Trustees Name Committees

Transcription

Trustees Name Committees
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·.VOLUME XLVI
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• ASSISTA,NT EDITOR\. .
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Glee ciu.b Extras
The Glee Club members, including Ann and Miss
Indiana who sang light operatic· numbers, had their
o\Yn Christmas when they exchanged gifts ChriStmas
eve and attended the· Christmas eve service at the
Cathedral.
Looking to the future, Ami said that she has no
. The High Point .Furniture Fair is the sta~ version
specific
-program' yet. Of course, she is well ~ked
· of ~·National Furniture Fair held in. Chicago last
week, from which Miss Herring returned Wednesday. up in advance and will. be participating in many of
the spring pageants of various .North Carolina cities.
Miss H~' arrived in Winston-Sale_ni, WedneS..
March 24, she will nostalgically take part in the
day, from Chicago, 'where she was guest of the Kent
Winston-Salem: pageant when she' will abdicate her
Coffey FurnitUre Manufacturing, Company of ,Lenore.·
"Miss Winston-8a1em" to another young·
· Her duties consisted of acting as hostess and
greetirg buyers for the ~orth Carolina section of the
. Nationnl Furniture Fair. Kent· Coffey, president of
·the compaiJ!Y, personally escorted Miss Herrilig to
,and around Chicago. She, in tuin, welcomed Terry
Sanford to Chicago when he ma<Ie his first out-of. state appearance since his inauguration by ~pealdng ,
· to a Furniture Fair audience.
She. "Saw" Chicago .
Ann said that she was able to see much of Chicago,
attend several parties and see Miss America, who
· made a brief appearance at the Furniture Fair.
Ann 'elatedly. talked about her recent Christmas ·
tr1p to Europe with the Georgia Tech G~ee Club. The
trip was designed to entertain "our boys overseas"
· •,for the Christmas season and .was scheduled -to leave
. :. Dec. 11; however, Ann said, . because of ~e ice on
· ·-the runways of the Philadelphia .airport, the ·plane'
· h~d to land in Baltimore. The group gi-abbed a train
. to Trenton. N. J. where they boarded the jet "Electra" for Europe.
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Trip Delayed
Due to the snow and ice, Ann said, the trip. was
delayed and .as ·a result the group was restricted to
three weeks of appearances in Germany instead of
, in Fr:mce· and Ital'Y, also.
The people in Gemnanoy, she said, were verw
"friendly" especially those people in the little shops
and out-of-the-way place's.· The group did not get out
of Germany itther than to land briefly ini'cgming and
going to and from Germany.. They had the advantage
of becoming acquaiJ1ted with one. place ·in E;uroP,C.
"I was even able to understand a little of what they
were saYing~ections, .for. example.'~ -.
Bdion,"'\
7":ednesda Olii
1 Tueslg's 38i 46-.'32,
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nd SigCbi 58-
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. Ann said she' was· able to make tseveral sight-seeing trips. Ann was espeCialloy' excited about the
cathedral' of Saint Lourine in Nuremburg, which
conciilis one of. the largest· organs in th~ -worl~. The
organist· showed several members of. the group th~
huge pipes and then. pl~cyed several numbers.
The Glee Club locafed itself near Nuremburg and
Stuttgart and perfornied in that area to. army camps ..
The soldiers seemed "very 'happy" to receive the
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NUMBER 14
The Wa~e Forest College Board of Trustees approved
a numlber of committee appointments Friday as it held
its first regular meeting of 1961. J
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All of the appointees were ndminated by trustee President William J. Conrad of Winston-Salem and were ..approved unanimously.
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The trustees approved an increase in student room rent
Bruce Filer, appointed earlier in vice and ~y old /hamburgers" of
from $85 to. $95 per semester to $100 and $110 per sethe semester as 'a "one znan com- the Snack Bar.
mester.
The increase is effective September.
mittee" to Hr.lalyze the cafeteria
Filer Sl!lli:d he didn't kMw
L-egislature 'Appoints Filer
To Investigate Snack. Shop
situation, '\vas selected by the Student Legislature 'Dhrursda'Y' to investigate student eomplaints on the
O>llege snack bar. ·
The ~app:Ointr:nent was mad'e after
members of the Legisliature had
V'<Jiiced cr:iticis:ms o-n the ''poor ser-
Summer School
· Agenda. Listed
46-36,
The OO'ficial scllledule for the 1961
Wake Forest sum::me:r school W1aS
released liast W~eek by the of:fice of
the re-gistrar.
T.he schsuule prov.ides for two
sessions, tbre .first beginning ';rune
12 and runn::ng throug.h Jul:;' 21
ood the Steco:nd session opening
July 24 and closing Aug. 2&.
During the first session, classes
w:ill be held on .the first Saturilay
only. Classes will be !held evel'Y
Satur:d.ay during the- second term.
A norn11al acade~nic load during
a summe:r session is six semester
hours in six weeks. Seven· hours
'is permriss:Lble if 001.E of the courses
'is a four-hour sci-€nce course or
a one-h'()tlr · :;wimnting or musit:
course.
'C<lurse desct;ipti.ollS can be foWld
1in the Summer Session Bulletin,
which wall be issued :s March, and
in the regUlar session catla.logue.
Dr.. Percival Perry, professor of
history, Wlill be Dean of the' smn·
·To··Spon8or
whether ·Snack Bar c-peration is
cOilmected with the cafeteria, which
will soon be un:der new direction.
In other action of the Leglislature, Bob English, freshmlam. class
·:vresident, who was previously appointed .to-look into the p:ossibiH.ties
of ill!lproving the lighting in the
East Lounge, l"eported that Harold
s. Moore; diTector of the buildings
and grounds for the ~ollege, said
the LoU11!?ie :w1as, not meant for
study 1and thiat new f1ixbures would
have to be instaHed to improve the
ligntiiJJg.
The. Le.gislature also discussed
the possibihity of. reuue~ng tule
parking ticket fines; but took no
~action on ihe su.bjeet.
George Elected
AKP President
Deposit
Posts Named
Co~rad, by virtue of being president of the trustees, will
be chairman of the •executive committee, the board's most
important committee. Lex Marsh of Charlotte, vice presi·dent of the board. will be vice chairman. Other members
are L. · Y. Ballentine of Raleigh, .H. Cloyd Philpott of
Lexington, the Rev. James S. Potter of Charlotte, Dr. Paul·
W. Johnson of Winston-Salem, Judge Johnson J. Hayes
of Wilkesboro, Maurice Hill of Morganton, 0. M. Mull of
Shelby, J. E. Broyhill of Lenoir and Leon L. Rice Jr. of
Winston-Salem.
Other Committees
Other standing committees: budget, Hill, chairman;
Jiames George, a junior of Smith- Clark; Marion .J. Davis, Winston-Saleln; Carl McCraw,
field, was elected president of Charlotte; Dr. Sam Holbrook, Statesville: audit, Ledford,,
Alpha Kappa P~"i professional busi- 1 chairman· the Rev. Gilmer H. Cross, Goldsboro; the Rev.
ness fr~aternity at a meeting Thurs- C. 0. Gr~ene, Shelby; C. Rush Hamrick, Shelby; and
day mghr~Judge Walter E.. Cl-issman, High Point: nomination of
Other ~.ffi~s elected are Carl trustees, Judge Hayes, chairman; Mull and the R~v- Mr.
-v:a.tes, a .Jumor of Winston-~alem, Potter: athletics. L[t.rkins, chainnan; Judge Cnssman;
~~ pres.Jdent; Dou~ :Valenltine, a Davis· the Rev. V. Ward Barr Gastonia; Dr. Holbrook;
Jumor of Charlottesville, secretary;
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1 A s h ev1"ll e: 1aw
' sch O<?1'. R'1ce,. c h airman,
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Porter 'l'hompS.O.n, a junior of Ran- George Penne I,
dleman, breasurer; and David Dr. Holbro<?~; Marsh; Bridges; Dav~s. medical _school:
Drinkard, a junior o:f Charlotte, Pennell, charrman; Mull; Dr. W. L. Bmgham, Lexmgto_n,
master of rituals.
the Rev. Lowell F. Sodeman, Rocky Mount; and Broyhill.
OG&B Slates. 2 New Features
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.Educator Gives Talk. On Russia
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Theatre Holds
Tryouts For
Next Drama
room
New Ps'ychol;o·gy .Club'
H'o·nors D r· D a··sh. Ie
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Bruce Smith and Angela .rohnson
were· named last ~k to fill, two
newly-created positions .Oil! the· Old
Gold and Black editorial staff.
Smith, a senior of Mt. Harley
N. J. was named entertainment
editor: And Miss .Johnson, a junior
of Wilmington, was selected to fill
the position of Arts F1iitor.
Both Smith and Miss .Johnson
will begin weekly columns, starting with the next issue of the paper.
In announcing the appointments,
eilitor Ray Rolliins noted the new
positions are part of an effort
to provide !Illore . specialized and
thorough campus and city social
·coverage.
The position of entertainment
editor was created in order to supply Old Gold readers with com·
presensive information on the various aspects of campus and city
night life.
Smith has ~greed to cover Winston-Salem, Raleigh, Charlotte and
Greensboro and relay criticisms on
movies, events at the Reynolds
Coliseum and "local night spots
when their entertainment is worth
Book Exchange
The Alpha· Phi Omega service
· fraternity knitted plans Wednesday
ANN.HERRING, Miss North Carolliia-,' looks ·.ove:r night for their annual book exher itinerary that has carried ari.d'will carry her tO change and is now .ready to barter
many points of die globe, including her l'eilent. trip with students interested in buying
or selling text books.
to Europe as a special member of Georgia Tech's · Students wishing to participate
Glee Club.
in the book exchange program are
requested to bring their text books
to the APO room located next to
the College clinic.
The procedure for exchanging
text books is that students must
price his or her own book, and
when the book is sold a check will
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be mailed to the o-wner.
Dr. Craig Phillips, Superintendent program.
his wife and mother .sweeping A small fee will IJe charged for
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of the Winston-salem city schools,
Phillips speculated that with this streets, mixing cement or doing expenses including the'1cost of mailing and handling.
sPQ.ke before the Circle K club and sirigleness of purpose, it is likely any kind of strenuous labor.
Students interested · in buoying
Winston-Salem Kiwanis Club Wed- that their system will excell ours ·The s[g:hts and m3llly others he
nesday in the Magnolia Room and unless we increase our efforts. - illustrated by slides. He said his books will find them at reduced
told the group that Russian educa- · In his 'travels in Moscow, Lenin- ±iavorite pktur:e was that of 'a rates at the APO book exchange.
tion is defiilitely behind the United grad, and other Soviet citie's, Phil- first grade boy looking innocently, The schedule will be as follows:
States both in educational facilities lips made observations which he with his head cocked, at fihe Jan. 30, 1-5 p.m.; Jan. 31, 9 a.m.5 p. m.; Feb. 1, 12 noon-S p. m.;
and instruction.
related to the group.
camera.
Feb. 2 11 a. m.-5 p. m.; Feb. 3,
Phillips said he ,wanted to see. In Moscow .he saw many tall
. N~w A:ppl'eiliation Of U. S.
{or himself how our system com- apartment buildings which have
Arriving in Winston-Salem after 12 noon-5 p. m.
pares with the Russian.
taken the place of the homes. All this trip that brought into focus
Phillips toured several Asian of his party's attempts to see inside much appreciation for America
schools last summer studying in of one ·was prevented.
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and freedom, he said he was glad
particular the Russian educational
, Prohibited ·Admittance
to be able to travel without show·,,
system.
At the University of Moscow ing a pasSport as every citizen in
Russians Not Ahead
Phillips said he was unable to Russia must do.
He s~d he left with the feeling eVIen . galn admittance to see 12
He f.~d by saying that hEl
that the Russians are at least 10 Amencan · ~xchange s~den~s.
had seen w~t he had gone .to see
years behind the United States in
During ~s. whole. visit, his only .but woul~ t wa;n.t . to go through
their educational system..
contact With ~he free world o~er the expenence Et~gam. .
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He noted that one school which than the carefully censured Russian
The ~anquet at which Phillips
The Wake Forest College theater
ba<t several hwidred s~dents en- p~s was .~ Uni~d · ~tates maga- spoke will beeome ~n annual event completed casting for its next prorolled, had a single
for a Z;IDe called Almenca. It too, Phil- SJJ?nsored by _the. an:le K an? the duction, "Lo and Behold," Wedneslibraey which was lit by one bare lips noted, was censured.
Wmston-Salel:ll Kiwams club m an day nigbt_and Wleylle ·Gunn, a senior
lightbulb hanging from tbe ceiling. .He said he ~aw as many as.600 effort to.. build friendship and un- of Wentworth, was selected for the
'flhe kitclhens 8'lld i-estrooms, in PIC~s of Lenm, who see';Ded ~ be derstanding betwee~ stud~nts and lead part, Milo Alcott.
the seemingly , best ·schools·, were the:u- ~d. The most .:.:epulSJve stghts W~ton-8alem busmess and proThe part of Daisy Durdle will be
unsanitary, according , to . United he satd he saw were women Uke fesslonal~ men.
played by jud(y Palmer, sophomore
States cond1tions, and ootld!ings f.ive
of Alexandria, Va.; Mr. Wingate
years old were constructed so poorby Fred Smits, senior of Pt. Washly·.that, by om- standards, it should
ington, N. Y.; Dr. Robert Dorsey
be condemned,· Pbillips noted.
by Chris . Frost, freshman of New
En&Ush Taught Early
York City; Minnetonll:a SmallflowHowever he said that tbe teacher by Lu~ia Pollocfk, junior of
:ing:., of English, which often ·begins .
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Richmond, va.; Kenneth Moore by
at the age of six, is very advanced
Josh Morton, sophomore of Albe·'in the Soviet Union.
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The newly-formed JoibnFrederick and was the recipient of the t'Jfth marie; HO!l:ey' W~ainwr!ght by Sher·The educational system is· com- Dash~ell Psychological Society will American Psychological Foundation ry Dailey, seni~ of Dallas, TeXas;
pletely contrOlled and financed by petition for ot'fici!al recognition by Award in 1960.
and .Jack McDougal by Jan Henthe~Soviet State, Phillips noted. The the administration at the regular
Dashiell received his Ph.D: from sley, senior of Greensboro.
communistS believe that in the meeting of the facww:1:9da;v.-. · Columbia University in 1913. He The play, a comedy, will be preschools they can inolci the !YOUth
F~ed as- an :aid·-'-in bringing ta~ht. in some 15 major colleges sented the last part -of February,
int() exactly what t!hey want.
fact4ty. members and psychology and universities before joining the and rehearsals will start after the
He also· noted that the Soviets. majors closer together and to spon- Wake. Forest faculty in 1958 to beginning of second semester.
-··are progressing toward a program sor programs to explain situations initiate the psyehology department.
The plot of the play is constructDashiell is particularly renown ed about Milo Alcott, who commits
· whereby, at the age of one, a child in which psychology can and is be·will enter a kindergarden and from ing used, the group has met twice. ln the field of ~gychology for his suicide by over-eating. Alcott has
· there on the state will furnish his
Dashiell, for whom the society introductory text book which was made a stipulation in his will for
or her housing, character teaching, was named, was recognized he- published in 1928 and was used by his house to be preserved for pospersonality ..development, technical cause of his· outstanding .work in psychology professors and teachers terity.
and professional training and also psychology.
for some 20·I,VIears.
The reason for. the :stipulation is
all his recreational opportunities.
He or~zed .tble .psychology deDashiell has also written the to provide Alcott with a place to
Educate The Children
partment at Wake Forest College, psychol()g<y' .section of a.n older live if there is a life a:fter death.
The Soviets are. convinced, Phil- ·has·, served as president of the edition of the Americana Encycl'O- ·The house becomes the scene of a
,lips said, that they can educate American PsychologicalAssociation pedia.
livelY comedy after Alcott's death.
·~.and bring up ·children better than (1937), president of the SoutheastOfficers of the society are: WarThe performance of "Lo and B'e.,.their parents. -They so firmly beAssociation ren Bloodsworth, presi®nt; Gary hold," will mark the third major
:lieve· this that . one third of Soviet
of the North· Caro- Long, vice:president, and Mary Liz production of·the year :for the Wake
"budget
.is -~.poured into· this
of Science (1960),- Willard, ··sec:retaey-treasurer.
Forest College Theater.
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~rease
The board also increased the admissions deposit to entering students from $25 to $50. It was pointed out that the
increase does ·not mean an increase in tuition and fees.
Administration officials said the move is aimed at
lowering the number of students who apply, make a
deposit and then switch to another school late in the summer. They said the policy of increased deposits is being
practiced at a number of other colleges.
'We're Not Behind'
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Page'Six
Trustees Name Committees
the Christmas season."
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Nonh Carolina, Mollday, .Januarr 16, 1960
Former Old Gold
Editors Working
In News Field
Increase Room Rent
, "type of group' we had," Ann said, "especially for
With a trip to Europe and . the Chicago ~ture
· Fair behind he~, 1 Ann Herring; the Wde Forest
· who became Miss North Carolina and ,second r'!Ulner
, up iD. tJie.Miss America Pageant last _year, will bustle
off to High Point Monday to participate in Ute State
Furniture Market.
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Winston-S~Iem,
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By KELLEY GRIFFITH .
~etuali,Y
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Wake Forest College,
··.Ann ,Herring ContinUes Bufly
·.Schedule ·4fter Europe Trip
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TWO NEW APPOINTEES to the Old Gold edi~rial staff, Bruce SJDith
aDd Angela Jo~nson, discuss their new duties as entertainment OOitor
and arts editor, respectively. Their columns will begin next issue.
-staff Photo
He will also furnish information
on jazz concerts within reasonable
driving distmwe, plarticularly at
neighboring colleges and universities.
As arts editor, Miss Johnson will
cover college theatrical productions
and theater productions in tlie Winston-salem vicinity.
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She will report also on Chamber
Music performanceS, student recitals, the Concert-Lecture series,
band and ~hoir concerts and foreign films.
Evangelistic Conference
Will Have Session Here
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Soni.e 2,500 pa.rticipa<nts in the
Cauth-en. executive secretary oi
annual North Carolina Evangelistic th-e Foreig·n Mission Board of the
Conference will be on the Waks Southern Baptist Convention, will
Forest campus .Tan. 30-Feb. 1.
deliver two addresses: "The World
The conference, spons'ored by the Need Of Evangelism" and ''Our
Baptist State Convention, will fea- ·supreme Obli:gation."
ture such ,n.ofla:ble theologians as·
Edd!em!Ul. president of :the New
Dr. Baker J. Oauthen, Dr. Dale Orle.ams Bnptist Theologieal SemiMooqy, Dr. H. Leo Eddleman and nary, will «Pt?n.k on "The Church's
Dr. G. Earl Guinn.
W~pon Of Offense" and "The
The theme of the ~erence is End Re,."Ult Of Cbm'Ch-Centered
'B 'ld' · A E
1' ti Ch
h, Evan~lism."
Ul mg In 'va~ Js c
urc ·
Guinn. pn•,...:,{,'nt of Louisialll8
The con:ference will open at 2 P· · College. w·itl >'P'<'<1k i\Ionday and
m. Mondlay, Jan. 30. Included on Tuesday llidl:.:< ,... n ''The Goal Of
the opening a..,"'"enda are Dr. Harold Evtan,.a-eii"ln:, ~md ··The Unbeliever's
W. Tribble, who will give 'B!n ad- Destiny."
dTess 0 ll "The Doctrine Of EvanA memb~t· ''". t.hc Wake Forest
geli~." and ·.Dr. L. H. Hollings- faculty \\ill t<•.:d. the sc.."iptuxe at
wor!n, chapla.in of the College,
the ope.:n.i:ng: t>f each morning and
Moody, professor of Christian afternoon session. Participan-ts will
theOlogy ;at Southern Baptist Theo- be Hollingsworth, Dr. J. Allen
logical Sem.ina...-y. will dEliver an Easley, Dr. Geor·ge J. Grissin, Dr.
address each ~ay of b
three-day Emmett w. Hamtiek, Dr.~ F.
program.
Herring and Dr. Robert A. Dyer.
Both, ol. course, will have assistance.
For Miss Johnson, the new position is a promotion. She has been .
a member of the reporting staff for
tbe newspaper for some time. She
has also been active in the College
Theater.
Tribble Reassures
Cafeteria Staffers
Dr. Harold W. Tribble, president
of the College, met with cafeteria
personnEl Tuesday in the cafeteria
and disspelled rmno'l"St of a widespread upheaval in the jobs of the
staff members.
The rumor swept through the
personnel last week after Mrs.
Ruby Sheridan, Director of Food
Services, resigned her position.
Mrs. Sheridan's letter of resignation was dated Dec. 9, but official
announeement was withheld until
after the holidays.
Her resignation will become effective Feb. I.
TJ.ibble said that be wanted to
:reassure tht ca.feti!'ria stalf:f members that "their jobs are safe if
they want them."
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PAGE TWO
Monday, Jan. 16, 1961
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Si--Si
Mexicans Pay ·visit
Mexico came to Wake Forest College last week-at least, eleven of
her repr·esentativ~s did.
"Gracias.. and "Buenos Dias"
floated across campus and students
stopped ill amazement to catch
snatches of rapid-.fire conversation carried on in Spanish.
The group, consisting of six girls
and foul" boys from ages 16 to 20,
attendled classes and socialized with
students here as part of the Experiment in International Living
program.
· This movement, with offices in
Putney, Vt., curently has the participation DC 31 countries.
From Mexice City
Mexico City is the home of all of
11le visitoors .exC€Pt one who lives
in Acapulco.
Esther Almaraz, Franco Arias,
Lom·des Arizpe, Jan Bazant, Roberto Beltran and Luis Pere-L are
students in Mexico. Elena Guerrero, Minerva Gonzalez Angulo,
Pilar Sotomayos, and the group's
leader, Miss Clara Guzman, are
kintergarten and primary school
teachers. Oonsuelo Ibarra is a bilingual secretaey.
Miss S1taron Spade, instructor ofSpanish, was hostess to the group
during their stay.
Eight Weeks In US
As part of the Experiment in International Living, the group spends
approximately eight weeks in the
Unibed States. Part of the time is
spent traveling informall!y to points
of interest and the rest living in
U. S. lwmes.
The group has visited St. Louis,
Chicago, Detroit and Niagara Falls.
They spent three weeks, including
Christmas and New Year's with
families in Vergennes, Vt.
New York and Washington were
visited. and the Spanish-speaking
visitors an·ived in Winston-Salem
.Tanuary 10.
After two weeks with families
in Kinston, the group will visit New
Orleans en route. to Mexico. ·
EXPERIMENT IN INTERNATIONAL LIVING-Who's getting the
"treatment" in this experiment is open to questio_n. :But finding
himself in the midst of "'L'lternational" feminine pulchritude is
Albert Greene, a senior of Lawndale. The girls are Marla Elena Guerrere>, Clara Guzman, and Maria Del Pilar Sotomayor.-Staff photo
Da:vidson College Band
Plans February Concert
I
So.cieties
Meets Set
The Euzelian and Philomathesian
litet·ary societie.s will begin the new
semester with meetings Monday,
Feb. 6 in thek respective halls in
Reynolda Hall.
Thie Philomathesian meeting will
begin at 6:30 p. m. and the Euzelian meeting at 7 p. m.
The book, "Exodus," will be discussed at L'l.e Philomathesian meeting.
Jessie Shearin, president of the
Phis, said that the society will
meet evew.r other wee~$: from Monday until the end of school.
The Eu's program chairman,
Kelley Griffith, said that there is
no program as of yet for the Euzelian meeting.
He said that the Eus met Monday
with a program of extemporaneous
speeches by members. Topics of
the speeches concerned the "recently removed drinking clause in
tlte Honor Code," "big time athletics at Wake Forest," the problem of "Who's Who at Wake Forest" 'and "whether the Euzelian
Literary Society should be abolished."
dent of the collegiate group.
Featured on the concert will be Ri:msky-Korsakov's
"Clarinet Concerto" wit~1 Charles Hargis as soloist. Included will be the first movement of the Hindemith "Symphony for Band." Works by Gustave Holst, Don Gillis,
Kechley and Richard Strauss will round out a varied program.
s
-- P.
e . PROMPT.'-·.CURB SERVICE
e PRIVATE
DINING ROOM
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_. Located
at Highway 52
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B
Lexington Barbecue
PA 4·7059
at Motor Rd.
If You Would·· Like
po
Made Or·Tinted
and
Bell,
co,
At
a
Ti
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REASONABLE PRICES
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5,
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Bloodmobile To
Visit WF Campus
They Like • . .
EuAndPhi
writing music at five. She began
ASSISTANT EDITOR
stud~ formally at the Manhattan
Miss Zita Carno of New York School of Music after graduating
City continued her "splendid" first from the High School of Music and
year as a professional musician. by Art.
performing pianoforte works by
She received her Bachelor Of
Chopin, Brahms, Hindemith and Music degree in 1956 and a Master
Clementi here Tuesday night.
of Music a year later from the
Miss Carno, who has been term- Manhattan School of Music.
ed by the New York Times as
Musical Child Prodigy
"without a doubt one of the major
Miss Carno's first composition,
young American talents," was third 4,ndante con Moto, was written at
in a series of four Chamber Music nine years of age. She first perprograms sponsored b" the Cham- formed at 11 when she gave a con"'
cert at the Manhattan School of
ber Music Society of Winston-Salem. Music consisting mainly of her
Miss Carno performed Clementi's works. She had written by that
Sonata in B Flat Major, Op. 46 and tittle a fugue and the first moveHindemith's Sonata No. 2 for the rnent of a Suite.
first half ()f the program. Four
The New York Herald Tribune
piano pieces, Op. 119, of Brahms said Miss Camo has "a technique
and Twelve Etudes, the Barcarolle which is pliant in the best sense
and Scherzo in C Sharp minor by of the word. Its pliancy resides in
Chopin composed, the final half of the fact that Miss Carno is able
the program.
to adapt her dexterity to the p.ifferYoung Beginning
ing demand of differing styles."
At the age of four, Miss Oarqo
/Lauded By N. Y. Times
began the study of piano and began
The New York Times said of Miss
Carno's musicianship, "She is with·
out a doubt one of the major young
American talents-a pianist with a
splendid technical equipment, brains
and finesse."
,
Miss Camo began her· first year
as a professional pianist in October
Eleven stude:iJ.ts participated in when she performed with Leonard
the recital spons~red by the Depart- Bernstem's internationally famous
ment of Music at Wake Forest Col- New York Philharmonic Orchestra.
lege WedDesda;v- in Wait Chapei._
Besides the basic pianoforte reVoice selections were rendered pertoire of solo :works, she has 29
concertos polished up for performby Gladys Morgan,· senior of Glen ance.
Alpine, Paul Thompson, senior of
Kershaw;, S. C., and .Judith Morris,
junior of Thomasville.
Ruth Stegall and Ann Matthews
accompanied the vocal solos.
Diana Gilliland, freshman of Birmingham, Ala., Billie Ann Mill· A blOodmobile unit will visit the
saps, junior of Robbinsville, Nancy Wake Forest College campus Feb.
Carpenter, sophomore of Cherry- 21-22 under the sponsorship of Alpha
ville and Shirldeen Johnson, senior Epsilon Delta pre-medical fraterniof Winston-salem, gave piano re- ty. ,
citals.
Plans for presenting an award to
A trombone duet was presented the group having the highest. perby .Terry Essie, junior of Winston- centage of donors are under con·
Salem, and .Timmy Tillotson, fresh- sideration:man of Hendersonville.
. This will be the first time tbe
Robert· Boatwright, sophomore of mobile unit has been on campus
Conover, performed a trombone since the spring of 1959.
solo.
Organist Dorothy Bishop, senior
'IIb.e nation's populatiOn is incteas·
of Springfield, Va., closed the re- ing at the equivalent of 35 towns the
cital.
size •of Raleigh each year.
B7 KELLEY GRIFFITH
11 Students
Give Recitals
What did our .Mexican neighbors
like about the Uilit~d States? WashinJ:,rton, D. c. and its beaUtiful buildings, Wake Forest College lif~but
the stude~ts· don:t ·seem.~ study
The Davidson College Concert Band unde1,· _t)l.~ baton of
1 Tiuch-an~ Amertean mustc, espe- Frank West, a native of \Vinston-Salem, will pYesent a conc:Ially Chnstmas _carols.
cert at the College Feb. 2 at 8 p. m. The program is open
The greatest difference between _
.
U1e United States and Mexico which to the pubh~.
_
..
the group noted. while here is the
The 40-piece band IS composed of selected musiCians
dating custom. In their country from the Davidson student body and its members hail from
girls may go out after dark only if a dozen eastern states. David N. Edwards, Jr~, of Winston1
they arc chaperoned.
Salem, a mBmber of the senior class at Davidson, is presi-
·... ,__
Miss Zita Carno ·Des~rves Billing
~
'
Ti
den
seas
foun
Stu
able
offic
Contact
RAY ROLLINS
...... ,
"Flowers For Every Occasion''
At
vari
Offic
Tli
tloR'
At
Old. Gold .An~d Black
BUD SM.ITH'S
er.
A
FLO-WERS
THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER -
PA-5'0489
Honors Winner
The Davidson band has won numerous honors in the
last decade.
.
:
Founded in ] 919. the band was directed by a succession
of student directors, the most noted of whom is Capt.
James C. Harper. director-emeritus of the noted Lenoir
High School Band. Capt. Harper is also a member of the
Davidson College board of Trustees.
From 1935 to 1951 the collegians 'vere under t'he guidance of Dr. James Christian Pfohl. a Winston-Salem
native, and fm•m 1951 throug:h 1955, Kenneth R. Moore,
now of Oberlin Colleg-e, was concert band director.
West Experienced
Dil'ector West 11olds degrees from the universities of
North Carolina and Indiana. Since his discharge in World
Wm· II, West has been a member of the Jacksonville, Fla.
Symphony Orchestra, the Charlotte S~'Till)hony and for
several summers was on t'he faculty of Transylvania Music
Camp in Brevard, N. C.
_
·
An oboist, West frequently plays with the Charlotte
Opera Association orchestra in addition to participating in
chamber music groups. In 1955 IJ1e joined the Davidson
faculty as an assistant professor of music and also directs
the ROTC and Davidson Wildcat Band.
This college organization makes an annual spring tour
each year. It has appeared in concerts from Philadelphia to
Miami and this year will tour North Carolina cities for the
first time in many years.
·
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\
B)' SONNY BEBCES
PAGE 'l'lDLEE
'
Veacs Who Are Greeks
/
Monday. Jan. 16, 1961
Patterson's Stratford
Pharmacy
YOUR PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS
We Feature
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.,
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I
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**
SPEAI(ING FRANKLy
Wake Forest College • •
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, .JANUARY 16, 1961
'Give 'Em Hell, Deacs'
Perhaps the TV cameras provided
the incentive. At any rate, the Wake
F<>rest College student body could by
no means be criticized for any lack of
enthusiasm or school spirit at the basketball game against North Carolina
State College Saturday afternoon.
The motivating factor for the vigorous support given the team might have
been that the whole nation was watchir..g us. Or it could have been the game
,Let's
itself-one which was predicted to be
close.
Whatever the reason, it is of secondary importance. The mai~ point is
that the Wake Foerst students DID
show tremendous enthusiasm and did
everything within their power to bring
victory. Perhaps another of Wake's
"sleeping giants" - school spirit- is
yawning.
-CY
Recon~ider
Wake Forest College students are
entering a crucial period these next
few weeks. Exam time is here and our
hallowed honor code will be, again,
put to the test.
But before we (who, of course, feel
no qualms about throwing the first
stone) sneer at honour, goodness and
all that, let's give the Code a fair
chance. Cynics condemn the honour
system for its seemingly evident fallibility, but not t(){) many consider what
good the honor system does in its nonjudicial or non-condemning· capacity.
Those in favor of repressing the
drinking clause in the honour system
missed the point of the entire code.
Drinking, of course, has become blatant since the drinking clause has been
striken.
The Vodka bottles are not now (as
they used to be) kept either entirely
off the campus or neatly stashed deep
in one':> underwear drawer or UD in
the philosophy seminar room behind
By GEORGE WILLL\MSON
ONE OF THE AREAS in which·
Wake Forest College has made
significant progress is the program
for attracting good students, but
even so, this is probabey- the area
that has left the most to be done.
The fact is that many of the Colleges and Universities even in North
Carolina alone, have for so long
done so much more than we have,
and are continuing tO improve at
such a rate, that
the job of catchup seems aloverwhelm- ·
Honor
Kant or somebody, but square on the
dresser.
The point is, people were afraid to
drink while the honour code extended
to drinking. There were, believe it or
not, a few souls who threatened to
turn their fellows in if they happened
to see the evidences of drink around.
So may we say the same thing about
cheating. Because a few, maybe~more,
maintain that they abhor cheating and
will coldly turn in the next cheater,
cheating is kept to a comparatively
respectable minimum..
Thus, the honour code has its. unseea!ble effects. But there are some
who will someday pop up and say that
because the majority of students never
turn in cheaters, the students want
cheating and should therefore have
the cheating clause eradivated from
our code. Perhaps in the direction of
these latter we should direct our
deenly considered sneers, not in that
of the honour code.
KG, Jr.
'LET'S FACE IT
we need good
WILLIAMSON students. No institllltion of higher learning, regardless of the quality of its faculty
and administration or the quantity
of its physical assets, can lay claim
to significant academic achievement without a student bodry that
is both stimulated and stimulating.
Ideas that are· born in 'the class•
room will almost surely die unless
they are nurtured in the dormitory,
but this only comes when students
have that sort of intelligence and
that sort of interest.
IN REALITY it is the students
themselves who attract most other
students·, not the · faculty or the·
propaganda of the College.
It is the small percentage- of outstanding students in each high .
school . th11Jt point out the really
"good" colleges by their choices.
That is why we have so far to go,
because we have attracted so few
of the truly top students, and· be-cause the job of selling lies in the
hands of the student body, an unfortunate place for anythin~ to lie.
BUT NONETHELESS, the job is
ours, and unLess we· make some
headwary, even the funds and forces
of the Baptist Church and R. ·J.
Reynolds Tobacco Comparuy will not
be able to raise us from 1lhe. ranks
of just another colleg~.
Glad to see that the Legislature
hatchet man, Bruce Filer, has been
given a new assignment. LotS of.
luck to the folks in the snack shop.
A POINT OF VIEW I
By FRANCIS FENDERSON
team's reaction would have been.
SCHOOL SPIRIT IS A MYTH at
ONE THING IS FOR SURE, they
Wake Forest College.
would have played a- poorer game
On Fnduy night at seven o'clock
knowing only 54 of their fellow
there was a pep rally held in the
students cared enough to come and
generate a little pre--game . spirit.
gym and there were exactly 54
Saturday we play N. C. State (or
people there, includiD.g seven cheerleaders, ;the Demon Deacon, the
will have played it by the time you
band and Mr. Em·erson Head, and
read this), one of our biggest rivals.
I could probably list the other fortyA game which will be on a national
televised network, and still only a
one people if it made any difference.
handful came. But whether it is the
The cheerleaders went to all the
biggest game of the year or a
Virginia game(?), the response ·
trouble of wearing theiX unifonns,
the band went to
should be the same.
all the tronble to
What kind of a game does it
those instrutake to excite a school whose team
just a week ago led the Atlantic
ments up from
the basement of
Coast Conference in basketball. But
that handful who came to the rally
gym, and the
.ueac<m had to put
didn't go back to the dorms just
tails and top
. because there wasn't a large crovrd.
on.
Oh, no, they sta'Y'ed and held that
And those few
pep ralloy anyway.
(Editor's note: The following editorial was
them to dictate its editorial policy.
students who
AND EVEN THOUGH the few
written by John Alford, last year's. editor of
Every man who drops a nickel into
came probably
voices didn't crnake as much noise
Old Gold and Black. The editorial was singled
a newspaper rack on the corner downhad to give up
as an excited Carolina, or Duke
s o m e t hi n g to
out for high praise by Associated Collegiate
town isn't entitled to decide what
stand, they strained their few
FENDERSON come, but they
voices, and had what's almost
Press judges, who awarded the paper an Allshould be in a paper. Editorial opinion
didn't mind at all, because it was
never seen-school spirit .
.lmerican rating. Prompted by student remust be consistent. No newspaper
If a stranger had walked by and
all for Wake Forest and they are
action to the paper's stand on integration,
prints two editorials on the same subinterested in, and yes, even love
seen so few yelling for such a great
the editorial is particularly appropriate for
ject, one contradicting the other. If
Wake Forest.
and large sc·hool, I'm sure he would
reprint at this time.)
students don't agree with Old Gold's
BUT WHERE were the other 2000
'have thought it quite odd. It was
Old Gold and Black has been under editorial policy, they have the privior so students who always say
almost embarassing at the gym
fire recently for having presented the lege of saying so on the same page.
something like, "We can't ever win
when it first started and it was
any1Jhing, I don't understand./' Well
hard to have any, feeling at• all
facts of the student demonstrations at But to say that the editorial page is
except disappointment, but soon I
F. W. Woolworth Cdmpany. A n'i.Im'ber slanted is an inane observation .. It's ' I understand quite clearly.
If
some
of
those
who
always
comwas proud that some cared enough
of students and alumni have been dis- supposed to be slanted. And the clearfor Wake Forest College.
plain when A Wake Forest team
turbed t'hat Old Gold's editorial policy er its position, the better.
· SOME MAY THINK what I have
loses, and are always the first to
does not coincide with their own thinkFourth, Old Gold and Black is not
lap up the glory when it wins,
said has little meaning, perhaps
ing. vVe offer no apologies, but we an advertising pamphlet sent out to
the way I've said it doesn't, be-would take more interest in the
feel that perhaps an explanation of the good people of the state as a repreCollege and what it does,· then I
cause I just came back from the
Old Gold's editorial policy will cool sentative of the College. Students have
gy:m, and my blood hasn't calmed
believe sincerely we wouldn't have
from the disgust.
to worry so much about loosing.
a few tempers and may contribute to fumed that many persons reading Old
Oh, the team detennines to a
But it indicates a great deal
-the studen:t body's understanding of Gold and Black's editorial page have
gr.eat extent who wins or loses a
about our total c()llege personality,
~ur responsibility.
inferred every student at Wake Forest
ball game, but it makes it a heck
not only about pep rallies, and athFirst, Old Gold and Black does not is in favor of integration. If they got
Qf a lot etasiel' when they really
letic spirit; it shows a certain
ct'eate the .news. We are not respon- that impression, we're sorry. We don't
apath~ that hurts, and I'm almost
know ith.e whole student body is
sible for the actions of the ten Wake see the possibility in the near future,
unified behind them.
sorry I belong to a student 'body
Forest students who joined in a lunch however, of taking a poll of student
IT DOESN'T TAKE TOO MUCH
who doesn't have any more life, or
counter pr.otest two weeks ago. We opinion every time we ~re ready to
of anything to sit and watch a ball
iove, or intet~est, or school sph·it, or
garme, but :you· have to want to
whatever you want to call it.
do have a .·responsibility, however, to write an editorial. Even when we are
give a lot to have pep rallies, and
EVEN WHILE I WROTE this I
repo1t what happens. If students do sure, however, that the majority of
school spirit or whatever the stuff
heard a boy yell across to another
not like the pictures that app-eared on students will disagree with our ediis called. \
dorm and asked another if he went
the front page of last week's Old Gold torial policy, we go ahead anyway.
The basketball team was supPQsto the pep rally, and he yelled back
showing Negroes and whites together, We don't feel that our honest thoughts
ed to be at the pep rally Friday
and said, "Yeah, I went but only
we're glad. If they don't like the news on any subject should be subservient
about 20 showed up ..!.. this place
night, but their eating schedule or
stories that appeared on pages one to the c01mfort or convenience of alumsomething prevented them from atreally gripes me, it's dead, real
and t'i.Yo, we're glad. We don't write ni, emotional students or just anytending, and thank heavens it did,
dead, and I'm sick of it."
hecau::.e I for one would !l:ave Leen
Wake Forest College students can
the news; we merely renort, it.
body else as uninteresting. Our Job is
embarrassed at my own school's
produce _:more than they do; what
Second, Old Gold and Black does not to reflect students' opinion; it is to
apathy, and who knows what the 1 does it take to make them do it?
not write its own letters to the editor. attempt to guide it. We aren't supposLetters are sent to us by students; ed to act for anybody as a pulse to
teachers, alumni, and so forth. This what is happening here.
point seems simple enough but reBehind the criticism of Old Gold's
action to our letters column has indi- supposed infidelity to the facts lies
cated that student mentality is even simply the fear that the newspaper
lower than we had feared. Also we may have some influence. And its
print every letter to the editor we critics don't like that. It's influence is
receive. If it happens that every letter a threat to their own beliefs. If last
on the page is from a sympathizer week's issue of Old Gold had denouncwith the demonstrations. it is because ed the protests and had ardently supthose students who will rush into news- ported segregation, there would have
paper offices are not literate enough been no segregationists in the Old Gold
to write letters from the other point office last week. Old Gold and Black
of view. A number of angry, supreme critics don't want impartiality. They
whites have threatened to write. So want companionship in their ugly,
far, we haven't received a sin):!"le letter diseased belief in the inferiority of the
from them. But when we do, we'll black man, a belief to which they cling
print it.
' desoerately for their security. ,
Third. Old Gold and Black is not a
Old Gold and Black will continue
corporation. Students may pay for the to threaten that security by refusing
newspaper, but this doesn't entitle to print anything but the truth.
Is Old Gold Slanted?
-~Of4,
(Allie~~ ~·'ila~ ·~· i.Ut·*·;,;;
signed; Damn ·wiU be.. _wllldalll . ·
on request. SpeiUnc Uul paDCta·
:Get~
ation _.-e &he Wl'lten' owa.)
For
tihiing which approaclles school
To the Student Body:
spirit
a few times at Wake Forest
I .attended a sma.ll meeting toathletic contests. .But. this spirirt
nigtht of the student body of Wake
F.or-est College. 'r.his was meeting . came only at a time when we
designed to show our. basketball · were beating xxxx out of the ·o~
ponent-at a time when it was. not
team what we think· of 'them-:
NOTHING. At letast, it ·appears , so desperately needed as it is now.
At the time <>f this writing it .. is
tlkt this is ~he case. The meeting
unknown
who will win the Wake
was called a Pep Rally; it was held
Forest~N~ C.. State •contest. If we
.in the gymnasi.um.
lose it is deserved, even desirabl~;
It coultl more accm·ately have
I say desirable because perha:Ps
been called a meeting of Campfire
it will wake some people up
Girls; it could have heen lhe1d in · the fact that a team without student
{)ne of the utililly rooms sca.tte'red
ba!!kllng is ·notJhing. The players
around ·our campus. From the turnaren't <>ut there fo·r kieks; they're
out (some 20-odd .people)· it ap·
<loing a job which none of us can
pea<rs simply, that we don't want
do--win for W.ake Forest.
to' Wlin: any athletic honors, a.rud
OIIIJe more thdught-if Wake
thiat Wle £eel that the boys and
should win the NCAA ch!aml>ion·coaches representing Wake Forest
ship I· .guamnt~ that the OTHER
·College are idiots, playing chil· ·
1,980 studlents (those' wlh.o diid not
dren's games, wasting their thne
pa1·ticipa.te tOnight) · will take g-ood
1;_cpresenting us in a fi:eld of college · care o.f "their part in Winnling.'~
life in whi<lh we do not wish to
They wrlll be proud of their being
p.aJrtici.pate.
· students at Wake Forest College
Twenty people o:_ut of a possible
(something on~y twenty perSons
two thousand-atteinp1ling to "give
made 'Bipparent tonig:ht). They will
Wlith some school_spirit." The peoundoubtedly lmag_ 'laboolt their
ple in this Scllool ha'vlen't enough
school's greatness. They wi.H :have
spirit to win tiddly-winks tournano right to be proud, boasting. is
ment. And, this lack of school spirit
not a p11ivi1ege .belongoing to.' tlhem.
e:!dlend'S into everY' facet of this
Keith RiCJhards:
college's lJi.fe. I hav.e seen some·
Junior Class
·E
The 0
ed.a piol
tion "D(
!be distri
a
1
diaJyo!"
·
By MARY MARTIN
A professor was calling ·the roll
in his class one day, Miss ................ ,
Mr ................... , Mr................... , Miss
Jones. Miss Jones? Still, with no
reply, . be aslred, "Is Miss Jones
present?"
Replied a husky veteran, "Yes,
Miss Murphy.".
· Before the holidarys, all the stu·
dents were-naturally very eager for
the approaching day of "exodus."
One coed;· however, was excep.
tionally eager .to
get 'home; for the
two daoys before .
we got out, she
marked ea·ch
of these days
a separate
tion of a roll o{
toilet paper . . .
and each h o u r ·
she tore off
ther section
she boarded
plane.
PICKARD
·
Au though the Salemite.-Coed clash
rages on, a consoling comment (for
us) was made by -a male student,
who said that Salem's parlors reminded him of new England bars ..
Recently, there have been several
"blessed events" among the faculty, especially in the Religion de-partment. A group of students were
discussing this when one suggested
that we rename Faculty Row to
the "Fertile Crescent."
PICKABD
I
.
.
Speaking of Kismet, during one
of the performances, a coed in the
audience elbowed her friend and
ca
Monday.
day.
The dJ
to Tuesd
reaction
move.
·Oasua
lillalrks ,
<kmis,bl
tervi:ewe
ing choi•
day con
d.a.te.
-Ja.n: H
boro, sa.i
idea .to
up- a. d~
weekend
-JOO!l
Hyatlf!'vi
"I want
M.onday.
,
like thad
Bill
I
said, "I
to
ha.ve
daiyi•. J'm
statu q 1
Bill N«
was tot
time to
think th.
up.'' ,
CharIE
· said, "I d.reame(l I was· in Kismet
in my Maidenform· bra:'"'
The other day, a student ~as
walking by Ben's when he noticed
two students acting in a rather
peculiar manner. A boy was rwriaging through a garbage can; who,
upon finding various items, passed
them' to hiS friend, seated· on a
bench; she, in turn, assorted them
on tl!e bench. The passer-by, somewhat amazed, hollered, ~~That's all
. right, Buddy, the caf~teria hasn't
'closed yet." ' ,
Elkin, N
not slll'le,
is any 1
thoink th«
ingout
ca.use yo
~k~
in tlhe co
Jlobn
Renders•
to a chla
"While <Us cussing the Cuba. situation, one student offered this solution to his friends, "I think we
should just send the Nautilus down
there one night, tie a rope around
the island, and tow it out to the
middle of the Atlantic."
he said.
no
~·ease
The co
\••
A group of high school students
were touring the campus; while
milling in the book store, they
caused much excitement among
the clerks. A student patiently stood
by, waiting to be helped, when one
of the clerks finally spotted him
and said, Oh,, is he one of OURS?"
were ,m;:
Elean
Lumberb
,time be<
Sunday
wthen yo
d~te. l
wru-d tq.
Q
Ruth
pressed
ain!d Blac
reoally do·
out, buot
staff) 01
ha;ir.''
Leila
thoughot
for Tt.iel
In the last' edition .of this pape:r
Christmas, there was prettY
much advise on heing careful on
the highways. Ironically enough,
·about two minutes after havingsent that particular edition of the
paper to. the printers, the editor
was cited for reckless driving.
~fore
regul:air •
it on S•
on ·Tues
the pap
With the cool breeze becoming
A group of girls were huddled
more fierce, several coeds have
about a table in the soda shop,
donned kniee socks to combat the
having the usual coke and convercold. One girl became very upset • sation. before class, when · a boy
on the daoy She wore her brown
walked up and sat down with them.
knee socks. She lamented, ''Every
One of the girls asked, "Oh, ............ ,
· time I pass by someone, they give
d() you know all of these girls?" He
me the Brownie ~alute." ·
answered, "In tbe Biblical sense?"
There were a few critical remarks made about the thea:tre's
recent production of "Kismet" . . .
wonder what would be said if the
theatre put on "Irma la Douce".
The p
pBpfll"
to
MAGNOLIA LEA-VES
1
:tQ slludt
rais:ecl v
good.''
Anne
C'hla<rlottl
keep it 0
on Sun&
In a grocery store . out in Reynolda recently, a student saw a
little boy staring up at the flower
counter. The little one nudged his
mother and asked, "What are these,
Mommy?" She replied, "Those are
geraniums." Her son then said,
"Oh, that's what they make atom
bombs with!"
•
'
the pap
tlhe poape
that WOl
of .the
have tha
The s<
when Rt
Gold ami
the -outc·
f~et
a d
said, "0,
Monday'
Ya. like
iit'll como
Adual
made·un
cation B·
Boiard m~
cuss the
light of:
tribution
The o
in the ne
Man, This Studying Gets_ Rugged
Cot.
Pre
,.
James
of the C
da'Y' that
pay shOll
ble.
He nob
WEEK~
RAY ROLLINS
CHUCK JONES
Editor
Business Manager
THE LJ
BE FORI!
ER REC
PREl
STUDEN
TION. T.
Studen1
time du:
tion. Pa;
Office is
Founded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and
Bbck is published each Monday during the school year except during examinaltion and
holid~F
periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.
;
BREm' FILSON
Associate Editor
KELLEY GRIFFI'ffi
Assistant Editor
LYNNE SMATHERS
Ma~ging
Editor
CAROLYN YOUNG
Assistaut Editor
JIM BA'ITERSON
Sports Editor
FRANK LORD
Circulation Manager
[
SPORTS STAFF: Ernest Accorsi, Barr Ashcraft, Bill Bentz, Dave Forsythe, Jack Hamrick.
1\lember of bbe ~ated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertiSii.ng by National Advertising Service, lnc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Second-Class mail privi,
leges aut;hQrized at· Winston-Salem, N. C.
Offices In Beynolda Hall 225·227
Telephone PArk 5-9711
P. 0. Box 75~
"Extension 215
Reynolda Branch
Winston-Salem. N. C.
Hi I
'
. !
,.
..
938
-
c::· ~;:u~a";'fY :, 'I· ott otherC~pilses .. ·I ,...-----.. .
'(} · GiJid.;,Q · . · .
j:r.,;
'
ForB~B~::e:;LSoN
..
hool
Jrest
pirilt
we
I
~ake
E we
~bl~~
lia~
j
to
dimt
yers
y're
can
r.a.ke
donIER
not
~ood.
lg.'~
einJg
liege
SODS
·will
heir
Jave
g. is
-1
;met
~as
iced
ltber
nagwho,
a
hem
Jmes all
!Isn't
ituasoluwe
lown
ttund
the
\
[lODg
>tood
. one
him
lS?"
a per
retty
1 on
•ugh,
ldled
!hop,
1verboy
llem.
Hoo•••o,
"He
se?"
Reya
ower
·
OLD'· GOLD. AND BLACK
MoJ~daT,
Jan. 16, lHl
PAGE FIV&
WA·KE.. FO,REST l: A.f. UNDRY
'
·
)
'
l his
llese,
~are
said,
atom
Students Play
Dangerous Game
At Post Office. ·
Cook Urges_
rrena'tl'ment
r
if
Volleyball Tourney
DALTON-HEGE, .Inc.
Hi Fi arid Amateur Equi-pment and Suppli~s
1
,...
KIT.FOIUI OR FACTOR~ WI!'J.:D
938 BURKE STREET
WINSTON-SALEM, N.
• VISIT OUR SHOWROOMS •
c.
·
'
·
AND CLEANERS
d
'
<)-.
Our Main Office Ia Located In Tbe Basement Of Taylor Dormitory. It Ia Here For·
Your Convenience And Satisfaction And Will Offe~ 1 ,)'ou The Beat And Quickeet
Service Available.
·
·
Mon. Thru Fri. Open 1:30 Till5:30 - Sat. Close All•
SPECIAL SE.RVICE
..
We Will Remain Open Dliring The Mid-Semesters Break
For Your Convenience.·
OUR SERVICES. INCLUDE
·
.
~
ditor
g.
LW
.'
• FllmHWMI
• DRY WASil
• FOLD DRY
• DRY CLEAIIII
Nlw! Pressing While-U-Wait On Dry Cleaning
Laundry Will Be Picked Up In Dorms On Monday and Will Be Back by Thursday
OUR NEW AUTOMATIC SHIRT PRESSER
.. PERMITS FASTE·R AND BEnER QUALITY PRESSING
.to
Lents
vhile
they
'the
·B~~!;!~TG!~:~
·
Dint'BS.
ssed
Lving'
. (['~
D lmes
.
D TI_Ve
•
Ge"t8 $1 '.0'
lelll.
~n
.
.
.. .
Davidson's Drinking Problem
action. He said: tblait he object.s to
The Old Gold 1311ld Black conduetr
The Davidsonian, the Davidson "giving up the ideal of enforceed a :p~oll Fridlay ntght on the qu.es- College student newspaper, con- ment."
·
tion "D.o you want tlhe Old Gold bo ducted a poll last month which.
SWT Talks Turkey
lle distributed Mon'dia.y or on fue&- shO'W'ed that l1be . coll~ge drinking
Southwest Texas State College
1
dJa,yl?"
.
policy is ineffective.
jn San Mar<ios, Texas, has as many
• 1 The poll was made ·in respMllle
The poll was ·similar to anOOher colleges aCl'oss bhe Illation, reee.ntly
tO stJU.de'llll; criticisms: which w.ere one taken by "The Dav.idsonialn" raised the tuition. The student legisraised when the last issue of the _Jn 1956. The 1957 p~ll sqowed 24 lature held a special ~n~eeting to
paper- came out Twesday instead of per-eent~ in fav{)r .of the drJnking discus-s investigating the rise in
Monday, the regula'l" distrlbu.tJon rule and 76 · peroent . opposed. tuiti'on. A committee was appointect
day.
.
.
·
\
Fig'llres :f!OT 18.Sit month's poll ~re to investigate tlhie tuition.
The dlay of issuari.ce: was moved 1:! per cent for the 88 pe'I"i:ant
The newspaper reports that the
against.
"only other bit of important Senate
to Tuesday in order to test student
b .
he
.1.
•
usmess"
wta:s t
.i;nvestigl!lltion
of
reaction to tr"
pr'oposed
perman-ent • "Drinking is none Qf the ool1ege's "th
f
•t
·
d!amn hu.sdness.~· wt'{)ite,Q.ne student.
e easabili y of a caieterm run
move.
Those 19 ·perc-t who indicated by a national catering service."·
· OasUJal indifference and witty re......
0
k
'11
th!ey drink -on ithe campus said tlhey
ne senatoo.- remar ed Ln. 1 usmarks we:11e mad~ by some stut t·1
·
'I ·
dents, but overall the ~;>t'udents .in- were able to .gelt away with it in ra ng a pomt, ' dii.d~t see any
terviewed sh()wed an over wtbelm- fraternity! houses, dorm rooms, the thing W'l"Q/IJJg with our Thanksgiving
·lot i8Jnd a J"anitor's clOSiet.
d,ill!ner--wemers and L'!Oast beef.''
ing choice in favor of having Mon- .n.a.rking
..day continued as .the distribution
The student and adrm:inistration
School Faces Crises
da.t
. Leiaders met 1;1} strike the "und·er
Central State College of Edmond,
.J~· HtenSiey, a senior of <keens- tlhie influence" cla.use, which stated Oklahoma, is presently feeling the
boro, said "I think that iUs 18. good that no student could ~ caught on press~ of a crises in shOO:tage of
idea .to move the dislributiro.n d:at~ campus under the influences of funds and space-=-a national prob:
up a day. There might be more •alcohoJ, witb mixed feelings. Presi- Iem.
.
weekend l!ew~."
.
. dent of the college, D. <frier MarDr. Garland Godfrey, president
· J0071 N:orzn.an, · a senior of tin, w.as not pleased with the of llhe college, se.ill that the college
Hyat~ille, Md., felt dif:ferenttly.
:is Operating O<'n less money per
"I want the paper .to come ''Out ()]L
student than any other college in
M.onday. Heck; I'm just used: to it
·the state---;ilnmst less than any in
like that."
the nation.
Bill Wtatson, of Atlain:ta, Ga..
~a
Tile present crisis is in obtaining
said, "I thirik we slboulid continue . .
t.J~
. :funds for summer school. ''Unless
to ba.ve .the 'paper eome· ou.t Mon.Central Sta.te College gets addition•
daly!. I'm a cotl.\!>erV:ative. I Uke the
Becky McDonald, who this p.a.st al funds by June; 1961~ it mil be
statlloS' quo. I'm from Atl~ta.''
semester was ca.u~ht up in l:he. impossible for us to bave summer
Bill Nelson, of Chevy Olui.se, Md., Young Democrats Clu.b whirlwind school this year," Godrfrey "Said.
was Ito the point. "Y{)u ·have .m'Clre campaign .for president-elect John
W.ith a 20 percer1t jwnp in entime to :read rit Sunday ~gib:t, I F. Kennedy, lis now directing cam· rollment i:n tbe last year, the colthink th~ dlate shouldn't be moved. padgn strategy for the local cha.pte'r lege is rin dire need of tt!a.abers and
up. •• .
of the Mareh of
,space. The schools is also plagued
Charles J<Jihnson, a. senior of
Miss McDonald is serving as with imiJdJequate heating and. veniElkin, N.c., had more to say. "I'm cha.i:r.qla.n.of the Street Solicitations Jation in some buildd-ngs.
·
not Slll'ie," said Johnson, "that :there Committee and .is a member of the
Who's Got The Hanky
is . any real difference. Bu.t I do Board of Directors of the local
The students from Fordham Colthink the f.act that lt.lle pialper com- chapter. "
lege gave the elective body, the
ing olllt oO!Il Monday was good heOn Saturday, Jian. 7, the tom- College Oongress, power to veto
cause you can review the previ~ mittee, with Mis-s M-cDonald in rulings of the University Student
week and also see what w.ill happen charge, collected $1,058.77 in street Council.
in tlb.e coming week." :: .·
.solici:tiations, ·llJio-re. than was col·
The .Student Council, whiah con.fuhn Woodlie, sophomore of lected ;in the ent.ire ~onth last year. sists of th~ fiv;, undergradllll;!e s~u­
Henderson, expressed indli:fference
The,street s-obcttati.ons Lake place dent ~CJIUllcils,_ got together With
tet a chang~e. "I re1aUy don't care," each Saturday during the month of the v1ce-pres1den~ Of th~ . stu.<Lent
he said. "I perfer Monday.:._rea.Jly Jianu!tty. The M.ar:rch of Dimes drive pevsonnel ~d dJec1de~ that~he_ S~u­
no teason though."
.
began on Jan. 1 and will end Jan. ~ent C.ou'nC'Il had ennnnent. jurisdieThe coeds reac.ti()ns
the CihJange 31 w.ith the Mo.ther's March.
ti<liil! ove: adl -organizatiOns, the
were .more llpeciLic. .
'\:vorkers who soLicited dontations College mcluded.
Eleaiilor Allen, ·a sophomoOTie of on the .streets ()f ·wi.nston-Salem
Tht College Congress viewed the
Lumberton, said, "I like the regulia:r Jan. 7 were .members of TAP, the situatiQ-n as~ threat to its e:lcisten;time beCiawe I Like to read it on city's Teen Age ProgTa:m.
ce, ·and a.cqu!lred the veto power by
\••
Sunday night. It is nice to . read
Elach Saturday the street sollici· a student vote.
>vlhen you come in from church or ta#ons Wlill be made .by a. specific
And Then There Was ..•
s d~te. Iti; som1e.thi.ng to look for- group. or organization. The Ameri·
The d~y s.t~dents: orf Sial~ ,Colward tq.
can Legion and the Exchange club leg1e held! them:- aillliUJ&l Chnstmas
Ruth Nichols, of Burlear, ex- are two of the or.ga.n.izatiQ-n.s help- tea, Dec. 12, fr?~ 3 t? 5 p. m ..
:pressed concern for the Old Gold ing wi_th ·the solicitations.
Faculb~n, admm1Stration and stuan!d Black staff in her .answer. "It
Miss McDonald said that she was dents attended.
real'ly doesn't matter when dt comes very ·pleased with the success of. . . Russian tea land homemad'e rookout, but it g1ives you (the Old Geld TAP :in making its solicitations on, ll!S were served.
staff) one moce day. -to tear your Jan. 7. Slhe .is d!oing this work "be·
h2;ir.''
cause I fLnKl :the program very es·
Leila Kassir, of Bagdlad, Iraq, sential to medical Tesearch. The
thought less of the s·taff and more most important scientific discoveri·
for TUesday's chapel. "I like t!he es ma-de in the Last decade were
regular day, because we can read made possib1e because of grants
it ~n Sund1ay night. H we get tt from the National March of Diines
on ·Tuesday, -everyone wo,uld read foundation."
the paper in chapel. That's :not
Miss . McDonal·d ;is ·a member of
o-ood ''
the Board of DirectoTs of the looai
., _ru;_ne Diehl, a sophomore of c~pter of Lhe MaiDch of Dimes.
Chlarlo.tbe, said, "I w'ould like t()
,.
keep iJt; on M(}nda.y. U suaJ1y I study
on Sunday afternoon and then 'read
the paper Sud!nay night. Also if
tlhe paper w~uld come out Tuesday,
that wo-uld he right in the middle
of .the week land you wouldn't
have that much time to read it.''
The scOr-e ~vas nine to one. And ·A "dla,ngerous" game was plaYed
when Rlay RolUns, editor of Old dn .the dB!tnopus Post. Office iust
Gold and Blaek, was asked whether after Uhie holidays,-· Bostmaster F.
the -outcome of the poll ·would af· E. Oarson no-ted !aslt week.
.
feci a decis.io!Il on .tlh.e· matter he
Va.nd!alism, Cars.o.n noted. And as
said, "0. K. ·yla want it to come out ~ result stud!ents may los·e night
Mond~&y "! J.t'll eome out Monday. mail p11iviLeges. It .almost hiappened·
Ya like it better th!ait way? 0. K. two y.ears ago wihen someo~e was
at'll come =t M-onday!
·
pi1ferilng boxes.
Aetually,. a dec.ision will not be
Ca.rso.n. expliadned a. lal'ge basket
made ·until a etall meeting of Publi- with easto'I's was placed in the
cation BOiaiJ."'d today at 4 _p. rn. Pub Pos.t Offioo :to be used as an
Boiard members are expeeted to :Jis- extra trash container beca.u.se of an
cuss the isswe. thorO!U:ghly tin the overflow' of mail.
light of reaction to the delayed· disS()meone went foc a ride almost
tribution llast week;
ilnto a set of dauble doors and
The outcome w.ill be announced alniost into the aims of a post
. lin the next issue of the paper.
office i.n.specto'I", calLed in after\\'lard to -inViestigate.
·
The dio(}r, Carson said, was almost !oroed open. "Someone ls
abo;ut. to be in· real tr-ouble.''.
0
The Colle~ wi1:J. repair the doOI"
·but officiail.s issued B> warning to.
'J ' ~
' .. ' : ·Stud~nts to "think" 'before destroyJames Cook, assistant treasurer ing propel"Y' and privileges.
of the College, re-emphasized .. Frida<y that students planning to prepay should do so as soon as possible.
The annual :mixJed volleY!ball tourHe noted, in' capital letters: THIS n81I1l~nt will begin Wednesday, Feb.
WEEK AND NEXT WEEK Ali.E 3. Team entries must be turned in
THE LAST REMAINING DAYS no later than MondlllY, Jan. 23.
BEFORE THE SPRING SEMESTEntries may be turned in to Dr.
ER REGISTRATION.
, Dodson or Miss Casey in the PhyPREPAYMENT WILL SAVE sical· Education office or to Marion
STUDENTS TIME AT REGISmA- Cheek or Jess Jackson.
TION. TAKE ADVANTAGE.
A team must consist CJif at least
Students who prepay will save 3 girls and 3 boy.,s. Rules pertaining
time during the ·actual registra- to play will be ~plaiDed ~d given
tion. Payment at the Treasurer's to eiuih team entered in the tournameh'f:
· ·~
Office is el.i!lll!inated entirely.
ABBOCIA'fE EDIT~R
, OP-;
;.not
now.
it .. ia
. .., .
r____..._..........iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil:iii···.:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
l
~
. .·
The Grand European Tour For 1961
VIS·IT 10 COUNTRIES
· 2 Nights in Lucerne .
2 Nigh.ls in Venice ·
4 Nights in Paris .
2Nights in Florence
3 Nights in London
4 Nights in Rome
TilE NEW CARINTHIA
For the moderate price of $93'5.00, you can enjoy 31
wonderful d!ays in Eiurope. This price includes roundtrip transatlantic transportation from New York City,
lots· of sightseeing from a sc·enic bus, ~and three meals
daily everywhere except in Paris and in Rome where
luncheon is omitted to allow free cl10ice of excellent
restaurants. You sail to Europe aboard the luxury liner
NEW CARINTHIA and return via KLM JET.
.RESERVAT·IONS SHOULD
BE MADE AS. SOON
AS POSSIBLE!
IF INTERESTED PLEASE FILL IN COUPON AND MAIL IT TO
MR. 1\IARK REECE
BOX 7225 REYNOLD A ST.\ TION
WINSTON-SALEM. NORTH. CAROLINA
IStudent's Na==-=-=-=-=-=---=-----
Student's Address ----------------·---'-------·-----·----------·--------------------------- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --1
ADEPOSIT OF
:s150.00 IS REQUIRE'D
WITH RESERVATION!
PAGE SIX
Monday, .Ja.n. 11. 1911
'Blind'
To Lead
The Blind
OLD GOLD AND ·BLACK
Kerrmit
.THE (Ql~.EG~5 JNN· RBliiJIJ~J::~·;.
.
• • •
AND
.
-
SPAGHETTI HOUSE
·~OLI)A~.·
f1
~·
By FRANCES BURNS
By the end of this Summer eight
yoting men and women, made
"Sightless" by blinders on the Boston College campus, will be walking downtown streets with chestSo WE7{E OUT liT
IINP WE PVI.. t.,
-rwo GIRLS IN E8c.H
so 1.
tN ONE
fJI'i TIW RRt I
high canes, and going swimming
5TRLEY'S -No NOT
'N 8/:TIVGEN
CIU~. -II REIIL fi.Dl.D
LO$J:RS- BUT HE
without being able to see what they
C.AR
111\11> H£ MOiES
THE ONE ON REYMJLJ)IJ,,, Tile Two r~~rs...
are doing.
lnJfV~ •• ONE CLUB
SWRfS \UITII1WO
IN_ 9~ TilE oTIIER ,,,
In their own temporary blindness
J.Q:)f(ERS ...
Uley will be headed for an entirely
new profession with even a new
name coined from the Greek.
~
The profession is "peripatology,"
made up of three words meaning
"study how to walk around."
.
~The aim is to train sighted men
and women bow to teacb mobility
and security of movement to the
blind and blinded and to develop
their other senses to the utmost
to compensate for tbe lack of
So UIE HOP JN WITtf
'OtAT!s THE I!IIIY IT
sight.
TtleM
-WE
G-oT
IP€'ftS,
WAS WITtf TlfEM.,,
Supported by the Federal govern~"f WE FfftJR.~ tMEiL.
ment, the couse opens June 2:7. It
•••TWO No-TRUMP"
Is spoDSOred by 39 leaders in eduPUtY IT COOL"'
cation, philanthropy and blindness
all over the countrtY.
Classes will be held at Boston
College graduate department of
·education in Chestnut Hill. Training will be with patients, 15 to 70
years at St. Paul's Rehabilitation
Center, Newton, under Rev. Thomas Carroll.
First Efforl of Kind
"The college"' said Rev. Charles
Charlotte: Observer was recently edited Old Go(}ld in 1944, i.s currently tJo the publication here a.t Wake
By. CAROLYN YOUNG
F. Donovan, S. J., "is accepting
filled by L. M. Wright Jr., who direc.tor of <the Wake Forest College Forest.
tbe challenge in the field of educa, ASSISTANT EDITOR
eddted Old Gold ·in 1952-53. Wright News Burearu. Before acceptJing tbds
Two former editors are now vicetion for the benefit of the handiDuring t'he 45 ~rs since its has also senned on the staff of the ))'Osition, be Slerved as managing presadents of bo<ltk publishing com·
capped both as a moral and real- first p-ublication on J"anwary 15, Richmond Td.mes•Dispatdh, Rkh- editor of :the Durham M'C)l'lling panies. Th,ey are J. A. :Me.Kaugha!n,
istic means of salvaging humanity." 1916, Old Gold and Black has con- mond, V:a., and was awarded a Nie- Herald and .as oity editor of the 191'7-18, and Gec>rge Ritte!lhouse,
The course's coordinator is Joseph trihuted a;t 1etast 28 of ~ts editors man Fellow a;t Harv.ard :for further Concord Tribllillle.
wlho was Old Gold's editor in HH6Runci, graduate of Boston College to the f.ield of joru.rn~a1ism.
s.tudy in journalism.
T.he A.ss<J~Cia,ted Press in Kansas 117.
School of Social Work,. who. will
Some have gone into rePQrting
In addition to the furmer editors City, Mo., is edited by Robert S.
Old Gold and Black has won an
te_ach one cl~ss. F~de~Jck Silver and have ;risen to positd<ons as working more OT less locally, there Gailimbre, who was one of three All-Americam rating-the highest
will ~ U:Clmical a1d director.
editors. Others ventured into the are man~ followdng joumalistie Old Gold edit<>rs in 1942-43.
i.t can possdbly eia:rnlr-for 13 out of
Applications for the federally sup- publishing f.ield At least one has pursuits in diverse parts of the
The 1941-42 edit()r, T. W. Ayres, the Last 15 semesters. Last year
ported places in the initial program written a. bOOk ·
countcy.
once served. with the foreign news it was named secom.d -best of all
now are being received and those
'
·
Virginian Pilot Staffers
service Ln China.
college newspapers in the South.
selected will be announced at the
One has -only to glance at tlhe
end of next week.
IJ11:ges of newspapers_ which serve
Datn Poole, 1954-55, and his preBrissie, Kelley
From the evidence it seems that
First effort of the kind to be th1s area to find eVldence of the deceswr Wilired Wiruitead are both -Eugene Briss.il!l, 1940-41, has good college editors make good
undertaken in a college or uni- wherea~ts .of former Wake reporters for the Norfolk Virgini- worked. for the Raleigh News and professional reporte:rs.
verslty teaching will follow plans Forest JOU1'llahsts.
an-Pilot in Norfolk, Va.
Observer. George Kelly, w!hio pre-,
develoPoo when war-blinded were ·The words "By Hannah Miller"
The greatest 24-hour snow faU
Befm-e god:ng into public re1a- eeeded him, worked for the Norbeing re-trained at valley Forge are often ~serted under stories in
folk Vkginlia.n-Pilot.
known in the Unl1;e4 States dumped
ti!ons,
Neil
Gabbert
worked
for
Hospital and at Avon Old Fai'IDlS the Charlotte Observer. Hannah
The Richmond Times-Dispatch 76 inches oa Silver Lake, Colorado,
daily papers in Kenlbucky and Tennear Hartford, Ct. '
was Old Gold editor in 1958-59.
.and the Washington PDst both em- in Aprll, 1921.
Desse€. He was one of Old Gold's
At the latter location the blinded
Three Wlth Journal
ployed. Ray Ntman, editor in 1938,
were taught to go freely about the
The period from 1955-58 has con- co-,editors in 1951-52.
before his death.
,
"The
Mumci'Pal
South.''
a
magaREYNOLDA GaJLL
intricate paths and roads of the tributed three staff members to the
C!h:M'les
Trluebltood,
1935-36,
and
Home of Plza l'ie
private school modeled on an old Winston-Salem Journal. Charles zine publislhed in Charlotte, was at Da~ Movgan, 1937-38, have both
Specializing 1D • • •
English castle.
Newman, 1955-56, Lioyd Preslar, one .time edited by Dave Clark, who been employed as newspaper reIiallaa s.-alleMl
"We want tbis program to get 1956·57 and B1ll Coxmelly, 1957-58 cO'headed Old Gold in 1950-51. He porters si!noe leaving Wake Forest.
Charcoal SCealal
off to a good starl with tbe ablest are all presently emp].{)oyed with al<S'o served as v:ice-president of a.
Norris In Chlcago
publishilng company unthl he enter853 ReYJlolda Rd.
candidates possible," commented the .JournaL
Another recipient of the Nieman
Prof. Runci.
The city editor's chair at the ed law school.
A ward is Hoke Nottis, w!ho edited
Hensley In Charlotte
Bill ~ensley, 1949-50, served on Old Gold in 1932-33. He bas· servthe staff of ·the Asheville Citizen ed on the staffs of several papers
and a.s Sports Publicity Director at and was wdth the AP in Raledgh
Wake Focest College and North for a time. He was serving on the
Cax-ollna State University before W.inston-Salan Jollmal staff alt; 'bhe
,,·,
beComing pulJJic relations director time of hds award and is currently
•i
w:ith tfue Chiclligo Sun-Times.
of a Charlotte firm.
.j
Newspaper ed.itO!r turned author
Bynum Shaw (1947-48) served
was W. J. Cash, who headed. Old
on a Nrorfolk paper for a while.
A bl'ief stay at the Winston- Gold in 1922-23. Oash, who wrote
Salem
Jou:rn1al was :n ::tore for The Mrlnd of the Soutlh, is now de,__ •·,.
Betty Horsley, who edited Old Gold ceased.
Edwin Holman, 1921-22 is editoT
in the spr.ing of 1945. She is now
----- ~_.,
of AP .i;n Atlanta, Ga. He has also
Mrs. .roe Pena.
Another female editor-the first served as Managfu!g editor of the
Of her kind-wol'ked for a· time on WdnstDIIl-Salem J o-lll'llal and as city
the JoU!l'nal. She is Mar.tha Ann editor (Jf t'he Charlotte ObServer.
Dr. E. E. Folk, "19
1\.llen, now Mrs. James R. Turnage,
Dr. E. E. Fclk, eddtor of Old
who was Old G-old cditDr !;n 1943Gold in 1919 is serv.ing journalism
44.
in a different way. He ds a.n ProNews Bureau Director
Russell H. Brantley Jr., who fessor of journalism and advJsor
,,
move
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'YIE'WING'
the.DE'AC$
Deacs
Han
The
University of Nor.t:ll Carolina
Tar Heels, evidently suffering no
ill effects ·from the recent ·oneyear
probation period imposed upon
By JIM BATTERSON
them 10 hours before game'time by
'. SPORTS EDITOR
the NCAA, lmocked the Demon
Deacons out of first place in the
Assistant Sports.EditOr Jack Hamxick, who ~ent down Atlantic Coast Conference by handto Chapel Hill for. the Deacs' game with Carolina last ing them their first conference loss
Tuesd·ay~ came up with an interesting little anecdote in six games, 83-74.
Seeking revenge for last year's
about the game. While sitting around t'he press box humiliating
defeat at tb:e hands of
list~:qi~g t~ the usuar pre-game chatter, he happened to, the Deacs, So-69, (The Tar Heels
:tiear the reporter Ii.ext to him say something to the led by seven points at halftime in
effect that the odds-makers ~'are giving it to them by that game) the Heels won tlie open9 points." .Jack, though as pat'riotic a Deacon rooter as ing tap, but the game sta~d ·off
one will find anywhere, assumed that it was Carolina rather slowly with no points being
w'hich was being referred to, and later on, .in the gatfne, scored until nearly two minutes
elapsed. Doug Moe broke the
when Carolina had opened its lead to 9 points, Jack had
ice With a soft jumper from way
turned to the·fellow and said, "Well, there's your nine out to give ,Carolina the lead at 2..().
·.points." To Jack's .surprise, he replied, "Yeah, its too The Deacs, however, ·came right
bad the score's the other way around." Whoever made back to ti<e the score at 3-3 on a
· tho8e odds must have taken a killing.
·
'jumper by Alley Hart; and within
Wake Forest was playing a ver:y good ballclub Wed- 90 seconds Wake· spurted to a six
nesday night. Eve.Jl 'Coach Bones McKinney had been ' point advantage with two overhand
. willin~ to concede that it wo'uld ta~e some doing to 'beat ; layups .by Billy ·Packer and :two
jump shots by Hart and big Len
the Tarheels. As it was t'he Deacs put u.p a gallant fight Chappell.
in the second ~alf coming within .two points of the CaroAt
point Carolina's guards,
lina club just aro~nd:the eight minute mark. However, York Larese and Lam Brown, a
ilhat was as close
J;hey got to the vaunted Tarheels. reserve who didn't :even start, · got
Bones Knew What To Expect
to work and pumped in 16 points
Carolina's strong points were no secret to Bones Mc- between them in the next seven
Kinney an4 his club. The first thing they had 'to do was · nl:iD.utes to lead Carolina to an ll
stop the Tarheels off the boards. This they did pretty point advantage, During 'this period
Deacs were able to manage only
successfully-out-reboundjng the Tarheels 36-35.. A. tb!e
two field goals and three free
second problem was 6-4 foot g:\lard York Lar~se, Caro- . tJ:U-o:ws,
and they :were not able to
lina's top scorer,. who was paired off with 5-11 Billy cut the margin appreciallely durPacker. Packer, according to McKinney, "played Larese ing the · remainder of th<e fni.tial
exactly the way we asked him to, but didn't get the 'help period. '
After intermission Wake Forest
he should ha.ve gotten." Larese ended up with 26 pointS
as '8. result, .but that was still a great deal less than . began to whittle away at.Carollna's
lead, and at one point the De~cs
might 'have 'been expected.
'
pulled to within four points ~f. the
A third problem which confronted the 'Deacs was Heels,
but it :was not until midwa~
defensing the Tarheels. McKinney had cooked up some of the final stanza that ''Bones"
special defensive measures for the Tarheels before the McKinney's charges really threw a
game, but as it was .he had to fall back on the man-to- scare into the partisan, capacity
.man which the Deacs had .been using all year, ·hut with _crowd at Woollen Gymnasium; With
some shortcomings. Nonetheless, after having analyzed 10:40 remaining in the 'game, UNC
. the gtame on films afte~ards, McKinney felt the Deacs led by seven, but Ted Zawacki
-
-
-
'OLD GOLD AND BLACK:
\_
'
·Lose .To Carolina,:.· (J'/l~_7.4.
Honda7, .Jan.
d First ACC Loss
16,
PAGE
1!161
SEvE!If
Aganl For
JOHN ROBERTS
WAKE FOREST RINGS
PRIO·ED TO FIT YOUR BUD.GET
'
S25.00·
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as
had "played better defensively."
1
As it turned out, it was W·ake's Offensive play that
was' so costly. ·McKinney's philosophy on offense is fairly
simple. As he puts it, "You do this, I don't do that."
Translated this means that a team1s offensive measures
should. be varied according to the type of def.ense thrown
up against it. Wake in the first half didn't~djust well to
Carolina's defense.-·For one interval of seven minutes,
the Deacs were able to get only one basket. Carolina in
the meanwhile forged a big lead, so big a one that t'he
'Deacs had less than a prayer o·f catching up.
One of the brighter aspects of the game was the play
of Ted Zawacki, who has as the year's gone on figured
more and, more heavily in Mclnnney's plans scored 7
points and did a fine job off the boards though he played far.less t'han half the game.
· According to McKinney, Zawacki first ·distinguished
himself in the Dixie Classic against State, "whe:re he
· did exactly what I asked him to." ·Zawacki has been
coming along ever since.
. Zawacki is not fast, but he moves well on the court,
and always is in the right place at the .right time. His
greatest asset, however is his shot, a jumper released
almost 1behind 'his head whicn is very hard to block.
Zawacki as a matter of fact was high scorer for the
freshmen last year with a 17 point average. If he gets
his confidence up, he could turn out to be quite an asset
for th~? Deacs in the scoring department.
--
Athletic Director Bill Gibson recently announced the
football schedule for next year, and its a beauty. Florida
State and LSU have been dropped to make way for Baylor and Auburn. Both these teams were ranked in the
top ten at one time or o1fuer this year and Baylor got a
bid to the Gator bowl. The Deacs play Baylor in its opener Sept. 23 and Auburn Nov. 4. Put together with traditional rivals, Duke, Clemson, ail.d North Carolina, they
will make up a pretty formidable array of foes for
Coach Billy Hildebrand and gridiron Deacs.
24.HOUR ·
SERVICE
PACKER scores on a hook shot in the Wake-Carolina
.
connected on a charity toss and
Chappell ·and Har:t scored four
:points within 10 seconds to cut the
margin to a meager two points.
The Deacs, however, were not able
to close the gap a:n:v more; and the
Tar Heels, le(fby Larese's 9 points
in the last six minutes of play
gradually pulled away to a nine
'Point victocy.
Both teams·· put on an excellent
exhibition of field goal shooting.
throughout the game, with Caro,lina coming out on top with 50.9%
'to Wake's 48.9%. The Tar Heels
took six more_ shots from the floor
than the Deacs did and hit on four
more. lli the rebounding department Wake Forest pulled down
more than the Tar Heels.
'Larese copped high scoring honors ·
for th:'night with 26 points, many
of which came on shots near the
basket where McGuire had moved ,
him to force Wake's hotshot guards
Hart and Packer to come in from
the outsid'C. Doug Moe and Jim
Hudock contributed 19 and 14 points
respecrtively. Len Chappell led the
losers with 24, and Billy Packer
followed cl!lselywith 22, 14 of which
came in the second half .
By BARR ASHCRAFT
" 'This is it, kid.' The next thing
I knew I was in deep water." These
were the words of 22 year old Hungarian-born Wake swimmer Eugene
Petrasy as be told this reporter
about his first taste of swimming
at the age of 5. Seven years later
at -th'C age of 12 Petrasy liad joined
a local Budapest athletic club, and
had begun swimming competitively.
.
It wasn't too long before Petrasy's
aquatic talents began to materialize.
He won the 100 and 200 meter breast EUGENE PETRASY comes up for air as he practices the breast
stroke titles in the national junior stroke in an afternoon se5sion at the pool.
to fl
!t
thi
try
. Ovee ho
~~un : ked
his
.· er. ere_, t
atssy Phlc
hUPlef.t
swunmmg m eres w ere e.
them off. He swam at RaleigJh
High School and in 1957 won the
Southeastern 100 yd. breast stroke
championship. That same year he
was selected as a High School AllAmerican.
As a freshman at Wake Forest,
1 Petrasy was defeated only once,
STALEY'S
ONLY
Only The New
- OUADRALENE~ PRO.CESS
Can
Petrasy .Stars
ForTankmen
o:mpic c~amp~ons:_ps, . ant! plar
~ on a c amplOns P wa r po 0
eam.
F
bt R ds
.
hi
outhgl-..:
In 1956 s a <:~~.~.C ~m t eres t s were
· .,_
ted. b
th Hun
b n........
.....
· I.J' Rm""rrup
ti
p ytr e · · edganan evo1u on. e asy JOID
·
llberation
up WI'th the . H unganan
movement and fought against the
Communists until be was forced
Motor .Tune-Up
$2.75
'ilnd. broke several pool records. The
next year he broke right into the
varsity line-up as a star. It was
largely due to Petrasy's efforts
tb a t Wa k e had 1•ts b es t season m
·
four years.
This year Pctrasy has been nothing short of phenomenal. In Wake's
meet against Virginia be won three
events spurring on the Deacs to
their first win of the season In the
process 'be set a new record in the
.
200 lYd. breast stroke:, the fourth
. !'!o!o£. ;:sa;sw:w, !'.":"•=..._· .. _,.._
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Fea:turing
-·
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to his cred!t in varsity c~mpetition.
In Wake's recent meets against
Carolina and Maryland, Petrasy
scored all of the Deacs' first place
For This
· t s.
porn
p t
· very versa tile, swun·
e rasy IS
· • - th · di ·d 1
dl
·
ddi
mmg to ehim VI ua
· me th
ey mb a t· ·
ti
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tshtro~e . a?-d butterfly. He took up
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depth, yet has been- defeated only
'once in 5 events
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t.
. PAGE EIGDT
Monday, Jaa. 16, 1961
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
In . TV Thriller
DEACLET DICK CARMJCHAEL grabs a rebound in tbe freshmen's
game against the Carolina yearlings.
By ERNIE ACCORSI
Deacs has c:mmplifiied teamwork
and a smooth runlllin.g m.adltine.
From among this har.monized unit
has risen .a b-right new star in a
long line of mge greats at Wake
ForeSJt, George Lehmann.
George, the freshman team's
lea.ddng ·scorer, pla~yed his b-asketball at Campbell Junior College in
Buies Creek, North Carolina. The
much sought after youngster avel'aged ·over 30 poi,nts a game at
Caim·pbell. This season he is over
the 20 ·po~nt per game mark, playing against some of the toughest
freshma\11 competition in tihe nation.
':Dhe Baby Deacs hiav:e defeated
such teams ,as V. P. I., N. C. State,
tl:re University of Viirgi,nia, the
Wake F'orest Alumni squad and
hlgh ranked Raleigh Hig!h School.
Their only defeat of the Ylear came
last Tuesday night at the hands of
<Ja,rol:ina at itlheir Chapel llill floor,
but its· next to imposs'ibl:e to beat
ancy> UNC basketball club in their
little gymnasium. In most of thes:e
contests they w€1-e led i.n sroring}yy> Lelhmann, .but p1assing off and
.setting up his team mates <is :also
ot>ne of George's attributes. Ve:ry
few high scor.ing stars possess this
valuable quality.
Hard To Stop
George is 6'2'' and wei.ghs 177
pounds. His size .a.nd fine spring,
make ihis jump shot haTd tio stop.
Lehmann hails from Pa-lmyra,
New Jersey. In recent years some
of Wake's finest cage standouts
have come from the Garden States.
To mention a few, there ii.s Dave
Budd of last ~,ear's squad, and T,ed
Zawacki, AI KOEfu.J.er, Bob Wool-
Track Recruits Wanted
Coach Bill Jordan announced
last week that any candidates for
· tbe track team should get in touch
with him at his office in room
314 of the gym.
Five indoor meets and nine outdoor meets have been scheduled
for the oncoming season to date.
Chappell
Paclller
the -game gave Coacll Everett
Case's quintet the lead and they
stayed out hi frOillt tibroughoot ·the
first half. Following' a jumper by
Jerry< Steele and another by ChapPell in the first two minutes of
play, Antoo Muehlbauer contributed f.ive points, DiSte:fano, one, end
Niewierowski, two, fOr' the State
column.
(
But .the Wolifpack never managed
to ·pusli their lead to' more than
seven and with 32 seconds 1remaining in the first half, Billy
l?laeker, Wake's .back oourt ace,
minutes to go when Ken Rohloff
connected with ,.a jumper from the
left and Sban N:iewierowsld lulded
two oru beim:g fouled by 'Toonmy
McCoy. Wake wns then ahead by
1>nly four points, 60~56.
But after trading a Deacon
basket for two StJate free throws,
Len Ohap.pell stank a jwnp shot
from the right and: added another
point when he was fouled by Bob
DiStefano. From that time on the
W:o1fpack was never able to threaten seriously.
An eight-point splurge ea:rly in
•
swished ~ net with a JUlnJ)el"
from the right comer. making the
score 32-31, state leading.
Little Alley Hart scored in the
opening 'seconds
the second half .
and until Wake's eight-point Spl"!ee,
the game ·Will'S ll'i·p .and tuck.·
·
· Chappell with ' 28 · points and
·Packer wdbh 14 led tihe Deacons of.
fensiv.ely while Bill Rull wa& way
out in front oi the d>eifensive de'pa.rtment with 15 rebounds.
'
Niewierowski and 'I'Whloff led the
Wolf.pack with 20 aitd 17 points,
respectively. ·
of
I
l
Sport Coats •• Reducedfrom $34.95to $2.2.95
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I
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SWEATERS
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CAROLINA HOTEL BARBER' SHOP
Free Throws
M
11 200 88 .440 102 68
11 21.3 102 .479 78 68
Hart
13 169 87 .515 44 35
Hull
13 . 88 47 .534 48 27
McCoY
13 77 28 .364 34 24
Steele
11 77 28 ·.310 19 9
Koehler
11 18
7 .389
5 2
:Fennell
10
4
0 .000
0
0
Zawacki
6 11
3 .273 11 8
Caldwell
6
6
o .ooo o o
Woollard
4 21
7 .333
6 3
Jensen
2
2
1 .500
0
0
Snead*
4 21 13 .618
8
5
WF Totals 13 859 393 .456 355 249
Opp. Totals 13 868 349 .402 3'l3 272
•Has quit Team.
%
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No. Ave.
.667 244
.872 272
.795 209
.563 l2i
.706
80
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16
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o
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14
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6
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17
.000
2
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31
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.729 970
KeboandB
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51
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48
4.4
2.5
18
1.6
1.5
7
0.7
0.0
2.5
2.3 · 15
3
1.5
o.o
17
4.3
4.3
0
0.0
1.0
12
3.0
7.8
79.5 655 50.4
74.6 538 41.4
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Buy and Save,I
S.igs on Friday 44-35.
In
ot..l-t,er fraternity
league
action the Delta Sigs evened up
t.heir rerord' ;at 2-2 by defeating the
Sigma Pll.'s 25-23.
The week saw four of the leaders
of tihe independent d.i.v.ismns increase their unbeaten streaks. Of
Jthe un:beaten teams in :tlh:e Red
Div.ision, the Rookies beat the PiKA
B team 35-25, a.nd the Defenders
belat Los Trtrenos -13-38. The R.ookaes are now 5-0 Wlltile the Defenders
are 4-0. In ·the White div.ision, the.
Mexrymen !"'an t.heir L>treak to four
by wihal.lbpi:ng the Red Shirts 5630, while in the Blue Division the
La.nsers won their fourth in a row
by forfe1Jt.
In .the scramble for second place
: in the ~hree divis·ions, che Celtics,
P.i Sloppa Hog.g a.nd K,appa Sig B
each w~n two games to c:hallenge
the le.aders in their ;:,espective divisions. The Ceitics as a result of
their v.ictories over Phi· Delt White
and .the Redshirts, moved >vithin a
game of tllle Ro'Okies in the White
D-ivision, while' Pi Sloppa Hogg
be1a1t the Spmtans and K'appa Snapper to move up in the Blue Division.
Kappa Sig B beaJt PiKA B and the
Sig Clowns to take ov,er second
·place in the Red Division.
In oth·er intramural action, the
Si·gma Chi's took f.irs.t place iln
bowling, by the comfortable 1nargin
of 117 pins. The PiKA's were
second.
Joe Hensley of Sigma Chi turned
GEORGE LEHMANN
jn the high score of the tournament,
lard, and Jackie Jensen of this a very cr.ed~table, 216.
year's club.
t
In water polo, the field was
Not enoug:1 can be r.·aid about narrowed down to 2 last week.
George Lehmann and h's chances Under the rules set up for the tourfor sla:·Jom a.t Wake Forest. H>e na.men.t, the teams are eliminated
has all the tools .and potential of as soon as they lose 2: games. The
an All-Americ<m. He's hig and K111,ppa Sig~t a.nd the PiKA's were
fast, deadly wit'h a jumper from the survivors .and wJll play f.or the
anyw.heu-e around the free throw c~am]lions.hip Monday. The Kappa
circle, and bas the ·p.assing skills of S1gs al'e unbeaten wU:l.ile the PiKA's
haV'e l'ost once. So, the PiKA's in
Billy Packer.
Seldom d'oes a quintent like order to take the championshipFrank Clhr:iStie." Rich Carmichiael, must beat the Kappa Sigs twice.
Butch Hassell, Bm.d Brooks and
Lehmann come alOIIl:g at one time.
They work together like an exper.ienced unit already, so it oan be
easily seen whalt they may look
like im three ~l'"S. Fortunate
enough a.t Wtake Forest to h:ave
such an a·rr.ay of ;talent 1a:nd on
the Ba:ptist C<ampus. come all at
once, a warning oan be issued to
Oarolina, Duke, St:a1je, and the rest
of the Atlantic Coast Conference
to o:pen tlhleir ey>es and set their
defenses, fer these boys are not
going to be to used l1o losing.
Cage Statistics
%
'
SUITS • • • • R:educedf~om $69..95 to $49.95,
SUITS • • • • -Reduced from $59. 9$-to $39.95·
SUITS • • • • Reduced from $32.95 to $22.95
Tlhe superb record of <the Baby
M
'l
Buy and Save-
Lehmann-- 'Bright New Star'
A
,.·
BEN S BEST $ A,tE
The Sig Eps, though idle last moved out of a three-way tie for
week, moved to undisp-uted posses- third pla:>e mto secon<l place besion of first place i.n the frlllrernity hind .the le~gue leade1·s.
baGketba1llmgue, as the ~nloy other
The PiKA's dropped to fifth
unbeaten .team, the KA's were place in the lel:l!gue as ~hey o·ame
banded their first loss by the Sig- ot~t of the wet!k with one wln 11nd
rna: Chi's 32-30.
one defe•at. The PiKA's lost t()
The Sigma Chi's also defeated the Kappa Si:gs 33-32 on Monday,
the Lambda Chi's 49-30 as !:.hey but came back to beat the Alpha
=:....::=:::..:...:=-~------~-------------
Field Goals
,.,
,
Sig Eps Hold On TO Hoop Lead;
Sigma Chi's Take Bowling Tourney
G
.
•. f ..
By CAROLYN YOUNG
Eight stnaig-ht points· midway in
tlhe second half gave. the Wake
Forest Demon DeJacons what provrod to be the decisive ~d\11alltage as
they :f()IUght their way to a 76-66
win over the Wolfpack of North
Carolina State Collegie at Memo1·ial Coliseum Saturday.
Fl.aJ1ing from ooe to nine p1>ints
bEib.ind in two minutes and seven
seconds, State could never quite recover. Their closest a.ttempt at pulling the game into their win co1umn
came with just less than eight
The Wake Fo1-est freshman
basketball team was given a rude
welcome bv the University of
Nqrth Caro-lina Tar Babies 'ruesdaly< ill.ight as the T.ar Heel frosh
beat the Deaclets, 62-57. The Ioss
was the first of the season for the
Baby Deac..'l.
The Tar Bab\ies, utiliz~ng lhe
cutside jump s'hooting of Mt. Airy
product, Mike Cooke, and the work
undo€'!" the basket of Briun McSweeney, built up a four point lead
at halftime, and the Baby Deacs
were never able to close the g.ap.
Caroliill!a's margin of victory
caan.e from the foul line. Wake
displayed a better shooting percentage from tlhe floor, hitting
46.7% to carolina's 39.2%, but the<
TIC!r" Babies connected on 7 mo1·e
ehaxitcy> tosses than the Deaclets
.-dirl.
Many .times the Oarol.ina frosh
g1al're Wake the ball. but .the Baby
' Deacs were never a,ble to take .advantage of many of these opporbunities in a game that was very
ragge<lly played by both sides.
Close First Half
During the first hialf both teams
mllarly ma.tclled each other basket
for basket, with Carolina pulling
away in the last two minutes to
their four-point haliitime margin.
Wilth 13:56 remaining on the clock
in the second ha·lf, however, the
"'1a.r Babie.s jumped to a nine-point
lead o.n two quic),: baskets and a
free throw by McSwie'eney. The
Deaclets were able to <:u.t the margin to 4 points with three minute.;.
le:fit.
Player
'/
Deacons DCfeat Stat~,·· 76 To. 66
Tar Babies_
Hand Deaclets
First Defeat
(Does
.
In~
ing, in
nant arc!hi1:ecl
est area.
Wachovia,
the cam:pus
moved to
will be in a
not only
community,
Polo Road
All Styles Of Hairtuts
-FLAtTOPS A SPECIALTY\
''A Haircut Where You Can See The
, _
Difference'~
Excellent Boot-Black Service By Willie- Johnson
••
well.
These
ly. A nw:nbfl
areas have
northwest
county.
The new
drive-in
parking
the bank
1'' depoSit
in th~ fa('•ilitv
The n1"~1n<>1rtt
CharJes