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County Leader s Named 150 Fund Spans State, Nation Th e Univen,ity's campilign to ra ise a minimum of SB.59 million through its One- Fifty Fund has entered its statewide and nntionnl phases. The cnmpnign, which b e- gan publicl y in ~l ay, 1973, h as reached two- third :, of its goal and seek!. to raise the balance of over S2 million in the statewide camp aign among alumni and friend s be- tween now and the end of the year. Chaiq1l'r,om, have been enli,tcd nn<l cam- p;1ign, arc unden vay in 16 areas. These are: Bl 1den Coun ty, Dewey H Bridger Jr. Burke Coun ty, M 0. Bra,wcll i Cat,,wba County , Stnnlcy Co rne; Cleve land County , Robert II Yelton ; Cas ton County, Earl T Groves; Columb u, Coun ty, an kcy \V Robinson ; Wake Forest Vol. 4, No. 4 Fall, 1973 Univer sity To Und ertake Self-Stu dy \\' ake Fo rest is p reparing to conduct a rn.tjor sclf-~tu d)• which will involve almost tver)· ,tspt.'ct of the University ,rnd will t..,J...l · he.twee n 18 and 24 months to complete. Dr . Edwi n C. \\' ilson, provmt of the University, wiJI be the director A self~stucly i~ req ui red for acc reditation hv th e South ern Associa tion of Co lleges and S~· hoo ls e\'c ry 10 yea rs. It will invo lve the followin~ b roa d a reas: pu r pose, organiza- tion and ad min h tra ti on, educa tiona l p ro- J!film , fina ncial resou rces, facu lty, library, the rcliltiom hip of th e co llege to its pro- fc.\''l ional schools, stud ent perso nn el, physical pl lnt, specia l ac tiviti es, gradua te p rogram, resea rch, and planning for the future. Thirt ee n co mmitt ees, e;1d1 composed of fi,·c facult )' memb ers, one admin istrntor and tw o stud ents will be responsib le fo r im·csti- g,ttion of th e areas. T here nlso will be a st<.'c ring committ ee. Th ey will do th eir resea rch and report their findin ~, durin g th e sch ool )·ear. Each <k•p:trlm cnt , m ea nwhil e, will conduct its own self-stud y. Th e ove ra ll repo rt will be considered by the facult y, the adminh tra- tiun nnd th e tru stee~ in th e foll of 1974 ,md tlicn pr ese nt ed to th e So ut hern As~ocia- tion. Th e :t.!isodation w ill \encl a co m mittee to the campus to check its ow n find ing!. in c,1rly 1975. Dr . Ben ~I. See lbind er, p rofessor of math- emati cs, has been named d irec tor of the University'.!! new Office for Instituti onal Re- ,c.irch. Th e office has been establbhed to coordi- nntc aca demic inform ation now cont ained in a numb er of offices. Seelbind er came to \Vakc Forest in 1959 and has been ~ccrctary of the faculty since 1972, Since 1960 h e has bee n dir ec tor of th e N,\tlonal Science Foun da tion inservice pro- ~r.tm for hi~h school mathenrntics tenchcrs, which is held on the Uni versity cnmpu s dur - ing tht· school yea r. He holds the doctorate from the Uni- versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and iii a fomt e r assoc ia te prof esso r a t the Uni - \icrsity of Alabama . Cumbcrlund County, James R. Nance Sr.; Durh ,1m County, Charles \V. \Vhite: Edgc- t·ombe County, Jack C. D Bailey ; Halifax Countr. C. D. Clark Jr .; Johnston County, Thoma, E. \Villiam.s ; Lenoir County, John Hooten; \lcckll'nburg Count)·. L<:\ \IMsh; cw ll ;tnm er Count)', Lonnie 8. \\ 'il liatrn,, Pitt Count)·, ~lurvin K. Blount Jr.; Hobcson Count)·, Everett L . H enry, Scotlllnd County, Dunc,m J Sind,,ir; \\ Jke County, J. ~telvill c llrouJ!hton Jr.i \\ 'a>·nc County, Thoma s G. Colc:r \\ 'il,on County, Dr C;lori..t F Graham Alam,rnt'<.· County, Dr. Emmett Lupton; Cab.trrm County, Dr . Frt•dcrit:k T Cr,wcn, CuiHord County (Cn:t:nsboro) Charles Cheek, (H,~h Point ) E. Lee C.11n; Stanly County, Dougl,I\ D. Stokes; llo cking harn Count y Dr Hunter ~foricle ; Union County, Koy D.twJ...ins. Alhc·rt L. Butl er Jr . of \Vinston-Salem, is the J.!tneral c,,mpaign chairman and Floyd Fletdtcr of Dnrham , is the statewide chair- man. Earlv results have been encouraging. Th e Ralci~h and Durham campaign s, which have been underw o.\)' since early summer, have procl11cecl $114,392 and $147 ,000. Thes e total, tu cli1te comidernb ly e,cced prc\'ious \\' akt· Forest c·ampaigns in these areas. Th<: One-Fifty Fund is tJ,e Uni\lersity's fir)t li>mpreh<'nsive capital campaign since the c1mpa is.,rn m the early 1950s to move \\ ';.1Lc Fore~t to \Vin ston-Sal em It is being REVIE conducted co ncurrently with the Univer sity 's on-going annual giving programs for the Colle~e. School of Law, School of Medicine, and Babc-ock School. The Alumni Council ha\ adopted this basic policy in order to coordina te th e h1,·oefforts: "The University's needs are of ~uch di- mension that they must be met through a combination or annu:il giving and capital Aifb to the One-Fifty Fund . Many olumni will be asked to make capital gifts while continuing their annual contribution. Others will be asked to support Wake For est by substantially increasing their annual gift. Both forms of giving ore es~ential lo the school." FOOTBALL,VOLLEYBALL,TRACK FILL ~,ALL SPORTS CALENDAR Fan, i.:ot thrill1n~ looks a t a footba ll team which t·ould ,tnrtlc the Atlantic Coast Co1~- fere1wc when the Dcncons o!>cned t.h.e ir ,c.i,o n wi th home S!amcs agn in , t Fl ori da St.tk Unhcrsity ,rnd \Vi lliam and ~Jar)·, Chutl ll.1nt\t..')', All-Americ,tn, sna tched a victory from F lorida's Srmino les on Sept. 15. \\'ith three seconds on the clock, Ramsey strctcht·d a field goal attempt 42 yards, earning a 9-7 Deacon vic tory" ll:11nsc)· J!Ot all the D eacons' poin ts that m~ht , mak inf.! three of si, field goals. On Oc t, 22, howeve r, the offcnst•, plagued by p<.•naltics, cou ld n't pene trntc th e \ V&~1 Jnd iam' defense far cnou~h to give R:tm\ey , 1 chanc<' for a scoring kick So th t" dcfomc took chnrgc of the s1hrn- tion For tht· fir,t \Vale Fore~t score, two Dl'<l<. 'On clefender-. teamed up to recover nn Jnd1;\11 fumblt • and run it across the goal. T lw !'l,Hnc pa ir put on a be tt er show in the M'<.·on<l hn lf One blo<.'J...cd u \ \' &~ t punt. Ii i" p.irhwr C'nuldn't ciltch the football , so ht· kit..-kccl 1t over the goal line, followed 1t ,md foll on it. Tho ... e ... <:Ort•, t.mt,,lizcd De.ics in the ... t,uttk hut ,\ tiring dcfcn~1ve um t fin.1lly ,1llowt·d the l ndin n'!i two touchdowns and a fide! goal m the 'iec·oncl half . Tlw team p l,\yt·d hl'ltcr 111 it, nt..·\t two gamt•, th,tn the 41 -0 lo!t,c'i to both Hich- rnoncl ,mcl tlw Uni\ cr,it)· of TC'l:il':t inclka tcd. The 01.-·,Kom he ld tlw ma!\Si\'e Tc.·,,1s foo t- b.l ll corpor,ttion to ,1 14-0 le,td ill lu1lftimc hcfort· beinf.! o, erwhe lme<l by the I .ong- horn \ manpower ~inc l)' Tc, ,.l\ playt•f\ wen.· drl'"''l'cl for the J.!;.1111c, and every one saw ,1c;tion aJ.!ain..t tht.' tiring \\ 'ake Fore.!il< .:rs. It w.1s not until the fifth gnmc, .1 28-12 loss to Sou th Carolin;1 at Groves Stadium, that the \\ al..l• Fort'\I offt·n,c s<.·orccl its first toud1dow11 of tht-· !'IC;bon.The Deacons beat the C,tml·c:oc.:k,m £in,t downs, rushing ynrd- ,1g<.·, p,h..a11g an<l number of ball control pl.1} 'I. But South Carolina h,1d one import,mt ... t.11i ... ti<.: in 11\ f.l\'or - the ':>Core. The J..:ill11l· wa, marred in the l,v .. t qu :utcr hy ,1 tlm.·t.• minutt • fight. The mdcc bc~an w lwn ,1 South Carolina player, who was I.tier t·jcc:t<.·<l from the J!nme; punched n \\ ',tkc Fort'st blocker. fans on both .!iidcs rl'lll,lincd ... t,\tionAr)', if not calm, ,10d order "a ... rcstort·d by the referees, coaches nnd mo,t or Ill<.' pl,1)·ers of both teams. (Cunt.'
Transcript

County Leaders Named

150 Fund Spans State, Nation Th e Univen,ity's campilign to ra ise a

minimum of SB.59 million through its One-Fifty Fund has ent ered its statewide and nntionnl phases. The cnmpnign, which be-gan publicl y in ~lay, 1973, has reached two- third :, of its goal and seek!. to raise the balance of over S2 million in the statewide camp aign among alumni and friend s be-tween now and the end of the year.

Chaiq1l'r,om, have been enli,tcd nn<l cam-p;1ign, arc undenvay in 16 areas. These are: Bl 1den Coun ty, Dewey H Bridger Jr. Burke County, M 0. Bra,wcll i Cat,,wba County , Stnnlcy Co rne; Cleve land County , Robert II Yelton ; Cas ton County, Earl T Groves; Columb u, Coun ty, an kcy \V Robinson ;

Wake Forest

Vol. 4, No. 4 Fall, 1973

Univer sity To Undertake Self-Stu dy

\\' ake Fo rest is p reparing to conduct a rn.tjor sclf-~tu d)• which will involve almost tver)· ,tspt.'ct of the University ,rnd will t..,J...l· he.twee n 18 and 24 months to co mplete.

Dr . Edwi n C. \\' ilson, provmt of the University, wiJI be the director

A self~stucly i~ req ui red for acc reditation hv th e South ern Associa t ion of Co lleges and S~·hoo ls e\'c ry 10 yea rs. It will invo lve the followin~ broad a reas: pu rpose, organiza-tion and ad min h tra tion, educa tiona l p ro-J!film , fina ncial resou rces, facu lty, library, the rcliltiom hip of th e co llege to its pro-fc.\''lional schools, stud ent perso nn el, physical pl lnt, specia l ac tiviti es, gradua te p rogram, resea rch , and pl ann ing for th e fu ture.

Thirt ee n co mmitt ees, e;1d1 composed of fi,·c facult )' memb ers, one admin istrntor and tw o stud ents will be responsib le fo r im·csti-g,ttion of th e areas. T here nlso will be a st<.'cring committ ee.

Th ey will do th eir resea rch and report their findin ~, durin g th e school )·ear. Each <k•p:trlm cnt , m eanwhil e, will co nduct its own self-stud y. Th e ove ra ll repo rt will be considered by th e facult y, th e adminh tra-tiun nnd th e tru stee~ in th e foll of 1974 ,md tlicn prese nt ed to th e Sout hern As~ocia-tion. The :t.!isodation will \encl a co mmittee to th e cam pus to check its ow n find ing!. in c,1rly 1975.

Dr . Ben ~I. See lbind er, p rofessor of math-emati cs, has been na med d irec tor of the University'.!! new Office fo r Instituti onal Re-,c.i rch .

Th e office has bee n es tabl b hed to coo rdi-nntc aca demic inform ation now cont ained in a numb er of offices.

Seelbind er ca me to \Vakc Fores t in 1959 and has bee n ~ccrctary of th e fa cu lty since 1972, Since 1960 he has bee n dir ec tor of the N,\tlonal Science Foun da tion inservice pro-~r.tm for hi~h school math enrntics tenchcrs, which is held on the Uni ve rsity cnmpu s dur -ing th t· school yea r.

He holds the doctorat e from th e Uni-versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and iii a fomt er assoc iate prof esso r a t the Uni -\icrsity of Alabama .

Cumbcrlund County, James R. Nance Sr.; Durh ,1m County, Charles \V. \Vhite: Edgc-t·ombe County, Jack C. D Bailey ; Halifax Countr. C. D. Clark Jr .; Johnston County, Thoma, E. \Villiam.s ; Lenoir County, John Hooten; \lcckll'nburg Count)·. L<:\ \IMsh;

cw ll ;tnm er Count)', Lonnie 8 . \\ 'il liatrn,, Pitt Count)·, ~lurvin K. Blount Jr.; Hobcson Count)·, Everett L. Henry, Scotlllnd County, Dunc,m J Sind,,ir; \\ Jke County, J. ~telvill c llrouJ!hton Jr.i \\ 'a>·nc County, Thoma s G. Colc:r \\ 'il,on County, Dr C;lori..t F Graham Alam,rnt'<.· County, Dr. Emmett Lupton; Cab.trrm County, Dr . Frt•dcrit:k T Cr,wcn, CuiHord County (Cn:t:nsboro) Charles Cheek, (H,~h Point ) E. Lee C.11n; Stanly

County, Dougl,I\ D. Stokes; llocking harn Count y Dr Hunter ~foricle ; Union County, Koy D.twJ...ins.

Alhc·rt L. Butl er Jr . of \Vinston-Salem, is the J.!tneral c,,mpaign chairman and Floyd Fletdtcr of Dnrham , is the statewide chair-man.

Earlv results have been encouraging. Th e Ralci~h and Durham campaign s, which have been underw o.\)' since early summer, have procl11cecl $114,392 and $147 ,000. Thes e total, tu cli1te comidernb ly e,cced prc\'ious \\' akt· Forest c·ampaigns in the se areas.

Th<: One-Fifty Fund is tJ,e Uni\lersity's fir)t li>mpreh<'nsive capital campaign since the c1mpa is.,rn m the early 1950s to move \\ ';.1Lc Fore~t to \Vinston-Sal em It is being

REVIE

conducted co ncurrently with the Univer sity 's on-going annual giving programs for the Colle~e. School of Law, School of Medicine, and Babc-ock School. The Alumni Council ha\ adopted this basic policy in order to coordina te th e h1,·o efforts:

"The University's needs are of ~uch di-mension that they must be met through a combination or annu:il giving and capital Aifb to the One-Fifty Fund . Many olumni will be asked to make capital gifts while continuing their annual contribution. Others will be asked to support Wake For est by substantially increasing their annual gift. Both forms of giving ore es~ential lo the school."

FOOTBALL,VOLLEYBALL,TRACK FILL ~,ALL SPORTS CALENDAR

Fan, i.:ot thrill1n~ looks at a footba ll team which t·ould ,tnrtlc the Atlantic Coast Co1~-fere1wc when the Dcncons o!>cned t.h.eir ,c.i,o n wi th home S!amcs agn in, t Fl orida St.tk Unhcrsity ,rnd \Vi lliam and ~Jar)·,

Chutl ll.1nt\t..')', All-Americ,tn, sna tched a victory from Florida's Srmino les on Sept. 15. \ \'ith three seconds on the clock, Ramsey strctcht·d a field goal attempt 42 yards , earning a 9-7 Deacon vic tory"

ll:11nsc)· J!Ot all the Deacons' poin ts that m~ht , mak inf.! three of si, field goals.

On Oc t, 22, howeve r, the offcnst•, plagued by p<.•naltics, cou ldn't pene trntc th e \ V&~1 Jnd iam' defense far cnou~h to give R:tm\ey ,1 chanc<' for a scoring kick

So th t" dcfomc took chnrgc of the s1hrn-tion

For tht· fir,t \Vale Fore~t score, two Dl'<l<.'On clef ender-. teamed up to recover nn Jnd1;\11 fumblt • and run it across the goal.

T lw !'l,Hnc pa ir put on a be tt er show in the M'<.·on<l hn lf One blo<.'J...cd u \ \' &~ t punt. Ii i" p.irhwr C'nuldn't ciltch the football , so ht· kit..-kccl 1t over the goal line, followed 1t ,md foll on it.

Tho ... e ... <:Ort•, t.mt,,lizcd De.ics in the ... t,uttk hut ,\ tiring dcfcn~1ve um t fin.1lly ,1llowt·d the lndin n'!i two touchdowns and a fide! goal m the 'iec·oncl half .

Tlw team p l,\yt·d hl'ltcr 111 it, nt..·\t two gamt•, th,tn the 41 -0 lo!t,c'i to both Hich-rnoncl ,mcl tlw Uni\ cr,it)· of TC'l:il':t inclka tcd. The 01.-·,Kom he ld tlw ma!\Si\'e Tc.·,,1s foo t-b.l ll corpor,ttion to ,1 14-0 le,td ill lu1lftimc hcfort· beinf.! o, erwhe lme<l by the I .ong-horn \ manpower ~inc l)' Tc, ,.l\ playt•f\ wen.·

drl'"''l'cl for the J.!;.1111c, and every one saw ,1c;tion aJ.!ain..t tht.' tiring \\ 'ake Fore.!il<.:rs.

It w.1s not until the fifth gnmc, .1 28-12 loss to Sou th Carolin;1 at Groves Stadium, that the \\ al..l• Fort'\I offt·n,c s<.·orccl its first toud1dow11 of tht-· !'IC;bon. The Deacons beat the C,tml·c:oc.:k, m £in,t downs, rushing ynrd-,1g<.·, p,h..a11g an<l number of ball control pl.1} 'I. But South Carolina h,1d one import,mt ... t.11i ... ti<.: in 11\ f.l\'or - the ':>Core.

The J..:ill11l· wa, marred in the l,v .. t qu :utcr hy ,1 tlm .·t.• minutt • fight. The mdcc bc~an w lwn ,1 South Carolina player, who was I.tier t·jcc:t<.·<l from the J!nme; punched n \\ ',tkc Fort'st blocker. fans on both .!iidcs rl'lll,lincd ... t,\tionAr)' , if not calm, ,10d order "a ... rcstort·d by the referees, coaches nnd mo,t or Ill<.' pl,1)·ers of both teams. (Cunt.'

Mr. Smith

Fall Sports (continued) The .. Throw and Co .. offense, which has

already gamed plenty of yards, should be earnin g points for the Deacons befor e the season's end.

Ther e·s no way to tell where U1e Deacons w,11 finish among the ACC rivals.

Honors may come to \Vake Forest from other sports, too. Cail Klock, coach of the women's volleyball team, expec ts her squad to finish at the top in state competition.

The \Vake Forest women are strong enough to eliminate their toughes t competi-tion , Elon College and the University of North Carolina at Greens boro, and go into southeastern regiona l play af ter state finals in ovember.

Women arc also involved m golf and field hockey competition now, and the teams are "becoming a lot stronger," according to Klock.

The inter collegiat e sports program for women was begun three years ago, and has help ed the Uni\'ersity recruit women stu-dents who want to carry over their high school !'il>Ort s activities, Klock said. This means e,pericnt :cd playcn. arc coming onto the teams .

Band Marches To Different Beat

Deacon s will meet keen competi tion in one other spor t this fall. The cross-co untry squad is vying with teams in "the seco hd strong est conference in the country," said coach Harold Rhea .

Charles \\ ' Smith. instructor in music , is the new director of the Uni\'ersity's 100-member marching band .

Th e toughest runs arc Oct. 5, against Duke University, and Oct . 13, agains t the University of ~far)'land .

Rhea is hoping for surprising times as his stnrters, juniors and freshmen , trim their five-mile times.

Smith takes over from Dr. C::alvm R. Hub er, chairman of the music department.

Smith , who joined the faculty in 1969, holds deµces from th e Univers it y of \\ 'yoming and New York Uni\'ersity, and he is workin~ toward the doctorate at George Peabody College.

The Dea con offense ran into a brick wall m the 37-0 loss to the University of \f ary-1.tnd. The De.,con dcfeme, which started out strong: and got in a few good licks during th e lonJ.! afternoon, finally tired und er the ~train of bcin~ allowed only a Lhree play rc~pite betwc.:cn appt . .-amnc:e~ on the field

Calvin Huber, who beg"iln directing tlw band l'icH.·11 )~.ar~ .tgo, built tla· J..'Toup from 33 to O\l:r 1()() members. Dr Huber will l'Ontinut: c:hamn.mship of the dl'partmcnt of music at the Uni\'en..ity. Ht: will tc.1ch clas~c~ :-t.nd din:c.:t orches trn <.'Onccrt\

\\'akc Fon·!'!I !.!Ol only one Rr~t down, and ib only scoring oppo rtunity was thwarted when Chuck Ramsey\ field goal attempt W<h blocked. Ramsey's punting was the highlight of tht' gume for Deacon fans. He made 13 good kicks for a total of 601 yards, an Atlantic Coast Conference record.

He was honored on Band Day, Oct. 20, for his decade of work with the band.

HOMECOMING WAKE FOREST vs DUl(E

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9 9:00 a.m - 4:30 p.m .

12:00 noon

6:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m .

Bowman Gray Lecture Series, Babcock Auditorium, Bo" man Gray School of ~lcdicine . \l edical School Alumni Council, Board Room, Bowman Gray School of Medicine. \l <'dical School Banquet, Downtowner \lotor Inn . Lawyer·, .. Partners .. Reception and Banquet, Bermuda Run Country Club. Private Alumni .. Homecomings .. throughout the City.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10 8:30a.m .

9:00 - 12:00 noon

10:00 - 12:00 noon

10:30a.m.

11:45 a.m.

1:30 p.m. -1:30 7:00 p.m.

5:00 - 6:30 p.m.

6:30 - 8:00 p.m.

2 \\' .-uu: FORE.ST R E\"JEW

\lumni Coundl \! eeting. Autumn Room. Reynalda llall Op<'n llouse , \! en's Res;dence Halls, Fraternities and Societies. All Alumni cordi,11lv invited. Bo\\'man Cray Lech1re Series, Babcock Auditorium, Bowman Gra\' School of \leclicine. Criminal Code HcYision Panel, School of Law, Main Courtroom. Jurbt Day Program . Buffet Luncheon. All Wah• Forest Law Alumni mvited, La\\' Library . Duke versus \\ ·ake Forest. Groves Stadium. \lnmni .. E,trava~anza,' ' Graylyn Estate, Reynalda Ru.id. Social llonr . Law Alumni prior to 1961, Sheraton \lotor Inn. Social for Law Alumni . Sheraton \lutor Inn . Private "\ ledical Class Reunions .. throughout the Cih·.

Mr. M,1Is Dr. Lee

Alumni, Development Staffs Acquire New Members

Dr H Doug las Lee, who jomed the de-velopment sta ff this summer, has been named direc tor of University relations, and Robert Mills ('72), who has been assistant to the directo r of development, has been named assistant director of alumni affairs.

Lee's primary responsibility at the Uni-versity will be foundations and corpo ra'tions in North Carolina and denominationa l rela-tions .

\fills will be directo r of annua l giving and ,1bo will work with fund raising for the School of Law .

Lee came to the Unive rsity from Virgini a lnt ermon t College whe re he taught ethics ,rncl political theory and was duector of chur<:h relations and educa tional develop-ment. He hold s the B.S. degree from the University of Richmond , the B.D . from Southeastern Baptist Theologica l Seminary uncl the Ph.D. from the Unive rsity of Iowa.

Order Basketball Tickets Now

Thi~ i" the time to buy sea!'!on tickets to \I ,lke Forest home basketball games. Head Coat:11 Carl Tacy and a:,.-;i"itnnt:, Li.lrry \Vil-li.,m:, ,md Bobby \Vntson had "n good re-cru iting yea r," and si'\: player, from last year':. van,ity tcnm will return ,

There are n few tickets left for the Big Four Tournament, which will be held on January 4 and 5 in Greensboro . (Cost -$16.00)

Tickets to all home games cost $4.00.

HO~!E CAME SCHEDULE Dec. 6 William & Mary 8:00 Dec. Univ . of Penn. 8:00

Bucknell 8:00 11

Jan. 2 Mar)'land 8,00 Clemson 8:00

Jan. 11 Jan. 19

David son 8 ,00 UNG 8:00 Duke 8:00 Virginio 3: 00 St. Francis 8:00

Jan. 26 Jan. 30 Feb. 0 Feb. 9 Feb . 20 Feb . 23 Ap1>alaehian 8:00 Mar. 2 . C. State 8:00

Send your ticket orde rs to the \Vake l'ore , t Athletic Ticket Office Box 7265 llcynold ,., Station, \Vinston-S~lcm, N. c: 27109 or call 919 -725-0226 .

~Jills, a native of Mooresville, N. C., joined the development staff in January , 1972, immediately afte r his graduation from the University .

Gulf Oil Awards W F Grant

A capital gra nt o f $5,000 has been awarded to the University by the Gulf Oil Foundation.

Th e grant, which wi ll be applied to library renovation, is part of more than $2.5 m,llion that Gulf will distribute this year to students and institutions of high er lellming. The capita l grant phase of the program is desi~'lled to help colleges meet an ticipated g-rowth requirements. to rep lace obsolete building and equipmen t, or to expa nd ser-vices.

Wake Forest Review

Published in July, October, February ond April by the Wake Forest University depart-ments of communications and alumni affairs. Editorial offices: Box 7227, Rcynolda Station, Winston-Salem , N. C., 27109. Second class postage paid, Winston-Salem, N. C. Change of address requested.

Marty Lentz Editor

Printed on Recycled Paper


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