the know say 'ts the real thng. Several lucky people were 'presented wth autographed phonograph records by Dean Hudson and shall we hope carry them home to lsten to n the dm far tomorrow and remember the Homecomng of '40 and the day we broke the jnx wth Va. Sorry we can't tell you Jean Burnsde's new qve t's a secret but we're all for you, Jean. We wsh Bll Koster would follow Mke's example or do we have to buy a voln case? Now- that you've read ths far are you partcularly proud of yourselves? Shame on you for beng nterested n jockey talk and gossp. Stuff lke ths shouldn't even go nfo a hgh school paper. The only reason t's prnted s because we assume that most of you wouldn't read anythng n the paper f t weren't for the drt column and we try to please everyone. After all t s your paper and f you want to read trpe, go on and read t, But tell us honestly, (and we wsh all of you who read ths would st down and wrte a letter, paste a two-cents stamp on t and address t to the FLAT HAT) do you really lke ths column? f you do or don't, why? f we don't get many answers to ths queston wthn the next week we mght drop t ajl together. So f t's your pet column or pet hate, wrte n, for ts very lfe s at stake. - + '

5 Tuesday, October 29,1940 THE FLAT HAT PAGE FVE Musc Open House! Wllams Barber j j Shop j J-'nce 1912 we have served tre Here s an opportunty for an excellent evenng's entertanment, a fne excuse for a date (f any s needed), and a use of two otherwse dull hours.. Tuesday, from - *er> to d " Lhe musc organza- students, of Wllam and Mary, Ths same courteous and ef- foont servce awats you today, j O'er Wllamsburg Theatre tons are holdng Open House n the Musc Buldng, presentng a dversfed program of choral numbes. The College Chor, the Women's Glee Club, and the Men's Glee Club are alternatng to present an nterestng, and what promses to be an attractve card. So come and admre the talent of these student organzatons as they present ther frst program, of he year. The tme s 7 to 9, Tuesday nght, October 29; the place, the Musc Buldng n the Methodst Annex. Fulton, Mo. (ACP) Thousands of Amercan college students are vrtually dsfranchsed because of "cumbersome" absentee v o t n ; laws. ^ A r X ^{»^^v^^><>*>^^^-^^<j-^<>-*>*'v><>«j--"5-'$-^''-'?-v'^-«--«--.>-.>->'>-<-< v,,..-*"'"*^ <»<:-s^>& ;*» < '*M3 JF l 1» WLLAMSBURG LODGE WLLAMSHt Al N.\ EXCELLENT FOR LUCHEON AND DNNER PARTES College "specals" welcomed DVSON OF TAVERNS AND ORDNARES Wllamsburg Restoraton, nc. -t%.4.'- PULLMAN BEAUT] ES Open Forum (Contnued From Page Four) of nflence n the Western Hemsphere. The noteworthy labors ;of Secertary Hull must be carred and unless the Democratc admnstraton s contnued n power the whole program wll be endangered endangered not because Mr. Wllke's polcy s the very antthess of Mr. Hull's but because confdence, the very foundaton of the good neghbor feelng, wll be destroyed f Mr. Roosevelt s not returned to offce, Here's the way the alumn looked plng nto Wllamsburg for the week-end festvtes. They do look frendly ear to the short wave ^ j broadcasts emanatng from Europe awfully young to have graduated or perhaps they're competton for cur Co-eds from other colleges. and Asa, and so Mr. Hull's good lot of the fellows here do look elsewhere, why we'll never know. neghbor polcy would be doomed to oblvon. Such an outcome would not only place our commercal nvestments n a perlous poston but our very securty would be defntely endangered. So, fellow students, preserve Amerca as we know t today by re-electng Frankln Roosevelt on November 5. BRUTON PARSH CHURCH "The Student Church Snce 1693" Rev. Francs H, Craghll, Rector Our South, and Central Amercan neghbors have complete confdence n Presdent Roosevelt's Holy Communon 8:00 A. M. leadershp; they know that hs motves Church School 9:30 A. M. are not selfsh and that the accusatons made by foregn agents Mornng Servce, 11:00 A. M. Student Recepton 4:30 P. M. as to our mperalstc desgns are fcttous. But f Mr, Wllke happened to unseat our presdent and f the Republcan Party should be THE WLLAMSBURG successful n November, then the METHODST CHURCH confdence of our southern neghbors "At the College Entrance" n us would vansh as mere vapors; ther fears and suspcons Dr. W. L. Murphy, Mnster would be rased once more as they know not what to expect from Mr. SUNDAY SERVCE Wllke. They mght even lend a Church School 9:45 A. M. Mornng Worshp U;0O A. M. Wesley Foundaton, 7:00 P. M. Evenng Worshp 8:00 P. M. 1,*!' t s '' :' \: 4. V*... and are we proud of that handsome Gordon Oxford shrt! n fact we have proudly shrted college men for genera-. tons and today Arrow s stll the favorte to wn on any campus. HORZONTAL 1 Large brd pctured here. S t. s a brd alled 1 the bses. 9 Snce, 10 Sngle thng. 11 To buld. 13 Leather strp. 15 ndan. 16 Sun god. 17 Roof fnal. 18 Ralway. 19 Wood sorrel. 21 Hautboy. -24 Sheaves. 27 Sauey. 30 Meanng. 32 Large type of ths brd. 34 Smolderng coals, 35 One that curbs. 36 Jump. 38 Dspatched. 39 Spkes, APSWBT to P.r etr"3» Pusssle 42 Rodent. 44 To mprove. 47 Anger. 48 Pertanng to sound. 50 Epoch. 51 Norse god. 52 To habtuate. 53 East ndan palm." 55 t returns tq the same ste year after year. 56 Sofas. VERTCAL 2 Sour. 3 S moldng. 4 Fabulous brd. 5 Gref. 6 To dstrbute. 7 n realty. 6 Low tde. 11 The whte stork s the best known. 12 Attempt. 13 Membranous bag. 14 Ths brd carry n,. a baby. 16 Ornamental rosette. <, 18 Repulsve, 20 Set of rooms, 22 Tramp. 23 Eye. 24 Bones. 25 Myself. 26 Ream. 28 To recede. 29 Fsh eggs. 31 Rocks contanng metal. 33 Magc. 37 Tne. 38 Chef actors. 40 Offcer's assstant. 41 Part of eye. 43 God of sky. 45 Great lake. 46 Back of neck. 48 Bakng dsh. 49 Sheltered place. 51 Upon. 54 Lke. earufocl m Clamour 111 ~1\ V (C Y'D 'Yz V^ a/ - ' 14 ">y (7% Y'^MF^m W(B (Multflament Acetate Pyon Yarns) >>-!* J Gordon Oxford las the famous button-down Dover collar, Sanforzed-Shrunk (fabrc shrnkage less than 1%). nvest $2. today n ths tme-honored celebrty. Another buck wll buy an Arrow te to top t off. See your Arrow dealer today. 1Z f$r$0 k 4m : «2 rata \ nm. TJS8.X7 m?-^j?: ^ t - "JOS f7^m _ pl;;505q 55 5b.scrBEr^sTr x sarasss * MATOAKA PARK RDNG SCHOOL Classes Daly 10:15, 2 O'clock and 3:30 v For nformaton Call Barrett Hall Of. 208 or Stables 71 SPECAL NSTRUCTONS FOE BEGNNERS 51 '.\ <s >, <) / ^ ^ *«w \ >,'. ft *» '-- "< /VvS^ The largest and best placje to eat n the Colonal Cty. We serve Breakfasts, Dnners, and Suppers. Also a la carte. We Welcome Vstors and Students. We want you to make our place your home; have all your meals wth us. We apprecate your patronage. Specal Rates to Students Wllamsburg, Vrgna -psas*" 5 **-* FNE. MEATS GROCERES VEGETABLES Specal Attentro t Fraterntes and Sorortes ^«-4^->4-& >^<«^^«>»M«>^"0«>^ MONOGRAMEO PRE.E Beautful slps woven wth Acetate rayon yarns... wth the needlecraft, talorng and fabrc found only «$2 slps. These Junor League Buds are Hygemzed to guard your personal charm. Beautfully made.. wth seams that wll not pull n wearng... wth adjustable shoulder straps... n whte or tearose. Szes 32 to 44 and 31H> to Yl l A. EXCLUSVE WTH l A a t 7 D # nc 9 The Pennsula's Shoppng Center Phone 400

6 PAGE SX THE FLAT HA - Whle appearng n a recent stage ht.. "My Dear Chldren" John "Profle" Barrymore dscovered he was much funner n burlesque than n hs straght role. nspred by the success of ths clownng by J-a-w-n, Darry Zanuck at once Bet about to put Barrymore on the shmmerng screen n a burlesque on the lfe of John Barrymore. That hlarous pcture... THE GREAT PROFLES, plays here on Wednesday, and offers the gentle move publc a rare evenng of fun. * * * * The Wllamsburg Theatre s just full of unusual flm fare ths week, On Thursday one of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's class productons made n England unreels a pcture adventure of Dorothy L. Sayers' "Lord Peter Whmsy," celebrated fctonal sleuth. HAUNTED HONEYMOON s the flm ttle, and t presents Robert Montgomery as the debonar Lord Peter. The producton s handsomely mounted n the Brtsh manner, wth panstakng attenton to detal and background. Constance Cummngs, as the brde of Lord Whmsy, s a very pleasng eyeful 1 for anybody's pcture. For pace and lustre the flm depends solely on Montgomery, and he delvers beautfully. $s s s % sgc Western thrllers are the vogue these days. Paramount offers a parcel of surefre exctement, n the best sagebrush manner, on Frday when RANGERS OF FORTUNE rde nto town. Fred MacMurray s head-man of the rangers, asssted by Glbert Roland, Albert Dekker, Joseph Sehldkraut, Dck Foran... and the nevtable woman, Patrca Morrson. Betty Brewer, a new chld-star Myrna Loy and Melvyn Douglas n a scene from "Thrd Fnger, Left Hand," the comedy ht playng here on Monday and Tuesday. dscovery, adds the juvenle touch. There s a touch of the "Three Musketeers" theme n ths thrller as Fred, Al and Dck use ther smokng sx-guns n unson to clean out the bad men. "All for fun, and fun for all" was ther fghtng motto, accordng to relable sources! & * & *& Saturday, November 2nd, wll see a very full program unreeled at the local shadow house. tem one s the Fox 'Lew Lehr' newsreel; No. 2 s The March of Tme concernng "Brtan's Royal Ar Force"; and No. 3 s George Abbott's zestful stage muscal... TOO MANY GRLS. From the ttle you could know t s a college yarn. And, all the mportant phases of a college,. e. Mrth, Melody, Football, Femnnty, are shown n extravagant muscal style. Cast standout s a Cuban Adons, by name Des Arnaz, who s a cnch to have femnne hearts flutterng n hs flm debut. Locale of the flm s a mythcal college n a mythcal New Mexco pueblo, where there are ten (count 'em) luscous coeds to every boy. Luclle Ball, Ann Mller, Frances Langford, and Rchard Carlson are the veterans n the cast. George Abbott, the maestro hmself, drected. :f SJ: s = $s They don't turn 'em out much faster or funner than THRD FNGER, LEFT HAND... a slck, sophstcated, romantc comedy playng next Monday and Tuesday wth Myrna Loy and Melvyn Douglas ptchng the fun down that groove. The delcately-shaded brand of farce that Myrna and Melvyn gve out n ths one wll keep the customers happy for a long whle. Crtcs who know, and who usually tell the truth, say that "t wll gve you the bggest laugh of your lfe." )KWSSXSWSSW?m^\\m«S\Vt^^ OeanLancran Unque Bo dngs n Book Dsplay 3 States n Assocaton Dr. Grace Landrum, Dean of Women and Professor of Englsh at the College of Wllam and Mary, wll speak at a meetng of the College Englsh Assocaton for the states of Vrgna, West Vrgna, and North Carolna, whch wll be held n Rchmond on Saturday, November 2. Speakng on the topc "A Freshman's Readng: The Lost Decade," Dean Landrum s ncluded n a program whch also presents Colonel Raymond E. Dxon, professor of Englsh at Vrgna Mltary nsttute, and Dr. Rchard Scofeld, professor of Englsh at St. John's College. Representatves from colleges throughout the state wll attend the meetng and collegate teachers of Englsh are nvted to be present. Electon of offcers wll be held and regonal organzatons wll be set up. Professor W. R. Rchardson of Wllam and Mary s the Natonal Treasurer of the College Englsh Assocaton, whch has exsted two years as a natonal organzaton. Professors Frazer Neman and W. R. Rchardson wll assst wth the arrangements for the meetng. Cavaler Men ley stated that the boys at Charlottesvlle thought the game was "sewed up" when he left that mornng. He went on to say, "Sure we're gong to wn the game, possbly by a 7-6 score..(ths was thrd quarter and the score at ths tme stood 6-0 n the ndans favor.) Mr. Bradley approved the dea of renewng the contract between the two schools and hoped that somethng would be done about t. From ths pont the conversaton turned to the bands. Mr. Bradley: "You have a very nce band here but you should have some majorettes! They really make a band look good. We had the Alexander twns from Martnsvlle wth our band last week-end." The Unversty band has sxty fve members fve unforms, and almost all the members usually make the trps wth the team. Ether these Vrgna men are really the southern gentlemen that they have the "rep" for or else we showed them genune hosptalty for they lked our steak and seemed to thnk we were very hosptable (overlookng, of course, the floats n the parade and the memoral to them outsde the dnng hall). At the- present there s a nterestng collecton of boo the dsplay case to the left * entrance n the lbrary. Ths ton s unusual n that t doc, 3 ot pay specal attenton to the l'. ; a»y value of the books, but rathe resents the art of bndng.. 1 of these bndngs are unque n t &,< - al and desgn, but the most ng are a copy of Longfellow n black velvet and carved and one of the Compleat Ang leather, decorated wth metal 174 College Men :s ; f e )-<«- stnl:- cm e no.,1 e ol. t as proof of hs regstraton whenever and wherever he ; asked to produce t. The cards that are sent to Washngton to be fled away for the drawng, are numbered and when drawn, the holders are subject to call and a lst of the mer n a certan dstrct wll be sent 1 o that dstrct. Each man must knew the number of hs own card. The frst drawng wll be held on or about October 21, but no draftees wll be taken nto the army untl after electon day, November 5. T s: lst for ths dstrct wll be posted at the court hou'se. After the frst drawng, questonnares are sent to all 'Jose whose numbers have been rawn, by the dstrct draft boards. These J "* ~-~- -» ? >fb The Guest Houu Of Dstnct!* n Eght rooms wth sx p:vate bathrooms and showers. Rates are posted; your nspecton welcome. Located n.a quet, resde t&l secton one block off Rchmond Road behnd Theta Belts. Ch fraternty. Phone 375-J. Mrs. Vctor turralde, Hostess Recommended by the College Servce Staton Rchmond Road Phone 788 Al TEXACO Products Complete Lubrcaton, Washng. and Greasng Servco We Call For and Del er Tobacco, Soft Drnks, Candy BAND BOX CLEANERS, nc. SUPERLATVE DRY CLEANNG SERVCE BEN READ questonnares must be flled out n fve days, and classfy a man as to whether he s avalable for servce, deferred for sx months becuse hs cvlan actvty s necessary, deferred because he has one or more dependents whom he supports, or deferred because he has LOST Sgma Nu Fraternty Pn W. H. Kennedy B-38 Engraved on back. f found please return to Horace "Sonny" Coward- Monroe Hall T0WAY* ^w>&.m *& W$$k Mrk 'eygur next pack Copyrght 1940, xsgsrr & MYERS TOBACCO Ca Tuesday, October 29, 1940 completed hs tranng, s an alen, mnster, conscentous objector, ols unft physcally, mentally or moralty for servce. About 800,000 tranees wll be called for the frst draft. t t \Xf lla <sr*!m5 c^vall t DRUGS SODAS SCHOOL SUPPLES X Phone 29 We Delver oday, more than ever, people are takng to Chesterfeld because Chesterfeld concentrates'on the mportant thngs n smokng. You smoke Chesterfelds and fnd them cool and pleasant. You lght one after another, and they really taste better. You buy pack after pack, and fnd them defntely mlder. For complete smokng satsfacton you can't buy a better cgarette _ - mmt^, m^m mm -^ _, - _, m K^HESTERF/EL fy'fy^f^)~<^)-tf^^^<f^-fy^^'<f^^ The Colonal Welcomes You 4- -> SHOWS DALY 3 : :!0. 7. S) -:- SATURDAYS AT 1:30, 3::D * WEDNESDAY JOHN BARRYMORE "THE GREAT PROFLE" Mary Beth Hughes - John Payne - Gregory Ratoff OCTOBER 30 f, THURSDAY OCTOBER 31 A Dorothy L. Sayers Mystery "HAUNTED HONEYMOON" ' Robert Montgomery - Constance Cummngs - Lesle Banks FRDAY NOVEMBER 1 FRED MacMURRAY "RANGERS OF FORTUNE" Albert Dekker - Patrca Morrson SATURDAY ' NOVEMBER 2 p. LUCLLE BALL - RCHARD CARLSON "TOO MANY GRLS" Frances Langford - Des Arnaz - Ann Mller PLUS: THE MARCH OF TME "Brtan's R. A. F." MON. - TUES. NOV, 4-5 "THRD FNGER, LEFT HAND" _ MELVYN DOUGLAS - MYRNA LOY Lee Bowman - Bonta Granvlle - Donald Meek College Representttve BOB WALLACE, '20 TCL'JE 2 n furnshng your room, remember to get an appr \ for "bonng up" on those lessons whch run nto t',e late nght hours. Your eyes are a precous hertagt don't run them by nadequate lghtng. Consult,' < tn electrcal dealer or Vrgna Electrc and Power Co. v>f *** a L * t's \\ n OH s v m m The Home Of Famous Foods AR CONDTONED Szzlng Steaks, Cheken Chow-Mem, talan Spaghett, Fresh Daly Seafood, Lynnhaven Oysters, Cherrystone Clams on Half Shell, Fresh Mane Lobsters, Soft Shelled Crabs, Jumbo Shrmp, and Genune Smthfeld Ham, Our Specaltes. Headquarters 'for College Students Specal Prces to Students on Meal Tckets. We Delver Any Tme Phone 794

7 Tuesday, October 22,1940 THE PLAT HAT' PAGE SEVEN Lterary Club Outlnes Program For Year At a recepton gven n the Dodge Room on Wednesday, October 10, the J. Lesle Hall Lterary Socety presented ts plans and explaned ts functons for the comng year to both new and old members. The Socety s to be dvded nto three nterest groups: drama, fcton, and poetry. At ths frst meetng, the students chose the groups'n whch they were especally nterested. However the three departments wll work together. The drama group wll not only enact plays by well known authors but wll wrte and dramatze ther own plays. The Socety wll also sponsor lectures centerng around the actvtes of these groups. ECHO PROOFS Students may have ther Colonal Echo proofs by makng the balance of ther down payment at the Echo offce, thrd floor of Marshall Wythe, between the hours of, 3-6 and 7-9 Thursday, October 24, 3-6 Frday, October and 7-9, Monday, October 28. ; ; Church Notces BRUTON PARSH CHURCH "The Student Church Snce 1693" Rev. Francs H. Craghll, Rector Holy Communon 8:00 A. M. Church School 9:30 A. M. Mornng Servce 11:00 A. M. Student Recepton 4:30 P. M. THF WLLAMSBURG METHOHST CHURCH 'At the College Entrance" J)r. VV. L. Murphy, Mnster SUNDAY SERVCE Church School 9:45 A. M. Mornng Worshp 11:00 A. M. Wesley Foundaton, 7:00 P. M. Evenng Worshp 8:00 P. M. RODGERS CLEANERS Alterng - Reparng Plant: Rchmond Road Phone 172M Offce: Prnce George St. Phone 557R OSC1 ml >ys A gala week-end of events wll agan herald the return of the Alumn to ther alma-mater and the vst of hgh school students to Wllam and Mary- The stadum, able to hold eght thousand people, wll have three thousand extra seats added for the game. There wll be approxmately three thousand hgh school students present from over two hundred Vrgna hgh schools and prep schools. A great number of these vstng senors wll be shown through the Restoraton buldngs and many of the campus buldngs. Wllam and Mary students wll be hosts to the vstng alumn and students. A commttee headed by Dean Cox wll take care of the guests. Mr. McCurdy wll be n charge of the parade, the alumn luncheon, and the returnng alumn. Mr. Lambert and Mr. Hocutt wll see to the recevng and regsterng of all of the vstng students. Regstraton wll be held n the Great Hall of the Wren Buldng. Jack Saunders wll handle the parkng' facltes and Mr. Gooch wll be n charge of the stadum arrangements. At 12:30 Saturday, there wll be a luncheon for the returnng alumn, guests of the college, and faculty n Matoaka Park. There wll also be a meetng of the Alumn Assocaton at Ph Beta Kappa Hall mmedately after the parade. At two o'clock the Vrgna and Wllam and Mary bands wll march to the feld and take ther place's. At 2:15, from the Presdent's box there wll be an address by Dean Cox, superntendent of ceremones, who wll announce the wnners of the parade. The game wll begn at 2:30. Between the halves both the Wllam and Mary and Vrgna bands wll play. There wll also be freworks and card trcks durng the half. The day wll be concluded by a dance n the gym whch wll last from nne untl twelve. SGMA P PLEDGES Sgma P announces the ntaton of four new members and the pledgng of Wllam A. Lugar, Rchmond, Vrgna. The ntates are: Claude Kelly, Aylett, Vrgna; Frank Pully, vor, Vrgna; Donald Johnson, Smthfeld, Vrgna; and Churchland, Vr Robert Grffn, gna. f A. & N. STORES X X SPORTNG GOODS Y Men's Ready to Wear X Clothng X Athletc Supples We come Al umm m College Shop BOB WALLACE '20 j ] ^Cra V '<&st? Vh n JUDGMENT DAY Grls Formerly Wore Bows by Rosanne Sttrunsky Present "due" rules are easy on the freshmen compared wth soe of the rules that were enforced at Wllam and Mary back n the '20's and '30's. Back around 1925 freshmen men couldn't even talk to grls (not date, just talk) before four p. m. durng the week. Grls had to wear green bows around ther necks and courtesy, wth fnger to chn, to all upperclassmen. Commands lke "stop," "st," "run" had to be obeyed when gven by an upperclassman. Freshman had to say "Ma'am" when talkng t 0 upper class grls. Certan days n each month were put asde as "due days." On these \: '? > -.- wk^mm ' s#: J\ ;«' WLLAM AND M.' )!'' TRBUNAL STYLE eles ros days grls had to wear old sh, e. no cosmetcs or curled har, rj wear rbbons a. yard long, stra : ;JH across the forehead, ted n a 1 >, n back wth streamers hana u< down. They had to carry tl > books n paper bags and not o stockngs or' chew gum. Boys had to wear caps by 1 wards gong to class on "due da; s- and walk backwards gong by B, ferton Hall. They had to go sn; 1 fle on all occasons. On Sat r days grls had to walk complete 1; around Lord Botetourt, then r n once around hm before gong m ther way. good school sprt, from N vember frst tll after the gat le wth Rchmond, all freshmen glls and boys had to yell "Come < a Rchmond" when passng by Lo c Botetourt. Due Caps were worn 111 year untl May 1st then burnt n Botetourt Oldest Me mora Statue n Unted States Wllam and Mary Offcals Refuse To Sell Guardan Of Freshman Walk The statue of Lord Botetourt, to whch Freshmen have to curtsey or tp ther hats, s the oldest memoral statue n the Unted States. COLD DRNKS... ' CANDY... TOBACCOS STADUM SERVCE STATON OPEN 7:00 t 0 11:30 t s the statue of Lord Not borne, Baron de Botetourt, who wa. Hs Majesty's Leutenant Governo General and Commander-n-Che of the Colony and Domnon o Vrgna and Vce Admral of th: same, from 1768 tll hs death : He s bured n the chapel of the Wren Buldng. The General Assembly voted ;>. fund for a memoral statue. Made n England by Rchard Hay ward, a noted Englsh" sculptor, t was brought to Amerca n 1773 anc placed on the pazza of the captal A wrter of the day showed th reverence of the people for Lore Botetourt by wrtng that "though the statue s exposed to the publc t sn't defaced." Whle the captal was n Wllamsburg funds were approprate for cleanng the statue, but whe the captal was moved to Rchmond the funds stopped. By 17^7 Lord Botetourt's memoral was mu tlated and broken. Bought For $100 The Presdent and professors of Wllam and Mary bought t for.. GLORFY p},\ YOUE HAR f ^, AND T WLL \ j ' GLORFY YOU '.""" &. ft.'.. w. Boys Not Allowed To Smoke On Campus a bg bon-fre. For many years freshmen had lo wear black or green four-nand tes except on Sundays and Holdays. They weren't allowed to moke on campus but always had o can-y matches for the convenence of upperclassmen. Back n those days freshmen t'-ere called "dues," Dues were lues because of one of the pro-.retes of the school, a full faeully: a presdent, sx professors, a wrtng master and an usher. The rsher was n charge of an NTRO DUCTORY course whch prepared or entrance men who couldn't pass requrements on arrval at college. "'he 'ntroductory" was shortened to "due course" and men takng t ecame "dues." one hundred dollars and n 1801 t was repared and placed n front of the Wren Buldng., Durng the Cvl War t was taken to the grounds of the East em State Hosptal for safe keepng and after the war returned to where t now stands. Many hstorcal nsttutes have tred to buy the statue, but the offcals of the college won't sell t. Lord Botetourt s to reman the,", ardan of Freshman Walk. Dutch Queston '!tll Undecded Should "Dutch" dates be adopted on ths campus? The co-eds are defntely opposed to the new dea that was suggested Monday nght at the debate held n Barrett Hall. A publc debate s gven each.. son by the Mens and Women's ' bate Councls on some lght and tumorous topc. The subject of ' tch" dates was dscussed hlar- ' ly Monday nght wth the Men's >uncl represented by Bernard ^ E. L. DANLEY f Watches, Jewelry, Bands 4. and Reparng Y Prncse George Street y 4- Wllamsburg -f DEAL Bea:: ly Shoppe Casey's, PHON2 RLLNG» PERMANENT- WAY! nc. 128 ' THAT'S KND TO THE HAB 1 Ryan Gves Rado Talk Usng the example of ancent Sparta, Dr. Ryan presented a complete pcture of the totaltaran or Fascst state showng- ts begnnngs, ts ams, ts effects upon human character and cvlzaton and how t comes to an end. The Spartan state, he showed, was strkngly lke modern authortaran states n even the slghtest detals, emphass upon race purty, strct-regmentaton of lfe, power of secret-polce ard almost mystcal devoton to the sprt of the leader. The key descrpton of Sparta and of the fascst state n general. Dr. Ryan quoted from, Plu- Bureau Open To All Senors Attenton ths week s brought to the Wllam and Mary Placement Bureau whch s n process of regsterng Senors for ts mportant vocatonal gudance programme. All Senors who have hopes of securng a poston upon graduaton should report mmedately to the Bureau's offce on the second floor of Marshall Wythe and make an appontment wth Placement Drector Hbbert D. Corey. Mr. Corey, Drector of the college's placements, wshes to emphasze the mportance of an early regstraton. The postons whch wll be avalable next June are detareh: "Nobody was free to lve as pendent upon the number of stuhe wshed but had hs way of lfe dents who have satsfactorly completed ther Placement Bureau pro and publc dutes fxed, he dd not belong to hmself but to hs leader gramme n suffcent tme for the... "They made the ctzens accustomed Bureau's consderaton.... lke bees always to Mr. Corey has n past years been the organc part of the communty, responsble for the placement of to clng round ther leader and n many Wllam and Mary graduates. an ecstacy of enthusasm and selfless ambton to belong wholly to Unversty of Mnn, law school ther country." has decded to contnue ts 3-year The defeat of democratc Athens course for students who enter wth by totaltaran Sparta was due n a B. A. ho small part to Spartan sympathzers wthn Athens tself, men who had become dsgusted wth the bunglng of a decadent democracy BKES FOR RENT and from far off dealzed Spartan law, order and effcency. They MR. AMES dd not know at close hand the Spartan character or realze t' Boundary and Scotland Sts. klled all capacty for thngs of the mnd." 'The Greeks of Fascst Sparta after 500 were the only ones of all of Greece who left nothng of any value n art or lterature to NOTCE the world. Ransone and Ned Ferguson on the affrmatve and Vrgna Stuart and Jean Rendollar on the negatve. Mar Davdson acted as charman. The Women's Debate Councl s an actve organzaton on campus. The present membershp s 20. Last year 40 co-eds tred out for the councl. -Many debates wth vstng teams are held on campus and are open to the publc. Features are the Northern and Southern tours to other colleges. Outstandng colleges vsted are Prnceton, Vassar, Unon, Bennngton, Chapel Hll, and Duke. Tryouts for the women's Debate Councl wll be held tomorrow n Phlomathan Hall n the Wrenn Buldng. Dodge - Plymouth GENERAL TRES TEXACO PRODUCTS Ayers Motor Co. Behnd Post-Offce Wllamsburg*, Va. The FLAT HAT hghly recommends the followng' tourst homes: The SELBY Besde Ph Tau House. MAPLEHURST 719 Rchmond Road. TRAVELERS' REST 244 S. Boundary St. MRS. PA1NTER 136 Jamestown Rd. FRANK D. BOZARTH 417 Rchmond Road. R. A. HARBNSON 721 Rchmond Road. The CEDARS Jamestown Rd. X WELCOME ALUMN The Two Wllamsburg PENDER QUALTY FOOD STORES Cater Especally to W. & M. Fraterntes and Sorortes Groceres Qualty Meats Fresh Fruts and Vegetables Complments of ROSE'S 5c, 10c & 25c Store HAKE OUE STORE YOUR MEETNG PLACE GET THAT QUCK LUNCH FROM US. COLLEGE PHARMACY R. HENLEY,? 23 Propretor:!l llll^lld Htchens Bf«%. on Prnce George St. Or PHONE 49 Get your clothes pressed and look your best

8 * * * * * PAGE EGHT THE PLAT HAT Tuesday, October 22, The George S. Kaufman-Marc Connelly stage farce, DULCY, comet. to the screen on Wednesday wth Ann Sothern n the number one poston, traled by a bang-up cast composed of Roland Young, Blle Burke, Regnald Gardner, an Hunter, and breath-takng Lyme Carver. The Kauran-Comelly orgnal has been modernzed for the screer and refurbshed as to dalogue, but t remans essentally the same. Story concerns a well-meanng young lady, busy wth everybody's busness. Results amaze, astonsh, and n general, amuse. Mss Sothera's portrayal of the confused and confusng herone s a standout. On the DULCY prelmnary lst are: "Papa Gets The Brd," another of those clever color cartoons from Metro's Hugh Harmon, and "Uptoa of Death," one of John Nesbtt's 'Passng Parade' subjects... t's the story of the Ser ndans of Mexco, a vanshng race. Samuel Goldwyn contrbutes a really fne outdoor drama to ths week's bll when. Gary Cooper and Walter Brennan appear here on Thursday and Frday 'n THE WESTERNER. Ths s sheer entertanment for all audences... n all places. t s a combnaton of melodramatc thrll and the drama of poneers makng a home n the West. Gven the touch of hgh techncal qualty.a pcture of Dotty Lamour, star of "Moon Over Burma" before gettng her new har-do. She and her new headdress wll be seen here Saturday. * usually expected from Goldwyn, the producton s lfted far out of the class of straght acton materal. But t retans that speed of movement, of physcal acton, that made the moton pcture great. Gary Cooper n THE WESTERNER has a role of the type whch brought hm to promnence. He s the slow-speakng slow-movng, quet cowboy "from nowhere" and offers a performance of such convncng restrant as to make t outstandngly effectve. Walter Brennan, a s the notorous "Judge" Roy Bean, turns n a job of pcturestealng calbre. The newest ssue of "nformaton Please" preceeds THE WEST ERNER. Ths features all the experts... Levant, Keran, Adams... plus lovely Anna Neagle. ^ t- *- * * The Wllamsburg Theatre has scheduled a corker for Homecomng Day n MOON OVER BURMA, featurng Dotty Lamour and her new harcut, aded by the two Prestons... Preston Foster and Robert Preston. Just n case the football game ends by that tme, the second matnee feature wll start at four ffteen. Two evenng shows wll be gven as usual. But for those who have ther Saturday evenng flled, a dash from the stadum near the fnal whstle wll do the trck. Replete wth acton rangng from a jungle fre to a log-jam, MOON OVER BURMA s full of entertanment values. A color cartoon, and a new ssue of the Crme Doesn't Pay seres are the short subjects. Eght straght hts s somethng of a record n moveland. Wth SPRNG PARADE, the Monday-Tuesday tem, Deanna Durbn and producer Joe Pasternak hang up number eght. The story of SPRNG" PARADE s one of young romance... n 19th Century Venna. t s flled wth Pasternak's deft touches of humor, the expert performances of a capable cast, and Deanna delghtful sngng. Mscha Auer, Robert Cummngs, Henry Stepenson, and those fddle slappng kds Butch and Buddy, round out admrable support for Mss Durbn. The musc and the lyrcs by Gus Kahn and Robert Stolz form a vtal part of SPRNG PARADE, whle the drecton of Henry Koster was superb. The added treat wll be Walt Dsney's cartoon "Pluto's Dream House." # $ % ^ & Soon to appear on your move schedules: "The Great Profle" n whch John Barrymore burlesques.the lfe of John Barrymore; "Too Many Grls," the Rogers-Hart muscal comedy from the New York stage,.(a college background); "They Knew What They Wanted," the Lombard-Laughton starrer. Program For omecomm * ' W Secton Mr. Douglas Robbng n charge. Form on College Park Road from Jamestown to Chandler Hall. All organzatons should report to the person, n charge of ther secton mmedately upon arrval. After all groups are n proper formaton, SECTON wll move up behnd SECTON ; and, SECTON wll move up behnd SECTON. SECTON *1..Motorcycle Polce Escort. *2. Grand Marshall and ades. *S. Color Guard. 4. The College Band. :! ;>. The Presdents of the College and the Alumn Assocaton. ''<> The College. Cheerleaders. '". 'Wanrpo, rder and ndans. 8. Class floats. a. Class of b. Class of c. Class of d. Class of * NOT n competton for prze. 9. Honorary Organzatons (Clubs, Fraterntes, etc.) a. Mortarboard. b. OmcroB Delta Kappa. c. Women's Monogram Club and Women's Athletc Conmtee. (combned) d. Varsty Club. e. Backdrop Club. Theta Alpha Ph, Dramatc Club, (combned) f. Kappa Delta P. "g. Thrteen Club. h. Scarab Socety.. Balfour Club.» j. Flat Hat, Royalst, Colonal Echo, (combned) k. Eta Sgma Ph. 1. Wythe Law Club. m. The Burgers. n. Boot and Spur Club. SECTON * 1. The Unversty of Vrgna Band. 2. Dormtores. a. Jefferson Hall. b. Chandler Hall, c. Barrett Hall. 3. Socal Fraterntes. a. P.Kappa Alpha. b. Kappa Delta. c. Theta Delta Ch. d. P Beta Ph. e. Sgma Rho. f. Kappa Kappa Gamma. g. P Lambda Ph. h. Ph Mu.. Kappa Alpha. j. Kappa Alpha Theta. k. Sgma Alpha Epslon. 1. Gamma Ph Beta. m. Ph Kappa Tau. n. Delta Delta Delta. o. Ph Alpha. p. Alpha Ch Omega. q. Kappa Sgma, r. Ch Omega. s. Sgma P. t. Lambda Ch Alpha. *4. Specal car. SECTON *1. Braxton Perkns Drum & Bugle Corps of Newport News. *2. Colonal Natonal Hstorcal Park Servce. 3. Lons Club. 4. Boy Scouts. 5. Rotary Club. 6. Grl Scouts. *7. Wllamsburg Volunteer Fre Department. * NOT n competton for prze. Play, Rally y the Wllamsburg merchants wh.j are sponsorng the parade. The processon wll go down the Duke of Gloucester Street to the Captal and back past the revewng stand on the steps of thj old Court House. On the stand w.ll be alumn offcals, Dr. Bryan, and the judges. Mr. T. J. Stubbs s the charman of the judgng commttee, whch conssts of three faculty members: Mss Kathleen dsop, Dr. Andrew Edward Harvey ana Mr. Graves Glenwood Clark, and two town representatves, Mr;.. Josph Roy Geger, and Father Thems W r alsh of St. Bedes Chapel, The wnners wll be announced by Dean Cox at 2:15 P. 'M. jefore the game when he gves hs welcomng address to the vstng; hghschool students who are guests of Wllam and Mary. There wll be a short mee ng of alumn n Ph Beta Kappa Ball at 11:30 and at 12:30 all rjurnn, the faculty, and guests of the college wll, have a pcnc lunch n Matoka Park. Between the halves of th the Freshman class wll > fgures and the two school". wll march on the feld v t Wllam and Mary band pul a specal show. There wll 1 ustomary bg dsplay of f>r ^ The last event of the v >< wll be the nformal alunr Saturday nght n Blow Gyu, ng at 9 P. M. Spotlght (Contnued From Page ng was made by Dr. Marsh, of the Departmc economcs. Accordng to t the Alma Mater closed the caton. Dr. Marsh's address dt "ncentves" that s, for human conduct. Of centves there are two types ncentves brought by customs, tradtons, 1; trbal dutes; and brought about by the d. ndvdual happness. two, the desre for happness has been a m erfnl urge than the frs Real McCoy (Contnued From Page O ) me rd ds le on 'he lr*. m ce, of or, vl- VOvth ve 1 * tnera! [boat, and uves < for the daul DOW- Wllamsburg, beng pr nantly 18th Century, of tl noma of thng n solvng the pr >M locatng ths trm and co s '- nentthe ly t was necessary to v s wreckng companes n f < > a O nd, Newport News, and Nor( >]. Of the three ctes, Norfol t )»oved the mo t productve and t < rsater part of the materal WJ s purd ted chased there, packed ntr. to the sde of a car an< to the scene shop n the Fn Buldng. Bryan's Welco (Contnued From Pag > there exsts a pressng n men of strength and v s < the sze of ts student b. nsttuton n Amerca b. % more than Wllam and f ar> realm of poltcs or on of battle, and though no r - tell what war may po.' peace-tme warrors wl ( utmost on the footbal show that "wn, lose or rn courage and the sprt, f ' and Mary are worthy c -* d and gve promse for t l< JOHN STEWART ' -ought e Arts Dgnfed Dean ness and versatlty, Dean Hudson features the voces of several vocalsts, a quartet, tro, and glee club. The brght lght of the band and the nucleus of ts superor syncopaton s Ray Lynn of hgh-horn fame. Ths nneteen-year-old trumpeter really has what's wanted and s proclamed by mony to be headed for Hue success an nhertance left hm by hs re no Aled Daddy of "Hot Lps" fame. Frances Colwoll, lovely and fullvoced warbler, s remarkable n f 4^ tccmrr & MYSK* TOBACCO G«t. that she has wham but doesn't have to rely on t to put her numbers over. Be on tme for the parade. t's gong to be broadcast over staton WRVA, Rchmond. DVJQl >OA SCHOOL MTPLE.-* We Delver -t-s-e-h- ">$ C»*->, ~<"^^-^-^-*-*--^-.v<^->-*-^-fr4-^<^-*^^>.<.^<<-^.<-')<> ;~$^ Chesterfeld has all the qualtes that smokers lke best that's'why t's called the SMOKER'S cgarette. Smoke after smoke and pack after pack, they gve you more pleasure. Chesterfelds are made of the RGHT COMBNATON of ke world's best cgarette tobaccos. SUSANNE TURNER MARY STEELE and J6AN DONNELLY members of the Women Flyers of Amerca esrerfe wmmmmmmmmmmmmm Blll^B >&& : >:&S^&-&;'k& MORE AND MORE...AMERCA SMOKES THE CGARETTE THAT SATSFES f ' * T The Colonal Welcomes You t f COLONAL RESTAURANT The Home Of Famous Foods V* A t 4- "* <*=:_?** AE CONDTONED SHOWS DALY 3:30, :- SATURDAYS AT 1:30, 3:30, 7, 9 $ Wednesday October 23 $ f Ann Sothern an Hunter f "DULCY" f Blle Burke Roland Young Regnald Gardner f Ttesda^Mday" TWCTDAYS October % GARY COOPER % Walter Brennan Dors Davenport t "THE WESTERNER" % ALSO: "nformaton Please" featurng Anna Neagle ^ - _... f % Saturday October 26 $ Dorothy Lamour "MOON - Robert OVER Preston BURMA" Preston Foster Dors Nolan Albert Basserman Monday-Tuesday October f Deanna Durbn Robert Cummngs Mscha Auer f "SPRNG PARADE"! PLUS: A new Dsney Cartoon "Pluto's Dream House" n furnshng- your room, remember to get an an - vet! for "bonng up" on those lessons whch run nto the late nght hours. 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