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G~ity Says WF May Have T~ seek Federal Aid Funds
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Deacons Make It Close But Heels Win In Overtime
Page Seven
VOLUME LD Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Caronna. Monday, Feb. 13, 1967 NUMBER 17
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TBR9UGB THE SOFTLY-FALLING 8NOW·::~::~.:~hat eovered the· campus Thursday night shine the eoaclJ!'Jirhts on the . portico of Reynolda Hall, like beacons in th~ ·nl&'ht: In the
-PHOTO BY JOHNSON baekground, the Ughted windows of the Z. Smith Reynolds Library form rectangular silhouettes against the darkened sky.
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Slater Empl()y~es Agree With OG&B;
Criticize _Wages, WQrking Conditions. • • • ' 0 • "1, - • • . ' . •
By RALPH' S~SON · . there .is ·ve;ry:·uttle emplOyee atiOn. employees worked six d:ay Asscc~ATE EDITOR tU;l'IJ.ovez: !lt ~~e IOcail operatioil. · One employee told of work- weeks.
.. -o A ·Sl · , ":rhft ita1iJUi3',;ffas. beeri ver;)t -in~. f~om ~~a. m.;J ~~~1,; ~. q~ "Aal.-othe:r. worlter chargea tliat t ~. ~~il · ~. ·Jr\~f~~" flli~ · hi".rr~ •• ;--~~-1: ··; -H:~·~went- · '1-ri$. m., •wlth- an hoiir' ood a · s t · icln•t ·· · ·· ry as .. .Ba· .· .,p le,".- a- Jgl1 if& . '" .. aH bi'e·_;:;k"""'d. ;~,.;:~--.~--.at•e·r.• -_~a erd __ .. P.ilY tfm.e and a g>J:oUp. of eiiiplo:vi!ijfl · t!Hi:rgea Sl~ j;Q fi~f~'tfi.'\~Jil'l'rtiost ot'the "'"+t ,. .... -... ~·~ r• half for ovel'titne worK. · last week in a letier to the tU111lover was among the dish- noon.· "It's ha:rd to even get regu-Old Gold & Black. · ~m c.rew. ' "If Slater would hire more lar pay for overtime," another
people, we wouldlll't have to worker said. .The employees, who wished
to remain anonymous, at the same tinie said they · -agreed with th·e newspaper "one hundred·per cent," and expressed 'a desire . ·for employees and students together "to wake u]:l A. R. A. Slater." ·
Not Fair
The letter also charged that "A. R. A. Slater supervisors are not foair. They should more meetings (sic) with the employees and students so that the work can be carried ou~ much bet~."
WO!'k so crong," the line work- The manager denied the -!!!I' salld. charge, and said that Slater
"And" especiafly us women did pay time and a half for lfolk," .she continued. "Wo- overtime work, According to men need to be with thetr state and federa[ employment familY at least two cLays a ~a•ws, restaurants and food week," ;she lamenied. services are not required to ·
Arinenaki said that most pay tbis amoun-t, he s:ai.d. The · .page-Jong, · typewritten
letter criticized Slater wages and working conditions.
Employees who knew a·bout the letter said· they "were k.nitting <together closely against Slater."
Armenaki said that he has meetings vJitb. employees, and pointed qut a specific meeting
. the first of last week. He inISiSted that he !has- "tri€d over allld over again" to Iiave' students form a foocl.committee.
Recruiters For Peace Corp~
·To Interview W akeStudents . .
.. More Letters Another criticism in the. let- Two Peoace <:9rps .recruiters Th . . lso lan to te.r was ·about S1ater!s program will •be on the Wake Fores~
ell' group a · P s to increase wages tO· $1.70 by send letters to -local govem- 1971. The authors of .the letter College campus Monday and ment leaders and l0oal news- Tuesday. · papers, sources indicated Fri- felt that 1S1l y.:~s too far The recruiter:s, Betty Lou day .B.fternoon. away. '· Barfi€ld pf Goldsboro ·and· Jo-
s~iiter ·manager· T: .Thomas "How do they: <Slater) ex- seph Higdon of ~oxville, Armenaki deJJied ·every charge · · ·pect -to keep employees at· this · Tenn., will be in the Jobby of about· which. Old Gold. q1.Les- !l'at~" the letter asked. Reynolda Hall from 8 a. m. to tioned him. · Armenaki said tn!lt "as far· 6 p. m. each day. to talk with
The main .criticism in the as the pay scale is concerned, anyone interested in the fll"O-poorly-written letter wa.s that we a-re in line with the other gram. Slater:::emp1oyees "are over- operations." . . . Hidgon, whQ was ~ vollunteer worked' arid underpaid." . Several- employees were in the Philippine Islands be-
Armeriaki· repeatedly insisted asked what ihey thought about fore becoming airector of that hls- organization is -paying working co~9Jtions' and sala-ry Southern reerwting, will speak
Chapetl. . Hidgon received his B. A.
degree in political scielioce at the University of Tenn€ssee. He taught science and .worked in community development while in othe Philippines.
Miss Barfield, who graduated from Watts Hospital's School of Nursing in- Durham, did obst£,trica!I work and taught in Afgha-nistan's capitaJ city, Ka·bul. She also toured the provinces to select sites for fu.ture Peace Corps health projects and checked on the health of other volunteers.
Master's Degrees Offered In Three ~ ew Departments
The oHiering of master's degrees in the departments of education, physical education and religion Wl<IS announced ~iday by Dr. Henry S. Stroupe,· director of the division of graduate studies a•t Wake Forest College.
'I\he college's education department previously has offered gmdwate work leadl.ng to certifica<tes renewal for public school teachers but has not offered enough hours for a master's degree. The change in 1ilis department is effective this summer.
New Areas
Physical education and religion are new areas being added to the graduate division. They begin offetmg graduate work this fall.
The c-han•ges bring to 11 the 111umber of departments in which there is graduate work in the arts and sciences. Graduate work also is offered at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine of the college. Five departments there offer the Ph.D. and master's degrees ami: five ollhers offier master's de,?ee work. The cohlege resumed offering master's degree work in 1961 in six departments .. They were ibiology, chemistry, English, history, mathematics and physics. The psychology departmenst wa.s added in 19134 and the department af sociology and anthropology in 'i966.
AJready 'Approved
The education department already has been approved by the State Board of Education for study l!~adin•g to the class "A" certificates and will now seek approva.l of progr.ams for
graduate certificates. There will be 13 gradu.a.te courses offered in the areas Qt.f teaching, counseling, principalship and supervision. Dr. John E. Parker, professor of Roma!llce languages and education, is chairman of the department.
There also will be 13 graduate com-ses in physical education. Requi.red courses involve a philosophical approach to physica.l educ-ation, research
methods, advanced tests and measilrements, readings and a seminar course. Dr. Harold M. Barrow, chairman of the department, soaid there will be a critical shortage of physical educatiQ!l teachers in the next few years and that the shortage will be more acute at the master's rather than the Ph.D. level.
The ma·ster' s degti"ee in religion will serve as either a
termin-al degree for those with a B.A. or B.D. degree or as preparation for further graduate study in religion. There will be 10 graduate courses iD the followiong areas: Old Testament, New Testament, theology, the history of Christianity, Christian ethics, religion a.nd literatt11'e, world religions and re.lig.ious education. Dr. George J. Griffin is chairman of the department.
Legislature Drafts Resolution For Fixed Four- Year Tuition
A Te!SdlutiOIIl to appoint a committee to draft a proposal for a fixed !tuition plan to be offered to the college trustees was passed by the Student Legislature Wednesday night.
U111der lthis p~an, outuned in a bill presented by Norma Murdoch, sophomore of Macon, Georgia, each student would pay throughout his college years on!ly the amo1.111lt of tuiti0111 stated in the buUetin of the term in whkh he entered. Price increases for 1any yearr would be levied only 0111 new studeruts. The trustees would be permitted to raise class tuition or a:ctivity fees for up· perdassmen ondy in the event of a "major financial emergency."
The plan was modified so that fees of students now en-
. rolled would not revert to those of their first year, but would be fixed at the figures announced for the fall, 1967 semester.
finanda[ problems for students and parents. Students dependling on iliOn-rising funds and scholarships are handicapped. Budget plaaming is "impossible."
Imvestigation of financial policy at other private colleges where similar fixed tuition plans have been adopted prompted the proposal. The bill ·stated that Davidson, Mary Ba:ldwill, and Wesleyan colleges currently operaJte on such a prog-ram.
The •bill CQ!lcluded that adoption of the plan oat Wake Forest would be "not onJy possible, •J;l1.Lt advisable for the
general welfare of the student body."
In other •business, the Saturday Classes Study Commit· tee ·announced a meeting with Dr. J. R. Johnson, of the math department on February 10. The possibilities of elimin·ating Saturday classes for a oneyear trial period oand of having fall semester exams before the Christmas vacation are under comsiderati0111.
Howard Stanback, sophomore of Durham, and Jim Wells, freshman of Greenvil!le, have been chosen as delegates to ,the State Student Legislatua-e in March.
Socialist Is Scheduled In Challenge Program
By PAM HAWKINS ASSISTANT EDITOR
College Offers Ctllle~lion Of ·:::.'::· ·
This bill attacks present ccdlege policy which allows student charges tO be naised at any time without notice. nea-W'JIS !ldVaJlCed Ul favor of the c~~ihciuded the fa-Ct_ tli~t tujJQon f<ii ~avor of the change included the fact that tuition
Chal:lenge '1)7 is rollin-g wong in this final month !before the progr11m with four more &Peams. ~e~t!Jl:r: Invitaf:i~s and $1,251T .1ft oofiatlans bemg received.
Norman Thomas, five-time candidate for president on the socialists ticket, will speak Saturday at 10 a. m. Thomas is a·n author, minister, and sociiil worker. . · · i6r; Edward K. Smith, deputy assistant seoref)ary for economic policy of the Department of Commerce, will participate in the seminar Saturday at 2 p. m. with Senator William P.roxmire and others dis-cussing governmetlltal economics as opposed to business and labor interests.
1500 Bulletins Are you conslidering trans
ferring to another college or attending a graduate or profession-al school? If so, the Registrar's O££ice lis offering you its assistance in the form of a little-known college catalogue library maintained · in Room 111 of Reynolda Hall.
The collection, wh~ch has recently been updated to include bulletins of the clll'lrent school year, represents colleges, uni. verS'ities, and professionaa schools from all fifty states and many foreign countries. Presently, there are approximately 1500 catalogues ~n the collection.
Arrangement of the catalogues is both by graduate j undergraduate c01lleges ·and by vocatiorual emphasis: music, journa,lism, theology, nursing, engineering, denbistcy, etc: ·
Some of the ·schools represented are the AmePican University m Oairo, the !D>Stitute of European Studies in Vienna, and Hong Kong Baptist College.
has risen steadilY for the past nine years for a total of $700.
Miss Murdoch's -bill said that thes~ "unexpected and unexplained" inocreases cr-eate a "generally negative attitude in the student body", and oause
. Craig Spense, <! viet Nam ivar correspondent :!or Mutual News, will speak Friday, March 3, at 2 p. m. Spense, who spent a year in Viet Nam, bias had previous experience speaking before college mroups.
Request For Lower QPR Rejected By Committee
By HENRY BOSTIC, JR. MANAGING EDITOR
The Student Affailrs Committee CSAC> turned down a request by the Interfratermty Council Thursday wltich would have lowered the quality pol;nt nation < QPR> n-ecessary for pledging a :fraternity f:rom 2.0 to 1.75.
The SAC backed up its refusat -to lower the necessary QPR with statistics showing Jthe accademic performance of -last year's £reshme111 who were allowed to pledge willh a 1.75 QPR or above. Last year the SAC had temporarily lowered the necessacy QPR from 2.0 to 1.75.
The committee, according to Dr. M. E. Waddill, assistant !PI"Ofessor of mathematics and >COmmittee member, also based its refusal on oa comparison of the number of men eligible Ito pledge [ast year and those eligible this year. '
Complete records were kept on the 23 men who were allowed to pledge ~ast year with a 17.5 QPR or !better. Of :this 23 only .seven had good enough gl'ades to be initiated. The grades of 11, or almost half, fei1I while only four had about the same grades.
Editor of the Winston-Salem Journal Sentinal, Wallace Carroll will speak in one of the seminlaTs Saturday, March 4, Qll the "Future of American Economic Policy."
Challenge has received a total of $8,000 in don·a-tions and pledges. Hanes Foundation has recently contributed $1,000 and Jefferson Standard Broadcasting Co., $250.
Registration forms will be sent out in the next few days to every college and univerl'ity in twenty-one states in the eastern United States.
.Jerry Baker, cha~rman of the Chatlenge Committee, said that they had already received promi•sing delegations from several schools, in response to the initiaJ. brochure announcing the pro~am.
Letters Sent
the minimum~ 1\VQge to all em- r:ange of the .local Slater oper- at 10 a. in; Tuesday in Wait ployees:andpays·some ~k- ::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=:=:~~~=:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Waddill said tha.t etatistics show that pledging a fraternity .usua·JQ hurts a boy's grades. '"!the main reBJson for de:f.erred rush was to give the freshmen boy a chance to prove himself academically," ihe said. "The g-rades of the 23 prove this trend."
Challenge has sent letters to ali! Wake Forest professors asiking them to give free cuts any time there is a major seminar or lecture scheduled so tbJat the students here will be ·iiJble to attend without penaJty. The form letter also requested that the professors try not to schedule mid-term exams during this period.
ers 50 · cents more than the minimuiri: . .
"To inform the s-tudents of how much the employees m:ake," the letter exp1aint!d, "the .highest employee ·makes $1.45 to $1.511.
"People tha-t work in the soda shop, on the line, in the
'¥ salad pantry, and bakery shop make from $1.00 to $1.25," the letter continued.
According to the .authors of the letter, "This is why so many people leave A. R'. A. Slater."
Armenaki and .William J. · Wentz, district manager for Slater who was formerly manager here, both agreed that
WGA Planning
Seminars On
Job Advantages 'llhe Functions Committee of
W.G.A. is planning ·a series of career seminars. Job oppor,tunities in various academic fields will -be diseussed.
The seminars will be held in DeTamble Auditorium from 6:30 to 7:30 p. m. on March 7 for religion., education, and philosophy;. on March 9 :for hilstocy, >political science, busi- · ness and economics; and OD March 14 for English, cJassical languages, F!rencll, Get-man and speech.
She wtll discuss the current umest in Chin-a. Her lecture is at 8:15 p. m. in DeTamble Auilitorium in the Humanities Building and is open to the public. ·Dr. Han, who is also the au
thor of the novels "The Moun· tain Is Young" and "The Four Flaees," is presently working on a five-volume biographyhistory-autobiography ofChjna.
She· has completed the first volume, .. The Crippled Tree," and is working ·on the second, "A Mortal FUower." The complete work wilf bear tlhe overall title, "My House Has Two Doors."
Dr. Han, who is active in the World Health Organization and the ;world Family Planning Association, planJs to retlll'Il to her medical practice In Singapore when all five volumes are completed.
She has trav~led . widely in China and Soutileast AsLa in the past seven ·years. A good
friend of many Asian heads of state, she has .a deep knowledge of the life and problems of the Orient.
Dr. Han was born and brought 1.LP in Pekinog and Sltudied there and at the Brussels University until World War II forced :her to return to Chillia. There she met and married her fii-st husband, a general with the na:tionoalist Chinese forces, who was killed in 1945.
After his death, she returned to medicine and completed her studies ·at the Univer·sity of London. In 1949 she began practice in Hong Kong:-·
Dr. Han has contrilbuted articles· to Life, Holiday, The Reporter a:nd The New Yorker and bas had a-rticles published by the ~rid Health Organiza-tion -and 1n many Asian journals.
She has lectUred at universities· in both En·glish and Chinese· on literature · and language.
Dr. Han impresses evecyoneo wbo meets her with 11he iinport;a111ce of what she has to say and her earll€S~ .desi,re for a good liie for aM in a. tiree world.
DR. HAN SUYJN • • • -Chinese doctor and author of "A Many Spleadored Thing," will speak a& 8:1S p. m. Thursday in DeTamble
Auditorium on the eurreat uurest In Cblaa. Dr. Han has travelled eztenslvely in Cbina and Southeast Asia in &he past seven :rears.
Last year there were only 144 freshmen men with a 2.0 QPR out uf the mare than 304 that signed up for rush. Tbi.s year -there are approximat* 25() who are eligible and have signed up for rUJSh.
"Last year we did lower the requirements," said Waddill, " because it wa•s the first year of deferred rush and because lthere was such a small lllllmber of men eligible to pledge. We felt that such a situation ml,ght hurl the firalt<!r-n.ities il-a;;t year.
''But -there is 1110 such problem this year," he added. There are enough ellgfl;}le men with .a 2.0 QPR or better with· out lowering the l!"equirements.
The SAC did not act on the resolution at its regular meeting which was held on Wedlllesday because of a mix-up which caused !the resolution :not to be presented.
Thomas said that he was upset bec-ause some fraterni·ties had accused him of not presenting the proposal on Wednesdiay. But said Thomas, "The resolutiQ!l wa.s presented to ·Deam. of M€al Mark Reece ibefure the Wednesday meeting, a-s <the SAC requires, but it wms temporoarily llost and not fotmd until Thursday morning."
The magazi.l'e program with a ·biography of the speakers and the story of Chaillenge Is scheduled to go to press in the next few days. Due to insufficient advertising, rthe program will sell for 50 cents.
A banquet for the visiting delegates and Wake students w~ll be held Friday night, Ma.rch 3, and breakfast buffets are planned for F:riday and Saturday mornings. The delegates will be housed at varioUIS motels in the city.
Going Better Baker said, " Things are
going better than I thought they would. I'm pleased overall by the progress so far, and I'd like to give specia~ mention to the students who hav11 volunteered a lot of their time.
":My only wonry," Baker continued, "is that the faculty may not recognize the advantages of this prog-ram and may not aJlow the students to participate freel(y.
"Some professors have doubted the validity of some of the speakers, but we have purposely gotten controversial speake;r.s who wiLl bring out thin•gs so the studen!ls will thiJnk more."
•· PAGE TWO Monday, Feb. 13,1967 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
~{.~!Zr~ta~ : . . !t\
ON DUTY
24 HOUR
SERVICE 1590 West First and
Clo\'erdale
726-1386
Setzer & Hall Take Cups In Bridge Tourney
The first annual WGA Bridge Tournaml•nt met with an unorthodox start Wednesday nig'ht when two boys won first place in the bridge tournament that had ori~inally been meant for all girls.
Bruce Reeve. a junior of Tom Rivl•r. N. J., an<! Bob Smith, senior of Clevclnnd Heights, Ohio, won the tournament th«t had included eight couples.
The trophy, howevc:or, will go to the first runners-up, Faye SC'tzc-r, senior of High Point, and Cathy Hall, :senior of Canton, N. C., in accordance with the rule that th(' trophy may only go to WGA members.
The tournamt'nt \\'as held il1 thl' rcc room of Babcock dorm :tor~;.
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--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY TilE OLD STUDY ROOM on Ute south side collection. The old periodical room bas a of the library's third floor is being converted capacity of 1,700 titles and the library now
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Austine Odom W~ill··Represent Wake In Glamour: ColJlpetitio,
By LINDA CARTER STAF'P' WRITER
Participating in beauty and lf'asthion competition is old~hat to Austine Odom, junior of Blacksburg, Va., who was selected over twenty-three other coeds Tuesday night as Wake ForeGt's entry in Glamour magazine's best-dressed college girl contest.
Austine currently holdlS · the title of Miss Blacksburg, and · competed in the Miss West Virginia pageant last July.
Here on campus, she was voted Miss Derby Day by Sigma Chi fraternity last year. She was also a contestant in last year's local Glamour competition.
Modeling E:QJerienee
Our Sprites and Midgets are priced for action..
"' to house the library's growing periodical gets 2,300. Miss Odom ihas dooe quite
a bit iX modeling in t..er home town, in connection with the Miss West V:irginia pageant, and for some Winston-Salem stores.
Get in on it
Oorner 7th & l\1arshall Sts. Winston-Salem, N. C. N. C. Lie. 3225-Dealer - Phone 723-7217
1 Renovation,Reclassification ~ Are Undertaken In Library
But despite her interestand her success - She says that fashion is, for her, only a "fascinating bobby." A Uology major, Miss Odom 'plans a career in "some sort of medical W()rk."
··-=. By GRAY LAWRENCE STAFF WRITER
The libra1·y is undergoing extensive reno\'ation oand rearnlllging in order to complete three C!lahorate projects.
According to Dr. Merrill G. Berthrong. director. they includt•: the reclassification of honks from the Dewey decima I to the Library of Congress system, a process which will take fmm three to foul" :vcnrl': an addition to the book fund in order to purchase new materials to support the grad· uate program, now in its second year of operation; and the completion of the library
building, at presetllt unfinished from the third floor up,
"The south side of the third floor is now being completed by equipping it as a periodic<Jls room. This was a necessary step because the present periodicals room can accomodate only 1700 titles and the library is already receiving 2300," Dr. Berthrong said. "We needed an area which h•ad more shelf room.
"So arrangemen:ts were worked out for the space formerly used for c-lassrooms, which will provide us with double the shelving capacity, which ought to take care of the projected increase in periodicals over
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the next several years. This means cutting down somewhat on the seating capacity, but arrangements have been made for more seatin~ in the stacks, so that the total seating capacity will probably l'vcn increase slightly.
"The vacated periodicals room on the mezzanine of the second floor will be refitted and refurnished as a shelving nnd study area for the Baptist Collection. presently housed in the stacks," Bcrthrong ·added. "This rocrn will have study space and lounge furnishings. The area might be ready by this spring, and definitely by this summer.
Berthrong commented on the importance of the Baptist Collection, the most extensive of 1ts kind in he area. "The Bap•tist Collection gives us a unique distinction; we feel it should be housed in a more secure area and be made more available to students. The new shift will enable us to accomplish this for the first time."
Berthrong also announced the election of the Wake library to the Association of
If she is selected ·a·s one of the tl•n winners of the national best-dressed girl contest, Miss Ouom may find her hobby more "fascinating" than ever. Glamour magazine will bring the ton winners selected from black and whit~ photographs, to New York early this summer to be 'photographed for the August backto-school ~ssue-. The girls will be taken on tours of famous fashion houses, given Slhort
Southeastem Research Libraries and explained lthe new atmosphere in the Rare Book Room.
"In October we hired a fulltime librarian, Richard Murdoch, engaged in cataloging rare books and helping students use the collection," Berthrong said. "Up to this time the rare books collection has been available only on a restricted basis through the -permission of the Library Administration. Now it is open from 9 a. m. to 5 p, m. · for both facllllty and students."
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this • Quick Service · Corner of Burke and Brookstown Streets
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Keyed-up students unwind at Sheraton . .. and save money Save with ~t•eekmd discounts! Send for your free Sheraton ID card today! It entitles you to room discounts at nearly all Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns. Good over Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays. summer vacation, weekends all year round.
. . -PHo:io BY JOHNSON AN ECSTATIC WINNER ..• o'f .the campns best-dressed title is Austine Odom, who captured· the hon!Jr .Tuesday ~ght in a fashion show sponsored by Strings society."· Twentythree coeds participated in the local ciontest.
course·s in · makeup · and design, and be guests of honQI' foc several dinners and broad-way shows. ·
The preliminary contest that Miss Odom won was sponso•red by Strings ·society. E<>.ch girl modelro tlhree outfits divided into the gen.eoral_ categories of campus, daytime offcampus, and dres\S.
Miss Odom's choice fur campus dress was a simple navy A-Hne !Skirt and a narudknit turtle-neck ski sweater in shades of brown, blue, and white. With these she wo-re brown fish-net ntose ami' navy shoes.
Pink Outfits ·
and bag, b~wn leather ~oves, . ·and a gold bracelet.
In the dross category, Miss Odom agaoin wore pink, ··and she credits this outfit with 'helping her . win the contest. The flOOr--length fDrmal She modeled was the •Same doress she wore when ,she won the Miss -Blacksburg title. · For ~uesday night's competition,
· she. used ma·tching pink satin shoes and bag and Wlbite- kid gloves aJS accessories. , Miss Odom was spOOJS~red
·in the contest by S.O.P.H. society. The other eompetlto.rs re:opresented varioUJS campus' <iorgal).iza.tions. , Dariel Saunde!'s, •Seuioor of Wmst'()n-Salem, ;md sponsored
But sbe admittedly has· "a by the day students, was passion fur pink," - an·d the nameld - runner-up, outfits she wore in .the two . A.s the. local wimler, Miss other divisions displayed 'this Odom will . serve · as Wake love .. For. heor daytime o.ff- Forest's representative for
:.&3II!~JftrS'IJftstiQjk1MjjPrug:'J2m __ ·G~~~olJr a¢ hl_).ve lber pic· r>r~r~~.~"'¥~l~s~~~q\:'«1MMed '.t!t!!._rerr!_il\'~~~th_e-~( tiack~tb'school rf.I!~s Wtbih'a9~S: % iJHf ¥[ld • •1iS!IIle. ,.,stieJJWiJ.IiLreceive'1ac· gOld
•· p"fum .':flnar gave f wo-~lece -~"Ciharm';'"ll"yelH'''s-·.siibsl!tiption effect. The dress had a swirl- to the· inagazin,e, and the ed skirt and a scarl attached chance of · being :named one >:~t the neck. She accented it olf the teo.n best-dressed colwith brown alligator pumps ·.leg€' girls in. the United States.
Bowman- Gray Is Awarded Grant For Teaching Project
The Nationai Fund for Medical Educaotion has awarded the Bowman Gray School of Medi·cine a two-year $31,300 grant to support the development and evaluation of new teaching ' methods in Ph.!lrmacology.
The funds for the project were provided- by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., one of several corporations contributing regularly tc the National Fund.
Senior students elected were James L. Biesecker, Lexington; Gerry D. Martin, Troutman;. W. Anthony Smithson, Winston-Salem; John A. Thompson, Jr., Winston-Salem; E. Fl:lanklin Tulloch, J-!'., Winston-Salem; and Wilson.K. Wallace, Charlotte. ,
·Elected from the Junior class were Marshall R. Ball·of New. Bern, ·Herbert M. Schil
, ler of. Winston-Salem a:nd James L. Self.of Raleigh.'
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r----------------------------------~-----1 COLLEGE RELATIONS DIRECTOR
The project is directed by Dr. J. Maxwell Ltttle, professor and chairman of ·the Department or' Pharmacology. It will explore the use of closedcircuit t~;levision, TV tapes, tape recorders; movies, teaching machines and other audiovisual aids in the · teaching
:Or. Don:ald M. ·Hayes, as- J
sociate professor of medicine
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Open· 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sat. 'tifJ:lO .~ ··1.1 Open: .9:30-·S:lO • f.Jfliday 'til 9
cjo Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008
Please rush me a free Sheraton Student ID Card (or a free Faculty Guest Card). I understand it entitles me to generous discounts all year long at most Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns.
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For The Finest Selection Of Valentine Candies,.
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program. ...
The most significant aspect of the project is a plan to establish a film library for the continuing basic science educ-ation of students after their pre-clinical years of medical :;"hool.
Also recently nine students and two facuLty members at l3"wman Gray were tapped for membership ln Alpha Omeg:a Alpha, national medical honor society.
aJt Bowman Gray, was elect.ed to · AOA from the medical school's alumni. Dr. Courtland H. ·Davis J~.. professo.r of neuro-surgery, was elected from <the faculty. i
Recently appointed to the the 11acultY · of the -medical
· ·school were Dr. Fleettfs L. Gobble Jr. and Ml's. Virgiio!a ·B. O'Col).llell. .
Gobble, a member of the medical · school's ·part-time faculty fcir the past 16 years, was named instructor in Obstetrics .and gynecology. Mrs • O'Connell, former treatment coordinator with the Alcohol- 1 ism Program in Forsyth Coun- ' ty, was ·appointed instructor in psycbia,tric social work.
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!Particip Religiol main .s dinne11ti of the
Schwt chernis1 Tennes~ directol rteachin1 ga.nic ; ·at tthe 1 at the. ville,. 1
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·~ clue!' ··:into •the
.·. dem sc ciety.
'• "Ima
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-Fuj Place
for the ., ibe as (
must si _,.Prior t
Wedn ;· Public ,,~men; l "· tropolit ."men_.~ (,.seniors r:rexc~pj;i; :;. Owens-' •· para tim .
·, .,,
.;.. 1
.~.iors au Proc
··'and wo ···master'
Travele ; informl City Sc gradua1 .student ~(Md.J : no info
.-. ThurE
.. -Bell, I: · 'graduart in Bus
···AikmaJJ .. 'ing seru . any m~ .~Corp.:
uating ''dents, ;
;County-:·and war ·9-11 a. graduart:
·'Bank a1 ··women
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. ers, D ·. Busilnes
Brot!l .ior of
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Jaycee: working ment, op through
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Mo
9:30
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·'
:Schweitzer Tells Students . I
Christ: 'Clue' For Life's Meaning By J. D. WILSON
STAFF WRITER
r>_r. George K. Schweitzer participated in Wake .Forest's Religion In Life Week in three main speeches as well as a dinneiltime discussion in one of the MRC houses.
Schweitzer, professor of chemistry at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville and a director of :research ·and rteachiug in the field of inorganic and nuclear chemistry at lthe Oak Ridge campus and at the main campus at Knoxville centered his speeches •.
--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY
SCHWEITZER IN CHAPEL
; ·around what he called "the ·, -clue." He wove "the clue" ·:into the <topics of religion, mo-
sphere pressing in upon you," he said, "which yields your essential outlook. Your whole feeling of it is your world view.
"Each person's world view," he said, "is seen through tinted glasMs as to his own experiences. This world view is changed by everything you experience."
Schweiltzer suggested that the -situation in Viet Nam is a result of · a clash of world views. "Each major culture of rt;he world has a different world view and to .understand 'them we must enter into their world view. But even then we will be seeing their world view through our world view,'' he said.
A major point in his speech was that '.'man'.s . essential search in life is for meaning • • .in this terrible . 4:hrobbi.ng mystery of a world around us. Life is aD enigma. ·
FundaJ!lental Theory
"Each of us,". he said, "in our Ce!!tral' soul has a fundamental theory of what· things are like-we're looking for the clue.
"Each person must pick from his total experience _one piece and say it's the key clue,'' he said. "Then the function of this clue is his religion. ·The on,Jy test for your clue is whether i:t clicks."
He suggested that no clue is totally adequate because man is limited and cannot live withourt; having his clue-JJ.is faith-challenged.
DR. SCHWEITZER talks with Dean Thomas Elmore while· serving themselves at the buffet held in Kitchin House. Other students
. . -PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY and professors wait in line. Dr. Schweitzer later talked informally with the group after the meal.
the "new generation" and tj1eir parents. ~'They are three generations ,iJ.part," he said. "Your parents had a limited handful of clues from which to choose, but you liave a !bewildering variety of clues from which to choose."
Most Are Polytheists.
Dr. James McDowell o.r his· tory; Dr. Leon Holliingsworth, chaplain; Dr. David Evans of anthropology and sociroJo. ·gy; allld Dr. Donald Schoanmaker of the political sciencl'l. department and lh.ousemaster ad' Kitchin.
discuss just what they want their curriculum 1Jo include in their four years of coll!"ge. .After each ·student :has told what interests him tlley all come to ·a:n agreeme-nt on one bnsic curriculum.
Five Hours
'Dhe discussion, originally scheduled for an hour and
· a.. half, was not over for after five hour3.
dem science ·and mod~n so-,1 :; ciety.
If one's clue fails to fit "he may crack, develop strains and psychological diSiabllity," Schweitzer said. "If this happens he must switch." . Schweitzer went on to explain the difference between
He explained the clue of Ohristianity as being the Jesus event. "But," lh.e said, "the world view ad' t'he Christian is based entirely on thls . . . and most ad' us are polytheists. In practice we go from one god to another-the god of Wall Street, tlle god of the Southern Baptist Conven·
The group lelii.surely discussed the house system and its purpose. After listening to t:he house members and professors talk about the system, Schwe-itzer concluded that the students are seeking througih th:is new "social and intellectual" -s y stem What tlleir curriculum has failed to . provide. ·
One student commented, "I was thoroughly impressed tlhat a man who is so intellectual could clearly make himseH understood.'' · "Imagine knowledge. ~s a
;'~Placement Bulletin Lists ,.:'
·.,Full Interview. Schedule · Placement Office interviews so, LLB's.
· for the week of Feb. 15-20 will Friday, Feb. 17: American . ibe as listed below. Studeii(!;S Cyanamid Co.: men and wo. must sign up at' lea'St two days men graduating seniors and ~.prior to the interview. grad students; American · Wednesday, Feb. 15: Avon Enka: no information; Hum;· Public Schools: men and wo- hle Oil Co.: accounting ma.. ,men; Nashville (Tenn.) Me- jors only; R. J. Reynolds To"· tropolitan Public Schools: bac~o C!J.: male graduatin~ .. men and women gradualting senw~s ~d graid students, .. . --- · · ··· ..... · · -------. -·-secunty··Life --and'~TrtJ.:st·EX>.: • ~' seD_l.o~-~ gr_ac;l student!l1~th i>.'in3l,ij-1(!l~dtiaW}t~o:iS~'!rlth i {)'exc~pj;km~,J·!lf:~;·.-~Q-~ .~r:m~n; hn" 'Jfu\g ffil :Bti~:-1\dilf 2E'2iili ! ;;. Owens-'Corn:ing Fiberglass Co«-- ma : ·•. ·•
tion. ·. · "I'm searohing for 1Jhe god
that is beyond all this crud.'' he ·Said, "for he's theo god I can't control, can't escape. Thus I'm not effective in leading a life based ·on Jesus . • • for I won't give up my polytheism."
He defined heresy as hav-ing" a. fnndamental saying you believe one thing, and acting on the- basis af anotib.er.
He also discussed an experiment he is participating in at tille University of Tennessee. In the experiment a group of students meet with a few <faculty members and
'l1hls is one of man's problems today. Blab- is what we betieve :in • • • but we should dantice ou.f: S'IM" ~eli~P-on til;~~ .. ., ac 0'11.
.-:~.
•- poration: men graduating sen~ or math, or llb. · ~rts, S~--.~-iors and grad students· beam Corp.:. no mforma~on
, . · . ' to datE; Texaco, Inc.: no m-
"Why~J1~';:1leWJ1l&. ~~,. r,,;; tell:ing th~m about religion,'' he wondered, "rather than giving tib.em 1Jheology. Do it through action and they will lmow what it is-you won't have to tell them.
... - Proctor ~ Gamble: men formation. · ··'and women ·w1th b-achelor's or
. \. 1
"·master's ·degree in 1any field; Monday, Feb. 20: E_rnst and Travelers Insurance Co.: no ~rnst: male graduatin~ sen
: information; Virginia Beach ~o11~ 'and grad stu~ents, Gas: ·City Schools: men and women toma CN. C.) C1ty Schoo~s. graduating seniors and grad m~ and women gradwatl_on students; Worcester CoUJJty sen~ors a:n<l grad st~dents With
.:(Md.) Schools: morning onJy, ma~Oil"S m accounting; N. C. "no information. National Ba~: m~ and wo
men graduatmg semors, grad Thursday, Feb. 16: Blue -students, arid LLB's; Thal
.. :Bell, II?c.: men an~ wom.en :himer Brothers, Inc.: men and - ?radu31ting seniors WI~ maJor women graduating seniors,
:U: Bus. Adm.; Collms and any major: U.s. Army Edge. -.~ma~ Corp.: male graduaJt- wood Arsenal: men and wo.. mg seru?rs and grad students, men gradu,ating seniors and ,anY maJor; Jewel Box Stores .grad students; U. s. Naval
··Corp.: me~ and women grad- Research Laboratory; men . uatmg seruors .'and grad st'!- and w-omen graduating seniors .''dents, and maJor; St. ~ary s and grad students; Weyerhae-;Count;v <Md.l Sc~ools. ~en user Co.: male graduating sen
~·and women gra~uating seruOl"S, iors; Bus Adm . 9-11 a. m.; UpJohn Co.: male ·
"The miiacle of Jesus," lhe suggested, "is that his beliefs and actions fit together perfectly."·
During 'his visit to ifle campus Schweitzer participated in a "first" at Wake Foresta dinnertime discussicm in Kitchin House- with the house men, Wake Forest professors, and tib.e chaplain .
·Fifty Men
Along with the estimated fifty house irien eating sirloin tipS · catet"ed · by ' Slater were Dr. Thomas· Elmore>, Dean of Students; Dr. M:arcellUJS Waddill of th.e math -department;
_ t::!u=g ~~~~:: !a:~~ ia&~?CZ.:TTJii:i\.~ .. :L.::::~ .... : ,:::~R::~:~:t~~:r::~~~ ~~- ; .. : .. : ... '~;~ .. ·women graduating seniors, any i··:major, and grad students; al-
:. Delta Sigma Pi · Has Sun. Smoker
* Complete Automotive Service
A . .smoker was held by Delta Sigma Pi Sunday night
: for all interested business students. BrotheT Gaines Rog
. ers, Dean of the School of ·. Busilll·ess, was the speaker.
Brot!her. Buck Patton, jun-
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FOR HAPPY MOTORING SERVICE -·SEE US
.:ior of Columbus, Ohio, lava- . .,_ _______________________ _
.. lieTed Carolyn Apple ,sopho· more coed of Princetoo, N. J .
Jaycees is a civic organization working for community hetterment, open 1xl 'all young men 21 through 35 years of age.
THRUWAY Shopping Center
Lower Mall.
Monday-Saturday
9:30 a. m. -9 p. m.
Reduced! 100% ALPACA
SWEATERS
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Feb. 13th to 18th REG. PRICE $18.00 to $30.00
Now $ J 4.40 to $24.00
efotl:tns ansi .$po'tlwuu 9o• dofm .
wCam:pus Shop
.... :
Another student frankly asked Dr: Sclhweitzer, "What would it take t-o get you to come as a professor to Wake Forest?"
He frankly replied, "A miracle."
Federal Assistance Is Needed: Garrity
· Wake Forest director of development and allumni alfairs, M. Henry Ga.rrilty, told a Winston-Sa.lem paper this week that Wake Forest may have to seek federal funds I! it is going rb> reach its $72 millio.n goal for improvements by 1975.
The college is presootly at.tempti.ng to get funds from private sources such as foundations, 'bequests 'by' will, alumni and friends, and in.duslbrial corporations.
·Garrity said he ,bas ·been ·repeatedly told by influential people that a college is
· acting unwiSely if it does not ·accept federal fumls. ·
Property Guts
Throughout ilts improvement progr.am, Wake Forest has obtained a total of about $18 million. Most of this has ·been in rt;he form of property gifts such as Reynolda Village property, tlhe R. J. Reynolds .home, and the Western Electric plant on Reynolda Road. These gilts are generally not directly beneficial for program needs.
Wake Forest is restricted to this private fund-raising
"I think ooy college has to face up to this issue and take the (federal> money, but presenUy the college had no plans to take it."
"Bowman Gray rtake.s it, so I don't see why we can't,'' he saiid, since the medical school is part of the college.
Garrity continued, "It would be ideal if we could be independent, and never take federal funds, but I don't think in this day and age you can survive without it."
Broad Support
Without 'federal fnnds, the college is trying to develop the broadest support it can. "We have the most powerful peOple in the history of Wake Forest working in this area !fund raising)," Garrity said. "We've got; so much going that our new president is going lb:> have to land running."
The college's development office and volunteer fund-raisers are cultivating 60 national foundations and 35 North Carolina foundations.
All a.lumni and parellJts will be approached at leas.t four times by mail and one or two times personally, for a gift.
We have
·~· =
"'*~ C9~1E~BRl1RY ~
Kll§rij~t.~ too humorous to mention!
COLLEGE BOOK STORE
"ON THE ~MP~S':__j
campaign because of its tra- .--------------------------., dition of separation of church and state. Baptists fear that government control might result if the in.stLtution a-ccepts federal funds.
Garrity himself says that the college can probably fina.nce through government loans at low iruterest or pay for itself. most or all of its $10 million pCogram of capital improvements at the ;undergraduate level.
These improvements would include a· hea1th center, school of business administration, ~arts, center, general class-room building, dormitories, and a ph y s i c s, mathematics and astronomy center.
"Personally," Garrity said,
Wake for~st College Barber Shop 5 Experienced Barbers
To Serve You 2 Barbers By Appointment
Robert (Crow) Spencer-Shoe Shine
BoHom Of Davis Dormitory ~--------------------------_,
Open S\lnday
1:00 P. M.-6:00 P. M. 424 W. Fourth St. 722-7030 NCNB will be interviewing on this campus February 20. Appointments may be arranged through the Placement Oflice.
b ~lark ewspaper
***Wake College * * *
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, FEB. 13, 1967
Moore Outdistances Sanford In Spending For Education
Terry Sanford has already enrned a place in the history books a:o; North Carolina's modern-day Education Governor. and the record achieH'ments of hi~ administration in behalf of public education no doubt justify that title.
It \\'ill hardlv be notil·ed that his succes~or, -Dan K. Moore, placed even greater emphasis on the same important issue, at least in term,.; of tax funds appropri:l ted t'ur state-supported schools and c-olleges.
Yet t-duration was the dominant theme of Gov. ~Ioore's legislative nw"sage delivered before a joint se~sion of the General Ao;:semhl~· in Raleigh last Wednes'la ,., ;md the needs of education were described by the Governor as the fir~t eonct>rn of his adm in i,;t r <.tion.
He asked for a whopping expemliture of $784 million for pnhlic education during the next biennium to provide pay raises for puhlic :-;choo1 teacher:; and ntlu•r school per~onnp 1. more ~pecial educational teacher~. additional teacher :;cholarship loan fund~. money for a ~tndy of the feasibilit:-· of I1Uhlie kindenrartens, elimination of the present $5 textbook fee paid b~- high school ;;tudent~. and the appointment of a "blue ribbon" eommission to stud~· all a:'lpects of the public school S;'\'Rtem in North Carolina.
In the field of higher education. he ur)!ed the Legislature to
approve salary increases for college teaching staffs, to provide money perr.1ilt ing- an improved student-teacher ratio in graduate pt•ograms, to make funds available for implementing new research and gntduate programs, and to strengthen the staff of the Board nf Higher Education.
Community colleges, the Govet·noJ· ~aid. also should get a substantial increase in appropria tion~ to provide salary increases for teachers, new ind ustr,,· training programs and the e~tablishment of four new h1·anch units.
The need,; of education, said tht.• Go\·ernor, \\'ill take 70 cents out of <>Vel',\" dollar appropriated from the state's general fund durin!! the IH'xt two years. leaving :10 t'ent~ for all other purposes.
There i~ little doubt that the General A~semhly \\"ill go along with most of the Governor':;; re~ commendation:<. North Carolina's leg-islators haYe become eduea~ tion-c:onseious in recent :-•e:Jrs. rlne JJal'tly. perhaps, to the impetu~ and tht' influence of the Sanford admini~tration.
StilL if money spent is a criterion for judging an administration's contrihution to education -and >:ureh· it is one of the standards- historians at least ou~rht to add a footnote to thP pages that :n·e rle\'oted to the Sanford admini;;;tration for the purpose of ;;;a~·ing that Dnn Moon' mn~t h::1ve l1ad ,;orne con\·iction~ about the impo1"tance of education too.
Resolved: Tuition Expense ~lust Be Made Predictable
Where as Wake ·Fore~t students are dependent upon parental financial aid and
'Whereas parents of \Vake Forest ~tudents are notoriously lower middle class in social stratification and
Whereas members of the middle clas,; do not h'l\"e salary in· ('!"ease;; proportionate to consistenetuition increases and
'\fhereas the local draft board will not excu,;e students who feel compelled to work a year and be educated a year and
'\Yhereas the federal government will not assume the burden of educating the m<L~ses without (·harge and
\Vhereas the una~suming applicant at this College is not aware that tuition cost~ rna~· ri~e as mnch as five hundred dollars during his four year tenure here ancl
Whereas financial aid through scholar~hips · C'lnnot, through the present endo\\'ment~ meet the demands for financial assistance that will ultimately arise and
Whereas in addition to basic tuition costs it is also necessary to provide oneself with small comforts of life such as food and clothing,
Be it resoh'ed that the Student Govemment Committee currently working on a resolution to stabilize the tuition at this College should attempt their task with the emphatic supp01"t of this student body and make every effort to encourage the facult~· committee which will reYiew this resolution to not ani~· accept, but endorse and support a contractual agreement between Colle~e and student which will guarantee for four ''ears the tuition rate accepted by each enterin Q" freshman at Vlake Forest College.
A Time For Nloderation Curfew for sophomore, junior
and senior coed~ at Duke was re<·""lh Pxtcndecl to 2 a. m.
This. liberalization of restrictions upon coeds enforce~ the realization of a similar need at \\'ake Forest.
The \VGA, in conjunction with the girl:-; and the Dean of Women. could hrinl{ about a ~i~rnificant modernization of restrictions this ,;~:me,;ter.
The Dean of Women ha~ pre\"ioul'll~· stated that lack of liberal~ ization wa~ directly related to l~tck of resnon~e by the t·oNl:-1.
Direct action waR taken la11t week when ouef-1tionnaires C'oncerning the Apartment Rule were distributed to the coeds.
The C'ornment~. whic-h remained annn~·mous, could lead to a
SYLVIA PRIDGEN Editor
more realistic approach to the problem. if the Dean was sincere.
If the WGA achieves sut'cess in this endeavo~ other crusades could include extended c"urfews and dorm keys or apartment::. for senior girls.
With mature criticism from the coeds, perhaps the administration will endorse Duke's WSGA Philosoph~· Committee Report which ~tated: "we were forced to conclude thllt a number of rules seem to asAnme that the students are Jacking in jud~~ent and per~onal resnon!libility . .. The assumption of immaturi~ t:v appears contrary to what we know of our studentR and what we expert of them in class, a~d sul!.trest~ that the rules are m need of !'eYision."
.. BILL GORDON
Business Manager
RALPII SIMPSON:Associ-rl; Edito~-- -·HENRY-BOS-TIC, JR .• Managing Editor BILl, VERNOR. Sports Editor DAVE RORERTS, Assoc. Snorts Eel. PAM HAWKINS, Assis~ant Editor LINDA LEVI, Assistant Editor
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Lucy Holton BUSINESS STAFF: Dick Heidger, Bill Lambe, Don Thompson. PHOTOGRAPHERS: John Daughtry, Bill Vernor, Warren Jobnson -----=--=--EDITORIAL STAFF;-Lind;-L~~i.--s~~a~~~ .. n~nnett,. Gray Lawrence, Pam Haw-kins, Becky Ross, Bonnie Wright, Barry Robinson, Chern Ward, Laura Ford, Doug Stokes, Tom Collins, Linda Carter, Jo Ann Tart, Becky West.
-------: Founded-J~n;,;;; !5, 1916, as the student;;;,;-p-~-p~·;-of W;k~-~st- College, OJ~ G?ld and Black is published each Monday during the school y~ar except du:rlng exammabon and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Puhhca:.:.\:..:io:..:n:,s _B_o~a::rd_.-::---:---:-=-::==::--;= M b r the Associated Collegiat,;--Pr~~~:Rcp~e~entcd for National Advertising by Ni{I:,n'i:i ~ducntiona·l Advertising Service. Inc. Sutoscription rate\ S'J-~o ~er .j~~- ~h,"~~~Class postage paid. Winston-Salem. N. c. Fo~m 357!J sh?Uld be male No Cox • s • Salem, N. c. 27106. Printed by The Nashv1lle Graph1c, Nashville, • .
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, ..; ... i:f '" '"' _.~;~--~~ •• :t-·- . ... :~ .;;- ~~w-~· ,.; , . .:::
: -~i'•.t.7.-r-~_,.~~ .. --~~:-!"'~!4~ .. ~~~-··'
'Alfie' Is A Heel But He Entertains
Bj DOUG LEMZA
l'
lt has been a ~ l!ime since the · story of am out and out h:eel lhBIS gr.aced the -silver screen. The amval of the Lewis GHbelr<t-Pa~amount productlloo of "Alfi:e" at tlhe Wim;tnn last Thursday not only fills the tic.kiet as the !hero . f!lies from girl to girll, but also .the film adds its own. comment on life anld the abillii.ty tio survive UillKier modern pressures,.
Played by Mielhael Caine (thlis time without g}asses), Alfie is the fant81S:V of what all men would like to be: a !adykiHer. And altboug.h he is no dream• er ·himself, Alfie seems to make thie rest of the world t'ather mundan& as he syst:ematleaUy leaves a very impressive line or women breathless in their admiration for him in bed. Whether the symbol of the bed is ·of much import· ance is left to the discretion of the viewer. However, it ·is used a !ot and it remains the center of attraction as the Cinderella story of Coekney-boy• makes-good is developed· in ·a no-holdsbarred atmosphere. Even ·as Alfie tq committing -sin after sin, and a'ithouglh we are entirely aware of the acti011s and consequences, it is bound to strike the audience .thiat it is enjoying illself im• mensely. This leads to the bHlboard qoote that has appeared in a New York jolllm·al: "You migl:tt hate yourselif 1D tlhe morning; but yriu'll rove "Alfie."
* * *' 'W'liere the plot of "Alfie" begins is
a problem, but the first scene placas our ·lover-boy in the front seat of a parked car "in me'dia res." His first victim lli a love starved housewife whose only problem in coming to Alfie is that P,er husband fill'ds her dull and unilllterestlng. Seve!'al other "birds" and their problems
L tt T Th Ed • t (All letters to the editor must be signed: e e rs 0 e I 0 r ~James will be \~thheld on req~est. Spellmg and punctuation are t.be wnter's own.)
are examined under Allie's narration: lhis perma.n<ent lady at !home and thv trial-s they have when a baby al'lrives; a woman doctor am the "cure" she
Writer Answers OG&B Accusations
To the Editor: As a waiter in the Magnolia Room,
I feel it is my reosponsibility to answer some of the charges made against our establishment. I will speak only of the Magnolia Room as this is my area. In the- first place, the waitresses are pa-id less than the wa,iters although they do more work. They fix the water, set the tables, fix tho sideboards, make the teas. the coffee and the salads. In addition to this th~·y must pay for their meals and th~'ir t1·ansportation to the school. The boys, on the other band, work less hours. do less over-all work, and get their meals at a reduced rate <deductc<l from their ~hecksl.
As for Mr. Armenaki, he indeoo does try harder. He has asked countless times for suggestions as to what the student would like in the Magnolia Room. However, pleasing two thousand different opinions is a \'£•ry difficult, if not impossible job. I know Mr. Armenaki to be a fair and rea~onablc man who does not ·have the stu{lents in mind.
Finally. in regard to ~he proposed "strike" by tb(' waitors of the Magnolia Room. I know of no plans of this nature. We did ask Mr. A:rmt>naki for a raise around Thanksgiv~ng and were given that raise with no trouble.
I agre-e that at times our service leaves somethin~ to be desired. The students who eat in the Magnolia Room also leave something to be desired in the way of manners and patience. Wlhen a wa-iter or waitreS's has twenty or twentyfive people to ~orve, it is almost impossible to render the immediate service that many of th!'~e students demand.
1 hope that the OG&B will realize tJhe importance of consulting facts ra,ther than hearsay before they write any other "sensational" storie-s. We the waiters do try harder. maybe OG&B should do t!he same.
With sincere criticism, Michael C. Porter
Get Off The Grass & Cut The Capers
Dear Editor: Life is mado up of many little things,
so 1 would like to take an opportunity to Sound Off about two smaH things whlclh could do a Great Deal to improve the appearance or the campus and tJhe geateral impno.ssion one reeelves of the student body.
When Wake Forest moved to WinstonSalem ten years ago it wa-s agreed upon by the student body that one of the new traditions of tlhe campus would be not ·to walk on the plaza grass. Up until about two monllh~ ago this tradition was uptreld, however, ·recently a few poople have taken it upon themselves to stomp · out the tradition. Ma·ny mornings one wakes up to find numerous trails and footprints in the grass, which gives the appearance of its having been trampled by a herd of buf.ralo or roadrunnel"S. W1hile the general appeatrancc of tlhe plaza f:!nJSs may not be an eart1h-slwking issue., it ts an important issue in regard to tradition and a sense of pride. It seems a shame to let a sense of pride in t!he appe-arance of the campus be enrshed by a few.
The second small thing I woulld like to really grip about! ! ! ! This concerns tJhe sportsmanship displayed by a small group of people at t!he basketball games. ln-
stead of displaying good school sp1rit undue public affection? G1rls were told recommends for AUie's lung infection; ~his "eure" at the sanitarium and 11he and yelling for the team, these lndi- just kissing a boy is UPA and that a
viduals insist upon giving the referee-s ltiss woul'Cl make an unde$kable im- havoc it brings to the nurses of tlhe a hard time in a big way. After a few pression on any vi-sitors. Now granted area: ntis friend's wife and their little thousand cheers of nothing but ''Go To that students slhould refrain from alffec- jaunt into the eountry <causing the film's Hell Refs! ! ! ! " one becomes nausated by tion in the aftocnoon·s ~fore any visi- most touching moment at the liime of t!hese individuals who seem to think llhey tors, but what is wrong with giving t!he abortion): the catastrophic baiiTOOitl have an obligation to be "rude, crude" a girl a simple kiss in the late evening? brawl (surely reminescent of a John Focd and loud!!! Anyone who witnesses such No one is going to be embarrassed western): and the American Lady bounti·
d . 1 r d t t help sooing another per<Son kissed in the .tul with h~r plus4t apartment and warn· a poor 15P ay 0 con uc can no ·robe <not to mentiun her ampl-e ficn•-l. but get a generally bad impression of dorm. The parlors and television rooms .. -~ the entire Wake Forest student body. were made for the students, yet the These main bouts are -surrounded by
At a time when Wake Forest is seek- WGA seems to tihink it ..slhould tell stu- innumerable short "acquaintances" a$ ing to grow in all respects it seem-s dents what to do in them. the pattern {){ Alfie's existence ~s· thrown somewhat tragic to let two small things Further, affection is a spontaneous open with the 'hero's own frank com-'pride and conduct) hamper the overa11 thing. If a girl kisses a boy at night in · menJ:s pacing. the ·action·of,ongy a!!ld• i'un. ~fforts af most of thE.- stticent ·body t.,; H·; i ;the ,dorm, sbould she. -~~-~-~~mPqS~~ l. a~.:·'.}.n' .f~~t it: ~'-.~~·!so franlm~s~·~atnn~es
Sam Gladding a punishment? Is affection a bad thJ·ng·, . Alfie s heeli.sh eharacter ~o m~atlatm~ Class of '67 The WGA seems to ~ay tlhat affection to the audience and •so acc_epbable no
is undesirable am:! that a girl shuuld be matter how many acts of tll-reputJe he
UPA Rule Attacked To llh·e Editor:
I am writing this with concern over the distressing social -restrictions practiced in the women's dormitories and I think this situation should be publi· cized to illustrate the need for more liberal restrictions by the Woman's Government Association.
At tlheo onset of the school year, girls were cautioned not to be overly affectionate with boys aroun-d the dormitory. For defiance, girl!S would be givoo call-downs or campused. This "undue public affection" or "UPA" was defined as any action which might prove to embarrass those around you." I think this rul~ f.or over affection · was fair, and no one seemed to min~ until now tlhat the subject ·has gotten out or hand.
Since the beginning of the new semester, hall counselors have given girls new and g.rcater restrictions. The whole question seems to be what con~titutes
punished for kissing a boy. This is commits. And although he looks happy, ridiculous. The WGA is saying, have he revools to. the aooience that he isn't a boyfriend, but don't you da•re kiss him when he is shunned by his loves and because all our girls will be embarrassed the American Ruby:_ "Sure I've ·~ot all rurd kissing will make a bad Impression them ~hings. But I ain't got my peace on them. I don't believe a sing.ie stu- of mind. And if you ain't got tlhat, you dent or faeulty member will agree with don't have anything." this idea, and I ask you, has a single * . * * Wake Forest coed complained t!hat she was embarrassed by seeing a .fellow classmate getting kissed?
Finally, I appeal to the WGA to look at the student's point of view. Many students, because of financial, academic, or clas-s status cannot have a car. It i5 very difficu~t to get off campus without a ca•r and after stm:lying during llhe week, in many casoo a visit to the girls' dorms is the only way a boy can' visit with fhis girl. A letter is &ent home to the girl's parents is slhe is cited for UPA ... Believe me, the students do not think ill of innocent affection, so I appeal to the WGA for a liberalizing of this absUT'd UPA poliey.
Name Witftlheld Upon R~quest
Wlhat bring·s ''Alfie" off in the 50I1eeQ
adaptation of Bill Naughton's New York and Lm;ldon stage success is its complete honooty of characterization amid cinematic story-telling. There .are no frills outside of the lus'h London eololr; and for this rea:son, tl;le ·film is rmpretentlous and unboring. The meamng or this heel's world and motivations .are se~ and C>rystal clear, and no psyc!hologic~ strangulation of the ho:nooty imparted. in the .Picture comes about througlh ~ GHbert'·s deft direction. All the peri'ormances are fine indeed. · The strong believability of Michael Caine's perform· ance is very dominating and lis Slll"lely a nomination for the Academy Aw~s.
Wake Forest Honor System Depicted"··- . .-~:
In Student Handbook As Way.Of Life, By LINDA LEVI ASSISTANT EDITOR
<Second In A Series Of Fivel The llonor system at Wake Forest is
not a set of rules; it is a way of life. This, at least, is the explanation pre
sented in the Student Handbook. Yet in tihat same handbook, specific rules, or honor violations, are Included in the Student Government Constitution.
Some of thooe rules are understood generally or read casually and promptly ignored. For the honor system to become a way of Iilfe, a knowledgco and understanding of tlle rules is basic.
The first section of the statute c-.mcernlng honor violations states: "All academic work shall be regarded as pledge wc.rk unless otherwise designl!ted by the Instructor." ,
. It ha<S oftt•n been ~e practice of ~turlcnts - and professors - to a•ssumc the opposite: All aeadcmie work shall not be 'regarded as pledge wock unless otherwise designated by the in.structor.
How often have stud~nts eollaboratccl on homework that was to be ;1andcld In the next day and nnt been aware that they wore committing a violation?
This attitude is ill'<iicative of the response of the students to the systemIt is not a way of lire.
It is a :-;r>t of rules wh; ::!h receive de facto obcdh1CE'. if anything.
* * * "No student shall cheat on any pledge wcork. Cheating shall be dermed as will-
fully giving or receiving aid or attempting to do so, or makJng any conscious effort to deceive on any pledce work."
Is a violation committed wftlen one student relays to another the contents of a quiz, with relative certainty ~hat
this student will receive the samo quiz? Doos a student violate the code-or
way of l£fe-when he willfully accepts information eoncernln,g a quiz given to a different section of the same cou!!'se?
Can eitlher student assume that the professor "will not be stupid enough to give the same quiz" to another section?
Does th& boundary af cheating end outside ~he classroom? Do students have the right to assume that quiz questions will not be repeated?
An.ci what exactly is considered "mak· ing a eonscious effort to deceive?" How can 1Jhis ac{:usation be proved in any trial? The student loses all significance unless th.e system is a way of life, for it is virtually impossible to prove such a violation.
"No student shall plagiarize on any pledge work. Plagiarism shall be defined as offering as one's own Ideas, words, paragraphs, phraseology, writings, etc. obtained from another source.''
How many Monarch masterpieces have been turned in as student work?
And how many students bave hlred ghost writers without giving them e>redit? The acUon is not always prompted out of desperation of faWng, but pure
laziness and foo.r of "losing a B." "No student shall be qullty of steal·
in(l'." Again, several nebulous areas appear
which can ga.ln significance only U thl \ <System i-s an attitude, a mood.
Is it stealing to take trays, platea, and silverware ~rom .the cafeteria wtth oo intention of retumlng tihem? HOw mucll does Slater spend each year simply to replace such items?
"No s&udent ahall faU to pay Juat debts contracted by him • • • No stu• dent shall lmowlna'ly or wWinriy pua a worihless cheek."
How many times have students knowIngly overd!l'awn t!l'-e.ir accounts? How many tlmea has the Hooor Council taken actwn?
* * * "Any student failing to approaeb
another student who bas violated the spirit of the system Is himself actfnt: in violation ·of the Honor System."
This plaCES ilhe guilt of violatdon upon almost every student at Wake Imresta violatl'oln of a way of life.
Every rule In the hO.tlQI.' code is nebulous in some respects-each 'has its shades of gray. Strict eiiiforcemene, of every rule by tihe Hooor Council and the student body is DOID.:..Cx:isltent.
The Student HandboOk implication 1s valid-lor the system to be effective at Wake Forest, it must be a way of life.
' Tm. tlhousand precise rules cannot make an effective Honor System.
.-
.;_.,-
steal·
appear \ if thl
\1
May Be A Baptist
P~ofs Prexy Preferences Put Ivy Leaguer No. One
By RALPH SIMPSON ASSOCIATE EDITOR . .
If four Wake Forest professors get the kind of president theY w311J.t, he will come from a deanship at some Ivy Letague or Btg 'ren univel'Sity, will be a Baptist unless the present Board of Trustees by-laws are .amended, and can expect a salary . of around $45,000 a year •..
The new president will not be able to straddle the fence with the :Baptist State Convention, and will have to get a!long ve-ry well or not get along at all.
And the 111ew chief administrator will need the ability to understand and deal effectivelY with problems of the faculty.
be someone whO bas been f,n teaching as wel1 as administration.
The fact that· the new moo must come from a strong university eliminates most Southern schools, sli.ars explained. He made the' exception of Duke, Tulane, University of North Ca.rolina, and the University of Virginia.
"I would go ~huntin·g in the Ivy League, ~e Big Ten, or in Oailifornia," ~ears said.
Olive -said the new man must be a "•reall communiootor.'' .both with Baptists and the fa-culty, ·
Academic. Program
The mtain ooncern. of the president sho~d be the academic program, according to V~a. .
He said the College couldn't have the "fence-straddling we've experienced for the past ten or twelve years."
Most everything the pro:fessors said centered around what Wake Forest will be 1n the future.
Pricharo said, "When you -ask whact kind of president you want, you must as.k fi.rst what kind of school do you wan.t?"
Most ·of the men predicted that the Wa·ke Forest of !the iuture will be a "smaH, sophisticated, ;uatioru!il uniV:er::' ~~ty!' .
iJne student ·asked Via after ·the discuS5iQil. if Wiake Forest were able to "take the plunge in.to university status."
Superficial View
I
OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Feb.l3, 1961 PAGE FIVE
if she doesn't give it to you ••• -get it yourself!
JADF EA
Cologne, 6 oz., $4.50 After Shave, 6 oz~ $3.50 Deodorant Stick, $1.75
"He should foster and pro- Via ltold him that "Wake · mote excellence with aca- Forest is already a university
F1our Views
These are some of the views demic freedom unquestion- -tin ta super.ficial sense.
'I'HE DUKES OF DIXIELAND , •• wiD blast out their jazz beats at Wait Chapel tonight in a special College Union concert. Students
with ID cards will not be charged admJssfon. General admission Js $2.00. Showtlme will be 8:15 p. m.
Buddha Cologne Gift Package, 12 oz., Spray Cologne, $3.50 Buddha Soap Gift Set, $4.00 Cologne, 4 _.z., $3.00
of our ·four faculty members able," the religion professor "It seems that what wtiver- After Shave, 4 oz., $2.50 from varying departments :who insisted. sitY means around here is in-spoke to about 40 students . .in Via .also con.Sidered the Bap- creasing the graduate school Poteat Lounge Wednesday tist predicament. in the arts and sciences," Via night. "The question of who the explJained, after mentioning
House System Goal: To Give The professors were Dr. ;president s'hould be can't be the existing law, medical, and
Thonvas Olive, associate pro- divorced from the question of business schools. fessor of biology; Dr. KeHh the relationoship with tthe Bap- The professors also specu-Prichard, associate professor tists," he suggested. · lated on the other adminds-
Wake Man 'Total Education ' of education; Richard Sears, Via said he woulld personal- ltrative vacancies to be filled instructor In politic:al science; 1Y be "happy -to see someone by next September. 'Xhe president of the Men's and Dr. Dan Vila, Jr., asso- -who •isn't a Baptist," but Most felt that it isn't 1ncon- Residence Counetil expla,ined ciate professor. of religion. couldn't r.ealistica•lly expect ceivable tha.t some of the 1n an mrerview last week tthat
They talked about what they this. deanships will be filled by the goalJ. of the MRC is to wanted to •see in a -new pres- He did eJq>eClt to get a pres- present faculty memibers. o:Mer the house men at Wake ident and what· they didn't ident "who .. i!Sin't provincial Prichard suggested that the Forest a "total education." want to see. •and proroachicaJ.? new pr~ident may. want to The mterview with Hoke
All four professors agreed Via said the new president choose :£rom presemt faculty Smith, senillll" of Trinity, ·Cqme with Olive that the new presi- "mi.IISt be someone who knows members for "stability and at the time wlhen the whole dent will ·be "the most unique how to get the Co!Jlege from tlransitio.n." MRC program for fill'st se-in the College's history. one world to another." The Olive said, "There a.re many mester is being examined
"lt used to be that the Col- religion professor explained qu:allified professors who could through ·a s>e'if !Study. lege was tied in closely with that the president must know step inrto the deanships, but "'llhe MRC has now reacoh-the BaptiSt State Convention," both worlds, College and Con- they wouldn't touch it with a ed the stage where it must Olive said, «illnd the majority vention. ten.:foot pole." evlllluate its poSJitlion," he con-of the people he had to do tinued. "We wiU be prepaT'ed. business with were of this pa!l'- ISC ·R h• B • within the next fe-w weeks
ti~~~:, ~~t~;~~t has be- . us mg egms ~ p~:e~: ::: s:~ s~~~ come .much mare sophis- cerned." ticated, and the level of people A A T h The MRC is a :little over to whom he must lllppeal are . t cti.VI•t1• es Olll• g· t one year 'Old, yet during its more sophisticated," the bio- short lifetime it has made logy professor explacined. signlificant pro~ss in im-
And there was general One hundred and fJ.fty-three .introduced, as were society· proving the stymied and frus-agreement that the new presi- gir>ls signed up for rush in the preStidents and rush chadrmen. trated Hfe of the non..1frate!l'ni-dent must be .a fund-raiser as De!Rll's office Friday fotHowing "The· adva111tages _of ti:U~h ty man at W·ake Forest Col-well as a top-notch scholar. , a meeting in winston Hall were pointed out," said Miss lege.
Sears seemed ~o sum this Thursday night whlich served Henderson, "and the rules But the progress has n~t feeling up when hE: ~aid, "The as an ~ntrciduction to the pur- were read and expla:ined. We been made witlhout problems. College needs .somebody who poses. of societies and the In- ~also explained the rush sche- "Money, space, faculty, and has had expen~ce at a top ter-Socliety Council. · dule and told how the sytStem aldmimistration are 1lbe big-qtllal!lty. 'tOii>vet".s:J:~p~w!mJT bas:Jroq amam rrf :ttj:J'n t .. ::~o" .- · , -- · ·' -k;,.., " ' ]•--· ,. aest .....,.,..blems h · h d ob T :tg '0<1 te~' aa1d wlto~· ... ;J¥-llhi ~irlii j~eard ''spee'ch'es->ocWOl' ou.·- • . . ,.,.·,·,;o j;,, .... ;,..,.,..~ .. _ ·' .w-: aV~·,,- ~ ~=;~a;;ut ~ll~~toSch~i1/l,,'rl ?r)t4~Y b'Y: ~~~li~;f:tl!ifd~t.~q#.:r; ~~~~~tml' ~z:U#i ·a~tivit_i~~-~~~ Jn·~:!"t:F-~:F ·' b;wmg,' ',·_.Sm!t.h
The .POlitic~ scientist said prestdent of !.S.C., and Karen begm ton,tght and tomorrow . _ the man the College seeks to Swartz, Rush Policies Chair- night at 7 p. m. with the Ooncernmg 50me of the take Tribble's pos~tion must man. !.S.C. members were informal parties being held in doubt among stu.d~ts ~nd
· the women's dorms' informal laculty at the begmnmg that
--PHOTO ~y DAUQHTRY A. SNOW·BLOSSOM ••• fa created fD the ffrat anowfaU of tbe season as ·a fafr spriDklfnc ·of Oakes soften the oatiiDea ol the prlckll er~n lenes. · ·
ARA SLATER SCHOOL AND COLLEGE SERVICES
TRY THIS NEW ITEM IN THE
SNACK SH-OP
Co~nDogAnd French Fried Potatoes
and formal pa~ors. Girls are :fn house sy~tem .. was .a good being encour+aged to attend all g, 00 &a•td, I lfhink we
. have proved ourselves. The formal parties. main thing that the faculty
On Wednesday the process an'd administration were con· of narrowling down preferenc- cern'E!d with was tibat we show es will begin. Open Houses responsibility. We have. 'I1b.ere will be held by tall:l the socie- !has been no vandalism at all tdes in designated rooms in in lliilY MRC lounge this year. Reynoldta Hall, but each girl Space is still one major can attend only four. problem. "Taylor is critical,"
Individual room ru~ is he po~teid out. "The men in scheduled :for Thursday anid Taylor took $400 out of their Friday [rom 3 to 5 p. m. and own pockets and gave up from 6:30 to 8:30 p. m. many ho111r.s of hard work and
Saturd•ay . will. be a silent turned in an old hallway and perJod with no rush activity storage room Into 'a lounge,
The second week of rush will begin on• Sunday, February 19 when the rushees will again go to open houses, but this time narrowing their attendance to three clubs. Indivi· dual room rush will resume Monday and Tuesday, February 16-17 at the Stame times as the prevdous room rush.
Formal parties- will be conducted Febr.uarY 22, 23, and 24 from 4:00 to 5:00, 6:00 to 7:00, and 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. . fn the dorm rec rooms. Rtishees will tattend ·in assigned groups.- Thereafter, silent period wi!ll exist between sJsters of the .soc'iety and rushees until officila!l pledge time.
ye-t the College has not matcih.Eid their effort.',
The !Student affah's committee recommended to the buill:l·ing and grounds committee that 'IIaylor be given space for a lounge, the MRC president said. The onzy -possibility was ·one of the storage a:reas now occupied by the College Book Store.
"The building and grounds committee said," according to Smitlh, "that it would be 'inconvenient' :IJO make tbhe book sf:Oire move •
"My answer to this,'' lhe ·stated, "is a question: Which takes preceldooce on this campus, book store convenience or student needs·?"
This ' lis Jthe problem that
Capitalist
Wouldn't it be groot to earn big money while you're still >in school? Maybe you can. We're interviewing students age 21 ~nd over. And we're 'hiring. Picking people who aren't afraid to work, when they know that the hrurder they work, tihe more money they'll make. The hours are up to you. You can work part time and earn While you learn. On-the--job training under, professional supervision while you're- worlcing for a big, internationallyknown company. For all the facts, write fur an appointment. There's no obligation.
CAPITALIST OPPORTUNITY Post Office Box 2113 Winston-Salem, N. c.
lhe sa.iid. "A stuident comes to Wake Forest because he tihlnks it can give him a good education and what happens? These ·top-notch guys that Wake> Forest gets so many of are more than glad to .get 'C' in a coUI1se once e:xams roll around.
"Our problem is .bow do you buiid a Wake Forest man when tJhere- 'a!"e 1110 ·guidelines?" SmJ.itlh asked. "We've got to 'learn what to do. It is imperative tlhat we do.
"But we need professional help," he said, "and is the College willing to give us that?
"In the first place," Smith pointed out, "the MRC tis not a studen.t organ.i.zatdon but an organ of tfile College under the !Supervision of tlhe dean of students."
Our programs for the !bouse men oover the whole range of the coRege experience, the president said. "W-e tJry to make the least '<lleli.neation between curricula:r and extracurdcular acti"~nities because we are trying to develop a 'total" educatioo progr.am." . · • -·Speoeil'ically,: ·h~ gave ,dne area which ihad been completely neglected at Wake Forest-the foll:ow-up of Elldubas got to be wrestled with,
c a tlon in tlhe claiS'SII'oom. "By our new program of
informal lectures and discussion groups,'' Smith sa,!Jd, "the MRC is tryilllg to ofl£er this follow-up and also as a corollary to bring the taculty and studen.ts closer together.''
Such a project as the Kitcllen House bu£fet and discussion, wlhich was held ~ast week, was an effort in tlhis directiOtn .. .Anld, acoording to Smith, it was the limt time a buffet supper bad been held in a residence house.
Of the buf1fet illscussiou Smith . asked, "Is it social or academ~c? Neitlher. It i!S educational. And isn't that what Wake Forest is trying to· do? Give tlhe ·stutient.s Btll education.''
"In flhe beginllling," Smith saild, "the MRC was like trying to d!Itive a car with no headlights on a curvy road one dark night-whidh way do you go?
"Now we have made a start and we Wlill need all the- cooperation a111d !help that we can get," lbe continued.
LOVER DON'l flUNK
;~1=~r~L:fr ··r;:t~~!:~r' ·utJJUif come a helluva long way!'" --- -- -
be added. L-----------------------------------~-.~--_J
THE BITTER END Invites You To Swing To The ·Tops
In College Combos. l
'\ ~-, ·.~
Wednesday Maurice Williams and
Thursday Friday
The Zodiacs The Tropics
The Four Winds Saturday The Shifters
_MONDAY and TUESDAY RECORDED MUSIC ON THE JUKE BOX
(TIES PLEASE)
THE BITTE·R END 1S02 LOCKLAND AVE.
• PAGE SIX Monday, Feb.I3,1967 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
house mixers . ;v ' •• • •
.. ·. , , ... :-: ......... ~.~ ,, ,.,:.,,,.:,....,~~.,, .. :, . ..,,,, .. '..-..
By TOM COLLINS
••••••••••••••••••••• Society
News DEACS. • • who are GREEKS LAMBERTI'S HAIRDRESSERS
For Casual and High
Fashion Hairstyling On a bleak Decembe!r' morn
Ing in 1965, Dr. John Dimmick then clhailrman or llbe stud~nts aifairs committee met with President Tribble for the pu·rpose of revealing the revolutiona:ry plans of the infant MRC. The President's re-action was rep()I'ted to be "sympath€'tic" and moot important, he stressed the development of rcsponsibiHty with lihe house \System. wnlen this rospon,sibility ha~ been demonstrated, then tlhe "·administration would do what it can to help the movement."
time · since th-e college moved to the klbacco city, no vandal:ism what.soever has occurred in tlhe lounges. The students have delved into their own pockets to ·more than match tho funds ailGcated by the college to the MRC.
By LIZ WAITT
•••••••••••••••••••••• Oompe-Tension . . . that's
RuSh. That one word de.scrlbes the atmosphere that will !h.aunt tlhe fre,sllrmen g:1rl's dorm·s for the next two weelos. (Due creddt for the use of thi.s word goes to Andy Gumt.l
By DOUG STOKES
Wha~ Makes A Fraternity?
Open Thursday and Friday Nights by Appointment
Reynolda Manor Shopping Center 722-6193
STEVE'S Italian Ristorante
Best in Italian Food Spageltee and Pizza
ALSO AN AMERICAN MENU
Open ll:OOA M.-10:00 P.M.
CLOSED SUNDAY 112 Oakwood Drive
(ACROSS FROM THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER)
The Swiss Chalet CHERRY ST. AT BETHABRA
BEST PIZZA IN TOWN -.
SANDWICHES OPEN WEEKENDS AT 2 P. !\I.-SATURDAYS AT 9 A.M.
1!\IPORTANT GAMES ON T.V. OCCASIONAL ENTERTAINMENT
On The Campus •• Almost HOSTS
JOE KAROLA - RAY WHITE
Since that time three lc>Unges and a social room have been constructed with money allocateid for only two ·IKmnges (or !X}ual to the amount !Spent on Johnston'·s reception Tooml.
This year, for tlhe <first
Gov't Internships Are .A.vailable To Qualified Juniors
Wake Forest studenbs interested in state government are urged to apply for the 1967 Summer Internslhip Program.
Participants will attend an orientation program and· then work for 10 weeks in ·selected state departments while attending evening ISemina•rs on the campus of North Call'Olina State UnivE;rsity.
'I1he State Internship Program will begin June 6 and continue through August 18. Students will be paid $75 a week while employ·ed. AppLicants must be residents of North Carolina Wh{l 'have completed three years of college. Application:s must be mailed to the Institute of Government, Chapel Hill, befone February 15.
XL CLEANERS One-Stop Dry Cleaning., Shirt Laundry, and
Dry Fold
One-Day Service On All Three! PA 2-1027
Across From Tavern On The Green On Cherry St.
'"· ;:i'l!i';.;; . ~j~
To me, thiG is a suf.ficicnt e~ample of .student responiSibility, and th•e timo h81S rome for the college to become tlhe catalyst in tlhe movement. The new budget fur 1967-68 affordls just such an opportunity. It calls for considerably mOII'.e bhan the meager thousand dolla·r budget now in the opera.tion, amd offers a chance to put the MRC on solid footing foc the coming year-s.
It will furnilslh the lounges with current magazines, oot last year's editions. and permanen•t, not borrowed fu'l'niture. (The MRC owns only ooe lamp for 3 Lounges. The .r.est have been bOIITOwed from students.) Winning intramural teams and exc·eptio'llal students in the houses will rereive handsome trophies and plaques instead olf' merely pats on the back. Some six damp tunnels irn the dorm houses now wastimg valuable space will be converted into study or recrootion rooms.
AnotJher interesting a.spect is the apP'l'OPII'iation for four intea'com ·SY'Stems which will provide illlstant communication witJh any docm resident.
Ope-rating 'similarly to the ooes in ·the girls' dorms, the intercoms wm a1low a female to get in touch with a student without layimg 001 tlhe !horn in the parking lot, or running the risk of a traumatic "grooss out" by coming ·stradght to thE; room.
Good Leadership
Rush wet>k is und'Oubtedly one of the mLOSt important and one of tlhe most hectic
· weeks of the yea·r lf'or society girls. It iJs for this rea·son that t!he competitive spirit in all llhe gi,l'ls rises and the tension mounts.
Rough Week
No matter who you ··a~. rl!IShee or rusher, Rwsh can be a mugh week, if you let it. A rushee is swddeniy faced with girls she does not know, and J'ushers mwst try to strdke up an intelligent conversation Wlith a ·girl they don't ~now, but would ldke to, presumably.
Advice to £reshmen: Think of a cle-ver answer for the inevitable or "where did you get those lovely curtains ·and bedlspreads?" 'Ilhe rushoos already know your name, 'hopefully, but usually they will not know where you're from . . . Just for openeros, wih'en askeld the other inevitable question, try Panicsburg in the statE.' of Awestruck or perhaps Debonair.
You couJd drawl that one. out like Dee-bone-yer i,£ you wish and reaUy impress a £ew people. There's a tlhird question that every rushe·r asks her ru~ee: "And· what made yGu decide to oomt> to Wake Forest?" Tell her that you were accepted at Harvard and YalE.', but you found ivy-leaguers a bit dull and too pretentious.
Door Signs
Amotlher item which shows If you're really a sure-consilderable merit is the pay- footed fr-eshman you can al-ment of housemasters allld ways put a o;ign on your door house gove-rnors. II this be- that say.s, "Line forms to the comes a reality next fall, ri~t. Please step to tbe llbe MRC ca.r~" soocit !high rea'!'!" quality leadersliip. No long- Advice to rushers: For er Wli1I house goV'ell'lllJerships !heaven's sake, don't aiSk that be llihamldess jubs or week-end !hobbies. The g()vernor ·sweet llhing where she got will be employed by the col- he-re lovely curtaiiills and bedlege with ca-ta1in responsi- spreads. She must be intelli-bilities demanded. of him. gent or she wouldn't be here,
The time. fOtr experimenta- (so they tell w;) • Willy not try a.sking her what her s1l31lld
tion lis over. To ask the MRC is on the Vietnam policy? to continue operation on a . . thousand dolla11S is like ask- Next pomt,. fmd out wh.ere
.,ing, ,@ ,.,1~~ to wear .. ,she's from .. befoce you g~ to .. ~.ba$~,~~: 'llhe stu~nts ;·;.~e~ h€u: 0 ··'<~ "''we:.. showc:l .. all
1n llbe !house system have . iie lucky enough to have ·lihe accepted their responsibility, time. Third point, even if She nnd now the college must do knew Wlhy lShe came to Walre tbe same. · FOO'CISt and not Harvard or
----------------------------------------------------- Yale, her ·answer will pa-o-
,• ·. :,
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·let's talk · ,·: . eyeball to eY.IIU
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bably not be excdting enough to get a !fifteen minute ·conversation ro'lldng.
Keeping all tlhese pointel's in mind, remember to .smi.Ie. Rushee smile to tbe rusher. Rusher, smile at your l'UIShee. AnJC!: RUSher, try to smiLe at the other Rushens.
Fideles
Rhonda Hefnel' will study next fall in Bogota, Argentina, at the Univ€!l'sity oil' tlhe Andes.
Candy Kruger has return~ :from a semester of stwdy abroad at Dijon, France.
Glenda Buie i~ engaged to James Jones who J,s stationed at Camp LeJeune, N. C. A June wedding is planned.
What ICIJ.stinguishes ooe ~a-1lernity ~om a1110ther? · Why may we caU ·>one 1iraterlllity "good," another "bad"? Indeed, what basically is a fraternity?
These queosbiOI!IIS seem to call for some complicated formula imvolving aims, principles, and· achievements, but actually tlhei:r noow:er is a common answer and an eaosy one. For. a fraterruity, basi-
. cally, is IIIO. better or worse or really dishingu.i.shable from tihe men .W:!lo compose :it.
Inasmuch as this iJs truE;, the pledging of new members to a fraternity is necessarily the oci!Jel1ion by which it must be judgeld lin future years, either great or not so great. I don't mean to !Say that tihe ail.niS, the ideals, tlhe quality and clo&eln.eSS of tlhe brotherhood take no par-t lin molrling the charactE!'r of tlhe :lira ternity. Just a,g a finished fabric ds depende111t upoon other :iiactors than me.rely the thtreads which compose it- tiglhtness Olf weave, design, etc., so is tlhe fraternity dependent upon more tfhan just its quality olf'. membership. Hlowever, a reaaly fine fabric, like a really fine 1iraternity, cannot be made if its baJSic materials be week or inferior. ·
Basic Materials
It is the absolutely es.sential necessity :for proctlll"ing the basic ma.te.ria1s of the fraternity tbat brings rush to ;its position of far greater importance th'an' any other fraternity activity. The spirit or competition broug!ht about by Greek Week and tihe race for All Campus Trophy is certainly important, but im-
Bowman Gray
Professor Wins
Science Grant Dr. Stephen H. Rdeharoson,
a·ssistant professor of microbiology at Bowman Gr-ay Sclhool of Medicine, is th-e recipient oil' a Resea'l:'clh Career Development Award from the NatiO!Ilal 11listitute of Health.
The 'award,. one of the most -,E!i~IW ~rfiia_ti-ded.. trairilng·f~s ,.,.avag.~qle,, to· ~c1:1-~e~c medii
cine, will !Support lhim during a five-year study of the orgamsm thlllt causes clholera.
Richardson is tJhe eig'hth member of the medical school facu!lty to recelive such a fel~ lowship. The awa!rd·s, renewable each ye-3!1." fur five yelU'IS, rure designed to finance pooitions for able scientists w1ho plan to pUl1sue eareel'IS in independ;ent research aJD.d tr alin:lng.
He will receive a .first-<year stipend <Ill' $13,346. The fiveyear value of the award is estimated at $70,000.
'IIIle grant will enable RichM"dson to investigate new aspects of cholera research, particularly relatilll.g to the bioclhemical action of the organism that C'auses 1Jhe disease. The WOil"k could leaJd to the deV'elopment <Ill' an dmproved vaccine for use in prev.entimg cholera.
partant :for llihe soake of that competition and i!IJOt 'OO!Illy for tihe s.ake of winndn•g. For if such competition helps to roster !eadenship, sportsmanship, anJd 'brotherlrood tlhen tihe purposes of suclh. activities have hem achleved even before the !final pcxi!llts and credits have been totaled.
The story of rush is quite different from tlhese other activities. A "good try" in rush Wlithout a successful result 1s of no va'lue. 'I1he lesson of d~feat run rush is necessa·ri:ly a le&son in total failure. The !Taternity and the f\l'aternity sy>stem must be successful ih :rush if it · is to bolster itself from witlhill am.d present a strong lf'ace to an inoreaJSingly critical world without.
Wekinesd'8y the direShmen will pledgE> a'll.d tihereim much of 1lbe fraternity story for the ruext few yea.ns will be told. Will an ,increasingly active MRC have an effect upon the pledging of freshme111? Is the :fraternity and fraternity life outd.-:~·ted? Does tihe. ifu'atemity retain the a)lpeal w!hich ·has
been so strong lin tlhe past? These questloos lm'e great
ones and not a111ngellher easily 1
resolved. A .sucoossf'ul rwh and pledging wm not necess- . arily be counted d.n lllumbea:s of pled~. The qualities of those pletdged, their wil.J.ingnei.SIS to move IJhe fraternity \System furward, and thellx ability to be ,integrated into the ~ratemity IScene. will r.atlher be the orit.erioo by Vlo'lbicb the fraternity success might
· be judged. There is no sense 1n expecting to see the reISults of Wednesday's pledging rise immediately illlto view either.
On Thursday morning the fraternity houses will. be neither aShes in the wake of faili.tre nor Wlill llbey tower over the campu\S in thed.i-success. Just as one cannot -see any difference between a tree with its 'l'OOts froohly cut and a tree with its roolls freshly watered, tlhing!S will appear much tbe same as alway-s - tlhe results appearing thereafter. In any event, Wednesday will see the dye cast.· What cololr shall it be?
Fraternity News ·Kappa Sigma
Kappa Sigma had four brotlhers pinned recently: Mike
. Rubenstein, sophomore of Ormond Beach, Fla., pilmed Jan Eakins, sophomore coed of Fairfax, Va. Bi1l Lam:be, sophomorE.' of Charlotte, pinned Lindsay Ra:r, sophomore .at Randolph Macon Woman'IS College.
Aliso pinned were Brother Billi Overman,· junior of Roanoke Rlapids, to sophomore coed Brenda Fasnacht, of Charlotte, and Brother Thompson Miller, junior of Lexi.n•gton, to Kr.istie Dickinson, a sophomore a1t Salem College.
Kiappa Sigma would like to extend its congra,tula,tions to pledge Jack Lewis, of FlOtreDice, S. C., for being selected as one of the ten amateur golfers who will represent the Uni:tcd States in the Walker Cup golf tournament agains.t Great Br.itain in May.
The iRiverias combo from ·Charlotte . provided the ellltectainmend: :for; lhhe ann'Liaa.''l'Ullh
~-warflY'l tliatR W<!Sl~'beld +rF'dday night at the Amrericnn Legion Hut.
Delta Sigma Pili
Lynn .Nes,bitt, senior of Berkleley Helig!hts, N. J., recently ibecame en·gaged to Naill.Cy Young, a junior of W.il:kesboro.
The fra.terniity has adopted an orphan for the Childre111 Inc., program. He is F'rancis B1tloy, a iNavaho Indian boy who lives in New Mexico. . ,
Theta Chi.
Two bands, the Jokers Seven and the El'ladic~rs. provided COIIJti.nuous ellltertainment Saturday night for a combo party iheld at the Parkway Chalet Mote!.
Kappa Alpha
The following brotheJ's recently became pinned:
Raleigh; Charlie Parker, junior of Marshville, Ito Dee Pierce, .qf the University of North Car9.linia at Greens>boro; and Alston Ma.con, senior of Henderson, to Barbara Mabe a junior at Meredith . College.
Others pinned included Win Bohleau, sen:i.or of Linwood, N. J., to Diane Baldwin, junior •coed of Salisbury, Md.; Eddie Gaddy, senior of Atlan.ta, Ga., to Ginny Mitcbell, of the University of Georgia.
Brotht>r Mack Gaddy, senior of Wingate, recently became engaged rfu Karen Cash, of Pfeiffer College.
Brother Butch Han, senior of Salisbury, recently became engaged to Judy BLake, of Guilford C{lllege.
Brother Paul Mattox, .sophomo.re of Dunn, recently lavariered Donna James, of Camp/bell College,
Brother Butch Pate, senior of Dunn, married Dayna Tlllte, junior coed of Atlanta Ga.
A rush party was held in
l-W~tf; ~~,;1a~~~l\n~g~ ~fk e~ ~e. a:I'.IIQur
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Alpha Sigma Pbl
Brother Mike Sasser, jupdor ; of Goldsboro, was recen·tly pinned to coed Martha Brodgen, sophomore of Virg·inia Beach, Va.
The :fraternity held its formal smoker ~at the chapter i\jouse Thursday· night .
Bill Hymes, sophomore of Willi•amSiburg, Va. and recentfly eleoted social chairman, directed the full slate of· activities held Rmsh Weekend . Included in the events were a combo party, witih music by lthe Showltt_!!n, held at the Executive Suite of the Downtowner Friday night and a record party held at the chaP'ter house Saturday night,
ln 'addition brothers and rUIS'.hees turned out for the :fraternity's s e m i - a n n u a 1 North-South football game
.~:.
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Saturday afternoon. Emmett Aldr<:!dge, sophomore
of Dtum, to Clara Pall'ker, jun--...~.·-· ................ , ....... , •••••.••••• .._... . .......... ''-"-='''' -~ .. -- •• .
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The house that service and quality built; the favorite of Wake Forest students and faculty. We specialize in steaks, short orders, sandwiches
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Thu: ·but
Cart evell .rank its awa;
:> Dea~ cept
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'Aft feats Carol Ins tit Wake openE 62-42 Colle1
Cai place. by ju Acke1 :rard. ·event mem~l yard
Oth' ious I .nY Ca istyJe .. gley I 'junloi 200:..YI ior T, y>ard
In a: the 4
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In Overtime, 75~73 Indoor Meet. Helps Condition Cindermen
OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monda7, Feb. 13, 1967 PAGE SEVEN
- ' -
Tar Heels Luck Out Again ·'
-By DAVE ROBER'l'S .. .. AsSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR
The weather in Chapel Hill Thursday was very sloppy,
· but at times the basl.retbaJl .Ln. · Cannicbael Auditorium was even sloppier. North C~rolina,. .ranked second natlcn!!illY; ~ied Its best to give : the game
_ awa.y, but a foul-deciiillated ... Deacon team refused to ac-
cept it. · ·, Free throws by Bob Lewis ·: : accounted fur the winning < · points in the Heels' 75-73 over-·
time· victory. .Two layups by Jim Boshar.t had given the Deacs a one-point lead w.ith sHghtly more than a minute
· · remai:niillg, but Lewis hit a pair from the foil!!. st.ripe to
. ·give the lead back to Corolina. Alter the ·teams traded ~s
; · kets,' Lewis hit the first of a one-and-one to stretch the
'< lead to the fiit·al two-point margin. Jim Broadway · at
. tempted ta desperation shot -···from mid-court with two sec. orids left, _but it feLl short. · ...
Deac11 :roul
. . The Tar Heels gave WakE' ., numerous opportunities to pull
;,' . away, but the Dearons could , illever take advanbage of them. · One rerason for lthis fallure was
toW. rtrouble-=--the Deacs committed 32 as a team, and three starters.plus "sixth man" Paul. Crin:ldey foul.e<l out. .
AU lthese losstb dimmed Wake's hopes, but rthe key one came with seven minutes left in regulation· time whe.n Paul
. Long, leading scorer and chief inspimtlon for the Deacs, hit
; a !layup bull· ·committed his fifth foul m the process.
Cri-nkley hit a free throw to extend the lead to four points,
. but; it was mostly downhiLl for · the Deacs thereafter. Lead
.lng 60-56, they proce~ded to · lose the ball Gn three conse. cutive tri:ps down the court.
Carolina managed io score . onJy one . paint during this time, however.
Heels Take Lead
Then began the frece-throw missing binge. Crinkley mtssed the first of a one-'and-O:ne and a ~O'lllg jum'per by Larry Miller cu.t the ~ead to one. P:ressing hard, the Tar Heels foul-
. ed Crinkley, but he missed again. A jumper · by Gerald Tuttle put Carolilla ahead, anq the Deacs cal!led a ot:ime out to regroup. .
WAKE'S DAVE STROUPE (34) drives OD the North Carolina goal. Stroupe coutrlbuted 12 points In the. great effort against the uatiou•s
second ranked team. The Deacs efforts feU heartbreakingly short as they lost the contest lu overtime. 75-73.
The teams traded field goals and turnovers before Wake called •time with 44 seconds left.
On a play which was obviously intended Ito gain a tie quic~. Dave Stoupe drove for a layup and drew a foul. His three pointer tied it, and aDter the Heels hit. from ilie. floor, · Moll!tgom_ery· sank one far th~ D!!<BCS :tO tie it up. ·
Scott: Has Chance
tend the UNC lead ~o 63-60. Jim returned to lthe 1-i.neup when Crinkiley fou.led out in the fin·ail mioute of regulation play. He had -been on the bench •since takjng a bad shot when ·the Deacs were slowing it down and wainng for a good one -mid-way in the second half. No Deacon· was to nave a sflaaing role, .however, ·as
. Boshart lost the ball olllt of bounds while driving ·for a I·ayup w~th ten seconds re:. mafulng. ··
thundered to their folll11;b straight victory .
The Gamecocks pulled down a tofla[ of 49 rebounds while Wake could manage olllly 22. The difference of ~ reboumds was more than enough to offset any. shooting spi"e:e tlw Deacoais could put tQg~. Although, hitlting 44.1 percent
. from the floor, the Deacl! ra.rely. got more thian one shot. at the basket each time they brOught the bail down rouxt.
Wake Never Leads
South Carolina never trailed in the ron.test -as they .spurtted to a 14~mt lead early in the
By RUDY ASHTON ASSISTANT SPORTS WRITER
The W-ake Forest track team opened its ;Lndoor track season Saturday, Feb. fourth, a-t the V. M. I. Re1Ja~s after. only three weeks of training, an<'! gave a disappointing perlormaDCe .
Coach Keith Hamilton, in his first year as !:rack coach at Wake Forest, elq)I'essed disappointment bu.t not discouragement. He ex;plaJ,ned tbat he dfti not expeot outstanding results from a team that was stilll not in. condition.. ..
ln previolliS years, the Deacon clndlermen started practice .after 'l'll'anksgivmg, but this yeall', ~ctice · was not helld regularly until the week before exams. The reason for thiL-; change in routine is ·that Hamfiton feels th'<llt: too eal'ly a sbart C'llll tire a runner mentally.
"H we sta.rted in Decemlber, there would be ,too l!nn.g a period without competition, and I feel this can. hur.t a trackman in 'the aong rtin," he IS'aid.
Just A Preparation
Hamilton further explained, "This year I am chiefly concerned with outdoor track, and illldoor !track is just a . preparation for the outdoor season. The goals I've set for our team are not e~ted to be reached Ulllti:l the spring."
Another reason the Deacoos don't 'approach the indoor seas0111 with more enthusiasm is that there just aren't the facilities at Walre Forest for an indoor toock program. The wurkouts ha-ve to be done outdoors, which ds differEmt from regular nwet conditions,
Elamilton feels he has good perSOIIlllel and pote!l'tilal on. his team, but it is too early to make ~ predictions about the upcoming se3500.
D!stancemen Return
RetUrning from aast Yelall''s team wiJil. be distancemen AI· Viehman (88!), mile), Jim Hope
(mile, 2 mile), and John Hodsdon <mile, 2 milel, sprinters Joe Mount (100, 220) and Jullian Rainwater (sprints, pole vault, ibroad jump), quarter milers Rudy Ashton and Duke Peliton, jumpers Jack Glasheen <broad jump, and Tom Fitch (high jump, high hurdles, triple jump), 300 weight men Ed Bal'ker (javelin) and Ohuck Ad.ams (shot, discUJS).
Co:aiing up from last yea.r's freshman team are sophomores Jim Shei1fe.r (880, mile), Bob Duval (880), Bill Rai-sner (220, 440), Kilrk Patchel (-100, 220), aoo David Asc:h <broad jump amd triple jump).
Co-Captains Elected
In an election held by the varsity team members, seniors A1 Viehman and JU!l.ilan Rainwater were selected as cocaptaidlls of this year's team.
The freshman team, which ~n workouts regulBII'Jor after exams, bas had a good t.urnou.t, lbut it is too early to make am~ predictions on their performance.
The ltrack team tmvels to UNC this Fa-iday and Saturday for the Bi:g Six meet with UNC, ' N. C. State, Duke, Davidson, and Nol1th Carolina College. The 111ext week they return to Chapel Hi1l for the ACC championships.
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BENEFIT WAKE FORES'l' STADIUM FUND., PLUS SPECIAL SHOWING OF
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Coming Soon - Bolshoi Ballet '67 Special-Limited Eugagement--2 Days Onl:r
"~10~1 LAUNDRY and
DRY CLEANING u0n The Campus"
GIRLS-· JOHNSON DORM BOYS- TAYLOR DORM IR. - BEAlER, M•ac•
·.What you do on Tb.e press ·a·gain resulted in
a foUl . _ .l;l,ut Cr¥,l_!<.ley · rru~ls ~ 1 .... ,. •• :-.1-;:_i!r.Afi t-r-Tufti~ ~f'1l~'.
· ~lft-ill!td=snr .. ®~'iiJ1lJ:i·~~er= tai'lldy had · ·no · riionoP<ily · · '6n poor.-· foul . shooting), Tom Gauntlett converted two to ex-
Car~lina ·then c-ame • up with its finest · effm<t to give the garine - ·away--.NeWiton· Scott was fouled under the Heel basket with five seconds left. Ji·e.omlasect, _howeyer, tBri.d the
Ifgames!Rellt mto·oorertime;L...J ·(sfMairt~eeysw aM!t ~lli-Uupe
both· fouled out ·in the· overtime period, and the OD1.Y Spark came from Bo9hart. BJg
· game·'before the'"Wake ~eam . .. . ' ''':c0iii!d'"'gei£'1i u.nt;rackli4: , Their "' "· '"-~·. ma'i-giit at haif time was 10,
.-The.Deacons completely .out-· pl~yed the Heels except· · for turnovers and mental er.rors, oufshoot;i.Dg· them 47 to .38 per -cent •Mtd traili.ll!g by only· o;11e
·,:in ·reboundiJng; Itc;was ·a. .con-"test ·com~ereJi'.t 1.i!iiiitti ''"the
game in· Winston-SaLem <\von by UNC, 7~.:74) except in 1lhe. excitement and the outcome.
February 21. may .. affect
Gamecocks Win
C33-23) and although the Deaos cut into their second half lead (45-40 and 49-44> the Gamecocks put .'their guns back to
Tankers DowD Appalacian: The. ~s to the Tar Heetls Thursday. night followed close on the heels of a 77-60 thrash
University of ·North Carolina . ing .admiJ:iistered by the Uruat Chapel Hill was a 64-31 versity of South Carolina in an rout .Ln. favw of ·the Ta.r He'els. · .· .ACC game 'played in Win-stOn-
· By BOBBY HATHAWAY . SPORTS WRITER
· After having suffered . defeats at the hands · of North Caa-olina and Virgini:a Military Institute since Christmas, the Wake Forest swimmln·g team
. opened a new semester with a 62-42 victory over Appa[aci:an
· work and blasted . Wake into submission. · Paul Long, Wake's super guard led the Deacs in· sCwin,g with 16 !I,X>i.Dts, far below his 22 point per game aver~e. Dave Stroupe chipped in 15 and Jerry ;Montgomery hi¢ 10.
. USC's :fi!Jas~ guard duo of Jack Thompson and Skip HarIicka led the Gamecock scorilllg with 20 points each,
.. SRllem on February folll'lbh.. Left·At Home· . Using Coach Frlank Me-·
Even though lthe Heels left Guire's new two-three zone many of their top swimmers at dt;lfense, the Gamecocks gave home; ·talent ·laden carolina the Deacs a terrible poll!ldhad far ltoo much. power .al!ld ing under the boards and
College. -Capturing · eigb!J of 11 first
places, the tankmen were led by junior swimming star Milt Ackerman who won the lOD:y&rd. and 200-yard :t:reestyle ·events and, in adddtiOI!l. wa'S a mem:ber of the winnin-g 400-yaid medley r&ay team.
depth for Wake to cope ·with. ------------------------.,
Other winners for the victorious Deacons were junior Dan..ny Capps in -1Jhe.1000-yard freeistyJe event; senior Rick Sed,gley in' the ;!00-yard butterily, 'junlor:Vi.nce Howard in the 200:..yard backstroke, and sen. ior Tom Graham in the 200-Y'ard breaststroke. · In a'ddiltion, the Deacons won Jthe 400-yard freestyle relay.
Thin·gs .were· not so smooth far W-ake last month as their 'llwo home meets ended in di-saster. The first a-gal:nst ·the
The ouly·Deacon winners were Ackerman . m- the 200-yard· freestyle, Sedgley in the 200-yard individual medley, and Grablam in the 200-yard breaststroke. , ·
One week la.ter ltlie Keydets of . VMI swamped ¢e- Wake swimmers 70-34, ·but Ackerm·an put on a .great swimming display for the home crowd.
He won the 200-yard freestyle, and witholllt. rest entered the 100-yaxd freestyle which he also won. The:n he took his third first-place of the day with a phat:.o-findsh victory in dlhe 500-yard fr.eestylle.
Sedgley won the other two firsts for Wake with victories in lthe 200-yard individual medley and ithe 200-::Yiard but-terfly.
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; I
PAGE EIGHT Monday, Feb.13, 1967 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Deacs Start Down Stretch, Four ACC Battles On Tap
BY RUDY ASHTON ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
The Deaco.n cage11s complete their string of four consecutive ACC games this week as they travel to South CaroUna tonight and go to the University of Virginia n-. Thursday. Then Saturday they finally return home to face an always tough St. Joseph's team.
Tonight in Columbus the Deacons will be out to avenge a 77-60 home court defeat issued by the Gamecocks last week. In that game, the taller boys from South Carolina completely dominated the backboards as well as the game.
Victory w.Gl not come easily for the Deacs in this contest. First of all, U.S. C. is a strong team 14-2 in ACC and 10-4 overall>. And secondly their home court is the smallest in the ACC. It is rumored that a long-legged spectator could, without rising from his seat, easily kick a player who was still in bounds. These cramped quarters have always put extra pressure on the visiting teams.
Paced By Juniors
This year's Gamecock team has been paced by juniors, who are all averaging in double figures. Skip Harlicka and Jack Thompson, both 6-1 guards, are averaging 18.1 and 12.6 points respectively. Forwards Frank Standard, 6-4, and Gary Gregor, 6-7, are averaging 14.1 and 13.9 points per game.
Gregor is leading the ACC in rebounds with a 14.1 average while Standard is thdrd, averaging 11.5.
The University of Virginia, always tough o.n their home court, have failed to jell this year. In Winston-Salem on January 7 the Deacons coasted to an 84-77 victory in which the Wake men twice led by more than 20 points.
The Cavaliers sport a 1-8 ACC mark and ·a 5-13 overall record. This year they have been relying chiefly on forwards Jim Connelly, 6-2¥.., and Mike Katos, 6-5. Connelly is fourth in the ACC in scoring with a 20.3 average and Katos
Lewis Paired With Palmer
From W-8-Journal
Jack Lewis, Jr., a 19-year. old Wake Forest sophomore who is only the ~econd recipient of funds from a scho!a.rship established seven years al(o by Arn()ld Palm<>r, will team with hi; benefactor in this year·, Gn•ater Greensbt)rt) Open Pro· Am tournament i\larch :.r-.
Just last week Lewi,, a resident of Florence. S. C., bec::.me one of the youn;::est golfers ever named to repre~ent the United States on the Walker Cup team.
GGo' General Chairman .Jim Betts announce<l Saturday that Lewis and P<>lmcr will be hc.If of one foursome in the pro.am field of 50 professionals and 150 a m a t e u r s. The Sl25,000 GGO gets undcrwa)' the next day.
As a student at Wake Forest, Palmer roomed with Buddy worsha.m, a close friend. Wor. sham's death in an automobile accident touched Palmer deeply, and shortly after winning his fir~t Masters championshtp in 1958 Palmer established the Buddy Worsham Schol&rship.
Since that time Palmer has been the major contributor, turning over funds hP would rec e i v e from exhibitions and speaking engagements.
The GGO also has had a part in the Worsham Scholarship, donating $1,000 each of the last several years from the profits of the GGO Sponsors' Banquet.
Following his pI a y In the GGO, Lewis will travel to Augusta, Ga., to play in his first ).lasters. Lewis won an invi(a.. tion to the Masters by finishing third - one stroke off the pace
- in last year's U. S. Amateur.
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ST. JOSEPH'S CLIFF ANDERSON will be the feature attraction for the Hawks as they invade Memorial Coliseum. Anderson is the Hawk's 'lnly returning letterman, but he is tbe spark of the St. Joe attack and ~ the nation's fourth leading scorer.
is averaging 14.6 points per game.
Possible Starters
Ch!p Case, 6-4, 16.9 average, Buddy Reams, 6-5, and John Quinn, 5-10, are other probable starters, and 6-10 Norm Carmichael is a starting possibility.
U. Va. a.Jso possesses big John Naponick, 6-10, 261 pound center, who this year has been more valuable as a bench warmer than ·a player. He can easily warm twice a'S ~arge
an ·area as most p<layers. Big John is also ,a great
team man and not one to hog others' shots. Thlis· can be· concluded from the fact that he has fouled out of some t;prmes this- YC'ar--lvithout scor-· ing more than two points.
The Hawks of St. Joseph's, having lost Matt Goukas to ·tha professional ranks, are looking to the current campaign as "one to grow on." Nevertheless, they sport a respectable <13-7) record and will offer the Deacons a good scrap.
The Hawks bring all-American candidate Cliff Anderson to Winston-SaJlem. Anderson, at 6·4%, is not considered tlall enough to be a good center,
but his play for three season~ has proved contrary to this be~ief.
Fourth In Nation
Anderson scored 1,038 polints his first two years and hauled down 450 rebounds- last year. Thi_, year he is fourth in the nation 1in scoring with a 28 point average. He is looked to as the leader of the team, and rightly so.
Anderson is aided by seniors Al Grundy (6-5) and Bob Brenner (6-4). Brenner has a 13.1 scoring average, and Grundy is known for his strength on the boards.
In the backcourt the Hawks have Bm DeAngeUs, a 5-11 junior w.ith a 9.4 scoring average, and· 6-0 ·steve- Donches with an 8.5 average. Both \3.re good ball handlers and qnick and alert on defense.
The game wHl be played at 2:00 p. m. 13.nd will be televised regionally.
This week the Deacons have a heavy schedule with two important ACC games and tbe ·always strong Hawks of St. Joseph's. McCloskey's men have been the surprise team of the ACC', and three victorties this week wouldn't be ttlo surprising.
WAKE'S JACK LEWIS lines up a put during a practice round. In addit;on to being named to this year's Walker Cup Team, .Jack has been paired with Arnold Palmer in this year's Greater Greensboro Open Golf Tourney.
GROLI.ER ENTERPRISES Now .interviewing students (day and dorm) for test families. Receive new Encyclopedia International FREE, plus other gifts, Phone 724-9515 today.
ORIGINAL PAUL MYRES
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Take Pikes Intramural Cage Lead
Baseball Drills Help Condition For Opener
BY DON SMim INTRAMURAL EDITOR
Pi ~appa Alpha rode a 36 point shooting performance by junior Dave Pugh and defeated •a taller KA team 66-62 to take over first place in the Fraternity lntramurad race.
Down by four at half time, the PiKA's stormetl back wi1Jh Pugh and Tommy B~ll leading a hot shooting attack that featured a 19 of 22 performance from the freethrow !line.
Pu,gh'.s performan·ce overshadowed a Ei.ne rebounding effort by the KA big men, Jim Clack and Bob Brenner. The KA's could not cope with the outside shooting of the PiKA's which featured a 58.6. · shooting percentage for the game.
The KA'os led with a little over eight mdnutes remaiiJJing, but wdth Pugh andl Bell shooting and Mike Ray and Coy Brewer rebounding, the Pikes went up by four.
Tlhen, with 1:12 left, Brenner sank two quick layups, Ed Parker -stole the ball for the PiKA's and sewed up the victory wti.th ·a qlllick driving shot.
Earlier in the week the Pi KA's knocked off the Theta Chi R'anch Hands 60-49. Allpha Sig defeated Sigma Pi 59-47, Delta Sig topped Lambda Chi 52-45, and Sig Ep won its third and fourth games' in a row with victor,ies ·over Sigma Chi and Alpha Sig.
Kappa Sigma rolled over the Lambda Chi's 13.nd the KA's slid by the Kappa Sigs in an overtime thriller, 54-48.
The Independent Basketball Leagues feature one of the stronger intramural teams, fraterru.ty or lindependelllt, the De!&!nders on 1x>p of the list in Independent Le-ague No. 1, the Defenlders topped archrival PAD 40-35.
The Bandits and PEK lead the pack in Independent League No. 2, while the Saints top Dorm League No. 2.
The KA Rebels lead in the Frnt B No. 1 race and the Roses and UFO are tied for first :in the Frat B No. 2 League.
Next week the official basketbaLl races close and the league!l enter tournament play for the All~Ciampus Championship. A p~ayoff between the KA's and .PiKA'•s seems likely, and the winner of that game will have to face a stronger, more-experi.CIIl!ced Defender team.
The PiKA's feature the Campus ISCOring leader in Dave Pugh and some other lline outside shooters, notable Ed Pairker Kappa AlPha relies heavily on a strong rebounding game, while the Defenders play for the good tShot. The Defenders can pl!ay just about any type of game; they are strong in-side and outside, and have a group of fine ball handlers.
Dark horses in tournament
BY BU..L UPTON SPORTS WRITER
Spring trairui:ng comes early this year for the Wake Forest varsity basebaiJl squad, which has been working out in ·the upstairs gym since Febrwary flirst, "These sessions are mainly ju:st to get the players in shape for the upcoiilli.ng season," said head baseball Coach J•ack Stallings. "We plan to get outside for practice as soon as the weather breaks," he added.
After last year's record of 12-12 (7-7 in Conference play for 13. third place tiel, Coach Statllings looks for a marked improvement lin thtis year's team. "Although our record has been somewhat disappointing the last two years, we have a chance to become a really good club this year. We have many boys who like to play and who are willing to work hard to improve themselves."
Other reasons for StJalllings' optimism dnclude some sdlid returning lettermen aP.d a 'plethora or fine sophomores up from last season's freshman team, which compiled a 14-4 record.
Myers Returns
Letterman Dickie Myers is returning to play catcher, but will be pressed for the job by soph Bill Heitman, who can also play the outfield.
The in£ield il5 stocked with lettermen and pro:mlising sophs. Steve .Wrenn, who slugged 8 homers with 17 RBI last season, is at fimt. Sonny Swails, another returnee, will be at second, and Billy Myers should fill the shortstop slot. Other vets are J·im.my Grimsley and Herb Pike.
Sophomore Barry Murphy as expected to see •action at first base when Wrenn is pitching. Other sophs worthy of mention in the inflield are Tom Berry, Digit La.ugh.rldge and Spencer Taylor.
The outfield has returnees Dwight Btai1tl.ett and Doug Horner, plus talented sophs Bob Blanton and Jim Callison.
play are the Bandits, PEK, and the Saints. The Rebels, UFO's, and Roses will reach the tournament but should fold in the llirst game.
In the All-Oampus Trophy race, the Theta Chi Cowboys lead· the second p.lace P·i~A's 1137.2 to 927.25. Bo1Jh. totals
-are one semester records.
for Tuesday, February 14
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STORE HOURS
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• JACK STALLINGS •
iMumiord, and Will Staples-. Sophomore-s expected to contribute are Jim Oallison, Bobby Harris, Ruffin Branham, and Jeff Wililiison.
The Deacons opening game ·iS with Kent State in WinstonSalem at Ernie Shore Field, 3:00, on March 22. The Deacons bave 11 other home games, dncludling 3 night contests, slated for the 1967 season.
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