Frosh Ballot Soon

Transcription

Frosh Ballot Soon
•;'
,.
ich '
L'!th
~·
'Miss Demon Deacon'
ConteSt 'Intensifies;
·aomeeoDibig Nears
IU"S
[)W··
121
-
Page 2
YOLUME XL'YII
Dedication
Ceremony
In Offing
-
·-
-·
Ill
Alan White Shines
For Demon Deacons;
Top Ground Gainer
.·
Page 7
._
/
**
Wilke Forest Colie~re, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, MondaY, October 16, 1961
*
NUMBER 5
Frosh Ballot Soon
•.
A
Homecoming Dance
.. .-.:
.~.-:~.._
Vibe King Will'-Play~~
...
n
lB
LB
.e
Hampt<Jn and his orcl1estra will be featured at
the Student Union-sponsored Homecoming Dance on Nov. 28.
PAGE TWO
Monday, Oct. 16, 1961
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Dr. Gregg .Will ,Te~c:h
As- Fullbrig/lt Fellow ·
Joins Law Faculty
Hanna 'Retires"
lin Hanover, N. H.; his masters
Staff Writer
degree at Stanford University in
"When you start, you think it Stanford, Calif. and his L.L.B. at
will never end," said Professor the Harvard Law School in CamJohn Hanna, reflecting back on his bridge, Mass.
32 years of teaching at Columbia
He is a member of the State Bar
University in New York City.
Associations in Nebraska and MasHanna is the second Visiting Pro- sachusetts and a member of the
fessor of Law, a position made pos- Supreme _Court Bar in Washingsible by the Mary !Reynolds Bab- ton, D. C., where he practiced for
cock Foundation. The first Visiting nine years before he began his
Professor was Dr. Warren A. Sea- long teaching career.
vey ()£ Harvard University. Seavey 'Hanna has served as Special Aswas on rthe law faculty last year. sistant to the Attorney General
Hanna, a soft-spoken and some- under A. Mitchell Palmer. He has
what reserved man, retired from also been on rthe staff of the Rethe faculty of Columbia University publican National Committee as a
in 1959. However, during the 'sum- member of the research staiif and
mer of that tyear, he taught at St. the speech writing committee.
IMary's University in San Antonio,
Among many other positions,
Tex. Then in the fall Hanna joined Hanna has served as a consultant
the faculty of the University of Mis- for the Farm Credit Administration
sissippi for the academic year 1959- and the New York Law Revision
60.
Commission.
Early this year Hanna was invitIn his spare time Hanna likes to
ed by the College to be the Visiting play golf. He says, "There might
Professor of Law.
be a difference of opinion whether
Shortly afterwards he left to go I am a golfer or .not, but I enjoy
around the world. While in Tokyo, playing." He is a memlber of the
Japan he was able to follow the Woods Hole G?lf Club on Cape Cod,
Wake Forest !basketball team in Mass. and a member of the Washthe semi-finals and finals of the ington Golf and Countey Club in
Eastern Regional Playoffs in the Arlington, Va.
Tokyo newspapers.
-------Hanna commented, "One day I
missed seeing the papers for some
reason and on the next day there
was no mention of Wake ForeSt in
the accounts of the playoffs so I
presumed they had loSif: out somewhere."
_
While in Greece, Hanna met a
man who was on the Smith UniCadet Captain W.illiam C. W'.lyversity faculty and had been around nick, senior of Reidsville, attended·
the world 33 times, 4 times this the Regimental Staff and Comyear. In Crete he met a man who manders meeting, 4th Pershing
was born about 8 miles from Win- Rifles Regiment, on Oet. 7.
ston-Salem and had represented
The meeting was held at DonaldReynolds Tobacco Company abroad son Air Force Base, Greenville,
for 25 years.
S. C.
This man introduced Hanna to
Waynick is commander of Co.
four people who were residents of D-4, Wake Forest unit of Pershing
Winston-Salem. Commented Hanna, Rifles.
"I saw that Winston-Salem people
The commanders discussed regireally get around." In Istanbul he mental oper:ations for the year, inmet a former colleague of the eluding plans for a regimental and
Columbia faculty who was conduct- national rifle match.
ing a seminar in that city.
Cadet 1st Lt. Francis Wilson,
Hanna received his B. A. degree senior of Valdes-e, also attended of:lhe
in history at Dartmoll!th College meeting.
-----------------------------
Dr. Robert W. Gregg, assistant
professor of political science at
the College, has been selected by
the State Department to teach for
nine _!lllonths in a New Zealand
university under the FulbrightAot.
Dr. Gregg will teach .American
government· and politics and .international politics at Victoria
University in Wellington.· The appointment begins· in January and
is one of ·600 grants for leC!turi.ng
and research' abroad dUring the
1962-63 school year.
Dr. Gregg is the ifourth Wake
Forest professor to be selected
by the State Department for research or study abroad in the past
year and a half.
Dr. Elizabeth Phillips, assistant
professor of English, taught last
year in Korea under a grant administered through the SmithMundt Act.
Drs: Eugene P. Banks, associate
professor oif sociologv, and Robert
R. Howren, assistant professor of
English, taughlt in Burma and Dr.
James C. O'Flaherty, professor of
German, did research in Germany.
The last , _three received Fulbright
Grants.
There are four universities and
By ADRIAN KING
ROTC Men
Make Trip
Monogram Club Plans
1961 Beauty Selection
By LINETTA CR.A VEN
Staff Writer
-Nine coeds are now in tfue contest
to- -become Wake Forest's "Miss
Demon Deacon of 1961." The contest ois sponsored. annually ·by the
Mo.nogram Club in connection with
the h~mecoming festivities.
Any organiz-ation on campus will
be eligibl-e to sponsor a candidate,
and a vote of the entire student
body will determine the winner.
The Independ{;nts and eight of
the social fraternities have entered
the following girls to represent
tih.em :in the contest: Linda Sutherland, sophomore of Macon, Ga., for
the Indep-endents; Car{)l Wagster,
sophomore of Columbia, Tenn., for
Sigma Chi; Ann Herring, sophomore of Winston-Salem, for Pi
Kappa Alpha; Cathie Graisel",
sophomore of Bernardsville, N. J.,
for Sigma Ri;
Barbara Kirk of Winston-Salem,
for Theta Chi; Pat Muse, sophomore of Johnson City, Tenn., representing Lambda Ohi Alpha;
Tera Frizzelle, a senior of WinstonSalem, for Kappa Alpha; Nancy
Carpenter, junior of Cherryville,
for Sigma Phi Epsilon; Barbara
Metcalf, senior of Charlotte, for
Kappa Sigma.
Each girl Will be introduced during chapel on Tuesday, Oct. 23, at
CADET lUAJOR PAUL MARTINEAU, of Manchester, N. B., eseoris
Edith Early, freshman of Winston-Salem, at the o:penjng of 'the Dixie
Classic Fair Tuesday. Martineau is one of IS seDtor ROTC cadets whc.
were chosen~to-e&cori ooauty queens at the fair opening. Kay Woodall
of Roanoke Rapids, Miss North Carolina, and Alyce Ashbum, Miss
Winston-Salem, were among the lovely girls who represented various
areas of the state.
Mitchell
Will Lecture
The Cullom Ministerial Conference will meet at 7 p. m. Tuesday,
to hear Dr. Carlton Mitchell. Dr.
Mitchell, who js a graduate of
Yale University and Union Seminary, was· formerly past<Jr of one
of the larger ehurches in New
J-e.·sey. He will speak on the subject, "Life as a cha.plain in the
armed services."
.
On Oct. 31 Dr. Carlyl-e Marney
C>f Charlotte will speak ~n the subject of "Prejudice Among Southe.a:n Baptists."
Advisors for the group this year
are iDr. Robert Helm and Dr.
Daniel Via.
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~A
141 STRATFORD DR•• S; W.
3436S
-
;
- . ·
__ '·
Judge J. Spencer Bell of 'char-! Jud~ Bell was ch~ipnan of the
-lotte newly appointed member of Cornmllttee on Expedit\Ilg and Imtlhe :United· StaJtes Circuit Court of ~rovrng the Admin~stration of Jus.
.
. t1ce in Nortib. carolina of the North
Appeals for the Fourth Crrcwt, Wlll Carolina Bar Assooi-astion and m
,Speak at 6:-30 P·' m. Th11rsday at 1959 received the J~Iul J. Parke-r
the College.
A ward for _his activitieS. on behalf
Judge Bell, who also has served of court improvement.
in the State Senate, will addrJss
Judge Beli is hative, of Charthe annual fall banquet of the lotte. He•received.theB.';A. degree
student Bar Ass.Oeiation of the at Du&\ Univksity ~d tile I.J:..,. B.
School of Law.. The banquet will' e;t the ·univ~r)rltY- of N~rth Carobe lheld in the MagnoLia Room \tina. He .also was a special student
of Reynold'a Hall.
at Harvard )University for one
The Faculty Cup will be given to I year.
.
'.
the law fraternity or non-frate:r- . His appointment to the Fourth
nity group having the highest scho-~Circuit was -confirmed by the
lastic average during the past Senate Sept. 23 and ib.e was sworn
school year.
in on Sept. 29.
Stratford Denter -
•
• AV
ari~~Y
From
•
•
s•. SlraHord Road
WAI(E -FOJIEST
...
Pizza and
a
Cu~b
~pagheUi
our Speciality.
our·- ~enu
· ·
Moisture Cre·am
by
Palm Beach
STUDENTS OF
·'
reg $5.00
Wake Forest College
Now $2.50.
·,,
-*
CAN YOU USE A HUNDRED BUCKS?
That's what you can win in every one of
-,oJ]at
Perfect Net
' -
•
14 Oz. Can
reg. $~.50
Now $1.00
I.. .
.
the
nature· of man in these two interpretations. The Marxist thinks
of man in a collective sense, but
the Christian doctrine emphasizes
the collec-tive and the singular assets of man.
,
And finally, according to Tillet,
if all class struggle is removed
then there will be no evil, according to the Marxist. The Christian
doctrine does not make one assertion but two-man is both good and
evil.
•:
Well Of Youth
BSU Weigl1s
Que'stz•ons O•-F
'J
Atomzc Peace
The "Pros and Cons of Nuclear
Pacificism." will be the third topic
of the study group discussions
sponsored by the Baptist Student
Union on "War or Peace." Ed
Christman will lead this session
which will be held at 8 p. m. Wed·
nesday in Room 104, Wingate Hall.
Mr. Lowell Tillet, assistant >pro·
fessor of history, spoke and led a
discussion on the "Marxist Interpretation of History" in the second
of these study groups last Wednesday night.
Dr. Tille<!: made several comparisons between the Christian interpretation of history and that of
the Marxist.
In the first point of comparisoa
he stated that the Marxist theory
is deterministic and based on one
materialistic principle while the
Christian believes rn a doctrine of
providence and that God is the law
of history.
The second point brought out
was that neither the marxist or the
Christian believes in the simple
doctrine that the world is getting
better each day, but the Marxist
needs to see a certain measure of
.
*
Service
~LL
.
_BEAUTY SHOP
o,f Foods to be Selected
Open 7 Days A W'~~
From 10 a.,m.- 2 a. m.
TO
a
Students Briefed
On New York Trip pr~~:;d. point discussed was
=ifliooe' P:At57'7~'"' ·
Patterson's Str;atford'
~Gigi'
Leslie Caron, Maurice Ch~valier,
Louis Jourdan, Herrili~ne Gingold,
Ev.a. Gabor .and Jacques Bergerac
will play in the movie "Gigi" showing at 8 p. m. Friday and· Sa.turday
in Room 14, Salem Hall.
The movie· is one dn the series
shown in Salem Hall each weekend.
-',
'·. ~ - l"''lf$80 ..... '" ,;'}
Deacon~s· Bench-,$25.
-=====::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;
••
Plays Ori Campus
which time a secret-ballot vote will
be taken. P.hotographs o~ the co~otestants wrll ibe on drsplay m
~eynolda Hall prior to the electiOn.
11he new "Miss Demon Deacon"
will be announced during the halftime activities of the Wake ForestVirginia footb:i..Il game Saturday
afternoon, Oct. 28, after each girl
has participated in- a convertible
pa1ade around -the field.
The Monogram Club is leaving I
the contest open to any organization on campus \vishing to participate.
The Delta Sigma Phi and Alpha
Sigma Plh.i Fraternities have not
yet entered
representative, thus
making the above list incomplete.
All last minute entries will be
accepted.
·
Dr~
The Student Union Travel
Committee held its first meeting last Tuesday for students in·
terested. in the theatre trip to
New York City.
The second informational meeting wi1.1 be held at 4:30 p. m.
Tuesday in Room 102, Reynolda
Hall. The intinerary for the trip
will be discussed.
The New :York excursion has
been planned for the Thanksgiving Holiday, N?v· 22-26.
Award ,Winner
two. technical colleges in New Zealand and the ,one in Wellington
bas been chosen to develop its
area of political science. The regular school year begins there in
Febrnary.
Dr. Gregg will fly to New .Zea~
land in late .January. He will be
accompanied by his wife and ltll.eiiyoung son.
Dr. Gregg received the B. A.
and Ph. D: degrees at Cornell Uni·
versity and was a graduate instructor there ibefore joining the
Wake Forest faculty in '1959. ·
HAND MADE REPRODUCTION
Pine Fui.-plture~ ·.Round Table,
4 Captain's Cha:irs ·
\.
~
p~ustax
'
>;~-
Both· of these items
d
Only ViCEROYS -Go~ -It~ •.
~~-~-~----------.,
Viceroy College Football
CO-NTEST NO.2
At· Both .Ends I
Got The Filter! Got The Blend!
Only Viceroy's got the
D?elikw* Filter.
Viceroy's Deep-Weave
Filter is made of vegetable
Here are my predictions for next Saturday's games.
Send my prize money to:
~~~----------~--------~-------!CLASS_______
and safe.
0
0
0
Here are the Contest Rules
-Read •em and Win!
1. Any student or faculty member an thiS
campus may enter except employees of Brown
& Willlamsa11~ its advertisin& agencies, or
members of ltleir Immediate families. All
cnUles become U\e P~Dertv Q~ Brown & Wll~
llamson-none will be returned. Winners will
~e notified within three weeks ~fler ea.ch cOli•
lest. Winners• names may be p&Jbllshed in this
newspaper. You may enter as often as you
wish, provided each entry is sent individually.
Contest subjed to all acvernmental reauJa ..
lions. Entries must be postmarked or dropped
ln hllllot box on campus no later than the
~Wednesday
midnight tlerore the aarnes are
played and recei"Ved by noon Ftiday of tile
ume week. The right ta diso:antiaue future
JHtests is reserved.
~ llariN must be in contestant•s own name a
0 ~961,
On the coupon In this ad or Cn an Olficial
Entry Blank or Jllece of paper of the same size
and format, wtite your predicUons c1 the
scores of the gmes o~~.nd check the winners.
Erltlose an emplyViceroY package or a reasonable rendition of the ViceroY name as it .appears en the package front. Mail entry to
Viceroy at the Box Number on tke entrw- blank
or drop In Vicerov football Contest Ballot B~
on campus.
3. Entries will bo Jodsed b7 Tllo Reub<!o H. ·
oonnelley Corp. on the basis of number of
winners correctly predicted. Ties will tie
broken on the basis of .scores DJ'Bdicted. DuPlicate prizes awarded in case of finS! ties. '
4. Winners are eligible for any prize in sub-sequent contests.
BROWN & WII,LIAMSON TOBAccO CORP.
II
For .
Call PA.59711.
Ext~ 313
(,.LEASE .RINT PLAIML'\')
material tllat's pu~
* Reg. U.S. Patent Office
I
ADDRESS·----------------------------------------~----
WIN
·
I
(Attach Viceroy package or facsimile here)
SCORE
0
So. CarolinG
Duke
0
0
Wake Forest
No. CarolinG St.
D Michigan St.
0 L.S.U.
D
WIN
No. CarolinG
·D Colifornia
D IOWCI
D
D
SCORE
Penn. St.
Oklahoma
Michigan
Contest open ONLY
Clemson
0
So. Calif.
0
Wisconsin
0
0
0
0
0
Notre Dame
WAKE FO-EST
BEAUTY SHOP
Brenda Bowen
and
MargairetH.oneycutt
Beauty Operators
Kentucky
Syrocuse
Kansas
Purdue
~0 STUDENTS AND FACULTY
ON TinS CAMPUS.
..,_
___________________
..,._J
Mail
before midnight, Oct. 18, to Viceroy, ;Box,67-B ,,...
Mt.________
Vernon 10, New York
1
Located Under
W achovia Bank
in the
'.V. F. C. Oampus
·,,
\
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
'ION
ble,
Def;,aters To Open New S~a~on
With U. Of Kentucky Tournameni
PAGE THREE
Reynolda Grill
HOME OF PIZZA PIE
SPECIALIZING IN , ••
ITALIAN SPAGHETTI
CHARCOAL STEAKS
853 Reynolda Rd.
FRANK WOOD
the year. Included in the schedUle the audience, not the debaters.
Staff Writer
for this semester ~re toil!namenls
''Tlirough these exhibitions we
ELECT
Wake Forest debaters leave tJWi at the Uni":ersity _of South Carolina are able to reach larger audiences
week for· the.ii first tOurnament of in Colull?'bta,. ~-. C.; _st. Joseph's and stimulate their thinking about
the year, the annuai Tborobred Co~ege. m Philad~lp~a •. Pa.;_ th_e current problems," commented Dr.
Tournament at the University of Umversi!j;y of Mia_nu ~ ~anu, SbirletV.
Kentucky in Lexington, Ky., which Fla.; an~ Duk~. Umvers~ty m Dur- The team has been bolstered by
TO THE
will be held Tluirsday, Friday, and ham; which ~s year will host the a large turnout of freshmen. ApSaturda~.
_.
·. .
_, .
annual_ Atlantic Coast Conference. proximately twelve fre~en have
A1 Baker, senior of Lancaster, Tournam~~t.
.
. been meeting and practicing reguINTEGRITY - ABILITY
S. c., and Ed Gaskins, junior m.
In addition, Wake Forest Will larly with the varsity..
SERVICE
Monroe, will uphold the affirmative sponsor two ~urnaments on the According to Dr. Shirley, this
A
Candidate
side of the national intercollegiate campus, a 0~':ce 00un;'ament and group of freshmen has exceptional
With A Purpose
debate topic: Resolved, that labor the all;Dual DlXle Classics Tourna- potential and will be counted on
organizations shOOld be under the ment 10 December.
heavily this year.
jurisdiction of antitrust legislation. · In addition to tournament com- >---------------....:===========~Susie Jones, senior of Raleigh, petition, the team_ plans to stage r---------------------------~
and Frank Wood, · sophomore of several exhibition debates. _The
Miami, Fla., will defend the nega- first of these will be on Nov. 26, in
tive side.
which two debaters from Cam. I
Nation's Best Featured
bridge U n i v e r s it Y, Cambridge,
The Kentucky tournament i~ one England, will debate two· Wake
of the most important of the year, Forest deb~te.r~.
since it features some of the /best
Other ex:hibtbons are planned in
teams in the . na~on, according high .schools in North and Solfth
to Dr. Franklin .R •. Shirley,• Di- Carolina.
•
'
rector of Debate
Chairman. of
"We feel these exhibitions are
the Department .Of. Speech;: who at least as i~portant as . our inwill accompany the group tO the tercollegtate tournament debating,
tournament.
. . ,,.:_. .: ·. ·
if not more important, since debat.
Some o.E the sc&OOIS.. which the ing is primarib>' for the benefit of
team will meet
.tii.e. UniversitY ~~;;~~;;;;:=;;;::;;;:===~
of Miami the u:Divers'ity· of SOUth
CLIFF BILL, Director of
Services
Carolina,'Notre +)~; ..Northwest.:
GU
ern, and the University of ~en. ,..
" .•;·
Rooms 21 and 22 - Beynolda JlalJ
tuck!y.
. . _ . ,,: .. .
.
Cloth• ~ To •w-re
The Ke~tllCkY.:· tqurnameen~ ; is
only the first ~,.ma~. activities
828 \f. 4lii
PA 22011
'
which the debaters are planning for ._--~----------' 1..--------~------------------..l
- - - - - - - . ; . . ·- - - - - - . ; . . ·
By
MP,
~B
Barry Dorsey
:ED
ri
LEGISLATURE
junior
Salemb~~rg, and
Welch, sophomore of Albe.
marie, discuss a c'hemistry problem ~ Dr~ N: Howell Furman, visiting professor of chemistry.-
i.AB HELP SESSION-George
~.
Give Up Retirement ~ ·
Princeton,· Prof Visits
•.
i
By JIM :BA.'ITERSON
'
ASsociate Editor
Dr. N. HoweR Furman, visitiJlg
professor of chemistry, gave up a
short-lived retirement to. take over
teaching duties here. Furman is
on an iR. J. Reynolds Foundation
grant
·
·
. · m
. June,. 1960,
.' F.urman.
retired
. after ~avmg ta~ght ~or ~4Lyears
~ _Prince~n Umv:rsity. While in
retire!llent. he continued to ~ct. as
~rt-~e consultant to two. mdus-trial firms and to wo;k Wlth _the
Bureau of Standai"ds m Washing.
lton.
·
,
Furman has had close ties with
Princeton most oif his life. All his
"earned" degrees were awarded
to him by Princeton.' He has an
honorary degree of Doctor of
Science from Boston University.
He made Phi Beta Kappa in his
undergraduate years at Princeton.
Furman was lborn in Lawrenceville, N. J., and attended Lawrenceville School· for Boys; a prep
school well-known for its ·graduates
.· .
·
.
. ' ·
branch of ~e U. S. Research Bat- group working on..the anazytical
talion dealing With chemical war- ·and process. che~try of uranium
flln!r
..
·· · .
.
~der.the S?'ca.J1ec:l-ManhaJtten DisHe went back to Princeton in tr1ct m PtiJtceton. . . ,
19~ and remained there until his
Furman -fin~, the _Wilke., Forest
retirement. He .became a R~ger Vf· campus .much ~e Stanf?rd s when
Moore Professor of _.Chermstry m be was there.. At that !time it was
1945, and was _chauman . of the a compact campus, well away from
chemi&tny!
department
city,"
he.realize
s!H-~· how-lucky
.
1954.
.·
. _ ·' ·. .from 1951- the
"You
don'lt
you
'Furman is a prollfic miter, hav- are here with eve~g 8o close
illg prepared will-over 100 short at hand. I'm _finding it ~asy to
papers and alJthOred or co-author- meet evel:ybody,"· he added. ·
ed 17 books. He has done consider- . North CaroliD.a is by no means
able research.. in the field Of_analy- new to Dr. Furman. He has on
tical chemistry, chiefly dealing several occasions sPoken at Chapel
with electrochemical methods, oxi- Hill, and has played golf at Pinedation reduction studies and the. hurst. Golf incidentially is at the
analytical and process 'chemistry moment hls main hobby.
of uranium.·
.
'
- He and his wife have a suinmer
During World War II he led a home in Charlollte, Vermont.
Magriolia Room
Soda Shop
'
SERVICE ON THREE FLOORS
TO SERVE YOU
aDd
are'
IaITJ 6.;;;.uthanao
.....;....
ALTBRATIONS ...
Food
Coffee Hour
Cafeteria
-.---..:..::---------------------'!.-----------------,..--
·
Honorary Frats Choose
Offic-ers; Hear Lectures
who g6 on ~ Princeton.
Speakers, election of officers and ni1ly is scheduled for Nov. 9.
~ter g,e~g. hls B. S. fro~ initiation of new members highlight•
Delta Phi Alpha
Prince~n m 1913 and then his current activities Of the College· Delta Phi Alpha, honorary Ger[M. A: m 1915, he spent _two :vea:s honorary fraternities-_and societies. man Language
Fraternity, ·will
tea~hin~ at St~ord Umversity m
Phi Alpha Theta
meet at· 5:30 p. m. Tuesday in the
Califorma. Durmg the summer of Phi
·
.
. Little Magnolia Room
1918 he served as a private in a
Alpha Theta,_ honorary his-_ ·
.
tory society, will hold its next meet- All m.embers are requested to be _. .- . :,l..
ing on Wednesday at Dr. Percival present.·
·
·
Perry's home. New members will
Alpha Kappa Psi
be initiated.
'
The next meeting of Alpha Kappa'
The old ·members will meet at Psi, honorary business fraternity
7 p. m. and the iliitiattes at 8'p. m. will be. a dinner in the Magnoli~
Beta. Beta Beta
Room Wednesday.
'
A field representative · of· Presi- Dr. Robert C. Beck, assistant The fraternity plans to pledge
dent John F ..Kennedy's Peace Corps professor of psychology, will speak several new members.
visited the College last Wednesday to Beta Beta B-eta, honorary -bioAlpha Phi Omega
and Thursday t() explain the pro- logy society, at 7 p. m. tomorrow The student direct()ry published
'ject and answer questions.
· .in Lecture iRoom B, Winston Hall. annually bY, Alpha Phi Omega,
Jim K.weder a graduate student
His topic will be "Problems in honorary service fraternity, will
at the Unive;sity of North caro- Thirst _1Motiva1tion."
.
go ori ~alt; after chaJ?e~ Tuesday.
lina · said that of the schools he
It will be an open meeting, and
The directory, contammg names,
has' visited so .far· in the starte, an students. interested _are· invited addresses and telephone numbers
interest here has been the highest. to attend.
of students, faculty and law stu"At least 200 students have stopGa:mma Sigma Epsilon
dents, as well as a free pa~s to a
ped and talked about the program,
Dr. Paul M. Gross, associate loca~ theater: may be obtamed at
and soone 20 or 30 have told me professor of chelni.stry, addressed the information desk or from any
that they definitely want to go," he the first meeting of Gamma Sigma APO ~embe:.
said.
, .
Epsilon, honorary chemi$try ira- -~e ifratermtly also plans ~ wo~k
The program. which is open to ternity, last Wednesday.. ·
Wl!th the _Winston-Salem Children s
/ ai.r-American citizens over18, sends Prospective memlbers were told Home .this semes!er.
•
volunteers to · newly developing about the nature of'the fraternity.
Ph•lomathes1an Society
countries abroad to participate iD Initiation of new members will . A program of reallings was given
Peace CorPs projects such as be held in two weeks.'
·
at tlte meeting of the PhilomathebUnding roads demonstrating farm
Ph1• 1
I0 t .__
sian Literary Society last Monday.
eQuipment, a~d teaching.
.
~
~ ·
Judy Palmer, junior of Falls
· Though technical skills would he At a dinner ~eeting Oct. 12, mem- Church: Va., .rendered s·atires of
helpful they are not a prerequisite bers of Phi Sigma 'rc:Jta, honor~ry "The Raven" and "Ulalume" by
to acc'eptance. AIJy liberal arts Romance Lang~ages . Fratermty Poe; Jesse Shearin, junior of Winmajor may qualify, and will be heard a pan~l discussion of three ston-8alem, read a selection from
t:1ught whatever additional prac· European trips.
·
"Green Pastures," and Carroll
tical skills maw be required. There ;\Dgela Johnson,.' se~or of ~il- Stegall, junior of Randleman, read
is a great demand for teachers of mmgton, an~ Ma~Ia Sm.pes, _semor fmm "Oedipus Rex."
such subjects as English, histOry, of Sylva, ~scussed therr .trips to The program was--organized and
mathematics·, and sciences, agri· Fran~e durmg the. past summer. presented J;liY Sue Fulkerson, junior
culture and economics.
PrOfessor Jack .Fitzgerald of the of Lutherville, Md.
Vol~ers will. be ·selected on the Department of Romance Languag~s "Advise and Consent," a political
basis of interviews written ·tests told. of· his travel and study m novel by 'Allen Di-ury, will be the
and physical exambatiollS'. Assign- S~am and ?fuer Eurol?ean ~oun- topic of' discussion at the meeting .
ments will depeo.d on specific skills tries, including· ~e SoVIet Umon. o~ Oct. 23.
. .
and the needs of -the area to which
The next meeting of the frater- ·
Euzelian Society
volunteers will be _sent.
The Euzeli_an Literary Society
Application forms will be avail·
T..
· _J
will hold its second meeting at 7
alble iii the Dean's office, or can be
o'clock tonight in Eu Hall.
obtainec.I !from the Peace Corps,
Frank Wood, sophcnftore of
_ytashington 25, D. c.
_City~
Miami, Fla.,..is program chairman.
·;Pe~ce Corps
,.
Recruits Here
s·
s
~t
Monday, Oct. 16, 1961
·
coed8 .I.RVaue
I
''
Schools
Day Students
Install Officers
A group of 49 ·c()llege seniors who
plan to become teachers are now
doing student tteacllmg iii high
schools of Winston-Salem and Forsyth county.
'
The practice teach~s .began .a
A ~g for all men day stu- two-week observation periaq in the
dents ~as held following the chap. various schools.. on Sept. 28, and
el program last Tuesday. Pbllllp cin Oct.l2 began a nine week te.achBii.rgoil, junior, presided. Wilson Iing period, ilcJ:ol'!fing to Pr9fe~OJ:'
c~. senior, and Davis Thomp. Jasper L. Memory, chairman 'o,f
· ·son, jUnior, were asked by Bargoil the department of education and.'
to assist him until other Officers dinictor of student teaching.
were elec<ted.
Twenty-one of the seniors are
Plans were dis<:uss~ concerning located in the city high schols·, 3
a Christmas party and more park- of the group are iD Summit School,
jng space lfor the · day students. and the county school system
Another meeting will be held in two ploys 25- of the student teachers.
weeks at a time to be announced Courses in math, histoey, Latin,
later.
German, biology., and physical eduThomas Lowe and Bargoil at- cation are among the subjects
tended a meeting of the Legfsla- taught by the practicing teachers.
ture Oct. 5, and Bargoil reported
The number of practice teachers
to men da~ students the results of has dropped from 60 last year to
the sessi,on.
·
49 this year. Forty of the teachHopes were expressed by Barry ers are coeds and nine are male
Walker, mayor of the trailor park students.
students, that the ~en day stu- Practice teaching' is a requiredents will organize el'teclively and ment for obtaining a teacher's cer·
\promptly.
tificate from lthe state.
It Takes A Heap Of
Success To Offset A
PoQr Appearance!
With The Help Of
Twin Oily Cleaners
NEW FACE, SAME SPORnNG HEART
We might as well tell you straight off: Corvair's the car for the driving enthusiast. Think
that lets you out? Maybe. Maybe not.
,
Until you've driven .one, you really can't say for. sure, because Corvair's kind of driving is
like no other.in the land. The amazing air-cooled rear engine sees to that. You swing around
curves fiat as you ple~se, in, complete control. You whip through the sticky spots other cars
shauld keep out.olin the first place. (Especially this year, now that you can get Positraction
as an extra-cost option.) You stop-smoothly, levelly with Corvair's beautifully balanced,
bigger brakes.
.
·
And Corvair's found other new ways to please you this year. A forced-air heater and
/ defroster are standard equi_pment on all coupes, sedans and both Monza and 700 Station
Wagons. So are dual sunshades and front-door armrests and some other goodies. You'll note
some new styling, inside and out. Nice. And safety-belt installation is easier, too, and ~heaper.
Another extra-cost option well worth considering is the heavy-duty front and rear suspension;
it turns a Corvair into a real tiger.
·
So you can see we haven't really done much to Corvair this year. Why on earth should we?
n this car, just as she is, can't m~ke a driving enthusiast out of you, better take a cab.
A New World oj Wri
---·-·--~.
A Large Wardrobe I~n't NecesTo Be ,Well Groomed. In
Fact, This Excellent Clothes
Care Prolongs Cloth~Life, And
Saves .Moe:ney.
sary
T!t'!l~Y
Phone PA 2-7106
&i2 West 4th S&.
·----+-------...:
bd here's America's only thorougflbrect sports car, the '62 CORVETTE. We warn you: If you drive a Corvette after
your :first sampling of a Corvair, you may well end up a two-car man. And who could blame you?
.See the '62 Corvair.·and Corvette ~t your local. authorized Chevrolet dealer's
I
'
®lb (1Dnlb atW 11Jlark
.'
Studying After 11
E3
f'.
(
'
'
I,
M. P
* * * Wake Forest College • · * *
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, QCT. 16, 1961
Dance Policy Needs Revising
The Baptist State Convention stated
four years ago that students could not
dance on the Wake Forest Colleg~/
campus, so we, the students, have our
big dances in the coliseum and th
ballroom at the Robert E. Lee Hotel,
and our smaller ones in the back
rooms of the fraternity houses.
And the business department occupies a beautiful ballroom on the third
floor of Reynolda HalL
Recently, two local combos were
banned from playing at any collegerelated function.
So Wake Forest students,· rather
than inviting these combos to play for
our functions, traveled to nearhy
campuses and danced the twist.
A part of our professors defeat the
purpose of our supposedly more liberal cut system and refuse the students
any cuts at all or allow them only
the three permitted under the old
system.
So, quite logically, students sleep
through 8 o'clock lectures in their
classrooms rather than in their beds.
And more seriously, students forfeit
hard-earned quality points in order to
gain extra travel time before and after
holidays.
The College compels its students
to attend a bi-weekly chapel service.
The result: the .student cheerfully
absorbs himself in his daily newspaper at least two hours a week and'
'Vait ·Chapel has in the past gained
a reputation for having a "most in-
attentive audience at 10 o'clock each
.uesday and Thursday mornings.
The library is locked tightly each
night at 11 o'clock and on week ends
at 5 p. m. Campus police:men quietly
shoo students out of East Lounge at
11 p. m. every night.
Thus, students resignedly return to
their dormitory rooms and stuff their
ears with cotton so they can continue
studying in relative quiet. Or perhaps.
they climb an available lamp post and
anchor themselves under the light.
Finally, getting into the prevailing
spirit at the College, the Student
Legislature voted to remove the drinking clause from the Honor System and
let the faculty enforce this rule also.
Now dormitory policem- ahem"counselors" reside in each of the
men's dormitories.
·
And the first few students caught
on campus with alcohol in their possession- internally or externallywill be made examples of and suspended from school.
Net consequence of the situation:
at noon Saturday Wake Forest resembles Egypt at the time of the
Exodus and neighboring campuses are
invaded by undergraduate Demon
Deacons.
A sober question is obviously inherent in all these ironies. When, if
ever, will the "powers that be" at
the College rea ize that most colle~
a e eople are mature adult~ an!J.:~=
vise its rev 1 I
~tiey-a·c·corotngly.
--.
a
--
A.re Frosh Elections Necessary?
Are freshmen elections REALLY
necessary?
Do the most qualified get elected
or is it the persons who have the most
posters up, smile the most, and meet
the most people? Do the freshmen
know the members of their class well
enough to make intelligent choices?
Does the strenuous campaigning,
fot· those who campaign long and
hard, enable those people to make
a good beginning academically?
Does the freshman class do anything as a class to warrant officers?
The freshmen do need a representa-.
tive on the Student Legislature. Projects are sponsored by the Legislature
that involve the individual classes;
therefore the freshman class should
be represented officially.
Nothing is done to distinguish the
freshmen from the upper classmen,
such as wearing rat caps, as is done
at other schools. There is no formal
initiation for the class except during
orientation, and then the great majority of upper classmen · are not on
campus.
So the elections tend to pull the
class together for the first time. They
give the class a sense of being fully
integrated into the college community
at last.
Even with all the campaigning,
some vote only for names they've
seen on posters or say "eenie, meenie,
miny, moe" and mark the ballot on
"moe." Is that electing the most competent officers?
However, the students who put up
the most posters and meet the most
people indicate that they are willing
to work, and perhaps on that score,
they are the ones who should be
elected.
Also there are some freshmen who
can campaign strenuously and still
make good grades.
These are some pros and cons involved in the question of the value
of freshman elections.
In the freshman elections last fall,
the class of '64 set a record. Out of
a class of 578 .mem'bers, a total of 380
voted in the first primary. In the runoffs, another record was set with 401
ballots cast.
The freshmen have heen encouraged to cast their ballots tomorrow for
the candidates of their choice. The
ballot box is the most effective way
to determine the strength of the persons that will be elected and in a
sense, the strength of the class.
-A. K.
Bloodmobile Response Poor
The bloodmobile is here and gone
and not much richer for its effort.
Wake Forest students were only able
to muster 115 pints of blood which
represent about five per cent of the
total amount which could conceivably
be donated.
This is embarassing. The bloodmobile just recently received over 500
pints of blood from Davidson Qollege,
a school less than half our size. Even
the Woman's College of the University
of North Carolina has a higher percentage of donors than Wake Forest.
We can't offer any alibi. There was
more publicity on the bloodmobile
tl!is year than ever before. The Red
Cross virtually contacted every student personally. Posters were plastered all over campus, pamphlets were
delivered door to door, and an an-
nouncement was made in Old Gold
and Black.
There are no excuses for students
·under age either. Parental permission slips were mailed out at the beginning of the summer and many were
returned. Unfortunately, few were
used.
But why give blood? Aside from
the humanitarian reason, there is onli
which affects us directly. Last year
football player Bill Skippon received
over 100 pints froon the Red Cross
while carrying on an unsuccessful
fight for his life against leukemia.
vVe owe the Red Cross blood.
We have been looking for ways in
which to cooperate with the WinstonSalem Community. Well, giving blood
is one. Next year let's put a little more
heart into our efforts.
-J. B.
LYNNE SMATHERS
IRVIN WILLIAMS
Editor
Business Manager
Founded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and
Bbtck is published eaeh Monday during the school· year except during examination and
holida~ periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.
JIM BATTERSON
Associate Editor
CAROLYN YOUNG
Managing Editor
.JACK liAMJtiCK
Sports Editor
CHARLES OSOLIN
Assistant Editor
RAY SOUTRAB.D
Assistant E.Utor
Circulation Mlllla&"ft
mVIN GROGAN
EDITORIAL STAFF: Sandy Barnes, Barbara Bennett, Pam Clodfelter, Marvin Coble, Lineta
Craven, Bob Dick, Kay Doenges, Linda Eagles, Ron Enders, Glenn Hamm Nancy Howell,
Adrian King, Caroline King. June King, Bob Krause, Cliff Lowery, Jim 'McKinnon, Walt
Pet1it, Roy "Rockwell, Susie Simmons, Leon Spencer, Phyllis Sd:eele, Jay Stroud, Dave
Sumler, Sandy Thomas, Elizabeth Unruh, Kay Wilson, l1'rank Wood, Harold Woodell, Jo De
Young, Carolyn Zanger.
Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for natienal advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Second-Class mail privileges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. 0.
Telephone PArk 5-9711
P. o. BOx 758'7
Extension 215
ReYDolda Branch
Offices In Beynolda Hall 225·22'7
Wlns&on-8alem, N. C •.
BY F. BRUCE BACH ·
What if :somone •were speaking
,of a fr.i-end of Yours and said, "She
used to •be a gremU.n lchick, but
now she is' 18. bogy-riding hoemama who runs with a six-pack of
Okies?"\
'
'
Would you know what they, were
talking about? Well chanceS are
tfbat you woti.ldn't, so .in conjun<:f;ion
With the spi:r.it of education here a.t
Wake Forest, OH~Beat offers y011
the. opportunity to learn a foreign .'
language. ·
This is the language of the s-mall
yet highly significant nation of
Southern Ainrofilac.
First of a.ll, a gremlin is young
hoedad and both are 'of tihe maseu·line gender. Therefore a gremlin
chick as a feminine gremlin and a
hoe:mama. is a. female hoedad.
Complica.tio~ Arises
- Now the lessOn gets comp-licated.
A ·hoedad ~sa boy between :fif'teen and twenty-one years of age
who has long hair, sideburns, and
who appreciates a good · street
figlht. ·One hoedad, which is seldom
seen,_ is just a hoedad, <but two Ol'
more hoodads is· known as a sixp-ack of hoediads.
One .Of these phenomenon ·betWeen the age of ten and·fi:fteen·is
. ·a gremlin and two or more,gremlins is a :51ix-pack of gremlins.· No.w,
· the girls· : that run around with
these gremlins are gremlin chicks
and are sometimeS called "gigets.''
A hoedad's girlfriend is naturally
a hoemnazna.
,
Meaning Has Broadened
An Okie orginally was someone
from Oklahomli, but through the
ages .the meaning of th-e word has
broadened to mean anyone from
the middlewest or south or a :llanner from anyWhere. Okies also travel
exclusively in six-packs. One is
seldom seen by himself.·
A large motorcycle is knoWn as
a "hog" and someone W'ho rides
a lll10·torcycle .is, logically enough,
. a hogyrider. Now if a six,teen year
old hGedad's ·girlfriend ·rides a
motorcycle and is .friend-ly witb
some .lJerson from Okl:ahoma, then
she is a hogyrlding' hoemama who
runs with .a six-pack of Okies.
End Of Lesson· One
Ii you ..feel as I dio a>bout foreigu
languages, then you ih:ave had
about· enough for one week, so we
will end Lesson One.
A student ask-ed his friend,''
What kind -of work does ·your
father do?'' The friend replied
"Government Work." "What kind
of governmen-t work?" asked the
student. "Twenty yea;rs," said the
friend. "Road Construction."
After hearing President Kennedy's addTess at Chapel Hill an··
· enthusiastic suppol.'llier of his'·· ex~' ·-· ·
claimed," I wish that he was run- ning this NOv-ember just so that I
·'could vote for 'him again!"
THE
By STANLEY H. JACKMAN,
Do you know where you've been?
Have you looked back carefully and
plotted it tall out, ·and are you sure
that it is so completely imbedded
upOn the- framework of your mind
that you'll ne-ver lose it ? r.t becomes the all-important asp~t; of
our lives these days. Is ~,your
"structural steel" a. m.aze'·1 of
strengths and fortitudes, a.nd will
it sustain you through all your
life?
·
It makes. little sense for us to
wonder ;where · we are going these
d.ay.s, mtd most of us are hasty to
avoid !being nonsensical. Therefore,
we avoid trying to care where we
are going. It's not a very important
thing anyway . . . this future that
is always, painstakingly descr1bed
as "nebulous." It's not that, any~
w.ay, but the emphasis· should be
plaCed! upon the -emblem we wear
on <~ur hlazer, upon the Cadillac
our folks· will' drive up here when
they come to see us, the brand of
flannels we wear to that "indispensible" Political Science Seminar
Course.
Don't worry about PoJ.itical
Theory, but take only History
• . • see what your fathers did
before you and do it again. Be
a part of down-fallen Rorme, and
call it the United States; jump
Group Plans
Europe Trip
Next Summer
Tentative plans are being made
for a trip to Europe, particularly
Germany, by several students in
the German department. This group
hopes that their number will increase to twenty.
The. plaps at present inclt~.de five
week of travel in GermallY' and
several neighboring countries France, Italy, and Austria . .
At the completion of the tour,
the group will go to the University
of Heidelberg where those interested will enroll in a summer German
language course. 1Although tbis will
not be a requiremeiiit, it will be
encouraged.
,
The members of the group hope
to be distributed in homes In and
around Heide~berg. In so doing,
they will get a taste of !the Ger~
man way of life. The students will
spend about four weeks in Heidel·
berg.
·
Dr. James O'Flaherty, who is
acting as advisor to the party, is
attempting to secure 3 hours credit
for those students who participate
in the 1aDguage course at the University.
At the next meeting of the German Club, pictures of Germany
will be shown. Discussion will follow. The date of the meeting will
be announced later.
.A:ny persons interested in going
to Europe with this group should
contact Dr. O'Flaherty ·in the near
future.
out of a tree again and again and
remem'ber that the paper wings
didn't work; talk through a sti~f
CARPETBAG
l
our way around through li;fe. The
wire, and have someone listen at
funny .thing is that So far we have
the other end.
just about given them a 10(}% preThe stDife <>l all of us in the
d'idtion rating.
modem swiety is to "arrive" and
we ibend ·all of our efforts in that
' 1Sneeze in MoscGW and gr<llb a
direction. "If you're not going anyhandkerchief in Washington ... ·?"
where, it's- pretty impossible to
Possibly not, but at least the ;re..,;.
arvive." Do you believe· that? You - action to a .s-neeze in Moscow is
.little mGre that .the Russian equiva1should, and yet its so hackneyed
-, and old faslhioned. After ail, teachlent of "God Bless You," except
~ ers and "older" friends repeat'that
they probably substitute "Stalin"
phrase and others like it to us all
f"O'l' .the Diety. In Washington,
the time.
sneeze and watdh. the ruStling of
Wall Street papers and tape! What
We have to remember the cor·
rect thingSJ we did. The correct
an assinine evolution.
clubs, the right Slide of the street,
"It certainlY is nice to have
the obv.ious side of town, the
youngsters in the \Vhite Bouse."
name and the door. It's r~y a
Compare thumbsucking with
shame that the almighty put our
Yalta. The heck with "Armchair
eyes -on wrong. We can back into
admirals," and the heck with
something this way, and really we
Yalta! What about tomorrow.
should have at least one eye keepA professional broadway actress
The SJioken word is lost. The
ing- watch. We might even back
will .play a major role in the Colsped .arrow ·lis also los·t, and inciinto the future if we're extremely
dentally very much out of date. , lege Theater's prodUction of "Hamcareless. And it will wait, believe
let," which will !l"t1n Oct. 23-27 and
Time-even an :imbecile knows
me it will wait. ·and we'll back
Oct. 30-Nov. 4. ·
what happens to that and its old
into it. Of course, our !immediate
Gina Petru.shka, who will take
cronY-the tides. But opportunity,
reaction is to back ahead slowly, so
the part of Gertrude, the .Queen,
what of th:a·t? Pharoalb. said negthat __ the blow won't jar us unhas appea~ed both on and off
lected with emphasis on the past
necessarily.
Broadway m such plays as "ComtellW. MUst we take our example
Yon can't begin the I.ongest
pulsion"
and
"Between
two
from that and keep dt in the pa.St
journey without the first step,
Thieves," on all 1ihe major televitense? •How about Neglecting?
and you have to make some
sion networks, and in two motion
effort to see that that first step
pictures.
·
.
is frontwards or you really will
Last summer she portrayed Maback into the future. I read about
ma in Winston-Salem's Tanglewood
a.girl once who backed into a eosBarn production of :•'1 .Remember
tume party because she bad fo~
Mama." In 1959 she played 1\[rs.
(All letters to the editor mast
gotten her costume, but that ·
Erlynne · in "Lady _Windermere's
be signed; name~J will be with·
would be hardly applicable here.
Fan'' and Mrs. Fvank in ''Diary of
held on request.)
· Ann Frank," while in 1958. she
I asked a ·ldbTarian at a college
portrayed the Dowager Empress in.
I once attended w:hether she 'had a
To The Ed:itor:
"Anastasia.''
copy of "Peyton Place" in her
Last February Slater Food Ser~
Miss Petrushka was born in LeipLtbrary files· or even-Heaven forvices took over the cafeteria amidi
zig,
Germany and lived in Switzerbid!--on the stack shelves. Wlhy,
.student hoorays. There was pr.oland
for 11 years before coining
hadn't I any idea how this could
mise of better food and better ser·to the Undted States. She is prebruise th<e unsuspecting youn.g
vice. And for a time all was imsent)¥ living in New YQrk City and
minds of college students?--except
proved.
appearing in the n-ew off-BroadI believe that her word was ''colBut alas and alack, success
way ;play. "The Opening of a. Win•
lege children,'' or youngsters, or
seems to have liJJed complacency,
dow" by Gene Radano.
some innane wo:rd. Don't place it
hence ten:ible food again with the
This play, :according to .James
1n front of them, shield them from
dnswlt
of higher prices.
Walton, d:irector of tihe Colleg-e
it, ·allow 1Jhem to seek it elsewhere
And there waS" promise last winTheater, received "unanimously
-ravenously!
.ter
of no price llii.kes! Are the stufavorable revieWs." She is being
How much digging have you
dwts going to have to again threatreleased: from tbe play for her
done in our library for Communist
~m and coerce to gcl good food and:
visit to the campus·.
"
material? Do we have any! You
'better service?
Miss Petrnshka 'Particip.ated for
should know the answer as readily
Doesn't the Slater people realize
fo~r year:;; lin the Kulturbund Theaas Y,our own name. Are we about
their
shortcomings? Do ..they plan
ter ~n Berlin and for six years in
to get any? Probably not! It's
NOT to attempt to' :ra:ise stanthe StadttheateT in Basel, Switzernot g-ood for us to read-infect us
dards? I hope thE'y"Do.
land. She has worked summer stock
as thinking m:ind·s and thinking
Sineel\ely,
in New York, New Jersey, and
young people--that cannot ;be, The
· "Hungry"
Pennsylvania,.
adage of :f.ighting fire with fire is
Her television appeal'a.nces anold, and antiquated, .but it pers.ists.
elude suc!h shows as "Kraft Thea·
Swear <~ff the Devil. · W!ould you
ter," "Studio On~" and ''PNlmow !him If you met him face to
1 dueer's, Showcase."
face . . . I'm sure you wouldn't.
<~:'! '
Miss Petrushl:a played the part
An ancient Pharoah said only
of Mrs. KessleT", the mother of the
four things in the world were
.'
.
.
murdered boy in "CompUlsion''· on
lost forever to mankind-the
spoken word, ·the sped arrow,
Broadway, and also appeared in the
. T·~enty-four guests. were present
time past, and riegl.ected oppor~
,premiere performance at North:
for- the fall semester smoker for
tnnity.
Jersey Playhouse of the original
ihe .Gamma Nu chapter of Delta
Does it matter? Not very much.
Meyer Levin version of tbe same
.'.;igma Pi. The smoker was !held
We can become a civilization of
plaY based on b:is novel. In this
last Wednesday night;
production s.he portrayed :Mrs.
"Ki-Ki'' birds rather easilY, and
David S. Monk, sales service co~
eventually we :will become so emStrauss, the mother of the muTderordinator for Areh€1- .Aluminum,
powered with hindsight 1jhat all our
er.
was the guest speaker. Other·visimirrors and the need foT them wiE
She was in .the ·motion ;pictures
tors were Dr. Ga:ines Rogers, Dean
disappear. What a joy this woul'i
''Middle of the Night" and "Secret
of the SchOol of Business Adminisbe!
:
of the Purple Reef."
tration, ·and .the fraternity's ad~
Watch out,. though, for in the
Miss Petrushka w:ill be conductvisor, Dr. Lyell Thomas.
comers of the darkness are soro.c
ing classes in acting as well as apThe business fraternity made an
wlho are a neat ad:mi&ture of "Ki~
overnight trip to Charlotte tihiis ·
pearing in "Hamlet."
Ki'' and forefront fowl. TJ.ey
Reservations for the ;play can be
past weekend, where the ·members
"know" !Tom History that they llre
made througl!l the College Theater
attended the North Carolina Trade
right, and they watch us b<tcking
office.
Fair.
Pro Stars
In 'Hamlet'
Letters
Business Frat
Holds Smoker
-
'I
1
-
Frosh ]lDy
Uses-~He.ad·
•king
"She
but
:k of
were
are
~ion
:e o.t
you
·eign i
mall
of
L
fU!Ig
scullllin
1d a
.ted.
fifa.ge
and
reet
iom
) 01'
sixbe-
n'is
em·ow,
vith
ieks
ts!'
ally
one
the
has
:om
rm.-
LVel
is
o.s
des
.gh,
ear
a
ritb:
leD.
vho
ign
lad
we
d,'"
:>ur
.ied
ind
the
the
.en·
an"
ex;:;' --m- It I
·'
ess
olLm-
.nd
Lke
en,
l>ff
•m·
wo
vi:on
. Tom Ti!al, a freshman of Rich-mond, Va., cuts his own lbair. ~-t
Sunday Tom set up a combination
of rn.irrOrs in his 'l."oom and' went to
work on 'his nead.- ·
However, this was
the first
.ti:m.e that he had given ll.imself a .
baireut. Last summer 'while work, :lng at· Camp Skymont. ne~ Front -, ·
Royal, Yta,. Teal became interested
in trimming ihair. The boys and
' girls were at the camp for six
weeks and consequently needed
haireuts..
·
Teal jokingly exclaimed- that he
would do the job. He did! Al;though his first attempts Wi!re not
perfect, at least they diid not provoke the ire-of-the parents! .Buys Tools
- Since. that feeble beginning, Tom
lhas· acquired his owri tools. For
ten dolliars he latched onto a set of
clippers, IScissors, combs and all
the accessories.
Teal has.. out 35 heads since
school Opened. He likes it ·and
evidently .the boys do also, for they_
keep coming back. ·
He trmns ' his roomma:te Rick ,
- Stivers' hair because, "he - is so
understanding about having ~hair
all over the floor." Stiver
freshman of Toledo, Ohio.
Busin._ Major
Teal ,:plans to major in. business
and he certainly :seems to have an
'. · incl:ination in this' direction. ~He
· reminds all ROTC men who want
to keep trim, "I can use
head."
oot
·Officers for the coming semester
were elected at the German Club
meetinlf Oet. 5.
-Sid .Disher, senior of Savann·ah,
Ga., was elected .pl-esident; Glenn
Hamm senior of Lancaster, S. C.,
was named vice-presiden-t; Inma
Browder, junior of .Danville, Va.,
was chosen secretary.
Kipphan Talks ·
During the meeting Klaus Kip, phan, exchange student from Germany, gave a talk on student life
of German Universities. Half the
. speech was delivered in English,
. the other half in German.
Members of llb.e German class at
Reynolds ··High School · attended
the meeting and sang a song 'in
Gel)llan.
'Ia-
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For information write: ~
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e's
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rend
\
INTERVIEWS BEGIN
The National Agency and representatives of a .business agency will
An organizational meeting of be -on campus this week to interthe Young Republicans Club will v:iew Wake Forest .students for job
be held 6:30 p. m. Wednesday in ·openings. Interviews will be held in
t'he Placement office.
Room 125, Reynold.a HaD.
This date was set at a meeting
of YRC leaders last Thursday.
One Of the ~sible YRC fune.
tions for the 'year may be to
sponsor the visit of four Republican Congressmen to the campus
iri November.
· Sue Stanley, junior ·of Greensboro, will preside over the initial
mec;ting ·01. the group.
YRCMeeting
Come, see our
collection for
-HOI'\le-Coming and
Greek Week
something exciting
for every occasion
from football games
to formal affairs.
Rendezvous Room
and Sports Shop
1
3
b
PATRONIZE OG'&B ADVERTISERS
Plenty of Parking Space
Salem ;physician, was eleeted vicepresident.
Four other officers of the board
were re-elected. They are: Talcott
W. Brewer of Raleigh, treasurer
emeritus; Worth H. Oopel:and of
Winston-Salem, secretary a n d
treasurer; James B. Cook, Jr., of
Winston-Salem, ilissistant secretary
~nd treasurer; and J. Wilbur Bunn
of Raleigih, general counsel.
Phone PA 40013
Kathryn Lewis
l.d·
in-
Cosmetics
Gifts
Delivery Service
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3716 Reynotda Road
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Weather Coats
$1.50
'
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Res-taurant
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· to all
Students
Lou Kara.s
~
~
·a:
MISS GINA PETRUSHKA has b~n released from "The Openi.tlg of a· Window" by Gene Radano, currently playing-- in 'New York City,_ to participate in the Wake Forest College Theater -production of
"Hamlet." In addition to her portrayal of" Gertrude; the Queen, Miss Petrnshka will conduct classes In
acting. (See story on page 1.)
Charlotte's Beauty
Salon·
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OP~N 6 DAYS A WEEK
9 A. M. - 8 P. M.
9 A. M.- 9 P. M. Frid~ys
·8 A. M. - 6 P. M. Saturdays·
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I
,
PAGE FIVE
Special
Event
Flashions
BeBer NUTRition.through at:o-chemistry
Conrad Bows Out
As Trustee Head
Lex' MarSh, Charlotte ' Tealtor
and mortgage thanker, was elected
president of the Wake Forest College Boord of Trustees yesterday.
Succeeds Conrad
He was chosen, as were the 10ther
officers, iby acclamation. He sueceeds William 'J', Conrad of, Winston-Salem, a. retired oftficial of
R. J. Reynolds Tobaeeo 'co.
.Dr. Paul W. Johnson, Winston-
Monday, Oct. 16, 1961
COUEGE STUD.ENTS
Are you, disregarding proper nutrition and encouraging resulting
fatigue and possible "subclinical
deficiency conditions" by:
I Substituting snacks for
wholesome mealS?
n Eating by taste and choice
· rather than by scientific food selection?
' m IDability to eat certain foods?
IV Dieting?
V Failing to get your vitamin
and mineral minimum daily
- requirement?
Away From Traffic
German Gro~p
'Hears·Kipphan
I
'The Christian Educa;tion and Service Club will meet a.t 5:30 .p. m.
Thursday -a.t the home of Dr, and
Mrs. Owen F. Herring. A s·teak
cook-out will precede the program.
Dr. Mark Depp, retired minister
of Centenary' Methodist Church,
will condw:t the {Program.
'The meeting is open not only to
members but pro.51peetive members
as well. Those interested dn attending Should inform Eva Pearce or
Joe Clontz today.
In Business
hoe·
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Dr. Herring
To Host Club
Mother And Daughter
Store
·
Corner Lib~rty and 3rd Streets
FOR
TH'E SMARTEST SPORTSWEA-R
IN TOWN
AT BUD_GET. PRIC-ES
Corne· In A.nd Get
Acquainted
Mother And Daughter
Store
"Not only is this a dull party, but
I've run out of CHESTERFIELDS!"
21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!
AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD-NOT FILTERED MILD-THEY SATISFY
Monday, Oct. 16, 1961
PAGE SIX
OLD GOLD AND BlACK
Classic Reported Good
"Ivan" ~eries Shown
Veacs Who Are Greeks
·oc~eltMant.e•s Motors·
. Plfinouth
. Valiant Fiat
By CHARLES STONE
It was Sunday afternoon, one of ly visited the chapter.
. .
.
those afternoons when all nature Pat Muse will represent the fraBy ANGELA. JOHNSON
were,not missed.
Some of the shooting, :Particularseems to be bursting up in joy to ternity in the "Miss Deamon DeaArts Columnist
As for the coronation and feast, ly of the horses and soldiers runthe warm Autumn sun. The door con" contest. ·
Sergei Eisenstein's "Ivan The the-..sumptuousness came thrOugh ning to battle, was much in adof a certain building was thrown
Kappa Sigma
Terrible" was a very excellent veey well in black and white.
vani!e of American films of the
open, and a group of starched and Barbara Metcalf was elected to foreign !film.
The, caS'tle with its tiny doors time...
.
tied young men stepped forth gaz- represent the chapter in the "Miss
The classical acting, which makes added to .the impressive size of the
The shadow-plaY aga~t the
ing around in excited expectation. Deamon Deacon" contest.
use of grandilose gestures, tight or- characters, also aide.d by platforms. castle walls when Ivan was conPreparations had been made. In· A party. was held in the house derly stage groups, and extreme The music of Prokofiev, written fe~.wlth an emissary over the
vitations had lbeen sent out. Com- last Friday night.
facial expression, was a far cry especially for the film, was mag- prospect .of English trade was
pany was expected.
Pi Kappa -Alpha
from the realistic interpretations ni!ficent. Thls music, well known very effective.
Tbedoormentioned above belong- A record party was held in the that one is accustomed to today. <by its _own merit,· was blended On~ sees the huge shadow of
ed to a certain fraternity house on house last Friday night.
This did not at all interfere with splendidly with each scene.
Ivan with his pointed beard alterthe Wake Forest
Upperclass pledges include Cook the magnificent spell which the
As th~ program n()ted, some nately alone and against a shadow
College campus.
Griffin, Terry Herndon, Dave Hut- film cast.
scenes, were lengthy, but,' contrary of a gl'obe, such as was USed for
The occasion was .
chinson, and Bill Northcutt.
The heavy style quite matched to _the 'sheet; did not seem trying. maP. stuc:zy (not solid but with
a long prepared ·
Pete Daniels married BoiU)ie Sul- the ostentatious yet cold splendor This is again due to the merit of strips connecting the poles, etc.)
for faculty tea. .
livan, a coed of Wilmington, dur- of the oourt and the man Ivan. the acting.
The' first Wednesday of NovemThe young men •
ing the summer. The couple are This "larger-than-life" quality The photography in its~lf reach- ber will be reserv_ed for the showof <that !fraternity
living in the trailer park this year which the program mentioned was ed a high plane of excellence. :Dt ing of, the second part_.of this inhad felt the dewhile Daniels persues graduate stu- quite suitable for this fantastic yet is an old film, and of course th~ tended, trilogy. This part,. "Ivan,
sire to meet the
C\ies.
historically true character.
quality 'in places is techllicallY the-Terrible, Pam II'~ Will be shown
newest fa c u 1 t y
Ann Herring was elected to reThe Russian actor playing Ivan poor, but not auY more than the at 8 . P.· m. in the Salem building
members. Those
present the fraternity at homecom- immediately commanded an' at- average television program.
lecture room.
·
men also hoped
ing,
tention by his size, his voice, and --'~-------------,-.------------ to renew older
.
Sigma Cbil
his facial expression, particularly
acquaintances among their pro. Dave Walker was pinned to Joan his eyes. The aging of· the man '
fessors and instructors. They were Lo Bianco of Florida State Univer- was wen done bis features be-. J
expecting 200, and they were ready. sity.
coming grad~IIy sharper and
.
A few guests came. Some very Upperclass pledges include: Dave harder.
~~fine oneS. And all seemed to profit Jacks, Jerry Randolph, Jim Wall,
Probably next in line !for honors ' .
from tire experience. But at the Ted Merideth, John Hamilton, was the scheming mother of the
• •.,
end of the allotted time, those Allen Autry, Doug M(yerly, and idiot boy Vladimir. She was all
.:. ·! .
··
·
eager young men tasted disappoint- Jim Isreal.
three of 'the witches of :Macbeth
By RICHARD F1LIPPI 1
many~ears, ElijilhKeUogg~s "Splll'o ·
ment.
Sigma Phi EJisilGD
and even- more. Her sinister ap- . :Qotertahunent Colluimist
tacus', Address tO tbe Gladiators••
Only one fourth of the expected
Nancy Carpenter, a ~unior of pearance, th'ough exaggerated in No~ playing at the Winston Thea- was ~- ~tandard elocution piece in
number had been seen. A few Cherryville, was chosen Sweetheart keeping with the classicism, was tre Js .the epic motion picture, Am~c.an__ schoo~.
..
,~
regrets had been phoned in, a few fur the coming ~ar.
never extreme.
"Spartacus." The film, a winner Thornton Wilder's "The Idea._.ol
appologetic nrotes were later reA party of brothers attended the This part could easily be bur- of four Academy Awards, ,had its March'~. deals with the.era of Sp~
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• ts
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. . . ·' . r
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R
•' e lOR, :·o- '·". w-na··.·n'ce/
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. ~NsroN--SiLiM,
93s _BuiiK:E smm
• wm OUR saowllilra· •
~(
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~=::=::=======~=::::============~
<
_._
. , • •,.
eeived,
but from
the majority of Duke
game last
something
forwas
anyadeof fall
world:
premiere
Yorkthere.
last published
tacus, andKoestler
in 1939 ..
the
expected
guests-silence.
A jukebox
partyweek-ehd.
was held in the lesqued
the threeinto
stooges,
yet she
and
is currentlyNew
playing
a Arthur
nl;)vel, ''The
Gladiator,"
WbY?
house last Friday night.
quately horrible eand never amus- It has been widely acclaimed f~r on the f>!lbj~. The.. best known
What about thls student..faculty John Hopkin~ pinned Diane Pfef- ing.
.
its Unique blending of a tender, ~ork, howe~er, is Howard Fast'l!
relations stuff we hear fanned up ferkorn. of W~ston~alem.
. The setting was. something. to intimate love story in a frame- Sp~rtacus,
the basis for the
·occasionallY? What about those il\fanrung Snuth, Rick B~c~~nan, nva~ the late Cecil B. DeMille, work of brilliant spectacle. This movle.
:
young men that sunday afternoon and John Jurkovec were lllltiated. particularly the crowd scenes f~r Technicolor production stars Kirk The !film tells the story of Sparwere looking forward to seeing
George Monks and Wayne Well- tht; ba~~ at Kazan and the pil- Douglas, Sir ·Laurence Olivier, tacus' revolt against !Rome which
their favorite professors and talk- :bourn recently :J?ledged.
grnnage m the snow to Alexandrov. Charles Laughton, Jean Simmlons, was only one of a series of re.
.
ing to' them informally?
Sigma Pi:-No news.
Of course color. and cinema- Peter Ustinov, ·John Gavin, and bellions called "The Servile Wars"
And what about all the other
Theta Chi-No news.
scope was not proVJded, but theY Tony Curtis.
-rebellions of slaves which had to
fraternity _groups on this campus
·
The producers of "Spartacus" be put down by force.
. .
.
v;ho expenence a taste of hell ea~h
scoured Europe for thousands of Without· supplies, weapons, or an
time t~ey attempt to plan a soc1al
authentic art objects, costumes, organized so~al system behind
gathermg and need a chaperone?
e e e
household wares, and furnishings him, Spartacus managed to train
Alpha Sigma Phi
in order to duplicate the lavishness 90,000 mutineers int~ a fighting
A party was held in !the house
.
.
and sensuality -of life in ancient force which destroyed nine Roman
last Saturday night.
By JIM McKINNON
high level to the profesSional ranks. Rome.
legions in succession. He did not
Gary Seager receently completed
Staff Writer
So far over 75 professional and
All together, 27 <tons of material attempt to defeat Rome, but sought,
help week and will be initiated soon.
East Carolina
co~ege. team~ .have u_sed the ma- including 7 tons of custom-made instead, to escape Italy with his
Fred Picklesimer won a scholarDuring this past summer probably chine m ltrallllllg ~herr. players.
armor ( ! ) were transferred to rebels. ·
L~UNDRY
ship to the Bowman Gray school of the longest sb:out in histo..v was
Th HTulandeTil~tomveM.,.._ty 'al Li Hollywood for !the production.
·Rome could not abide such an
.
·"
n emon
me dierne.
held on the Bucaneer campus.
The brarye atowar
Tulane
has
initiated a- s part acus was among the great eventuality, however, for a successDelta Sigma Phi
occasion was the summer dance
t
h b th
tud ts torch-bearers for freedom, yet he ful escape would have demonstratA hayride and house party were at which time the popular record: new sysdemth w ere Yt bee ts lien is probably the most neglected hero ed that it was possible to throw off
.
.
•
. can rea
e curren
s se ers · hi to
Th tyr
· a1
· 1
·
·
·
held Saturday rught.
mg "Shout" was sung !for 28 rmn- t
n minal fee It has set u a m
s ~y.
e
anmc
soCia slavery and get away With J.t.
>
The fraternity serenadedthecoed utes by the Blue Notes of Kinston. a ~al 0 te
· t d.
f~
order
he
challengetl
saw
to
it
that
In
his
attempt-to
flee
Italy,
Spardorms last week.
Campbell College
rben . sys m 1ocafe thm 0li~be 0
e every contemporary trace of him tacus planned to cross the Alps
rowsmg rooms o
e
rary.
ed
·
·
Kappa Alpha
Campbell college basketball coach
Drew University
was eras . . .
.
but ch_anged his plan and went
A combo party was held in the Fred McCall -has become an inAn
dded feature to the ew
even if history has !been ne- south mto Italy. _Near the point
house Saturday. afternoon before ventor as well as a basketball girl's ~orm at Drew was then in- gli~ent toward Spart_acus, the poets, where the revolt began, his a~y
the South Carolina game.
coach. His "McCall's Rebounder" t ll ti
f
d
writers, and dramatists have found was defeated iby the combmed
1
•
· ti
1
~
of
has ben patented and placed on the st a a ontho a'd oord re
b ease
k d SlYS- him a source o f msprra
on. A Pay
.orces
Crassus and Pompey. \
L ambda Chi Alpha
A party was held in the house natitmal market for the first time. emT qn . e sdmie_ttan
aafct ~~· about Spartacus appeared in Paris It may be of interest to IliOte that •
. mvention
.
.
, a dev1ce
. .designed d o gam
aib 1 ance
er ,....
. .
. ht
This
IS
h
. e1 a s ear 1Y as 1788, one year after the a prom1smg
--young o££'1cer named
1as t S a t urd aJY rug .
1 k d th
Gary Williams, Stew Bryant, and to help develop the jU!IIlping po- ~r~~e
:~~ ~~ ~O:,r~ :-d French .Revolution.
.
Julius Caesar was in .the victorious
NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CENTER
George Fleetwood
tential of basketball . players ·
.
• t er- t The first play
. recently pledged.
.
ask a dm'ISSion
over a sma11 m
......
1by an Amencan forces.
·
·
A representative from the nation- It was designed so that it can be
located in th do
Th o run ~!lore .....an ,000 performanc- Bnefly, "Spartacus" depicts the 1
a1 fraternity, J. Edwin Cole, recent- used by players from the junior com
'tt' g t teh
orwt aaly. d ske es was R. M. J3ird's "The Gladia- story of man's eternal desire for
----------------------------------~~~----------~~-- ?erson
SI lil will
~ then
e cenr
e ,to
~~~~:~·~w~ru~·c~h~o~pe~n~e~d~in~~~~1~-~F~o~r~fr~e:e=d~o~lil:·~-------~------~------~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
m the lounge
press a but_
ton which will release the .lock on
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Monday, October 16
Concert
6:55--News
7:00--Campus Report
7:15--Wake Forest Sports
7:30-Special of the Week
8:00-Reynolda Hall Lecture
Series
9:00-Almanac
9:25--Law in News
9:30-Broadway Spectrum
10:00-Interlude
10:30-Deaconlight Serenade
12:00--Sign Off
Tuesday, October 17
~:00-Evening Concert
7:00-0pera of the Week
10:00-Interlude
10:30-Deaconlight Serenade
12:00--Sign Off
Wednesday, October 18
S:OO-Evening Concert
8:55-Newa
7:00-GermaJliY Today
7:15--H Is for JG¥
7:30-0ra1 Essays on Education
8:00--The Individual
8:55-Buslness Review
9:00-Music from Wake Forest
10: 00-In!terlude
10:30-Deaconllght Serenade
12:00--Sign Off
Thursday, October 19
5:00--Evening Concert
?:oo-Gomfng of Age
7:30-Challenge of the Aging
8:00-Book Fair
8:15--Food lfor World
8:30-Leaders of the ~'few South
9:00-Etbic for Broadcasting
'S:~Evening
For Nice Things To
Wear And Relaxed
Suburban Shopping
Visit
the door. Appalachian
.
The Appalachian Mountaineers
are the !only homeless football team
in the NwJ:h State Conference this
season, as they have no games
scheduled in Boone. The new stadium that is being constructed on
campus has not yet been completed.
Though the Mounties are' without
a' home this year, they will be
hous~d in the new stadium by the
time the 1962 season arrives.
9:30-Pioneers of Prose and
Poetry
9:55-Medical Milestones
10:00-Interlude
10:30-Deaconlight Serenade
12:00-Sign Off
Friday, October 20
5:00-EveniDg Concert
6:55-News
7:00-Consumer Question
7:15--Land of the Bible ·
7:30-American Law, .
8:00-World's Great Drama
10:00-Jnterlude
10:30-Deaconlight Serenade
Mars Hill College
Formal dedication was made this
week of the new Robert Lee Moore
Auditorium and Fine Arts Building.
Dr. Daniel A. Poling, editor of the
Christian Herald delivered thededication address.
12:00--Sign Off
for all occasions
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\
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Alan White Shines
As ·neacOn •Half bacl~ ,
·s
..
'
/'·
.
'
.· ·.
IT
I
..
I
takes
the'D EA CS
By JACK HAMRICK
sports Editor
.
.
CROSS.COUNTRY TEAM
MJ::RITS CONG~TULATIONS-The Wake Forest cross-country squad has started .off, the 1961 fall
season in :high gear. Winning two of their !first three meets, the
Deacons have compiled a record of two wins against one de'feat.
~d by senior Ed Ledford ~d s~phomore Dave Turner, who
finished in a tie for first place, the Deacon :harriers defeated the
Virginia Cavaliers here in the first meet of the year, 24-33.
The ne~t week the cross-countrY-m-en journeyed :tio' Davidson for
r a meet with the Wildcats and came. out victOrious iri that encounter
.
too. Sterling Martin finished in first place for that meet.
On OC'I:ober 7 the Deacons met Duke and N. C. State in a triangular
meet at Durham, with the Blue Devils taking the victory. The Deacons came in second, and the Wolfpack finished in third place.
For their fine efforts in support Of their college the Deacon harriers
are to be congratUlated, and our best wishes for a successful season
go out to them.
·
Wake Forest's next meet is with Virginia Tech here Wednes4ay.
Let's all be at the finish line to cheer the Deacons on to victory.
PORTABL~S
e ELEOTRICS • STANDARDS
The Typewriter
Showroom Of The South
Kelly Typewriter Co.
•
818 W. 4th ST.•
"TYP~WRITER IS OUR MIDDLE NAIIB"
DEACON-WOLFPACK ENCOUNTER
RATED A TOSSUP. . ..
_Aithoqgh the North Ca:rlolina -State Wolfpack has experienced
rough going in its first three outings of 1lhe season, All-America
Roman Gabriel's ·passing does not' seem 'to have suffered too 'much.
The Wolfpack is currently resting. in last place among ACC schools
their rushing· depamnent as it has· only been able tD grind: out
309 yards on the ground in its first three games. In passing, however,
State is in fourth place, with a total aerial1 gam of 326 yards.
·And Gabriel has done ali" of Starte's pas$1g. He has completed 29 .of
59 attempts for a per game average of 108.7 'yards through the air.
Four Of his passes have been good for touchdowns, and he has had
thi:'ee passes intercepted.
·Against this potent Gabriel passing attack, Jthe Deacons·will pit a
pass defense that has anowed 353 yards through the air in three
.games. The Dimcons have also given up 683 yards on the ground to
award th~in last'pfac"!!m the total ACC defensive standings. Wake
has given· up a total of 1036 yards on the ground and in lthe air
for a per game yield of 345.3.
The Deacons. have not been able to conjure a ,.powerful offensive
machine either. In total offense Wake Forest has picked up 512 (Yards
for a per game average of 170.7 yards while State ·has gained 635
yards for a 211.6 yard average.
Thus the 55th renewal of the old Wake County rivalry seems to !be a
tossup. The Deacons are due for a victory, and if .they can kleeP
Gabriel's passing to a minimum and start an effective offense of their
own Wake Forest students may get to ring the bell in the library
-3gain ·Saturday night.
·
-
.PATRONIZE OG&B ADVERTISERS
m:·
the line of scrimmage," claims
White; "therefore, I had many oneon-one ·situations wiotlh de<fensive
packs. This helped me a great deal
~s far- as cutting .and shifting' is
cotncerned.''
Wihile at. Elm City High, White
compiled a ' truly unbelievable record. He served as f{lotball, basketball, and baseball captain his
senior year,.and during the football
season he scored 34 touehdowns
and passed for 8 additional scores!
See White, P. 8
.
Deacs To .Meet State
-.u.nder~ Lt. -ht. _s s·atu.'. r d ay
I
'
•·
•'
•
.
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•-
•
SPORTS NOTES FROM HERE -AND THERE·'
K
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I.ENWOOD AMMONS
Dada
.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,::-:·•='·
oneman
conferellce
aboutyolll" ,
future
You:
Why the gold bars?
UOO BeJaolda Had
Batteries
Cerner Bobla BOCNI ....
PBONB
..
.... 1-2111
Future Yort:
There's No Secret
equipment available today.
The Air Force needs college trained men and women
as officers. This is caused by the rapidly advancin&
technology that goes with hypersonic air and spaco
flight. Your four years of college have equipped YO'Il
to handle complex jobs.
You:
Say I was interested ... how can lget to he an officer?
to producing fine photoengravings. You
simply take generous.:amounts of experience, skill and conscientious attituile and
combine them with the best mechanical
Piedmont Engraving follows this fonnula
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·
Let PiedmDnt salve yaur plate pro111ems
far publications, bnchures, calor-process
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PIEDMONT ENUAYING COMPANY
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Future Yort:
Future You:
WINSTON·SAI.EII, N.C.
You know about Air Force ROTC and the Air Foree
:Academy. Then there's the navigator training program. You've probably heard about Officer Training
SChool. .. where the Air Force takes .certain college
graduates, both men and women, and commissiona
them after three months of training•.
You:
Starting salary is important. What about that?
Future You:
Add it.up. Base pay, tax-free allowances, free medi·
cal and dental care, retirement provision, perhaps
flight pay. You don't have to he an eco major to see
it adds up to an attractive package.
You:
I've been thinking· about getting my Master's.
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Accessories -
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You're needed ... just as your father and grandfather
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Im~en~tor~'~J~a~c~k~M~ur~d~o~c~k~this~·~Wlll~·~t~er:·:....:.·_:·~·~·---~.. _________::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::====::
'
RO.AD SERVJCE
• PARKWAY PUZA
key
mistakes
have
a 1better
record!
to kept
date. State
. from
. _
W:ake Forest ·backfield coa-ch Bill
Hunter also re:portB that. State's
ends! hav:e ~n dro.pping n~erous
Gabriel aenals, thus hurting the
passing attack.
A. C. IIOTSnfGD. JIL
Welcome Wake Forest StudeDta
And Family
W
J
Jerry Steele, cO-captain of Wake Forest's 1961 ACC basketball
chllllripions, is doing graduate work at the UniversitY of North Carolina. lie is WQrking· i>n a dEigree in Physical Education . . " Tackle
Bert Wilder, N. c. State's fine .linem'an, has just been drafted into
the ~ and will riot be l\ble to play in Saturday's game against
"Stop Gabriel!" That is what drafted .by the Cleveland Browns, hi.gh !Pre-season ratings, The Wolf- Wake Forest . . . Pat Williams will interview Wake Forest,freshman
., Wake Forest head football· coacll. ·hol<l down ·the right- tackle sp<)t. pack's· -.}one victorY was 'a 14'-7 . footbail coaci1: :B~ia'tue Featb,;;rs tonight at 7:15 on "Wake Forest
.Bill Hildebrand ·and his assistants Junior AI Wilder, Dne •of the best triumph over Viirginia. Injuries and Sports." . . . Alley:_ Hart will serve as assistant Ito Wake frosh cage
will be
telling
the Deacons
tackles .inand
theWeldon
ACC accordin'g
to
week
a.s they
prepare
to meet N.this
C. Ed'Wll.l'ds,
Shaffer, best
State Saturday night at S~te's remembered fori his field goal tliat.
Riddick Stadium.
beat Car()linJa last year, are the
The key to State's success is .AJL alternate .left tackles:
American
quarte~back
Roman
State thus ~<ar has. ;von only o~e
Gabriel.• The 6-foot, 4-inch senior galllle and failed. to live up tD Its
from Wilmington rls labeled by
many aS the finest college signal
caller in the laind.
Gabriel, 1960 ACC Player Of The
Year, was responsible for 54 per
.cent of ,State's offense · last season. .As a so.plhomore in 1959 he
'· was the .most accurate passer in
major college football with 60.4
per cent completions·. At one
stretch in 1960 he either ron Dr
passed for 12 of the Wolfpack'St
touchdowns and · finished with a
56.5 per cent .pass completion aver~
age.
'Head mentor Earl Edwards has '
strength at the otih.er <backfield positions. Although only one hal!fback letterma,n ds returning-senior
AI Taylor-EdwaTds has s'everal
sophomores tbat liave performed
well at this position. Carson Bosh:'' er, Anthony Koszarsley, and-Joseph
Scarpati hav:e been counted on i.for
heavy duty.
/
Fullback is also loaded Wi<th
talent. Senior James D' Antonio·
has developed into one of the best
fullbacks in the ACC. Juriior letterman Roger Moore, who avemged
3.2 yards per .carry last year, and!
sophomore ·Dave Houtz 'will spell
D' Anto.nio.
' ·
·
Tackle is perhaps the strongest
position on the line. Four returning
lettermen, all of whom weigh more
than ~ pounds, bolster this posi-~­
tion, Nick Maravich, already draft- ·
ed by the Philadelphia Eagl~s, and
, ' Fran Pala.ndrani, who has ~en
PAGE. SEVEN.
~VIEWING
'
"Alan White lis our best all-round
ball player. My only regret is that
we don't '!have more like .him.".
These are the words of Dick Hun- •
ter, Wake Forest -backfield eoach
who has tutored .Alan fOT th~ pa.sit ··
two seasons.
White in Iili; senior year has
blossomed ~ut ·into one of t~e Atliantie Coast Conference's top halfbacks. Defensively he is a tenacious: .pass defender, comes ~P well
on ru.nning plays, a.nd tackles witfrl.
crisp authority. ·"Offensively,"
states Coach Hunter, YAlan is not
the fastest r~e!l" we. have, but he
has goOd agility and is hard to
bring doWn." '
·
Anyone who has watched' White ·
perfor,m cannot help ibut notice tib.is
particular feature of his play. He
handles himself with the class· and ·
· poise of a real veter&n and moves_ ·
with the effortless -grace that only ·
a natural athlete passesses.
Wh'ite claims, "I kno~· there are
- hal:f.ba.cks who can outrun' me,· but
·setting. up your blockers and-then .
following them is the important
thing. As soon as I see daylight
though, I'll .pick my spot ,and_ take
off. Nobody can teach you that;
it's just:.got to be there.''
White eredits Wake Fore~t·s emphasis on 1lhe runni.Dg game :for !his
fine showing this £&11. "We've
\ brought ()Ur ends in tight and this- .
bas helpedi out our blocking in the
line. l'v:e had SIOme real big holes
to run throug!h so far."
· .After the first games . White
bas emerged as the top ground Caxolina, where his falther is a
· gainer for the Deaes·. Ag&inst Dnke Baptist minister. ''9ur high school
, he picked up 47 yards. in five car- wasn't big. enou~ to pl:ay eleven
·' .ries to raise his total for the season man foobball," says White, "so I
to 100 yards ill 15 tries for a. 6.9 never played: anything but six-man
average. He has added 39 yards :football -until I came to Wake
on four passes to lead the club in Forest."
Playing this brand ~f ball has
total offense wiUb. 142 yards.
proved to be a blessing in disUnusual Career
quise for the -beetle-brown White.
Alan White has had a ·very un- Six-man football is a 'W!ide-o.pen,
'' usual football career. He hails from running ·type garrne where most of
Elm City, a ·picturesque little vii- the actiQ)'l
place down· field.
lage in the -eastern.part of North "It was no problem getting past.
Monday, Oct. 16,1961
FuiureYou:
stude;.. who · Tblsi"Perspf~a •• ~ .
ltvdiea drowsily no matlw
.._..,. NODOz beps ,_.
llow •ucla sleep he gets.
awake CIIICI ahrt-sahlrl
II you find studying sometimes soporific (llllll who ·doem•11) the word
to remember is NoDoze. N'oDoc alert. yeu with a •fo and accurate
·... Not thrS: •
amount of caffei.n~the IGII8 ~ atimalant·
in_ coffee and tea. Yet --llabit-li ' 1
NoDoz is faster, baudiBr• ..,.. nBIY..
So to keep penpicMh• ..... .....,_ aad
IIDIIIS-and while clllu' & ........._
..... ..., .........._......
......~·~
-'--1.-~111
I
r _
,.
0
•
e
,'1
................................ .
.
As an officer you can apply for the Air Force Institute
of Technology. At no cost, and while on active duty
some officers may even win their PhD. degrees.
You:
Tell me more.
That's the job of your local Air Force Recruiter.
Or write to Officer Career Information, Dept.
SCIIO. Box 7608, Washington 4·, D.C., if you
want further information about the navigator
training or Officer T.raiuing School programs.
There's_ a place for
professional achievement in the
U.S.Air Force
/
\
PAGE EIGHT
Monday, Oct. 16, 1961 · OLD GOLD AND BLACK
.
.l
Deacons De~eat I Fi~~;!~!!»~~:!:cewill
Clemson, 17 13
-
Clemson vs Duke
Syracuse vs Penn state
Maryland vs Air Force
'Virginia vs Virginia Tech
Yale vs Cornell
Furman vs Citadel
Purdue vs Michigan
Wake Forest vs N. C. State
USC vs California
Tennessee vs Alabama
Clemson
Syracuse
Maryland
Virginia
Cornell
Citadel
Michigan
Wake Forest
usc
Alabama
W"Llliams
.875
Duke
Penn State
Maryland
Virginia Tech
Yale
Citadel
Michigan
Wake l<'orest
•
\'OLU1
. .!'
.!
.. ·?
Acconi
.725
Clemson
Penn State
Maryland·
Virginia
Cornell
Citadel
Michigan
Wake Forest
usc
usc.
Tennessee
Alabama
he would enjoy giving the "play
for pay" hrand of ball a w!lli:z-1.
However, White has prepared for
a -coaching career with the ulti.mate
dream of landing a college job.
Right now,
however, Alan
White's main coneer:n is helping
Wake Forest to get off on a good
-
T4
Tl
-,~
WON'T
SHRIN.K
EVEN IF
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The
liemble
Series
The
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Two
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waa 1M
Adler SC's are--guaranteed not to shrink
out of fit or:. your money back. lamb's wool,
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where
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Littlefi4
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tiallet
r.
Dl
Sbort
ed by
membe
for its
Americ
.Balancl
pany s
Worl(
ginning
for Sol<
tinue li
choreoJl
Service;
Mter
ADLER ·SC's-4\VAILABlE IN WHITE AND COLORS AT
Theatel:
HlftE'S. Inc.
BEN' S of_ WAKE FOREST
BOCOCK·STROU.D
The 14
is Micl
years "
most d;
Opera.
A nalt
also beE
New,Yo
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Hew
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Opera- I
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TheW
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fraternit;
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Being NeatMean$Alot
•
West Fourth Street Barber Shop
Wake Forest Barber Shop
10 Barbers
toured'
before
perforn
"Along
In 19:
graphex
Ballet,.
tinued
Hurok,
rect thi:
r
wdnning streak. "The spirit on this
squad .is exceptional," he says,
"and we're going to beat some ball
clubs before it's aH over." If prognosticator Wlhite's
prediction
comes true, :You can rest assured
that he will be right in the middle
of the fireworks.
has not gone unnoticed by the
coaching staff. Says H u n t e r , : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
"Alan's i. good man to call on when
you need that big play. He just
won't lose yardage."
Perhaps White's biggest booster
is lhead coach Bill Hildebrand.
"He's a. real plugger and does a
solid workman-like job every time
out," says Hildy. "If we had 22
men who were as sound at their
positions as Alan is at his, we
wouldn't have any problems."
Off the field the personable
White is liked and respected ~y all
who have had any contact ~th
!him. He is currently serving in the
.Student Legislature and ea:rlier
this Year he was elected president
To Serve
of Phi Epsilon Kappa, the honorary
physical education fraternity.
White has had anY number of
"feelers" from professional clubs
a.nd like any boy who plays football
You
2 Beauticians At TheW. F. Beauty Shop
I.!.---------------------------
4
ary Sol
Alan White Is Outstanding Halfback
(Continued from page 7)
·
It was, however, a green, untried
Alan White who enrolled at Wake
Forest in September of 1958. "I'd
he lying if I said that I wasn't
scared," he says. "I just wasn't
sure I could adapt to this new style
of football." White admits to being
lost
confused
first,
but
withinand
three
weeks ib.eathad
mastered this new system and ibegan feeling more at home. According to
Coach Hunter this ability to catch
on quickly is .one of Alan's strong
!pOiints. "You tell him something.
<>nee end that's it. He just doesn't
nnake mistakes."
Another .amazing feature of
White's career lhas been the failure
of opposing 'teams to throw him
for a loss. "If memory serves me
correct I've only lost yardage once
since I've· been ;pla~ing football.
It happened
last year onThis
a. draw
play
against 'Maryland."
fact
E1
I
of plays, the Tigers scored another
TD to make the score 17-13.
Football Forecasts
.725
Has:
Mrs.
~~~~r~,~~~~~~~r~m~mr~~w~~!~~~~~~~~·:~!~l..
~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::
Sixty-Niners Win,·
Gain Mural Lead
Hamrick
Host
Luneh 75c - Dhmen lie
W. D. TARN, MANA••
Phone PA 4-1356
IU W'•. ltla II.
-
By JACK HAMRICK
the Deacs bucked an 18-mile-perThe Wake Forest Demon Dea- hour wind and moved the pigskin 1
cons, winless in <their first three right back up the field for what 1
games of the season because of in- appeared to lbe a sure score.
1
abilirty to make the most of their
On the Tiger 12, however, the!
opportunities, finally began to click Deacon attack stalled when full-:
Saturday and came up with a back Craven Williams _fumbled and i
powevful rushing and passing game Tiger tackle Dave H:Ynes fell on j
to down the Clemson Tigers in the ball.
"Death Valley," 17-13.
/
. The fi·rst quarter of play ended.
Combining thier devastating of- scoreless, but l!.he . Tigers came,
1
fensive game w:ilth a very effective back strong in the second stanza,
1 defense, the Deacs were just not and the second time they had posto be denied as ,they broke a seven- ession they moved .from their own
game losing streak with their win. 20 in nine plays to score. Lon ArmThe victory was the first for a strong converted to give Clemson :
Wake Forest team over Clemson the lead at 7-0.
i
since 1949: the two teams did not Taking the ensuing kick-o:£!1'.
play in 1952.
Wake marched from their own 33
In winning :their first victory of ~o the Clemson 20 where Mickey
the 1961 season, tlle Deacs gained Walker kicked his second field goal:
365 yards on tlJ.e ground and in the 1of 'the season -to make the score j
air while . Clemson .picked up 265. 7-3, and the half ended that way. ,
In the rushing department alone,
After intermission the Deacs j
the Deacs ground out 298 yards. took l:IP right where :~ey left off in 1
The Tigers on the other hand, bot- the first half. Rece1vmg-clemson
tled up for' the entire game by the won the opening toss but elected
LEGAL EAGLE Fred Wolf attempts a pass against the Sixty-Niners Deacon defense .could only gain to kick-the second half kick-odif,
142 yards.
'
Wake moved quickly for its first
in intramural football last week. The Sixty-Nilo.ers won, 12-D.
Team Effort
TD of the day.
For the Deacons lthe win was a
Taking the ball on their own 41,
great all-round tea~ effort. In the the Deacs moved to <the Clemson
hullabaloo of the Wake dressing 14 in five plays ~th the big gainroom after the game and amidst ers being rtwo passes to huge end
the victorious cries of rejoicing, Bill Hull. Four plays later, Reiley
sweaty Deacon warriors, Wake completed another pass, this time
Coach Billy Hildebrand would not to Bill Ruby, for 11 yards and a
single out many individuals for TD.
.
credit in the victory. "The victory The Deacons faked a pomt-afterTheSixty-Niners Intramural Foot-. was missed again.
was a tremendous team effort," he touchdown try and went for the
ball Team virtually clinched the
Fred Wolf w?s a standout for stated. "Chuck Reiley did a fine two-pointer, but Reiley overthrew
Independ~nt crown last Thursday !he Eagles playmg both ways._ He job of calling offensive plays halfback Alan White and the score
by defeating tlle Legal ~agles, 12-0. mter.cepted rt:wo passes and gamed against the Tigers, and Toddy remained Wake Forest 9, Clemson
The accurate throwmg ,arm of consrderable yardage.
Brewer did an excellent job on de- 7.
Frank Chri~ty accou_nted for all the
The ~~nager ?f ~he Sixty-~i.ners, fense.
Deacs Score Again
scoring. His two frrst-half touch- E_d Phillips, sa1d rt ~~ a good · "This victory couldn't have come Neither team was ~ble to mount
down heaves were caught by Jack v1ctory . . . best sprnt of any at a better time. I have no idea another serious scormg threat unBudd and Al Koehler.
Independent team." He wished why it is we always manage to til midway the fourth quarter when
These two teams entered the "they all had this kind of spirit." pla(Y' a good game at Clemson, but the Deacs began to move goalward
game u n defeated. They have
Intramural Stan~gs
this one is the sweetest of all.
again.
marched through the Independent
Fraternity League
"I do want to give credit to Ray Taking the ba~ on the Wake 25,
league wi1:h little trouble.
Won Lost Tied Malavasi (Wake Forest chief as- the Deacons qmckly struck for a
0
0 sistant). Ray has handled the de- first down. Halllback Donnie FredA chance to lose the title still Sigma Phi Epsilon ... 5
. exists for the Sixty-Niners who play Kappa Sigma ................ 4
1
0 d'ense all season and he has done a erick tried right end for a threethe PEK Warlords and the Vos- Lambda Chi Alpha .... 3
1
1 tremendous job, and I want him to yard gain and hit right tackle for
toks this week.
Pi Kappa Alpha .......... 3
2
0 get credit for it. In addition, he five more.
.
Sig~ma
Chi
......................
3
2
0
was
the
one
who
got
the
team
Reiley
then
sent Alan Wllite off
The game began with promise
2
1 ready this morning since I was in his own left tackle. Getting into the
when the Sixty-Niners' Pete Bowie Kappa Alpha ................ 2
2
2 Winston-Salem for the birth of my Clemson secondary, the speedster
booted the kick-off into the Eagles' Theta Chi ...................... 1
3
1 son. I don't know what Ray told from ~lm C~<ty, N. C., cu~ back to
end zone. After several exchanges Delta Sigma Phi .......... 1
4
1 the boys, but he really got them the ngb,t s1de of the f1eld and
of the ball lthe Sixty-Niners march- Alpha Sigma Pbi ........ 0
Sigma
Pi
........................
0
5
0 ready."
· raced 59 lYards for the second Deaed to the Eagles' one inch line on
Jndependent League
Fired Up
con touchdown.
.
.
passes from Christy to Koehler and
Won Lost Tied The Deacons, fired up by word ·On the try .for ~mt, W~ke agam
Ed •Mandy. Wi1:h six minutes re0
0 that Mrs. Billy Hildebrand had just went for a two-pomter. tReiley passmaining in the first half, Christy Sixty-niners .................. 5
1
0 given birth to an 8-pound, 1-ounce ed to Frederick in the left corue: of
passed to Budd for the TD. The Legal Eagles ................ 4
Vostoks .......................... 4
1
0 boy in Baptist Hospital in Winston- th~ end zo~e for the co!lversron.
try !for point failed.
PEK Warlords ............ 2
1
1 Salem, immediately went to work This two-pomter was ~e first for a
The second and last score came Los Truenos .................. 2
2
1 to achieve their number one am- Wake Forest team smce the twofive minutes later. ChristJy, on the Freshmen ..................... 1
3
o bition of beating the Tigers on their point rule went in?> e~fect, ~nd ~e
Eagles' seven, passed to Koehler Buccaneers .................... o
5
o own home grounds.
Deacs led, 17-7, Wlth aoout SlX mmto make it 12~. The extra point Bulldozers ...................... o 1 5
o Taking ~e ball on the kick-off, utes remaining.
=ru~~iiiiiii!miiiiiiiiiiiii~i.iii~~~~iimiiiiiiii~~oimeliiifiiaRiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiii
But
Clemson was
not next
through
for
~'W~~-~~W"~~<~~~~m-117
Bm<! E'!g!ll R
the
af-ternoon.
On the
series
Games
c!~~!~~~!T!'!I!~~.
start thrs afternoon at 3:15 . .Any
fr~hman \vho is interested in plaY·
;eng is invited to try out.
Exp.:
WiU
James
executive
/ak_ a. pa.rr.:. d'J.'.sjr~~ /Beneath ancient trees,
Crossroac
2 in chap
•
menthol fresh
• rich tobacco taste
fine
mocJern" filter, too
which have known so ·many springtimes, you feel renewed and refreshed by the soft, cool air. And so your taste is refreshed by a Saleni,
the cigarette with springtime fre~ess in the smoke. Special High
Porosity paper "air-softens" every puff. Enjoy the rich taste of
tobaccos while you refresh your taste, with Salem!
•
Robins~
student a:
12 a.m.~
at 12 a. 1
Student:
meeting,
sonal appr
beerirequ
in the D1
-·~
/

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