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TODAY':lNS.IDI ·. * ·. : · -. · .fUSTORY.: .: · .*· OUKE . · - · ' ·· -·· r .. . ,. •·. t ··n····. . . ' , : ' . . . ••• ::\ ''. i , . TODAY; EDITORIALLY a ... ' ' . ' * VISITATION *ALCOHOL . '. Wake Forest .U¢versiw, WtuSton-Satem, North Carolina, September 5, 1975 ' ' ' ' ' I No.1 Late summer b$Jgs a quiet look. to Lake Catherine in Reynolda Gardeus on a sleepy afternoon. Overhanging trees and the bridge are mirrored in the still water. . Photo by Yandle ' · Intervisitation Rebutted; ·Strictly Enforced i By BRIAN ECKERT · Associate Editor Following its rejection by the Board of ·· Trustees, the liberalization of donn visitation rules has fizzled and in its place has come stringent enforcement of the old ones. Those regulations prohibit members of opposite Sexes from visiting each other's dorm rooms except during open houses. Along with strong instructions to the residence hall staff to report violations, a new, but as yet undetennined system for judging housing contract violators, will be instituted shortly. An "administrative committee" of deans and the housing director had been proposed to handle rule- breakers, and that committee actually dealt with a visitation a proposal to grant administrators the power to determine major social policies. Scales, who termed the vote "a reaffirmation of previous policy," requested strong, uniform enforcement of the housing rules to comply with that reaffirmation. "There has been some a1annist talk to the effect that the . fresh action invites a 'crackdown' against offenders," Scales said Wednesday. "My view is that we should bave as few rules as possible, but these should be enforced." said that the SJB handled only one visitation case last year. In fact, two such cases were tried, one involving an RA from Huffman Donn who illegally entered a women's dorm after hours. In the other, a not guilty verdict was returned against a female student and her boyfriend, a resident of -Davis House. The woman entered the sulte, knocked on the door to call for her date, and left the sUite with him. arrangements of the institutions- -colleges, and universities among them." · "It is fairly new," he continued, "in this generation, that in the best of homes Of our constituency that boys visit girls and girls visit boys in the bedrooms of the others. · : "There are many homes where the . old conventions are still respected," Scales said. The president added that "architectural, legal and other grounds" figured in the trustees' rejection. "I think perhaps the worst evidence against intervisitation is the evidence of· other · campuses," Scales continued. "They have shown a steady deterioration In the quality of life, deterioration of property and the refusal of anyone to govern in these residence halls (that permit open visitation)." .. SJB Criticizes Move ,- case earlier this week which involved a female RA and a resident of Taylor House, turned in by another RA. Part of the enforcement program was the removal of jurisdiction in housing contract violation cases from the Student Judicial Board. Originally, Scales requested the formation of ·a committee of Dean of Men Mark Reece, Dean of Women Lu Leake and Housing Director Ed Cunnings to rule on such cases. But in light of the · judicial reforms submitted to Scales by Cromer and White, no final decision on housing case jurisdiction has been reached. On the other haild, no changes will be made in the stricter rule enforcement plan. Residence life . directors and RA's have been instructed by the deans' offices that they may exercise no discretion in visitation violation cases. They must "observe and report" through their of command without exercising discretion such as warnings or counseling. said that, among other reasons, the rationale behind the trustees' decision was preservation of traditional relationships. Asked if he believed the visitation question to be a moot issue, Scales replied, "It seems to me that it has been considered often enough. I think politically it is likely to be unsuccessful/' . J' ·• By MARK LEUCHTENBERGER Assistant Editor However, Judicial Board and Honor Council retorms designed to return jurisdiction in such cases to the stUdent courts was circumvented the student us, and that we have rig}Jts only brought before · the fraternity submitted to university President constitution." The Student asfarastheywishtogivethemto presidents," Markman said. James Ralph Scales Wednesday Government constitution says· us." "Fraternities were offered an afternoon 1 by student that the SJB shall hear cases Coble objected to the extra hour to stay open on Government President Andy The co-chainnen of the Student · 1 i g · 1 f th committee because he felt it weekends if they would grant the d · Judicial Board strongly criticiZed tons 0 e would lead to "double jeopardy" right to judge housing violations this. the Also, Markman said, "We're in certain cases, since those tried tQ an admi.nistrative cominittee. the reforms' chances for dectston made thts summer -losing trial by peers who for housing violations might also They refused. acceptance were excellent. which has at least temporarily naturally understand' the face SJB trial for social "This year, it's been instituted. The SG-led, faculty-endorsed the power to judge situation best. This shows that misconduct. without anyone's permission," he movement to loosen visitation VIolations of the housing contract "La this ti said from the SJB to an the administration has no faith in st year ques on was · rules failed last May 12 when the Board of Trustees defeated liJ.l3 Al . h l s .... · ·. co · o · · ·. tan·d Reviewed concerning the decision during the summer. "Nobody has_ ByDEBORAH bothered to tell us anything," RICHARDSON Coble said. Editor As a result; said Markman, "We really don't know what our duties are right now." He added, however, that a meeting between the SJB and the administration had been scheduled for yesterday. According to a copy of the committee's procedure released Wednesday afternoon by the President's office, the SJB would have jurisdiction only in cases which involved social misconduct. Intervisitation would be a housing contract violation under the plan, and thus under the rule of the committee. Coble and Markman objected on several growtds to the ruling, which established Deans Lu Leake and Mark Reece and Housing Director Ed Cunnings as the committee m.embers. One objection, Marlanan said, was that the decision "totally Director of Housing Ed Cunnings and a spokesman for the residence life staff, who asked to remain anon;'!llous, said Wednesday that the alcohol policy is presently wtder review by the administration. Cunnings said there were obvious ambiguities in the policy, such as making the fraternities pay for ·lounge space, then determining them public. To date, the fraternity lounges are public and therefore no drinking is allowed in them, according to the rules. The question now is whether the rule will be enforced or allowed to slide as it has been in previous years. Cunnings told the Housing Committee of Student Government this week that the prohibition of alcohol in fraternity lounges will be enforced. However, the residence looking for violations any more ·administration." staff spokesman said the staff's than they ever did. However, he When by committee understanding of it is no different did say that if a new ruling is members what provoked the than last year's. made, he will enforce it. crackdown, Cunnings said The spokesman said he will Cunnings agreed that the "ambiguities" in the policy. enforce the policy of no alcohol in alcohol policy has always been on Several fraternities cancelled the lounges only if be is forced to the books, but "it has not been parties Wednesday night as they come to the lounge for some other enforced" in the past. However, awaited word on how strictly the reason, such as noise or he said, as of now, it will be policy will be enforced this year bottlethrowing. He said .staff enforced by virtue of a or to see if a . new policy is members are not going out "corporate decision of the forthcoming. Suspects Pirating FBI Takes Films By CHARLES JOHNSON Managing Editor University officials last spring turned over about ten films to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, but the university isn't implicated in any illegal activity, according to Rodney Meyer, copyrighted film material are a instructor of English and fine of $25,000 and one year's unofficial head of the university imprisonment for a first offense, film collection. and a $50,000 fine and two-year The FB.I is conducting a sentence for a second conviction, pending investigation of film a spokesman said. Chapin to Kick Off CU Concert Series copyright infringements, Film pirating is not wtusual, according to FBI spokesmen in said the FBI sopkesman in Winston-salem and Charlotte. Charlotte. "We've had copyright Fihns acquired by Wake Forest matters for many years," he may be in violation of federal said. "Probably it has come to copyright statutes, a spokesman light more in recent months." explained, though they were The FBI is attempting to innocently acquired by the determine why there are university. Meyer said the films suddenly so many illegal films in were purchased last fall from an circulation, Meyer said. "I don't individual in southern California. know why, and I'm not sure the "They may or may not be FBI knows why," be added. illegal," he said. "The only thing Valued at "severai thousand that's happened is the FBI has dollars," the films given to the come arowtd and picked up some FBI are part of the university's films as part of an investigation." small film library. By STEVE CARPENTER Staff Writer Harry Chapin, the singer· • songwriter who skyrocketed to fame with his hit single "Taxi," will open the 1971).76 College Union concert series tonight at 8 in Wait Chapel. Any unsold tickets for the perfonnance may be purchased at the College Union box office for four dollars with a student ID. The son of a big band era drummer, Chapin was raised in New York City's Greenwich Village. One of his first experiences with music was with the Brooklyn Heights Boys' Choir. He later gained experience with the banjo, guitar, and 1 trumpet, and formed a musical act with his two younger SG Positions Open Petitions are now available at the information desk for candidates for the Student Government legislature and freshman positions on the Honor Council and the Student Budget Advisory Committee. Petitions must be returned to SG Secretary , Marta McCave by 5 p.m. 1 Wednesday. Elections will be held Tuesday, September 16. brothers, Tom and Steve Chapin, who now serve as part of his elite back-up group. Chapin left the music world in the early 1960's to study architecture and philosophy at Cornell University and to pursue a career in film. He has since involved himself in the production of some 3110 films. He received an Academy Award nomination for his documentary "The Legendary Champions," and is presently working on an original screenplay for Warner Brothers entitled "The End of the World." It was 1971 when Harry Chapin's present musical career began. Despite the then popular songs of Cady Simon and Kris Kristofferson, Chapin was able to attract an impressively large audience for his now famous "story songs," of which "Taxi," "Cat's in the Cradle," and "W..Q. L-D," a bittersweet song about an aging disc jockey, are the most famous. Newly-named College Union Director David Robertson said he anticipates a large turn-out for tonight's p·erfot·mance. Robertson added that big-name performers such as Chapin will frequent the concert roster this year because it is easier to sell them. This means more revenue for the ailing College Union program budget, which bas been cut by approximately one sixth. Other performances in Watt Chapel this semester will include Muttay Soloman impersonating W.C. Fields on September 26, Martin Mull on November 6, and Pure Prairie League on November 8 for Homecoming. No October perfonnances have been scheduled by the CU because the athletic department has scheduled a "major entertainer" to appear in Groves stadium sometime during the month and, according to Robertson, the College Union "cannot compete" with the event. R!lbertson said that proceeds from the event will go toward payment on the debt on the stadium. When asked if there are any promising hopefuls for performance in Wait Chapel, Robertson responded that Art Garfunkel is now under consideration for sometime in either November or December. He added optimistically that if Garfunkel "goes on tour, we have as good a chance as anybody" of getting him. The university itself was Meyer said the films are "only involved in no illegal activity, for in-house use and scholarship. Meyer emphasized. "The They're not to be used for public question may be whether or not showings." the person who sold these fihns He explained that the films are had a right to sell them. a part of the university's "On the form we gqt, it was archives, to be used as research made clear you could charge the materials. purchases on major bank credit He compared film purchases to cards," said Meyer. "Everything the buying of dime novels "on the seemed legitimate." off-chance that they may interest Because the investigation is somebody. still pending, FBI spokesmen "Films are ephemeral items," declined to release any details he continued. "We try to use except that an investigation is some judgment about the films taking place in California we buy.'' Neither Meyer nor the According to the New York spokesmen know what will Times, more than 27,1100 cans of happen to the films. copyrighted film have been ''For any film voluntarily confiscated by the FBI in Los surrendered or taken by legal Angues alone. Thll rimes said it papers, it would be up to the U.S. has been estimated that as many attorney handling the as 65,000 film collectors in the prosecution or the court" to United States may be in violation return it, said a spokesman in of federal copyright laws. Charlotte. Meyer said the outcome won't one publication estimated the be known for a year since the number of film collectors in the decision hinges on the West Coast United States at 250,0110. investigation and whether or not "It's an entirely above-board "the case goes to trial." operation, Meyer explained. Maximum penalties for "This is a nonnal hazard of willfully infringing on working in libraries." The "failure of the Student Judicial Board to function" last year, Scales said, was the motivation behind _shifting violation cases to the administrative committee. He "The rationale is that it has been a tradition in conservative societies . . . to preserve the integrity of the family, the institution of monogamy and the tradition of conventional relations of the sexes," Scales said, "and the living He explained that he felt students "ought to devote their energies to something more creative, somethlng less slavishly imitative. They ought to work out new patterns of social Hammering and drilling on the balconies of Poteat House are awakening residents each morning at 7:30, according to several disgruntled occupants. The workmen are evidently repairing the cracks in the balcony structure. Photo by Smith Robison· Promotes High Expectations By LESUE GARST Staff Writer The students of Wake F'orest must give of themselves emotionally, intellectually, and spiritually in order to make university live up to thelr expectations, according to Dr. Olin C. Robison, the guest speaker at opening convocation. Robison, the young, newly- elected president of Middlebury College, addressed his spe ch mainly to the freslunen, although he said he tried to resist the temptation to give them advice. He said that people today see institutions as villains against which they must make a lone stand. Robison said it is constructive to question just how much power institutions should exert over individuals, citing the civil rights movement, the Vietnam protest, the consumer movement and the women's liberation movement as positive forces. However, he warned that many people are "seduced by the romance of conspiracy" against established institutions and like to see therrfselves standing alone against injustice. Robison said his life was given meaning in the context of institutions,and that students' goal should be to make their institution, the university, a vehicle for worthy values. He inserted Marshall McLuhan's idea that an institution tends to become what it says it is. Thus, he said, by identifying with Wake Forest's ideals, students can make the wtiversity a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. Also at the convocation, the investiture of the honor cowtcil was conducted by Dr. J. William Angell. New members of the faculty and staff were introduced and include: Dr. Olin C. Robinson of 1 Douglas Bland, director of residence life; captain Jesse Brackett, military science instructor; Dr. John Burnham, visiting professor, Babcock School of Management; Gary Cook, art instructor; Dr. George Edward Damp, assistant professor of music; Sandra Daniel, French instructor; Dr. Ann Fairbanks, visiting assistant professor of music; Dr. James Fairbanks, visiting assistant professor of politics; Dr. Willie Hinze, assistant professor of- chemistry; Dr. Louise Hoffman, instructor of history; Steve Jenosik, director of resident life; Patsy Jordan, instructor of education; Dr. Ellen Kirkman, Alfred T. Brauer instructor in math; Mary Labarre, instructor of Spanish; Dr. Annette LeSiege, assistant professor of music;Fred McLean, director of debate and instructor in SCTA; James Mader, instructor of business and accountancy; Laurence Mannis, Babcock School of Management professor; Will Ray, publications editor; David Robertson, College Middlebury C!lllege was the guest Union director; and Lieutenant speaker at last week's llpening Colonel William Scott, military convocation in Wait Chapel. science professor. Pho1o by Cranford
Transcript
Page 1: t . * · '· -·· ··n····. a · circumvented the student us, and that we have rig}Jts only brought before · the fraternity submitted to university President constitution."

TODAY':lNS.IDI ·. * :~,s~r~:ria~: -· ·. : · -. · .fUSTORY.: .: ·

. * · PROf.:V~ OUKE . · -pcJ\Iv~R - · ' · ·

'· -·· r

.. . ,. •·. t

··n····. . . ' , ~:· :

' .

. .

• ••• ::\ ''. i , .

TODAY; EDITORIALLY

a ... ' --~

' . '

* VISITATION

*ALCOHOL

. '. Wake Forest .U¢versiw, WtuSton-Satem, North Carolina, September 5, 1975

' ' ' ' • ' • I No.1

Late summer b$Jgs a quiet look. to Lake Catherine in Reynolda Gardeus on a sleepy afternoon. Overhanging trees and the bridge are mirrored in the still water. . Photo by Yandle

'

· Intervisitation Rebutted; R~les ·Strictly Enforced

i By BRIAN ECKERT · Associate Editor

Following its rejection by the Board of · · Trustees, the liberalization of donn visitation rules has fizzled and in its place has come stringent enforcement of the old ones. Those regulations prohibit members of opposite Sexes from visiting each other's dorm rooms except during open houses.

Along with strong instructions to the residence hall staff to report violations, a new, but as yet undetennined system for judging housing contract violators, will be instituted shortly.

An "administrative committee" of deans and the housing director had been proposed to handle rule­breakers, and that committee actually dealt with a visitation

a proposal to grant administrators the power to determine major social policies.

Scales, who termed the vote "a reaffirmation of previous policy," requested strong, uniform enforcement of the housing rules to comply with that reaffirmation.

"There has been some a1annist talk to the effect that the . fresh action invites a 'crackdown' against offenders," Scales said Wednesday. "My view is that we should bave as few rules as possible, but these should be enforced."

said that the SJB handled only one visitation case last year.

In fact, two such cases were tried, one involving an RA from Huffman Donn who illegally entered a women's dorm after hours. In the other, a not guilty verdict was returned against a female student and her boyfriend, a resident of -Davis House. The woman entered the sulte, knocked on the door to call for her date, and left the sUite with him.

arrangements of the institutions­-colleges, and universities among them." ·

"It is fairly new," he continued, "in this generation, that in the best of homes Of our constituency that boys visit girls and girls visit boys in the bedrooms of the others. · :

"There are many homes where the . old conventions are still respected," Scales said.

The president added that "architectural, legal and other grounds" figured in the trustees' rejection. "I think perhaps the worst evidence against intervisitation is the evidence of· other · campuses," Scales continued. "They have shown a steady deterioration In the quality of life, deterioration of property and the refusal of anyone to govern in these residence halls (that permit open visitation)."

.. SJB Criticizes Move ,- case earlier this week which

involved a female RA and a resident of Taylor House, turned in by another RA.

Part of the enforcement program was the removal of jurisdiction in housing contract violation cases from the Student Judicial Board. Originally, Scales requested the formation of ·a committee of Dean of Men Mark Reece, Dean of Women Lu Leake and Housing Director Ed Cunnings to rule on such cases. But in light of the · judicial reforms submitted to Scales by Cromer and White, no final decision on housing case jurisdiction has been reached.

On the other haild, no changes will be made in the stricter rule enforcement plan. Residence life . directors and RA's have been instructed by the deans' offices that they may exercise no discretion in visitation violation cases. They must "observe and report" through their c~ of command without exercising discretion such as warnings or counseling. S~ales said that, among other reasons, the rationale behind the trustees' decision was preservation of traditional relationships.

Asked if he believed the visitation question to be a moot issue, Scales replied, "It seems to me that it has been considered often enough. I think politically it is likely to be unsuccessful/' .

J' ~

·•

By MARK LEUCHTENBERGER

Assistant Editor

However, Judicial Board and Honor Council retorms designed to return jurisdiction in such cases to the stUdent courts was

circumvented the student us, and that we have rig}Jts only brought before · the fraternity submitted to university President constitution." The Student asfarastheywishtogivethemto presidents," Markman said. James Ralph Scales Wednesday Government constitution says· us." "Fraternities were offered an afternoon 1 by student that the SJB shall hear cases Coble objected to the extra hour to stay open on Government President Andy

The co-chainnen of the Student · 1 i g · 1 t· f th committee because he felt it weekends if they would grant the d · Judicial Board strongly criticiZed ~~::g neon;~~~ tons 0 e would lead to "double jeopardy" right to judge housing violations ;~rr:,!~ ~:x ~O:~k~:su:_~ this. ~eek the a~ative Also, Markman said, "We're in certain cases, since those tried tQ an admi.nistrative cominittee. the reforms' chances for dectston made thts summer -losing trial by peers who for housing violations might also They refused. acceptance were excellent. which has at least temporarily naturally understand' the face SJB trial for social "This year, it's been instituted. The SG-led, faculty-endorsed t":M~erred the power to judge situation best. This shows that misconduct. without anyone's permission," he movement to loosen visitation VIolations of the housing contract "La this ti said from the SJB to an the administration has no faith in st year ques on was · rules failed last May 12 when the

Board of Trustees defeated liJ.l3

a~F~~~econ:t:eeStuart A l . h l s ==~ .... ·~.~,';:!- · ·. co · o · · ·. tan·d Reviewed concerning the decision during the summer. "Nobody has_ ByDEBORAH bothered to tell us anything," RICHARDSON Coble said. Editor

As a result; said Markman, "We really don't know what our duties are right now." He added, however, that a meeting between the SJB and the administration had been scheduled for yesterday.

According to a copy of the committee's procedure released Wednesday afternoon by the President's office, the SJB would have jurisdiction only in cases which involved social misconduct. Intervisitation would be a housing contract violation under the plan, and thus under the rule of the committee.

Coble and Markman objected on several growtds to the ruling, which established Deans Lu Leake and Mark Reece and Housing Director Ed Cunnings as the committee m.embers.

One objection, Marlanan said, was that the decision "totally

Director of Housing Ed Cunnings and a spokesman for the residence life staff, who asked to remain anon;'!llous, said Wednesday that the alcohol policy is presently wtder review by the administration. Cunnings said there were obvious ambiguities in the policy, such as making the fraternities pay for

·lounge space, then determining them public.

To date, the fraternity lounges are public and therefore no drinking is allowed in them, according to the rules. The question now is whether the rule will be enforced or allowed to slide as it has been in previous years.

Cunnings told the Housing Committee of Student Government this week that the prohibition of alcohol in

fraternity lounges will be enforced. However, the residence looking for violations any more ·administration."

staff spokesman said the staff's than they ever did. However, he When il:lll:~ by committee understanding of it is no different did say that if a new ruling is members what provoked the than last year's. made, he will enforce it. crackdown, Cunnings said

The spokesman said he will Cunnings agreed that the "ambiguities" in the policy. enforce the policy of no alcohol in alcohol policy has always been on Several fraternities cancelled the lounges only if be is forced to the books, but "it has not been parties Wednesday night as they come to the lounge for some other enforced" in the past. However, awaited word on how strictly the reason, such as noise or he said, as of now, it will be policy will be enforced this year bottlethrowing. He said .staff enforced by virtue of a or to see if a . new policy is members are not going out "corporate decision of the forthcoming.

Suspects Pirating

FBI Takes Films By CHARLES JOHNSON

Managing Editor

University officials last spring turned over about ten films to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, but the university isn't implicated in any illegal activity,

according to Rodney Meyer, copyrighted film material are a instructor of English and fine of $25,000 and one year's unofficial head of the university imprisonment for a first offense, film collection. and a $50,000 fine and two-year

The FB.I is conducting a sentence for a second conviction, pending investigation of film a spokesman said.

Chapin to Kick Off C U Concert Series

copyright infringements, Film pirating is not wtusual, according to FBI spokesmen in said the FBI sopkesman in Winston-salem and Charlotte. Charlotte. "We've had copyright

Fihns acquired by Wake Forest matters for many years," he may be in violation of federal said. "Probably it has come to copyright statutes, a spokesman light more in recent months." explained, though they were The FBI is attempting to innocently acquired by the determine why there are university. Meyer said the films suddenly so many illegal films in were purchased last fall from an circulation, Meyer said. "I don't individual in southern California. know why, and I'm not sure the

"They may or may not be FBI knows why," be added. illegal," he said. "The only thing Valued at "severai thousand that's happened is the FBI has dollars," the films given to the come arowtd and picked up some FBI are part of the university's films as part of an investigation." small film library.

By STEVE CARPENTER Staff Writer

Harry Chapin, the singer· • songwriter who skyrocketed to

fame with his hit single "Taxi," will open the 1971).76 College Union concert series tonight at 8 in Wait Chapel. Any unsold tickets for the perfonnance may be purchased at the College Union box office for four dollars with a student ID.

The son of a big band era drummer, Chapin was raised in New York City's Greenwich Village. One of his first experiences with music was with the Brooklyn Heights Boys' Choir. He later gained experience with the banjo, guitar, and

1 trumpet, and formed a musical act with his two younger

SG Positions Open Petitions are now available at

the information desk for candidates for the Student Government legislature and freshman positions on the Honor Council and the Student Budget Advisory Committee. Petitions must be returned to SG Secretary

, Marta McCave by 5 p.m. 1 Wednesday. Elections will be

held Tuesday, September 16.

brothers, Tom and Steve Chapin, who now serve as part of his elite back-up group.

Chapin left the music world in the early 1960's to study architecture and philosophy at Cornell University and to pursue a career in film. He has since involved himself in the production of some 3110 films. He received an Academy Award nomination for his documentary "The Legendary Champions," and is presently working on an original screenplay for Warner Brothers entitled "The End of the World."

It was 1971 when Harry Chapin's present musical career began. Despite the then popular songs of Cady Simon and Kris Kristofferson, Chapin was able to attract an impressively large audience for his now famous "story songs," of which "Taxi," "Cat's in the Cradle," and "W..Q. L-D," a bittersweet song about an aging disc jockey, are the most famous.

Newly-named College Union Director David Robertson said he anticipates a large turn-out for tonight's p·erfot·mance. Robertson added that big-name performers such as Chapin will

frequent the concert roster this year because it is easier to sell them. This means more revenue for the ailing College Union program budget, which bas been cut by approximately one sixth.

Other performances in Watt Chapel this semester will include Muttay Soloman impersonating W.C. Fields on September 26, Martin Mull on November 6, and Pure Prairie League on November 8 for Homecoming. No October perfonnances have been scheduled by the CU because the athletic department has scheduled a "major entertainer" to appear in Groves stadium sometime during the month and, according to Robertson, the College Union "cannot compete" with the event. R!lbertson said that proceeds from the event will go toward payment on the debt on the stadium.

When asked if there are any promising hopefuls for performance in Wait Chapel, Robertson responded that Art Garfunkel is now under consideration for sometime in either November or December. He added optimistically that if Garfunkel "goes on tour, we have as good a chance as anybody" of getting him.

The university itself was Meyer said the films are "only involved in no illegal activity, for in-house use and scholarship. Meyer emphasized. "The They're not to be used for public question may be whether or not showings." the person who sold these fihns He explained that the films are had a right to sell them. a part of the university's

"On the form we gqt, it was archives, to be used as research made clear you could charge the materials. purchases on major bank credit He compared film purchases to cards," said Meyer. "Everything the buying of dime novels "on the seemed legitimate." off-chance that they may interest

Because the investigation is somebody. still pending, FBI spokesmen "Films are ephemeral items," declined to release any details he continued. "We try to use except that an investigation is some judgment about the films taking place in California we buy.''

Neither Meyer nor the According to the New York spokesmen know what will Times, more than 27,1100 cans of happen to the films. copyrighted film have been

''For any film voluntarily confiscated by the FBI in Los surrendered or taken by legal Angues alone. Thll rimes said it papers, it would be up to the U.S. has been estimated that as many attorney handling the as 65,000 film collectors in the prosecution or the court" to United States may be in violation return it, said a spokesman in of federal copyright laws. Charlotte.

Meyer said the outcome won't one publication estimated the be known for a year since the number of film collectors in the decision hinges on the West Coast United States at 250,0110. investigation and whether or not "It's an entirely above-board "the case goes to trial." operation, Meyer explained.

Maximum penalties for "This is a nonnal hazard of willfully infringing on working in libraries."

The "failure of the Student Judicial Board to function" last year, Scales said, was the motivation behind _shifting violation cases to the administrative committee. He

"The rationale is that it has been a tradition in conservative societies . . . to preserve the integrity of the family, the institution of monogamy and the tradition of conventional relations of the sexes," Scales said, "and the living

He explained that he felt students "ought to devote their energies to something more creative, somethlng less slavishly imitative. They ought to work out new patterns of social .Q_~ganization."

Hammering and drilling on the balconies of Poteat House are awakening residents each morning at 7:30, according to several disgruntled occupants. The workmen are evidently repairing the cracks in the balcony structure. Photo by Smith

Robison· Promotes High Expectations

By LESUE GARST Staff Writer

The students of Wake F'orest must give of themselves emotionally, intellectually, and spiritually in order to make ~e university live up to thelr expectations, according to Dr. Olin C. Robison, the guest speaker at opening convocation.

Robison, the young, newly­elected president of Middlebury College, addressed his spe ch mainly to the freslunen, although he said he tried to resist the temptation to give them advice. He said that people today see institutions as villains against which they must make a lone stand.

Robison said it is constructive to question just how much power institutions should exert over individuals, citing the civil rights movement, the Vietnam protest, the consumer movement and the women's liberation movement as positive forces. However, he warned that many people are "seduced by the romance of conspiracy" against established institutions and like to see therrfselves standing alone against injustice.

Robison said his life was given meaning in the context of institutions,and that students' goal should be to make their institution, the university, a vehicle for worthy values. He

inserted Marshall McLuhan's idea that an institution tends to become what it says it is. Thus, he said, by identifying with Wake Forest's ideals, students can make the wtiversity a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts.

Also at the convocation, the investiture of the honor cowtcil was conducted by Dr. J. William Angell. New members of the faculty and staff were introduced and include:

Dr. Olin C. Robinson of 1

Douglas Bland, director of residence life; captain Jesse Brackett, military science instructor; Dr. John Burnham,

visiting professor, Babcock School of Management; Gary Cook, art instructor; Dr. George Edward Damp, assistant professor of music; Sandra Daniel, French instructor; Dr. Ann Fairbanks, visiting assistant professor of music; Dr. James

Fairbanks, visiting assistant professor of politics; Dr. Willie Hinze, assistant professor of­chemistry; Dr. Louise Hoffman, instructor of history; Steve Jenosik, director of resident life;

Patsy Jordan, instructor of education; Dr. Ellen Kirkman, Alfred T. Brauer instructor in math; Mary Labarre, instructor of Spanish; Dr. Annette LeSiege, assistant professor of music;Fred McLean, director of debate and instructor in SCTA;

James Mader, instructor of business and accountancy; Laurence Mannis, Babcock

School of Management professor; Will Ray, publications editor; David Robertson, College

Middlebury C!lllege was the guest Union director; and Lieutenant speaker at last week's llpening Colonel William Scott, military convocation in Wait Chapel. science professor.

Pho1o by Cranford

Page 2: t . * · '· -·· ··n····. a · circumvented the student us, and that we have rig}Jts only brought before · the fraternity submitted to university President constitution."

PAGE TWO Friday, September 5,1975, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

, R?bertson Takes R~i~~' Visitation Struggle Long, Slow Drrects Student Actzvztres ByCONNIECOLE In October 1969, the student marginthemovetoramaaslve however,asiheacademicyear "Nobodyglvesadamnaboutthe

By JULIE DRAKE Assistant Editor

A sign posted over the secretary's desk in the Office of Student Activities reads "Everytlme I get it all together -somebody moves it." The sentiment seems appropriate for an office that coordinates all the student activities on campus under the direction of only one paid professional.

Dave Robertson is the new man in this office; he replaces Manny Cunard who left his job as College Union director to take a similar position at Loyola University.

Robertson comes to Wake Forest from the University of North Carolina • Wilmington where he was assistant dean of

students in charge of residence life. A graduate of Lenoir Rhyne College in 1971, he received the master of education degree from the University of Georgia in 1974.

As to why Cunard vacated the job, the new director of CU said it was "for Manny's own professional development, not out of disappointment or disenchantment with the university." Loyola is a bigger school with a larger staff which, according to Robertson, offered Cunard "the chance to do a lot more new and different things."

At UNC-Wilmington Robertson was chiefly responsible for residence housing. He said he sees his role here as a coordinator of student activities. He wants to provide

ca

JANE DoE· Personal Ban~er

AssoclateEdltor .Government legislature "visitationparty"deopiteclaims wore on. · hours or rules or whatever. If unanimously passed the by President James Ralph Scales ou're cool about it, nobody

more students with the opportunity to contribute to operations of the College Union.

Robertson said he wants to increase student Involvement In planning campus activities but, he said, "I may be looking through rose-colored glasses." Because the budget has been cut since last year, Robertson said the College Union couldn't survive without student help."

According to Robertson his office will try to be less wa~teful but it will not drop projects the students have found worthwhile. "There may be a few more char~e events this year than In prev1ous yE:ars " he said but he thinks students' would rather pay one dollar than to have an event cancelled.

"It seems hardly likely that the University will ever consider admitting girls to boys' rooms or vice versa. On the other hand, it's completely unreasonable to force students off campus for a modicwn of social life."

Sound familiar? In May, 1969, the words of this junior fraternity member typified. what was going through the minds of his Wake Forest classmates. Intervisitation is not a new issue, nor was it t.'len.

April1969 found the university stand on lntervisitation limited to approved open houses only. A survey of student opinion that month showed most students in favor of intervisitation, with some reservations, and indicated that students felt administrators would be receptive to proposals concerning visitation.

A proposal prepared by the •Men's Residence Council Open House Committee that year suggested intervisitation be implemented on a trial basis. It would be controlled by a student host committee, charged with supervising intervisltation hours and submitting violations to the proper discipUnary body.

The hours of allowed intervisitati~n according to the plan were to be 4 to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and noon to one-half hour before the women's curfew Friday through Sunday. House lounges would be open at all times.

An important stipulation of the proposal was that it was applicable in the men's residence halls only. Arledge Armenaki, MRC committee chairman said then that most girls had not expressed a desire for intervisitation, primarily because the arrangement of rooms on the women's halls would make it necessary to be dressed all the time and because intervisitation would inhibit study time.

can

resolution favoring limited open that "in 15 or 25 years" students The next development of any ~era you, including the RA's." lounges in the men's residence would agree with hlm on hi& f:E:: inqu:;io~~~~e 0~ Statistics showed that only one halls. In passing the reaoluUon, stand against visitation, a stand · student bad been turned in by legislators presenting the he characterized as one of October 19'13, when tbe Inter- Diid-February on an proposal mentioned that other "privacy in an increasingly Campus Council, a group intervisitation charge. Warnings universities, such as Duke, had congested world." composed of representatives of were issued by RA's upon the • unlimited 24-hour visitation - all campus . organizations, first observance of seven days a week. University of Symbolic visitation periods of presented administrators with a intervisitation, and the RA's North Carolina· Chapel Hill one hour or more were tob bet thnle ~oror poopensalho~a lntinbotbg pemtie:.onlns andg were said to have more students were also allowed to rule in the men's donna u o Y '' ...... discretionary power than In the visit in the women's dorms from 7 after three-fourths of the suite women's dorms .. By November, past. "Be discreet" seemed to be a.m. to closing Friday through residents had agreed to the plan. the deans had not yet repUed to· the l'Ule of the day. Sunday as well as any day Any student charged with a ICC despite the two-week time . . declared by the student body. violation, according to a limit for a responae. The policy, · The lntervisitatlon !.ssue was-

The proposal met its fate when legislative resolution, was given they claimed, was to go to Scales, submerged again untll spring of the Student Affairs Committee, the privilege of havJng bis trial but had not reached him at that 1975 when SG passed a resolution voted against it because, postponed 45 days from the date time. establishing a policy that would according to Dr. Hugh Hinman, of the passage of the resolution. Dubbing the administrators allow all men's suites and then an economics professor and With faculty approval of the "irresponsible," ICC made 8 women's balls to devise their own SAC chairman, the proposal was visitation bill, SG suspended ita final bid for a reply by early visitation plan with a maximum too vague and ambiguous. It was plans, and according to SG December which the deans of 24-hour visitation seven days a referred to the legislature for officials, SG was willing to work accomplished only after making week. clarification. Following close on "to bring about change in an numerous ''procedural" changes Petitions were circulated " the heels of this setback was SG's orderly and democratic involving hours, security, and among the student body, with approval of visitation in the manner." violations. over 90 per·cent responding with men's dorms. The April trustees meeting saw positive support for student

In December after six weeks of the visitation policy defeated by a Criteria for evaluating the regulated visitation. controversy, SAC approved the vote of 35-1, the trustees proposed automatic open house By April, the faculty had voted open lounge proposal, and reaffinnlng what they call~ the set-up seemed to be the major to approve the visitation policy as student leaders began to turn "parietal rules of the drawback over which· presentedtoitbythestudentLlfe their attention to the visitation University." Only the student administrators and students C o m m i t t e e , h a v i n g issue, with mass meetings trustee voted In favor of the bill. - haggled untll mid-January. The recommended some changes in scheduled in Wait Chapel. 11ew policy, which was to begin in security procedures. At an April

The outcome of the Executive Then, in February 1972, Scales February, stipulated that each meeting of the trustees, Student Committee's vote on the student approved a recommendation living unit would negotiate with Life Committee, and visitation proposal was withheld from the university deans for its· head resident each week for administrators, Dr. Philip until January when the students open lounges in women's dorms open ho11S8 activities (anything Perricone presented the had returned to campus following and six open houses per year in involving at least 30 people) and visitation proposal. On the the Christmas vacation. Dean each dorm on campus. In the ·for hours (maximum noon to agenda for this meeting were Thomas Mullen, In annou:1clng women's dorms open houses closing.) Members of Women's discussions of the purpose of the the negative decision, stated that were to follow a "request" Residence Council and Inter- university and the Student "something needs to be done to system, while in the men's donna Fraternity Council were to Judicial Board. improve the social Ufe of students a "selected occasion" system Implement the · policy and to On May 12, during the final on campus." would be the rule. According to report Infractions. exam period, the trustees voted

In February 1970, student. the 1972 Old Gold and Black Red tape in .the paperwork 15-13 against placing legislators jubilantly re- reports, both terms confused delayed the poUcy, while another responsibility · for social submitted the visitation policy students. poll of student opinion showed regulation in the hands of the with more restricted hours and The undercurrent of student that, in the words of one student, administration. the demand 'that the policy be support for visitation emerged sent to the Student Life again in the fall of 1972, and a Committee rather than to the series of student forums were Executive Committee, which was held to discuss alternatives and composed solely of possibilities.. Considerations administrators and faculty. about the 4-1-4 curriculum

March 1970 found SG seemed to place the visitation legislators passing by a narrow issue in the background,

B 3~ wt3QD v.c(,b Sei5\ I \Gil~J-

_Ap.:ll~ {!_.,:;_..

Night Thief Hits Dorms

Between 3 and 4 a.m. one morning last week, bandits hit the men's' residence halls of Kitchen and.Poteat, stealing over $250 In cash plus !D's, athletic passes and drivers licenses.

Lou Fuller, one of the victims, said that 18 wallets were stolen. "The thief had no pattern," Fuller said. "He stole six wallets from 306 and skipped 3IYl but hit 308. He went through pockets, but only stole wallets. All the doors were closed but none were locked." A total of ten wallets were taken from Poteat and eight from Kitchen.

The Winston-8alem police are investigating the matter.

Notices Any student satisfying certain in the listening room in Re)'nolda

requirements for North Carolina Hall. 1

residency and full-time study as Anyone who forgot to n.ake an 1

determined by the state General appointment and still wishes to Assembly is eligible for a $200 have a picture in the yearbook North Carolina Legislative may call the Howler office any Tuition Grant. Any in-state afternoon next week and picture student who has not already done arrangements wlll be made, so must complete the application students will be photographed in supplied by the admissions office natural color. and return it by Tuesday.

The only requirements for this grant are to have livlld in North Carolina for at least one year, to · not have been declared a resident of any other state, to be determined eUgible for North Carolina In-state tuition rates at public institutions, to be an 1Uidergraduate, and to carry a minimum course credit load of 13 and one half credits per semester.

QueStions on one's residency status should be taken to the registrar's office.

The Howler staff. will begin taking portraits Monday at 9 a.m.

Seniors who have their portraits made will receive a raffle ticket making them eligible for prizes to be given away at the conclusion of the photography session Friday, September 19.

Graduate students and seniors Interested In applying for grants for graduate study or research abroad In academic fields or for professional training In the arts should contact Dolly McPherson, visiting English lecturer. Details and applications should be obtained by October 15 from Ms .. McPherson In 204 Reynolda Hall, Tuesday and Thursday 2-5 p.m.

It Sounds

BUT EVELYN WOOD GRADUATES CAN READ

JAWS IN 41 MINUTES

And you qualifyforyourown Personal Banker simply by opening a Wachovia Checking account. Then anytime you have a question about your account, or a banking. problem, you have someone to go to for the answers. And you never have to go far. Wachovia has an office conveniently near the campus; open all day, so anytime you drop by is o. k. We'd like to make the financial side of your college life a little easier. So stop in and see us this week. And keep your Personal Banker's card in your wallet, where you can refer to it often.

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At That Speed, The 309 Pages Come Across ·With More Impact Than The Movie.

In Living Blood, You Might Say.

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-----EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS-----

Bi ByKAl

Stl

Dr. Miles professor o

" recently eng.

"': editorial batt .. Company in

Sentinel. Bic chainnan of

2 j of the Sierr

economic a1 concerns in cc

b Power's ~ .. construction ..

f. power plant Carolinas dt years.

. Living i

F Sophomore Mark Cregar are two ol currently resll former stora1 basement of H Lacldng a WI becomes so h~ sleep In the d~ books and t room.

Robert Bell housed In a s: room that lacl he voices no c the single roo1 doesn't get too fan. I don't sta he said.

Ed Cunnil: , . housing, says ) moved out soo " within the dor f usual problen ~- the competiti• :I

housing (est 2300) have Cunnlngs reb days, seven were housed hospital, but relocated in 1 Also, transfer! grouped four triples of Po otherwise, C

·• there have overcrowding

WAI (prefer4

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Old

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Page 3: t . * · '· -·· ··n····. a · circumvented the student us, and that we have rig}Jts only brought before · the fraternity submitted to university President constitution."

of the

-'

their

._ ...... ,_...., __

, PAGE THREE Friday, September 5, 1975, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Bidwell Battles Building of Nuclear Plants By KAREN BISSELL

Staff Writer

Dr. Miles Bidwell, associate professor of economics, bas recently enga~ in a series of

In his first letter to the Sentinel July 19, Bidwell expressed the SieiTa Club's dissatisfaction with

both the rate increa&ell required for the building of new nuclear facilities and the unsolved

editorial battles with Duke Power dartgers involved in nuclear Company in the Wllllton.salem power plant operation. He Sentinel. Bidwell, who is also · pointed out that there is CUITently chairman of the Foothills Group an excess capacity of 50 percent of the SieiTa Club, has both economic and environmental in the Duke Power generating concerns in coMection with Duke system and that households and Power's plans for the . buainesses used less electricity in

1974 than in 1973 due to increased construction of several nuclear costs. power plants in the Piedmont Carolinas during the next ten years.

Living in Storage " Sophomore football.players

Mark Cregar and Mark Mattlko are two of three persons currently residing In windowless, former storage closets In the basement of Huffman Dormitory. Lacking a wall vent, the room becomes so bot the two said they sleep In the dorm loqe, storing books and belongings In the room.

Robert Bell, 8 fresbman, is housed In 8 smaller windowless room that lacks closet space, but he voices no complaints. "I like the single room and It (the heat) doesn't get too bad becaiiSe of the fan. I don't stay In here too long," be said.

Ed Cunnings, director of housing, says the three will be moved out soon to existing space

• within the dorm. Elsewhere, the ~ usual problems aosoclated with ., the competition for on-eampiiS '' housing (estimated capacity

2300) have been resolved, CUnnlngs related. For several days, seven transfer studentll were housed In the university hospital, but have since been relocated In the mens' houses. Also, ~era were temporarHy grouped four to a room In the triples of Poteat and Taylor. Otherwise, Cunnings reports, there have been no acute overcrowding problems.

·,,_.

WANTED! (preferably alive)

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Reynolda Hall '

Tbls letter was answered AilguBt 25 by Richard Pierce, assistant vice president of corporate communications for

SEX Information and Referral Service

Campus Extension 327 Mon. • Fri. 9:30-J2 A.M. 1:3N:OO P.M.

RECORD BAR'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE INCLUDES: Janis lan's Between the Lines

Duke Power. He stated that there Wllre factual eiTors in Bidwell's letter.

Pierce wrote that the excess in generating capacity was 30 percent rather than 50, that households and businesses used more electricity in 1974 than in 1973, and that Duke Power is seeking an increase in retall rates of 23.8 percent rather than the 25 percent quoted by Bidwell in his letter.

BIDWELL REPLIES

Bidwell answered Pierce, saying that be took b1s figures from Duke Power's 1974 annual report to its shareholders and that Duke Power must be

deceiving either Its stockholders or the readers of the Sentinel. In this second letter, Bidwell reiterated his belief that Duke Power had not properly examined the question of need for their proposed nuclear plants.

What Duke Power falls to realize, according to Bidwell, is that the price of electricity bas something to do with the amount that the public will use. He feels that Duke Power's projections on the future demand for electricity are crude and were BITived at without the use of modern economics.

Bidwell said he feels that people will respond to relative prices. He cites as evidence the fact that people in the Duke Power service area used less

electricity in 1974 than in 1973 because they had to pay more for it.

PEAK COSTS

Under the present system an hour of electricity costs the same no matter what time of day you use it. Bidwell has proposed the implementation of a price differential so that electricity used during peak hours would cost more than that used at other times during the day. This difference would make power alternatives such as using solar power for air conditioning and voluntary conservation measures such as turning off hot water heaters during the day more attractive to the g~neral _pub~c.

Pilgrims Leave For Old Campus

By BARBARA CLEARY Staff Writer

A university-sponsored trek ·to the old Wake Forest campus will culminate with the North Carolina State-Wake Forest· football game at Raleigh next Saturday, September 13. Bus transportation, dinner and a game ticket is included in the ten­dollar price.

Students and faculty members may sign up for the trip individually or in groups at the information desk through Wednesday in Reynold& Hall. In

· 1970, more than 600 people attended this event, which occurs once in every student generation.

· Buses will load in the area of the water tower, across from the soccer field, and depart at 2 p.m. Saturday for the two-hour journey to Wake Forest. On aiTiving in Wake Forest, the group will parade from the Cslvin Jones house (center of activities) to the chapel of the old campus.

John Lyon, mayor of Wake , Forest and Dr. Randall Lolley,

president of South Eastern Seminary, will greet the congregation. Brief remarks from university Provost Edwin Wilson will follow with President James Ralph Scales presiding.

South Eastern Seminary, a theological school of approximately 600 students, bought the campus in 1956. At that time, Wake Forest University moved to Winston· Salem.

An informal tour following the chapel ceremony will allow participants "to get the feel of a place," according to Ed Christman, university chaplain. Retired professors and faculty members who remember the old campus will serve as tour guides.

A barbecue and fried chicken dinner and a pep rally will be held in Groves Stadium, there, the former Wake Forest football field, now owned by the· local high school.

At 7:30 p.m., the buses will depart for the football game · agair)st N.C. State. Buses will return to Winston'-Salem around midnight.

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Roger Daltrey's Ride A Rock Horse Neil Sedaka's Sedaka's Back Jaws Soundtrack

Night. Bar Hanes Mall 10·9:30 Mon.- Sat . .. --------~--~--~·

The idea of charging extra for electricity used during peak hours could also be combined with the idea of charging extra for any amount of electricity used over an agreed upon !lVerage amount. Thus the people who use the most electricity will pay the most for it.

Bidwell is a member of several groups which are primarily concerned with the environmental aspects of nuclear power plant construction. He ls cbalnnari of the Yadkin River Basin Citizen's Advisory Committee, which ls a group appointed by the state of North Carolina to advise the state on problems involved in the development of the Yadkin River Basin.

OPPOSES PLANT

The committee consists of about 40 people who represent either industry ·and farming iii the area, the Duke Power Company, or concerned citizens. One of the committee's major concerns is Duke Power's proposed Perkins Nuclear Power plant on the Yadkin River.

Bidwell is also a member of the yadkin River Committee which IS composed mainly of people who own land on the Yadkin River. This committee has succeeded in intervening in the licensing process for the Perkins plant.

An active Sierra Club meniber, Bidwell agrees with its position on nuclear power plants. Specifically, the club has called for a moratorium on the construction of new nuclear power plants until all of the problems involved in their

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operation can be worked out. These problems include what can be done in the long run with radioactive waste, what can be done in the event of an accident at a nuclear site, what can be· done to eliminate the possibility of the acquisition of nuclear materials by terrorist groups, and what can be done to dissipate the waste heat produced by nuclear plants without envirorunental harm.

PUBLIC UNAWARE

construction of nuclear plants, said Bidwell. One way is the repeal of the Price-Anderson Act by Congress which currently limits the liability of the power companies in the event of a nuclear accident. In addition, this act provides for government subsidy of the cost which a nuclear accident would involve. Without the protection offered by this act, power companies might be more reluctant to construct nuclear plants, he said. There are currently bills In both houses of Congress, which if passed, would stop new construction of power reactors pending a five-year study.

Bidwell and others are concerned about the difficulty of interesting the general public in the problems of nuclear power. One reason for the difficulty is As a final consideration perhaps that the production of Bidwell said that the supply of electricity by nuclear power uraniwn, like the supply of coal involves a sophisticated used in conventional steam technology that is not easily power plants, is limited. Thus, understood. But the construction other means of power production, of the Perkins plant directly such as solar power, should be upstream from Winston-Salem in~estiga~d m~re intensively, bas implications for the people of S8ld. It IS possible that other this area, particularly in the methods o! power pr~uction event of a nuclear accident with could be unplemented m the the resulting escape times for the same amount of time reqllired to surrounding region. . get all the currently proposed

There are ways to halt nuclear P~~ on line.

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Rated PG

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Page 4: t . * · '· -·· ··n····. a · circumvented the student us, and that we have rig}Jts only brought before · the fraternity submitted to university President constitution."

PAGE FOUR Friday, September 5, 1975, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

DEBORAH RICHARDSON Editor

RICHARD CARLSON CONNIE COLE BRIAN ECKERT Associate Editors

CHARLES JOHNSON Managing Editor

IJlnrk SCOTT BO'ITENUS NANCY CONRADS Business Managers

JULIA DRAKE MARK LEUCHTENBERGER

Assistant Editors

" ... and the truth shall make you free."

Wake Forest University, Winston-salem, North Carolina

Policy Degrading administrators see it as their duty to govern the sexual condw:~t of university students. How this duty was perceived merely from a student's decision to study in the academic environment of Wake Forest remains a mystery: it was certainly not revealed in the catalogs that this stringency in social life accompanied the academic life here.

Dean of Courses Halts F avorahle Registration

Now that everyone has registered for the fall semester and gotten the four or five

. courses least needed or wanted, I thought I might make a few suggestions for some timely additions for the spring semester, although even If these courses were adopted,

Some Common Sensing

By DON SENSING

they probably would not be offered untll 1993. Furthermore, I believe that Wake Forest should cre11te the position of "dean of courses," his function being that no one got the courses he or she wanted. A miln with such outstanding abilities would fit right in with the general scheme of things here.

ACCOUNTANCY 161: A basic workbook foP. the modem swindler. Covers such important topics as "How to Steal a Million a Year and Not Get caught· Unbalancing the Books."

ANTHROPOLOGY 484: Seminar:. "Why Pithecanthropus africanus would be a 4.0 student at Wake Forest." Special emphasis on cave living as applicable to the men's dorms.

ART 101: Independent research: "What the devil was that in front of Tribble Hall last spring?" Nobel Prize poaslblllties here.

BIOLOGY 999: "Could the earth be a giant egg?" Can it be proven it isn't? This is an impOrtant question.

BUSINESS 210: American business in 1975 • lousy.

CHINESE 113: Wah dong ling kow Kung Fu tu.

CLASSICS 268: An indepth comparison between the Lotus, eater of Homer's Idiocy and the flower culter of the '80's.

C.HEMISTRY 451: An experimental analysis of the Lotus and the flowers of the '60's ..

ECONOMICS 290: The economics of flowers in Tur.key today and how it is applicable to the French Connection.

EDUCATION 110: If yu kan reed this yu dont nead to take ejukashun.

The current visitation policy is a degradation to every student on this campus. Ignoring the fact that at least one quarter of the student population is above the legal age, even the youngest of us has chosen 11is code of sexual conduct by the age 1f 18. To think that being alone in a ruom with a member of the opposite sex will invite intimacy where normally it would not have 0ccurred, or that being prohibited from the room will prevent such intimacy, is to reduce students to the level of animals who mate when proximity permits.

We are not simply joining with the university's opponents in sinking another barb into the charges of her "backwardness" or inability to "move with the times." We are asserting that at no place in time should one group of people dictate the mprals of another group, whom they consider mature in every way except morally. What can be accomplished if the ruling group's morals are satisfied by students' actions in a certain time and place but not in the real context of their lives?

Open Letter Counter argues ENGLISH 167: The entire semester will be

spent in finding the line" 'Tis pitY, 'tis done" in Shakespeare, and then proving that Shakespeare couldn't have written it.

FRENCH 201: A close study of D'A$ngan's family tree.

GERMAN 290: Ist this not a Gennan class? Ja, dis ist ein German class! -HEBREW 217: Where are men like King

David ·how that we need them? And the se' ual aspect is at the core of the intervisitation issue, no matter how it may be disguised in such terms as ''privacy.'' The Board of Trustees has not been so vehemently opposed to visitation all these years on the grounds that someone's roommate might be disturbed. Undoubtedly details such as this do need to be worked out, but students have illustrated time and time again that they are willing to endure these inconveniences if given the freedom of normal adults.

No, the real reason for the repeated den~als of visitation privileges is that the trustees and

The proponents of such a policy are perpetuating a lie and forcing it on those who do not accept it. We begin to wonder whether trustees and administrators formulate policies to satisfy student needs or to satisfy their •own moral codes.

Extension of 'Privacy' The rule restricting the use of

alcohol to private areas is a reasonable one; in fact, it is merely compliance with state law. However, the cloak of "privacy" should extend much farther than it presently does.

too are done away with, the social life of this university will stagnate. Surely, some of these mixers will be moved off campus, but that very move takes much of the informality with it.

The option to have beer blasts is certainly not the answer to everything that is wrong here, but there is certainly no reason to outlaw them as long as they are being held within the privacy of the respective houses.

An open letter to President Scales: As a student, I was very disappointed with

your response to the intervisitation Issue at Wake Forest. The keynote to the issue is contained in your sentence "Those of us who are in the front lines of these issues must be good listeners."

Based on your arguments it appears that some individuals have not listened; rather, they have continued to voice the same objections year after year without regard to the students' · counterarguments or general changes in society. We regret that the full Board of Trustees and several administrators have not followed the precedent of the Student Life Committee of the Board of Trustees in meeting with students and sharing views, rather than simply issuing policy.

Pennit me to give the counterarguments to your areas of discussion as brought out in the meetings with the trustees and in student discussions.

1. Educational. Wake Forest is supposedly a liberal arts institution. As such the university should be dedicated to the full development of the individual, not just the intellectual portion. It is for this reason that we have such programs as the Artist Series, the Challenge program, and an active athletic department. When social regulations forbid an individual from associating with half of the society in anything less than a 1 fonnal environment, a substantial part of the person's potential is lost. This restrictive policy is apparently the antithesis of the Wake Forest ideal.

2. Architectural. It is because the men's residential complex has 193 separate entries that a self-regulation policy by halls, suites, and floors should exist. Unfortunately, the present policy encourages people to violate the regulations and follow the rule t~t if one

is r:ot caught, one is not guilty. Enforcement of the policy becomes a farce with so few policing the areas. The only way to have effective regulation is through the students cooperating with a mutually agreed upon policy, thus protecting the privacy of one's neighbors without infringing on the rights of others.

3. In Loco Parentis. We agree that the university is expected to safeguard life and

Berk's Part

By NEAL BERKOWITZ

university which passes regulations then totally i~nores its own laws by blatently ignoring enforcement. We do not respect a university that conceals this dissention of the students from the trustees. We do not respect trustees and administrators who start enforcing policy in a seemingly vindictive act only after students voice objections. We do not respect a university which believes that adults lose all rights of self government when they come to Wake Forest. 1

Wake Forest's oligarchic enactment of laws are filled with hypocrisy at all levels. We do not see how any group of individuals can legislate regulations when they are Isolated from ~e mainstream of events. In their high towers policy is made, policy which we, though adults, have absolutely no jurisdiction over and which we are apparently expected to follow blindly. Indicative of this is your letter

property and to act as a parent would in crisis filled with trite sayings and irrelevent, of health, in legal difficulties, in seeking endless ramblings. We have heard these employment opportunities, and providing excuses many times before; what we would emergency financial aid. This does not likearematureintellectual·arg.unentsforthe mean that the university should treat the present policy. students as children incapable of associating Rather tban end this letter on a sour note, with mem~ers of the opposite sex. General permit me to make a hopefully beneficial concens~ IS such that most pa~ents believe suggestion to the trustees, administrators, that thetr o~f~pring can and will ~~the ... ,and all other interested parties. We the correct declSlons ·when faced ·Wtth~~er -, studen~.:. inyi~e :YOU to join with us in people.. . . . . ... ··, . . ,<. discussing Wake Forest policies. No, I am not

4. Is 1t t~e r~spons~bility of the uruvers1ty to offering the students an opportunity to attack fonn ~ m~vidual s char~cter by totally you and your opinions, but neither am I ~he~t~rmg !lliD and treating him as an suggesting that you simply redictate your mdiy!dual mcapable of forming his own views to us. Like the meeting with the Student deciSions? The college ~xperience ought to Life Committee, this assemblage will pennit help ~ person ask the ultunate questions and both sides of the issues to be infonnally and face life's moments of truth with equanimity objectively weighed and perhaps we may all and courage, not hinder him by encouraging benefit from this sharing. We do not want servile compliance and blind obedience. change for the sake of change. Rather, our

Yes, P~es1dent Scales, w~ agree that young desire is to reconcile student opinion, trustee people will respe~ you less if you do not stand policy, administrative decision, and actuality by your convict10ns. We do not respect a in a form agreeable to ali.

ffiSTORY· Directed readihg. n the Greeks had lost the battles of Marathon and Salamis would there .. be modem Olympic games?

HUMANITIES 112: Lousy Arts, as opposed to Fine Arts.

ITAIJAN 112: A startling discovery that only one word is necessary to speak perfect Italian • "atsa." For instance, "Atsa my table! Atsa my pencil!"

LATIN 250: Isay isthay otnay a etterbay ayway utay eakspay?

MATHEMATICS 450: Pi r square; cornbread are round - a basic fallacy.

MIIJTARY· SCIENCE 211: Setting up a Berlin wall in front of the women's dorms in order to prevent intervisltation. Special emphasis on "Shoot .now, ask questions later."

MUSIC 350: The role of the Jew's Harp In Beethoven's Fifth.

PHIWSOPHY 321: A study of the meaning of life: "Shake it but don't break it, wrap it up and I'll take it."

PHYSICAL EDUCATION 550: Viewing and playing Rollerball. · PHYSICS 466: Independent project: Building a linear accelerator in your own backyard.

POLITICS 278: How to fix an election. PSYCHOLOGY 289: How to· get a job now

that you can teach a rat to run a maze. RELIGION 251: God drives a flying saucer,

but it was recalled by General Motors: a discussion.

RUSSIAN 110: How to say, "The U.S. is a sucker," and "Dentente conquers all," in Russian.

SOCIOLOOY 155: To bus or not to bus: eeny, meeny, miny, moe.

SPANISH 280: Quienes estan estas Baptistas?

SCTA 157i Advanced lip-sync.

"Privacy" in state law refers to one's entire home, not just the bedroom. The lounges, men's and women's,are the only thing we have resembling the remainder of the house. Therefore, it seems that alcohol should be permitted anywhere within the dormitory buildings. (The rumor to the effect that members of the opposite sex would not be allowed in lounges termed "private" was checked out and found false.)

Letters to the Editor

The alcohol policy is presently being reviewed by the administration for possible revision. This is a positive step, but we hope the ~ormulators of the new policy reahze the extent to which a tightening of previous years' practices could stifle the social life remaining here.

Convocation Speaker Lambasted

This campus does not promote the intermingling of the sexes. Men and women are housed as far apart as is physically possible; now a crackdown on visitation rules has further hamp.ered the situation. When a man wants to see a woman , or a woman wants to see a man

' formal arrangements have to be made because there is no casual "dropping by" to see anyone anymore.

Possibly the last vestige of any type of informal mingling is the Wednesday night mixers. If these

Letters Policy Letters to the editor must be typed on a 60-

space line double-spaced, and should be no longer than 300 words. Letters must arrive in

. our office by 7 p.m. Tuesday to be printed in the following Friday's edition. Letters must include the author's name, but a name will usually be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to edit for length but will not correct gramm11tical or spelling errors.

We are located In room 226, Reynolds Hall, extension~ 464 and 465. Our mailing address Is Box 7567, Reynolds Station, Winston-salem, N.C. 27109.

I must take exception to the remarks of the recent convocation speaker, Dr. Robison. His speech on truth and the relation of individuals to institutions seems to run contrary to historical experience. For example he cautioned us against being lonely and single ~eekers for t~th .. \Yell unfortunately history 1s full of mdlVlduals who considered themselves to be nothing more than that: alone. I offer Socrates, Jesus Christ Galileo and Voltaire as illustrations. Which' of these men sought to define themselves in the "context" of an institution be it a popular court, a Sanhedrian, an Inquisition or a monarchy? No, the sad fact is that the few speakers of truth in hwnan history are outc~stes, and reviled among the many. Mr. Rob1son seems to regard Truth as something ~ixed ~ithin an !nstitution, fixed and utterly unmob1le. But m the words of Galileo "It moves nonetheless."

Yours truly, C. Jay Robbins

Housing Rapped

Dear Mother Forest, I would like to extend to the administration

of this institution my congratulations for taking one-half step forward last spring for almost opening one ear to student grievances about intervisitation and taking about six steps backwards this fall with a beefed up residence staff. Also I ask the administrative intellectuals to be tolerant of my f11cetiousness but as one of the children of Mother Forest I must confess to having a social problem ... I live in a dorm. Since I am powerless to cure my problem I can only hope that they are not using my tuition money to police the dorms. I have lost my ability to

Fou'!d~d Jan~ary 15, 1916, .as the s?udent newspaper ol Wake Forest University, Old Gold and Bla_c~ IS pubhshed e_ach Fnday dunng the school year eMcept during eJiamination, sur:~ mer and hohday pen~ds as d~rected by the Wake Fore~! Publications Board. Mailed each week. Members of the Assocraled Collegiate Press. ~epresented lor National Advertising by National Educationa i

,, Advert.smg Serv•ce. Inc_. Subscnptton rate: 55.00 Second class postage paid, Winston-Salem, N.C. -:'..From '1679 should t)e matted to Box 7567, Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109. Printed by

Comnftlnrty Press, Incorporated, Krng, N.C.

freely socially interact with my peers so I guess piece of mind is all I can hope for.

Sincerely, Ramsey Shaner,

Senior

Dirty Ethics, Dorms

not the neatest or most considerate people in the world, but they are certainly not to blame for the fact that Davis House is roach infested or that the floors were not washed in mv room since last year. My father slaved to get me out of the ghetto and now he spends four thousand dollars a year to send me to a place where I must share my s}),ower with roaches.

As for the ideals of honesty that were supposed to be present at Wake Forest they

stuffed with misplaced and worn out en1dition. I had wondered for two days what importance someone who is president of a small college in Vermont who possesses a football team worse than ours could be to us and on Thursday I realized that he had to say what the administrational tyrants of this University want us to believe.

In choosing to come to Wake Forest four also have yet to appear. Last Wednesday I years ago there were several non-aca.demic purchased from the bookstore a copy of The

Radically speaking, A.G. MONACO '77

Voting Importance qualities, that 1 believed the school had which Economic Report of the President, which played 3 major part in my decision. Two of they acquired from the United States Printing these qualities were that the city (Winston· Office for $3.2S and sold to me for an c n t d t · astounding thirty-five percent profit. 0 ege 8 u en s usually consider Salem) seemed to offer me an escape from Disregarding the fact that 1 believe this t~emselves to ·be pretty bright people. The the filth that surrounds Northern cities, and Liberals of Amer1'ca procla' th t be th practice to be illegal they compounded their un em o e that the existence of an honor code on campus conscience of the nat1'on b f th ir heinous crime by tacking on the N.C. state . . • ecause o e would help to tone down my cynicism toward ammos1ty towards tile v· t w sales tax which they did not have to pay when 1e nam ar. my fellow man. they purchased the books thus tacking on Students are viewed as the social

While the city of Winston-salem appears to revolutionan·es who break d th ld another twenty cents profit. Had Mr. Clay and . own e o tbisex-NewYorkertoberelativelyspoUess,I th pl h ksf . k d k 1 Puntan tabOos and boldly carcy the flag of haveyettoescapethefilthofthelargecity.It epeo e ewor orplc e mypoc et ast the,socalled,newmoralityonward.ltissaid is amazing that the Housing Department of Wednesday they could not be considered that th t d ts f t d worse thieves than I presently feel they are. e s u e1:1 ° 0 ay are honest, and that this school along with the Maintenance they are the f1rst gen ti t "t n ·t lik This theft by the bookstore more than set · ,. . era on o e 1 · e it Department can actually claim existence 1s Colleg1a•es ar 'd d b the stage for Dr. Robison's disgusting display · • e cons1 ere Y most · when the dormitory I live in would do shame everyone to be th di f of conventional pedantry. All that can be said . e para gm o political to any slum in New York City. Agreed, the f D enlightenment. The applause goes on and on. men who live in this dormitory with me are ~ r. Robison is that he is another in a long Indeed, there is a presumption in this country r-~:;::;:;;;;;;;;;;::;;---Tl_m_e_ot_ta_Xl_·:de::rnu:;:·s:::iz:e~d~tur;:;k;ey;s~w~h;;o~h;-av_e_b_e_en1 that there is no reason to fear the future,

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Q)•t_LULA ~.lEAKE $ j! I L) ~ I \: BE!TY F~~i · r: -,If" - ~ - ~

because today's students will be there to lead the republic.

But if college students are the embodiment of all these attributes, then why is it that so few of them vote? In 1974's November elections a mere 20 some odd per cent voted. An undeniable gap lies between the prevailing image of college students and the actions that they take to constructively express themselves. If students really want to reflect the conscience of America, then they must do more than shout empty slogans in the streets. They must vote. If students really wish to build a new social system, then they should express their convictions in a meaningful way. They must vote. If students desire the image of honesty, then they must not appear to be deceiUul by extolling the virtues of involvement in soriety and commitment to goals and then not participate in the political process by not votmg. If students truly are enlightened, then why do so many fail to realize that, as individuals, the best way to have an impact on the society is to vote. The American people cannot expect their students to lead them when the collegiates do not care enough to vote in elections. If you think that you might like to vote, remember, you have got. to register now before you can vote in November ROBERT C GUNST

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7:30 p~m. · ' • interested

·state and

Dr. Harold the announced Rimers of production season.

The cast as.Wilma as Nelly as the 1ud2e-l~r·

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HARRY .CHAPIN-Concert tonight at 8 'p.m. in Walt. Chapel. , · , . CHE~S CLUB~· Organizationat meeting Monday at 7 p.m. m 103 Reynolda. Beginners are invited, COLLEGE.DEMOCRATS-.First.~eethtg W~dnesday at ?:30 p.m. l;ll the .ne~ d?rm mam lounge. All persons mterested m becommg mvolved on· the campus local ·state and national levels are invited. · . ' . '

Editor~• Note: CUlson Ia an associate editor who is.spendlng the fall1!4!JDe&ter. in the un1ver81ty Ve~ce ~OliBe .• ·ae will~ sending articles throughout . the tenn about places he has vi8ited. Hl8 first stop was London. · .....................

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should not be surprising. Perhaps compact, placed one against the These are the middle class ::Xtc~C:y, cialtheineconomic other in long rows, with no more homes one sees in the guided · . 0 · ra . tegration than a 12' by 12' plot of land for a to\U's. Off the beaten track are

· has been .different. · f After.all the talk of impending ront yard. These tiny plots the blemishes. London's

economic doom, the British receive all the care and attention neighborhoods of poverty are r _____ ;..._..;,~;.,.;:o~f a:,.:w:;ell~-t:en:d:;e::,d ,:Am=eni:· c:an~y:!ar!!d;... smaller and better contained

curse the passersby who ignore their requests for a few pence.

for the Prohibition of VivlsecUon, London has a place and headquarters for you. Packed together on a leisurely Sunday afternoon in Hyde Park, LDndon is a veritable circus of modem hwnanity.

London seems everything but · WOR~H~~ SERIES -- The topic is "Hostility Into . English. The setting, ·always a .Hosp1tahty: Neighbors and Stangers" Thursday at 11 convergane!e of old and new, ·a m in Davis Chapel tradition and Innovation; has

than their American Between the Lines c01mterparts, yet many homes

reflect the same feeling of resignation as can be found in Watts or Ha.rlem.

By RICHARD CARLSON Veufce CorrespOndent

Mounted atop the London society is the London businessman or bureaucrat, just as you might envision . him -conservatively dressed, umbrella or cane in hand, and an expression of the traditional British cool. ·

All this Is a mere backdrop for the diversity of London. Its representation of the potential of human character and opinion embraces every conceivable faction. Even if yo\U' interests are as obscure as those of the Union

With the flood of student travelers and tourists in August, London presents an internationalism to which no American city has ever aspired .

· • • . been accented in recent times by . " • · . . . the. blending l!f white, black,

MUS~~ OF ~- . Archeo~og1cal Research. on the · brown, and yellow. The varieb' of Yadkm River" will be the subJect of.the first evening Ulndon's~~stockisenoupto

. program of the fall at the Museum of Man. Dr; J. Ned make even an American feel Woodall associate professor of anthropology will quite at home~ The bartender who d · · b ' th k h · · · ' serves up your pint of lager at the . esc~ e . e W?r e and hiS students have done on White Horse Pub 1s likely to be preh1stor1c Indian cultures of the area in a lecture Italian; the . uaber who escorts Thursday at 7:30 p.m. . you to .a seat aUbe Plcadllly

Theatre· could well be Chinese; CU FLICKS-- "Let It Be" tonight and tomorrow night the ticket-. colleetor ·on the at 7:30 and 9. . Victoria Line might be Indian or

. worker (insofar as maintaining a , sufficient though not luxuriant standard of living) is . more

Flowers; shrubs and ivy ornately trimmed and arranged, give each home its own identity, each trying on a minor scale to imitate the splendor of Hampton Court Gardens.

Nor have the 'Aqualungs' or 'Cross-Eyed Marys' made famous by Jethro Tull vanished from their abode Wider the bridges and in the parks. Ragged, filthy and wilted with age, they

Tyner Tops

In a sense, Ulndon is stiii the capital of the world, even more than in the days of Victoria, for it Is here that most of the world finds a foothold.

Jazz Field Actors Selected

African. ' . " . ·Many Amertc8ns are· taken

aback by this gre8t concert of races. CallfOmlana and · New Yorkers find their pride in America's . melting pot challenged by the . rivalry of the · British cauldron. "Admittedly, Anglo Saxons are by far the most populous of London, but the spectrum spanning diversity of · Ulndon's other inhabitants. lend to the B.ritisb capi~ill a cosmopolitanism that is Jmlque.

· secure than his American coimterpart. One London newspaper was headlined with "5000 Face Job Crisis · In London." In any American city of comparable size, 5000 unemployed would be counted as .a .Sign of prosperity. Indeed, ·while Americart economists herald the return of unemployment to levels of six or seven per cent, the British are McCoy Tyner Is one of the most He is not an avant-garde definitive composition. currently bemoaning the influential fig\U'es in jazz today. musician like Ornette Coleman or Piano arpeggios suddenly give

and Only Love" with a clear, lyrical melody. Then Tyner elevates, transposes and rewrites it with a style combining Fats Waller, Stravinsky and Cecil Taylor.

Dr. Harold Tedford, director of Michael Sawyer, John Pike, and the University Theatre, has Rick Brown as townspeople. 8JUlounced the cast of "The The production stsff includes Rimers of Eldrltch," the first set designer David Welker, production of the 1975-1976 speech consultant Caroline season. . Fullerton, production manager

'fhe cast Includes Tammy Greb Roger . Richardson, stage as Wibna ~tldns, Carol Bedsole manager John Logue, and as Nelly Wmdrod, George Speer lighting designer David LaBaw. as the judge-preacher, Jan Doub ·· as Mary Windrod, Reid stott as Season tickets are on sale Jor Robert Conklin, Neils Pustrom as $6.50. This price inclu!les the four the trucker, Bill Rodgers as major productions, a one-dollar

· Walter, Deborah Caskey as Cora discount on the Union Dinner Groves, Bill Savage as Josh Theatre, and admission to the Johnson, Clint McCown as Skelly nine laboratory theatre Mannor, Gerald Owens as Peck productions scheduled for this Johnson, Donna Corey as Mavis year. Johnson, Kathie Bahry a§ Patsy Students can p\U'chase tickets Johnson, Laura Arnesen as in the theatre offices on the Evelyn Jackson, Leslie Radford eighth level of the library, 2-5 as Lena Truit; and Trudy Tanner, ~.m., Monday through Friday.

SHELLY BANKS

For all your photographic needs Call:

McNabb Studio. "On the Campus" Ph: 723·4640

prospec_t .of a perpetual three per Cecil Taylor. His style Is founded way to a tenor saxophone solo by cent unemplo)iment rate. The pianist's ideas affect pop in the tradition of his .former Azar Lawrence, a young follower

However. much inflation may as well as jazz musicians and his mentor, the late John Coltrane, of the legendary Coltrane. add. to the economic pressure, the .1 compositions and perfo:mances d Lawrence's solo is melodically an consists of inspired t b t · reasonable security of will have a greater impact when swee , u Jt cuts through Tyner's employment diverts those others catch up to him. _ ir~p~ovisation in a rapidly percussive piano like a knife.

"Makin' Out" bubbles with energy. Tyner's strong left hand sets the rhythm while his right races all over the keyboard. Lawrence contributes his best playing on record.

pressures from · the racial shifting chordal structure. Tyner and bassist Joony Booth, fisaures that may or may not lie Tyner Is jazz's quintessential .--------------------.. just beneath the surface of the performer. His music speaks not London· society. I say this with an just to ~ne generation or race. admitted ignorance of lower Instead, Its appeal transcends all class worker attitudes in LDndon. classifications. ~

. Nevertheless, the alienation

In One Ear ... By CHARLES JOHNSON

Ulndon wears its integration well: the various races move freely among each other, with no apparent fear or suspicion. In my four days in London, for example, I observed far more cases · of interracial dating and niarrlage than I have seen in any !..meiican city. Still, the whole racial experience of Britain, originating in its imperial way of life, is wholly different from that of America. 'Plat its sense . of. tole.rance Is somewhat different

which I recognize in America is He someti.mes dabbles in not observable in Ulndon. African sounds and rhythms, but ._ ___________________ ...

Booth has an outstanding bass solo on "Love Samba," and Tyner's piano rises out of Wilby Fletcher's and Guillerme Franco's percussion in a smoking finale. In spite of the racialiUlity, the his music is stirringly American,

'welfare state' of Great Britain as he evinced in the powerful has fallen short· of creating a "Song of the New World." nation of economic equals. The Indeed, it Is some' of the most majority of Londoners live beautifully inspired music ever modestly but comfortably by composed and performed. American standards. The great American suburban home with its spreading lawn is a rarity here. Instead, their homes are

His latest album "Atlantis" (Miles~one M-55002), was recorded at the Keystone Komer in San Francisco, and succeeds in catching the magic of Tyner in concert perfonnance.

Unlike other modern jazz innovators, Tyner sticks with the acoustic piano, shunning synthesizers and other electronic instruments. His music, not the instrument, provides the innovation.

··' Tyner's· styiJl is the most ,

distinctive in· jazz~ Notes cascade down the keyboard like a waterfall, but his heavy-handed chords retain subtlety.

His playing is highly rhythmic, yet "at times beautifully serene and melodic. His chords sound experimental, but not atonal.

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Though most of Tyner's playing is built on nearly­impossible changes, he weaves in fragments of old and new melodies, which hold long compositions together.

"Atlantis" contains six tracks on two records recorded during three different . club performances.

The title cut, the longest (18:02) and opening track, Is the albwn's

an excellent musician, play stirring solos.

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More Tyner solo work can be found on the recent "Echoes of a Friend," Tyner's tribute to Coltrane.

Lawrence propels "My One

The rough-edged "Pursuit" fails to equal the other tracks, but the group holds nothing back in a hard-bitting performance.

Tyner's recent recordings, "Song for My Lady," "Song of the New World," "Echoes of a Friend," "Eiilightenment" and "Sama Layuca" have established him among the foremost American musicians. "Atlantis" adds to his stature.

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Page 6: t . * · '· -·· ··n····. a · circumvented the student us, and that we have rig}Jts only brought before · the fraternity submitted to university President constitution."

PAGE SIX Friday, September 5, 1975, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Deac Football Opens With SM run over the Deacons. Running. Millner currently holds down the backs .Dave Bostick and Wayne · flanker soot. and JC transfer AI Morris, and quarterback Ricky Zyskowski and sopb steve Young Wesson all gained over 700 yards are slated to start at wid~ last season. Wesson, although he receiver and tight end Ia only 5-10 and 160 pounds, led re&pectively. Once again, there is the team with 885 yards and is not an overabundance of described by Mills as ''the man experience between this trio.

- • p ~ .:~ .. . ' ..

By LANE ALDERMAN Sports Editor

Three weeks ago the Wake Forest football team began practice for the 1975 season, an eleven-game campaign in which they will try to demonstrate improvement over last year's record of 1·10.

Tomorrow night, when the Deacons host the Southwest . Conference Mustangs of Southern Methodlat University, they w1ll have their first chance to see if any improvement has actually been made. ThS' game, which should draw between 12,000 and 14,000 spectators, will begin at 7:30 at Groves Stadiwn ..

In speaking of the new season, Wake Forest Head Coach Chuck Mills says, "We've made a lot of improvement in a lot of places, but we still have a long, long way to go."

Bill Armstrong

Wake- a lack of size and experience.

defensive line is nose guard Jobn Bryce, who l1sts as his goal to be the "best llneman of the team." Bryce, who bas seen conaiderable action at middle guard Ia well on his way to fulfilling his expectations. His chief shortcoming ia his size.. or lack of it. Bryce's 11-1, 220 pounds, leaves him, along with other Deacon linemen, smaller than the average defenalve down Uneman.

Slated to start at the tacllles are two rookies to the Deacon lineup- sophomore Jim Dumler and JC transfer Larry Rogers. Both have legltlmate size but lack any major college experience. Another JC transfer, Dan White, should also see considerable playing time at defensive tackle.

Starting quarterback Jerry McManus prepares to meet the SMU

Just how far they have gone is only speculation in the pre­season, but a quick look through the Deacon lineup points out a problem that has plagued Mills in both of his first two campaigns at

Perhaps this deficiency Ia most evident in the Deacon defensive line, which will be battling the SMU offensive line. That Mustang line, which leads their wishbone attack, has been referred to by SMU coach Dave Smith as the point "where we are the strongest."

Size and numbers are present in the defenaive ends, but the coaching staff 1s still looking for improvement at that position. Starters should be team tri· captain Doug Benfield and junior Dave LaCrosse. Benfield, who was a leader last year in tackles, has been described by Mills as being "as hard a worker as there

Mustangs. Photo by Cranford In the middle of that Deacon . ,, . lS.

Volleyball, Hockey Begin By :a~~~ON ~hether or not the volleyball.and Coach Pamela Wiegardt feels All·Star team. Five of the team compiled an excellent 19-11

r fte!d hockey teams ~an contmue that the field hockey team will be returning Deacons also gained record, finished third In the state Lookin forward to the 1975 to Improve as they did last year. hard pressed to improve on last experience by attendlng a field tournament, and made it to the

women's ~all athletic season one Brh squads have a l~rge numb~r yesr's 5-5-1 record. Wake Forest hockey camp at Mt. Pocono, quarterfinals of the regional 'of the big questions has t~ be fo veterans returnmg hut will lost its number one player to Pennsylvania before returning to tournament in Kentucky. This

l~•••••••••lllallllclllle•to•uiigimhelt!lr•s•c•headmulaes•.•lllllll•ll graduation and several school. "I think it was very was the best performance that

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. team." footwork, field hockey's two most cuts haven't been made yet. Perhaps the strongest point of important skills. The team's first Twenty-two women tried out for

this year's team is experience. game is September 19 at the team but only twelve wlll Eleben of the 19 girls played last Funnan. comprise the final squad. year and two of them, Anne The women's volleyball team It is probable that the team will Forrest and Molly Lambright, seems to have a better chance for be led by senior Gwen Williams were finalists for the Deep South improvement. Last year the and junior steph Glenn.

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who makes things happen for Across the off~nslve line, the SMU." Deacons list Tom Parker and

Clark Gaines

Unfortunately, too many of the Dan Fulton as tackles, Randy oHenslve fireworks may come Woodle and trl·captain Lew

.. from SMU and not from the Henderson at the guards, and Deacons. Like the defense, the Larry Tearry at center. The only offensive unit finds itself for the proven talent on the line, Woodle most part young and undersized. and Henderson, have suffered For the fourth consecutive year, pinched nerves and their the Deacons find themselves condition is questionable. without a returning proven As has been demonstrated with quarterback. Scheduled to start the Deacons in the past, none of in tomorrow night's contest 1s JC these starting positions is transfer Jerry McManus, a SolO, permanently locked up, and l~pound transfer from Lees- freshmen could once again play McRae J.C. According to Mills, an important role in the season's however, the job is still "semi· outcome. "Ordinarily a freshman open", and backups Solomon shouldn't have to play," said Everett and.Mike McGiamry are Mills, "but I guess it's an "still to be dealt with." indication of our lack of depth

Running in the backfield with that several may play for us by McManus ·wm be tri·captain the time the season is over. I'm Clark Gaines and John Zeglinski. very pleased with our freshmen Injuries prevented Gaines from as a. group, but most are just not living up to his nickname of yet ready to play yet."

Backing up the line will be hard-hitting junior Randy Carroll and rookie sophomore Don Cervi. Behind them, ln the Deacon secondary, are senior Bob Richards, juniors Mike LaVallee and Ed McDonald, and the man described by Mills as being "as fine a defensl~e back as there is in the country " • Bill Armstrong. The 6-4, 205-pound Armstrong was switched from quarterback midway through last season and quickly proved that he has the potential to be great.

Overall, the Wake Forest defense is not a particularly powerful unit, and the SMU wishbone attack will bring three proven runners in an attempt to

"Super" last year, however he The Deacons have never still led the Deacsin rushing with beaten a Southwest· Conference 329 yards. team, and although no one is

The passing game has still not counting Wake out of the ball jelled under Coach Mills, game completely, it will take an' although the receiving targets exceptional performance for are an improvement over the Wake Forest to upset its stronger past few years .. Junior Bill foe, SMU.

OG&B Sports Trivia Contest In response to critics of recent

times who have claimed to know more about sports than the mighty OG&B Sports Staff, the Old Geld and Black proudly presents its first annual Sports Trivia Contest. Ten questions will be run for five consecutive weeks. Answer the CJ.Uestions and bring the answers to the OG&B office in 226 Reynolda Hall before 6 p.m. the following Wednesday.

At the end of the contest, the winner will take the place of the weekly guest in the Fearless Forecast football predictions, and really get a chance to show us up. In case of a tie, we'll think of something. Good Luck!

1. What Is the last major league baseball team to win . three consecutive World Series?

2. What individual holds the NBA singl&-game scoring record with how many points?

3. Who was the last team before N.C. State or UCLA to win the national basketball championship?

4. Who was the first NFL runner to gain 1,000 yards in a season?

5. What was the name of the first horse to win the Triple Crown of horseracing?

&. Who shattered the world record in the long jump with a leap of over 29 feet In the 1968

Olympics? . 7. Where was the only Rose

Bowl game that was not played in Pasadena, Cal.? What year was it?

8. Everyone knows that Hay Berwanger of the U. of Chicago won the first Heisman Trophy In 1935 (Right?). Who was the first runner-up? .

9. Which brother combination has hit the mDst combined number of major league home runs?

10. In 1963 the MVPs in the National and American Baseball Leagues, the National Football League and American Football League all wore the number 32. Name them.

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Haas Individual Champ

Wake Golf :.Another Title By WARREN STEEN

Sports Editor

Less than three months since his poised Deacon golf team coasted to Its second consecutive NCAA golf championship, Coach Jesse Haddock is already stating the club's objectives for next season.

"Our goal is to win the national championship for· the third straight time," declares

Haddock; who has never compiled a losing· record in his sixteen years as Wake Forest golf coach.

And he added, "I feel like some team will have to be very, very fortunate to knock us off."

In other words, it will require a certain degree of luck for any team to topple a Deacon squad. which returns its top five players. Last year's team record-setting outfit claimed the Atlantic Coast

Mexicans to Play JV

Sports Shorts The football team of the

Polytechnic Institute of Mexico City will play the Wake Forest JV team on Monday, Sept. 8 at 7 p.m. in Groves Stadium. Wake Forest students will be admitted free with a Wake I.D. and Athletic Pass. ·

The Mexican team hosted the · University of North Carolina . jayvees a year ago and will travel to Chapel Hill later in the week to repay the visit. They. are scheduled to arrive in Winston· Salem Sunday and stay through Tuesday.

·tournament will be making a $500 contribution to the golf program,· and will be the guests of . the Athletic Department at social events covering the entire weekend. In addition, they will have the opportunity to purchase tickets for the ACC basketball tournament, which are impossible to obtain through public sale.

There will be no charge for spectators.

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Conference title, Wake's ninth straight conference crown, then captured the NCAA by an amazing 33 strokes over runnerup Oklahoma State.

Prior to that feat, the preVious record margin of victory had been Texas' 13 stroke triumph · over Houston in 1972.

By taking home the nation's ~p collegiate golfing prize, Wake Forest became only the sixth school in the 78-year history of the championship to win back-to­hack titles.

In addition to the team's acntevements, several individual golfers sparkled, lending support to Haddock's philosophy that if the team does well, so will the individual members. ·Smooth-swinging Jay Haas

collected the individual title by a single stroke over 1974 U.S. Amateur champ Jerry Pate of Alabama.

Haas, whose uncle is pro golfer Bob Goaiby, pieced together consistent rounds of 71-72-69-70 to finish the tourney at 282, six under par on the well-groomed Ohio State Scarlet course in Columbus," Ohio. · 1974 NCAA champ Curtis strange ended up in third place with a 284, two shots behind his winning teammate .

Actually, . the . four-day tournament did not turn into a runaway until the final day of competition. The Deacons led by six shots following the opening round, by three shots after round two, and by six after round three.

At that point, no one in Columbus envisioned the stomping that second place Oklahoma State would receive.

Recalling that slim third round lead, Haddock states, "At that time, I wasn't thinking about the margin of victory. I just wanted us to win, but I'm glad we pulled away the final day."

Indeed they did, for at the end of none holes Wake's advantage had been increased to 21 shots, and the tourney was decided beyond doubt.

After the four rounds had been completed, pre-tourney favorite Florida found itself in tenth place, exactly fifty shots behind ·the victorious Deacons.

Following. the NCAA tourney, four of Wake's golfers received All-American recognition from Golf World Magazine. strange and Haas were selected to the first team, while Bob Byman and David Thore were tabbed to the second and third teams, respectively,

Tbe 1975 NCAA Golf Champions moments after the victory.

Cross Country Workouts Go Coed By PAUL RICCI

Staff Writer spring, I started running seriously for the first time, eventually building my endurance . up to the marathon distance of 26 miles."

The team they will play will be largely composed of freshman and other non-varsity Wake players. ·

The Wake Forest Karate Club is accepting memberships from interested students with no previous experience in the sport necessary.

Baseball Program

Dellastatious to work out with his team this fall. "I've been running for fun for the past four years, but I have never been schooled in the proper techniques before," says Kitty. "When I got to Wake Forest this fall I talked with Coach Dellastatious about getting some actual coaching, and he said the best :thing to do would be to work out with the boys. So here I am, nmnlng eight miles a day."

Kitty has never run in a competitive meet before, and she doesn't plan to run for the Deacon barriers. However, she does want to enter some local amateur events in order to gain some experience.

Non-Wake Forest spectators will be charged $2.00 admission for adults and $1.00 for children.

Begins to Improve Pro-Am Golf Tournament The 1975 Wake Forest Pro-Am

Golf Tournament will be held tomorrow with the first tee-off time at 10:30 a.m. at Bermuda Run Golf Course.

The club meets tWice weekly, from 4-6 Tuesday and Thursday afternoons with Sunday afternoon free workouts. Mr. Rick Heatley of the Wake Forest Latin Department is the club's instructor.

The organization is, affiliated with Jboon Rhee, one of the nation's foremost experts in Tae Kwon Do. Clinics with top professionals are scheduled for later in the year.

Membership fees are $15 per semester.

No Coolers

By TOMMIE O'TOOLE Staff Writer

Thirty-six aspirantfl for spots on the WFU baseball team began· their five-week fall season last Monday with an "excellent attitude and improved talent," according to new assistant coach Dr. Gene Hooks.

Hooks, who doubles as Wake athletic director and who was a Deacon baseball star in his own right between 1946-50, describes his position as one similar to that of a general manager's.

The tournament, held for the benefit of the Wake golf scholarship fund, will feature pro stars, former Wake Forest stars, and All-American members of the current Deacon national championship squad. Among those entered are Lanny Contrary to rumors, no coolers Wadkins, Jim Simons, Joe of any kind will be permitted at Inman, Bob Goalby, Jack Lewis, the Wake-SMU football· game Curtis Strange, Jay Haas, Bob tomorrow night. Students are Byman, and David. Thol'e. · · reminded to bring with them

"But," he emphasized, "I do not want to miss out on all the fun-coaching on the field."

The personable Deacon A.D. has helped head coach Marvin

. Crat~r ~e most by ~cr~~.gfive players·'with· excellE!nt potential, potential so good, in fact, that for the first time in several years the

Other participants in the their Wake I. D. and athletic pass.

As a group of ruggers await their turn in the drill two Deacon players prepare for tbe 1975 f~l rugby season. The opening game is at N.C. State on Sept. 13 with the home opener on Sept. 20 against American University.

'**********************'

Pep Team Organizes

Freshman girls who are Interested in joining a Pep Team to work with the varsity cheerleaders are asked to call India Early at 725-9009. The group will help the cheerleaders during the year and will start Saturday.

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baseball ·squad is giving some players full scholarships.

The areas which should see the most improvement, said Hooks, are the pitching and catching spots. And two big reasons why are freshman signees Stan Johnson of Wilson and Doug Henley of Rocky Mount. Johnson is a .525 hitting catcher and Henley is a pitcher with a 20-3 high school career mark.

Hooks and Crater plan on spending the first two weeks of fall ball concentrating on teaching and on giving walk-ons a fair shot at making the club. The remaining weeks will be divided between practice and time­controlled practice games with near-by colleges.

With the signing of fine recruits, the purchasing of new equipment, including sharp new . double-knit uniforms, and · an improvement in overall talent, the Deacon baseball team, according i;o Hooks, is looking forward to a fine fall practice and to the spring season.

Kitty's training requires her to _... run three miles· at 6:30 in the

morning, along with the regular five mile run in the afternoon. While the distances sound awesome, she clalms that they don't bother her.

"When I was at Denison College (in Granville, Ohio) last

"Coach Dellastatious has lined up some open races for me this fall, and I'm even thinking about trying to enter the Boston Marathon next April," she explains. "But I think that the Marathon will conflict with spring tennis, and that is the · sport that I really Jove."

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Conunented Hooks, "We are now getting the kind of players we need to bring Wake Forest baseball back to a competitive . Kitty Consolo talks about witb Assistant Cross Country

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Page 8: t . * · '· -·· ··n····. a · circumvented the student us, and that we have rig}Jts only brought before · the fraternity submitted to university President constitution."

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Pre-season practice hasn't even begun yet, and already the upcoming swimming season is full of promise- if only on paper.

Faced with the task of replacing five lettermen, Coach Leo Ellison r.ecruited eight high school swimmers, including two All-Americans.

Gary Bice, a native of Southfield, Michigan, was a high­school All-American both his junior and senior years.

Primarily a freestyle sprinter and backstroker, Bice's best times in four events - the 50 yard freestyle, 100 freestyle, 200 freestyle, and 100 backstroke -are better than the existing school records.

Another two-year All-American, Mike Gaona, from Canoga Park, California, was the Los Angeles City Champ in the 100 freestyle his junior year, and the 200 freestyle his senior year. Gaona's best time in the 200 freestyle is better than Bice's by over three seconds, and beats the

school record by over four seconds.

Allen Lydick, from Sarasota, Florida, also has times which break the school records, in the 100, and 200 breaststroke. Lydick was a candidate for All· American honors his senior year, and was second in the Florida state 4A championships in the 100 breaststroke.

"I feel like we had a pretty good recruiting year," said Coach Ellison, "But we would have liked to have had a better one."

Fearless Forecast ALDERMAN HARSHBARGER LECRONE RICCI

SMU at Wake SMU by 14 SMU by 17 SMU by 25 SMU by 24 Wm & Mary at UNC UNC 13 UNCB UNC7 UNC 14 Miss. St. at Memphis st. Miss. St. 6 Miss. St. 10 Miss. St. 5 Miss. St. 10 Mississippi at Baylor Bay 4 Bay a Miss. 10 Bay 10 Villanova at Maryland Md.13 Md. 24 Md. 7 Md.14 W. Carolina at Toledo Tol. 6 WCU4 Tol. 12 Tol. 21 E. Car. at N.C. State State 7 State 20 State 15 State 10 Missouri at Alabama Ala,20 Ala.28 Ala. 5 Ala.20

TAVERN ON THE GREEN NOW ...

Once again as toe meets !~ather to signal the kickoff of yet another football season, the Sports Editors of the OO&B are busy at work sharpening their prognostocatory skills (i.e., we're picking the winners of football games). Each week, Lane Alderman, Bruce Harshbarger, and last year's champion Warren steen will forecast and pick the point spread of 15 games, and invite a guest expert to join them. After five weeks, the winner of the SPorts Trivia Contest will assume a permanent role as guest.

This week, Fearless Forecast welcomes popular Gene Overby of WXll-TV who broadcasts the Wake Forest football and basketball games. Because of a limited schedule of college football this week, only eight will be picked with a full slate of 15 next week.

I

STEEN OVERBY

SMU by7 SMU by 10 UNC 12 UNC7 Miss. st. 14 Miss. st. 10 Bay 3 Bay4 Md.15 Md. 40 Tol. 4 WCU14 State 19 State 11 Ala. 14 Ala. 20

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Vol. LIX

After their om thenameoiW night's panty 1

quad implore

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ByCHARLI Mana gil

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No hard li consumed in residence haUl~ to Ed Cunnin housing, but bee allowed.

Speaking al meeting of the Committee, 1

university admi on an interim pc last Friday. The beer and wine while the forma: reviewed if tw• met:

-Students rna laws, which pl'l hard liquor by p 21 and disph beverages in pt

--Students responsibility i regarding alcol

Cunnings said what the forma but he said agreement h1 pressure off the an immediate change.

The re-eval school's alcohol of an increa! campus living President Jamt Cunnings said.

In previous y policy stated th be consumed in campus, but i enforced, he ! enforcement eroded e consciousness ol on the books. .

Because of :

By JAil Staff

The student-f< business depa1 more than dou university ave1 business major!

- courses at regi other interested on a waiting lis

Although one part-time staff added to the bus this year, a sub by university department has


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