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I~ · 2018-03-20 · and Jimmy Taylor. Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager,...

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d' , rioinf: · h, Alpha Y' Frank, ;, PiKA, . .l nomi- 1;. Sigma·· ed, was •Y accla- Council · Tommy Sig;· !d; They >ed; and· \ [aynard, • · 1 . iita . · ··::·.·.··· ; :\' -.· . j;:f .. . ' ·. Black, . I Antly' · ... ·· :d J nlJ:a.·.· ; s. •ed; was y-treas-- coed. ·e class ·ent to, :lement. Ierman, _ Ia Chi; Lees. to __ .. .. /- Miss ·. Alpha. . coed. John >; Miss coeds, Theta ·Sigmll :Alpha ::-:-:: .... ::;,. I __ -@ I . t I ... ·· .I .. / - ··. .•,· . ' ' · ..· { ·c Euzeliaris. Debate · ;:.. ·Whether .. To Ban I':·'' , ·Marilin : '·:: ' : • • # •• ' . ; VOLUME . Debate Team ··· _Goes-·To Meet ·outlatv Joe. Hough and Jim Greene par- Corrupting Influence ticipated in the- Notre· Dame In- A influence is what vitational Debate Tournament at Mi'ss Mauldin termed Miss Mon- South ·Bend, Ind., Friday and roe:· A 'man and his wife go to Saturday. . a ·movie and see Marilyn and · ·;, · v.ar5fti debaters 'par- Clal"k ·Gable. The 'husband 8SkS 'tieipate'd · in· siX scheduled rounds his Wife, "Why . can't you be like of ·on -the national collegi- M·I,U'ilyn'l'' She asks, "Wlly can'b ·ate· debate query, "Resolved:· That you be like Clark?" Soon they I . th!l United State::; Should· Adopt are divorced. · a ·Policy of Free Trade." ,Tim DeVos opened the case for · · rounds were held the negative. "She is not just a among the four top teams at the body-pardon the expression- end of the preliminary six rounds. she is a per.sOnality," he s&id. He and Greene spoke on both spoke of her :talent cHaracter; sides -of the · alter- giving examples to supp,ort his nating and case. sides in each round. "Some say she is taking per- '. '!,.' ''·, Deacons. Overrun Duke In Practice Contest Here, 9-1. I . <Jt.e .. . - ' . . PageS .• Wake Fore,at, Coll-.e! Ni.rth Carolina, .M,arch;22, 1954 NUMBER 20 Mo·nroe? verted use of her natural fea- tures," said DeVos, but she is "simply using her ability to attain· in her field" just as other persons use their ability to attain in their fields. For example, DeVos point, ed out, "MarilY!l Monroe g9t to fame. in her birthday suit; Joe· DiMaggio in his baseball suit." Her Bad Effects Doris Taylor, second affirma- tive, stressed the bad effects of Miss Monroe upon Jf;he people o.f the country, the youth. Marriage, divorce and marriage again show tendency' to lbad character, she said. Men will desire to come home not to a ·girl like dad mar- ried, Miss Taylor said, _but to a. girl like Marilyn Monroe-who serves certain· food -because it looks good on the plate. Sl!1l is defeating the purpose of education, Miss T-aylor said. We go to class to learn dictation and how to speak; then we go tq 111 movie, and Marilyn speaks in a baby voice. · H'l>ugh, speaking for the nega- tive, asked, "What are they go- ing' to do to others who have been married· and divorced 20 times'?" Some thinis, however, are .bad a.bout Marilyn,, admitted Hough; if -eveey woman was like Marilyn, meri would just go ou<t and pick the next one ·ca.me along. . · !Modern-Da,. Venua' "She'· is'' a. standard of what evezy ought to be_;;_in O.n .Six) . . Acclamation Vote Marks Sele("tion Plans c-Liliom' For March 30 JOE HOUGH elected BSU prexy The 1954 Howler has gone to the printers. Editor Guy Revelle says that he hopes to have it out before the end of school. He said that he is not sure of the exact time it will be out. "A few scattered pieces keep it from being complete," he said, "but bulk of it is gone. " Coeds Plan Vote On Other Offices Jean Butler, Charlotte junior, will be president of the Woman's Government Association for the year 1954-55. She defeated Barbara Beals in a runoff election Tuesday night. Barbara Geer was eliminated in the first voting. Jean has been an active mem- ber of WGA this year, serving as a member of the Executive Council, house president of Bost- wick Dorm and a mem'ber of the Social Standards Committee. Copy editor of the Howler yearbook, she is junior intramur- a-ls manager -of the Woman's Recreaticm Association and a member of the Student latue. Jean is a Stud·ent Party candidate for secretary of the Student body. Remaining Nominee• Candidates for the remainder of next year's offices were lected by the nominating board: The slSJte includes Joan 'Glover, Barbara Beals, Isabelle Quattle- baum, for Callie Ann Coughlin, Barbara Geer, Sara Mcintyre, for Johnson Dorm house president. Motsie Burden, Barbara Land, Jean Mason, for Social Standards Committee; Billie Olive, Carol Stroud. Notie Vay W·hite, secre- tary; Miriam Allred, Denny Bax- ter, Jp Ann King, for treasurer; Kay Arant, Marietta P-erry, Doris Taylor, for represenrtative to the Legislature; Sarah Riecke, Lor- raine Munn, Gayle Privette, for Bostwick Dorm president. More Candidate• Minnie Jane Bowman, Louise Clark, Sylvia Mangum, for more representativ>e; Jan Bell, Hilda Maudlin, Helen Puckett, f01; junior· representative; Ann .Lide, Alice Speas, Betty Tribble, for tov.n girl representative. Petitions were submitted by coeds to include Lib Hamrick for Bostwick Dorm house president and Joe ·Chandler for sophomore 1·epresentative. Elections will be held next Monday in Bostwick and Johnson dorms. Names Whip "Liliom," student-directed pro- duction of the College Theater, will be presented in the Chapel Tuesday, March 30, at 8 p. m. Bob Swain, who is directing the play, will play the lead role. Other principals in the cast are Jayne .:imithwick, Genevieve Jardine and Norm Larson. Revelle described the yearbook as having 268 pages-32 more J ohnie Ray Hendren has been named whip of the Campus Party. chron- As whip he will be in charge of when all co-ordination and publicity of the Party. than last year's-arranged ologically according to events happened. A campaign committee will "As far as I know," Revelle work -with him and ·will be re- said, "no other college yearbook sponsible for individual faction.;; has ever used a similar type of of the party." Jim Greene is chair- arrangement. Things may . be a man of the committee. Others are "Liliom" is a fantasy which was written by Ferenc Molnar, a Hungarian, in 1909. It has been described as "a combination of realism, low comedy, a bit of melodrama, a celestial scene and the return to earth of the troubled spirit of the hero woven around a beautiful love story,." Howard Twiggs, Kos Weaver and little hard find, but it's unique." Jim Privette. · Dave Garrett is business mana- The whip and committee were ger of the Howler. Motsie ·Burden named by Coy Privette, Campus and Parker Wi3.son are co-as- Party nominee for president of sociate editors. , the stu!lent body. High Schoolers Vie Here Others- in the cast: are Georgia McNemar, Glen Holt, Mllirtha Cook, Vernon Mitchell, Jan Bell, Barbara Land, Betty Cumby, Kathy Spell, Betty Kohnle, Bob Jordan, Jack Kehoe, Vic Kirkman, Jack Robinson, Monroe Gardner and Jimmy Taylor. Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager, and his assistant is Violet Puckett. Forty-two North Carolina high school seniors competed here Sat- urday for 15 honor scholarships. They were given final tests and interviews. The group was selected from over 250 students who were given e..'Caminations by their local school ()fficia!s last month. Winners of Saturday's final competition will be 'notified by April 1. Ten of the scholarships are for $760, covering tuition and general fees for two years, while five are for $380, covering tuition for two years. James B. Cook Jr., secretary of the scholarship committee, an- nounced the names of the fina- lists. Finalists' Names They were Marjorie E. Colmer of Greensboro, Annie R. Phillips (Continued On Page Six) Ministers Hit BSU Probe Body The committee which is investi-, accept the three men's resign- gating liberalism in the BaptiSit na Lions. Student Unions in the State and One Raleigh minister, who was which recently asked for the re- not present a,t the Association's signations of three BSU leaders, meeting, the Rev. G. W. Bullard has come under fire from various of Temple Church, protested that ministers in the State. the resolution "is not factually Nineteen ministers who attend- correct" and is not agreeable to ed a recent meeting of the Ra- "all of our Baptist ministers" in leigh Baptist Association un- the Raleigh Associa.tiorl. animously joined· in the protest The Rev. Warren Carr, pastor of the committee's request for of the Watts Stree<t Baptist the resignations of the Rev. James Church in Durham, addressed an Ray of Raleigh, the Rev. J. C. open letter to his congregation in . Herrin of Chapel and the which he accused the committee Rev. Max Wicker of D'uke Uni- of "a move which would suppress versity a,t Durham. · report which the convention The Rev. Ray is state BSU- (Baptist State) appointed it to secretary, the Rev. Herrin is make." BSU secretary at UNC and the Hoe suggested that the com- Rev. Wicker is BSU secretary at mittee, headed by Dr. W. Perry Duke University. They have, as Crouch of Asheville, be relieved yet, not resigned. and a new one .be appointed to The ministers' conference of take its place by the N.C. State the Raleigh Association voted to Baptist Convention. The State denounce .the investigating com- Baptist Convention appointed the I mittee for alledgedly going be- present one last fall. yond its authority in offering to Newly-elected president of the UNC BSU, Tom Mauldin, last week accused the investigating committee of not "dealing with the students in good faith." Maul- din continued, "Dr. Crouch and his committee impress me only with their insincerity in dealing with the pt·oblems of the Baptist Student Union." "I do not belie.ve," he stated, "there is any desire on the part of the committee to bring issues to the forefront so that aU may have an opportunity to under- stand what is going on." · The committee wa-s appointed to investigate charges of ism among BSU leaders at UNC and Duke. Dr. Crouch has cribed his committee's mission as an attempt to "help the BSU, not to hinder it." Dr. Crouch has insisted that the conflict is· "a personality problem," not a. battle over "lib- eralism." He said it was "a quest. ion of difference of opinion be- tween members of the church."
Transcript
Page 1: I~ · 2018-03-20 · and Jimmy Taylor. Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager, and his assistant is Violet Puckett. Forty-two North Carolina high school seniors

d' , rioinf: · h, Alpha Y' Frank, ;, PiKA, . .l nomi-1;. Sigma·· ed, was •Y accla-

Council · Tommy ~ha Sig;· !d; They >ed; and· \

Legis-1~-­[aynard, • · 1 .

iita Chi;-·.;/~~ rti.JTh~yt. ~-- .

hv~~:r·. · ··::·.·.··· ; ~~ :\' -.· . ~

j;:f .. tli~-. . ' ·. Black, .

-;~t-'

I Antly' · ... · · :d J nlJ:a.·.· ;

~.endent,. res'i~cnt s. ~·,.ovet· •ed; was y-treas-­coed.

·e class ·ent to, :lement. Ierman, _ Ia Chi;

Lees. to __ .. ~·.· .. /­~e Miss ·.

Alpha. . coed.

John >; Miss

coeds, • Theta ·Sigmll :Alpha

::-:-:: .... ::;,.

I __

-@

I

*~~1 ~~:;:!{ '~~~ .

t I

... ··

.I

..

/

- ··. ~t .•,· . ' ' · .. · { ·c Euzeliaris. Debate · ;:.. ·Whether .. To Ban

I':·''

, ·Marilin Monroe~· ~ : I~ '·:: ' : ~ • • • # ~ •• '

. ; VOLUME . ~~IX

Debate Team ··· _Goes-·To Meet

·outlatv

Joe. Hough and Jim Greene par- Corrupting Influence ticipated in the- Notre· Dame In- A corrup.ti~g influence is what vitational Debate Tournament at Mi'ss Mauldin termed Miss Mon­South ·Bend, Ind., Friday and roe:· A 'man and his wife go to Saturday. . a ·movie and see Marilyn and

· ·;, · The>tw~ v.ar5fti debaters 'par- Clal"k ·Gable. The 'husband 8SkS 'tieipate'd · in· siX scheduled rounds his Wife, "Why . can't you be like of d~biHe ·on -the national collegi- M·I,U'ilyn'l'' She asks, "Wlly can'b ·ate· debate query, "Resolved:· That you be like Clark?" Soon they

I. th!l United State::; Should· Adopt are divorced. · a ·Policy of Free Trade." ,Tim DeVos opened the case for · · Semi~final rounds were held the negative. "She is not just a

among the four top teams at the body-pardon the expression­end of the preliminary six rounds. she is a per.sOnality," he s&id. He ;H~ugli and Greene spoke on both spoke of her :talent a~d cHaracter; sides -of the · qu~on, alter- giving examples to supp,ort his nating bet~een ~firrpative and case.

sides in each round. "Some say she is taking per-

'. '!,.' ''·,

Deacons. Overrun Duke In Practice Contest Here, 9-1.

I .

·'~e~ <Jt.e .. e~·:·V!i/14.·'1~-Af~" . - ' . . ~

PageS

.>.~ .• Wake Fore,at, Coll-.e! w.~ F~~~· Ni.rth Carolina, ~onday, .M,arch;22, 1954 NUMBER 20

Mo·nroe? verted use of her natural fea­tures," said DeVos, but she is "simply using her ability to attain· in her field" just as other persons use their ability to attain in their fields. For example, DeVos point, ed out, "MarilY!l Monroe g9t to fame. in her birthday suit; Joe· DiMaggio in his baseball suit."

Her Bad Effects Doris Taylor, second affirma­

tive, stressed the bad effects of Miss Monroe upon Jf;he people o.f the country, the youth. Marriage, divorce and marriage again show tendency' to lbad character, she said. Men will desire to come home not to a ·girl like dad mar­ried, Miss Taylor said, _but to a. girl like Marilyn Monroe-who serves certain· food -because it looks good on the plate.

Sl!1l is defeating the purpose of education, Miss T-aylor said. We go to class to learn dictation and how to speak; then we go tq 111 movie, and Marilyn speaks in a baby voice. ·

H'l>ugh, speaking for the nega­tive, asked, "What are they go­ing' to do to others who have been married· and divorced 20 times'?" Some thinis, however, are .bad a.bout Marilyn,, admitted Hough; if -eveey woman was like Marilyn, meri would just go ou<t and pick the next one ~hat ·ca.me along.

. · !Modern-Da,. Venua' "She'· is'' a. standard of what

evezy ·:w~man ought to be_;;_in ~ne (Continue~· O.n P~~ee .Six)

. .

Acclamation Vote Marks Sele("tion

Plans c-Liliom' For March 30

JOE HOUGH elected BSU prexy

The 1954 Howler has gone to the printers. Editor Guy Revelle says that he hopes to have it out before the end of school.

He said that he is not sure of the exact time it will be out. "A few scattered pieces keep it from being complete," he said, "but th~ bulk of it is gone. "

Coeds Plan Vote On Other Offices Jean Butler, Charlotte junior,

will be president of the Woman's Government Association for the year 1954-55.

She defeated Barbara Beals in a runoff election Tuesday night. Barbara Geer was eliminated in the first voting.

Jean has been an active mem­ber of WGA this year, serving as a member of the Executive Council, house president of Bost­wick Dorm and a mem'ber of the Social Standards Committee.

Copy editor of the Howler yearbook, she is junior intramur­a-ls manager -of the Woman's Recreaticm Association and a member of the Student Legis~ latue. Jean is a Stud·ent Party candidate for secretary of the Student body.

Remaining Nominee• Candidates for the remainder

of next year's offices were se~ lected by the nominating board: The slSJte includes Joan 'Glover, Barbara Beals, Isabelle Quattle­baum, for vice~president; Callie Ann Coughlin, Barbara Geer, Sara Mcintyre, for Johnson Dorm house president.

Motsie Burden, Barbara Land, Jean Mason, for Social Standards Committee; Billie Olive, Carol Stroud. Notie Vay W·hite, secre­tary; Miriam Allred, Denny Bax­ter, Jp Ann King, for treasurer; Kay Arant, Marietta P-erry, Doris Taylor, for represenrtative to the Legislature; Sarah Riecke, Lor­raine Munn, Gayle Privette, for Bostwick Dorm president.

More Candidate• Minnie Jane Bowman, Louise

Clark, Sylvia Mangum, for sopho~ more representativ>e; Jan Bell, Hilda Maudlin, Helen Puckett, f01; junior· representative; Ann

.Lide, Alice Speas, Betty Tribble, for tov.n girl representative.

Petitions were submitted by coeds to include Lib Hamrick for Bostwick Dorm house president and Joe ·Chandler for sophomore 1·epresentative.

Elections will be held next Monday in Bostwick and Johnson dorms.

Names Whip "Liliom," student-directed pro­duction of the College Theater, will be presented in the Chapel Tuesday, March 30, at 8 p. m.

Bob Swain, who is directing the play, will play the lead role. Other principals in the cast are Jayne .:imithwick, Genevieve Jardine and Norm Larson.

Revelle described the yearbook as having 268 pages-32 more J ohnie Ray Hendren has been

named whip of the Campus Party. chron- As whip he will be in charge of when all co-ordination and publicity of

the Party.

than last year's-arranged ologically according to events happened.

A campaign committee will "As far as I know," Revelle work -with him and ·will be re-

said, "no other college yearbook sponsible for individual faction.;; has ever used a similar type of of the party." Jim Greene is chair­arrangement. Things may . be a man of the committee. Others are

"Liliom" is a fantasy which was written by Ferenc Molnar, a Hungarian, in 1909. It has been described as "a combination of realism, low comedy, a bit of melodrama, a celestial scene and the return to earth of the troubled spirit of the hero woven around a beautiful love story,."

Howard Twiggs, Kos Weaver and little hard t~ find, but it's unique." Jim Privette. · Dave Garrett is business mana- The whip and committee were

ger of the Howler. Motsie ·Burden named by Coy Privette, Campus and Parker Wi3.son are co-as- Party nominee for president of sociate editors. , the stu!lent body.

~2 High Schoolers Vie Here Others- in the cast: are Georgia

McNemar, Glen Holt, Mllirtha Cook, Vernon Mitchell, Jan Bell, Barbara Land, Betty Cumby, Kathy Spell, Betty Kohnle, Bob Jordan, Jack Kehoe, Vic Kirkman, Jack Robinson, Monroe Gardner and Jimmy Taylor.

Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager, and his assistant is Violet Puckett.

Forty-two North Carolina high school seniors competed here Sat­urday for 15 honor scholarships. They were given final tests and interviews.

The group was selected from over 250 students who were given e..'Caminations by their local school ()fficia!s last month. Winners of Saturday's final competition will be 'notified by April 1.

Ten of the scholarships are for

$760, covering tuition and general fees for two years, while five are for $380, covering tuition for two years.

James B. Cook Jr., secretary of the scholarship committee, an­nounced the names of the fina­lists.

Finalists' Names They were Marjorie E. Colmer

of Greensboro, Annie R. Phillips (Continued On Page Six)

Ministers Hit BSU Probe Body The committee which is investi-, accept the three men's resign­

gating liberalism in the BaptiSit na Lions. Student Unions in the State and One Raleigh minister, who was which recently asked for the re- not present a,t the Association's signations of three BSU leaders, meeting, the Rev. G. W. Bullard has come under fire from various of Temple Church, protested that ministers in the State. the resolution "is not factually

Nineteen ministers who attend- correct" and is not agreeable to ed a recent meeting of the Ra- "all of our Baptist ministers" in leigh Baptist Association un- the Raleigh Associa.tiorl. animously joined· in the protest The Rev. Warren Carr, pastor of the committee's request for of the Watts Stree<t Baptist the resignations of the Rev. James Church in Durham, addressed an Ray of Raleigh, the Rev. J. C. open letter to his congregation in

. Herrin of Chapel Hil~ and the which he accused the committee Rev. Max Wicker of D'uke Uni- of "a move which would suppress versity a,t Durham. · ~he report which the convention

The Rev. Ray is state BSU- (Baptist State) appointed it to secretary, the Rev. Herrin is make." BSU secretary at UNC and the Hoe suggested that the com­Rev. Wicker is BSU secretary at mittee, headed by Dr. W. Perry Duke University. They have, as Crouch of Asheville, be relieved yet, not resigned. and a new one .be appointed to

The ministers' conference of take its place by the N.C. State the Raleigh Association voted to Baptist Convention. The State denounce .the investigating com- Baptist Convention appointed the

I mittee for alledgedly going be- present one last fall. yond its authority in offering to Newly-elected president of the

UNC BSU, Tom Mauldin, last week accused the investigating committee of not "dealing with the students in good faith." Maul­din continued, "Dr. Crouch and his committee impress me only with their insincerity in dealing with the pt·oblems of the Baptist Student Union."

"I do not belie.ve," he stated, "there is any desire on the part of the committee to bring issues to the forefront so that aU may have an opportunity to under­stand what is going on." ·

The committee wa-s appointed to investigate charges of liberal~ ism among BSU leaders at UNC and Duke. Dr. Crouch has des~ cribed his committee's mission as an attempt to "help the BSU, not to hinder it."

Dr. Crouch has insisted that the conflict is· "a personality problem," not a. battle over "lib­eralism." He said it was "a quest. ion of difference of opinion be­tween members of the church."

Page 2: I~ · 2018-03-20 · and Jimmy Taylor. Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager, and his assistant is Violet Puckett. Forty-two North Carolina high school seniors

\

PAGE TWO OLD COLD AND BLACK MONDAY,_ MARCH ·zz,' 1954 _'· __ .·.· \ .· . /'~~;NON - 1 ~h ' ' ' '

Editorially Speaking: .t •.

On littolera,nce:_ . , · -·~ ·.·... "' -_··> :jiB Wf1t ·llttnlt :®f .<Utrurl,~·:··' . ~, , :

.. ',\

"Deeming it unsafe to · stand I B:r HUNTER JAMES. ligious viewpoint a · . -v:ewpoiilt-

,· -.- !· Boregarde.:Relates Encou~ier· Of Elephant Attending Da-nce Another Nasty·._ Mess. -Appear~

Baptists of the State are again con­fronted .with a nasty mess. Trouble be­gan when an investigation and study committee recently offered three Bap­tist Student Union secretaries the "op­portimity to resign."

(The committee, headed by the Rev. Perry Crouch ·of Asheville, was appoinir ed by the N. C. State Convention last November to look into the BSU's of the State and make a report to a later meet-

. ing of the Convention.) The secretaries in question are James·

W. Ray, State BSU head; J. C. Herrin, University of North Carolina BSU sec­retary; and Max Wicker, Duke Univer­sit;v BSU secretary. They have refused . . to res1gn.

Adverse reaction to the offer of the committee has been quick in coming. Nineteen ministers of the Raleigh Bap­tist Association scored the committee last week for going beyond its authority in offerin'g to accept the resignations. BSU president at UNC, Tom Mauldin, accused the committee of not "dealing with the students in good faith."

The Rev. Warren Carr, pastor of Watts Street Baptist Church in Durham and pastor adviser of the, BSU at Duke, has presented perhaps the clearest and most logical analysis of the situation in an open letter to his congregation. His is a position with which Old Gold is in complete agreement. We quote:

"Baptists whose membership is in Baptist churches of the North Carolina Baptist State Convention are now ern­broiled in a highly distressin·g situation. For years the more thoughtful laymen have feared that freedom of religion, historically the most distinctive Baptist witness, has been the victim of dis­tortion and insidious attack by many of the leaders in the State Convention.

"Now the worst fears of such thought­ful people have been brought to tragic realization. It is inconceivable, for those of us who believe in religious freedom, that a committee appointed only to study the Baptist Student Pro•gram of our State Convention should presume to advise three student leaders that its recommendations would be of such a nature that they might think it wise to

By BILL WILLIAMS resign from their positions. "The implicaion was that if these Mid-Winter Dances last week

end brought a diversion from the leaders resign no adverse report con- study routine of Wake Forest stu-cerning them would be mad~ to the dents, and the social side of col­General Board of the Baptist State Con- lege life assumed,· for a few short vention. Thus a committee has made a days, ~ prominent role. move which would suppress the report Among the numerous person!! which the Co-nvention appointed it to: -that crowded· '·Memorial Audi­rnake. · -· torium Saturday night was none

"I do not· believe· that these three other than that -gay and debonair leaders, Mr. Ray, ·Mr. Herrin, and Mr. cel~rity, the colorful -Boregarde Wicker, chaplain to the Baptist stuqents Smith . at Duke, have in any way disqualified Mr. Smith, with his light so­themselves from their positions of· ser'- phistication and friendly reserva;;

• tion, p~d~ed to be the saine enter-· vice. At the moment this question. is not taining conversationalist .that al-the central issue. The core of the matter ways brings him popularity at lies in the fact that the committee, al- social events. beit by agreement rather than a motion, During intermission the master decided to ..-take matters ~nto its own raconteur added to. the gaity b!r hands rather than do what the Con;ven- contrasting the dance with a func­tion asked of them. It is time that our tion he attended during last sum­laymen look seriously into such ·matters. mer's vacation. You are the people who, by your gifts· Out-Of-State School an_d support of local churches, make the "I attended the affair," said Convention possible. Yet here is a fla- Smith, "on the invitation of a grant example of S'\lppressing infor- young lady aquaintance. The func­rnation to which you are entitled. tion was held iii honor of a num-

"If the Convention decides that these ber of students who attended a men should n'ot be employed, then the large out-of-state" university. majority has perfect right to prevail. "No expense was spared . to

make the party a success and re­However, if the information is to re- freshments were excellent. Grape main secret, the Convention cannot punch was served which in my possibly decide. The decision is to be opinion was of a superb flavor, left in the hands of a small committee. but my tastes were evidently not It seems to me that before any em- shared for I noticed that one of ployees of the Baptist Student Union the out-of-state students took a are asked to resign, we should deal with bottle from his inside coat pocket. the committee. It should be. relieved of "The bottle contained ·a liquiu its responsibilities and replaced .by a -of that much I was sure, for its

contents flowed .as the student committee which will do t4e job it is turned the bottle's mouth down-asked to do." ward into the punch bowl. I walk-

Thus, the dispute rages. The outcome ed over for a closer inspection of is wide open. Only ·a few things are the proceedings. clear at this point: the committee has "Spicing it up a bit?" I greeteJ, obviously exceeded its authority and whereupon the student gave a handled the whole affair rather mischievous chuckle and winked.

I . had intended to be cordial, not clumsily; the three BSU secretaries and humorous; however, 1 good na-Baptist students have not been dealt turedly returned the chuckle. with fairly; and, regardless of whether the Rev. Crouch chooses to term the af­fair a "personality problem," it is mere­ly a new form of old issues--students vs. elders, "liberalism" vs. "conser­vatism."

A good free-for-all in the State Con­vention seems to be shapin'g up.

Care To Partake? "The student . seemed pleased

and acted as if we shared a mu­tual secret. He inquired if I would care to partake of the contents, and, being curious as to the taste of this liquid, I replied that 1 would. 1

began crawling forward. "Mter There was a_ man,~,who, in .. the .to the effect -that,. propljety -iD:~ ... · traveling for some few feet ·I beginning of religion,'was a here- reliJion_.'rests on the "ye~ -lindis-.;.;·,.-" noticed a n elephant leaving tic. · · co~red p-rincipJe of free .4\ill .• ; .:_ through a door on my" left. I de- Now a heretic, as defined by and thought." . ; .. cided to follow. . Charles, is one who can ~gre~ to From Lone A•o ·.

"Only after an abrupt six :foot nothing but that which i~, unac- Charles chronicled .:these opin"~:'-. :. : descent into a pansy bed 'did I _ceptable, to -~urrent·._r~li~ be.:_:.:_.i~: :tong- a~w.-,puti;the;::::·~e.·stj)~..I:·?·· discover that -the door had been lief, for wh1ch reas-on most· .0 t.-_ sileb. · 'tlfa~· WiU"·"':stir::Pow,rful. ~~ .-, a window. ·them, as soon: as t~ey ·are dis_..:_·>~.e~lteCl\ feeling!!.· IJ~-.- _emotion in~~- _ . "The fresh _.air ~leare·d my mind, · ocove~ed,. are. 1m_med1a,~y ~sb~a- . ~~~-;whl;l. 'h~ .. hear~"o:freligi_ori.':·: ·: and in a few minutes I ventured · cized from· -whatever Is~ avaul&ble .. ,The:y..·.iemaia'the supreme ;aebieve,.lo . .-to rise. No sooner had I brushed to' be ostracized from. ment thus far in the criticism 0{."; . '·· myself off and· started to return But it would come· to/ pasa, theology. ~;,, inside -than the puzzling persoJ?-. Charles stated, that this bad e_l~:--·· Charles,· goes on to say that in· ·ality that had stood by-.:tbe ·-puntn ~ ment o:f ~-jntoleJ"ance · in -religion the· future, ···:especially in · that· I

bowl came outside, assisted by the wi,ll .be eventually sublimated, ~nd . tw;entieth century, close to the./' ' foot of the hostess's father. hencef~th there woul9, be. nothmg mi~dle· of it, there will be no op- . ; · ·

"The- rest of the evening wa'J but leniency toward_ those who . position; either vehement or other~,.;· relatively normal. The hostess ~ntertain beliefs other _than thoS<e wise, to any religious views ·con- . apologised for the behavior of held- by . reli~ous authorities of trary to ·the ones existent .at. the~<. ' the student, and I replied that it the· future. time. -was perfectly all right. But I . It . will ba:ppen that everyo~e There will be no ~bjections io· ;; , shall always wo.nder how- that-. Wlll •}ook WI~h ·favor-. up.on t~1s what will questionably ,be.:te~ed.: · \ elephant managed to get out of practice . of . tolerance wh1ch will "liberalism" which is a modified ' · :,: such a small window." ·be the beginning·: of a .n~w re-' ·form· of hMesy., No one will 0~:.:·. ·

Reader Writes: .asked to resign any position he ·· might hold for reasons of this .. nature.

Political ~Deals~ Disgusting Of course we know that Charles . was one of the few survivors of" the great flood, saving with hiiS. own life his invaluable manu·­scripts on which were printed h\s long range predictions. t h a t .

To the Editor: I have never been quite .so dis­

gusted at campus politics as I am ·concerning -the nomination of president of the student body for 1954-1955. · I have seen many political "deals" made and broken in my fQur years at Wake Forest, but even these deals were not so apathetic ·and unreasonable.

There are many inen on this campus who would fill the office of president to great advantage to Wake Forest College. I will name only a f€w; they are: .:Par­ker Wilson, Carwile LeRoy, Wil­fred Winstead, and Joe- Hough.

Prior Obligations I und-erstand that many of

these refused to run for va.rio.us reasons. Some of them have prior' fJbligations which I respect, though I should think the entire student body should come first to them.

I would like to see the students of Wake Forest given a choice, a competitive choice, for the presi­dency. This is one of the fine characteristics of our present American political system, we have a choice.

write-in campaign. I have found much ,sentiment on . the campus

. for . Carwile LeRoy. Although, ·he: is a nominee ·for one other office, L feel he would accept a genuine dz:aft from the student body.

I m!J.ke this suggestion to the student body ·entirely without the consent .of Carwile but, I hope he will .accept. .

·-. Donald M. Freeman

· reached as far into the future as the -second World War, as far,. even, as the discovery of Ameri- · ca.

Spanish Inq11iaition· In· one of his predictions he, per­

petrated an interesting preview to­.the Spanish inquisition which waS.. to come under state control about 1480, and he wrote:

E~tor Explains : " .. ·.The hopeless and wretched . (From· a column ·by Johri Soft--- depravi~Y._ th~ blasphem_ous ·gra~i-­

ness editor of the University of ty of humamty, a thread of 111-

Mia~i, Fla., Hurricane.) sidious grotes~u.erie, the height ~f­. .. Editing the Hurricane is deplorable act1v1ty and -the_ prost1-.

.like kicking a hydrogen:..filled· hal- tu~d state ·Of': the t~eolog~cal af-'­loon. It might float gracefully, fau_s of". that tn;ne ~~~1. all be e~n-·_ blazing new trails of glory, or it ?od~ed .. m an . mq!IIS~twn,_ a .vlle. might explode in your face. It is mstitut~on. wh1ch Will, m. tm~e,: about as unpredictable as a pet drown m .~t~, own flood of mquit­cobra and just as potent. Or it ous despa1r. can 'be as soothing as warm milk. At t;his point Charles sneered.

When you're working with· 10,- with quivering lips, and, inciden- (' 000 people, you find it somewhat tally' it may be- remarked .'here difficult to please all of them. ·that t~e . abeve' quqtation . is her~.-· Sometimes, even one of them. reprinted. precisely in its orig!nal Everyone has his own interpreta- context. Charles was· the 'only man. ·

A Couple Of Suggestions Concerning Politics "The liquid which was not un­

like water in appearence was not unlike fire in taste. I could trace its course di)wn my asophagus,

Remember? In some c<?untries the parties

meet and unanimously nominate'• one candidate; remember Hitler, Mussolini, and Mr. Stalin's recent elections? This is unreasonable when a fine group <!f capable. men exist from which to choose.

· tions, and naturally everyone ex- alive who could wri~ in ·all bing­pects his beliefs or opinions to uages with equal clarity, lucidity-_ be catered to . . . and precision, using to unique per­

Before the campus becomes thorough-· ly embroiled in politics for the corning spring elections, Old Gold and Black respectfully makes a few suggestions to appropriate groups:

1. To the Student Council: For years an annual complaint con­

cernin·g elections has been the confusion surrounding the voting area on election day_ Students must surge, bodily, through a mob of-_ -not other voters­but browbeating campaigners in order.

._ito get .td the polls. They beat the voter on the back, hand

him a fishful of literature and ask bini to vote for this or that candidate. And when he comes out, he is asked how he voted.

Lack of ·confusion is a characteristic of well-conducted elections. And con­fusion will forever be present when voters are not allowed to enter the polls unmolested. We think that setting aside a restricted ·area around the polls to ex­clude campaigners would be a worth-

c9lb 8olb anb -lack Founded January 15, 1916, as the official student newspaper of Wake Forest College and published weekly during the school year except during examination and holiday per­iods as directed by the Wake Forest Publi­cations Board.

Editor ····--····---················· Wilfred Winstead Buainesa Manager ·--······-········ Glen Garriaoa Managlng Editor ·····--··---············ Dan Poole Sports Editor -··--··--···--·--··· Charles Newman Associate Editor : ......... ---------· William Pate Photographer --···--··---······--------······ Irvin Grigg Ciwulation Manager ·-····-··---·--· Anita Brooks

Editorial Staff Linda Boothe Durell Bullock Bob Girard Hunter James Gwen Johnson Ottis King Steve Mahaley Shirley Mudge Patsy Pearce Helen Puckett

B11siness Staff. Gray Boyette Don Craver Wilbur Early Bob Jeffords Jim Reinhardt Ann Scruggs Benny Wrenn

CirculatioD Staff Dot Brooks Motsie Burden Marian Cabe

Jack Robinson Dorothy Canipe Flora Nell Roebuck Callie Ann Coughlin Jim Shurling Bob Simpson Jimmy Taylor Bill Williams

Caryl Dixon Lou Newsome Reba Oxford Patsy Pearce Frances Tharrington

Tony Wrenn Blair Tucker Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc. Subscrip­tion rate--.$2.50 per year.

Entered as second class matter January 22~ 1916, and re-entered April 5, 1943, at .the post office at Wake Forest, North Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879.

OFFICES IN THE STUDENT CENTER Telephone 4056 P. 0. Box 551

while project. , into my stomach and on to my

toes which curled at the impact. What we try to be is the voice fection even those that were at.

of the majority of the students. that ti~e no.n-existent. 2. To political party platform com­

mittees: In the interests of Wake Forest Col­

lege and its students, don't pledge to put ash trays in classrooms, move benches to the magnolias or fill up the mud­puddles on the campus. Parties have· been promising to do such things for a long time, and yet students still drop ashes on the floors, the benches are per­manently s~cured out from under the ma·gnolias, and a student crossing the campus on a rainy day still steps in un­~voidable puddles.

Platforms are supposed to be the basis of campaigns - at least ideal campaigns, while the candidates should be those persons who are best qualified to do what is promised in the platforms. If there can be found no more worth­while things to do than restate the jokes of past years, just declare ·that campus elections are popularity contests and stand or fall on that basis.

Student government is a fine, glow­ing, American term. But on the Wake Forest Campus, excepting the work of the Student Council, it is all student and no •government. Merely an attempt to put meaning into the term "student government" wo-qld be a worthwhile and notable achieve-ment.

May the campaigns proceed.

This Is The South (The following editorial recently ap­

peared in the Richmond Va., News­Leader.)

A little ice is very nice, a touch of snow is fine; there's nothing really Spartan in a low of twenty-nine. And, true, we love the open fires that winters always bring-but, weatherman, old friend, old pal, we're ready now for· Spring!

Ah, yes, it's time for balmy climes, for grubbing in the dirt. Let's put away the overcoat, get out the open shirt; let's turn our thoughts to baseball teams, to Mantle and to Berra-let's have a little sunshine in Virginia's Riviera.

Japonica, come on-ica! We want to see some posies! We're tired of rubber boots and wraps, and childr~n's runny noses. Down with chills and fuel oil bills, and scarves around the mouth! Richmond isn't Iceland, chum; this is the Sunny South.

Forsythia, we missth-ia! W ~ want. to see some greenery: A burst of dogwood w o u l d improve Virginia's barren scenery. Cross our hearts and hope to die, if wintertime will pas~we won't object to spade or hoe: We'll· even cut the grass!

"Feeling the immediate need o.f several deep breath!! of fresh air, I decided to go outside at once. 1 turned and almost tripped over . a crystal chandelier which some­one had for no apparent reason placed on the floor.

"The room had suddenly be­come misty, and I gathered tha-.; an enormous number of cigarettes must have been smoked in the preceding few minutes. While try­ing to determine the proper direc­tion to take, the door suddenly passeQ. in front of me.

"I stepped forward quickly to make my exit but found the door to be the opposite wall with wnicit. I collided with considerable force.·

Descending C:eiling "Noticing that the ceiling was

descending at an exceptional rate of speed for a ceiling, I attempted to duck, but. at that precise mo­ment, the floor lunged upward and hit me full in the face.

TELEVISION REGISTRATION · · (ACP)-Students at Ohicago

Teacher's College. utiliz-ed a unique aid in registering this semester-a closed circuit tele­vision beam.

As students registered in one room, ·a TV cam~a in another gave them immediate notice of closed class sections, thus saving everybody steps and backtrack­ing.

I believe we should show our disagreement with the actions taken ·by our Student Party by a

We try to print stories that affect · At any, -rate :we ar'e gl~d tnat-.:, the most people and we try, Charles authoritatively- declared. through o u r editorials an d that there would never again be,·­columns, to support projects and ·even a suggestion. of intolerance · policies that will do the most goo<l .in the many' religious sects to for the most people . . . come, EU>peciaU.Y ''in that sect:

-lr=:============~::::::::::~:::::::::::=::;=jl which will stem from the Roger William's philosophy."

THINGS TO TJLK 4BOIJT ,.;,:

IN 1841 AN "RTIST DREW A DESIGN· FOR AM A'RSHIP WHICH NEVa( fLEW. ~ IT . ~CALLED lHE •GREAT STEAM 000<~

Feeli~g ':Nullifiecl It is good to read a .prediction.

that has come to·-pass ·so accurate­ly, although the good feeling is nullified somewhat when one re­members how narrow and dog- . matic they were back then, when the leaders clung · feverishly· and. . absurdly to outworn tradition. · ·

That was the time when the people suffered under the rule o.fl those who exploited and prosti­tuted the machinery of religion ;until they finally contradicted its very purpose, denyin'k: illy the means of their writmgs ~nd · actions the inherent right of every . man to free will and free thouglit.' so long as it is founded on a valid ' · basis.-" .. , . 1 , . ·

We r~alize, of course. that./.i. · · ·· ·most of these recent· denuncia· ·.

tions, investigations, _:charges · and . attacks within. specific denomina­tions do not rlllg of intolerance at-all. ' i

They are nothing but friendlY, disagr~ements ~hich are ~nhlog- · ou~.to those frequent f~mily s~.ats. . with which;·'we are all fbmilier.' . ·

. ·'"·

Few Ads, No COmic Strips In RussiciD Papers By DEAN SCHOELKOPK to were editors of youth news-

Editor, Minneaota Daily This is the fourth in a series papers. They all were chosen bY,

(ACP)-Four-page newspapers with almost no advertising, no comic strips and with daily front page editorials are the rule in Russia.

All the papers we saw, from Pravada and Izvestia, right on down to the smallest provincial

'papers, follow the same pattern. They are issued once a day, and sell for 20 kopecs (five cents1.

We talked to seven newspaper editors during our trip, and found the most interesting one--and a typical Russian new!iman-to be 1. M. Malutin, editor of the Baku, Azerb-aijan, Worker. :The Worker has a circulation of 90,000 and a staff of 60 persons-. .

Editorials in the paper deal with all questions of interest to the Soviet peopie, :Malutin told us. Re said he determined editor! ial policy, and with the rest·.of the Soviet press he is currently trying to "educate" readers into a . friendly attitude toward the United States.

Friendly Relations "Y o.u can't find a phrase in our

papers · ·against the American people,"· he ,said. We are trying

of six: articles by one of seven · the eentral committee .. o.f the American college ne\yspaper edi- party and then named their own tors :who recently toured the staffs. Soviet Union. Next week's story We asked them if their news­will de-al with 3-D movies in the papers ever disagreed with any USSR and Russian composer government decision. They said Dimitri Shostakovich. they- never do !because they trusb

to help friendly relations between' nations."

Malutin was bitterly critical of ·the American press. Since World. War II, he said the American press has reflected Soviet lifel non-objectively and has been :full of different kinds of propaganda: for war.

"I would.like to read the Amer-. ican papers," he said, "but they

reflect the USSR in unfriendly terms." We asked him how long it has been since he's seen an American newspaper or mag­azine, and he sa-id three years.

How was he able to g~t accu­rate rate reports from the United States? The only fair accounts, he said, come from Howard East , (winner of the Stalin Peace prize in 1953) and from Paul Robeson.

Youth Papen Other newspapermen we talked·

their elected representatives to do the right thing.

At Moscow University we· asked the editor of the student newspaper if he ever criticized the government editorially. ll~ said he never found a need for that- He said he did criticize pro­fessors and ministry of~ culture, which runs the university.

The student editor-Ivaner Za­harov-looked about 35 years cld. He said he was a post-graduate student in history, and had been elected editor for the last three years by a "conference of read­ers." He has :been a member of the party since 1946.

There are 100 .students on the staff, .Zaharov said, and the paper is issued t)vice a week.

Radio Sets When we were visiting donni­

tory rooms at Moscow University, we got our first good look at the one-knob radio set which is so

common in Russia. •: · There is no need for more

than one control on the :radio be-. cause there is only one station to listen to-Radio Moscow ... Other. cities 'have their own · smaller stations but· only Radio M<>scow· is heard over-all the Soviet Union.

In some places it's almost';.im-' possible to get away from · its­voice .. Loudspeakers on the stre-et­corners in the city blare forth its· 1 rograms from the time it goes on the air--about 7 a. m.-until it goes off the air-about 11 p.m.

The Russians have 'television, too, although not many .people own sets. There are three TV stations-in Moscow; Leningrad. and .Kiev. We· watched television in Moscow, and found the picture­clearer . than ·any in . this country' because Russians use a finer. screen.

The picture tubes are small, \ usually five or six inches. The Russians told us big picture tubes are not practical. They get .bigger' images ·by projecting small ima-, ges onto larger screens by use mirrors. · Programs run for at>out hours each night, and longer Sunday.

,,., ..

·~. se~e enJd~

. ; i•c:!!.~~ · -fnnu.al : 'fhey_..,, . $tories' . :- . -~·- Afte ··. itternc :'. ~eld a

· .: -tauranl were s -Weave1 .Qeorge visited week e: : :Kapi lias wo

v Led by . Harold €harl~ tbey d1 Chi's· a·

. The, Marsh,, li:oro, a dent f: and Ja< the cha

Haro o J,o Jor

College

In ll ti.~sketb f.eated 4'8 to paced ooth t ~rty a ~en pl

. ,. fair. ~ r :· Morr

· -visite~

Carw elected' for thE

:was ch Jack ·v men•' w' first··m•

·--Plans Ball :ar! Culler J

Jecal .ell the ·ph bers ·of. on thei] for tlie

Delia 'ihe fral at the ' _Saturda:

{ mince. ' asented 1

'•

· iJ)g. sel1 lor the.

Lamb nu~l " night ·i llid-Wir dance· l :rant, fe: inco~n1

Page 3: I~ · 2018-03-20 · and Jimmy Taylor. Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager, and his assistant is Violet Puckett. Forty-two North Carolina high school seniors

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: .. PACE 1l M£

· : ~CK~acs ~~rrri:0· ·-·A,re. · ~-~e· ··eks' :AF Tem&- - ~nt~i' '--~- _-.- .· ·.: _ ASksQ_uestion-GetsRepfN 1-~dr· .. ·· ," ')_Vt;, -. ··pn,, ·4 ..... vr. '_ . ;·· ,;DI '·. ··.· ·v ........... They_CO,uJdn't·Qu"tt lJant;l~· B,-WJLLIAMPATE. "Where was Mm:x ailed~ 4\:~ :·: -- '• ; ··- ~.By j:iJnniy 'Payio\: ' .· . :i: ·-~ · lS:J;f' . -· · a.-HUNTER J...,;,£5 . Th• inan, who they •~• hidd•n c ('i· t<an~:"t jun~•'h from N•'" ~~'!:,~f..~ald ,., ........_

. ·' . Alph•.:Sic"ina ... Phi . . . ·y_ear. Ann, Stanley, tht; chapter's They wer~ ,Negroe.s thand th~y i~. hthe j~kef?ox, the • small mh ~n thaerofomllaow'n ate b ot eg)e· swears "Where did he ·die'? .. \·:ewpoinf;. - d'd f c G' I f w·n c 'naei Men had taken-first prize In. e' talent WJt. a guitar who plays all t ose I g 0 e rue . "E 1 d, priety -in:~· . . of' members and the~r."ean I a~ or res~ent Ir

0 .· I· · GU ... show and they came 'out 'onto th~ songs when you slip him a n'ic~el . In the course of a History two "Wnhgi_cahn I:s hi's '--g~~ --...~-~ e'l: -undis-~,· .. ·- -~'pi_cnic--~t Lake Mirl ~he mttlOnal frater~Ity, :was also on:·pilot Training h F Th th' h t h b I h __..""""' -

:ree --Will afternoon_ before , the 1~tr~duced to. alumm_ and .~t:;sts. . . . sidewalk, ':out of t e orest e· . ;r9ug · the slot, _.mus ave· ecn ect~re t .e ·professor got around "Das Kapital. The CQI!Immriis:t-, • · · Se'v·eral E1ght pledges were m1tiated An ~rviatien · cadet selection atre; they came out dancing. very tired also because he had to to dtscussmg Ka.I_. ·l Marx.. Manifesto is J· .. ~ .... a sman --

W.mter dance. . · · · Th , 1· ht bl k I · "M · " It 1' the """" __..._

~se opi~7·:' c •

; .are 'still):; · · ~rflil._ u:t4!~ :, mtion in~ it, ~ religj,on.::-~ · . '·achieve-·-.· · .ticism ot ·; .

>e no op-- · · or o~hel'- ./ ews con­tt at the•·

etions io· ·' 1

e :termed.··'­modified~ > will bo-.

sition he of this ..

G Charles. rivors of" with hi;;;. ' manu­inted his

that. 'uture as

as far,. c Ameri-

... s he,per­eview to· b.ich :was.. ·ol about

wretched 1s -gravi-· i of iu­teight of' e prosti-. peal af-" . be em-·

a vile., in time •. r inquit-

sneered inciden­ed. here· is here-.­o.rig1nal nry. man. lll lang-lucidity-

que per­were at.

lad tnat ... declared· cgain be-­.olerance sects to at sect: e Roger

~ediction ccurate­eling is one re­ld dog-­n, when hly' and. tion. hen the rule o£1 prosti~

religion cted its lby the ~s and >f every. thought. ·a valic,l '

e. that··:~. muncia-' ~es ·and nomina­·~nce at. i ~ri~ndl7-anf1:log-· ly sp,ats iller.

~rs r more i.dio be-station

r .. Other smaller Moscow· ; Union. tost ;.im­~om its. 'street~ 'orth its it goes .-until out 11

evision, . people

·ee TV ningradi levision' picture country.

finer

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· a· ·· t rned mto. the brotherhood last weelt, team fl'OJP ~Pe. 'Air Force Base,:- e woman .''!':'ore a 1g ~e eep P aYJ_D~ . ane. s "Who knows what is Marx's Jet." ;~~~~~:~.~~1!J:.·! their d tes , re ~- : , ,in a 'formal --. initiatio_~;: .. held~ . Fo.rt;· .:Sr.ag~ •. - ~1!: .'!':t~t , Wake ... Fo~- . swea_te~, :h~ rna~ a: da~k·_~lue su_1t, :~mly __ so~&--· they<~~uld da~c_e·~;to_.: .· ._ m()st· }mpor~ant work'?" he asketi .- The prof could stand re JIG:

:-\.:;:t~~llpb\a ,"'Sii~!sJvc)ll!!YJ!illl.:-feli.~';re~ :_we~~~ar- a_~d·.~.h1J!Stiay .~ngbts;, e·13t;, Co!!~g~ _.'rties!f~y a-n~'-"Weii~e.s-· .and -botli_ w.era.:-.la~g~~~g as tl":Y• . Dan~~_!•· t~-~. ~~~ --~ld, ~~~1e ,th~ clas~. · longer. He looked at the .atJioknt_ .·:SI"-'lllla·· Pi: and-,. _Buc!t Rlll~ .. the:,c~~pter's·.re~r.e-·. d~Y.· .. -- -- ·:: .. · ·._ :- ·,,. :_: ·· .. -,_.. d~~ced, shagg~ng,. to -~he .musxc on . . . . . . . , ··.: . : ~o o~e ans~ered so this stu- :_::~'Tell me;:·he· said r~ ....

, iritra-miii-af !!!.t:lta~lve to,..the.·Jntram~ral -~!lll~ ·. T~e..:.1~a~_---~ll: counsel ·~erson~ that ~arne ·fro_~. Franci~- G~l~. . -.;~'he er~":'d. w,~teh~d hlm. . rais!i!d. -hi~ .. h.and. . • "how.-do yoti. know so mw:JJ. ~-. - - . ·: ~ cd>~-w~s nam~d ... ~_ptam of the IJlte!Elf!t:ed. m_-.pllot a..mJ. 11enal ol?- Inside tbe r~~uran_t -the .Juka- ;_... • . yalll. . . . . . "D~s ~spital," he said. . Karl Marx~''-.:·;-.·i:o-.~-1>;;,.;. j~il~<i~/'·an ;~ alumn~s VQlley_ball· team.·. server .. pha~es -of. aviation cada_t. :b~x ___ :-vas. plaY?,ng, : .. a!ld the .. ~~ . HJ!!· teet~. sh~n~. ~l~.t~l~- .xn. th;. '!O.r. 'Capital'," saic;l .the P.rof,. "I'm a Communist." __

Sig chapter.at Pres- · tJ:aining.p.rogram in the Air Force. people· couldnt stop shagg~_ng, b~ht, of tli:e :s:p_~clOus--restaura~., :"~hat!!) rigi_It.· Now who can ·tell College, recently _p'aid Pi Kappa Alpha. • Lt. Dcrse F. Pendleton Jr. -and· even after they had won first w1tb _th~- sw1rlmg movement of me. what ·his most influential work SPAGHETTI QUEEN! .

chapter a visit. Ray Whitley .of Mildese, Glenn· Aviati~n . G~det· Selectidn Team prize in the talent-s_ho~. t~eir: Jit~e a~d ,;_s~ning bo.di_es; .. is'?· ... · : ... · (ACP)-At CorneU Uni"t:~,. Powell of ·Fuquay ¥arina. ·and ·no. ,304 wdl be located in the Col- Gathered. ln. ~Jrele hts te~tli ;Sh~ne vvhitely until. ~t Still no one offered the answer. a freshman coed has ofiemd! im

.... , · ·· Harold BomSley of Cherryville. lege hook store from 8:30 a. m. Appar$!ntly_ noth1~g: has _ey~r last the dancers. stopped, pantmg, ·~Anyood:l'.?"- buy all copies of the f.reslima:re . : :'.. . K~p·pa ~!e.~ _ . . : were pledged"·last :Week. · . . . . .T~~s.~a;y imtil 6:00 p. m. Wednes· happened' before h~~ tha,t, m .u.~abl~ ~0._ d!l!l~.~ .. ~n;y~~re. . · . · _.-, · "His ··communist Manifesto," directory. She says a p~ air -:· i Sev~ral mem)>e~s a~d pled~s DO-t Ellis-· with AI Gilliam, ,a~d ~ay. · · .. . . ". ·',l '!~e Fore~t, f~r a _c:_r_:owd! _ c_o_~- The ·woman, still with th~t ~~aid. the, same student. her published in the direcf<IS'l'f

~njoy.ed a trip to New Orleans Martha Ann Meadows,-_,with R. A. , Aviation ·cadet .training· is s1stn~g of .~hose m the restaurant,, feverish at?-c! frozen and breathles-s , ~he prof asked more questions stands to ruin her social Jife:. ~'c;e,~~ly, w~er~ t'\ley witn·essed .. tha Pearson, .. were · sponsors froni offered to singl~ persons between ·'gathered · m the --~?orway an.?:. on :grin op her face, stumbled weakly about Marx, l~oking each time to -She was trying w reanwe· 81.

.,un';Ull Mard1 G~as c~lebra~~on. PiKA for , the Mid- Winters the ages of 19 ·and ·26 1-2 years the street. Ther- ga~hered tn: a ~utcthe door, while the man cri~s- the- entire class for answers. But shread cf stringy substanee :&mm ',rhe?'.-·'!etw:ne~ WI~h many sea Dances. Miss· Meat;I?ws an~ Pear~ who must .have completed high; ~eavy slow:m?VIng Clrcle, laugh" cr:ossed his arms ~n'd shook hands it .appeared that only this one I her teeth when the phot~

·,, ~tor1es_ of their tr~p~ . ~on.ar4'! to.-be marned durmg the school__or have a higher education Il}g and shoutmg ..... ,_. . . . WJ_:t4 .those !Vho had been w~tch-_ student,_knew all the. answers. snapped the shutter. 1 • 1' After the concert Qn Saturday. spring holidays. and. must be able to pass mental The people who ·still sat talkmg ing, and· he said,. '1'So long yalll." --...:...~.,;,.-;· .;;;..-:---:---------..:..;:;_ ___________ _

' ~fternoon, members and ~ledges· · The PiKA's held a diimer meet- and physical examinations given a!ld eating in the booths thought a He had a treinulo~s smile on his . :-. -l!eld a banq.uet. at __ GreahaDI; s Res-. ing Thursday, evening at Bol?'s at Air Force expense. f1ght had started, and many rose face. "So· long." .

: -·~u_rant~ ~-~P~m~ors for .. the,- dance College Inn, with Pro£. Wayl~nd Qualified applicants are given spon~~eous_ly, as one .person and Were SylVIa _Man~.~-~~- Geo~e. Jones of the History .Depaii;ment a. fou1·-month deferm~nt from ran ~n um~on to :the doorway, Weaver ·an~ Bllhe Ohve Wit~ as guest speaker. After the Sat- their s~lective service boards. pressmg thexr enthralled faces on­~.e?rge W~ll. Severa~ .. ~lu~m urday afternoon concert, an. open Filing an application, . says. the to the lieatle~s ~n~ow panes. '!~!te~-- _the cha:pter dunng _the house .. :for dates ·of the . P1KA's Air Force, does not constitute an Someone came ms1de and turned ~eek, ~~!-~· . , . . . .. .. was· bel~ at th~ ho~e of· Dr.- C. ,enlistment and the applicant may the· ju~ebox up, but those in the :, Kappa Sig's volley?all team B. Earp, PiKA faeulty adviser. withdraw his application at any rear didn't know why. They didn't

)\as won ~hree c~nsec~t1ve ·game~., .,._. . · . " · . · time. _ know what. was going on because v Led by :Qill Fer~:Is, Bobby Nel~n, . ·Sigma Chi they couldn't get to the front.

. ~arol~ Mo?re, Roy Mo?rehead, Margaret Feeney, pinned by B } What'• H~ppeninc?· <,;barles ReJd and ~ud~y Pa~e, Jim Elam, ·was recently serenaded . ay· or Offers "What's going on?" someone they defeated the P1KA s, Theta b th b othe · asked. Ch'' d La bda Chi's Y e r rs. 1

s· ~n m • . . . The Sigs have wo,n two of· three N 'p PJ "I don't know," som~one said. The chapter welcomes baek B1ll · · tr · 1 11 b 11 ew ay 8fl "I don't know what's go1ng on " · fr- Greens games m · m amura - vo ey a . . . , .

¥arsh,,. sophomore om · - Plans are now being made to . . "Is it a fight?" lio,ro, and J. E.' Johnson, laW: stu- send several delegates to a multi- A plan for pre-paid -tuition, "No. I don't think so. I th-ink ~ent fro~ .Bde?son. Bot~- G!b.~o~ province convei).tion of Sigma· Chi' whereby· parents or others may it's somebody dancing. It's not a ~nd Jack 0 gms recen Y VISI e in Atlanta, Ga., in" the. latter part pay in ad-vance the college ex- fight." the chapter.. . of April. · · penses of future students, has 'fhe . crowd looked at the

Harold Moore rec~ntly pmne,d The Sigs are lQoking forward been appfoved by Baylor Uni- dancers. 11

Jc"o 11 Jor;~fs,, st;e~t at Woman s to their Sweetheart Ball to .be 4'ersity and e}gbt other Texas Everybody liked the show; so 0

ege rom ·lc ory. · held on the week end of .April 9. Baptist colleges. ., . they were half-dragged-, · half­Preparations· are already , being Payments toward the· tuition, pushed and half-invited inside the made for the • festivities at the room and board_ expenses of restaurant, where a space was

Theta Chi

In ii. recent iritra-Theta Chi house. future etudents may be made ia cleared for them to continue. l:i.asketball game, the Theta's ·de- any way the· parent or donor In. the rear people stood first on f:eated the Chi's by a score o.f · :._ . · · · chooses. 'I' he colleges suggest chairs and then on tables, strain-4'3 to 32. Pledge c. J. Benner v· nna School l'egular p_ayments, intermittent ing upwards from their toes. The paced the winers. Afterwards Ie · · payments, and lump· sum. invest- rollickin·g· bodies of the talent bOth teams celebrated with a 0./!./!ers Courses ments as- chief possibilities. The show winners moved quick and ~rty at the house. The game has J.J.~ fund may be set. up. at any time symmetrical in the cleared-out ~en planned to be an annual ai- between the student's birth and space. up front.

,. fair. a·n ·al-umn·,~. The University· of Vienna Sum .. · enrollment· in· ·c.olleg· e.· - - Hand Shaking-= r : Morris Brown, ~. -visite~ the chapt~r 1 · mer. School at--.~~hloss _Traunsee. 1 . l~terest- is c:redited. to 7 the de- _The _dancin~ man shook hands

___ recent Y·. Gmunden, Austria,. w1ll- · offer .posJt at the rate of ·five per cent ,With on_e _of: :the students WhQ ., :· Kapp'a·. Alplia' couZ:!!es. op~.n .t._o A,.iner_icari. stu- a year, a rate _higher 'than the .yatched; he s}).ook hands and wal!

.. Carw.iie . LeRoy was recently dents' from --.July 26 to Sept. 5. funds would " normallY. e*n in shagging all the time, and the . Designed to promote better commercial , investments. ·In. case woman had a frozen grin on ner

elected president ~f the fraternity tmderstanding between Europeans a student fa_;ils. to enroll :in the face, unable to suppress it or for the next year. Bob Culler and Americans, the curriculum school niter tuition is pre-paid, change it because she had no

:was cho~en vice . president, and will includ~· law and political the deposit :is refunded. breath. Jack · walston,' sec;retary. These b G . ·n · c ff' .. t th science, .-li eral arts, and· erman ~en' Wl • ass~me 0 • Ice a e ·langua"'e. Courses will be con-!Jrst · meetmg· 1n April. · · .d, t " '". E li h, ..

·--Plans for the annual Old South uc e~ 10 _nt; 5 • · Ball ·are- nearing coiil(lletion: Bob .. To be ellg~ble ~for entrance to Culler .and ·J~hn Brooks are 'the the ~hree or .sJx-week courses, lecal .chapter's representatives. to Amencan ap~hcants must have the ·plaiming,- committee. Mem- completed at least two yeara . of bers ·of the local chapter are- well college work. ~Y ~nne. 'Closmg on their· way 'on grow'ing bearc;ls date- for admtss1on 1s ~ay _30. f~r tlie occasion. Claaae• _In Caatle

Delia Aycock was honored by An oppo~·tu~Ity __ .. f()r summer 9he fraternity at a banquet held stu~y co_mbmed Wl!h_ out~oor va-l at the Woman's Club in Raleigh cation,. hfe _at a mountam l~ke, _Saturday_ ·night before·. the IFC the school ·Is held at the mne ....

,. Wince.. At this time she was pre- teenth century castle ~f •Traun.~e' ~nted a .~-sweetheart 'pin for be,. on the shore of a .!ak~ In Austna s i:ng select~ ~appa_ Alpha RQse' ·Salzkam~~rg:ut. dlstrJct. . lor· the current yea'r; In add1t10n tO course work, the-

. summer school's· $200 tuition will Lambda Cbi Alpha.

Lambda Chi's held their an­nu~l White Rose Ball Frid4lY night in ··conjjmction with the! llid-Winters Dance. The banquet­<lance · held · at J obnny's Restau­rant, featured' the recognition of incoli!ing: officers elected fQr this

include trips 'to Salzburg and the' festival, and to nearby places of interest. Students will also. bel able to arrange . an excursion to Vienna. ·

Available Scholarship• Eight scholarships are av~iiable

to well-qualified- stude.nts who . w.ould be unable to attend the .. sum~er ~ehool with<>Ut financial assistance. Applicants for these· ·avyards· .or for general admission: should write to :the Institute,· 'of International Education, 1 . East 67tli Street, New York City. ll'he Institute is screElning applications for _-this progra~ in the Un;itc!d States. -' · ~,

SPRlNG ·Is .PAINI TI·ME WE FEATURE

SHERWIN ~ WILLIAMS ·PAINTS· an:d· BRUSHES

HIGH QUALITY-Low-cosT·

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.Another sum.nier school prO-' f.· gram ·,administered by the In~ti­ -~ WI-lEN I STAA.TED· .-. tute is "the Summer Schools at British Universities. Closing. d;;~te for application to this course. i& April 7. March·24 is the last d!!-te to apply for transatlantic passage­arranged :by the Institute.

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"Of course we streas scholar­ship," she reports, "but it's the over-all appearance that counts most. And I'm not just talking about 'good looks'."

One of the most frequent ques­tions · girls ask, Miss Dale · said, "is how close· Newcomb is to Tu­lane. Of course, I tell them 'right next door'." ·

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Page 4: I~ · 2018-03-20 · and Jimmy Taylor. Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager, and his assistant is Violet Puckett. Forty-two North Carolina high school seniors

PAOE FOUR OLD_, CoLD AND· BLACK MOND~ Y,- MARCH 22,'

B.S •. V •. P. __ .. By 'TEX' NEWMAN

Out of the hustle· and bustle of politics, investigations, mid-term exams, and so on, comes a ·new portion of the Old . Gold sport's page. · . · I ·

Under~ C~ach;-Nichol.on: .. ·.- · ....

·. Sprit/tglV~t Ptcldice'Sf: .····-~ Wake l~'ore~t's -t~mnis . tlie' R:,/J., Reynolds High SchoD1· and April,:.21;::;~Jlemson 'visits

Instead of the four French words. meaning "Please re­ply;'' the title can be interpreted to mean "Reminiscent, S__ports Vie·w-Points,'' or it can be taken to mean anything else the reader might ha_l)pe~to_assuine. . .. . __ .

' .~·:-~

Dickie Hemric, ·Deacon :futsketball's All-Amer~can ce~­ter, has added another laura} to his gro·wing crown-lie . has been named am·ong the five of Kentucky's all-opponent t~am this year, an honor in anybody's book. ·

activated 1ast year llfter a team ·1~st year; and JimmY. :Deacons._,:,.,.·. ·. : .. ~- · _ . year absence, took to the courts _Daughtridge, who played . .- -for May r· .:· Wa-k F -t-- · ·

· • • · -· · · e ores goes last Monday to start practice fo>: Rocky Mount High School last ' · · the spring net campaign_. · · . . · E. C. C., th~~eets , Duke

The 1954 team under. the was-.. a semi-finalist in May 4. · State 1s host, ~ tutelage- of· who .. 'high. ._- ~hool . tennis ·:May,~. and_ ~uth :<Jarolina-is· direci~r._ of. ··~a:St~:ye~r·~~:as- -~n,_a:i J:ere,_-May '7.·;0n.a~.o ~~ern tion- in th"i!·college_libr8l·y~ $.everal otlier' toumeys 1\fa_y 10 ·aad-son is 9.-·.former: Carolin-.:net· man, . season • .:Otliers rotmding meet.~ _Maryl~n~ and· 'l'eplaces Dr: "Fred :west; -R~- . fre~l!i;:sf@~d are~ill clgseS;:· leigh pastor, wh~.- coached die Jones, C. J. Benner, ·Howard ,Aber- 18, .'"''0101''" • . .

,team last yea1; on a part-time nathy, -·Bill Starling and Jerry ·here. The ACC- tournament Baseball is just appearing on the horizon. Since the Deacons lost some eight lettermen last year, Coach Taylor Sanford is rebuilding a new team. T:wo of last year's me~ are back-Dickie Harris and Luther McKeel. McKeel is returning to his former spot in center field. Last season,_ he was one of the top sluggers for the Sanford ·men, and, if he continues to play as he has in practices, he will be

~basis. · · · · Drum. · . be played at Duke, May 13, 1.4 ,,. the· squad ·has ·five "of ·;last . Coach· Nicholso~-~aid;:that-:tlJe 15. ·- · : ' .....

I spring's six varsity men ,back and spirit of' both. teams was- exc!ellant ;::::;:::::::::::::=====:~ ·. has seven others out·. for the one -and that' '4e was looking:- forward . . . vacancy. and possible replacements to a rough, but rewarding' season. . . .• . .. . . ,:._; .

back among the top. . Harris has been ~hanged in the infield. Last year he

started at short stop; thi-s year, he's af second. So far·, he has continued his last year's form,_ with .tjle improvements that come from another season's experience.

McRae Will Be Big Help Coach Sanford has at least one more familiar face in

the batting order-that of basketballer Frank McRae. He was out most of the season last year because of a shoulder injury. In the games in which he did play, he proved his worth as a starting outfielder, mostly at the plate. More than one rival outfielder has had to go 'way 'back for a

·ball from McRae's bat, and, barring other injuries, he will add a great deal to Sanford's somewhat green bat­ting order.

_Another basketballer, Lefty Davis, who worked some

Jasper Mem~ry, left, and Will Allred, right, who begin at net battle thia week for_ the nu.mber one and two apota on Wake For­eat's tennia aquad, give Joan Mauney, aophomore coed, a few tips to -improve her tennia game. (Photo by Wayne Kinaer.)

DePorter Wins, Too: as a starting pitcher last year, will probably be counted S h on as one of the Deacon's better pitchers. Bill Walsh Hemric Trinle tatistic c am'P pitched last year as a relief man, and he will undoubtedly r be promoted to a starting berth for the 1954 season. Walsh Deacons pickie Hemric and ~I has been workin•g with a somewhat effective curve ball DePorter finished the season by in practice, along with a not-so-we11-eontrolled fast ball. gh;ng Wake Forest four-star bil­But time, coaching .and practice will wor_k out a lot in the ling in all of the individ~u,d statis­whole hurling staff. tics departments for the 1953-54

It seems that baseball is an outlet for the athletically- basketball season. ilaclined energy of men who have succeeded in ·other Hemric came out a triple sports; Joe White has· switched from passing to infield champion. The big Jonesville work, while football teammate Br.uce Hillenbrand is now junior headed the scoring, field ·staked out in Wake Forest outfield. Another basketball shooting and rebounds slots whil~ player, Billy Lyles, works with White at short stop. AU DePorter made it a Baptist ex­three have showed up better in practice than a lot of folks elusive by coping the free throw might think. shooting department.

h Of T - Pl An impressive average of 24.3 No S orlage ennis ay~rs points a game, eight _ out of. 16

Also on the sports horizon is tennis. Last year's squad shots from the floor and eight ·om lost only one man, and ·tenrus coach Jim Nicholson, who of ·n from the free throw line stepped from his role as Director of_ the Baptist ~ol- are pretty good figures in any­lection amon•g the college library staff; has no shortage 'body's scorebook and those are of men to vie for the -one vacant spot. · the statistics that Hemric has

been writi11.g for the Deacons. Of course, any of these new contenders might challeng~ Ho .. ora For Hemric

and replace one or several of the returnees, but Jasper f th · d Add to these a string of honor-Memory and Will Allred seem to be sure o e one an ary team berths like All-State

two spots. Just as last year, the two are neck and neck All-Atlantic Coast Conference and for the first spot, which Allred won in a series of matches All-America and throw in the Big

an accuracy ~percentage ·of .807 and tile title in that department. Teammates Billy Lyles and Lefty Davis · back up DePorter witb. fourth and fifth places.

Lyles dropped in 77 out of 102 shots from the foul line for a .755 accuracy mark. He totaled a 9.3 points per game scoring average.

Davis built up a 17.4- scoring average to earn third place in that department.- He took fifth in field goal shooting with a .405 percentage and average 7.2 re· bounds per game. In free throws he sank 137 ·out of 183 tosses for a .749 mark.

Forward Ray Lipstas did well for himself. He averaged 9.1 points per game, picked up a .368 :field goal mark, dropped in .627 per cent of his foul shots and collected 6.4 rebounds per game.

In the free throw department Hemric was only able to slip in 230 baskets out of 310 trys for sixth place and· a . 7 42 percentage average.

in the group. He added that · the ACC matchr.s ·Quick ~nice, and Tuty . · · " 4•t. :Year'• Team · ~ou1d be , especitllY_: tough. Caro- • < • • • ••• _ ..

Will Allr~d, last year's number Imp has -~ sey~ra1· players on Food ii··Reaerved fo_r. -~011·-one man; J8.sper M~mory, numbe~ s~holarship, Jte- ·said. - h · · · · two on the 1953 squad, Clay 1954 ScLedule -w en ~ou meet me_. Daughtrid-ge, fbrmeriy third, Gene . · The 1954 tennii ·scilieoule ia.: Correll, formerly fifth, and Bill eludes- ma~hs :with ·the touring Rogers, last year's numbe1· six: Wesleyan University 5quad here,'

· man, are returning to the courts April' 8, Elon, April 10, at ElQn, this year. . Sta.w, April· 14, · here, E. ·c. c.,

-at~-

Buck Rish, -who ' played the April 1 '(, here _and another with alt~rnate-seventh spot last yeat:, Elon, April · ,21, here. Carolina

is among those. we>rking out for ;:o:m:e:s:il;~o~y.r=a=k~-e=F~o:r:es:t:·:·A~pr~i~l ~2~4~,~============~ the sixth position. Bill Patterson, Don Morrison, Jim Martin,· John Mallol'y, Don Logsdon and ·Bob Mann are contenders for the 'posi­tion and may, ···in challange matches, replace any of the varsi­ty six.

A 14-match schedule, including eight Atlantic Coast Conference battles, has been set up for the coming season. Also included in the schedule are matches with Elon College, 'Eastern Carolina College, Wesleyan ·university,- and William and Mary, of the South­ern Conference.

Froeh Team Because of .the ineligiblity of.

freshmen in ACC play, and be­cause of expansion of the tennis program, a freshman · team has been organized. The frosh -are IGd bv AI Griffin, who played for

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Moada., Sbowe 3:15 - 7:00 - 9:00

for the 1953 season. This Four three-year scoring record. year, Memory leads by the Then, remembering that the phe· winning of a dl:'a wing from nomenal basketballer "~~.ill be back a hat, but the two begin. next year to pile up more records play-offs for· the leading po- and you can bet that Coach Murry­sition early this week. Greason is ·feeling mighty happy What About Track Team? right now.

IT'S ALL A MATTER ·0 TASTE, Dew"y Martin & Sh .. lley Winten

~D- ;. .

"TENNES-~E CHAMP''

Tueaclay Shows 3:15 • 7:00- 9:00

Boris Karloff -in-

"THE BLACK CASTLE" Talent Night On Stage

Wedneaday Show• 3:15 - 7:00 - 9:00

We have wondered how Hemric's new three-year record in the Big Four is 1,841 points

the newly-formed track which is a comfartable margin team is shaping up? In mak- over the old record of 1,788 points in'g th~ rounds of the various set by Duke's Dick Groat. Besides, athletic fields, only a few it is ·within an easy 19 point reach men have been observed do- of the all-time Big Four (l8reer ing anything that might be record of 1,860 held by N. C. taken as . track practice. State's Sammy Ranzin.o for a Some 35 men were reported four-year peri~~ . . to have been interested in Dickie already holds tlie Wak~

Forest career and single-season the new squad, but if they scoring records. have been working out, they DePorter Gets Title are holding very s e c ret Al DePorter's 96 out of 119 free

Joh .. Hadiak &: Rubert Stack practice sessions. throws gives the Deacon steady -;:-iD­

"CONQUEST OF COCHISE"

Thursday & Friday Showa 3:15 • 7:00 - 9:00

Dane Clark & Harlem Globe Trotters .-..:in-.. .- -

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Saturday-Sbowa Continuou.a 1 to 11 P. M.

Rocky .Lane -in-

"EL PASO STAMPEDE" -also--

George Brent -in-

" MEXICAN MANHUNT"

Sunday Shows 3:15- 7:00- 9:00

Alan Ladd -in­

"BOTANY BAY" ---·---COLLEGIATE THEATRE

We"k Of March 22, 1954

Monday Showa 3:15 - 7:00 - 9:00

Jack Palance -in-

"MAN IN THE ATTIC''

Tuee. - Wed. & Thurs. Sbowa 3:15 ·~ 7:'00 - 9:00

RJ.onda Fleming & William ~ndigan -i­

"INFERNO''

Friday & Saturday SLows 3:15 - 7:00 - 9:00

StartiDg For Entire Week James Stewart & June Allyaon

--in-"THE GLENN MILLER STORY"

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When you co~e riKht down to it, you smoke for one simple reason ••.• enjoy­ment. And smoking enjoyment is all a matter of taste. Yes, taste is what_ coUnts in a cigarette. And Luckies taste better.

Two facts explain why-Luckies. taSte better. First, LS./M~.T.~Lu~ky Strike means fine ·t~pacco· .. ~::light, mUd, goOd­tasting toba~co. Second, Luckies are &c.;. tually made better to taste better • ·• ·• always round, firm, fully packed to draw freely and smoke evenly. -

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'W,bere's your· iingle? It's easier than you think to make $25 by writing a Lucky Strike jingle'like those you see in Ws ad. Yes, we need jingles . -and we pay $25 for every one we use! So send as-many as you like to: Happy-Go-Lucky, P. 0. Box 67, New York 46, N.Y.

smart coeds, -­menl

LU ES· TASTE BETTER . - ....

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··!'{Wake 1 -::\;.three . ru . {t. ahead, 3

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Page 5: I~ · 2018-03-20 · and Jimmy Taylor. Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager, and his assistant is Violet Puckett. Forty-two North Carolina high school seniors

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HQW~D YOU UKE TO •• ;

meet· { 1

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PENDlJETON.

on campus now-to sho'W you how to •••

ear.nover· $5000 a year ••• ·

become an officer in the air force •• • get a head start In let' aviation •••

be a ~rt of a great flying team •• •

as on Aviation Caclef. See him while you c~ Ist ·Lt. Dorse F. Pen~ dleton and Aviation' Cadet Selection Team:' No. 304 are staying at' the Recreation Room'. tomorrow ·and Wed~·. nesday. He will be

, available between the\ hours 8:00 A.M. and '6:00 P.M. to those de .. s1r1ng futher infor~ mation on career op­portunities in the Air Force. Pope Air Force Baae

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2 ·Visit. Colleges RELIGIOUS BOOKS BOUGHT ~ 'SOLD-- "ORDEitE!l ' Grady S. Patterson, registrar,

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position,. 96 ·points out of a pos~ sible 100. ·c. P. O'Brien, a junior, fired 100 points from a sitting position; the maximum number of points possible from that position.

The Women's Recreation As­soCiation is planning a· picnic fo.t· this week. Notices will be put on the bulletin boards.

Intramurals in individual sports will begin this week. A paper wm be posted for those who want t(l participate 'in. these tournaments.

and ])r~ Gaines Rogers, Dean of 1

the .School of Business here, visited .junior colleges in the west­ern part of the .State in conjunc­tion with public relations. · They spent one day each at Wingate, Gardner Webb and Mars Hili. Purpose of their visits was to encourage students to con­tinue their education.

SOUTHEASTERI BOOK AGENCY

113 '"SOUTH ST. Hot Coffee :At 'All lim~ __.. Five Centa "A '"Cup

Several members of the team have fired 100 pointS from the1 prone position. ·Maj. I. J. Cooper, advisor for the rifle team, stated tha..t · the ROTC has wonderful prospects for the rifle team next year, judging from the scores made by cadets who will return to the team next year.

The student government at the University of Marburg, Germany, has rejected a proposal ·that · · money contributed voluntarily for sports, be used to· introduce courses in social dancing.

NEED- GREETJN·G CARDS, A COKE OR .••.

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Page 6: I~ · 2018-03-20 · and Jimmy Taylor. Jean McSwain is assistant director. Larson is stage manager, and his assistant is Violet Puckett. Forty-two North Carolina high school seniors

......... ,, .. ..,.,, .. -~t.~ftir.. the· fortt.-ain• CoUece Theater production ef Molnar'a "Liliom." The play will be •h·en March ·.3o in -tfte G.pel. Bob Swain ie directing the pia,. and will plaJ' the 1....11 role. OtiMra in the caat :ba~lu'l!e .Jqae S111ithwick, Norm Lareon and Gene..-ieye Jar;line. (Photo by Wayne Kinaer.)

~d J\ctors:

Drama Is Backstage, Too B:r WJ~IAM: PATE

~ is the drama that the 'Wa"ke Foneatt <l:o~ Theater does !llot JU!lSI!D.t; tQ an audience.

'Tlle ::aeton are rarely seen. 'l'hey never bow before the foot­.ilights to the applause of unseen ?ilands.

ODe of these actors may be the JI!OP man "spatter painting" a ·:muslin .flat

Or it is the set electrician, his \!~tares bathed in blue as he ;gingerly replaces an 800-degreeo. stage light.

The make-up man is a player, ::too. His lines are written in ,grease paint. The costume de­'Signer is another, and his prop is ihe measuring tape, his scene the :fitting.

H-se Manager And tlle- honse manager plays

-:ms r<>l.e., arranging programs, :setting up the refreshment stands, seeing to it that the ushers smile.

From tryouts to opening night 'lfuese people and many more are :moving on the stag_e, putting ex­"llress.ion into wood. and paint. - This is not· tli.e story- of the pre­lll!nl'ed play .. The- pia:y- tells its own ;;;tory-_ l'bis. iS' the untold story.

011'tt :&111!1't the warning light is :ilihlting. Taking a final drag on a t:igarette or the last swallow of .a coke, the play goer finds his :seat.

Eef<~re the lights dim :mel the ;;play begins the theater goer may ,ullfold his program to glance lhrollp tlte cast of characters. If ill~ gues .farther he will see the <division of acts and scenes. ·h~' Qtf!!I!J: Listing• - 'Perliaps;· if- fie Iia:s a moment or "two loDger, he will glance on th<i! ':back wllere he sees lists of names .-'llllder such headings as :•costume ·aiies.igners" or "electricians."

These a.:re just lists of names · "J:o him.. These people aren't goina; ·:to be on stage. Besides, the play :::.is bt;gim5ng-. His program falls "to .bis lapi f.OJ!gotten.

:J«>W'D YOU UKE TO ...

meet lot Lt.

DORSE F. PENDLETON

.en campus now- :·

.to show you how to • , •

earn over .$ 5000 a year •••

become an officer in the pir force •••

·get. a head start . in jet. aviation •••

be a part of a great flying team •••

os un Aviatio1t Cadet. See !lim. while you can. J:st Lt. Dorse F; Pen.' 4ll.eton and Aviation Cadet Selection Team .No. 204 are staying at Jthe Recreation:- Room .tomorrow and Wed-' :nesday. He will beJ :a~ble· between the' .hours 8:00 A.M. and 6·1l0 P.M. to those de.: ~ng futli.er infor­:mation, on. career op-

' ]~Gl'tu-nities · in' ;the Air ::FOl'Ce. ::P,ope Air· Force· ·Baaei

But there are two atmospheres· Only the director is apparently minute in. the moral

present in the theater .. The second calm as he gives last is hidden behind heavy · satin structions and boosts curtains where the names on the· of cast an!! crew. back of the program· have vital Yet that is only opening night significance. in the dwindling minutes before

Backstage · the air is charged. curtain time. The story has only Cast members nervously recit::! begun to unfold. their lines to themselves. A stage Before this hectic climax can be light has gone out and a lighting reached, usually about tltree technician is trying to replace tha weeks of good solid work will blistering hot bulb. have passed .. And an entire set

Difficulties of hard working students will The lead can't find his sus- have played their roles.

penders when he has to walk <Jn stage snapping them, or the stage Costume Designing manager scurries from .-place to. Jimmy Taylor, costume de­place to see that everyone is in. signer, comes in for a large share his proper place. of this work. In the weeks before

Someone on the stage -crew presentation he will face the prob­feverishly puts the finishing !ems of turning script lines into touches on a picture frame or appropriate costuming. paints an overlooked railing. The He will have to make visual as leading lady needs a pin for her well as ~eading interp1:etations. costume and must find one with- He must measure, even make the in minutes. costumes from the yards of ma­

Ban Monroe? (Continued From Page One)

way ... " said Hough, who added that she is a "modern-day Venus -one toward whom all eyes are cast. Are we going to outlaw schools and churches?. By .the same logic we can't outlaw Mari­lyn Monroe. She is another American institution."

In rebuttal, DeVos countered that DiMaggio had not had a steady home, for if he had, Mari­lyn could not have broken it up. Miss Mauldin said, "Marilyn Mon­roe can't act but one kind of part, and you know what that is . . ." The Russians, according to Misses Mauldin and Taylor, used pictures of Marilyn Monroe to say that "this is an example of American womanhood."

But Hough answered, if the Russians had "exhibited her pic­ture to their. people, there would 'have been a mass exodus to the United States." And, summing up the debate, Hough stated, "Mari­lyn is an institution, she is here to stay."

2 In National Meet (Continued From Page One)

Pi Kappa Delta is a national forensic organization which has a chapter at Wake Forest. At the national Pi Kappa Delta tourna­ment held last year at Kalamazoo, Mich., the Wake Forest men's team received a superior rating in all speaking events.

Stewart, Allyson Team In New Film

With James Stewart and June Allyson in the starring roles, Universal-International's Technicolor production of "The Glenn Miller Story" has been scheduled to open next Friday at the Collegiate Theatre.

The real-life story of the celeb1·ated musician re-creates the exciting times in which the band-master built his renowned orchestra and .f-eatures the. songs he made famous, played in the Miller manner. Starting from the time Glenn was strug­gling to find a "new sound" the1 picture carries him through his whirlwind romance with his wife-to-be to his fabulous suc­.cess in dance ball and cafe, on 'the radio and in theatres, and eventually his formation of the great Army Air Foree Orches­tra and the- tragic flight during whlch he was lost.

Cast in chief sutJporting roles are Charles .Dra)ce, George To­bias, Henry Morgan and guest­staxs Frances 4ngford, Louis Armstrong, Gene Krupa, Ben Pollack, :the Archle Savage\ Dancers and The Modemaires.

terial. Then until opening and the hasty search for lost pins or othei· mishaps he ~'ill fit and adjust his creations.

All the while, the lighting technician who burned his fingers on first night is checking angles. estimating intensity, watching for consistency in light and dark or striving for effect in one · of the most consuming jobs of the the­ater .

Norm Larson, whose interpre­tive lighting in the Theater-pro­duced "Glass Managerie" en­hanced Tennessee Williams' tragic· portrayal, handles this jDb.

Adaptation When sound comes into play

Vic Kirkman and Violet Pucke:t will be checking to adapt the play's needs to an ·auditorium accoustically adapted to 2,200 per­sons.

.But one of the more irksome jobs they. will have 'to contend with is bringing offstage effects in on cue. Add the necessary dark­ness present in "Menagerie" and a hard job becomes even harder.

Difficulties are every day oc­currences to those who work back­stage. Betty Mae Tribble and Virginia Cocke handle props with limited funds for materials, no prop room, and the fine details which necessitate even listing tile items in the actors' pockets.

Don Freeman handles the head­aches connected with tickets, pro­grams, ushers and the people out front.

Bobby Jordan, Flora Nell Roe­buck, Ed Squires, Bud James and Monroe Gardiner turn scrims, paint, drapries and furniture into settings and scenes.

Unnamed Pe()ple Parker Wilson does art

and helps on stage . Then there are the unnamed

people who play their own re­spective parts toward the whole. They are the necessary people. They are the indespensibles.

N o t t h e least in the list of necessary people is Prof. Clyde l\1cElroy, faculty director of the College Theater. On him falls the coordination, the job of guiding the entire production. Often on him rests the· success or failure of a production.

The many scores of people who make up, in one way or another. the Wake Forest College Theater measure their work in man-hours. Before the Theater's · scheduled five productions are completeJ approximately 2,600 man-hours of work will be invested.

One of the incongruitie!s -of all the hard work touched on her~ comes after the completion of a play. Everything that takes two weeks or more to put up comes down in two· hours.

"The guy that edits a publica~ tion," said one of the Theater workers, "has back issues to re­minisce over. The guy who builds the sets only has callouses."

... : ·. .. '

OLD GOLD AND .BLACK MONDAY., , ....

IDGAo.· Plitt form. ~Out- New1 D~~i,Jt(Jrs S~i~ ,Re~,ign$.'~ (Continued From Page· One)

store f:rQnts and the; sidewalkj;;:. · 2. The· ·brick .walks on. campus

will be re-routed to conform to the dirt paths which students who didn't · like their original l~yout

42 Vie Here· (Continued From Page One)

(}f Pinnacle, Mary_ Ellen LOftis of. Brevard, Linda Willard <if1 Pilot Mountain,' Jeanne Bradley of Waynesville, Marjorie Anne Sauhders of Charlotte.

Glenda· Thomas of Hiddenite, Jane Methvin of Fayetteville, Bobbie H. Vanderfoot of Moores­ville, Annie Bert Walton .of Jack­~onville, Oscar Jones of Mt. Olive, Walter A. Tuttle of Greensboro, Roger P. Gray Jr. of. Winstou­Salem.

James M. Peterson of Clinton, William A. Baker of Raleigh. George F. Fair~nks Jr. of Ra­leigh, ·Bobby Williams of Clinton, John C. Council Jr. of Winston­. Saiem,: JQseph L. Yates of Biscoe, ·Robert c:' Hartsell of Mt. ·Gilead.

Other Candidate. ~-::· Claude B. Wood · of,·-'P:.9Y, Bill Norman of Winston-Salem, ·.:.:r,~mes 0. Sizemore . Jr.· of ReidSville, Miles C. Hedrick of Rocky Mount, Willi&m L. ,Powell Jr. of Raleigh, Hunter L. Stone Jr. of Newton, James N.· Stephens of Leaksville.

David R .. Bryant of Greensb(}ro, Charles H. Freeze of Kannapoli~, George L. Cox of Greensboro, J. Patrick Pittman of Goldsboro, Larry B. Vanhoy of Rockwell, James R Darden of Jacksonville, Donald E. Johnson of Raleigh, Darwin Tip Johnson of Winston­Salem.

Sidney R. Carter of Clinton, Claude W. Drake Jr. of Como, Franklin N. Jackson of Clinton, Kenneth Payne of Southport Wil­liam T. Poole of Marion, Gerald T. Taylor of Beaufort and Michele L. Barringer of Newton.

B •.f' .· ·:m ·. · :J~ cco:ntinued ·From -~~ge~·:<n~:e) -:·· ·: : have so generously provi&ed. eu·"n · "':Or"' ·plishinerits" · a~<i ackn~wte'dge the' ·

3. One o'clock ·per~ission will 0 . . . . , . . . "vast' prestige that I hold ~t· be ·provided for crieds on· every . P~.!~hY~ . freahm&J?. and .. Wake· Forest." , . · . night. of the week that they don't . ·aopho.~~re: de~t~~ ~et , witll . , "Is ·it not apparen't then,'~ de- · ,· have four o'clock permission. the varaaty. team and M··~ Carol clared.: Smith, "tliat i a:n thorough-·: :~

Have Police Force , Old~an, du•ec:tor, ••at week. . ly capable ol enacting any reform· · · '··· · 4. A high-level Wasepo (Wake Purpo~ of the meetiair. waa regardless of the obstacles?" .

Forest secret P.Olice) will be ere- to beein the .•election j,f a ~eam Party whil> Htmter' James re­ated for the investigation of any of freilhmall and •ophomore~. to 'ceived. the n~ws of· SmitJi•s·' dis~ subversive movements on 'the rfllpresent Wake F~!••t at . the. qualification in .'his ~(fi~~ a~ p~rty campus such as ·studying !lnd Apple. Blo .. om Feahval ~t ~ary .headquarters. Jam~s w~~ so t'!lken failure to smooch. ,J~gularly. · ... Waahangto~ .Colle·~ ~ur•_aa the with shock that-')t~·-' comi>let~ly;_;:-.;_

5. The Chapel ·· \vm· be turned 81!Cond wee It of Apnl. · missed t4e side' po,cke~, ·scratch~di" •:. ·. over to the Semina1·y immediate- More than fifteen novi~e~ and broke his cuestick. '. · = · ·· ly, while chapel attendance ior tu,rnecl out f~r the, meethia,. Whereupon he i m m··e d i a·t·e·l y ,;, students will be -put' 'on a·. volun,. amona whom were Jobnn,.· ·Line- turned .to the reporter and .. said: .. ·. tary basis and held ·iu the phone hurpr, J. L. ·Dawkina, Joe Mill- "I· don't give a dam .. ·I don't. booths at Holding's: drugstore. aaps, Walt~r Ward and Clifton give a ... " . .

Sneedon. :;: James concluded with a staie-6; A . life-size portrait ~f Mr. ment that is not printed here·"but

Boregarde Smith· '\\•Hi :he duly- led officiat' observers~~ to" believe placed in the rotunda of Wait . Students at the University of th_ at the narty nii:me .·ha.d ·-'_been , Hall: Bfi!~gr~d.e, Yugos}ovia, recently ..- -r-

Would lmpro..-o. Constitution pQ-ycotted .lectures. The boycottc ·:h:a:n:g:e::d., =~==;;=::t::=;==::: 7. It goes without saying that ... ended w~en their d:ma?ds. for a :!'

a complete revision of tJ1e stru~ fz:ee_ 9'ho1ce of examma.tlon terms ture\ of the Wake Fo1·est Conirti· and a ... cha.nce to rep~at exams tution will be inunediately .under- _w...,e_,r.;e_m_e_t_ . .;..;. ________ .._;,

Stephenali's Record ·a ·arfnlint taJi:en, and such improvements· as ~'.;";;i''o-"!""".-...,_.-._..__.._ __ -.

are ·deemed necessal'y will be in- ~ ..... tr&:liiced. · . · · ···~ · ·

., '• .... -LON.G P.4Y.-.RECORD~-

8~ A democratic atmosphere, · herefufor~ ·unkiJown on the camp­us, will be encourage(~ ·'-'by the Waespo and by the gQvenunent in general.

9. TV sets will be installed· in all the classrooms es1Jecially in those where classe~. h;\Ve llrevious­ly been carried on.

(To pay for this "installation th-~ new Chapel at Wi.nston-Salein will be sold, and later on ·lllarts o-f the R. J. Reynold's Tobacco CompanJ will be sold. The Reynold's Build­ing is under appraisal at the pre­sent time.)

JAPAN: DORM.ITORY .. .(ACP) - Hokkaido University

in Japan has completed its .firs!; women's dor:mitory, and- it will house 20 students. The coeds pay only for room a11d a1·e expected to cook their own lUeals.

If Y · - ou D~ire· The BeJt In . . . ' . , ' .

HDIE.~COOIED. FOODS AncJ

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Columbia-CL-6282 · /

Rtd. Garters Mu.sic from the Sound Track

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"The Frueh Una~' Music from -the Sound Track

with ..

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Columbia~C.L-6275 . Music from Kismet ,

Peror FaHh a Drch. ~ . . .

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·.

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·· 'Lilic ··~F~r .:Nigh

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duction will bQ

8 p.m. ·Bob~

will pi pl'incipE Smithw Georgia Martha non Mi · The ·Barban Kathy

·Jordan, Jack·· Ii and. Jin

The McSwai er,. anc Puckett

Ed Sc .the set

, _,.and Jc ·''Tribble,

Puckett costU:rilE Nemar, ness; ai

. "Lilio Molnar. "a corr

.comedy, celestia: earth o: hero " love stc

Lilior despical a caro wick)

De] 3rd

Jim Wake placed Invitati at 'Sou· and 20.

' Houg top 10 was aw

Notre ' ·: · · defeatii

;Wa,ke : :one poi1 semi-fin Vermon · Wake Westerr and the

Miss director panied ·

li R -~

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A Ba; James : spoke s of the recomm other B dism~e

Howe no :prel sugg~tE

"T.he iicult "The ll ihave bE

•as<ilnin the diff: mittee · do a co

"I al sympatll sponse ~

present and the gram at tists."

The 4 Baptist to prob• dent Ull


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