Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the...

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am eeo ery day - - Sll king, l ,Joe., ling Melton Loses Bet, · Gets Scholarship, Everybody H11PPY Ill nlll aull lurk Quartetto Italiano To Perform Here In Concert Series Page Five VOLUME X.LIV Sprllg Queen, Court Will Be · Selected Soon Students· will vote during chapel perio,d Tuesday on 10 members of the -i959 Magnolia ·Court. The Court will reign over the annual Mag-· nolia Festival, which will be held May 3-9. -- I The Magoolia Queen will be se- lected from senior class and her maid will come from the junior class. Each class will have two rep- resentatives in the court. The nominees are as follows: Seniors-Jane Freeman, . Dinah Gattis, Leah Lee, Marlene McLamb, Stephany Painter, Anne Tyner and Jan Wilcox. i ·* * FRANCES gives· DEANE the first campaign dollar. Deane Voted Student ,.Chairman· For Drive Juniors-llew Bauoom, Jean Charles Deane, student body vice- science building. Hobby, Susan McGahey, Diane Mat- president .has been chosen chair- Other students on the-cabinet are tocks, Janice Priode, Barbara man for- the student division of the Jane Mitchell, Sam Harvey; Mar- Safriet and Anne Whicker. College Development Fund,. He was garet McDopald, Earl Shaw, MUI."- Sophomores-Anna Ruth Current, named chairman of the student ray Greason Jr- and Harvey Jeane Daniel. Susan Davis, Gladys cabinet at a meeting Wednesday, .Durham. 1 Morgan, Reca Saunders, Janelle when three vice-chairman were Heading the Wake Forest division Smith and Jean Thompson. also named. ' of the drive, which includes both Fresbman-Peggy Cryner, BettY They are Miss Frances Young- faculty and students, are Coach Earp, Meyressa Hughes,. Becky blood, president of the Women's Paul Amen and C<lach Horace McCrary, Connie Pinyoun and Government .Association; Bill.Owen, CBones) McKinney. · W:anny Wagster. _ . : president of Alpha Phi.' Omega ser- In the meeting Wednesday Amen 'Dr. David Smiley of the history vice fratk-nity, . and Joe Weston, emphasized that the student drive department wilf give the Tuesday president bf the Interfl"aternity is more concerned with 100 per cent chapel . address.· He will speak on CounciL. participation than with money. "We ''The Divided South.'' . The group•s purpose, is to· be'gin realize that most students don't . Speaker at Thlll"sday chapel ser- solicitation among the student have a lot of money, •• he said, "but vices will be Dr. Baker J. Cauthen, body for the drive's $1,225,000 goal. we want to. show the city of Winston· executive secretary of the FOtreign The fund-raising attempt will begin Salem that we are interested Missions Board of the Southern Bap· in the soon afterwards, and .enough in this thing oW'Selves to tist Convention.. the money go toward a new give 100 per cent." * * Page Three Indian To Lecture In Lounge Tonight P. V. Svrinsgvard of the Indian Embassy in Washington, D. C., will be- at the COllege tonight for an address sponsored jointly by the Student Uni0111 Actors and the Internayonal Relations · Club. · , The Actors' Workshop, part of the Svrinsgvard will speak on "India College Theater, traveled to Dan- . World Politics." Tonight's meet- ville, Va., Wednesday t01 present the ing will be at 7 Q'clock in east play ''Still Life." The play was one lounge. • of three on the ,.campus NUMBER 18 Dean Is Silent OnPunishmeiit . ' For UNC FusS I Wake Forest officials last week refused to comment on whether any action would be taken against students who rushed on the floor during the Feb. 12 fight. at the basketball game with the University of North Carolina. Athletic Director Bill Gibson said 1fu.at Acting Dean E . . G. Wilson's office is responsible for any reply to a recom- ·-------------. mendatio.n made last week by Atlantic Coast Conference Commis- sioner Jim Weaver. Legislature's Agenda Has 2 Varied_ Topics

Transcript of Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the...

Page 1: Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week. Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the Dayton basketball

am reeo ~our

tery

day

-~s

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Sll

king, l ,Joe., ling

Melton Loses Bet, · Gets Scholarship, Everybody H11PPY Ill nlll aull lurk Quartetto Italiano

To Perform Here In Concert Series

Page Five

VOLUME X.LIV

Sprllg Queen, Court Will Be

· Selected Soon Students· will vote during chapel

perio,d Tuesday on 10 members of the -i959 Magnolia ·Court. The Court will reign over the annual Mag-· nolia Festival, which will be held May 3-9. -- I

The Magoolia Queen will be se­lected from senior class and her maid will come from the junior class. Each class will have two rep­resentatives in the court.

The nominees are as follows: Seniors-Jane Freeman, . Dinah Gattis, Leah Lee, Marlene McLamb, Stephany Painter, Anne Tyner and Jan Wilcox. i

·* *

FRANCES YOUN.~BLOOD gives· DEANE the first campaign dollar.

Deane Voted Student ,.Chairman· For Drive

Juniors-llew Bauoom, Jean Charles Deane, student body vice- science building. Hobby, Susan McGahey, Diane Mat- president .has been chosen chair- Other students on the-cabinet are tocks, Janice Priode, Barbara man for- the student division of the Jane Mitchell, Sam Harvey; Mar­Safriet and Anne Whicker. College Development Fund,. He was garet McDopald, Earl Shaw, MUI."-

Sophomores-Anna Ruth Current, named chairman of the student ray Greason Jr- and Harvey Jeane Daniel. Susan Davis, Gladys cabinet at a meeting Wednesday, .Durham. 1 Morgan, Reca Saunders, Janelle when three vice-chairman were Heading the Wake Forest division Smith and Jean Thompson. also named. ' of the drive, which includes both

Fresbman-Peggy Cryner, BettY They are Miss Frances Young- faculty and students, are Coach Earp, Meyressa Hughes,. Becky blood, president of the Women's Paul Amen and C<lach Horace McCrary, Connie Pinyoun and Government .Association; Bill.Owen, CBones) McKinney. · W:anny Wagster. _ . : president of Alpha Phi.' Omega ser- In the meeting Wednesday Amen

'Dr. David Smiley of the history vice fratk-nity, . and Joe Weston, emphasized that the student drive department wilf give the Tuesday president bf the Interfl"aternity is more concerned with 100 per cent chapel . address.· He will speak on CounciL. participation than with money. "We ''The Divided South.'' . The group•s purpose, is to· be'gin realize that most students don't . Speaker at Thlll"sday chapel ser- solicitation among the student have a lot of money, •• he said, "but

vices will be Dr. Baker J. Cauthen, body for the drive's $1,225,000 goal. we want to. show the city of Winston· executive secretary of the FOtreign The fund-raising attempt will begin Salem that we are interested Missions Board of the Southern Bap· in the soon afterwards, and .enough in this thing oW'Selves to tist Convention.. the money go toward a new give 100 per cent."

* * Page Three

Indian To Lecture In Lounge Tonight

P. V. Svrinsgvard of the Indian Embassy in Washington, D. C., will be- at the COllege tonight for an address sponsored jointly by the Student Uni0111 ~e Commi~ee Actors Tra~el and the Internayonal Relations · Club. · , The Actors' Workshop, part of the

Svrinsgvard will speak on "India College Theater, traveled to Dan­. World Politics." Tonight's meet- ville, Va., Wednesday t01 present the

ing will be at 7 Q'clock in east play ''Still Life." The play was one lounge. • of three pr~nted on the ,.campus

NUMBER 18

Dean Is Silent OnPunishmeiit

. '

For UNC FusS I

Wake Forest officials last week refused to comment on whether any action would be taken against students who rushed on the floor during the Feb. 12 fight. at the basketball game with the University of North Carolina.

Athletic Director Bill Gibson said 1fu.at Acting Dean E . . G. Wilson's office is responsible for any reply to a recom­·-------------. mendatio.n made last week by

Atlantic Coast Conference Commis­sioner Jim Weaver.

Legislature's Agenda Has 2 Varied_ Topics

Page 2: Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week. Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the Dayton basketball

PAGE TWO Monday, .l\larch 2, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

"A DIME, PLEASE," Bill Shepherd tells two customers at The Barn. The building has been \reopened by the Student Union, which is operating it for the Baptist church. Shepherd is directing activities. Plans include week-end platter par.ties, with refreshments served at the snack bar. The customers are Phyllis Johnson and Charlie Johnson. <Old Gold Photo by Grigg.)

Ministerial Students Name Canady Prexy

ROTC Frat Will Induct 24 Pledges

.David Canady, senior from Hope lege and seminary professors be­Mills, was elected president of the longing to the NatioQ.al Association Cullom Ministerial Conference Tues- of Biblical Instructors. The com· Twenty-four pledges of Pershing day night. mittee was appointed to. deal with Rifles organization will be initiated

Canady replaces Bob Hale- the problem of pre-seminary study Tuesday. The initiation will be held Cooper, who resigned at the first of of religion. Drawing from his ex· in the ROTC department and 'a the semester. perience with the committee, Easley

The new president has held the will point out some of the values 9f banquet will be held after. the cere· offices of first, second and tl1ird majoring b religic.n. mo:nies. vice president of the conference. The conference. which meets Pershing Rifles is an honorary He is presently vice president of the every other Tuesday night in Room organization for ROTC cadets. It Euzelian Literary Societ•·. 104, is open ta anyone interested in

o was organized oo the eampus last I Eleded to the post of vice presi- attending, Canady says. dent, left vacant by Canady, was year with the help of the unit at John Baxley, senio~· from Norfolk, ''·· . Clemson College. Va. , ' (. · · · ., · · The pledges have been going I

At the same meeting Dr. E. W. \' · through concentrated training in Hamrick, reiigion professor and ad- ~ · preparation for their initiation. viser to the conference, spoke to 1 · the group as part of the program. They spent one day solving field He lectured' on "Recent Archeo~ogi- 1'· problems, with battle conditiOtllS cal Discoveries in Jordan." (". produced as nearly "real" as possi-

The talk was illustrated by slides ble for the. exercises. of recent excavations in Jericho The men hearne Pershing pledges and other places of archeoligical i11 December. They were tapped interest. Hamrick took the pictures during drill and they participated fo;r the slides on a trip to the Near in formal pledging ceremonies East last summer. later. The period od' pledge training

Dr_ J. Allen Easley, acting dean lasted during the rest of the fall of the school of religion and chap- semester and into the spring semes-lain Qf the Corllege, will address the ter. conference at its next meeting When the men become full mem-tomorrow at 7 p. m. bers, they will take their places on

The talk, to be on the subject of the Pershing Rifles drill and ll'ifle pre-seminary studies of religion, teams. will be heard in Room 104 of WL'l- The Clemson organization sent gate Hall. representatives to tour various

Easley recently served Orn a DAVID CANADY units recently, and the Wake Forest ,_n_a_ti_on_a_I_c_o_m_rm_·t_te_e_ma_d_e_u_p_o_f _c_o_l· ___ · _._._to_I_e_ad_p_r_ea_c_h_ers __ • _·_· __ unit was praised by the group.

To New York

Wesley Tour. Planned Fifteen students from the Wesley 1 Foundatior: or Ronnie Thoma~,

Foundation in Winston-Salem will[ student at the College. Thomas lS

join with 30 other students from the I President of the group. Registra­University of North Carolina and tion deadline is Saturday. Duke University in a trip to New Students from the three schoJOls York March 26. will travel together by· bus, leaving

The representatives spent ome night and the following morning inspecting the Wake Forest unit, then traveled to Raleigh to, inspect the Noil'th Carolina ·State College unit.

Catherine Treadway, freshman from Gastonia, has been chosen regimental sponsor for Company D-4. Her picture will be sent to. the regional contest for judging with other company sponsors. She will als() sponsor the unit at the aunual military ball, to be held March 15.

'Deacs Who Are Greeks By DAVE RAWLEY

Greeks were 'Qusy last week witl.i initiations and elec­tions of officers. Serenades also kept the brothers busy.

Many fraternities are beginning to make plans _for their individual formal dances to be,rheld in the spnng. Dates have been set and locations decided tlpon.

• Alpha Sigma Phi Orrin Cl'ifton hras been elected ::i;W:''>'r·(·tt;,;:<;'\<··

p1•es'ident ·of !t:lhe f.ratem1ty. Gene Glasco is 1Jh-e :new viee president. Ban:y Davison ~s· treasurer and Bob Stree.t 'is ·secre.taDyl.

RecentJ,y. pledged were Fred Picwlesimer and Ed Rohinson.

Albent Gonwer. Jerry Haas, Tayror Ryan, Fred! Wardlaw ~d Orrin Clifton IBIZle newly im"'tiated brot;hel'S'.

The pJ.edges and rbr<:Ythers enjoy­ed a ·banquet at the "52" Resta.u­:rant last week.

Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week.

Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the

Dayton basketball ~e .im, honor of the relatives of Phil H,arrds, in wihose honor <the frat€rlbity an­nually .presents a trophy>· to the athl·ete exhibiting the most out- • . . Alpha Sigma prexy . . • rst.anding spor.tsmamJSihip. The ·trophy was· presented rut hal£1lime.

A1umni Larry Ady·1eobt, Parrish Clodfelter and Alan Tuttlie vis'i.ted the chapter during the ~k end.

Kappa Alpha Re-cently irntiated -into ibhe fl·atermty were Walt Wlbite, Chuck

Reiley, George Hudnor, Dave Smith, Joe Elllis, Lyman Fel"l'Cll and Craven WiiHiams.

Norman Kel~um ·ha.s been elec.ted cha:pter so£tball coaclh 81Ild Murray Greason wa.s elected volleY' ball coach.

Kappa Sigma The fraternity recepJtly serenaded Kather'ine Lee, a ·student nurse

rut the: University Qf Nol'lth Carc>Hna. Slhe is pd:nll!ed to Jerry .Joe Stephenson.

John F·rank Bragg Jr. w'aG recentlY' initia.'bed. Larry Brooks has won the Delta Omega Senior Scho1ari!ihlp

Award. This honor is awarded a.nnmvlly .to the senior With 1ihe highesrt oVErall s·cho·lastic average.

Lambda Chi Alpha Newly initi'<llted brothers are Jack P.endergraph, J<llhnny Ov.ercash,

Winston Futch, Maurice Hom:e, Phil Boe, Chic F·orbes, and Jim Duffy. .

An inform:al paity was :held art; the chapter houoo Srutumay evenlinlg following :bhe •basketball game. ·

Pi :Kappa Alpha Pledges have compLeted "Help Week" in preparation for inltia-tion. An infOT'Illal o.pen house was held fo1l·owing ;the Vil'ginia g.ame.

Sigma Phi Epsilon Recently~ pinned was Carl Beacbam to Marian Niemann of Salem

College. PJians are being made for .the Dis'trliot Leademhlp School :t.o be

held here on Marcil 21. Bryan Falls is in cllarge of the planning com­mittee.

Ed Ckhewicz and Lloyd Gr03s are new pled·ges. Sigma. Pi

The f.rart;erntty held its annual Founder's Day supper in the Mag­nolia ·room on 'l'htn1sday. Dr. Robert Helm and Dr. E. E. Folk spoke ·briefly -to :the group.

A Fidel Castro pal'ty was ~e-ld at the Forsyth Foish Qamp SaturdaY' night. Prof. D. T. MUl'phy and his wife acted ras chaperones.

Pl:ai!1.s for :t:he annual Orchid Ba.ll a-re in full .swiing w:i.'th Jim Bow­man in charge of a.U the ·a=ang;em~nts. It will be held April 11.

Norman Bright ·has •been elected! repreSientamive to !the Inlter:fmter­nity •Council for the spring aemester 11eplacing Mark Hodges·. Way­land Johnson was elected rushing. 'Clhaiiorman.

Sigma Chi ' Bill P:acker, Lenny Ohappell a.nd Geille rCompton prledged ~aS!t w-eek. An :open house was held Saturday night af.ter the V:irginia ibasket-

baiH •gaane. ·

Theta Chi Recem.tly initiated were Wesley Cox, John Muse, Ed Ledford, Roger

K:ralreou, Russ DeMent, Sid Disher, Jerry Baill BJIJid Charles Dempsey. Plans are reing made for ibe Dream Gi'IIl: Bal!l which will he held:

April 18 in the El ·Cam Rey Room :of the Reynolds Building. A rCbarlie Brown FarlY' was hel-d •wt the ~use Friday n'ight for thie.

brothers, pled_g(!s and :bheir da.tes.l

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Called the New York Seminar, from Chapel Hill March 26. The the trip will be open primarily to !"seminar" is to last four days. The students who have participated in group will leav~ New Yo.rk Monday Wesley discussion groups. If the , around noon and arrive in Chapel quota of 15 is not filled, ho.wever, Hill that night around midnight. other persons may be considered. Chaperones for the group will be Coot for the trip will be $38.70. the Methodist chaplains at Duke

Do }f)u Think for Yourself? ( THESE QUESTIONS .. )

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The seminar will include lectures by Dr. Frank Graham of the United Nations and former president of the University of North Carolina, Martin Halverson who is director Qf Arts Division of the National Council of Churches and the theo-

l

lc,gian Reinhold Niebur. Other activities will include three

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1. When you feel that certain fads are foolish do you talk against them?

2. Do gadgets such as new cigarette lighters often intrigue you so you want to take them apart?

3. Do you think that political candidates should write their own speeches instead of using a "ghost writer"?

\ .

4. Given the choice, would you prefer having an apartment of your own to living at home with your parents?

;vesONoD

vesONoD

5. Do you prefer a salesman who is anxious to make ~ quick sale to one who will patiently answer all your 9-uestions about the product?

6. When arriving late for a party, are you inclined to join a group of close friends rather than attempting to strike up new acquaintances?

VESDNoO

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9. Do. you base your choice of , YES o NOD a cigarette on what people tell you rather than doing your own thinking?

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Page 3: Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week. Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the Dayton basketball

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W.Z.Wood To Address _YDCGroup

Cha:rither Music Concert

Ita-lian String Quartet To Play

By RA.Y ROLLINS . A Wake Forest alumnus now ac­_tive as a Winston-Salem attorney and a leader in Regional Young Democrat affairs ·will address the College Young · Democrats in a meeting on the campus Tuesday. . · The speaker will be William Z.

Wood, director of YDC activities in the five-state region including 'this state. · ·

The meeting will be held in Room 1202,- Reynolda Hall . at 7 p. m. President Jim Davis will preside. · Wood is a graduate of the Wake Forest liberal arts school and School of Law. For several years he served as chairman of the Forsyth County Board: of Elections. He is a former president of ~e Wils()jllian Democrat Club of For-syth County. '

Prior to his election in 1958 as regional YDC directw, Wood had held minoli state YDC officef> . and in 1956 was selected a YDC national committeeman. He has been active in regio111al, state, and local YDC conventions and seminars and ha:s

· served , on policy-making commit­tees.

Wood, a native of Brooks Cross­roads in Yadkin CountY, now lives in Winston-Salem. His family_ in­cludes three children.

, I

The " Quartetto · Iuiliano will play for members of the Cham-­ber Music Society tonight in the Magnolia Room.

Members , of the string quartet are Paolo Borciani, violin; Elisa Pegreffi, violin; Piero Farulli, viola and Franco Rossi, cello.

_The performance will be part of the group's fifth United States tQUl'. The musicians first per­formed in the Unit~ States in 1951.

Four Selections The ·· progr~ ·will negin with

Boccherini's "Quartet in G Ma­jor, Opus 44', No. 4'' It will include Mozart's "Quartet in B Flat Major, K. 458," "Three Pieces

for String Quartet" by Stravinsky and "Quartet in F Major'' by Ravel. ' The four young Italians be..

came a concert gro,up by acci­dent. They were playing infor­mally in the ··hom,e of Borciani when they decided tOi form a quartet~ to be called the Nuovo Quartetto Italiano.

Minor engagements in'Italy led to appearances in Spain, Portu­gal, Switzerland, France, Holland, Scandinavia, Austria ariil Ger­many, and · then England. In England they made 14 tours. ·

65 Concerts · On their last United States

to.ur, which was in .1957, the

musicians played 65 concerts, 12 of them in New York City. I The Boston Herald said "On

rare occasions one sees ()r ·hears art so perfect as to be · nearly unbelievable. 'l'his was. the case with the playing of the Quartetto Italiano in Jordan Hall last night." '

All. four ()f the niusicians began playing at an early age. First violinist Paolq Borciani bega~ study at five: the violist Piero· Farulli and the cellist, Franco Rossi, began study at the ;~.ge of nine. Elisa Pegreffi, the one · woman in the group, began studying the violin at eight years old. She is maiTied to Borciani.

/

·No-New Rules Put In Charter For Meredith • • . the Quartetto Italiano practices for a concert • • :

' /

. Meredith College trustees took no s~neak s action in a rece~t meeting on a r . er . ays Baptist State Convention proposal ~A;d'.ls· ·1110tto· that the college change its charter. 11 1r.1.~ ·

The proposal,_ directed to all con-vention-related institutioos in the O'J• Ch b state, would make future charter . am ers

More Students In~luded

Loan Fund Is Changed

, i

Prof Feels USSR Grip To ,Remain

By DON SCHOONMAKER The Soviet Union will never

loooen its grip on Eastern Europe, a University of Virginia professor prophesied Tuesday. 1

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, March 2, 1959, PAGE THREE

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Dr. Stanley J. Zyzniewsko, speak- ;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ing in the east lounge of Reynolda Hall, said "The Soviets cannot lose Eastern Europe. It is too vital to the whole communist picture."

He traced the salient develop­ments that have occurred since

COX PHARMACY, INC. World War I in that area. He re- In College Village marked that Soviet desire to con- (Just Off Robin Hood Road) trol Eastern Europe was "pathQ]o-gical." PRESCRIPTIONS- COSMETICS

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three stages that the governments R - te d Ph went through in becoming satellites egiS re annacists on Duty at all Times of Russia. The final stage, he said, ____________ ..;;P;.;A;,;;,·.;;;3..;;·3;.;;6;,;;,2;.8 ____ ...;.,· _____ _J

is characterized by manipulated -===-----;-----------------------....:== elections, a parliamentary facade ~------------------_,:=====:::; and other parties either shattered or absorbed into the communist party.

He mentioned that the Soviets adroitly wove a "nice tight eco~ nomic web" about each satellite nation to make it dependant upon the Soviet Union.

•Zyzniewski emphasized that not only in economy but also in cultural , and social -life, Russia attempted to "transform the image of Eastern Europe."

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This transformation was carried r.,.,-------------------------J out through the Stalinist policy, which Zyzniewski said was "a method of coercio.n which was bringing i~ diminishing returns.''

New Approach Because of the shortcomings of

Stalinism, a new approach to Eas­tern Europe with greater liberalism was needed, the speaker said.

In connection with this "more liberal" policy, the Soviets would emphasize "mutual interests," he said.

The Hungarian revolt Oif 1956 caused a "retreat from liberaliza­tion," the lecturer added.

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JERRY K. BfNNEB TO OUR PRESENT

STAFF OF 5 BARBERS

or "policy" changes subject to the Wake Forest coods and out-of- ·clarification of the provisions of ·approval of- the "conventioo. The The executive vice pres~dent of state students are now eligible for the charter to eliminate possible r--------------. conve;ntion made . its propo~al by the Winston-Salem Chamber of_ financial a~sistance from the Jame conflict should the , loan policy be

Mr. Bennett inyltes hla many friends and customers

to visit him at his

-adopting a Conumttee of Nme re- Commerce told members of Alpha · • expanded. , .port in November. Kappa Psi pro.fessional fraternity W. Den~ark ~an Fund as a re· In signing the order authorizing

Wake Forest trustees, when they Tuesday that the chamber of com- sult of court Interpretation of the modification~ of the loon charter, considered the proposal at a meet- merce's main function is to aid the fund's charter last week. Judge Olive based his findings on ing in January, sent it to a study community. The fund was previosuly reserved the following COinditions: (ll That committee. The committee has been Speaking at a meeting in the for "young men. of this state." when the fund was established in given no date to. report to the Town Steak House, Fred Linton The new mling was mad~ last 1877, there were only six out-of­.trustees. added that the purposes of the wee~ by Judge Hubert E. Olive of state students at Wake Forest, (2)

Orders Prepared to Take Out

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MR. BENNETT comes to Ul with 6 YEARS af BARBERING EXPERIENCE

OTHER BARBERS ARE CLARK SMITH J E TILLEY ' NOEL c. HOUCK AND BILL LAWING. ,

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OPEN 8 A.M. Till 6 P.M. TUESDAY- VfEDNESDAY. SATURDA. y C. B. Deane of Rockingham was chamber 0 f commerce include Le~~on, who ' felt that c~nged that women were not admitted as

re-elected president of the Meredith development of the economy of the conditions at !h~ Co~ege .have al- resident students until 1941, (3) that NORTHSIDE: .BA-RBER SHOP trustees. Also re-elected were Dr. conununity fostering of civic ac- ter~d the original mtent of the in 1958, 510 students <or more than Elizabeth James Dottere of San- tivities and helping to form and fund ~arteJ:· The ·loan. ~d was 22 per centl of the student body lord, vice president, and V. Ho,ward carry out governmental !regulations. estaJ;>lished ID 1677. Olive IS also were out-of-state students, (4) that. NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CENTER - PHONE PA 5.7382

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B~~~~~~ H has'dth · ta ~~~b~~~~in~ru~s~~s~~=~~~~~~~~~;~~~;~~~~~~=========~=~~~~=~-t . . e emp lZe e 1mpor nee trustees · t f th ' · reasurer. ' , of ere ti ood h . · cen o e 2,255 students enrolled • YOUR NEAREST DRUGSTORE

D. J. Th~ton Jr.; of Wilson w~s fufluen~n~g Je 1oc!~~pm7 areas: .. :~an ,fund_ offi~als brought at Wake Forest College, were

name . chairman of' the .~exec:utive ;\rentiOillS and setting up n!nd o;rr~~~- ;·:fn:e:n:dl:y=:s:U:It:':· :d:es~I:gn:ed==to==g:e:t:w:o:m=en=s:tu:d:en:ts=. ======~ . Away From Traffic Plenty of Parking Spac• comnut!ee. Dr: ~lton S.· Prickett ing tourists' attractions. _ i of Burlington IS VIce chrurman. President James Huey welcomed

-Frat ·To Take · Math Students

visitors before Linton was int~ uced by Ben Laneaster. :

Besides faculty and student mem­bers, Bobbie . ..E. Phillips, division councelor for Alpha Kappa Psi and an alumnus of Wake Fo;rest, was present.

Kappa Mu Epsilllill, honorary mathematics fraternity, Will ~bOld WGA Co' ff H

Centrai-Ca~olina Motors CADILLAc··_ OLDSMOBILE,

The Home of Better Used ·Cars an· i¢tiati~n ceremony on the cam- ee our pus Wednesday night. Social Standards Committee of t -A GOOD ·SELECTION AT ,ALL TIME~

The special meeting will be held Woman's Government Association 2%6 N. MARSHALL ST. PA 3-9611

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OLD TOWN PHARMACY 37~ Reynolda Road WAbash 4-9<130 "in r:00m 230 of Reynolda Hall at 7 held a coffee hour Thursday for -------------------------J FWO'AR~EST

p; · m. coed day students. The affair was - t;

New members will · meet 15 held in the parlor of :so"stwick Dor- ---:--.======:===========================;:=======:;------------------------------­minutes earlier in room 103, Rey- mitory: The coffee hour followed a nolda Hall, to pay initiation fees supper meeting Wednesday night and semester dues. Some 15 te> 20 for the day students, which was studentS are expected to be initia- held in the Magnolia Room. · ted. The initiation fee is $7; semes- The same committee plans to ter dues are $1.50. Allen Dotson is serve refreslunents during · inter­treasurer and Phil Griffiths is presi- mission of the chamber music con-dent. ' • cert to be held tonight.

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Page 4: Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week. Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the Dayton basketball

;

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1959

Little Spark, M.ich Smoke The time of flying fists and shout­

ing and heated arguments is over. The flying fists went ~;mt Thursday nigM after the Wake Forest-University of Nort'h Carolina basketball game had ended. The shouting ended shortly after it began Wednesday night, When students voiced their displeasure at a decision by Atlantic Coast Conferen­ce Commissioner Jim Weaver by burn­ing him in effigy. And it"s _higlh time the arguments, both about tfue game and about Weaver's decision, were over.

It's high time because no a,mount of student argument will c'hange the decision. The smartest thing Wake Forest students can do is to see that no such decision is necessary next year.

Weaver demonstrated a lack of faitfu'in the Wake Forest student body wheri he decided that the 'home basketball game ·with t!he University cannot be played in Winston-Salem. The events of Thursday night, Feb. 12, support 'his lack of faith. W ~ stu­dents, of course, know better.~ We know we are capable of controlling ourselves even under stress. We know that we. can play North Carolina in Winston-Salem next year and have no trouble whatsoever. The point is that · Weaver doesn't know it, the Atlantic Coast Conference doesn't know it and the public doesn't know it.

The only way we can prove it is by keeping a close rein on boifu. team members and student spectat<>rs .at all future athietic events. And the most effective rein is kept by the students themselves. The administration has the power to take action against stu­dents who participated in the fig'ht. Weaver recomm~mded that officials study movies made of the fig'ht to identify students who should be disci­plined. This, we t!hink, would do more harm than good. If students had been warned before'hand of the conse­quences, or if some precedent ·had been set for discipline in such cases, things would be different. As i~ was, students had no warnings of punis'h­ment hanging over their heads When they excitedly piled out on illJ.e floor. And, too, the movies of the g.ame probably show only part of i!he stu-

~ i dents Who joined in the fight. I:f­punished, these students would be scapegoats for the many whom t'he cameras missed.

In view of 'fuese things, we feel the officials or Student Conduct Councils would be wise to hand out no punish­ment for this year, but to make plain what puniShment will be meted to students Who try the same thing again. Anti-Weaver and anti-Caro~ina feeling is high enough, and pumsh­ment now would destroy t'he last rem­nants of student body self-respect.

If the matter is then left in student hands, there are several 1fuings_ the students can do to improve the situa­tion. They can stop feelin1! like _n;ar­tyrs because of Weavers decision. Martyrs make loud speeches but get thrown to the lions in the end. They must also quit blaming Carolina for t'he decisions Weaver made. That school had its part in the fight, but decisions after t'he fig'ht were entirely in the hands of the commissioner.

And finally students can try to see the 'humor and the relative unimpor­tance of. the whole affair. Most·.col­lege students live in their own httle college -world, in ;v'hich some ev~nts can get strangely out of proportiOn. One school. because it happens to engage in athletic contests with ot'her school, becomes a blood-thirsty villain in t'he eyes of the other school. A game becomes a fight for honor and everybody can feel noble and pa!Xi~tic while singing school songs and k1ckmg opposing players in t'he shins. And in. their juvenile way, students can feel "This· is college; this is tradition". as t'hey act in a way no self-resll,ecti~g high school student would.

If students could learn to laug'h at the idea of a school's honor being wrapped in some pigskin or inflated sphere, t'here would be no more trouble with Carolina or any other school.

This is probably too much to expect. It is not too much to expect that Wake Forest students have learned some­thing from fue recent fracas. And it's not too much to expect them to restore the public's fait'h in their school by controlled conduct at all future games, whether with Carolina or any ot'her school.

On Dormitory Damages The committee on dormitory dam­

ages came up last week with a pro­posal that is perhaps new to Wake Forest students but is accepted-policy in many sc'hools in this area. A charge for dormitory damage, to be paid at registration, has not been tried on the Wake Forest campus before. What has be~ tried is t!he "culprit must pay" method, whereby Director of Residences Tom Griffin charges any damage done in a suite to flle occu-pants of the suite. '

The only trouble with this met!hod, and it has been a fairly important drawback, is t!hat the occupants of the suite are often not the culprits respon­sible for the damage. During the water fig:hts which used to be regular affairs, many screens would be dam­aged by students who perhaps lived in a different dormitory. But the man be'hind the damaged door had to pay.

The new method, if approved, will

HANNAH MILLER Editor

still try to get at the guilty one by charging the suite members, but theJ difference will be that the members can appeal fue fine to a board of stu­dents. If the student board says t'hey are innocent, the suite members get their money back and the standing funds _pays for t'he damage. If the board rules "guilty," no money comes from the fund.

Any money left in the fund at the end of the year will be given back to the students. Colleges who have tried the method say that their refunds get larger eac'h year as students learn that it pays them to take care of the suites.

As much as students 'hate to pay for anything and keeping in mind the tui­tion increases that 'have already been approved for next year, the idea still seems like a good thing. It's a small insurance policy for the college and for students w'hose suites may be dam­aged by outsiders.

BOB DEMSEY Business Manager

Founded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black is p11blisJJ.ed each Monday during the school year except du-ring examination and h~liday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Boaro;

JOHN ALFORD, Managing Editor DAN CHURCH, Assistant Editor BOB YARBROUGH, Circulation Manager RAY ROLLINS, Assistant Editor

WOODY PEELE, Sports Editor

EDITORIAL STAFF: J. D. Alexander, Sam Allen, Bruce AySCUe, .Toe Chandler, Maz: D~ Frank Glenn. Ann Griffin, Kelly Griffith, Roberta. House, Charlie Johm!on, Janet Lemons, Sa.mh M'Ul'phy, D001 Schoonmaker, Lynne Smathers, Fred Wardlaw, Judy Parker, Marcia. Jones.

BUSINESS STAFF: Beel>e Davis, CamiDe .Tobnston, Chuck Jones, Janet Lemons, Ann Ringley, Doris Smith, Jim Thomas, Charle. ~aldrop, Anne Watkins, Dan Webster.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by Na.. tional Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Second-Class mail pri­vileges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C.

Offices in Reynolda Ball 225-556

Telephone PArk 5-9711 P. 0. Box '1567 Exteasion 215 Reynold& Braaell

Winstcln-Salem, N. C.

By. Gus Burns I .

· Magn~o1~a Ruling Could ·Have Been Worse, Leaves

, THE AFTERMATH OF THE of former riots, one m fodtbaJ:l a.md 'after his unfortunate nm·in witb . .- -- .. -riot .it the Uni>verSUty 10£. ·Nor.bh one in baSikebba.ll. ~a.tt:l.'s lbighl,-~~!tc)~:·Neg;'!O ,· • · __ - <- .,.B7:BO~-~~~~~-- --- _;. Carolina.· basketball game h8s· pro- Weaver's- deCision stated that sta.r Oscar Robertson in ithe DiXie , Did y-Ou iheaa- about tlhe ·professor <lruced ao-ine s1ll'Prising neautts. At- specific ;players sh0111ld ibe .reprl- Classic. who gOit excilbed about the basW. Ja.ntic Coast Conference Com.m.i&- ma.ndied fo()l' their aeti:O!Il-5. :Well, I lit <»lild! conceivably be the best ball ~_on the mdiio? · . 'Siiloner Jim Wieayel"'s d~imon was think !bhey should. A basketball thing thait !has iba.ppened to ibh. rf "I reaJlly .shonldln't ge"; s·tirred unique, to sa.y .the least. But the coU'rt and a boxing ring a.re· two for the rest of this season Budd will . up, but 1 get ·nervous," he con-thing 'bhat I can',t under~nd' is :the dffferent rthings. The rulmg fw:ther clea_rly show that he intends t01 fol~ fessed, "and when Wake Forest('!!~ reaction of -some of .tile ~'tude:nts of stated that if Dave Budd js involved Jlow the commissioner's advice I3IOd · playing, I really get tight.'' . . r;: our scl»ol. · -' in another fight his eligibility wi!l1 , tha.t g,oa.ding_llim will ha-ve no ef- Perhaps ;bhis !Situatilon -should ba

The decision could have . been a be revoked. · ' ·feet, it w.:ill .l!la.ck off. An<l ~ looked' into. l'ot worse. Somebody could have ONE REFUTATION is tha.t Budd·, begins to apply all of his· easi,Ly. been ·suspended; we oould Budl:l, as' a re3ult . energy to .ba.sketbalil ih.e ClOWd well ·have been fined· or our- athletic of t.hiS· decision, i be the ,best plaiyer in these :pa:r.ts. In. :the intereslt 'C1! variety sOme­

o~ lll'Oillina.ted Dr. D. T .. .Murplg! of :tbe phlll.osophy depa.rlt;ment ~ Magnolia Queen. Who kniiiWs; · tbis ma.y start a fad. ·

relations with. Carolina could ibave will lbe a marked : . since Diclcie Hemric. . ibeen tempo-rarily teTminta.'ted. ma.n every time i: . FINALLY, ALTHOUGH I per-

This, it SEEms to me, would have he steps on a:= ·soOO.J.I.y- .halte to> see our gaine :wlitJb.. been ;the w-o:rse penal~ of all, for court. I don' t ' Carolina. moved away, it might although we haven't won a -basket- think so. Whetbi- :· · 13'el"Ve Uhe desired pur.plose. The iiiL-ball or football game from them ~ we reafu:e i~ ' nooent w!i1l have to su:f:fler :witJtl sinee I have ibeen 'in school, 1 wowld or not, D a v rthose hot-head~ few . who were imagine it to .be a ,pretty enj~yable Budd's guilty in this ase and perhaps experience. acti0011s have a.l- student ~n wil!l -come to~the .

"Dr. Bvadbury, d.tt ~the ~ ges.t cockroaoh I ever saw. I ed upon the and IDt" ran

BUT THE THING TErAT I ca.n- readyt made hl.m point where !l;hi.s sort of thlilng 'Will not Ulllderstla.nd .i-5 'how we could ex- a. marked ma.n. BURNS no longer 'be condoned:. I:f lit does,

~ climbed up on chair and · r a. n

pect rt;o get off scdtrfree when the lThlis reveals n~ arnd this .ool'!t of .ilhmg lis SJbopped flaTeup 'l'eiCeived naJ!;ito:na.l :reeogni- ing to our opponents that tlMy . ful" g100d, the decision Willi have

· Jv e_r me. I screa1ned and

tion. An<l d:on't forget :bhe evidence d!i.dn't adrea<liy! know. Pa.rtieulu"ly · ibelped oo. Illruddy ca.me wiith a. sh~gu!Il. lit -was awwa.l" . Student Rights

Are Pondered By Universi~y dom for students has c~me up at the UniV€rsi!tiy of California in Berke­ley, Calti.

Professors there have studied a prop:os& to witlhhold eentai!Il iin- · fonnatiOID from prospective employ­ers of SJtud~:n.ils.

The DaiLY' Galif~rnian,. S'tudentt newspaper art the. university, said the issue arose w:hen, dlll1iirilg loyalty~&eeur.ity chedi!s, 1lhe Civil Service, 1\liljrt;a.ry Intelligeoce a.nd Federal] Bureau of Inveslbigation requested information on prospec­tive emplOl)llees. The information in question could not be called "re­lrruted to 'the classroom."

I' The pr-oposal studied by the prl>­,fessors is till!i.s: : · ·- ·_ ·-- · Champions Freedoni:

"This faculty asserts that free· dom of discussion in the classroom and i-n academic consuilitatdon ~s-­

, fundamental to higher education. The essential ireedom of a un'i­verslty can be seriou~ly jeopa.r@-

, ized if argument and expression oif opinion •a.J."e 'inhibited, pa'l'tieu­larly in rth.O<Se subjeCts whidh are· ihel'd cont"r'oversdal in some qua.r.tet-8 · and at some moments in history.

/

"There:fore, reports by a teach~ er _.Concerning !the beliefs, autitudes, activiti€s and wssooi.astions of a student regarding reli:gion, ~­tics and public affai:rs in general : are nolt ]l€TIIllissable when the re­.potts are ba.sedt on inf-ormalt'ion ac­quired by ·the teacher 'in the course of inst~tion OT in t:he coul"ISe of Olbher student . - teacher rel.atiom that inv~Ive the student aca.demiic program_"

Get Information Emplowers gene:re~Lly get in:for­

ma.ti'on on students· :by 'askilllg their university professors and officials.

Explains the Daily Oalif<Yrniian: "Questions regardi:rug s-tudenlt per­fonnance :in the classroom, wbe1llmr .students -we>re lazy, .Jo-ud.In;>uth.s or cheaJted' in ex;aaniina'tions, are alii. logicrul amd answerable acctmti;ng to the committee's (Pcr."'fe!}sors') staltemenrt. Tille comm.ilbtee ~lieves, -liow€ver, hat qus1Ji.on:s regarding po1i:tics, religion, activities and as­sooaltions should li~ 1Je answered 'if the Unive:ooity wants to be re­garded as free:.

"The pro~ Tesolution, ac­cording ·to 1lhe com:mititee, is not intended to criticize ·· lthe govem.­ment's I()ya.Ety-secw:'.i!ty program, but ,fu sarfeguard students partici­pating in :fundeme.ool universilby i'IliStiructio-n •and counseil!ing • • •

"The major reason for the pro· posal, according to the committee report, is that if students knew their religious and political beliefs w&e noJt firee from facul!ty re­-sponse to 1oya.li!Jy'..seeurity inquiriea, !the :timidi:ity .tba.t prevali.ls among •many Ito h01ld di.:fferent an<ll new ideas a.nd Ito expT~eSS them would

· erupt into a fear of social pres-sure ••• .,

Officials Reply

..

By JOHN ALFORD

Committee Of One ..

In .the midst of a lot of riotous and uneffective clamoring about one James Weaver and some school named the University of North Carolina, there is, fortunate­ly, a more organized . and mOtre pleasant arrangement of sounds.

fl'wice within this week Wake Forest students will have the oppo-r· tunity t() hear good·music. No doubt the very words "good music" will fotce some eyes to the next page; no doubt, they will be the ones who prefer noise to music '<unless, Clf course, they just don't happen h like what they are reading-which is quite probable).

First Group The first group to appear is the

Quartetto Italiano under the spon· sorship Oif the Chamber Music Series. This series was begun, in addition to the regular Concert­Lecture Series, because someone thought that it was needed and co.uld succeed. So far as I know, it is st.cceeding under the able leader­ship of Dr. Elizabeth Phillips. The group's membership has incr.eased over last year's, and enthusiasm seems to be getting greater.

Attendance at the College-spon· sored coocerts, under the guidance of Dr. Charles Allen, has increased also.

The admirable thing about both the Chamber Music Series and the Concert-Lecture is that people like Dr. Phillips and Dr. Allen have taken an interest in such things that pro!Vide some cultural opportunities for an otherwise culturally-devoid college.

A Se'rious Jlobby Both persOOlS have ·taken the

series under their care as some· thing of a serious l).obby and have worked conscientiously toward hn· proving ·the series. Dr. Phillips, and those working with her, have pre- · sented a progr-am so far this year which is rapidly conforming to the "ideal'' chamber 1 music tradition. And Allen's preview of what is in store for next year through the ef­forts of the Concert-Lecture Series is hardly short of unbelievable. ' I do not see how ANY student, no matter i:f he has a quiz the next ·morning, can afford to miss this week's music program-Or any pro­grams to be offered in the remain· der of his college career. - Perhaps you don't like anything "less" than Fats, but it is more than likely that if you are subjected to. just a Jew programs this semes· . ter, y011 might find your tastes <:hanging. Go even if you have to say like one student, "I might as well go,; I paid for it."

This ds a. .true st~ We W'ond.er how !If :flee},~ to be .seduced by a HUGHES c<!Ckroach.

We hope 8'0IIle of: tJbe money tO be pledged rto the school 'this sprinia will go fo:r pencil s~. li!_:a :the scienoo ibuildling thiere ara o.nly two. . -_ I

A studenlt was st.Gpped ca.rryiJifr a. pelt skunk "!into a gym the other ~

"You . ·can'lt ;take tha.t tmng in there,"/ said the coacl!.. ·"'11hink of the odlor inside."

"Oh, :that's 19il1: l'ligh,t," . .the Ill4l1ll ·assured him. "l!e'l!l g~ uSed ,to lilt same •as _ J. did."

· TWO-way cOd-e: Dear Dad, i ::

. Gue$$ what I . n~ mo$t .. of. That'$ right. $end it along. Be$'t wi$shes. Your $on, RU$$. _. · .

,. Dear RUSSI, : _:, . . ·, . ' - . NOttnDg-ev~r ·hapPens here. We

kNOw you likie !Your school. W:rliibe. , u..s aNObher lel;f:;er. J!lim. was .asking !81bou't you at NOon. NOw we nwst. i>ay g.ood!Dy. As ever! Dwi.

. "'FOT goodness sakes, use' both hands," screamed the girl :l.n tbe •.speed!in1g auto.

"I ean't," w.a.s :the reply, "I have· to -drive w.ith one."

A coed' was talking alxmt the ·book ;being discJlS!Se'd in iflhe ~ circles !this month, OIIbcher !in the Rye. "It's a. good -ibiook, f!Very ather word d~ a·cuss word, but i~s .g<)od a.nyway.'' ~ ',zn!ind?

' ' ~ . . My favorite Dr. William S:pea:a

s!toey: . . The sstudellJ!; was lliJstless wnd

ch'oowsy 'in the physics lecture. Die professor arouSed him suddenly witb the question "WhaJt is electricity?'"

The Sltuden.t shifted, ''WeLl, uh, - thalt is, I knew but now I've for­.gotten."

"That rea:lly is a shw'rne.'' Speas said. "The only per.sool: on eartib. who ever knew wlJ,aj{; electTdc:ity was •. and now he's focgotten."

A Wake .Forest English pro­fessor :was ,preparing :to read to his clas,;;. _a. poem, "The Wlilbheri!ng Daisy." He s~ed at the page a . mdnute, 1lhen exclaimed, ~·on hell/ who wants <00 :re8.d about· ''I'he Withering· Dais.y~ a.nyi}Dow,'' threw t'hie poem aside and wenlt >On wJt:.b the ledure. · ~

·' It was tw~ ·.Situdents, thougih, who

- were' ~onsid~ring the present world situation. "W)hBt," liiSlred one. "would you 'd!Y'if you knew the world were coining to. a.n' end! lin five minutes?"

"I think," ·;tlbe -roth~ mulled, "I'd try ·to get a: goOd seat.''

Dr. Peter __ Elkin, the Australian professor !t:eaCihing English at the Co11ege 11h!is · sem&ter, 'W'86 . dig­ging lthr'ough the English office tr~ can recently. A coed godng iby commemrt;ed IQI1 it. ·

"Well," Ole quipped, "how else. do y'ou expect me !to get my lunch?"

'Grants Do Not Swindle. Athletes'

Then there was 1lbie political SIClienoe student last week who WM coniidlering, o-ut ioud, Ub.e imposSI[­bilitlyt of quick mab~liization of the United States' armed forces .. "You could !pUt back m>lio umtfom1 1lb.e

A recent attack on atlhiletic scholarships by the pres5.uetit of Yale University bas drawn sharp criticism from · 6e'Ve.ral CQllege ail:lhleti<!'" officialS!.

In a speech at Johns Hopkins University. Dr. A.· Whitney Gris­wold, the Yale president, called the scholaishlps "one of the great­es-t swmd:l€ ever perpetrated bn hmerican yQIUtb."

Griswola said, "Its aim is not the educaltion of yo-uth, but the enJterta.irunenrt of 'its eld~rs . . • not t!Jh.e welfare of the athl-efbe hut the pleasure of the spectator."

Y a!le is a member of tJhe ley ' League, which · prohibits a.iillletic scho,larships. ,

Goheen. ,Agrees . Pre6idenll; Roberl F. Goheen of Princetoo, a.n.other member of the eiighrt-university Ivy League, .said

he was in · complete agreemenJt wilt!b. Gv1swold's views·.

0. B. Williams, chaimtan of th-e U ndversilty of T ex •a s' athletic council and president of lflhe South· W!eSit Oon:ference, t e :r me d tihJe scholarships "a fine thing." . He sa!id "Aill I can say is that iis

one man'·s opinion and ilt cer.tailrl.y ism •t mine. Atihleil;ic sc!b.Q'lax\shi.ps here ha"e ena;bled students to g:e!t an eduea'liion when they migiblt nort have gotten one otherwise and I C8/ll 't see were rthere is any swindle , connected! with !tibalt."

Kermit l..aaha, commissioner o:f the Fronti~ Conference in the SourtJhwest, echoed, "A swindle, my eye. If albhletic scholarships IIU"e a swmdile why nQt use the ~e y.a.rdstick in measuring !llhe value

' of sch&arships awarded for other . a.Ctiivities?" ·

. nien who have just got oUt." "But;• the vi>61;era.n collltlnued, "!it would take me tWo weeks juJS!t to squeeze into lll!Y' old -uniform.''

_Coonmissi'oner E. L. Ro:rmneY' of the Skyline 'llimerenee eommenlted, .. I >doubt 1lul!!; I!Jhe rep~ves oif many of OUr educatiOI!lal lin· sb"'tuiti<ms feel bt our preSent "I undel'Sita.nd," he said, "that rules 'in rESpeidt to add! t() athletes>, YlOW C!LlTy a. dbaplain lbo pray for· which .includes a.thletic schi>la.r- :the team." - · Sha.ps, is perfect and without :weak- "Yes, :tlha.t;s right." neiSSes. But .the program -does in-- "W~mld y<>u m'ind introducting elude many favorable ieatures, and me to him?" · Should he effeet unrbil sometb'ing "Be glad to. Whici:n one do you bebter is offered." · wanlt, the offensiv;e cbapla.:in. or

Fronltis W. J'Ohnston, dean· otf dlhe defensdve chaplain?•• the faculty of , Davidson llillege _ and president of· the Southern Con- AH the names on the liist of ference, ~id: students inJtlerested in j<>in'ing Bill

"I think 1lhe s.tarl:emenlbs ba~ ·a . Shepherd'~ !Pt!=P 6.nd .booster clubs 'measure 1()£ ll:rruth, iblllt -that !llhley are real, for a ohange. Md of the are exaggerated· both in degree and :names ihat get put On. tp<>StOO: !lists lim kind; I 'c:ton•t think lb'hey a.pply around here are ficlii.tiiou'S. And has to eveir,v 5ehoool tlbait gives athletic ~ ~ b~n a. Jis.t" that did not SlchOOI.rship.s or .to. all ;who _ .. include at least one, OJ.ouSe!notber's -_~pt them." '. '. . ... :.·-· . name from' the .girl!;!. dormitories?

·-

,. In Of ' ' :_Is

lege ~· ..... ..,.,.b "will similar It added ihat both McKinney for their order.".

Page 5: Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week. Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the Dayton basketball

' .

..

··Invalidity ... Ot -Tickets

-\1~ :. Decried (Continued from page 1)

/

\

Melton Gets $3.,ooo· Stipend . . . . , , - I - .. , I' • - -~ - - ·~ .. • ....

By .JOHN;.AJ..FO~ _ · Charlt:s Melton, w&ke Forest:

Senior, 106t a bet Wednesday-· night and was happy about it. He had pronused everyone in his suite in Davis Dormitory that if

._ He is a. bio~o~- major at . the. more- for the fellowship duriilg ' college· and ·was ··recommended the ~s holidays. · -for the award by Dr. Charles Melton re-entered Wake Forest Allen and· Dr. H. Branch Howe,- tbis year after an absence of a both of the Coliege biology de~ year during which time he attend-

, partment. · ed Georgetown College in George-11e reprimanded and ad~d that ,.,. nn,y future' unsportsmanlike act

on his part or intervjmtion in any way with an opponent will .cause . Ills: d,igibility to be terminated.''

· he won a· fellQWsbip, he would tteat them all to a free off-cam­

-pus-:meal. ·

, He was interviewed in Balti- town, Ky. He ·was a student at Wake . Forest during both his freshman and sophomore years and had ·originally planned to maj01r in philQsophy.

1 In another part i,f \the- state­ment the officials said the Col­lege 'J•regrets the incident" and "will take 'Steps Ult see that · a similar incident does' not occur.'~ It added that "the College feels ihat bOth Coaches McGuire and :McKinney should be commended for their attempts to maintain order."

· Executive Committee The ACC ex~tive conunittee

is made up of Mortimer <;aplin !• of the University of Virginia.

R. R. Ritchie ·of Clemson. College and Dr;- H. BrOOks James of North · carolina State Co-llege.

Three. ·meetings of Wake Forest officials led tQ the final state ment.: Present at.- tlie final .meet-

- ing Friday were ~Wake ~orest President · Harold·'· W. Tribble; William Gibson, athletic director; Horace (Bones) McKihney, bas-. ketball coach; Jesse Haddock, assistant athletic. director; Mar· vin Francis, si»~ publicist; and members of the sChool's commit­tee on athletics, which ·includes Dr. Forrest W; Clonts, cbainnan; Dr. E. G. Wilson, Wor~ Cope­land,- · Russell .Brantley, Dr. Gaines M. Rogers, Dr. T . .::J. Turner and Dr. George Griffin.

Carried. Out Another recommendatiOiD of

Weaver was partially carried out before it was made. He ·asked "that student leaders on both

' campuses be solicitt1 ta counter­act the prejudice and ill will which has been engendered over the past three years; , that they . do.this through appeals to the., stu­dent ·groups and to .. the student

. bodY.- at large, and by any ot}ler .'--~tive .. means at tl].eir com-.. Jnand.'' . -

. Athletic . Director Gibson con­tacted athletic officials at Chapel Hill two weeks ago abQut having

1 student leaders at the Univ:ersity . meet with Wake Forest leaders. He said Friday, however, that no word bad been r~ived. yet from the Chapel Hill men. ·

. - ····' .

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BEN'S of Wake Forest

· · Thaf night he and his suite­mates·went in a body to the Polo Grill. where Melton covered the check--$12. He says that he didn't mind the extravagance. The fel­lowship is for $3,000.·

He was awarded the grant· by the Johns-Hopkins· Universtiy in Baltimore, Md., where he intends to do· graduate w01rk in the de· partment of biology next year. 1 The award is divided into two

sums, one for tuition costs and the other for a generlu stipend. $1,200 is the amount given bi:ril. for tuition. The .remaining_ $1,800 will require not more than Six hO!Ul's of laboratory assistance a week. · ,

1 Melton says jokingly ~at he can .. probably work for six hours a. week all right."

CHARLES MELTON • • • lost a bet • , o ·'"

AA UP G rozp· PiKA's X,_op Lis_t _:,

According to Melton's inter­viewers, only about 15 or 20 stu­dents will be accepted by the graduate school of biology this year. He intends to study experi.­·mental embryology and develop­mental genetics.

· He has not yet accepted the fellowsbip because he is in' com· petition also for a National Scienee Foundation scholarsbl> and is in the f'mals of the Wood·

, row Wilson 'fellowship competi· tion. \. .

He does not really expect to get anything else, he says, but "you never can tell . ., At any rate, after his surprise at receiving Ole fellowship ~m Johns·Hopkins, he is not making 'any more bets.·

Keeps Mum liltramural Cups Given About Renort , Trophies for academic record. ton is president of tlle fraternity.

r · Greek Week events, and intra· The overall sports trophy went A colnmittee rePorted Friday· mural athletics were. preseDted tQ Pi Kappa Alpha. The Pi Kappa

to the loeal ~P:~ of Thei by the InterfraternitY Council in Alpha men copped three of the Aanerlea.n .Assooialtion · o:f Uni-/ dlapel Tuesday. · 1 trophies for individual sports. ver.si·ty ProfessOl'Si on a· proposed · , Kapp~ ~ha received the· Th9f were named winners in chanter change, ibuJt . the report!; award for academics. Tom Carl- volleyball, snftball and water was illot made puib-lic. · polo.

&ec<>:znnrendaillions made m the ' Sigma Chi won . the basketball report wlilll. go .Ito ;llb.e faculJizyo · APO Service trophy. Monday, March 9. l>r. David L. Greek Week trophies went to. SID.'lley, president of tbe cbapl;eT, Fra' t To Vote two fraternities, Sigma Phi Ep-said his group feels the com- silon and Theta Chi. Sigma Phi miltltee's re!W¢ is "unfinisihed Epsilon won first place in the business" until ]t is presented Ito Spring semesoter officers 'Will fraternity sing during the special the faculty. be elected by members -of Alpha week. Theta Chi placed first in

Tih.e report concern:.s the change Phi Omega seiyice f 1,aternity ·.in field day. , . propooaed for. the "Wialre Forest about_two weeks. The organiza.-... Dick Burleson, ella~! chair~ cllm1teir 'by the 1958 Ba.:pltist. Stalte. t'I·o·n ~. ;<- -ve·· -.. •-m.-t.;,tirig. -·;JT;~k(ia,v'·, man, . pre~d the ttophies, ·eon<vEll!tlion:- :A:t a meetiing in ·Jan:.· W1lll ·•w .., """ -t~ "' which were ,received by repre-uary, the. chapter vated ,tlo set ·at wliich 'the elections will he dis- sentatives from the various up the commitrtee. The sugges-- cu3Sed. fraternities. The presentation is tion. was made iby ilhe group's Students intereslted in -joining an annual ceremony SpollSO'red comzni!ttee ozi .a.ca~ic f~~m. · th f aternity have been invited b:; the IFC.

Chairman of the· mvestlgation e r ------' 100 llltltend the Tuesday meeting. group is Franklin R. Shirley o:{.- wh'ich will he held at 7 p. m. 'The lthe .speech. department. sp,ring rt~JSh program for new

Organists To Tour Wake Forest . organists belong:..

ing to the local chcipter of the American Guild of Organists will go. to St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Winston-Salem today. There they will inspect the Skinner Or­gan, to be shown them by organ­ist Mary Cash. They will leave . at 3•30 p. :m. from the rear of Wirigate Hl~ll.

members is now under way,~­cording ,to Rresiden:t Bill Owens. Former Boy Scouts make up the grroup. . . .

Work· on the- student. pi=ic­pa.rk, which w:;a;s;,. · Sltamed l.aSit yea'!:, has :been ·resumed. Owens sa!id the park should be rea.dy f.or UJS·e in a few weeks.

Several menibera attended a d•is·tri-c.tt .meeting last week end in Easton, Penn. ·

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Honor Group '

Inducts ,Coeds Eleven coeds outstanding in-.the

School <Jf Businea~ Admimsltra­·tion were initiated Thu.rsday night i.n1o ;Delta Kappa Nu, hO>noraT:V business fratm'Ili.ty. for ~

·women. ' . · The new members are Jean

Da!liel, Janelle · Smit:h, Anna Ruth Clll'll."ent, Lou Littlefield, J-ean Hobby, Eleanor Taylor, Bil­lie Keith, Eve1ym Yelton, Phyllis

· Johnson, Sandm Bright and Caroi,r.n Paschwl.

All of ·the girls are at lea;;;t juniors t~,nd have ·maintained a b.igh ove1•al:J scholastic average.·

The initiaJtion meeting was held at the home ol Miss Jeanne Owen, professor in lthe busine·.:;s school. Miss Owen spoke on tlhe insum.noe field and •the mem­bers discUssed the possiblity of establishing a businesS .library. They came Ito no conclusion.

Dances s'-'·-a:.a'-> ..... L<UL.._,....._,

Bv Student Union . (Continued from :page 1)

and the junior class will look aftei" plans and .decorations, Semi­formal chess will be worn, and the dance will be held at the Winston-salem Elks Club. · Two small dances will be held

March 21 and - April 24. The March affair has been termed a "march winds" dance, to be semi-formal and held at the Elks Club. The April 24 affair will be a lawn dance in front of The Barn. A combo will play~

Suinnaer Canap VVork A representative from Winau­

kee 1Jsland 'Damp in New Ha.mp­Sibire w.ill ibe on the campus TJ:mrsda.Y' Ito mterview students inlterested in summer .camp work. He will speak to Sltudienlts in the office of Aeting Dean E. G. Wil-sbn at 2 p,.~m. .

.Stud:elllts can sign up for inter­views in li;he dean's office. ·

TOPS IN DRIVE-IN ENTERTAINMENT

Winston-Sale-in Drive-In Sunday Thru Thursday!

CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF-"Big Daddy" Burl l;ves, Elizabeth Tay-lor, Paul Newman

and HOT SUMMER NIGHT-with Leslie Nielson

Friday and Saturday-Triple Feature

TORPEDO RUN-Glenn Ford TARZAN AND .THE LOST SAFARI-Gordon Scott DECISION AGAINST TIME-3rd Hit! . . .

Application Blanks Are·

. . -· ~ .

lt(;adfNow (Continued from page 1)

for s.everal more years. Application blanks can be ol>-

. tained at the information desk in Reynolda ·Hall, in the office of

. Acting Dean E. G. Wilson or from committee 'members Deane and Janet Binkley. Dr. Kenneth Kee· ton, adviser for the project, also

- has the blanks. Interviews of all applicants will

follow the March 21 deadline for · receiving applications. The com­mittee will conduct the inter­views. The committee's. choice will be made known by April, but . the . approval of the Student Leg­islature will be" necessary to make it final. · •1 The applicant need not be .ma· joring in a foreign language and he do.es not even need to know the German language, Deane said, although these factors will be taken into consideration. · Information to be included on

· the application blanks includes a student's quality point average and a transcript of his college record, which can be obtained in the registrar's office in Reynolda Hall.

No students in the school of law or school of medicine will be eligible, but the program js open to all students in the schools of liberal arts and business ad-rr.Wnsttation. ,

One question asked is "Will you return to Wake Forest after ·the conclusion "<Jf the foreign student exchange program for at least one year?"

Kiwanis Official To Speak Here Ci:rde K Glub, newly organized

on the W·a,ke,:Forest. campus! will . heal" a JGwanis ofitCi·ar·-froon . Wins.ton-Sri.lem speak - WedneS­day.

Charles Penuel, inunediate past president of the Twin City Ki­wa:rris Club and a member of the group's board' of directom, will .speak. He is an official of Bell Telephone Laboratories.

About 30 men student.:; have been dnvited .to tl:ie meeting. The seven char.ter members <Jf the group will choose 16 men to join the organization, which is affili­ated w1th Kiwanis.

(0)>t ~•aH!:i ysatj Mous C>f- SfOH U.lO-!j- 'iO+JMS

ei!A NN 3d s~ 3 3 1S S't ~ 3 dO G3 ss 01. ~a 0 E) '!I d 13 51 H::l

= OOI!l.L.OU .. ~~anw 33NS or 3J\~3N

A s J.::l'!ld!'oll '!I 1008 HJ'VH ~ '!I ..!.IS .. SIS 3 L"ll J. ::> v• t-=.1:•, 1 v H J.lM S>IOOH S'<:l /\V ,.t.SII•U.XJ'Ini)l •

="""""" 3N Ol. s \;/:) Vd .,antf'O'!ItB'I\,. d I )I 5-

t13MSNV 1CD>f

ACROSS !.'Between a bop

and" a jump 6. Animal from

Green Bay? 9. Wallencountered

on some dates 10. Miss Gardner

ad infinitum 11. They attract

eyes 12. Kind of stand 13. lt follows yo"u

down South 14. Don"t get

caught in it 16. Gal who looks

like unmade bed 17. Marilyn's one 18. Kind of do 21. Half a song

at Yale l!2. This makos

a profound · impression 25. With lemon

in your mouth 26. All you need

to get ahead 27. Paint_ 28. Snick and -29. Tackle's rainy•

day facial SO, Chow 34. Kind of etera 35. ~iblical birth

reference 37. She sounds

like money 38. Instrument of

the conniver 40. TemJ>le, but far

from Philly -1.2. Flipped 43. Horse & soap_ 44. Rains marbles 45. But she

may not be a cheap date

DOWN 1. Got beyond

first base, illicitly

*

2. Are you smoking 'em? Good!

S. You're brave iC you're . UBing this

4.Pets in confusion

5. Manhandle 6. He gets

the air 7 .. Meow from

girl on phone? 8. A good place

for "hots" 9. Rock popular

in Ireland 16. Early mominc

cut 17. Overimbiber 19. It's good in

the hole 20./What Pop

saw in Clara Bo'IV

21. Crosby cat 22. Gnatty crowd 23. Kools' mild

refreshing ingredient

24. Right on target

25. Drink not favored bY 17Down

27. Favored receptacle of 17Down

29. Pinocble or gin maneuvers

31. Dress up 82. Somethmg to

live fQt 38. Aqueous

!!lolutions 35. Favorite

vegetable of this generation?

86. The first man to break it wins

' 39. Point in compasses

41. Short general _

* *

OLD GOLD AND BLACK MOIIId.a;:r, M;areh 2, 1959 PAGE FIVB

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Page 6: Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week. Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the Dayton basketball

PAGE SIX :M:Gnday, March 2, 1959 OLD OOLD AND BLACK

8 Firms To Discuss . ·Variety Of Vocations

Eight business firms will squeeze 1 sentative will interview only those a series of interviews into four days students who took and passed the this week, as seniors talk to firm National Security Agency examine­representatives about jobs. tion given on tb.e campus in Decem-

Burlington Industries, Inc., the ber. These interviews will also be Norfolk County Public Schools in given Tuesday and candidates Virginia, and Uni<>n Carbide Cherni- toward any degree will be talked

- cals Co. will all send representa- to. tives today. The State Mutual Life Assurance

· ~ Burlington Industries is concern- Company will . visit. _Wedne.sday. ed with students who will be getting Sales and actunal P_os1tmns Will be business administration, accounting, open, stu~ents ':'orkm~ toward: any liberal arts, technical and general degr~ will be J~terVIewed, With a degrees in June. The positions the special ~mpha~s placed upon company can offer include manage- mathematics majors.. . ment training programs in manu- Math MaJ~rs , facturing, administration, produc- The New: York Life Insurance tion, control, accounting, industrial Company will come ~e sam~ _day, relations and sales. · to talk about actunal positions.

Teaching Jobs The Norfolk school jobs will be in

high schools in that area.

. Mathematics majors will be the students interviewed. Juniors ma­joring 1n mathematics will also be interviewed by the company with an eye toward its summer pro­gram.

Chemical marketing is the field which Union Carbide Company will offer to, chemistry and general science students.

Sales and sales management openings for students in business administration will be offi::red Tuesday by Hallmark Cards, Inc.

iNational Security Agency has at­tached some strings to, students whom it will interview. The repre-

Sales positions with the Upjohn Company will be the last jobs of· fered during the week. The com­pany's spokesman w i 11 talk Thursday to biology, chemistry and physical education majors.

All the inten>:iews will take place in the· placement office on the first floor of Reynolda Hall.

14 Soloists To Perform On Tuesday

Fourteen voice soloists and two string musicians will present a "town and gown recital'' Tuesday in the lower auditoll"ium of Wingate Hall.

Musicians from the Winston­Salem area, as .well as College Stu­dents, will be on the program. They are all students of Dr. Clifford 'Bair of the College department of music.

Secular and religious songs, sol~ cantatas, oratorio and o.pera arias will be included in the program, with some special pre.. Easter re­ligious selections.

Several concerted music selec­tions for solo vwce, ·strings, organ, piano and mixed voice ensembles will also, be heard.

The program, which will be open to the public, will begin at 8 p. m.

Soloists w i 11 include these musiCians from Winston-Salem: Jeanne Angelin, Mary Louise Still, Pamela Rhyne, Molly Cox, Gene­vieve Rabil, JoAnne Marshal, Mary Emil Meilstrup ..

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Accompaniments will be provided

Wake Forest.'s Santa. Gives Joy In A-tlanta SpagheHi ·'Pizza • · Steaks • Solads

6,5 0 0 n The D I. a I by Anna Wither Bair, Patricia The student body Christmas party Moore and Ruth Sorrell. for Winston-salem's underprivi-

Selections from Mozart,' Liszt, . ' Schumann, Grieg, Handel, Haydn, leged children has fostered an At-

1\Ionday 5:58 Sign On "' 6:30 Suppe1· Club 7:00 News 7:30 Guest Star 7:45 Vespers S:OO Popular Music 8:30 Proudly We Hail 9:00 Sports 9:15 Classical Bour

10 :il.5 Popular Music 10 :30 Deaconlight Serenade

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12:00 Sign Off ·Tuesday

5:58 Sign On 6:00 Supper Club 7:00 News · 7:30 Pat Boooe 7:45 Vespers 8:00 Popular :Musia 9:00 Sports 9:15 Classical Hour

10:15 Popular :Music 10:30 De~onJight Serenade 12:00 Sign Off

\\' ednesday 5:58 Sign On G:OO Supper Club 7:00 News 7:15 Betty Bruce Howard 7:30 Here's To Veterans 7:<15 Vespers 8:00 Populal' Music 9:00 'Sports 9:15 Classical Hour

10:15 Popular Music 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade 12.00 Sign Off

Thursday 5:58 Sign Gn 6 :00 Supper Club 7:00 Nem~ 7:15 Virginia R~ and SteYe

Creech 7:30 Army Bandstand 7:45 Religious News 8:00 Popular Music

. 9:00 Sports 9:15 Classical Hour

. iJ:15 P9pular Music L0:30 D'eaconlight Serenade .!.2:00 Sign Oft

Friday 5:58 Sign On 6:00 Supper Club 7:00 News 7:15 Campus Scrapbook 7:30 Forward March 7:45 Vespers 8:00 Popular :Music 9:00 Sports l:J:l5 C!assical Honr

LU: 15 Pupular :Music 10 :aO Dca"onlight Serenade 12:1JU Sign Off

Saturday 5:45 Pre-game Music

\

----~--···---··----...-::

6: 00 WFC vs. McCrary Eagles <freshmen)

rforsmart '? fall

wardro•es

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Mendelssohn and several other com- lanta., Ga., step child. WHETHER HUNGRY AT 3 A.. M. OR 3 P. M. IT'S posers will be sung. One early The step child is Serpassfon, an

Moravian selection will be liicluded ru-ganization established by Ralph in the program. James, one of the founders of the Stal~y' s Drivt-ln YWA To Hold 'Prayer Week'

Episcopalians Set Schedule For Lent

I The Wake Forest Canterbury Club will meet each Monday during Lent, replacing the regularly­scheduled Wednesday night meet-ings.

Meetings of the Episcopalian group will be held in the balcony of Wait Chapel at 6:15 p. m .

Also during the Lent season, Holy Communion will be held in Davis Chapel each WednesdaY':rnorning at 7 o'clock.

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"'PARATROOP COMMAND" starring Richard Bakalyan-Ken Lynch-Jack Hogan-Jimmy Murphy AN AMERICAN-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE

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Wake Forest Christmas party. James, a first-year theology stu­

dent at Emory University, planned a Christmas party in Atlanta similar to the W~ke Forest affair.

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II . _ er's rulin1

-Forest fig incident s dancing ir,

' :Wednes-da: wllich Wea."

. ·- with a. plea. try to- preve

The Wake decisd!ons ag. 'Bibly liifltle w 'WQuld have J

Officia] Offilcials ~

" ibha.t rthe d€14 ,-"..- Carolina ~

Ohe ineide:nt · si!ty. Chance[

· :ltecE!!!>SaTy :f( reprima.ndied 11'or l1lhe; figh Billy 1blame VI

Since aNi any siinilar there is a. POl try to del'ibe miOSt trouible ibnt he its a. l lthe Jteaim, S·t ·~-another :b

AccOrding tered t:he fil catnel'a. can , fm.yom say , hlte ooUl1t fir

Fight 8 An:other :&

out directly i ;pl.iSIYlers to r'i1 the opposite mg across tll first. May:be be wrong. VI the Cawl.i:na

Oooeh Bar rush: :from .tb

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Page 7: Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week. Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the Dayton basketball

,1".

RD.

. By WOODY PEELE

Deacon·· Dope ·'A Coast Conference Commissioner Jim Weav- · 11

; er~s ruling 'on the University of North Carolina-Wake • ·Forest figlht has caused m.ore campus fu~or,than any · · . incident since the Baptist State Conventwn s ban on

dancing in 1957. . . · . · . ·1 :w.eanesuay. mgJ:Jit rthe:re was a· demonstratfun of the •Situ~ents at

- \ J

Tfac~ ~en Coarh, Then· Wigiins Pra~bciDg , ]oil} Demon Deacons For Games . ~y JOHN. HEYDT <Twig)t Wiggins, junior 1from

A Wake Forest player who has Youngsville. · ' By' JOEL STEGALL . · not seen much action this year but Wiggins. follo.wed his high school

The Deacoh track team IS now wlm will probably be counted upon coach, AI DePorter, to Wake . preparing for its final meet of the more heavily next year is Winston Forest in 1956. The Deacon foil'Ward indoor season .the Atlantic Coast · has been ~oached by DePorter for

' . • a total of five years. Con!erence Indoor Games at Chapel High School Career Hill Saturday, March 14.. The coach-player combination

The winner of this meet .will l?_e first began at Yo,ungsville High declared ACC Champiop regardless School, where Wiggins played two of what its .season's recoo:d has years for DePorter. When he was been,. It will represent the ACC in a senior, the forward earned All-National Collegiate Athletic Asso- ·State and All-Tournament hon()rs,

OLD GOLD AND BLACK . Mond~y, March 2, 19~9 . PAGE SEVEN

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· . wlnCih Wea.ver was bU'l'IIICd 'in effigy<. Bil'l! Shepherd ended! :the mlly • .: witJb. a, ;plea for !the s;tudents 1;0 ibe "good sports" from a:llOVI)' on a.Iid

try to preven!l; any fll11tller difficulties tbetween the 1 ltw'o: solrool6. The Wake F-ores.t sltudenros must share 'ilble blame fOO.O: mruch 00: the

deciSiilons agaln,;,t il~ school. If rthey had s.tlaiyled in 'the •Sibalnds poob­'lllbly Rbtle -would have come. of the figthlt and OOlY' 'deciSion . probably wOuld! have been ilighter. ·

ciation cqmpetition. . ave~:aging well over 20 points per

Coach Bill Jordan viewirig the game with a team that won .. the '";~~~~~~~~~~~;::~~;::~;::;::~~~;;;;;;;;~~~ coming meet, . say; that Wake· N~rth. Carolina Cl~ss A champ10n- r Forest will .be .up against high- ship. •

Officials Feel .• ~ Decision »arsh . Offilcials a-t rt;he University .bave made statements lbhalt ;they f~l't

,, tbb:a.t; the dooisi~n was too . ''\Iarsh Oil :thle •Ca:rolin:a :team. Aotuailn.y :> idarolina ,g1(Jit off prebty 1Ji,gh~. Only two repri:man<fEP weJre issued -for • ilh.e incident i1io Oa.:rolina pl..eyiers, Lee Sha.;ffer and Lou Brown. Umver­: si<ty. l(}haooeillor William •C. Aycock ·aa.id thalt he fee~s no T!eprimOO.d! is ·n:~sM'y for Shafier, beeau~e· he. ·~~~it done alnything illo be

caliber oppositiOill-especially in the . In 1956, DePorter w~ . coaching Duke University and University of at Wake Forest, and Wiggms enter-North Carolina teams. ed as a freshman. He became the · Sonie idea of the caliber of com­

petition is supplied....-by the records of last Saturday's Carolina IDvita­tion Games in which Wake F01rest took part. This year is the first tinie the Invitation Games have been held. Big Foua- schooJs were the participants.

freshman club's number tw01 scor-' er, with a 15.4 average. Other members of that team were Dave :Budd, George Ritchie, Char:-lie Forte, and Jerry Mitchell. Mitchell was also a Y <>ungsville High School graduate who had played on DePorter's team.

Played 20 Games

STALEY'S Charcoal Steak House

2000 REYNOLDA ROAD WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. repritnam!died for." Shaffer nonethel~s must !take some \of the blao:ne

for l1lhe; fight. lfe seems :flo !be giLded by GwroY.na. a.nd freed from I

any iblame. wdlaibsoe\'er. _ · · · .

In the varsity 'games, Duke top­ped the scoring with a total of 627!1 points and showed at least three ex­

Last year, glayirig his first year ~~~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:::~~ of varsity competition, Wiggins ~

. Since ali pla.:yers on both 'teams were pu:t on •strict proba.tion and a.ny slm:Har !inciden~ will. e~ger ;the~rr college •basketball oa:reers·, there is a poosibiJl.i.ty that other ;teams 'Will take. ·advantage of :bhis -and try tto del'ibera.tely provoke •one ()f the players. Thwe Budd is .in the m'OOt trouble l8.iS fGr as 'bhis iso conc€'IIl1ed. Budd has a shal'P. temper; but he :is a good! player anld his· loss would be a goreaJb ~~triment fu. ltbe il;eaJnl. Smn~times· even the coolest ibaiJJl pla.-yer will be pl"OVOked 'biyt another :to <»Ine to bllows:~ .

Acco.rdmg 1!10 W-eaver, films show that the Wia;ke FQTaSff; •b_ench en­tered the figobt first. But does · het !bake into eoll!SiideraJt:ion that a· ea.JllC1!a can •only cover one !Part of the coul'lt at ta !time? How could ll.nyooo say wiirth any degree 'Of s.ccuracy which :team was up amd on · the ooWJt first. · · 1 / • ' i i i

• ·Near Wake Bench J

An:other :£Mtor Weaver could! hlv>e ,seen was thwt the figlbrt; broke out dlreclly in front o.f the Wake Ben!abl, so it was easy .:tior the Wake plia.Yie:m to rlse· ir'om. the bench and j()in.in. Th~ Card1ina bench wa~ aJt ~ oppos~te end Q£ the {lount and the time. elemenlt in'V'olved! 1n travel-

tremely tal~nted trackmen. Carolina posted 60 points to nail

down second .place. State placed~ third 'with 117!1-

points, foll6wed by Wake Forest with five points. Sam Jordan and Bob Medlin scored for the Deacs: · In the ··freshman games, UNC was far.ahead with 817!1 points. The next highest SCOil'e was held by Duke,t which, had 27%. Then came State with 19 and Wake Forest with 10.

Aftermath Of Fight

played in 20 games and had a 5.3 scoring average. This year he has .been averagmg ~.4 points per game and has over a r.500 shooting percentage. He is used mainly as a forward but is able· to move into the pivot when the occasioo arises.

He is noted· for:- his strong play off the backbOards as well as fm; his pinpoint passing. '

Wiggins is majoring in physical educati0111. and is a member of ,the Monogram Club. He is married . to the former Sarah Holmes-

·. . ' Weaver ·Gives ·Recommendations

Ing aeross the court could malre it seem lbhoat ·tlhe Wake plaJyters arose Atlantic Co~st Conference Com- has been engendered over the past Carolina to compensate for the ad-fir$ Maybe they did and W~v.er is rlgbit, 'but ll;hen again ihe might missioner Jim Weaver made three three years; that they do this ditional travel involved. 1

J)e wrong. Wab players may have j.mnped in Qtllly Wlhen ~ saw recommendations last week in con- thJ:ough appeals to . the student "9. That Forte and Wiggins of ~~~ t.he (}a.rolina players rusbJng dnwn oourt. . ' · '\ ·. nection with' basketball brawl tx?dy at large, and by any other Wake Forest College and Shaffer

Coach Banes .MeKimley did: his best :to halt Ube players in theh' Feb. 12 betweelt"'~ake Fo.rest and creative means at thE;ir command_ of the-'(fniversicy of North Carolina rush: from .the benoh a.nd then entered the crowd Ito pull them off. the University of North Carolina. Off-Campus Site be reprimanded for their acti()Ji,

Libtie = he done to try to •gel!; the decis'ion changed. Perhaps it. He~e is· the text of the reconunen· "3. That athletic officials of the "10; That Odom of Wake Forest wil~ •be a good odecisi01n ·in tb1e .]onog run. but as things ~&ta.nd now, i't. dations. .. ' . University of North Carolina give COalege and Brown of the Univer-seems <that Weav-er made several bad deCisions .and realLy didn't '_'1_. That Wake Fo.res~ . athl~tic J seriOt-!S consideratioo to playing sity of North Carolina and all .other 1

<take eve:!'Ythlng in.to consideratiO!ll. off~c~als and . other, admlnlstJ:abve 1 their next season's home basketball squad members, who without 1

- · · offiCials carefully study available gat!'e (19.59-60) with Wake Forest authorization, went onto the court,! ~oti~n picture films in an ~fort to: College at ~n off-campus site." be reprimanded_ I

4JB W. 4T[i ST.

Agent For

.·John Roberts Wake Forest Ring$

PA-3-1939. ReynOlila Road Qarber· $hop

~dentify students who left their seats I And Weaver reached these con- '"11. That Budd of Wake Forest m th~ stands and rushed onto the elusions: College be reprimanded-· and ad- ! floor m such. an ungentlemanly and I "1 .. That players' benches be put vised that any future unsportsman-1 unsportsmanlike manner. th . • "d · "d t like act on his part or interventim1 ~:::======~=·=-=:::::::;;:;::~~~~~~~~~~~ .. . . . . . on e scorers si e near m1 cour _____ __ _ ____________ _

_ It Is my feeling that disc1plin!iry instead od1 at either end of the in any way with an .opponent will action fhould be ta~en agamst 'court. 1 • cause his eligibility to be. termina-these students, for, while spectator .. 2 That' ll t d ted ..

t I · th "b'lit h . a presen squa mem- · 1 ~ "Flat. Tops". And .. Crew Cuts" A Spedalt:r - co.n r~ IS . e respa~sl I Y _of ~ e bers on each team are hereby "12. That. the athletic officials c.f

athl~tlc drr~ctor,; his task IS I_m-. notified that they are under strict Wake Forest College assure- . the 1 PC?SSlble .Wlthout. the cooperation: b ti . . th t h · f th .

1

provision of adequate separate .\and suppoo-t. of, the student body. , pro a tson, nlika, tel?-ce or 'lr tany a'nd private dressing' r~om for of-

· • Regi$te:red B.ar~~rs T ~ Ser:ve: You ·Tw6 Doors, From·.The "Rathskeller". ·,.. h ' . unspo.r rna e ~c m any u ure .·.. . .

I _ 2. T at stude~t. leaders on both contest will endanger th~ir eligi- fiCials; that if the room presently 1

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. a p ayers o eac squa be cautioned against a similar oc- and the room sound-proofed. I currence in a University of North · Carolina-Wake Forest basketball The;e ~re 161,264 4-H. Club boys game; and hereby notified that and girls· In North Carolrna.

should such an incident reoccur all =---------------. participants · will have their eligi­biity_

'~4. 'Partcipan'ts' is interpret~d to mean all players involved in the incident and any squad member n·ot playing at the time who1 goes

· ' onto the playing court. . · "5. That going ont01 the playing

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"6. That under no circwristances shall a basketball game between

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Wake Forest College and the Uni- ,-------------·, veisity of North Car:-olina be played in ·winston-Salem, N. C., during the 1959-60 season. ·

Student Tickets "7. That at whatever site is se­

lected fo.r the Wake Forest home game with the University, of North Carolina student tickets will not be honored- 1

"8. That sho,uld the site be far­ther removed from Chapel Hill than Winston-Salem, Wake Forest Col­lege ·will make fair and just pay­

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Page 8: Ill nlll aull lurk - Wake Forest University · :rant last week. Alumnus Jesse Castner v'iSfued the charpter •last week. Delta Sigma Phi A ,banquet was, held before the Dayton basketball

PAGE EIGHT Monclay, March 2, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK ..

ACC Event To Begin_ Thursday e QUALITY PORTRAITS e COMPi..ETE WEDDING

COVERAG&. e CUSTOM FRAMING • , OPE:!'( TIL 9 P. M.

MON.-THURS.-FRI.

New York Tournament ' M Preston Studio lftmp-___. . onogra:q~ PA 2-5742

Will Await The Winner Will Induct L..:N:on~hsi~de~sh::~p~pm~g~cen:te:r _ _:::~~~J ..... Several of the nation's top basketball teams will attack

each other's standings wifu a vengeance this week, and Wake Forest will be in the middle of the struggle.

The Atlantic Coast Conference basketball tournament will be held in Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The winner will be the ACC repre­ientative in the National Collegiate

L~f!:~!!~ Odell• Matthews Motors· .. .. ' .. ' ' . ' . -,

The M<mQgram Club will fonnally D s · initiate 21 men· tomon-ow night at . e oto_ n. l'y.·.:U.outh.·.· 8 o'clock in the left. cafeteria wing. '£ f,' • •.,

Athletic Association's nationwide v II b ]l I toW"nament, to be held in Madison 0 ey a 8 Square Garden.

Teams forget regular season play c f s t ' and throw final league standings to urren por

This initiation will climax a six-

~~ri~~ ·~~or:~·, =~e~ B_ ortr_~-.w.· ard.~,- -___ .- v.,·a .... . have won their letter swe1;1ters and 0 _ , :L' 4 li a yellow "W" around their necks.

the wind during this period, except to determine first-round pairing in In I f } · the single elimination affair. And n ramura s One grodupthwill~.~e a bulletin 638. W • F Sf •..

board an e· ....... er two groups ·-------------...1.-----~~---"'!'--...1 the last place team, if it has the ability, can move from the bottom Intramural volleyball got started of the ACC ladder to the top in last week as fraternity and inde-

will sand the pool table iil -the club· ~--~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiililiiiiiiiiiiiil roorp. and make signS to be placed around the . :campus anno.uncing

three days. pendent league teams ripped into future Monogram Club meetings.

To Be Favored , eacll other in Rey11olds Gymna-

Frank McGuire's Tar Heels Win siuvm.ll ball - d ob' b b · th t o ey lS on a roun -r m

pro a ly ?O mto e. ournament as basis, with nine fraternity and six the favorites. All f1ve 6f the Tar · d d t t Each t · : H 1 tart h be v <ring m epen en earns. eam • eeth s d ebrls f~ve enLea eSrhaa,.ff plays two games per week until the ·THINGS WERE WARM last .'week for Atlantic ~ast Conference

The men being initiated into the club are Ken Glover., ' cross coun­try; Mike CQx, track; Warren Bloodsworth, cross country; Duke Weeks, assistant trainer; Bob Bray, football manager; Buddy Harwood,. football manager; and Glenn Fox, equipment manager. m e ou e Igures. e er t t · 1 ded M t h · C • · · J' W H · d h ted 't' • ·f · · and Dick Kepley give the team ournamen IS cone u . a c IS onmuss1oner Im eaver. e receive ea cr1 Ici~m rom some

height under the boards, york th~ best two o.f three games of 15 sportswriters and school officials and a crowd of abo11t 350 W ak~ Larese leads the shooting, and Doug pomts. . . Forest students burned him in effigy Wednesday night. 'Th~ students, Moe and Harvey Salz !l"'Wld out Entries for softball! tenrus and singing songs about the University of North Carolina.. gathered on

. . horseshoes opened tlus week and · k b D the startmg f1ve. will c1 March 20 PI will begin the plaza and gave chants, then listened to a moe sermon y ea-

Good management reducea :farm costs. --

. The yruye~sitY of North Carolina in soft:h after the. sp:;!g holidays. con Bill Shepherd. Sheph~rd told the students that Weaver ~tudied lS ~ot mvmcrble, though, as shown Play in tennis' and horseshoes will the UNC-Wake Forest f1ght carefully but made a few- JDistakes. b?'_ Its recent losses to th~ ~ver- begin the week before the vacation, 4fter about 40 minutes of throwing firecrackers and answerfDg Slhes of Maryland and V.Il'guua. on :March 23. Tennis and ho.rse- Shepherd, the crowd dispersed. (Old Gold Photo by Grigg.)

For 'Nice Things' Wear And· Relaxed Su'Qurban Shopping

· Will Be There shoes will be on.a team basis, with --------------------,------Both of the schools will be in the five men making the team, two By\ Frosh swnnm· ers

tournament, and they could do doubles and one singles. again what they've done to UNC ()Dee already. Also able to upset the Tar Heels may be North Carer The Scoreboard lina State College. state will be ~ WEEK'S SCHEDULE playing on its home court and Today Coach Everett Case always bas his Theta Chi vs. Sig Eps team in top shape by the time the Sigma Chi vs. Delta Sigs tournament roDs around. MonQgram vs. Celtics

Duke Universtiy is also expected Gym Dandees vs. Preachers to be extraordinarily tough. Wake Tuesday Forest, too, can certainly not be Kappa Alpha vs. Kappa Sigs counted out of the running. Clem- PiKA vs. Sig Eps son College . and the Gamecocks of Lambda Chi vs. Delta Sigs the University of South Carolina P. D. P. vs. Dirty D()zen complete the_ ACC listings. \ Gym Dandees vs. P. D. P.

Deacon Co.ach Bones McKinney Wedllesday will be counting on George Ritchie Theta Chi vs. Sigma Chi and. Dave ~u~d for much of his Monogram vs. Preachers 11conng. D1~e Odom has also Celtics vs. Dirty Dozen shown great Improvement recently. Gym Dandees vs. P. D. P.

Thllrsday Alpha Sig .vs. Sig EP5 Kappa Alpha vs. Delta Sigs PiKa vs. Sigma Chi Lambda Chi vs. Theta Chi

Last Week's Results Theta Chi def PiKa, 15-2; 15-4. Sigma Chi def., KapJ)2 Alpha, 15.0. 15-11. Delta Sigs def. Alpha Sigs, UH;;

\ .

10 Medals Are Won Wake Forest freslbanen swimmers Helms, 4th in the 220-yard a.nJd

c1aill11eid: 10 medals 'last week at lbhe 400-yard :freestyle ev>en'ts; Ba.TTell, Freshman Invitational Swilnming S.th in the 100-yard breastroke a.nd Clhampi-onships, sponsored! BIUJ.ual- 6'1b in the 200-yard brea&troke ly by the University o.f Nol'ltib events; Rathbone, 5'th in the ,160-Cn:rolina. yaxd backstroke.

The event ended the seasori for Bobbit, 4th in diving; Ensinger,

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Winston-Salem. N. C. the Baby Deacons. · t2nd in the 220-yard backli>troke; and I The Deacle't ta.nkmen were led Wa.iker, 6th in the 200- yard burt-

by Matt Helms, John Harrell and ?~rf~l~y~si~ro~k~e~event~~-~· =====~===========~ Gene· Petrasi, who capturei two m-edals eaeh by fl.nishing among the top six poo:ition~ in two events each. . •'

Olthers who placed i:n one or more contests were Bo-h Ratrnbone-, Fred Bobbitt, Sandy Eooinger and Dave Wa.Ike:r. Their positions were:

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El Cam Rey RESTAURANT

THE REYN,OLDS BUILDING 4th & Main Sts., Winston-Salem,_ N. C.

Your Place For: . PARTIES - DINNERS r- DANCES -BANQUETS

. 115-7. - ~===============:==============~=~====~ Kappa Sigs def. Sig Eps, 15-6; 15-12. ;o P. D. P. def. Monogram, 15..0. Dirty Dozen def. Gym Dan., 15-0.

i .c ' . PA 5-5150

FRANK THOMPSON, senior 1ackle on the 1958 Deacon foot­ball team, was recently present­·ed a trophy by Coach Paul Amen ::as the year's "most valuable player." The trophy was given by U&e Carolina Theater in Winston­Salem. Thompson, from Chad-

- bourn, was co-captain of the team. He lettered for three sea­sons, after playing end . on the Wake Forest freshman team. He was a three-sport star at Chad­bourn Higli School and made several · AU-State teams. His teammates voted him •~"most valuable player."

Celtics def. Preachers, 15-0 and forfeit. Lambda Chi def. Kappa Alpha, 15-11; 15-3. Sigma Chi def. Kappa Sigs, 16-14; 15-4. Theta Chi def. Alpha Sigs, 15.(); 15-4. Delta Sigs def. Sig Eps, 16-14; 15-12. Monogram def. Gym .van., 15-0. and forfeit. P. D. P. def. Celtics, 15-12, 19-17. Celtics def. P .D. P., 15-2. Dirty Dozen def. Preachers, 15-0. PiKa def. Alpha Sigs, 15-2, 15-5. Alpha Sigs def. PiKa, 15-13. Kappa Sigs vs. Lambda Chi, POilt­poned.

Fountain Favorites For Co·Eds

?~P~ BAR

e Northside Shopping Center OPEN Tll.L 11:30 P. M.

for the finest in

New ·and Used .Cars

II makes and mode Conveniently Located On The Way To Town

-,

FLOW MOTORS "We Buy, Trade or Sell" 1

VIC FLOW

Broad St.

YOU DON'T NEED CASH

-Your old

tires make the down payment

Firestone Champion

New Treads Applied on Sound Tire Bodies

or on Your Own Tires

, .YSame Tread Width .} YSame Tread Depth"·-,

. ~:{ YsGm.e, Tread Design_ -· ;§: -rsame Tread Quality

;il" AS NEW FIRESTONE TIRES

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SIZE 8.70•111 BLA.CKWALL

Plus tax and racapp11bla_ tire

ALL SIZES AVAILABLE • • •

firestone STORES Corner Fift!' and Cherry Sts. Phone P A 4-;5578

Deacons RoOst ' .. -- ' '

(Formerly The Varsity). ,

"LOCATED IN THE SHADOW OF. THE CllAPEL"'

. -· · .. 1'-· ·.

PUTE LUNCHES SERV·ED -' - ~ ' • >

·12 _Nooilto·a P. M~ Daily

FRE_E DELIVERY TO·D&RMIIDRIES·· FROM 6 P.M. TO 10 P. M~ DAILY

·''

A Geod Place ro··Eat-:. Trj Us Ttday! - .. . . ' - -

PHONE PA 3-9324

· .Exciting · ... for a~ dashing, nonchalant.

look ...

i' poW~TOWN has more· for YOU-· --- _: ·_

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~··:

!CHOOSE' A

Continental SUit :\ or· Spor~ Goat ..

BY WESTBROOKE

It's different ... it's new ... as dashingly · styled as a Jaguar- these new CONTI­NENTALS. Tailored superbly, the jacket,

- lh:as ·narrow peak lapels, side vents a:rid­welte'd pockets. The sliin trousers have stylish-side straps and are equally in fash- . ion wit'h or without ·cuffs. Suits in gray · _a:p.d brown.· s·port -Coats in olive, gray and burgundy. Both in Hop Sack 'material. Sizes 35 to 42, regulars and longs.

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Suits ------------------ $45 and $55 Sport Coats .:.. __ .:.._ $26.95 aiiif $2~.91:

FREE PARKIN G. Open Every Day ·at Central Parking, Inc.; -9:15 to 5:30 and City Parking, Inc., Open Fridays while _shopping with us. 'til 9:00

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'SmART JASHIODS JOI mEn ADD BOYS FOURTJi:.AT CHERRY

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. ·-~el4: WF.B; Resign

·· Pa1

i! i VOLUMJ!

\VF Wi1

. '

To. Ad vi Cha1

~ • A. repot charter ch ·wake For representa· of ·the J. U~v~ity.

The rep; posed to

-suggested 1 · Convention

t!Mfeanven charter ch

Dr.Kem ter presidE the tepQrt:

Text oft s~veral 'we'

I mittee inv ~}>Oirt; whi entire chill

' repott tod~ approved b - Prof. F.J charge of'

! . committee. the content

·· that the cru '' rer unlinist

·bi-ought b whatever a• to take.

. ;:The grou demic freed mendation Keeton appc

Whetber change.-is a of trustees;· could influe

N,l). inieetill called. and ' not schedUil tee. t:Ommit

· proP<>sal "uil . Br.oadus .E;·. 'the conimitb ----IIa~p, wm:'J . '

Of PI l

A ,harpslcb lege ·will giyE .and concert day. .

The event :the. library ·1 sponsored b3 music and a:

Mrs. M311 salem: faculty She studied ill m·19S.5 a.s a' was aw~~rded Qberlin Colle! in 1956.

The harpsil Raruph 1\!Jacl lowa State -G lrota State T~

Her progrru include instn pies of the I: of the histor

_? and a reci.ta \ best composit

-chord as fou difrerent coun

Music from lands, Itaiy, ( Spain. Selectio played as the. gram. · ·

Cadet~ ·To A~

Over 100 RO the drill field l urday night wl Military Ball 1

The-9 p. m. will be held · a Army Reserve

· chestra has , 'be for the dariee.

Formal attirE large number· serve Third A .expected tot attl

Although co­s-bin:g R.'ifles ~ Blade, onlyt cai ibers of the Mil ti'OOl will be afu

A special att will be the pres1 sponsors. Battle Llew Baucom sponsors ~d tl Connie rinyotl Carol Ann Cali Catherine Tread Betty B:rendell, ~

Sp&DSOling the Geer Bnl