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New.Floor Added New Trustee Rules ··As Building Rises Are Held … · 2018-03-20 · By K. S....

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ECC ChRnenge In Editorial Draws Replies Page Two Deacon Cagers' 'Light Of Hope' Lit By Watts * * .!!ike * * Page Six '.'\< VOLUME XLVBI New.Floor Added ··As Building Rises By K. S. DUFFER i:ng facing the Law SC'hool build- , STAFF WRITER ing will matcih exactJJ.y the archi- · The new General Classroo.m tectural design of the front of building assumed a new look the Law Scillool. And the other du.rinlg the holidays. A new floor end of the building will match ,, was added. Almost. exactly tJhe enmance on the li- 1 !t According to Pete Moore, Su- brary it faces. both perintendenJt of Buildiings and ends "":'ill. be the .same haght of Grounds the interior constru.c- the bmldmgs they face. tion of the new floor was com- The. COI!ltract the con- pleted before the !holidays be- compam.es callis .for g<m., The brick exterior was add· •DY July. The erl by the masons during the mg will be ready for occupation holidays. it appears for the fall of 1963. tJhat there is a new floor on the (See Picture, page 5) building which next Fall will ,, ihouse th.e sociology, philosophy, education, and all departments, except speech and drama, now housed by the Library. To save on building costs, work is concentrated on the ends WF Plans Asia Institute of the buildi:ng, said Moore. A !Six-weeks institute on Asia, 'The ends are more difficult designed for high school and to .build" said Moore. "Also, elementary sCihool teachers, will be c0111ducted by the Asian Stu- they lend support to the center dies Program at Wake Forest of the building. It would be over- ly expensive to employ masons next summer. to work on both the ends and The institute, .to be held June '' tlhe center of the building." !10-July 16, will be under the ,At present construction of the' direction of Dr. B. G. Gokb.ale, $1.65 million' dollar buildiing has professor of history 81lld Asian been delayed about ten days due stUdies at Wake Forest. to inclement weather. The ten Twelve $100 scholars'bips days will be quickly made up be offered by the Asian Stud1es n()W tJhat the building's progress Program with the assistance of oafforos shelter for work on the the .A!sia Society, New York. interior in case of more bad Dr. Gokhale will conduct weather courses, carrying three credit For the curious building- hours each, on the ihistory and watcher, Moore supplied this in- civilization ()f Southeast! Asia formation. The end of the build- and of South Asia. These courses may be taken for undergraduate or graduate credit. A course on Oriental SO.Cial Ins.titutions will be taught by Dr. Ohangboh Ch.ee, assistant pro- GOING UP? Sophomores Dave Chamberlain and Dalllly Kellum hope their grades will as a result of their studying for exams on the Reynolda Hall elevator. Imagine the surprise of an Old Gold reporter when he was faced -PHo·ro BY ROUGt;;R WOOD With this spectacle Friday night as Chamber- lain and Kellum-supplied with soda shop re- freshments and lounge chairs-made their bid for precious study space. Speech Department Plans Television Lab Experiment NUMBER 13 New Trustee Rules Are Held Desirable By ADRIAN KING MANAGING EDITOR integrity of commitment to the /least. At his most, he is far welfare· of our institutions is more. such that they, too, can be "He is the responsible agent Rev. Carlyle Marney, pastor trusted to do more than make acting in the interest of the in- of the Myers Park B a P t i s t generous contributions of money. stituti.on to which he has been Church of Charlotte, said Fri- Their judgment and their wis- elected a trustee for the denomi- 1 day night he believed there dom and their memories of the nation. The designated ends of 1 were people the borders time when they lived among us the inlstitution are prior. The sti- , of North ·Carolina who !Should be qualify them for full participa- pulated intentions of the deno- ; allowed to serve on North Caro- tion." I mination are as a field within : lina Baptist institutioiiiS'' board Marney's remarks evidently which he operates. I . of trustees. caused raiiSed eyebrows "He, as re.sponsible acting In a speech before the fourth judging from. comments over- agent, runs the risk of going annual conference for the trus- heard following the banquet counter of the desires and in- tees of North Carolina Bap- speech. The speech was inter- tentions of the proprietary body, tist institutions, Marney asked, spersed with several new and the denomination. The relation 1 ". . Is it not possible that the sharp departures from accepted between the trustee and the de-. life of a single institution may ideas of the relationship of trus- nomination, at its worst, re- spread so far beyond the bor- tees of Baptist in:stitution:s to the presents a situation of febrile ders of the state and the con- Baptist State Convention. and denervating manipulation of vention that the constituency of Prior to his above remarks, the institution becomes entitled Marney declared, "The trustee to ISome kind of eligibility for is, with respect to the institu- participation in the life of their tions of the denomination, the mother, too? means which the power I ". . . I believe that there are of the denomination is trans- men beyond our borders whose ferred. This he is at hils very Second Scholarship Offered To College The Wake Forest Board of Trustees will hold its regular January meeting Friday at 10:30 a. m., according to Worth Copeland, secretary to the Board. William J. Conrad, new pre- sident, will make committee appointments. The Board will act on four faculty appoint- ments for the ·academic year 1963-64 and several faculty ap- pointments for the current year. Other routine matters will be discussed by the Trus- tees, acoording to Copeland. The Free University of Berlin was established on a perma- has offered Wake Forest two nent basis last year through s c h o 1 a r ships for the 1963-64 communication between O'Fla- school year. herty and Hartwich, sent Rob- manhood to the point that the Library Adds ,,_First Edition fessor of sociology, By BARBARA BENNETT with WSJS-TV, Chanel12. As a Dr. Gokbale also will conduct ASSISTANT EDITOR public service, WSJS• is sending Dr. Horst W. Hartwich, execu- e;:t Hocutt, ?f to trustee is but a rubber stamp tive o;ccretary of the Free Uni- the Free Umvez;s 1 ty thiS for the median wishes of the versity's Foreign Relations Com- and brought Mane Almuth. Blit- constituent power source. mission proposed a continuation tersdorf, of Coburg, Bavana, 00 "At its best, he iiS a responsi- of the exchange program Wake Forest. IJle man, acting according to sports, Ernie, Accorsi, senior of and offered a second scholar- Hartwich said, "We shall do his manhood and his Christiani- Of Spenser a once--a-week seminar during "Hit music-F.ade in one!" its complete television mobile the institute. A special collec- These 'are the directiOI!lJS which unit to thoe campus. Hershey, Pa. ship. everything in the future to guar- ty in the best interests of the Lin<La Southerland, junior of In a letter to Dr. James c. a!lte:. the exchange from our institution he has called Miacon., Ga. will direct a pro- O'Flaherty chairman of the s1de, and offered the two schol- to serve. The best mterest of gram entitled Reader's Theatre. German Hartwich "even . Wake Forest that call for him to will be a fleleyision expressed his appreciation for IS not m a pos1tion to make an know respoDISibly where oor- of Edna St. Milay s "the unusually friendly recep- offer at all." ders. arc:: with respect to hilS de- . 11he Murder of LJdice, tion" he received during a visit Visiting the College in con- nom:m_ation, and where the edges The College Library has re- ceived a copy of the first edition of the "Faerie Queene" fl'Gm the collection of. Charles H. Babcock Sr. of tion· of books and educational will &tart cameras rolling Dn The program will originate aids will be ·available in the col- "Operation Speech 241," a tele- from Room 20, Renolda Hall, lege library, 8IDd · educational vision lab under tJb.e direction of and will be viewed on a televi- and cultural films on Asia will. students scheduled for telecast si()n set in the East Lounge, be shown. Thursday, 7-8:30 p, m. The first in tJhe series is news, The Asiaa!J Studies Program A series·. o:ll television ... pro-. weather, ailld sports coverage was in ·the fall of 1960 at grams prroduced by the mem- under the dire'ction of Jim Wake Forest, Salem College, bevs of Speech 241, a eourse in Sinkway, junior of Glen Rock, and Winston-Salem Teachers introduction to broadc·asting, N. J. The a111nouncers are news, College as a result of a grant and! members of tlJ.e WFDD staff Ray Southard, senior of Frank- from the Miary Reynolds Bab- will be presented over a closed lin; wea·ther, Ertelle Brewe'l', cock Foundation. television circuit iin cooperation freshman of Bel Air, Md.; and mg . John . R?sental, of to the College last April. · nection·with the _foreign leaders are With respect to the needf> of New· York··C1ty; B'renda- Ericks, · · . · ·. - ,; · · program of ·the Office of' Cui- tlie institution.·we shall say, pre- Considered. 0111e of the most important works in the English langu·age, the "F.aerie Queene" was written by Edmund Spen- 1' ser, English au1ihor who lived from 1552 to 1599. Spenser said the purpose of the long poem was to "fashion a gentleman or IIIDble person in. vertuous and gently discipline." "Vertuous" '•\Vas 1Jhe spelling used then. The dedication says: "To the mo.st rni.ghtie and tna.gnificent Empresse Elizabeth, by the grace of God Queene Df Eng- land, France, and Ireland, De-. ·fender oi the Faith, &c." Turner Wins Grant For Nuclear Study· Award Allows Year In Belgium - Bormd in old calf, :the first part was printed in London in 1590. It contains the first three booiks of the long poem, The second part, which contains the n remaining three books, was Printed in 1956. Dr. Thomas J. Turner, pro- fessor of physics, has received a grant which will enable him to spend a year doing research and studying in one of EUl'ope's outstanding nuclear laboratories. Althougfu. the College has a Spe-;nser collection housed in its Rare Books Room, it has had no first edition of the "Faerie Queene." These two volumes were owned at one time by JOihn· Mitford, early 19th century critic and author, and later be- came a .part of ·1ihe library of A. Edward Newton, American book-collector and author of several books on book collecting. The National Science Formda- tion has awarded him a :£acuity fellowship which p a y s an amount equal :to his salary as well as travel expenses. The fel- owships are aimed at improving tJhe effectiveness of teaCihers. ;, Prepayment Bills Go Out Dr. Turner, his wife, and three children will go to Mol, Belgium nen August and remain there for 12 months. Dr. Turner de- scribed Mol, a town of 20,000 which is 30 miles from Antwe'l'p, as :the equivalent of Oak Ridge, Tenn., in this country. ;Dr. Turner actually will be on .the s.taff of the laboratory and will work with Dr. S. Ame- lilnckx, head of solid state Th Tre · ff' iled physics division of the labora- e. ;.ISUI'er.s 0 Ice ma t;ory. He !has been described as :atatenal concermng one of the world's outstanding a! College charges for the spriD;g physicists. Dr. Turner will do semester to all at their laboratory work as well as par- d u r 1. n g the ticipate in seminars and con- Christmas holiday. ferences. '":ho did not re- At th.e Colle.ge Dr. Turner is ce1ve this matenal may call at ·doing research for the Atomic the Treasurer's office, 107 Rey- Energy Commission the be- and obtain addition- havior of metals· under stress. JCOp1es, Two areas of his work at Mol The deadline for mailing pre- will be internal friction 8!1l.d the payments to the treasurer is new field of disloca:tion inter- Thursday, Jan. 24. actions. He also will visit other Schedule Of Exams MORNING AFTERNOON 3rd hour MWF .classes Wed., Jan. 16 Bta hour Tl'S classes English 111-7-10 p, m. · 6th hour 'ITS classes Thur., Jan.17 2nd hour MWF classes 5th hour TTS classes Fri., Jan. 18 4th hour MWF classes Math 105, 111, 112 Sat., Jan. 19 7th hour MWF classes 2nd hour 'ITS classes Mon:, Jan. 21 5th hour MWF classes 7th hour 'ITS classes Tues., Jan. 22 h/: hour MWF classes 4th hour 'ITS clasLSe$ Wed., Jan. 23 1st hour 'ITS classes Chemistry 111-7-10 P. m. 6th hour MWF classes 'J,'hur., Jan. 24 8th hour MWF classes DR. THOMAS J. TURNER • , . does AEC research • . • outstanding physics laboratories in Europe, particularly ones at Stuttgart, Germany, and Gre- noble, F'ra.nce. Dr. Twner has been on the Wake Forest faculty since 1952. He holds the B.S. degree from the of North. Carolina, the master's from Clemson Col- lege and the Ph.D. from the University of Virginia. Juniors Plan Class Gift Junior class president Charles Win.berry ha-s announced the ap- poirntment of a 40-member Class Projects Committee. The group will meet to in- vestigate and discUSs ideas for the c1a56 giftt to the school. Plans call for .the group to re- commend several projects to the entire class ·at a class meeting to be held sometime in March. The committee will also look into various financbal means 1Jo help pay for the gift, It is hoped by the officem of the class that some means can be .arramged so th.a.t the entire cost of the gifu will not be bom.e by assessments on each mem- ber. ••No deviation from this posted schedUle will be allowed except special authorization 0! the Executive " The first meeting of .the Com- mittee will be held Thursday at6p, m. sophomore of Accokeek, Md.; 1 to tural Exchange of the u. s. sently, how he lives where there and other members of the thea- With the conviCtwn tha: Department :of State,· Hartwich is a conflict of interests, ter. It can only be good for our stu found Wake Forest a "small but with the ever-present teDISwn Following the Reader's Thea- dents whom we to USA ll t ll " that marks his dichotomous call- to become acquamted With a exce en co ege. . tre segment, Tom Lally, senior small but enthusiastic college, He said liis visit was "extra- mg. of Lorain, Ohio, will conduct a sportJs inte't'View. which has ahead of it a very ordinarily interesting, and I was Legislature Approves Proposals PQISitive development." very pleasantly affected by the The Huntsmen·, ventriloquist d kindn 'th Th tru t th fu Bill Constagy, junior of Atlanta, O'Flaherty said the faculty friendliness an css WI l ". . . e s ce, ere re, Ga.; and folksinger Dr. Johin A. scholarship committee will meet which (the faculty) and also the lives as an agent, as servant, Has Responsibilities Carter, Jr., assistant professor early this week to decide how !Students received me." and as I:?an. to G<>d of English will.be featured »n a the second scholarehip will be for the mstitutlon. compe.-. variety spot directed by Carole utilized. tency means that he . aware Saintsing, soplwmore Df Win- The exchange program which Band SetS of some of the facts of life. He In a quiet session of the Wake Forest Stl:dent Legislature held prior to Christmas holidays, the legislators adopted the recom- mendation:; of the special com- mittee on the bookstore. soon-salem. Miss B'rewer will be ' comes to see that all so called . the hostess. F c theological issues are not. They- ReaJer's Theater irst oncert frequently are cloaks ror power Young To Direct Ui grabiS. He comes to understand. Offers Program U'llder the direction of L. L. The report, presented at a previous meeting of the Legis- Young, junior of Shelby, an edu- catiOOLal segment will be pre- sented on the subject of skin, diving, with Becky Stone, sopho- more Df Durham, Interviewing Bill Young, senior of Burnsville. Concluding the series Will be tlhe presentatiOill of a fifteen of tile !Store and the. correspond- minute comedy entitled ence that the committee had re-. W lk In B t .. 'th M l lature by Charles Winberry, president of the junior class, concerned the textbook division · th · t' tiJo a s eau y w1 ary garding e _mves Iga n. Michael, junior of Charlotte; In presenting the recommen- Dan Custer, senior of Palmyra, dations, Winberry noted that the Pa.; Terry Eddleman, a fresh- members of the body should un- man of Winston-salem, and derstand that the report was at Brenda Hicks. The drama will present incomplete and could be directed by Jan Huggins, be incorrect. He added that this seniO'r of Ifender:sonville. _be only if the The speeclt department has adlllUllstration chose to present worked with tlelevision facilities to the committee the complete in the past, but thiiS is the first recordls of the store. He as- time that ·the television equip. sured the body that when this ment has been brought to 1lh.e was done, the committee W!Onld campus. present its complete and final Working with Dr. Burroughs report. and the Wake Forest students in. In accepting the recommen- setting. up have been Reese dations of the committee the Felts, Johnny Comas, and Lee. Legislature received the report Wallenhaupt of WSJS. "We are as a "matter of information;" very appreciative of the cooper- urged the committee to hold a11ion of WSJS television in further diiScussions with the making this possible through members of the administration, the use of their facilities," stat- and recommended that the ad- ed Dr. Burroughs. ministration present the com- mittee its full and complete records of the College Book- store. The committee recom- mendations were adopted unani- mously. Howler To Take Group Pictures The legislature also approved The Howler Will take pictures the appointment by President of honoran' organizations Tues- Steve Glass of Joyce Groom, day even..:ng in the Howler office junior of Winday Hill, S. C., to according to the following sched- the Honor Council. Miss Groom ule: will fill the vacancy created by 7 . 00 the resignation of Flo Robinson. 7 ; 10 . REGISTRAR'S NOTICE A student in part-time work who needs a special schedUle for spring !Semester should file his application Promptly with the registrar. One who is fully qualified to make the request should not postpone action until registration day, and expect the registrar to have time for con- sideration of the situation, the Registrar's Office announced. 7:20 7:30 7:40 7:50 8:00 8:10 8:20 8:30 8:40 8:50 9;00 9:10 9:20 Omicron Delta Kappa Tassels Alpha Epsilon Delta Beta Beta Beta Gamma Sigma Epsilon Kappa Mu Epsilon Delta Phi Alpha Phi Sigma Iota Phi Alpha Theta Eta Sigma Phi Pi Kappa Delta Phi Epsilon Kappa Monogram Circle K Alpha Phi Omega The Wake Forest COI!lcert that processes of change are- Band will present its first con- in:'olved but are some- times buncd beneath a mass of cert of 1Jhe year in chapel verbiage to which he is subject- day. Featured will be Masse- ed ... " Six Wake Forest students will participate in the second Reader's Theater at 8:15 p, m. Thursday and Friday in the College Theater. net's "Meditations from Thais," Marney's address was entitled performed by six flutists. /"The Trustee and the Denomi- Judith Lea will play a piano i nation." Following his address, solo, "Theme From the Apart- . the group broke into smaller ment," accompanied by the 1 units for seminars.' Dr. Sankey band. 1 Blanton led a seminar on "The The program, sponsored by the speech department, is en- titled "Dorothy Parker" and will consist of the reading of four short stories and ten short poems by Miss Parker. The readers will be students Judy Palmer, Brenda Cart- wright, Dee Shreve, Kathy Looney, Florence Gray, and Sam Allen. The entire Concert Band will 1 Colleges,'' and Dr. M c Leo d play Richard Wagner's "Elsa's 1 Bryan of the Wake F.orest Reli- ProcessiOOJ. to the Oathedral,"l ·' gion Department led a group on tJhe Overture from ''The Un-, "The Social Service Institutions." sinkable Molly Brown," selec- The program resumed Satur- tions from "Gigi," and a Latin . 1 day morning with an address by number, "Fandango." Dr. Mark Dcpp, Methodist of The performance will be un- :Winston-Salem. Dr. Olin T. Bink- der the direction of Calvin R. I Icy spoke on "The TrUIStee and Huber, director of instrumen.tal I the Instituti.'Cin." Afterooon semi- There will be no admission and coffee a,nd cookies will be served following the program. mu·sic at Wake Forest. nars were conducted. YDC To Hear Dr. Jordan Dr. Henry Jordan, a prominently-mentioned candidate for governor in 1964, will address the regular meeting of the Wake Forest Young Demo- crats at 7 p. m. Tuesday in the East Lounge. The club will make plans for attendance at the state installation of officers to be held Jan. 12, and discuss a rally to be hosted by the group in February. Jordan, Cedar Falls dentist and textile execu- tive, !Served as chairman of the State Highway Commission under former G<>vernor W. Kerr Scott, and was a close political advisor to former Governor Hodges. His brother, B. Everett Jor- dan is prmently serving in the United States Senate. Arrangements will be made for the club to attend the annual State YDC installation to be held in Goldsboro Jan. 12. The club has entered the competition for the mOISt outstanding college club of the year. The awards committee will meet in Goldsboro to select the winner of the coveted award which the club received in 1960. The club was selected at the state convention held last fall in Greensboro to host the winter college rally. Plans tentatively· call for the rally flo be held in February at the Hotel Robert E. Lee. other arrangements will be discussed at the meeting, to which all students have been invited. DR. HENRY JORDAN ••• DC speaker may seek governor's post •••
Transcript
Page 1: New.Floor Added New Trustee Rules ··As Building Rises Are Held … · 2018-03-20 · By K. S. DUFFER i:ng facing the Law SC'hool build-, STAFF WRITER ing will matcih exactJJ.y the

ECC ChRnenge In Editorial Draws Replies

Page Two

Deacon Cagers' 'Light Of Hope' Lit By Watts

* * "e~ <J~t.e e~ .!!ike <J~uJ M~,, * * Page Six

'.'\< VOLUME XLVBI ----------------------------------------------~--------------------~

New.Floor Added ··As Building Rises

By K. S. DUFFER i:ng facing the Law SC'hool build- , STAFF WRITER ing will matcih exactJJ.y the archi- ·

The new General Classroo.m tectural design of the front of building assumed a new look the Law Scillool. And the other du.rinlg the holidays. A new floor end of the building will match

,, was added. Almost. exactly tJhe enmance on the li-1 !t According to Pete Moore, Su- brary ~icll it faces. Als~, both

perintendenJt of Buildiings and ends "":'ill. be the .same haght of Grounds the interior constru.c- the bmldmgs whic~ they face. tion of the new floor was com- The. COI!ltract ~th the con­pleted before the !holidays be- structio~ compam.es callis .for g<m., The brick exterior was add· ~omp~eti0111 •DY July. The b~­erl by the masons during the mg will be ready for occupation holidays. Alll~way, it appears for the fall ~mester of 1963. tJhat there is a new floor on the (See Picture, page 5) building which next Fall will

,, ihouse th.e sociology, philosophy, education, and all departments, except speech and drama, now housed by the Library.

To save on building costs, work is concentrated on the ends

WF Plans Asia Institute

of the buildi:ng, said Moore. A !Six-weeks institute on Asia, • 'The ends are more difficult designed for high school and

to .build" said Moore. "Also, elementary sCihool teachers, will be c0111ducted by the Asian Stu­

they lend support to the center dies Program at Wake Forest of the building. It would be over-ly expensive to employ masons next summer. to work on both the ends and The institute, .to be held June

'' tlhe center of the building." !10-July 16, will be under the ,At present construction of the' direction of Dr. B. G. Gokb.ale,

$1.65 million' dollar buildiing has professor of history 81lld Asian been delayed about ten days due stUdies at Wake Forest. to inclement weather. The ten Twelve $100 scholars'bips ~ days will be quickly made up be offered by the Asian Stud1es n()W tJhat the building's progress Program with the assistance of oafforos shelter for work on the the .A!sia Society, New York. interior in case of more bad Dr. Gokhale will conduct weather courses, carrying three credit

For the curious building- hours each, on the ihistory and watcher, Moore supplied this in- civilization ()f Southeast! Asia formation. The end of the build- and of South Asia. These courses

may be taken for undergraduate or graduate credit.

A course on Oriental SO.Cial Ins.titutions will be taught by Dr. Ohangboh Ch.ee, assistant pro-

GOING UP? Sophomores Dave Chamberlain and Dalllly Kellum hope their grades will as a result of their studying for exams on the Reynolda Hall elevator. Imagine the surprise of an Old Gold reporter when he was faced

-PHo·ro BY ROUGt;;R WOOD With this spectacle Friday night as Chamber-lain and Kellum-supplied with soda shop re­freshments and lounge chairs-made their bid for precious study space.

Speech Department Plans Television Lab Experiment

NUMBER 13

New Trustee Rules Are Held Desirable

By ADRIAN KING MANAGING EDITOR

integrity of commitment to the /least. At his most, he is far welfare· of our institutions is more. such that they, too, can be "He is the responsible agent

Rev. Carlyle Marney, pastor trusted to do more than make acting in the interest of the in-of the Myers Park B a P t i s t generous contributions of money. stituti.on to which he has been Church of Charlotte, said Fri- Their judgment and their wis- elected a trustee for the denomi-

1 day night he believed there dom and their memories of the nation. The designated ends of 1 were people o~tside the borders time when they lived among us the inlstitution are prior. The sti­, of North ·Carolina who !Should be qualify them for full participa- pulated intentions of the deno­; allowed to serve on North Caro- tion." I mination are as a field within : lina Baptist institutioiiiS'' board Marney's remarks evidently which he operates.

I. of trustees. caused ~orne raiiSed eyebrows "He, as re.sponsible acting

In a speech before the fourth judging from. comments over- agent, runs the risk of going annual conference for the trus- heard following the banquet counter of the desires and in­tees of North Carolina Bap- speech. The speech was inter- tentions of the proprietary body, tist institutions, Marney asked, spersed with several new and the denomination. The relation

1 ". . • Is it not possible that the sharp departures from accepted between the trustee and the de-. life of a single institution may ideas of the relationship of trus- nomination, at its worst, re­spread so far beyond the bor- tees of Baptist in:stitution:s to the presents a situation of febrile ders of the state and the con- Baptist State Convention. and denervating manipulation of vention that the constituency of Prior to his above remarks, the institution becomes entitled Marney declared, "The trustee to ISome kind of eligibility for is, with respect to the institu­participation in the life of their tions of the denomination, the mother, too? means thro~gh which the power I ". . . I believe that there are of the denomination is trans­men beyond our borders whose ferred. This he is at hils very

Second Scholarship Offered To College

The Wake Forest Board of Trustees will hold its regular January meeting Friday at 10:30 a. m., according to Worth Copeland, secretary to the Board.

William J. Conrad, new pre­sident, will make committee appointments. The Board will act on four faculty appoint­ments for the ·academic year 1963-64 and several faculty ap­pointments for the current year. Other routine matters will be discussed by the Trus­tees, acoording to Copeland.

The Free University of Berlin was established on a perma­has offered Wake Forest two nent basis last year through s c h o 1 a r ships for the 1963-64 communication between O'Fla-school year. herty and Hartwich, sent Rob- manhood to the point that the

Library Adds ,,_First Edition fessor of sociology, By BARBARA BENNETT with WSJS-TV, Chanel12. As a

Dr. Gokbale also will conduct ASSISTANT EDITOR public service, WSJS• is sending

Dr. Horst W. Hartwich, execu- e;:t Hocutt, j~or ?f Cla~ton, to trustee is but a rubber stamp tive o;ccretary of the Free Uni- the Free Umvez;s1ty thiS ye~ for the median wishes of the versity's Foreign Relations Com- and brought Mane Almuth. Blit- constituent power source. mission proposed a continuation tersdorf, of Coburg, Bavana, 00 "At its best, he iiS a responsi­of the p~esent exchange program Wake Forest. IJle man, acting according to

sports, Ernie, Accorsi, senior of and offered a second scholar- Hartwich said, "We shall do his manhood and his Christiani-

Of Spenser a once--a-week seminar during "Hit music-F.ade in one!" its complete television mobile the institute. A special collec- These 'are the directiOI!lJS which unit to thoe campus.

Hershey, Pa. ship. everything in the future to guar- ty in the best interests of the Lin<La Southerland, junior of In a letter to Dr. James c. a!lte:. the exchange from our institution he has ~n called

Miacon., Ga. will direct a pro- O'Flaherty chairman of the s1de, and offered the two schol- to serve. The best mterest of gram entitled Reader's Theatre. German d~partment, Hartwich ~rships. "even . ~ Wake Forest that instituti~n call for him to ~his will be a fleleyision ad.apt~- expressed his appreciation for IS not m a pos1tion to make an know respoDISibly where th~ oor­~;on of Edna St. V~no~en;, Milay s "the unusually friendly recep- offer at all." ders. arc:: with respect to hilS de­. 11he Murder of LJdice, ~eatur- tion" he received during a visit Visiting the College in con- nom:m_ation, and where the edges

The College Library has re­ceived a copy of the first edition of the "Faerie Queene" fl'Gm the collection of. Charles H. Babcock Sr. of W'mston~alem.

tion· of books and educational will &tart cameras rolling Dn The program will originate aids will be ·available in the col- "Operation Speech 241," a tele- from Room 20, Renolda Hall, lege library, 8IDd · educational vision lab under tJb.e direction of and will be viewed on a televi­and cultural films on Asia will. students scheduled for telecast si()n set in the East Lounge, be shown. Thursday, 7-8:30 p, m. The first in tJhe series is news,

The Asiaa!J Studies Program A series·. o:ll television ... pro-. weather, ailld sports coverage was be~ in ·the fall of 1960 at grams prroduced by the mem- under the dire'ction of Jim Wake Forest, Salem College, bevs of Speech 241, a eourse in Sinkway, junior of Glen Rock, and Winston-Salem Teachers introduction to broadc·asting, N. J. The a111nouncers are news, College as a result of a grant and! members of tlJ.e WFDD staff Ray Southard, senior of Frank­from the Miary Reynolds Bab- will be presented over a closed lin; wea·ther, Ertelle Brewe'l', cock Foundation. television circuit iin cooperation freshman of Bel Air, Md.; and

mg . John . R?sental, IScmo~ of to the College last April. · nection·with the _foreign leaders are With respect to the needf> of New· York··C1ty; B'renda- Ericks, · · . · ·. - ,; · · program of ·the Office of' Cui- tlie institution.·we shall say, pre-Considered. 0111e of the most

important works in the English langu·age, the "F.aerie Queene" was written by Edmund Spen-

1' ser, English au1ihor who lived from 1552 to 1599. Spenser said the purpose of the long poem was to "fashion a gentleman or IIIDble person in. vertuous and gently discipline." "Vertuous"

'•\Vas 1Jhe spelling used then. The dedication says: "To the

mo.st rni.ghtie and tna.gnificent Empresse Elizabeth, by the grace of God Queene Df Eng­land, France, and Ireland, De-.

·fender oi the Faith, &c."

Turner Wins Grant For Nuclear Study· Award Allows Year In Belgium

- Bormd in old calf, :the first part was printed in London in 1590. It contains the first three booiks of the long poem, The second part, which contains the

n remaining three books, was Printed in 1956.

Dr. Thomas J. Turner, pro­fessor of physics, has received a grant which will enable him to spend a year doing research and studying in one of EUl'ope's outstanding nuclear laboratories.

Althougfu. the College has a Spe-;nser collection housed in its Rare Books Room, it has had no first edition of the "Faerie

'· Queene." These two volumes were owned at one time by JOihn· Mitford, early 19th century critic and author, and later be­came a .part of ·1ihe library of A. Edward Newton, American book-collector and author of several books on book collecting.

The National Science Formda­tion has awarded him a :£acuity fellowship which p a y s an amount equal :to his salary as well as travel expenses. The fel­owships are aimed at improving tJhe effectiveness of teaCihers.

;, Prepayment Bills Go Out

Dr. Turner, his wife, and three children will go to Mol, Belgium nen August and remain there for 12 months. Dr. Turner de­scribed Mol, a town of 20,000 which is 30 miles from Antwe'l'p, as :the equivalent of Oak Ridge, Tenn., in this country.

;Dr. Turner actually will be on .the s.taff of the laboratory and will work with Dr. S. Ame­lilnckx, head of th~ solid state

Th Tre · • ff' iled physics division of the labora-e. ;.ISUI'er.s 0 Ice ma t;ory. He !has been described as

:atatenal concermng prepaym~nt one of the world's outstanding a! College charges for the spriD;g physicists. Dr. Turner will do semester to all student~ at their laboratory work as well as par­ho~e addres~es d u r 1. n g the ticipate in seminars and con-Christmas holiday. ferences. ~Y s~dent '":ho did not re- At th.e Colle.ge Dr. Turner is

ce1ve this matenal may call at ·doing research for the Atomic the Treasurer's office, 107 Rey- Energy Commission the be­nol~!!.~all, and obtain addition- havior of metals· under stress.

JCOp1es, Two areas of his work at Mol The deadline for mailing pre- will be internal friction 8!1l.d the

payments to the treasurer is new field of disloca:tion inter­Thursday, Jan. 24. actions. He also will visit other

Schedule Of Exams MORNING AFTERNOON

3rd hour MWF .classes Wed., Jan. 16 Bta hour Tl'S classes

English 111-7-10 p, m. · 6th hour 'ITS classes Thur., Jan.17 2nd hour MWF classes 5th hour TTS classes Fri., Jan. 18 4th hour MWF classes Math 105, 111, 112 Sat., Jan. 19 7th hour MWF classes 2nd hour 'ITS classes Mon:, Jan. 21 5th hour MWF classes 7th hour 'ITS classes Tues., Jan. 22 h/: hour MWF classes 4th hour 'ITS clasLSe$ Wed., Jan. 23 1st hour 'ITS classes

Chemistry 111-7-10 P. m. 6th hour MWF classes 'J,'hur., Jan. 24 8th hour MWF classes

DR. THOMAS J. TURNER • , . does AEC research • . •

outstanding physics laboratories in Europe, particularly ones at Stuttgart, Germany, and Gre­noble, F'ra.nce.

Dr. Twner has been on the Wake Forest faculty since 1952. He holds the B.S. degree from the Univ~rsity of North. Carolina, the master's from Clemson Col­lege and the Ph.D. from the University of Virginia.

Juniors Plan Class Gift

Junior class president Charles Win.berry ha-s announced the ap­poirntment of a 40-member Class Projects Committee.

The group will meet to in­vestigate and discUSs ideas for the c1a56 giftt to the school. Plans call for .the group to re­commend several projects to the entire class ·at a class meeting to be held sometime in March. The committee will also look into various financbal means 1Jo help pay for the gift,

It is hoped by the officem of the class that some means can be .arramged so th.a.t the entire cost of the gifu will not be bom.e by assessments on each mem­ber. ••No deviation from this posted schedUle will be allowed

except ~Y special authorization 0! the Executive " The first meeting of .the Com­mittee will be held Thursday at6p, m.

sophomore of Accokeek, Md.; Sa~d H~rtwich, 1 r.et~ed to tural Exchange of the u. s. sently, how he lives where there and other members of the thea- ~erlin With the conviCtwn tha: Department :of State,· Hartwich is a conflict of interests, ~d ter. It can only be good for our stu found Wake Forest a "small but with the ever-present teDISwn

Following the Reader's Thea- dents whom we se~d to th~ USA ll t ll " that marks his dichotomous call-to become acquamted With a exce en co ege. .

tre segment, Tom Lally, senior small but enthusiastic college, He said liis visit was "extra- mg. of Lorain, Ohio, will conduct a sportJs inte't'View. which has ahead of it a very ordinarily interesting, and I was

Legislature Approves Proposals

PQISitive development." very pleasantly affected by the The Huntsmen·, ventriloquist d kindn 'th Th tru t th fu

Bill Constagy, junior of Atlanta, O'Flaherty said the faculty friendliness an css WI l ". . . e s ce, ere re, Ga.; and folksinger Dr. Johin A. scholarship committee will meet which (the faculty) and also the lives as an agent, as servant,

Has Responsibilities

Carter, Jr., assistant professor early this week to decide how !Students received me." and as I:?an. re~ponsib.le to G<>d of English will.be featured »n a the second scholarehip will be for the mstitutlon. Hi~ compe.-. variety spot directed by Carole utilized. tency means that he ~s . aware Saintsing, soplwmore Df Win- The exchange program which Band SetS of some of the facts of life. He

In a quiet session of the Wake Forest Stl:dent Legislature held prior to Christmas holidays, the legislators adopted the recom­mendation:; of the special com­mittee on the bookstore.

soon-salem. Miss B'rewer will be ' comes to see that all so called . the hostess. F c theological issues are not. They-

ReaJer's Theater irst oncert frequently are cloaks ror power Young To Direct Ui grabiS. He comes to understand.

Offers Program U'llder the direction of L. L.

The report, presented at a previous meeting of the Legis-

Young, junior of Shelby, an edu­catiOOLal segment will be pre­sented on the subject of skin, diving, with Becky Stone, sopho­more Df Durham, Interviewing Bill Young, senior of Burnsville.

Concluding the series Will be tlhe presentatiOill of a fifteen

of tile !Store and the. correspond- minute comedy entitled "Sh~ ence that the committee had re-. W lk In B t .. 'th M

llature by Charles Winberry, president of the junior class, concerned the textbook division

· th · t' tiJo a s eau y w1 ary garding e _mves Iga n. Michael, junior of Charlotte;

In presenting the recommen- Dan Custer, senior of Palmyra, dations, Winberry noted that the Pa.; Terry Eddleman, a fresh­members of the body should un- man of Winston-salem, and derstand that the report was at Brenda Hicks. The drama will present incomplete and could be directed by Jan Huggins, be incorrect. He added that this seniO'r of Ifender:sonville. coul~ _be ~rrected only if the The speeclt department has adlllUllstration chose to present worked with tlelevision facilities to the committee the complete in the past, but thiiS is the first recordls of the store. He as- time that ·the television equip. sured the body that when this ment has been brought to 1lh.e was done, the committee W!Onld campus. present its complete and final Working with Dr. Burroughs report. and the Wake Forest students in.

In accepting the recommen- setting. up have been Reese dations of the committee the Felts, Johnny Comas, and Lee. Legislature received the report Wallenhaupt of WSJS. "We are as a "matter of information;" very appreciative of the cooper­urged the committee to hold a11ion of WSJS television in further diiScussions with the making this possible through members of the administration, the use of their facilities," stat­and recommended that the ad- ed Dr. Burroughs. ministration present the com-mittee its full and complete records of the College Book­store. The committee recom­mendations were adopted unani­mously.

Howler To Take Group Pictures

The legislature also approved The Howler Will take pictures the appointment by President of honoran' organizations Tues­Steve Glass of Joyce Groom, day even..:ng in the Howler office junior of Winday Hill, S. C., to according to the following sched­the Honor Council. Miss Groom ule: will fill the vacancy created by

7.00 the resignation of Flo Robinson.

7;10

. REGISTRAR'S NOTICE A student in part-time work

who needs a special schedUle for spring !Semester should file his application Promptly with the registrar. One who is fully qualified to make the request should not postpone action until registration day, and expect the registrar to have time for con­sideration of the situation, the Registrar's Office announced.

7:20 7:30 7:40 7:50 8:00 8:10 8:20 8:30 8:40 8:50 9;00 9:10 9:20

Omicron Delta Kappa Tassels Alpha Epsilon Delta Beta Beta Beta Gamma Sigma Epsilon Kappa Mu Epsilon Delta Phi Alpha Phi Sigma Iota Phi Alpha Theta Eta Sigma Phi Pi Kappa Delta Phi Epsilon Kappa Monogram Circle K Alpha Phi Omega

The Wake Forest COI!lcert that processes of change are­Band will present its first con- ~lways in:'olved but are some­

times buncd beneath a mass of cert of 1Jhe year in chapel Thurs-~· verbiage to which he is subject­day. Featured will be Masse- ed ... "

Six Wake Forest students will participate in the second Reader's Theater at 8:15 p, m. Thursday and Friday in the College Theater.

net's "Meditations from Thais," Marney's address was entitled performed by six flutists. /"The Trustee and the Denomi­

Judith Lea will play a piano i nation." Following his address, solo, "Theme From the Apart- . the group broke into smaller ment," accompanied by the 1 units for seminars.' Dr. Sankey band. 1 Blanton led a seminar on "The

The program, sponsored by the speech department, is en­titled "Dorothy Parker" and will consist of the reading of four short stories and ten short poems by Miss Parker.

The readers will be students Judy Palmer, Brenda Cart­wright, Dee Shreve, Kathy Looney, Florence Gray, and Sam Allen.

The entire Concert Band will 1 Colleges,'' and Dr. M c Leo d play Richard Wagner's "Elsa's 1 Bryan of the Wake F.orest Reli­ProcessiOOJ. to the Oathedral,"l ·' gion Department led a group on tJhe Overture from ''The Un-, "The Social Service Institutions." sinkable Molly Brown," selec- The program resumed Satur­tions from "Gigi," and a Latin .

1

day morning with an address by number, "Fandango." Dr. Mark Dcpp, Methodist of

The performance will be un- :Winston-Salem. Dr. Olin T. Bink­der the direction of Calvin R. I Icy spoke on "The TrUIStee and Huber, director of instrumen.tal I the Instituti.'Cin." Afterooon semi-

There will be no admission and coffee a,nd cookies will be served following the program. mu·sic at Wake Forest. nars were conducted.

YDC To Hear Dr. Jordan Dr. Henry Jordan, a prominently-mentioned

candidate for governor in 1964, will address the regular meeting of the Wake Forest Young Demo­crats at 7 p. m. Tuesday in the East Lounge.

The club will make plans for attendance at the state installation of officers to be held Jan. 12, and discuss a rally to be hosted by the group in February.

Jordan, Cedar Falls dentist and textile execu­tive, !Served as chairman of the State Highway Commission under former G<>vernor W. Kerr Scott, and was a close political advisor to former Governor Hodges. His brother, B. Everett Jor­dan is prmently serving in the United States Senate.

Arrangements will be made for the club to attend the annual State YDC installation to be held in Goldsboro Jan. 12. The club has entered the competition for the mOISt outstanding college club of the year. The awards committee will meet in Goldsboro to select the winner of the coveted award which the club received in 1960.

The club was selected at the state convention held last fall in Greensboro to host the winter college rally. Plans tentatively· call for the rally flo be held in February at the Hotel Robert E. Lee. other arrangements will be discussed at the meeting, to which all students have been invited.

DR. HENRY JORDAN ••• DC speaker may seek governor's post •••

Page 2: New.Floor Added New Trustee Rules ··As Building Rises Are Held … · 2018-03-20 · By K. S. DUFFER i:ng facing the Law SC'hool build-, STAFF WRITER ing will matcih exactJJ.y the

®l~ (linl~ au~ ~lark • • • Wake Forest College • • •

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, JAN. 7, 1963

Wake Will Play ECC Yes, East Carolina College, we

will play your football team. We are not afraid to play you. We have met many ·teams from· col­leges larger than you- Army, Baylor, Tennessee, to name a few - and do not hesitate to play the bigger schools with nationally­ranked teams.

The game has been definitely scheduled, but we have not seen evidence of "considerable oppo­sition" to it, as your editorial suggests. There have been no demonstrations, no angry letters, no formal protests lodged. And you brought up the mention of "lowering our standards," not us.

You accuse us of consider­ing ourselves a "major football power," and of "delusions of grandeur" in this respect. We are not deluding. ourselves-com­pare our enrollment with our ACC foes and our other competi­tors even ECC-we are much smaher in size. Yet we play in the big leagues, for the Atlantic Coast Conference is one of the nation's best. We believe Wake Forest has a good football pro­gram, as well as a good overall

athletic program-but we have our problems, too. We want a strong team and a winning rec­ord, yes, but that is not by any means the only thing Wake For­est is interested in.

Before you so hotly accuse us of thinking ourselves a "major football power," ask yourselves some questions: This is to be the 1963 opener for you-a dedica­tion ceremony for your new sta­dium- an important game for you. Why isn't one of your foes from the Carolina Conference scheduled? Is not the fact that you want someone from outside this conference proof that you at least consider Wake Forest, prestige-wise, better than these other schools?

Yes, we will play you. We will not say that we will win the game, ne~ther do we in any way concede defeat. We suggest that you adopt a similar view, for there is danger in bragging about victory long before a game is played.

The game will be decided on the football field, and not on the East Carolinian's editorial page.

We Miss The Times Strikes come and strikes go,

and the damage done to the parties involved can usually be mended with only a few per­'Inanent scars.

Generally, the loss to the pub­lic is kept to a minimum by leg­islation and presidential action; when the diffenences have been ironed out, labor and manage­ment can return to husiness as usual, until the new contract ex­pires.

In the case of the New York newspaper strike, however, the biggest loss is being suffered by .the public, and it is a permanent Joss which can never be rectified. For the past month, the people Qf the United States have been without one of the mainstays of our civilization-the New York Times. The other papers are

·missed in New York, but The 'TiJ>.:1es is bigger than any city, 'or even than the entire country -it is missed throughout the world.

For The Times is more than a newspaper-i-t is a daily his­tory book, recording with as much accuracy and impartiality as is humanly possible, and often with more thoroughness than is conceivable, the events and opin­ions of today that will shape the world of tomorrow.

\Vithout The Times, no one can truly say he is informed. Only in The Times can the read­er hope to get anything near a complete picture of the world as it developed over the previous 24 hours. Where is the student of politics and government without James Reston's r e p o r t s from Washington? What do we know of foreig-n affairs without Max Frankel? From whence comes our infoemation on United Nations without Sam Pope Brewer?

Fm·thermore, The Times does not limit i·tself to reporting the news. for the interpretations and analysis offered each day provide us with insight into the meanings of events, their significance to us as human beings. Would we ever

RAY SOUTHARD Editor

really know what was behind a presidential decision without the observations of Arthur Krock? Or could we begin to understand the effects of a war in some isolated, oriental wasteland wfth no C. L. Sulzberger to examme its consequences?

Then there are the editorials, by far the most influential in the United States, and probably in the entire free world. When­ever a major decision is made, whenever an important step is taken we turn to the editorial page 'of The Times for guid~nce in our thinking. If The Times supports the move, we feel. that we may breathe 1more easily­chances are it was the right one. If The Times questions an action, reconsideration is almost always in order. The Times is the voice of the people, the source to which Adenauer and De Gaulle, Khrus­chev and Mao turn when they want to know what Americans are thinking.

Here at Wake Forest, we notice a special loss. Even though we are on the fringes of civilization, and have to get our Times a day late through the mail, it is an essential part of our education. As we prepare to assume respon­sibility in the world around us, we must have a thorough know­ledge of what we are letting our­selves in for, and no textbook can completely prepare us. On}y through day to day news Will we approach understanding of what needs to 'be done.

Each day the strike con~inues is a page torn out of the hi~t?ry book of mankind. Every edition of The Times that does not go to press leaves a hole in the total knowledge of the human race, a hole which can never be com­pletely filled. We only wish that the New York printers and pub­lishers would worry less about a few extra dollars an hour and remember that their reticence is severely damaging an institution essential to our way of life-an informed and responsible public.

ROY ROCKWELL Business Manager

-C. 0.

Founded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black is published each Monday during the school year except during examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Carolyn Young MANAGING EDITOR: Adrian King ASSISTANT EDITORS:

Charles Osolin, Barbara Bennett

SPORTS EDITOR: Jack Hamrick ASSOC. SPORTS EDITOR: ErnieAccorsi CIRCULATION MGR.: Leon Spencer

EDITORIAL STAFF: Bill Bentz, Pete Billings, Nancy Cain, Sandy Barnes, Dave Chamberlain, Carol Claxon, Marvin Coble, Lineta Craven, Ken Duffer, Jo De­Yo·ung, Abbey Farthing, Rachel Floyd, John Gallow, Diana Gilliland, Janet Gross, Dennis Hoff, June King, Janet Lee, Jim McKinnon, Charlene Markunas, George Mitchell, Jack Neal, Susan Penley, Joe Staggers, Mayo Stancil, Charles Stone, Susan Turner, Bill Vernor, Charles Winberry, Frank Wood. BUSINESS STAFF: Nancy Howell, Jim smkway, Tom Teal.

Member of the Associated Collegiate PreSJS. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Seco~d­class mail privileges authorized at Winston-salem, N.C. Printed by The Nashville Graphic, Nashville, N. C. · ·

ECC-Wake Game

Who's Lowering Standards? By LEON SPENCER

For the first time in the his­tory of football, Wake Forest is scheduled to play East Carolina, the game to be next fall in Greenville. Concerning t b is scheduling, 11he East Carolinian, student paper at ECC has made sevel"alnbservations.

Fi'rst, .the ECC !Paper stated 11hat t!here wa·s "consider.able oppositdon" by the students here. Second, the editorial felt that we were suffering from "delusions of grandeur" by imagining that we are 10<\ve>ri:ng ourselves to participate in this athletic event. They conclude by assermng that this "lowering of standards" is on tlhe part, if anyone's.

cOIIlversations. But it is true that there are

,those who express concern over this scheduling, not because they suffer froon delusions of gran­deur but because they are dem­onstrati:Thg rtJhe natural of human tendency to consider first the ef­fect •and action will have upon that which 1Jhey are closely af­filiated.

And the effect that this sched­u!img will have upon Wake Forest requires the following observations:

tions no a southern conference position c.aamot be fulfilled rapidly without their defeating teams of higher status. The ma­jor question remains, should Wake Forest be used as their stepping-stone?

These comments, of course, are not concerned with 1Jhe ab­ilities of :the two teams. .Al­t'l'ough we as students are hope­ful for the coming year, not .even the greatest amooot of Gchool spirit .and loyalty can force one to boast of a. talenfied team. The gaJille, however, is not conceded as lost, as certainly ECC does not c·oncede.

~:-

/.

. ,Now these are very interesting observ.ations demonstrating ex­cellent reasoning on tfue part of the college's edit10rial staff.

Athletic conferences appear to be funny things. Over the years a conference and its schools acquire a label; they are either equal to, a'bove, or below the level of another conference. And mo matlter the size of ;the school or its e::q>anding athletic progr:.>.m, a college must grow up to other conferences before a higher conference team can play l!hem without a loss of prestige.

The m.ajor concern, then, of those who object, is that, from Wake ·Forest's point of view, there is nothilll!g to gain by this · contest, ·and a tremendous amount to lose. A loss would result in ra greater loss of pres­tige than from any other game scheduled; a win would be shrugged off as tlh:at of an ACC team over a Carolina Confer­ence team.

'------·DILEMMA----f ,•:;

l ?

Mter watchi'llg: the picketeers in front of Reynolda Hall and the mass demonstrations in. clhapel. everyone is familiar willh t!he "considerable opposi­tion." Actually, the ECC situa­tion is lacking in most campus

* *

This is the situation with ECC. Their Carolina Conference is rated considerably below the At­lantic Coast, and their aspira·

* To Play Or Not To· Play

(Editor's note: The following editorial appeared in the Dee. 7 issue of the East Carolinian, student newspaper of East Carolina College, Greenville.)

Nothing i:s yet final concerning ECC's proposed scheduling of a football game with Wake Forest f-or next year. At this point it seems that the only thing standing in the way of the scheduling of the game is Wake Forest's reluctance to CJOmmit itself.

There has been considerable opposition to the game by the students of Wake Forest. The reason they give for opposing it is that they will be lowering themselves :if they play East Carolina College. We would 'have to consider those fighting words if it were not so obvious­ly a cover-up for their real reasons.

We do not yet pretend to be a major football power. Wake Forest apparently does. If we play them next year we will beat them and this would greatly damage their delusions of grandeur. Perhaps they feel that it is bad enough to be defeated by two state supported schools without adding a third to the list.

If there is ariyone at Wake F:orest who actually believes that they will be lowering their standards by playing us, we question them as to how they reached such a decision. As Charles Craven said in last Sunday's News and Observer, "More than the name has changed at ECC." Perhaps we should further the education of Johnathan Beam by inviting Wake Forest to our school so that we may prove this.

If there is any "lowering of standards" involved in scheduling such a game, we as:sure the good people of Wake Forest that it is on our part and not thews. I£ Wake Forest has not yet received a formal challenge from this College we request that they consider this as such.

AcadeiDic FreedoDI Deinands Support

By FRANK WOOD with anything less than total conformity to their dictates.

Continent Focus does not objec-t to the

game itself; ib does mot object to ECC's ambitions to a higher conference, which it probably deserves. It only recognizes the status assigned various· colleges not by the colleges themselves but by long-term, e a r n e d growths in prestige built througlll such media as the press, etc.

by Charles Stone

This idea, as phrased by ECC as "lowering of stand,ards," is not egQtistical; it is nnly a practical interest in the public stature of one's college. A:nd in no way can East Carolina Col­lege objectively state that it is they who will be "lowering their standards."

Wlhat's goirng on around here? Those who have known the col­lege for a long .time say that it has never changed so radically than it has in the past Geven · yea'l's. Upperc1a·ssmen w a 1 k througlh, fue freShmai[JI dorms to­day and are amazed. Ten o'clock at night, and all is quiet. With a revelatioo!

In past years there used to be a constal!lt roar emanating from Kitchin and Poteat. !ro­day's fresh.men seem. almost

Ignoble Youth? I By A Staff Writer black hair growing thickly down,

Of Old Gold And Black the nape of his neck\ and along The o-ther day, on a rain- the -sides of his short-w'hiskered

drenched Wake Forest College lanter:n-jaws. Campus, two students walked The students walked slowly briskly from the College Book past the paper-picker, and then Store. both quickly opened their note-

They pulled their raincoat col- books, .tore sheets of paper from

civilized. :nus past fall we had no major riots for the first time sirnce I oan remember. No march on 1 the girls' dO'!'lll with the tradi-tional cheers, no ooe attempting 1 '• to set fire to building, no fren· zied mob of undergraduates clearing the tables in the soda shop ·aside to rommlt the ulti-mate sin-it's been downright • dull. At least so it seems to vet­erallltS; of form.er times.

A further revelation, the fresh­man class is fihe first to live np to adv-ance expectations. The mortality vate is going tro drop in the next fe\v year·s, they tell •t ! us, for the quality of the stu-dents is increasing. At the same time, the character of the col· lege is c'!Hmging.

!•

lars snugly ·around their necks them, ripped the notebook paper

The students may be no more mature, only more serious. They seem better motivated. There used to be quite a group »f happy-go-lucky six-year men around laughing at rules and as. 1

signments. But their day is past. Now illhere is more talk of school aft~er college.

,, and tried to duck the drizzle into small bits,· and threw the which was falling after a two- paper onto the wet gress border-hour long downpour. One student ilng the sidewalk. busied himself with trying to Tohe paper-picker looked up keep the rain off 'his neatly and saw the stludents walk combed b:air by holding a large quickly on. The paper-picker's textbook over !his head. The face was irnscrutable-the sad, other student, not worried about draW!ll lines did not alter, only his short, crew-cut hair, watCihed deepened:-as he watched the a paper-picker silently and di- minute pieces of paper spread ligently picking cigarette stubs, themselves like light, Iarke candy-wrappers, and discarded snowflakes. in a widely-spaced, notebook scraps from a row of soggy pattern in the rainy grass. boxwoods growing near the exit Th,e paper-picker, half- stumbl-of the book store. ed and half-ambled to the manu-

The crew-cut student nudged factured litter, lugging a large, his accomplice ·and nodded his hempen sack slun.g over bls head toward fue paper-picker spindling shoulders, made heavi· whose :r-ain-soaked, safety-p.im er by the water sponged litter

fastened overcoat, which seemecl filling one-fo1ll'1lh of the deep

You cam. even get away With { 'i: reading a book outside of class now, or skipping a ball game to see a foreign movie. And if you're careful, you might be able to get away with listening to an occasional Beethoven re-cord. What is happeng to us?

As our more enthusiastic col· le~ supporters Olll .the outside reminded us recently, we have a more cos·nwpolitan cross sectiOOJ I · ,, of students than ever before. No longer is Wake Forest a cloister fur Nor:tlh Carolina pre~chers. It

The recent firing of Dr. Ralph Elliot at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary was in­deed a stunning blow to Baptist tradition and principle.

When they !Start firing our professors, we have to draw the line and fight.

Perhaps the only consolation we can take in this incident at Midwestern is just that-the line has been drawn. Since the draw­ing of the line, moreover, it has been encouraging to note the volume of p r o t e s t that has arisen, particularly among Bap· tislls in this state.

to swallow the small, slight sack. He turned his back on the

is OIIl the way to becoming really something. But what?

Nilneteen sixty-three1 will {lelpJ tell.

f '(

More importantly, perhaps, it raised serious doubts whether the Southern Baptist Convention can remain intact without los­ing the faith of its fathers and of those today who have insisted on the freedom of the individual against the authority of reli­gious institutions.

Has it actually happened to us?

Have we reached the point where we deny _anyone the right to express beliefs contrary to the established dogma?

Have our colleges and !Semi­naries b c c o m e brainwashing clinics, whose only purpose is to inuoctrinate students with a

fixed creed? Has freedom

been extinguished and progress stopped?

P c r h a p rs not, and perhaps such ft:ars are unjusti­fied at the pre­sent time.

It is certainly WOOD true that tl1ere

are still many Baptists who sin­cerely are committed to indivi­dual freedom in religious and academic matters.

It is also true that North Caro­lina Baptists have been better defenders of this tradition than Baptists in some other areas and that Wake Forest is quite justified in taking pride in the individual freedom which she permits and encourages.

Yet we cannot afford to be complacent in the face of !Such incidents as the Elliot firing or the banning of a play at Baylor, and the increasing report;; of in­terferences with academi~ free­dom and pressures to conform at some of the Baptist colleges and seminaries should indeed disquiet us.

Knowing that the price of liberty i!S' eternal vigilance, it behooves us to be unhesitating and uncompromising in identify­ing and resisting these tenden­cies toward the worst kind of authoritarianism and conform­ity, which is the religious. kind.

The situation has obVIously reached the point where com­promise and moderation are be­coming insufficient, for we sim­ply cannot compromise with those who have demonstrated that they will oot be satisfied

body within, scraped the ground students, relit a small briar pipe as die bent over ·to pick up the clenched grimly in his mouth, litter. The paper-picker's hair and, futilely trying to pick the

PARKING hung in matted strands ove'i" his bits of paper from the grass forehead from underneath a with his spiked-stick, he finally PO!Iking regulations will be

strictly enforced during the reg­istration period for rspring se­mester, according to Capt. W. H. Byrd of the campus police.

flemsy cap which. appeared larg- bent over and rested on both er than it was for the rain had knees, gatihering the paper from deepened its dark coloc to match the grass with wet, cold-stiffen-the color of the paper-picker's ed fingers.

Cornerstones By K. S. DUFFER

Thou hast conquered, 0 pale Galilean; the world has grown grey from thy breath;

We have drunken of things Lethean, and fed on the fullness of death

Laurel is green for a season, and love is sweet for a day

\VF INSTITUTE 1834

Bnt love grows bitter with treason, and laurel outlives not May

WAIT CHAPEL 1962

Sleep, shall we sleep after all? for the world is not swee~ in the end;

For the old faiths loosen and fall, the new years ruin and rend. -A. C. Swinburne, "Hymn to Prosperine"

75 Years Ago Slang was disparaged by a writer for the Student in Jan., 1888:

"People of the South, especially those who were associated in their youth with slaves, find great difficulty in commanding the use of good English, tl10ugh they may . . . have learned the errors they daily make ... In coming yeans a traveller in this state will meet WF graduates who experience great difficulty in avoiding the u:se of 'I'll be dogged;' 'Man, hush;' 'By Joe;' 'I'll be John Brown;' 'By Dings;' 'Go to Thunder;' 'I don't need it;' 'Not built that way;' 'Gather them in;' 'Got there,' and 'It isn't anything else.'

I may be wrong in attributing these habits to fashion, but it seems to me that we fall into many of them merely because it is customary­fashionable to use such. '11o say the least o£ it, it is a useless, foolish, injurious, and, I came very near saying, sinful habit, which is easier to cultivate than to check when once firmly rooted.

A little girl said: 'Papa, where do people get their fashions?' 'From New York.' 'Where do they get them?' 'From Paris.' 'And where do they get them.' 'Oh! right froiD Satan; now hush.' This may not be true, altogether, but the fashion that leads urs into the use of slang begets a carelessness, resulting in !Slack morals, the source of which you can trace fior yourself."

50 Years Ago

uye Sluggards and Ye Slothful Ones" entitled an entreaty in the Student, in Jan. 1913: "Having been initiated into the rites of manag­ing a grub joint, the writer is in a position to know something about the irritations which make life gloomy for the club manager, and which make his already !Scanty remuneration look like a counterfeit nickel which has just been shoved off on you. One of these irritations -and by no means the least of them-is a certain class of fellows who so persistently neglect to pay their accounts promptly. They are good fellows, all of them-nearly; but their memories refuse to work, well-they never have their cheques fr.om home by the first.

. . However, some do, carelessly or willfully, allow day after day to

drag by without settling their accounts when they might do sdl, forgetful all the while that the merchant is in a fume because the club bill is UIIJSettled, and that the manager is in a fume because the merchant is in a fume-and because the good matron is some­times urgent.

Ye sluggards, wake up, and let us begin the New Year right by resolving to pay our board bills promptly. We may thereby make

· life brighter for our managers; and I believe that our Post Toastle~ and our rsteak {?) will thereafter have a better flavor." ·J

25 Years Ago

"How do I study for an exam?" was the query for a rovil)g reporter for the OG&B in Jan., 1938: "The census took into con­sideration all types from the 'men in white' of tomorrow and to the future faculty members of Podunk Public School No. 3. The doctors to be seem to be the most studious. Following them are the young lawyers in our midst, with the mini:sterial aspirants running a close third. Whatever else the brief questioning might have disclosed, one thing is quite obvious-'Cranuning' is rapidly becoming an indis­pensable word in the vernacular of the average WF student. Orgamz_: ed study . • . is jurst :so much unadultered bunk to WF students.

Hurried dashes to and from the library, supposedly social calls to a .more brilliant classmate's domicile, and gleeful owling away of the small hours on the night before are features of thiJS frantic review period.

Be it rsaid to their credit, there were among those questioned some who modestly professed to go by an organized !System. One of the minority ·even stated that he had been "persuing page after paflt! · during the past thirty days. Incidentally, this gentleman's last scholastic rE(port was graced by the presence of 3 F's and 2 D's, which fact J;nay or may not have had something to do with his ernestness., r

I

',. "i.

·I

Page 3: New.Floor Added New Trustee Rules ··As Building Rises Are Held … · 2018-03-20 · By K. S. DUFFER i:ng facing the Law SC'hool build-, STAFF WRITER ing will matcih exactJJ.y the

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Film's Symbolism Obscure; WFDD Features Wagner

BEST SELLERS OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Jan. '1,1963 PAGE THREE

The ten best books of 1962 in fiction and nonfiction were selected by Time magazine in the Jan. 4 issue.

Fiction

Robert Frost's Introduction Correctly Evaluates Antho,logy

, /By CHARLENE MARKUNAS By DIANA GILLILAND form but still connected with the wife and just-anived · Seigfried. SHIP OF FOOLS,

STAFF WRITER dream. The Professor 'dreams of It wrus planned. as a surprise. Katherine Anne Porter STAFF WRITER

· .. . his own funeral, without mourn- Early on Christmas morning he THE FOX IN THE ATTIC "The New Poets of England . , Ingmar !lergman ~s consider- ers, clockls· without hands, the arranged a group of his musi- · h d H 1 ' and America:" An Anthology ·~ ed an artist as a film maker. hearse which loses a wheel and cian friends on the staircase Ric ar ug les edited by Donald Hall, Robert

With~~t ~~~,of his films ("Th~ nearly crushes him, the faceless and awakened the family by the THE REIVERS, Pack, and Louis ·Simpson; .~1agu:wn, The Se~~n~ Seal, man, hi!j own face in the coffin. first performance of the "Seig- William Faulkner Meridian Books, $1.45.

Sawdust and Tinsel l his repu- Mo t f tile h f . ly fried Idyll." I PALE FIRE, tf:ion would have been made by . s 0 _se ave a acir • • Vladimir Nabokov Als Robert Frost observes in the lovely "Wild Strawberries." obvious meanm?· The ~o~~r- Ongmally I5Cored fo~· a cha:n- D A HI h·~s m· troduct1"on to "The New

less funeral indiCates hilS sp1r1t- ber orchestra of thirteen m- EATH OF GHBROW, ~ "Wild StrawbelTies" concerns ual death and lack of real com- struments, Wagner, always with Frank Swinnerton Poets of England and America;•

a day in the life of ~rofessor panionship. The clock without the passion of the large, re- LETTING GO, - "All poets I hav~ ever heard of Isak' Lund when he IS to be hf.Dds is useleSIS and also points IS COred it for a full orchestra Philip Roth struck their note long before

'• honored '!>~ his univers!ty ~t out the relativity of time. adding horns aiid drums. ' THE D.EATH OF THE AD- forty, the deadline for contribu-Lund. Dr~vmg to Lund With his Bergman also employs anum- Wednesday evening is Schu- VERSARY, Hans· Kellson tions to this book. The statistiClS daughter-m-law, he encohunrm· te~~ ber of Christ-images in this as bert's "Trout" Quintet. The LABYRINTHs AND FICCION- are all in favor of their being thre~ eve~ts which cause ~ well as in other films. The pro- music aroU!Ses the same feel- as good and lyric as they will re~lizc his pe:sonal failure, .m fessor wolillds hilS hand- on a ings and pictures as does the ES, Jorge Luils Borges ever be ... Maturity will come, spite of material _success. . nail. ins- experiences cause his description of trout fishing Jn MORTE D'URBAN, We mature. But the point is that

''\ At Lund he fmally realizes resurrection as a human being. Hemingway's "The Sun Also J. F. J»Qwers it is at best irrelevant. Young 't that tho~_gh he is honored, he Anot:her .vehicle· for e:xPressing Rises.'' WE HAVE ALWAYS LIVED poetry is the breath of parted

is not loved,· and as .the day symbolism which Bergman uses IN THE CASTLE, 1imJs ••• The reader is more closes, he makes . a,n attempt ic tllat of light and shadow. The Shirley Jackson on trial here than they are. He to break through his cold, ego- nrofess'or lives m· a dark, heavily L · s h is given hilS chance to see if he tiSti al h II .. aw c ool Nonfiction can tell all by himself without

viewpoint. They examine the commonplace without becoming mundane :md express deep emo­tion without becoming mauldin . Yet the poems are not the re­sult of mental gymnastics but the expression of deep mental and emotional ferment in good style.

Many of the topics are uncon­ventional. One !SUCh is a poem by Thorn Gunn entitled "The Corridor," in which a peeping

Glitters up there my eye may never see,

And so the time lag teases me with how

, Love that loves now may not reach me until

Its first desire is spent. The star's impulse

Must wait for eyes to claim it beautiful

And love arrived may find us somewhere else.

tom looks up in a hotel conider The li:st could go on and on to disc.ove: that som~one is without including all of the top­watching him in the mirror at ics, meters, and vense forms the end of the hall. The poet that were handled in an out­asks, standing manner. Of course the "For if the watcher of the_ mediocre is included too, but

watcher shown the over-all impression of the There in the distant glass, book and the poetry is one of

should be watched too, vigor, whether in praise or pro-Who can be master, free of test, a:s a short poem entitled

other; who "Counting the Mad" that ends Can look around and say he

is alone?" c. s. e · · . . curtained house. When he re- critical instruction the differ-!

~~. s11n:ple plot outlme - IS m.em~rs his childhood, it is a G THE CONQUEST OF LONDON ence between the poets who -amplified" by dream . sequence's time of inten IS'Uillight. . . ets Po· rtrai·t and flashbacks. In one of them se and THE MIDDLE YEARS, wrote because they thought it I Philip Larkin, in a fairly he is revisiting a plot of wild Visu~lly fhi:s film is. a tone Henry James would be a good idea to write long and !Searching poem called strawbenies from which the poem m black and white. Sun- A portrait "of the late Prof. RENOIR, MY FATHER, an~. those who couldn't help "Church Going," questioms the

!• film takes its title where he liiTht is constantly reiterated, C. Soule has been do- Jean Renoir wntmg out of a strong weakness r.:eaning of religioU!S faith today

"This one thought himself a bird,

This one a dog, And· this one thought himseU

a man. An ordinary man, And cried and cried

No NO played as a child· ' sunlight on a girl's _hair, sun- nated to the School of Law by SCOTT FITZGERALD, for the muse." and WIOnders "When churches

Bergman seems. to have two light streaming through leaves members of his family. The por- Andrew Turnbull A better evaluation of tlie con- f:.ll completely out of use, What main ideas to present- in this or through the windows of a trait WillS hung in the Soule 'PATRIOTIC GORE, tent and challenge of the book we shall turn them into." _Yet film. bne of these, first develop- cathedral, ~unlight reflected off Faculty Conference Room, which Edmund Wilson could not be written. The poets his poem is not a cynical des-ed by Proust, is the idea that a pond.. , . . was fUrnished in his memory A SAD HEART· AT THE arc young and relatively un- sertation by an agnostic but a Tom Spangenberg gained 674

,. an event derives its .. meaning "Wild Strawberries" is a se- by contributions from students SUPERMARKET, known by the general public but sincere attempt to evaluate the yards in 123 rushing attempts not from itself, but from the ries of symbol!s, ISOpte compre- whom he taught. Randall Jarrell they have proved both their true meaning of religion. for the 1962 Dartmouth football

All day long."

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manner in. which it 'is viewed hensible, !10me not." Perhaps if Law School Dean Carroll W. THE GUNS OF AUGUST, worth and the editor's wisdom Dealing with human relation- team. at different times and from dif. we could understand Sweclish Weathens.said: "The law scqool Barbara Tuchman ~choosing their poetry by· win- ships with great inlsight and~·-------:--------------------ferent frames of reference. This we could grasp more. of the is delighted tO have the excel~ THE .BLUE NILE, "' nmg many of the putstanding tender re-signation, EUzabeth is the same thesis on which meaning of this film. I wonder lent portrait of the late Prof. . Alan Moorehead poetry award:s and scholarships Jennings .strikes an unusual

618 W. 4&h St.

. Lawrence Durrell has based the about the necessity for so many William .c. Soule, who was a THE LETTERS OF JAMES since 1957, when the anthology balance between a concept of ;•- four volumes of his Alexandrian symbols when they are &o often loyal and valuable inember of AGREE TO FATHER FLYE was published. As a general rule science and love in one of her

Quartet. deliberately obscure. Somehow' our law faculty from 1947 until THE LETTERS OF OSCAR anthologies should not be re- simple but elogant poems en-The second concept in the film I don't think that they are de- 'his untimely death in July, WILDE·, commended for they cannot in titled "Delay." In it she com-

concerns the inability of man liberately obscure because so 1953. We are grateful to the ed. by Rupert Hart-Davis their limited selections show the pares the concept of light years to communicate with his fel- much of life is. Soule family for their generous IL DUCE, scope of a poet'LS work. to love by saying, lows. Bergman shows· this by donation of this portrait to the Chr.ilstophcr Hibbert However, as the poetry of

:; the Professor's analysis of his Wagner and Fish Law School." many YJOUDg poets is either tn-· o~ life, and th~ .~ealization of Evening Concert continues !he donors ar~ Prof. SoUle's G consistent in quality or unavail-~

The radiance of that star that leans on me

,,

, .. t.

, . .., •·

:.. -

his own respomslbility. with its admirable attempt to WidOW; Mrs. Alice Wall Soule rants In able (as is the case with many So ."Wild ~trawberrie_s" ~ a bring culture to the maJSses. of Wake Forest; his parents, of the British poets) this antho-~

~wcdish versu_m of ~e ftrst f~ Monday it presents Wagner's Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Soule of ,.., R · logy is an excellent alternative ~ _th~. Fore1gn Film senes, "Siegfried Idyll" even though Orl:m?o, ~la.; and his brother .1. 0 estore to either reading a quantity of

Ikiru. Wagner does seem musically and s1ster-m-law, Capt. and Mrs. mediocrity or not reading the, unfashionable this season. Frank G. Soule Jr. of Bethesda,! B • th ·l works of new poets at all. I Obscure Symbolism ,... t n ace I

The Siegfried refers not to the Md. Capt. Soule is a doctor in • , :r The poetry in the collection , The film begins with a dream hero of myfhological and oper- the U. S. Navy. range15 from merely clever to [

sequence of visual symbol!s. atic fame but to Wagner's infant The portrait was painted by Grants totaling $13,000 have deep and ::;carching. Most of the : Later in the film the symbols son. Wagner wrote the '"Idyll" MI1S. James C. O'Flaherty of been received to complete re- poets examine age-old problems i

Was shining years ago. The light that now

are found again, changed in as a Christm~s present for !lis Win·ston-Salem. storation of the Calvin Jones from a fresh, energetic, modern I ______ ...;____________________ Prof. Soule died at the age of house, birthplace of Wake F.or- r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

LITT.LE 'l. A' AN 33 after a brief illness. He was~ est College, Dr. Christopher Crit-.L.,..~ a native of Orange, N. J. and tenden announced recently.

attended Washington and Lee Dr. Crittenden, state director University; receiving his B. s. of archives and history, was re­degree in 1941 and his LL.B. elected president of the Wake degree in 1943. He received hils Forest College Birthplace So­LL.M. degree from the Uni- ciety at a meeting in Wake For-

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T~e~ ~ad t_hl:ee chil~n, Alice the early 1800's that' the first Vtrgmia, William Curtis Jr. and cla~sses of Wake Forest College Donald Redford. were held in 1834. The owner,

Prof. Soule joined the Wake Dr. Calvin Jones, 1sold the land Forest Law Faculty in 1947 as I for the campus. The first Wake an associate profeSISOr and was Forest president, Samuel Wait, promoted :to full professor in also made his home in the house. 1952. In North Carolina, he Members of the board of direc­(!Stablished a well-deserved re- tors are Dr. Douglas Branch, ptitatipn aLS a labor arbitrator. Raleigh; Dr. I. Beverly Lake, At the time of his death he was Dr. J. B. Hipps, Mrs. w. W. a member of the General Sta- Holding and Mrs. Cameron Lee tutes Commission of North Caro- all of Wake Forest, and Jame~ lina. . B. Cook of Win:ston-Salem.

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PAGE FOUR Monday, Jan. 7, 1963 OLD GOLD AND BLACK Placement Office

Ten Awards· MayBe Won By Graduates

Marriage Go-Round

Doctor Weds In Germany By DIANA GILLILAND

STAFF WRITER

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Hungry Coeds Tangle New-Fangled Devices

By JERRY McLEESE SPECIAL TO OLI;l GOLD & BLACK

Six Wake Forest girls aren't so sure that these new-fangled drive-in restaurants are all they're made out to be.

Last week the six tested the speaker system of ordering at a restaurant near the campus.

The driver disregarded the speaker the first time iShe parked. She ushered the old black Chevrolet from the space and attempt­ed it again.

This time she was going to be sure to get close to the speaker. She did. The Chevy eased forward, climbed up on the cement island with the speaker stand. The !Speaker and tray-holder were severed from the stand.

She backed out again. She r~H!ntered the space-at a safer distance. She got out of the car and picked up the speaker and tray-holder.

A curb hop walked by. Tl1e girl held the speaker and tray­holder with a what-do-T-do-look on her face. The curb hop grin­ned and walked on.

She carried the damaged items into the restaurant Mean­while, five more 'V~ke Forest girls wove up in a new Comet, parked easily and gave their order.

The girl came back. The curb hop came by with the order for the girl:s in the Comet. He grinned. The occupants of the Chevy looked enviously at the order.

The curb hop came back by. He didn't grin. The girls in the Chevy left-still hungry.

Pledges Set For Patrols

Instruction Tuesday in mili­tary patrols will conclude train­ing for the seme:::tcr for some 30 pledges of Pershing Rifles, ltono­rary military soeiety.

The lesson is the last of a series designed to acquaint the cadets with varied a1spects of military operations. It will be taught by cadet Maj. Irvin Gro­gan III, senior of Winston-Salem.

Tlie pledges will have one maneuver in early February, the annual mock war with bro· thers of the fraternity. The maneuvers will mark the end of a pledge week, in which the pledges will perform various military a c t i v it i e s, including standing gr1ard at the women's dormitories . . The maneuvers will involve

60me 45 cadets and will be held on privately-owned land near wmston.SUiem.

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Eagles Wins Post Sidney S. Eagles Jr., second­

year .student at the School of Law, has been appointed chair­man of the American Law Stu­dent Astsoci~tion's nominations and elections committee.

Eagles was a delegate to the assocation's annual meeting in San Francisco last August.

He will be responsible for handling the nomination and election of executive officers of the association at its annual meeting next August in Chicago.

Scandinavian Seminar Accepting Applications

The 1963-1964 academic year will be the 15th year of opera­tion of the Scandinavian Semi­nar.

This program provides the American undergraduate and graduate with a year's living and learning experience in one

MRS. GERALD TAYLOR of the Scandinavian countries . . . · was Mary Aim Hampton · · • Home stays, and !Short semi-

Alabama Doctor Lectures Tonight

nar courses are combined with an extended period of residence and study in a Folkehojskole, an adult education center.

The curriculum of the Folk­ehojskole is confined mainly to

Dr. Buris R. Boshell, asso- liberal arts subjects with em­ciate professor of medicine at phasis on Scandinavian litera­the Medical College of Alabama, ture, language, art, history, and will speak in the amphitheater social studies. of the Bowman Gray School of The oost for tuition, room and Medicine at 7:30 p. m. Monday. board for the nine months, Ian-

His lecture on "Etiological guage materials, and transpor­Factors in Insulin Resistance" tation from New York to Copen­will be :sponsored by the Bow- hagen is $1,780. man Gray Medical Society. A limited number >Of scholar-

Dr. Boshell, who was appoint- ship loans are awarded each ed to the faculty of the. Medical year to qualified applicants. College of Alabama in 1959, has: For more ~o~ation, ~te served as chief .of medical ser-1 to The Scandinavian Semmar, vice at the Veterans Adminilstra- 127 East 73rd Street, New York tion Hospital in Birmingham, 21, N. Y., or check at the Old Ala., since July l, 1962. Gold and Black office.

A 1947 graduate of Alabama Polytechnic Institute, he stu­died veterinary medicine for two years before entering the Medical College of Alabama as a student. He received the M.D. degree from Harv:ard Medical School in 1953.

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Merchants Reach The "College C1·owd" With A.Results Getting Ad In Old Gold And Black.

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Staley's Drive-In­ReStaurant& CarHop The house that service and quality­built; the favorite of Wake -Forest students and faculty. W·e specialize in short orders, sandwiches and dinners.

24 Hour Service

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AI Dillard, Manager

THE BELL TELEPHONE· COMPANIES SALUTE: BILL McCOY A man with a talent for big jobs, Bill McCoy (B.S., 1955) is responsible for the personnel who handle all business transactions with customers in the Greensboro, N. C., office of Southern Bell. In addition to the 15,000 customer con­tacts this requires each month, Bill supervises the collection of one million dollars a month from 75,000-customers.

Bill began his career with the company. as office man­ager in Charlotte, North Carolina. There he was respon-

sihle for· the daily cash receipts and supervised the office staff. In addition he handled public relations activities. Bill met these chailenges well and, as a re8ult, earned his promotion in Greensboro.

Bill McCoy and other young men llke him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country help bring the finest communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America.

BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIE.

,.

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I ' ~.

. '

•,

Christy Minstrels Sign For Concert

Registration Schedule Spring 1963

....

'Barabbas' Called Top Religious Epic

Monday, :Jan. 28 ·-~.....wr his role. It is superb. Some say By CHARLIE WINBERRY Tuesday, Jan. 29 "Finding entertainers who will

appeal to the students whlle still remainiJng in our limited budget is often a trying job. Howeve!l", if!b.e College Union has four con­certs plamned for the spring se­mester which we feel everyone will enjoy," said Walt Petitt, head of major functions com­mittee.

The first group, 11he New Chris­ty Minsflrels, will appear on campus :ii;I. February. They are a new group which has become popular in the mid-West and the west as folk and western music singens. The ten-mallll group cur­!l"ently appear on the Andy Wil­liams TV Show as a regular parl of :the &how. They have re­cenrtly recorded a best-selling album.

Carlos Montoya, a fiil·menco guitarist, is scheduled for a second concert Mar-ch 25. Carlos lhas recorded several albums

and is considered by many to be *SEN10RS STAFF WRITER it is not his best performance. the finest living flamenco gUi- 8:00 A- C 8:00 Sa_ sm He will !have to outdo himself to tarist. 8:30 D-G 8:30 Sn-Th "Bal"labbas," the screen ver~ matclh his stirring betrayal in

Two lawn conceorts have been 9:00 H- J 9:00 Ti _We si()([l;, is one of the few fitting dra- tlhis movie. We could suggest a plan.n.ed. for the spring. The Bro- 9:30 K- N 9:30 Wh-Z matizations of a religious novel minor correction. But realism thers Four nave been ncheduled 10:00 O-Sm 10:00 A-Bi in a long period o£ movie demands that swords of clash-for an April pel'formance. The 10:30 Sn- z 10:30 Bl- Bz making. The texb of the fibn ls ing Romans spill blOOd. 'llhe Lettermen nave also been sched- the work of P.ar Lage!l"kvist, 1951 movie has its gory moments. uled for a laller petiormance. OTHER STUDENTS Nobel Prize wiamer _for litera- Barabbas meets the strongest All "~·p noncerts are free for the ·-·. · ···· --·· ·• .. ....,.,....,., ture. Barabbas was the man power f ""- Roman E ·

"'~ ~ 1:30 McA-McK 1:30 _; ·· C- Coo. ·,.'c. freed by Roman rulers of Jeru- 0 ""e · mpire student body. showing not Oillly the immense

Th:roUgh the cooperative ef- 2:00 MeL-Man 2:00 Cor-D salem to appease :Uhe cry of power of the empire but the de• 2:30 Mao - Mh 2:30 E - F mobs for tfu.e crucifixion of fort of the College Union· and 3:00 Mi _ ,..._

3 __ 00

G _ Gz Christ. ooy that is present dll'ring the the English depar.tment, W. H. -"''-" early ChrisUan era. AUden, niO'ted critic, poet, and 3:30 N- 0 3:30 H- Hop It starts Thursday at the Caro- We cannQt say too much in lectuxer, will visit the campus 4:00 P- Pq 4:00 Hor- Kl !ina ~d runs for a week. :regard to "Barabbas," the finest Feb. 26. 4:30 Pr- R 4:30 Kn- L This movie, in my opinion, Christ- ·and- biblical orientated

Plans are being made to have *Only candidates for degree in June July August and Jan- having previewed it ~a~t week~ is stlory fJhat has eveT been our a jazz festival and several art . . ' . ' ' .the best of t!b.e religious ep1c·s pleasure to see. e~hibitions during the spring uary, 1964 will be admitted. Doorkeeper Will hold approved list. presented to moviegoers in some We didn't renege before semester. TIME OF REGISTRATION-Each student will be governed by time. The crudeness of "Ben Christmas about "Manchurian

Striv1ng to offe:r as many the first two or three letters in his surname, and will be expected Hur," the vagueness Df "The Candidate" wlhich stars Laur· forms of culflural activities as to appear for registration at fhe time specified above when his Robe," and length of 1the "Ten ence Harvey and Frank Sinatra. possible for the student body, records will be most access1ble in the administrative offices. Corrunallldments" gave them a Every0111e that has seen "Candi­the College Uni<m has planned a January 1964 candidates for graduation have been asked to place in ihistory. Perhaps the d<ate" has approved of it highly. travel, world kinowledge, adven- check with Mrs. Margaret Perry in the Registrar's Offiee within tiaei fi?at. tlb.e Cecil B. De~e t is full of intrigue and suspense

'"iit;imiiimRBWMWMDD;;jmm ture series in which world au- the next 10 days to determine if they are included in the list of la.bel 1sn t attached ~ t~e fil!m and has a wonderous endilllg. Ill thorities will show films on dif- . ligi"bl £ .,., . tr .. , will colO'l" your bhinking. lt Janet Leigh is tJhrown In for

News Briefs m I!:I!E ni!

The Wesley Foundation will sponsor a married couples class meeting at the Maple Springs Metlwdist Church at 9:45 a. m. eaeh Sunday.

The class topie will be "Non Christian Religions" and will be taught by Dr. Ralph Amen of the Wake Forest Biology De­partment.

The Peace corps has announ­ced the date fur the next place­ment test as .Jan. 26. The test will be administered in the Win­ston-salem Post Office building, room 208.

Further information can be obtained from Mr. Mark Reece, campus Peace Corps represent­ative.

Wake Fores.t is ineluded in a Bell Telephone Labor.atories pro­gram; in which colleges partici­pating in the company's com­munications development train­ing program will receive money equal to tuition already paid for company trainees.

E. A. Horst, technical employ­ment coordinator for the lab­oratories in Winston-salem, yes­terday pt"esentJed .the College a cheek for $270 to match tuition for m employee who is ,a part­time student.

ferent countries and ,accompany semors e e or ear...., regis auon. should 111ot. This movie is evi- kicks; th:a,t's all she does.

th~e~m~m~·~th~e~xhi~·~b~lt~s~a~n~d~l~e~c~tur~es~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dence of wlhat can be done and ObJarlotte plays host to the -: what will be done again• m the ever popula'l." Benny Goodman at

CONSTRUCTION'S CONFUSION is a perplex~ ing thing . • . at least to sophomore Sandy Barnes of Winston-salem. Sandy, along with almost all Wake Forest coeds, is forced to en­dure this confusion in their front yard, but they are willing to do so as tbe campus's newest addition continues to rise skyward. Miss Barnes is shown here sitting on the tiers of

future. the Auditorium Saturday night. This is a spectacle of the man Tickets Ca!ll' be obtained by writ­

Who lived because Christ died in ing cthe Coliseum in Charlotte. his place. The struggles endur-ed by Barabbas and the engulf­ing changes of J:rls life as a pa­gan are vivid. His desire to serve, his effor.t to repay, lWd his conscience thatl brings itself to bear upon his onee disparag­ed char-acter fit into ~a pattern. Some critics have called the film . .a ·realistic approach to the modem chureh of today as it is !represented in the life of Bar­rabas.

Anthony Quinn is the star. We could commend extensively on

Voodoo Dolls, Mo ]o Teeth: Dr. ]. B. Rhine Ever have dreams that fore­

Wal"ln events that happen to you? Have you eve!l" wonaered about

-MITCHELL PHOTO YOur intuition that steers YOU a future lecture room in the classroom build· away from disaster? Have you ing lliiW under construction next door to the ever felt that spirits of relatives girls' dormitories. Work is proceeding accord- . encroach upOn your mind in ing to schedule, witb tbe building to be ready lonely moments? Ever womda-ed for occupation by September. 1963. The class- about PaLm readers and other rooms and offices will provide new homes for people who claim clarvoyiant

powers? all the departments now located in the library,

"th th t• f tb S h D Dr . .J. B. Rhine, ch.airmarn: of wx e excep xon o e peec epartment. tJh.e Parapsychology Laborato!-y

BASKETBALL on TV l WAKE FOREST

vs VIRGINIA TECH

Sat., Ja;n. 12 at 2:15 p. m.

Six More Games! Saturdays At 2:15 p. m.

J;81ll:. 19, N. Carolina vs Virginia Jan. 26, Duke vs West Virginia Feb. 2, Wake Forest vs Clemson Feb. 9, N. Carolina v-s WF Feb. 16, Virgirua vs Maryland Feb. 23, Duke vs North Carolina

Sponsored By PEPSI-COLA BOTTLlNG CO. PILOT LIFE INSURANCE CO. r-;, WFDD-AM & FM~

1 65"~ On The Dial WFDD Lists Concert Shows

at Duke University, will provide answers for these questions in Chapel Tuesday.

Dr. Rhine has done extensive research. iJn the field of extra­sensory perception. He b.as writ­ten widely on the subject.

Monday, Jan. 7 5:00-Dinner Music 6:55-Focusing on the Arts 7:00-Campus Report 7:15--Wake Forest Sports 7:30-Evening Concert 9:00-Reynolda Hall Lecture

Series 10:00-News 10: 05-Deuconlight Serenade 11:00-News 11:05-Deaconlight Serenade 12: 00-Devoti.Qns 12: 05-Sign Off

Tuesday, Jan. 8 5:00-Dinner Music 6:55-Law in the News 7:00-Washington Report 7:15-Your Mind 7:30-Evening Concert 9:00-Exploring the Chlld's

9: 30-Debriefing 10:00-News 11: 05-Deaconlight Serenade 11:00-News 11: 05-Dcaconllght Serenade 12: 00-Devotions 12:05-Sign Off

Thursday, Jan. 10 5:00-Dinner Music 6:55-Business Review 7:00-Georgetown Forum 7:30-Evening Coneert 9:00-Sing Ye 9:30-Marx Interviews

10:00--Deaconlight Serenade 12: 00--Dcvotions 12:05-Sign Off

I Evening Concert, heard night­

ly •at1 7:30 p. m. on vadio staJion WFDD-FM., will present the

•following classical programs tlhis week: ·

Monday· Sibelius: Quartet in Dm; Wag­

ner: Siegfried Idyll; Trimble: Four Fragments from the Can­terbury Tales; Haydn: ','Mira­cle" Symphony No. 96 in D.

Tuesday Poulenc: Concerto in Gm for

Orga:n, . Strilng Orchestra and Timpani; Scriabin; Poem of Ecstasy; Schumann: Quintette in E-flat for Piano and Strings;

Bach: Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue in Dm.

Wednesday S~hubert: Quintet illl A for

Piano and S•t rings ("The Trout") ; Wagner; Tristan and Isolde Love Duet; Vivaldi: Con­cert\0 in Dm for Oboe; Bruch: Concerto No. 1 in Gm fo:r Violin.

Thursday Beethoven: Trio in E-flat;

Ives: Symphony No.2; Mendels­sohn: Concerto No. 1 in Gm.

Friday Franck: Symp.lwinic Variations

The College Inn Restaurant AND

Following his leeture, a ques­tion and answer period will fol­low. If you have ever wondered about the warld of tJh.e unknown, this is your eh:ance.

for Piano and Orchestra; Mo­zart: Sinfonia Concerlante in ]\:-flat; Dvorak: Concerto in Gm for Piano and Orchestra.

SPORTS EXTRAS !

VIC DUBAS SHOW Saturday, 2:00 p. m.

WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Saturdays, 4:00 p. m.

SUNDAY SPORTS SPECTACULAR

Sundays., 2:30 p. m.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Jan. 7, 1963 PAGEFIVJr

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Friday, Jan. 11 5:00-Dinner Music 6:55-Books in the News 7:00-Special of the Week 7:30-Evening Concert 9:00--Rcnaissance and Spaghetti House

DATA PROCESSING DIVISION

9:30-Ethic for Broadcasting 10:00-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-Devotions 12:05-Sigu Off

Wednesday, Jan. 9 5:00-Dinner Music 6:55-Doctor, Tell Me 7:00-BBC Repart 7:15-Germany Today 7:30-Evening Coneert 9:00-Pirandello

THERE'S 10 SECRET to producing fine photoengrav­ings. You simp'ly take generous amounts of experienee, skill and COIIIBci~ntious attitude and com­

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"Three Registered Barbers To Serve You"

Giles Mclelland- Ray Church- Bill Speece Conveniently locat€d at Northwest Shopping Center Reynolda Rd. Erl., across from Old T~own Gleaners

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Interviews On Campus Jan.9

Marketing & Sales Systems Engineering:

Page 6: New.Floor Added New Trustee Rules ··As Building Rises Are Held … · 2018-03-20 · By K. S. DUFFER i:ng facing the Law SC'hool build-, STAFF WRITER ing will matcih exactJJ.y the

PAGE SIX Monday, Jan. 7, 1963 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

---------:~~~Watts Powers Wake Cunningham Leads VI E W I N Ci With Board Dynamo UNC To Coliseum

DRY CLEANING SHIRTS

Ray's CLEANERS:iAUNDiY

the DEACS By ERNIE ACCORSI

ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

The Holidays And Basketball The festive basketball carnivals are now over,

but the newly tinsel-crowned Holiday champions have jarred the season's outlook for the next tournament round in March. The biggest surprise was pulled by St. Joseph's as they received a Court­in for Christmas, and converted the gif.t into two straight wins over NYU and St. John's, then placed Philadelphia in a state of shock as they won the second annual Quaker City tournament with heart throfbbing upsets over Bowling Green, Villanova, and Brigham Young.

All of this happened immediately following the demoralizing pasting they received in Winston­Salem only three weeks ago. It's hard to believe that these were the same Hawks that lost to Wake. Then when Billy Hoy fractured his ankle, Jack Ramsay's cause seemed hopeless this winter. But the slim-bald headed fellow pulled another miracle at the Main Line and to the delight of a clamoring, dedicated student body the Hawks came from ob­scurity again.

At the same time Illinois was winning the Holi­day Festival in New York and UCLA was being crowned kings of the Los Angeles Classic, the ACC clubs were banging heads in crucial single games. After being upset by Davidson, Duke traveled to lavish Miami, Florida, where they found sunshine, sandy beaches and 7-1 Mike McCoy who led the Hurricanes to a 71-69 victory. Duke blasted into a 16-4 lead early in the intersectional clash but McCoy and 6-6 sophomore Rick Barry proved too much for the Blue Devils on their home court.

Duke recovered from the pair of losses to trip up Princeton, then travel to Greensboro to level off Wake Forest's record at 4-4. The Deacons played sound ball in the opening 12 minutes of action as they forced Duke to play slow down ball and held a six point edge. However, near the close of the first half the Blue Devils began to work their fast break to perfection and led by 12.

It stayed pretty much that way until the final 10 minutes of play, when the fellows from Durham scored 42 points and practically ran the Deacons through the wall of the coliseum. Art Heyman scored 27 points but again as has !been the story throughout his three year career it took him a truck load of attempts to get them, 25 this time. Besides Heyman's low shooting percentage it can also be noticed that his general field goal total is com­paritively shallow due to the fact that he tallies many of his points from the free throw lane.

Bud Not Loved At Maryland Jolly Bud Milikan seems to be living the life of

horrors at the University of Maryland. The chunky guy from Oklahoma has been hung in effigy every­where from the campus dining hall to the spanking new Business Administration building. Besides be­ing draped over trees Milikan has been called at his home, told to quit by students and booed louder than Sam Huff in Green Bay, Wisconsin. In fact it's gotten to the extreme now that when the voice of Cole Field House in College Park introduces the players and coaches of the two competing teams, they're all bellowed except lovable Bud. The small percentage of the Maryland student body that does attend the ballets in ,their spacious arena, are dis­turbed over the missed opportunity to express their feelings for Milikan and beg for his handle follow­ing the introduction of the players, but unfortunate­ly, no Bud.

When asked if this is bothering him, Bud bites his lip in the usual Milikan manner, and just grumbles a few words that no one seems to be able to arrange into a decipherable statement.

Sports Chatter One eastern writer summed up the first three

New Year's Day bowl battles with this comment "I know now what makes Pro Football so exciting: college football" ... There is a basketball club in Camden, New Jersey playing in the weekend exist­ing Eastern League, that pro'bably could have been t~e ABL cha!!I-P· Try this squad: From the war­riOrs Pa'!-1 Arizen, avg. 32 points a game, and Joe Graboski, ex LaSalle great a Alonzo Lewis, from Temple Hal ~ear, from St. Joe Bobby MacNeil, former Washmgton, D. C. high school sensation Tom Hoover, plus a bench of George Raveling and Jay Norman. Sounds like a Philadelphia all-time history book collection.

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COFFEE HOUR CAFETERIA

Rollllly Watts, a 6·7 sophomore one field goal off Watts in the Watch out, here comes Caro-1187 pound jwtior forward, also who failed to cause any great second half. Watts blocked sev- lina again! Coach Dean Smith a star on the tennis courts, has amount of excitement as a eral shots and didn't let the Vir~ will bring his Nor!Jh Caroli:n~ avel'laged 12.~ points a contest. , freshman performer last season, glnia pLayer get off a decent basketball squad to tlhe Colesium The black cropped Morehead 1 has now emerged as one of the shot. Wednesday night to meet Booes Sciholar has :hit on 54.4 precent 1 shining lights on the Wake Agai!llst Maryland he scored McKinney's quintet. of his field goal attempts. Forest basketball scene. one field goal i:n seven minutes The Tarheels are unbeaten in Two other players who have

The Deacons' last two outings, of play in the Dpe~g half. He ACC competition, sporting a 2-0 seen considerable ~ction are before a brief Christmas recess, en.tered the ga_me W1th. m;!ly two record, and are 4-1 overall. The Ray Respess and Mike Cooke. Watts gave sparkling perfor- mrnutes gone m .the seco~d half Chapel Hillers hold victories Cooke, a 6-2, 180 poun~ guard,

I mances and it now appears it and played the f~nal 18 :nmutes. over Georgia, Clemson, South. has averaged 9 .. 4 pomts per is goi:ng to be ratheT difficult to He reached his sconng high Carolina, Kentucky, and Yale. game. Respess IS a 6-4, 194 keep him out of the starting line- for the y~n~ng. seaSO?- against .the Their one Joss was a 76-90 pound sophomore trlllllsfer from up. Terps, fm1shing Wlth 15 pomts thomping handed to them by a the Naval Academy Who has a

"I have never seen a boy im- on six of seven field goal at- Sll;rong Indiana team. 5.4 norm. prove as fast as Watts has," tempts and three o~t of four '11he colorful '11arheels do not North Carolina, boasting. a Coach Bones McKinney said £t:o;n th.e free throw line: In ad- have a -starter over 6' 5" tall, basi_cetball record .of 7~7 wms after the game a.t Maryland. d1tion he hauled lin: f1ve re- a!lld, most pre-season palmists ~gamst 237 losses smce 1ts start ''He showed me some moves out bound;s. . predicted, would be a sure bet m 1911• shffi!ld b.ave a:nother there tonight that I haven't seelllo While. ~ost of his shots have to ge,t swamped in the fight for good club this year. from a big man in·a long time." ~~~~etti:~~ ~~e =ron~~ rebounds ~s winter. The thick

The Was·hington D c young f 20 tri fo . 750 nosed Srmth planned to play , . ., - o es r an amazmg, . J; oth h t f 11 ster came on to do ,both a stand- percentage. He has added 11 or e one good . s o ' u Y out offea1sive aond defensive job fx thr . 18 tri f aware he had no he1ght.

Deacs To Make TV Appearances

in the game at Virginia, and was to~l of ~w~~ and a C:.9 ~~er~ ~ut bhe Tarheels have sur-just as great iln the win over H . lso lh 27 b d pnsed everyone. They have out- Three Wake Forest games will Miar land age. e a a·s re oun s rebounded their opponents 223 to b f ·

Y · for .an average of 3.9 per game. 197. This has enabled them to e eatured m the Atlantic Against V~ginia .he pla~ed As 'a fresh~an la?t y~ar he take more slhots (334-282 ) than Coast Conference basketball

only three mmutes :m the frrst saw only bnef action m the opposing teams which has s ll- series being telecast this season. half, but saw 14 minutes of early games, but came on strong ed their victorles pe The three games involving 1Jhe a.ctfon in. ~e seco.J?-d half. He at the finish. He p~ayed in 13 of Coupled with ~ h(}t shooti!ng DemOJli Deacons are Wake For­f~shed Wlbh 10 pomts on four the 16 fr~shman tilts and scor- offense is a -stingy defense. Said est-Virginia Tech on this com­field goals out of four attempts ed 80 pom~ fox: a 6.1 av':l'age, Notre Dame mentor Johnny Jor- in.g Saturday, Jan. 12; Wake and two free throws, but stole but 63 of ih1s pomts came m the dan after scouting Carolin 's Clemson OIDI February 2; and ~e sho~ wi~ a. gre;at defensive fin a~ four -contests. ;a:e h~s _15 SS-6S win over Kentucky: "l~e Wake-North Carolina on Febru­JOb agamst 'Vrrginia s Mac Cald- ~gamst Duke, 3~ agamst yrrgm- been in basketball for 28 years ary 9. All games will start at well. . . 1a Tech an.d lWle each m two and 1 actually learned things out 2:15 P. m., with Jim Simpson

Ca~dwell had 15 pomts m bhe g.~es agamst N. C. State, to there watching Dean's club handling play-by-play and operung half, but! managed only fnnsh outJ the season. operate. Beautiful offense pat- Greensboro television station

WFMT-TV's Sport s Director r~.~~r,-~:~;;;:~,::~~~~11':::1'~0:..li!:Woil0.:~~-~;:l11 ~~:~~::~ t!:~~~e that was ~~~~e Harville providing IJhe

li Cage Stats For 8 Games ~~ Th~:tar~a~c: ... ~~~~:y:!c~ al~th~~aJfn~esatin2 =~~ ~~~~~ h H watch if you are to take i:n w:hat North Carolina-Virginia on Jan-f) RECORD: 4-4 (Overall) 3-0 (ACC) ~ .. ; promises to be a typically excit- uary 19; Duke-West 'Virginia on n PLAYER FIELD GOALS FREETHR. RE. PER FOUL POINTS ~:_j ing Wake-UNC clash. January 26; Virginia-Maryland

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• •• Open 7 days a week · Lrom 6 'A. M. until 1-0 P. M., serving breakfast, luncheons, and din­ners.

LOCATED AT NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CENTER MR. and MRS. CARL WEBSTER, Managers t.1 G A M PCT. A M peT NO. AV NO DIS NO.AV q The spark that lights the fire On February 16; and NOrth

0D~~ed~=8mn~M~-~~U~lw~Ua~~B~~~te-~cljc~a~ro~~~·~a~~~uk~e~~~F~e~b~ru~ary~-:~~·~·=~~;~~~;~~~~~;~~;;;;;;;;~ t: '·!,each game is one Billy CUnning~ n Frank Christie 8 90 44 .489 35 21 .600 52 6.5 18 0 109 13.6 H ham. This 6-5, 195 poad sopho-;;! Butch HaJSISell .. 8 75 34 .453 26 22 .846 30 3.8 23 0 90 11.3 ~·:: more sensation is a sure bet for \) Bob Woollard ____ 8 65 30 .462 36 23 .639 70 8.8 29 2 83 10.4 ~\) sta'l:dom. The long armed for-'-' DickCarmichael8 57 28 .491 2117 .810 45 5.6 22 0 73 9.1 U ward, acknowledged in all pre-h Ronny Watts .... 8 25 18 .720 22 14 .636 33 4.1 22 0 50 6.3 [::i season fishwrappers, has tallied [~\ AI Koehler ........ 8 36 17 .472 22 13 .591 10 1.3 23 2 47 5.9 '1 102 points in six games for a ! RichardHcrring 5 5 2 .400 0 0 .000 2 0.5 2 0 4 0.8 ~:1 17.0 .average. The Brooklyn, N.

-1 Jay Martin ........ 4 2 2 1.000 0 0 .000 0 0.0 1 0 4 1.0 ''! Y., native, who can jump like a John Anderson .. 4 4 1 .250 0 0 .000 3 0.8 50 2 0.5 scared gazelle, lhas pulled down Brad Brooks .... 2 4 2 .500 1 0 .000 2 1.0 2 0 4 2.0 92 rebounds for a 15.0 norm. Ted Zawacki .... 2 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0.0 1 0 0 0.0 Keep your eye on number 32. AI Lozier ............ 1 0 0 .000 2 1 .500 1 1.0 0 0 1 1.0 Co-captain Yogi Poteet, a rug-Billy Smith ........ 1 2 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 ged 6-1, 182 pounder, has been

TEAM REBOUNDS .................. 49 6.1 surprising everyone with his h(}t !hand. Poteet averaged 0.8 points

~~="i*~~~iifu~W~.,.;~:!· ~~:!":::!*'~·,,~.M'~.w:.:~·H~~:i~-;;'::!"~~if.:-mw:~r ~·~m,~-W'<~;:!t;: ... :!!%~~~ .. ~~,~~~~·-=:'JJiW!,~:=:!,_:=::~''·::::~~ per game in 1959-60 and 3.8

Intramural Cagers Return To Action After Holidays

p(}ints last year. But in the first six games so rar the muscular backcour:t ace has his 101 mark­ers and 'a 16.8 average. He's high macrr for UNC.

After .a two week Christmas ·games. Delta Sigma Pi beat layoff the fraternity and ialde- Kappa Sigma B team in a

' squeaker, 43-41, Rinky Dink's pendent basketball teams got edged the Buzzards 39-36, and back to work on a short week. Sigma Chi B team trounced Before the holidays, however, 'llheta Chi B team 27-23. the intramural water polo Utle W:restling, which was supposed was won by the Pika's, as they to take place this semester bas beat Sigma Phi Epsilon in a been delayed until second se­heated, 1-0 game which ended I mester because there has been a tough season in :the tank. I no shipment of the mats needed.

This week in basketball, the Mter the end of the winter big news came from the Delta spO'l'ts except for the basket­Sig's beat the Pika's in an up- ball c~mpetition the fraternities set, 46-39. The Pika's won the a running a cl~se race for the championship last year, and title at this point. Kappa Alpha have the same men back, but has remained in the lead all could not m u s t e r enough year, but its lead has been cut strength to catch up with. the to thiTty points by Sigma Phi surgirng Delta Sig's. Delta Sig Epsilon. Pi Kappa Alpha has thus remains undefeated after staged a te>rrific onslaughter in three !l"ames. Stu HighsmitJ;l was winter sports, winning the titles J the b1g man for Delta Srg by in swimming, table tennis and controlling the boards and pour- water polo. '11hey have come ing in a number of points. In from a mediocre sixth place other frate~ty lea~e ga.mes ~fter fall sports to a strong last week, Srgma Phi Epsiloo, third position now. The point Kappa Sigma, Kappa Alpha, and spread is not 100 points between Sigma Chi won their games. the top four teams, whereas

lin: the Independent league, KA has 1027 Sigma Pohi Epsilon Delta Sigma Pi, the Rinky 991, Pi Ka~pa Alpha 951 and Dinks, and Sigma Chi B won I Sigma Chi has 931. '

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ON THE CAMPUS - ALMOST!

SANDWICHES - PIZZAS IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC BEVERAGES

Important Games On T.V.- Entertainment on Weedends

Senior guard Larry Brown, the other co-captain, has also been averaging in double figur­es. The 5-10, 165 pound team quarterback has a 14.0 mean. Brown, w.ith a deadly antiquated twohand set shot, is being J;)Ush­ed for All-American honors.

The foUI1h member of the squad in double figures ts \Ter­satile Charlie Shaffer. The 6-3

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§~'99 Stdw "On Wake Forest Campus''

Thruway Shoppbtc Center "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" 300 S. Stratford Bd.

Winston-Salem. N. C.

says Quintus (The Eye) Tacitus, well-known hunter and man about town. "My modus vivendi calls for the very best. And-when it comes to :flavor in a cigarette-'Threyton is nulli secundus. Indeed, here's de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette." f"rrl-""

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