, inauguration address revives challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~...

10
.. I .., r- ti: to ce betatts .-by univer- 'eifnta.sed .• , TODAY, EDITORIALLY e Challenge Re41CUed e · Sanford Taller au INSIDE Students Complain Mai'Ceaufa Language * * An All American Newspaper * * * VOLUME LUI Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, Feb. 19, 1968 NUMBER 17 Nixon, By LINDA LEVI of state. Wallace, Face Johnson In Mock Campus Election City and retired to private life, vowing that he wuuld never again seek public office. ASSOCIATE EDITOR Richard Nixon .and George Wallace will face Lyndon B. Johnson in- Tuesday's mock presidential election sponsored by the Old Gold & Black. Former United States vice-president Nixon defeated bis opponents last week ror the Republican nomination by gain- ing 194 of the 413 Republican votes. Nel- Rockefeller, governor of New York, was the closest competitor with 144 votes. Ronald Reagan, governor of California, received 44 votes and George Romney, aovernor of Michigan, gained 31 votes. b The freshmen and sophomores carried the election for Nixon, .a former presi- dential candidate in 1960. Voters over 21 years of age elected Rockefeller as the Republican nomination, defe_ating Nixon 'l8 to 47. Nixon was defeated by John F. Ken- nedy in 1960 for the presidency and was defeated in 1962 by Gov. P.at Brown for the governorship of California. He sub- sequently joined a law firm in New York However, in the past couple of years, Nixon has increasingly exposed himself to the public eye, traveling around the world and visiting with various heads JOHNSON In the primary election last week, Nixon carried every area of the nation. He received 116 Southern vo-tes, com- pared to 85 for Rockefeller and 32 for Reagan. Northern students gave Nixon 60 votes compared with 48 for Rockefeller and seven for Reagan. In the West and Mid- west, Nixon gained 12 votes as compared to four for Rockefeller rutd four for Rea- gan. Nixon received 49 per cent of the male votes in Republican primary, where- as he received 38 per cent of the female vote. Johnson defeated Robert Kennedy, sen- ator from New York, by six votes-107 to 101-for the Democratic nomination. Eugene McCarthy, senator from Minne- sota, received 41 of the Democratic votes. Johnson has been given the edge in the Nov. 8 presidential electh>n by prog- nosticators, but will not receive the land- slide vote he did in 1964. The Vietnam war and rioting could Humphrey To Deliver , Inauguration Address Hubert H. Humphrey, Vie-e President >f the United States, will be the princi- )al speaker at the inauguration of Dr. James Ralph Scales, President of the Jniversity, April 1o-11. Provost Edwin G. Wilson confirmed l'hursday that Humphrey will attend the naugural ceremonies. However, defi- lite plans of his visit have not been ,, 'inalized. "But he is committed to us," Wilson ;aid, "as firm.ly as one in such a high >ffice <:an be." Humphrey, former U.S. Sen. from \iinnesota, was elected Vice President n 1964. He was . one of the organizers of the !beral Americans for Democratic Ac- :ion, a group which recently endorsed )en. Eugene McCarthy for President. Humphrey denied any current aff.ilia- ;ion with the organization and said last . veek that he left the ADA tlrree years '!go. Dr. Rufus Harris, president of Mereer " University, Macon, Ga.; and! past presi- jent of Tulane University, New Orleans, t.a., has agreed to speak at the inaugura- :ion and academic coovocation. Because of the Humphrey situation, Jlans for the .two-day ceremonies are >nly tentative. University officials hope fiumphrey will speak on the night of 10, opening the ceremonies. The actual inaugural ceremonies are tentatively scheduled for 11 a. m. April 11 in Wait Chapel. At tha.t time Harris wiU speak and Scales will deliver his inaugural address. Colleges and universities throughout the U.S. are being invited to send rep- resentatives for the academic l.:onvoca- tion. An inaugural luncheon is planned after the ceremony for University official<; and guests. Scales is the eleventh President o.f Wake Forest and will be the first to bP. inaugurated since Lhe change to Uni- versity status on June 12, 1967. He will also be the fiTst to be inaugurated on the Winston-Salem campus. He succeeds President Emeritus Har- vld W. Tribble who retired in 1967 after 16 years of service. Scales came to the University from Oklahoma State University, where he wss Dean of t:he College of Arts and Scien'.:es. He asosumed of.fice July 1, 1967. Faculty ·To Vote Today On Registratiolz ·Proposal By DIANNE JONES STAFF WRITER Faculty members wilQ vote today on a proposal! to form an ad hoc committee to study the possibility of revamping the University's registration proeess. Several professors have indicated for weeks that the faculty would coJWider some sort of preregistration proposal. Today's recommendation, to be pre- rented at the 4 p. m. meeting by Dr. Ro- bert N. Shorter, assistant professor of English, calls oniJy for a committee to study the process. Shorter said his main objective is to eiiminate the "complete and utter frus- trarbion caused by the outdated· present system. "I'm not advocating anything specific at this time,·: he said, "but there ought to be a change, a more effii:cient system than the one we now use." Grady S. Patterson, registrar of the University, denied any knowledge of the proposaL "These peop·le ·have all sorts of ideas, but no one bc,thers to tell! me about what is actually my bw;liness," Patterson said. Postal Lobby Stays Closed; Galifianakis Promises Help "I don't have my eyes tJosed," he continued. "In 1930 we tried pre-regis- tration and it didn't work. In 1957 two weeks were set in bhe spring to register for t'he fat!. After we finished f'Oing through all t.h€ preliminaries, some students who up for sum- mer courses changed their minds, and some flunked courses they had planned on passing," Patterson explained. I.or.:al postal authorities this weekend fi.rm in their refusal to keep post cffict' lobbies open at night, while an to Rep. Nick Galifiankis promised an from the Congressman's office. Howard Jones. an admlnistrative aide to said the Fifth District Congre- sman would "give definite con- o,ideration" to ·complaints about the lock- ing of Winston-Salem's six branch pos- tal lobbies around 7 p. m. daily. An assistant to Winston-Salem po::;t- ·'r master Charles Jsgett said Friday, how- . ever, his department plans no change In the p-resent poli.cy, despite a Jetter from the _regional office in Atlanta, several complaints, and stories last week in Old Gold and Black and the Twin City Sentinel. Under conditions, box patrons at the campus Reynolda branch are un- uble to get mail after 6:55 p. m., when the lobby is locked. The local practice of locking lobbies is an exception to a nationwide policy (If aU-night service. H. Jackson who is an assistant to Postmaster Law- rence O'Brien said from Washington last week that he would make an attempt to get better service for local patrons within a week. He said then that it was cus11omary for brari<.-h stations to remain open at night, except where it was "structurally im- possible." Wilson said this weekend, however that the only way to change the local practice would be for a postal investiga- tion committee to recommend a new po- licy. He said the local branches began clos- illlg early about 18 months ago after an investigation by ·the postal investigation <'Ommittee. "I don't plan to contact them for an- other investigation," Wilson said this weekend. He said his feelings were still the same concerning the early c-losing. "The rea- son we stopped staying open all! mgbt because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur- poses," he said. Friday afternoon Wilson pointed to a recent act of vandalism at the campus station. "We had a floor mat stolen 1ast week," he said. Wilson blamed the vandalism at the campus. station to "a high concentration of people." "Some of them are just full of spirit," he said. "Why go inro a system tlhat just doesn't make sense?" the registrar ask- ed. Patterson computer registra- tion because such a method wouldi "just turn the into numbers. "The schedules would just be dlished aut to the students, and they would have no choice to p'an their courses or to e-hose tJheir professors." Dr. Ivey Gentry. president of the Uni- versity Senate and mathematics profes- >or, commented favorably on the <.Om- putor method. "It will save time and effort orthe faculty, administration, and r-ossibly the students alike." STOP THE WORLD ..• I Want To Get Oft, a hit Broadway play written by An· &bony Newley and Leslie Bricusse, will be presented in Wait Chapel Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. Newley also starred in the Broadway production of the musieal. See story page 5. cause Johnson trouble. If the Vietnam war ended, Johnson's popularity would carry him to sure victory. If, however, tl:·.e war continues, and worsens, and if the summer brings a return of the race rioting characteristic of last summer, Johnson may face almost insurmount- NIXON -PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY THIS IS SCALES . . • as be reacted to the discussion concerning Challenge '69 at the last legislature meeeting. Graduate School Will Be By ·Vietnam War Bv BARRY ROBINSON ST/o.FF WRITER SECOND OF A SERIES Cuts in enrollment, fewer new pro- grams, and a reduction in the num'ber classes will probably be the effects of the Vietnam War on Wake Forest's developing graduate school program. Such serious problems as a greatly reduced enrollment crippling the Univer- sity's young graduate program rutd a lowering of standards to maintain a minimum enrollment are discounted by most officials associated with the pro- gram. Even Friday's announcement by the United States Selective Service System that only graduate students pursuing a course of studies in medicine or "allied" fields would be deferred from now on should not effect the University's school to any great degree. No Permanent Harm Most officials connected with the grad- uate school program here did not think tl:>..at the war would permanently harm or destroy the program. "There will be no changes in our de- partment regardless," said Dr. David Smiley, chairman of the history grad- uate appli-cations committee. "We are not really dependent on the number of people." "We may have a period of two to three years of hardship," he said, "but it shouldn't affect us too seriously." An- other professor connected with the pro- gram compared the situation with that of World War II. "There will be some temporary effects but no permanent ones," he said. "Enrollment cutbacks, a reduction in the number of classes, and fewer new programs are probable re- sults should this draft situation con- tinue." Problem Of National Welfare Many professors who were questioned on the problem of graduate deferment felt that the real problem to Wake For- est and the country was not the situation of the schools but of the national welfare. Dr. G. McLeod Bryan, professor of re· ligion, summed up the views of these professors and of U. S. Educational Commissioner Harold Howe. "The prob- lem is one of overall deprivation," said Bryan. "In a few years, the country (Continued on Page 5) able trouble, political scientists say. Johnson and Democrats seem con- fident, at this point, that they can ac- hieve victory in the election, centering strategy on big-city Northern states. However, the picture is clouded by a third party candidate, Geo-rge Wallace, former governor of Alabama and candi- date of the American Independent Party. Wallace is seeking the votes of the dis· contented. Polls put his strength at ten per cent of the vote. The consensus of the speculators hold:; that Wallace will damage Republicans more than the DemtJCrats. According to U. S. News & World Re- port, most politicians feel that "the prin· cipal appeal of Mr. Wallace will be to angry Democrats who might vote Re· publican if he were not in the race.". Wallace, who is nominally a Demo- crat, refutes this charge. He asserts that he is opposing Johnson and that "he is taking away Johnson votes by cutting into historic Democratic strength among working people." Faculty and administration members and all full-time undergraduate and graduate students are eligible to vote in the presidential election tomorrow. The polls will be open between 11 a. m .. and 6 p. m. in the Main Lounge of Rey- nolda Hall.. WALLACE $3,000 MRC Pledge Revives Challenge '69 By UNDA CARTER MANAGING EDITOR Leaders of Challenge '69, fighting for the life of the sympoei.um, received an unexpected $3,000 donation from the Men's Residence Council last week and _made plans .to take their appeal to the Board of Trustees. The MRC central council Monday night voted unanimously to pledge $3,000 to Challenge. By the end of the week the independent executive boards of the four MRC houses had unanimously supported the decision. Jeter Walker, senior of Morganton and MRC publicity director who present- ed the proposal, said Norma Murdoch and AI Shoaf, Challenge directors, had been afraid the project would die. University President James Ralph Scales had indicated in a recent legis- lature meeting and in a later· private meeting that be thought it improbable plans for reorganization of student gov- ernment. At that meeting Scales ques- tioned the legislative proposal to request from the University a separate budget for the symposium. According to Miss Murdoch, when she and Shoaf later met with Scales he said he did not believe there would be available for Challenge. Scales set up an appointmer,t for Wed- nesday to discuss the issue further with the two directors. He \\--as in California (Continued on Page 5) SG Take-Over Of Symposium Was Unofficial that the University would be able to sub- By LINDA CARTER sidize the symposium. Investigations last week revealed that Academic Obligation "The factors that went into our de- at least part 'Of the budgeting contro- cision," Walker said, "were the fulfilling versy over Challenge '69 is the result of of our academic obligations, the fact that a misconception-the student govern- we thought it was a g<XXI investment be- ment take-over of Challenge '69 was cause it was, if nothing else, in efficient never official. hands, -and because the idea was totally The first symposium was Challenge '65, endorsed by our advisor, Dean of Stu- organized by a group of students acting dents Thomas Elmore." independently. The donation equals one-fourth of the Their proposal, approved by both the proposed $12,000 Challenge budget. Student Affairs Committee and the en- As part of the agreement, Walker said, tire faculty, provided that the symposium the MRC asked that some receptions for should operate independently of all other speakers be held in MRC houses if pos- campus organizations. The University sible. was to bear no financial responsibility. A $300 portion of the pledge will be Another stipulation said that nomi- paid as soon as possible to estal;!lish an nations for executive positions were to operating budget for challenge. be approved by the Dean's office, the Challenge executive director Norma registrar's office. the faculty advisor for Murdoch called the MRC donation "one each particular committee and the Chal- of the best things that could have hap- len.ge executive committee advisors. pened to us. Their action is an evidence Most of the money for Challenge '65 .of student support and should help us was solicited by the students from faun- when we appeal to foundations, indi- dations and individuals. viuals and the University for funds." Despite the success of the first sym- Miss Murdoch said she and Shoaf plan- posium, the Challenge program immedi- ned to solicit other student organizations ately fell into difficulty. Plans for the for donations. next Challenge, to be held in March, 1967 Meanwhile, they are planning to go began to bog down. through proper channels in order to A major part of the problem was lack present a request for funds to the Board of leadership. Most of the organizers of of Trustees budget committee. the original symposium had been sen- Controven:y over budgeting for Chal- iors or juniors in 1965 and had since Ienge arose in the Feb. 7 legislature graduated. meeting when Scales was presented with (Continued on Page 5) 11 Financial Aid Available tl I I 1 To Pay Higher Tuitions 1 m :_,j to an article in the Char- .. Tuitio-n at both public and private in· lotte Observer recently, "some students •"- M stitutions 'Of higher education across the no doubt consider it absolute privation M ,,,. country is rising dram a fically and with to spend four years on a college campus .. ,, it the pitch of par.,ntal-and student- without a convertible, a pocketful of anxiety. charge cards and a beer budget good More and more, parents and students for at least one walloping good drunk alike are confronted with the results every few weeks. of "-academic inflation." "For many other students anything Even Wake Forest has found it nee- more than a 20-cent coffee break is a essary to push tuition from the $600 downright luxury. per year level in 1961 to the $1,100 level "Whatever the variables, one rule of to be enjoyed next fall. thumb can be applied with relative It is virtually impossible to estimate curary: The college student today will the cost of four years of college; the spend in one year roughly what his figure will vary greatly to fatJ:ler in four," the Observer whether the student is attend a private article satd. or public institution. What avenues are open to the student However, the average total cost to a -and the parent-who is experiencing student for tuition, room and board, difficulty in adjusting to the results of books, sll'Pplies and personal expenses "academic inflation?" is now $1.618 at a public college or uni- According to the Observer article. versity. The figure is $2,722 for a pri- "The student entering college next fall vate institution. has more financial aid available to him Another factor in the cost of a col- than has exsisted at any previous time '':!: lege education is tbe student's own in the nation's history." m values and the family's standard of (Continued on Page 5) d

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Page 1: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

..

I .., r-~,~-

ti:

to

ce betatts .-by univer-'eifnta.sed .•

, TODAY, EDITORIALLY

e Challenge Re41CUed

e · Sanford Taller au ~ODAY, INSIDE

e· Students Complain

e· Mai'Ceaufa Language

* * An All American Newspaper * * * VOLUME LUI Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, Feb. 19, 1968 NUMBER 17

Nixon, By LINDA LEVI of state.

Wallace, Face Johnson In Mock Campus Election City and retired to private life, vowing that he wuuld never again seek public office.

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Richard Nixon .and George Wallace will face Lyndon B. Johnson in- Tuesday's mock presidential election sponsored by the Old Gold & Black.

Former United States vice-president Nixon defeated bis opponents last week ror the Republican nomination by gain­ing 194 of the 413 Republican votes. Nel­~on Rockefeller, governor of New York, was the closest competitor with 144 votes.

Ronald Reagan, governor of California, received 44 votes and George Romney, aovernor of Michigan, gained 31 votes. b The freshmen and sophomores carried the election for Nixon, .a former presi­dential candidate in 1960. Voters over 21 years of age elected Rockefeller as the Republican nomination, defe_ating Nixon 'l8 to 47.

Nixon was defeated by John F. Ken­nedy in 1960 for the presidency and was defeated in 1962 by Gov. P.at Brown for the governorship of California. He sub­sequently joined a law firm in New York

However, in the past couple of years, Nixon has increasingly exposed himself to the public eye, traveling around the world and visiting with various heads

JOHNSON

In the primary election last week, Nixon carried every area of the nation. He received 116 Southern vo-tes, com­pared to 85 for Rockefeller and 32 for Reagan.

Northern students gave Nixon 60 votes compared with 48 for Rockefeller and seven for Reagan. In the West and Mid­west, Nixon gained 12 votes as compared to four for Rockefeller rutd four for Rea­gan.

Nixon received 49 per cent of the male votes in th~ Republican primary, where­as he received 38 per cent of the female vote.

Johnson defeated Robert Kennedy, sen­ator from New York, by six votes-107 to 101-for the Democratic nomination. Eugene McCarthy, senator from Minne­sota, received 41 of the Democratic votes.

Johnson has been given the edge in the Nov. 8 presidential electh>n by prog­nosticators, but will not receive the land­slide vote he did in 1964.

The Vietnam war and rioting could

Humphrey To Deliver , Inauguration Address

Hubert H. Humphrey, Vie-e President >f the United States, will be the princi­)al speaker at the inauguration of Dr. James Ralph Scales, President of the Jniversity, April 1o-11.

Provost Edwin G. Wilson confirmed l'hursday that Humphrey will attend the naugural ceremonies. However, defi­lite plans of his visit have not been

,, 'inalized. "But he is committed to us," Wilson

;aid, "as firm.ly as one in such a high >ffice <:an be."

Humphrey, former U.S. Sen. from \iinnesota, was elected Vice President n 1964. He was . one of the organizers of the

!beral Americans for Democratic Ac­:ion, a group which recently endorsed )en. Eugene McCarthy for President.

Humphrey denied any current aff.ilia­;ion with the organization and said last . veek that he left the ADA tlrree years '!go.

Dr. Rufus Harris, president of Mereer " University, Macon, Ga.; and! past presi­

jent of Tulane University, New Orleans, t.a., has agreed to speak at the inaugura­:ion and academic coovocation.

Because of the Humphrey situation, Jlans for the .two-day ceremonies are >nly tentative. University officials hope fiumphrey will speak on the night of ~pril 10, opening the ceremonies.

The actual inaugural ceremonies are

tentatively scheduled for 11 a. m. April 11 in Wait Chapel. At tha.t time Harris wiU speak and Scales will deliver his inaugural address.

Colleges and universities throughout the U.S. are being invited to send rep­resentatives for the academic l.:onvoca­tion.

An inaugural luncheon is planned after the ceremony for University official<; and guests.

Scales is the eleventh President o.f

Wake Forest and will be the first to bP. inaugurated since Lhe change to Uni­versity status on June 12, 1967. He will also be the fiTst to be inaugurated on the Winston-Salem campus.

He succeeds President Emeritus Har­vld W. Tribble who retired in 1967 after 16 years of service.

Scales came to the University from Oklahoma State University, where he wss Dean of t:he College of Arts and Scien'.:es. He asosumed of.fice July 1, 1967.

Faculty ·To Vote Today On Registratiolz ·Proposal

By DIANNE JONES STAFF WRITER

Faculty members wilQ vote today on a proposal! to form an ad hoc committee to study the possibility of revamping the University's registration proeess.

Several professors have indicated for weeks that the faculty would coJWider some sort of preregistration proposal.

Today's recommendation, to be pre­rented at the 4 p. m. meeting by Dr. Ro­bert N. Shorter, assistant professor of English, calls oniJy for a committee to study the process.

Shorter said his main objective is to

eiiminate the "complete and utter frus­trarbion caused by the outdated· present system .

"I'm not advocating anything specific at this time,·: he said, "but there ought to be a change, a more effii:cient system than the one we now use."

Grady S. Patterson, registrar of the University, denied any knowledge of the proposaL

"These peop·le ·have all sorts of ideas, but no one bc,thers to tell! me about what is actually my bw;liness," Patterson said.

Postal Lobby Stays Closed; Galifianakis Promises Help

"I don't have my eyes tJosed," he continued. "In 1930 we tried pre-regis­tration and it didn't work. In 1957 two weeks were set as~de in bhe spring to register for t'he fat!. After we finished f'Oing through all t.h€ preliminaries, some students who s~gned up for sum­mer courses changed their minds, and some flunked courses they had planned on passing," Patterson explained.

I.or.:al postal authorities this weekend ~food fi.rm in their refusal to keep post cffict' lobbies open at night, while an ~.ide to Rep. Nick Galifiankis promised an inve!'ti~aticn from the Congressman's office.

Howard Jones. an admlnistrative aide to Ga~ifianakis, said the Fifth District Congre- sman would "give definite con­o,ideration" to ·complaints about the lock­ing of Winston-Salem's six branch pos­tal lobbies around 7 p. m. daily.

An assistant to Winston-Salem po::;t­·'r master Charles Jsgett said Friday, how-

. ever, t~at his department plans no change In the p-resent poli.cy, despite a Jetter from the _regional office in Atlanta, several complaints, and stories last week in Old Gold and Black and the Twin City Sentinel.

Under ~resent conditions, box patrons at the campus Reynolda branch are un­uble to get mail after 6:55 p. m., when the lobby is locked.

The local practice of locking lobbies is an exception to a nationwide policy (If aU-night service. H. Jackson who is an assistant to Postmaster Ge~eral Law­rence O'Brien said from Washington last week that he would make an attempt to get better service for local patrons within a week.

He said then that it was cus11omary for brari<.-h stations to remain open at night, except where it was "structurally im­possible."

Wilson said this weekend, however that the only way to change the local practice would be for a postal investiga­tion committee to recommend a new po­licy.

He said the local branches began clos­illlg early about 18 months ago after an investigation by ·the postal investigation <'Ommittee.

"I don't plan to contact them for an­other investigation," Wilson said this weekend.

He said his feelings were still the same concerning the early c-losing. "The rea­son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur­poses," he said.

Friday afternoon Wilson pointed to a recent act of vandalism at the campus station. "We had a floor mat stolen 1ast week," he said.

Wilson blamed the vandalism at the campus. station to "a high concentration of people."

"Some of them are just full of spirit," he said.

"Why go inro a system tlhat just doesn't make sense?" the registrar ask­ed.

Patterson critic~ed computer registra­tion because such a method wouldi "just turn the s~udents into numbers.

"The schedules would just be dlished aut to the students, and they would have no choice to p'an their courses or to

e-hose tJheir professors." Dr. Ivey Gentry. president of the Uni­

versity Senate and mathematics profes­>or, commented favorably on the <.Om­putor method. "It will save time and effort orthe faculty, administration, and r-ossibly the students alike."

--------~~~--------------~----~--

STOP THE WORLD ..• I Want To Get Oft, a hit Broadway play written by An· &bony Newley and Leslie Bricusse, will be presented in Wait Chapel Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. Newley also starred in the Broadway production of the musieal. See story page 5.

cause Johnson trouble. If the Vietnam war ended, Johnson's popularity would carry him to sure victory. If, however, tl:·.e war continues, and worsens, and if the summer brings a return of the race rioting characteristic of last summer, Johnson may face almost insurmount-

NIXON

-PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY

THIS IS SCALES . . • as be reacted to the discussion concerning Challenge '69 at the last legislature meeeting.

Graduate School Will Be .L~ffected By ·Vietnam War

Bv BARRY ROBINSON ST/o.FF WRITER

SECOND OF A SERIES

Cuts in enrollment, fewer new pro­grams, and a reduction in the num'ber o£ classes will probably be the effects of the Vietnam War on Wake Forest's developing graduate school program.

Such serious problems as a greatly reduced enrollment crippling the Univer­sity's young graduate program rutd a lowering of standards to maintain a minimum enrollment are discounted by most officials associated with the pro­gram.

Even Friday's announcement by the United States Selective Service System that only graduate students pursuing a course of studies in medicine or "allied" fields would be deferred from now on should not effect the University's school to any great degree.

No Permanent Harm Most officials connected with the grad­

uate school program here did not think tl:>..at the war would permanently harm or destroy the program.

"There will be no changes in our de­partment regardless," said Dr. David Smiley, chairman of the history grad­uate appli-cations committee. "We are not really dependent on the number of people."

"We may have a period of two to three years of hardship," he said, "but it shouldn't affect us too seriously." An­other professor connected with the pro­gram compared the situation with that of World War II. "There will be some temporary effects but no permanent ones," he said. "Enrollment cutbacks, a reduction in the number of classes, and fewer new programs are probable re­sults should this draft situation con­tinue."

Problem Of National Welfare Many professors who were questioned

on the problem of graduate deferment felt that the real problem to Wake For­est and the country was not the situation of the schools but of the national welfare.

Dr. G. McLeod Bryan, professor of re· ligion, summed up the views of these professors and of U. S. Educational Commissioner Harold Howe. "The prob­lem is one of overall deprivation," said Bryan. "In a few years, the country

(Continued on Page 5)

able trouble, political scientists say. Johnson and Democrats seem con­

fident, at this point, that they can ac­hieve victory in the election, centering strategy on big-city Northern states.

However, the picture is clouded by a third party candidate, Geo-rge Wallace, former governor of Alabama and candi­date of the American Independent Party.

Wallace is seeking the votes of the dis· contented. Polls put his strength at ten per cent of the vote.

The consensus of the speculators hold:; that Wallace will damage Republicans more than the DemtJCrats.

According to U. S. News & World Re­port, most politicians feel that "the prin· cipal appeal of Mr. Wallace will be to angry Democrats who might vote Re· publican if he were not in the race.".

Wallace, who is nominally a Demo­crat, refutes this charge. He asserts that he is opposing Johnson and that "he is taking away Johnson votes by cutting into historic Democratic strength among working people."

Faculty and administration members and all full-time undergraduate and graduate students are eligible to vote in the presidential election tomorrow.

The polls will be open between 11 a. m .. and 6 p. m. in the Main Lounge of Rey­nolda Hall..

WALLACE

$3,000 MRC Pledge Revives Challenge '69

By UNDA CARTER MANAGING EDITOR

Leaders of Challenge '69, fighting for the life of the sympoei.um, received an unexpected $3,000 donation from the Men's Residence Council last week and _made plans .to take their appeal to the Board of Trustees.

The MRC central council Monday night voted unanimously to pledge $3,000 to Challenge. By the end of the week the independent executive boards of the four MRC houses had unanimously supported the decision.

Jeter Walker, senior of Morganton and MRC publicity director who present­ed the proposal, said Norma Murdoch and AI Shoaf, Challenge directors, had been afraid the project would die.

University President James Ralph Scales had indicated in a recent legis­lature meeting and in a later· private meeting that be thought it improbable

plans for reorganization of student gov­ernment. At that meeting Scales ques­tioned the legislative proposal to request from the University a separate budget for the symposium.

According to Miss Murdoch, when she and Shoaf later met with Scales he said he did not believe there would be mo~ey available for Challenge.

Scales set up an appointmer,t for Wed­nesday to discuss the issue further with the two directors. He \\--as in California

(Continued on Page 5)

SG Take-Over Of Symposium Was Unofficial

that the University would be able to sub- By LINDA CARTER sidize the symposium. Investigations last week revealed that Academic Obligation

"The factors that went into our de- at least part 'Of the budgeting contro-cision," Walker said, "were the fulfilling versy over Challenge '69 is the result of of our academic obligations, the fact that a misconception-the student govern-we thought it was a g<XXI investment be- ment take-over of Challenge '69 was cause it was, if nothing else, in efficient never official. hands, -and because the idea was totally The first symposium was Challenge '65, endorsed by our advisor, Dean of Stu- organized by a group of students acting dents Thomas Elmore." independently.

The donation equals one-fourth of the Their proposal, approved by both the proposed $12,000 Challenge budget. Student Affairs Committee and the en-

As part of the agreement, Walker said, tire faculty, provided that the symposium the MRC asked that some receptions for should operate independently of all other speakers be held in MRC houses if pos- campus organizations. The University sible. was to bear no financial responsibility.

A $300 portion of the pledge will be Another stipulation said that nomi-paid as soon as possible to estal;!lish an nations for executive positions were to operating budget for challenge. be approved by the Dean's office, the

Challenge executive director Norma registrar's office. the faculty advisor for Murdoch called the MRC donation "one each particular committee and the Chal-of the best things that could have hap- len.ge executive committee advisors. pened to us. Their action is an evidence Most of the money for Challenge '65 .of student support and should help us was solicited by the students from faun-when we appeal to foundations, indi- dations and individuals. viuals and the University for funds." Despite the success of the first sym-

Miss Murdoch said she and Shoaf plan- posium, the Challenge program immedi-ned to solicit other student organizations ately fell into difficulty. Plans for the for donations. next Challenge, to be held in March, 1967

Meanwhile, they are planning to go began to bog down. through proper channels in order to A major part of the problem was lack present a request for funds to the Board of leadership. Most of the organizers of of Trustees budget committee. the original symposium had been sen-

Controven:y over budgeting for Chal- iors or juniors in 1965 and had since Ienge arose in the Feb. 7 legislature graduated. meeting when Scales was presented with (Continued on Page 5)

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11 Financial Aid Available tl I I 1 To Pay Higher Tuitions 1 ~ m :_,j ~fsT~f s~~ liv~~~rding to an article in the Char- ~ .. ;~ .~, Tuitio-n at both public and private in· lotte Observer recently, "some students •"-M stitutions 'Of higher education across the no doubt consider it absolute privation M ,,,. country is rising dram a fically and with to spend four years on a college campus .. ,,

it the pitch of par.,ntal-and student- without a convertible, a pocketful of anxiety. charge cards and a beer budget good

More and more, parents and students for at least one walloping good drunk alike are confronted with the results every few weeks. of "-academic inflation." "For many other students anything

Even Wake Forest has found it nee- more than a 20-cent coffee break is a essary to push tuition from the $600 downright luxury. per year level in 1961 to the $1,100 level "Whatever the variables, one rule of to be enjoyed next fall. thumb can be applied with relative a~-

It is virtually impossible to estimate curary: The college student today will the cost of four years of college; the spend in one year roughly what his figure will vary greatly accordin~ to fatJ:ler s~nt in four," the Observer whether the student is attend a private article satd. or public institution. What avenues are open to the student

However, the average total cost to a -and the parent-who is experiencing student for tuition, room and board, difficulty in adjusting to the results of books, sll'Pplies and personal expenses "academic inflation?" is now $1.618 at a public college or uni- According to the Observer article. versity. The figure is $2,722 for a pri- "The student entering college next fall vate institution. has more financial aid available to him

Another factor in the cost of a col- than has exsisted at any previous time '':!: lege education is tbe student's own in the nation's history." :.~' m values and the family's standard of (Continued on Page 5) d ~~~:::.~~~m~:r.::~~~~~~t:t:tJ::·:.;mg:~;:~:~:~m~.ar::::::::=.:i-:::~:~,:r.:~£-=m.&:.~~~f~i~:<~f~m~=::K~~~~~~r.=lT:::::mm~:~~::~

Page 2: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

-PAGE TWO Mooday, Feb. 19, 1968 OLD GOLD AND BLA.CK

PAD Chapter Will Receive &nors When District Con clave Meets Het~e

The Wake Forest chapter of Phi Alpha Delta legal fra­ternity will be rec0gnizcd as ihe most outstanding P.A.D. chapter in the nation when it hosts its district conclr.ve here ;his weekend.

The district 13 ami 14 con­dave will be held nt the Ro­bert E. Lee Hotel, Friday through Sunday. Approximate­ly 300 delegates from all law schools in the two districts are c:·:pe-_ ted to attend.

The participr:lir.,; district~ include char:;ters in the Caro­linas, \1rgi:r.ia. i\'e5t Virginia, Maryland nn:i tb DL.;trict of Columbia.

Schools in the horo districts th(' Univ~t·s·ities of Virginia. Maryland, 1.~'cst Virginia. ;'llorth Caroli,ia, South Caro­lina and Ric-hmond.

Other schools in the distriets are Georgetown, Wushington and Lee. Duke, Howard, American. Catholic, William and Mary and Wake Forest.

The principal speaker Gf the weekend conclave tentatively will be Don Hutson of Kansas City, Mo., who is lhief justice of thz fraternity who will ad­dress the group at their ban­quet Saturday night.

Last year th;) conclave was held in Washington, D. C.

St. Leo's Catholic Church 335 SPRINGDALE AVENUE

MASSES: Sundays-7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 12 Noon

HOLYDAYS: Davis Chapel, 5:00 p. m.

CONFESSIONS: Church, Saturday, 4:30 to 5:30 p. m. 7:30 to 8:30 p. m. Davis ChapeJ, Saturday 3:00 to 4:00 p. m.

CONSULTATION: Room 107, Library, By Appointment

Each yea:r the location site rotates between the northern and southern districts. · Registralbion wiU be from 5-9 p. m. Friday in the lobby 0£ the Robert E. Lee Hotel. A reception will be held that night.

Satu; dav will be filled with busines . .; · sessions, district committee meetings, work­shops and alumni reports.

At 1 p. m. Saturday, a ban­quet luncheon will be held with Robert F. Clodfelter, vice president - trust department. Wachovia Bank and Trust Cr.mp;!ny, as guest speaker.

At 2 p. m .. elections will be held for district offices and the site for next year's con­dave wi.Jl be selected. A na­tional fratern.ity officer will also address the group.

A s>pecial schedUle has been arranged for wives and dates of delegates for Saturday. They wiH make a tour of Win­ston-Salem during the JlM)rning and will play bridge that af­ternoon.

Formal Reception

That ni?ht a formd r-ecep­tion wilJ be ht:ld at 6 p. m. and wi:t! be fcllowed by a banquet. Hutson will addTess the group at that time. A•.ve:rds wiiU then be pre:e:1ted and new officers will be insta1led.

The Phi Alpha cz;Jelta Fra­ternity BaH, a sem.Hormal

Bobbitt's Pharniacies OOSMETIOS ·· PRESCRIPTIONS •• SUNDRIES

FREE DELIVERY 3 LOCATIONS

Reynolds Building - Nissen Buildin.g

Corner S. Hawthorne Road at Lockland

-ianc~. will be held that night, beginning at 9 p. m.

The·weekend's activities wiH end with a breakfast at 9 Sun­day morning.

Three district officers are from the Wake Forest chap­ter of P.A.D. The student dis­trict justice is Eddie Welche, tllird-year law student; the district derk is John McKin­ney, second-year law student and the district treasurer is Randy Mattocks, second-year Jaw studerrt.

The dJstrict ahunni justice is Charles Taylm-, a Wake Forest graduate and presently a Republican representative in tJJe North Carolina House.

1,000 Volumes According to Carroll Leggett

publidty chairman for the fraternity, the Timberlake chapter was Chosen for the national outstandling dlapter award because of the quality of its professiona•l program; its social program; its ser­vice to the Wake Forest Law School and, particnlarly, be­cause of its 1,000 volume li­brary in the chapter house.

Le '~ctt said, "The Timber­lHl'3 chrsrpter is :recognized as one of the mos.t progressive aoo aggressive chapters in the nation."

He said that Oharles Win­berry. immediate past justice of the Wake Forest chapter, was recently selected as one of three P.A.D.'s in the United States to m2ke a trip to Me­Gui·!l Univer.sity, in Montreal, Canada, to make preliminary plam for ~ihartering the or­ganization's first international .:'hapter.

Rllllllel'-Up Last Year Last year the Wake chapter

was runner-up for the mos:t out£•tanding chapter award. For the past two years it has won the outstanding chapter disrict awe<rd.

The Wake Forest chapter has 102 members. It is one of tihree chapters in the nation that has a fratermty house.

The local chapter also has an active wive's club which serves as an auxiliary to t'he chap•ter's fl.Ulctions.

Hollywood's New Landmark ... - ... .,,.;).

'Graduate' Draws Honors .. ,.

By DOUG LEMZA FILM CRITIC

"The Graduate" offers its audience so much to see. It is virtually flawles$ in techni­que, incomparable in the act­ing, and outstanding in the motive prescribed byt dijrector, Mike Nichols, and scriptwrit­ers, BUICk Henry and Calder Wil'1ingham. But within the story structure, "The Gradu­ate" offers a unique. comment on youth today and living in gen.erat

Produced for Embassy Pic­tures and Joseph E. Levine by I.a~wence Turman, it is now playing at the Parkway Thea­tre.

Introduction To Life Set in Ca}ifornia, the film

invites the audience to follow young Benjamin Braddck tlnrougrh his post-graduate sum­mer. It turns out to be a chaotic introduction to life.

Returning lrome after grad· uating with honors, Benjamin is subsequently put on display by his "proud:" paorents. From then on a· rarpid suree<;Sion of cver.r!:s shatter his already de­licate emotional stabi,li.ty. He i.s sed'!.JCed by his father's bu:;­ines.s pa•rtner's wife, then falls in love with her daughter, and so on to even more compli­cated entanglements.

Through the eyes of Nic.hols. vast realims oil untou~ed cine­matic territory are unleashed for the first time in our gene­ration. (The composite tech­njque of over-lapping sound and C'',o.se pfuotagraphy w11.s last successful in Welles's ''Citizen Kane."}

· Communications Break The opening sequences poillt

to a hazy communication~ breakdown theme. Benjamin de3ires to be alone, onJy to be pressed into meeting peo­ple. Spotting his weaknesses. Mrs. Robinson, the bus·iness pa~tner's wife, loopholes the boy'S! pensive doubts.

Nichols. drenches these scenes wtth pure satiric com­edy, allld· the dialogue and Sl.:reen effects are matchless.

Intimations a.t Benjamin's sexual experience are hinted by Mrs. Robinson in their first hotel rendezvous and the

MARRIAGE . . . ? Katherine Ross and guests now bars the church's doors. (A scene. Dustin Hoffman run from trapped congrega- from Mike Nichols "The Graduate" now plaj.i_ -tion. The cross he used to fend off the wedding ing at the Parkway Theater.) · •·· ·

.: unn ention of Benjamin's mo- as Benjam~n fights for her Benjamin's reaction is stuh­tives by Benjamin. himself. love. The frantic par~e culmi- ning. The rest of the script

The collage of time and Pl!te·; in the church in which a<!quHs i·tself in fine style for thnught as Benjamin goes Elaine is marrying a young tl;e mood of the ~lm. _. ; through each of his experienc- med student forced on her Transversing these emotions · e~. in.cludJng ii'ISI!.ru.sions by his PY her paTents. for the di·rector and the, parents, is a beallltiful direc- The fihn's climax is Cinema screen writers are a superla-_· tion of the audience's train of at il<l wildest. Ben fends of the tive group of actDrs. To laud thought on Benjamin's actual assembled wedding guests, the merits of all would ~, plight. So sharply are we grabs Elaine, and bars the wrf'ng as injus·tices would lie· ·1 : w11re of his experiences _ chureh doors with the cross. :ot hand. . whioh he refers to as "per- As the congregation screams, Ann Bancroft, as Mrs. ROb-· ''rr.oe time.:;" tha·t when he is the couple (l.Ulaware of the inson, has finally holted from told he cannot see Elaine bride's new marital status, her trap as Ann Sullivan in-: (!.!le daughter). the audience I'm convinced) runs across "The Miracle Worker." As· feels as mu..._:h discomfort lis the lawn and jumps a city the Madame in question, slrec Renjamin himself. bus. out voices and wills : Benja:: Cinematica~1y, lhe movie Berserk Intellectual min to t'he •point of coritrolling

passes its half-way point when Nichols' et:Ming is like an him. Her sneers a•re the best; • Benjamin's interest is shifted intellectual gone berserk at a in HoHywoodi, and she make!!! to Elaine and t-he pace quick- Stevenson ral1Iy. Every move use of her fine contralto by' ens ta accomadra.f.e the new is calculated for effect. shaking Benjamin up with al­entang~lemer.t. Mrs. Robinson. When Banjamin gets caught luring purrs and the obsene .. on the other hand, becomes by Mrs. Robinwn in the first remark at tihe end. ._, villainness instead of arch-se- fifteen ininutes of flle movie, WoDderful Effect - ... );. ductress. flaS'hes of her bare skin tan-

~ ... - •f "'·· ···-·· ••• -~ ~ ~.

.. events leading ·to the -actual· · ·~smg· a·i-e. ·a hilarious cir-:

;:. • ~ , . . •. I • · ' l

Shocked by the revelatian of taJ.ize hds eyes· (a.nrl ours as her mother's a.ffa•ire with Ben- well) into actions he wishes jamin and denried contact with he hadn't ·taken later. These him, Elaine is driven from glallJCes and composite shots Benjamin. Crisis after crisis merge~,.into· specialillY' num-­are- "met:nn. rapid ~Succesai6-n be~) tftat'it:ttWtitllii!an.f\ '''"'r.;

Katherine Ross, a pretty. newcomer, does weH in. pro-­jecting the diffi-cu.1.t role of Elaine. Her eflfer_t is wonde~ , ful as she changes from prim and pr"ruo.'" at ho.,.,e, tn wild ' ' t . ,Y~;n W·•'-!'J ~r"'~,.'. .

cm4-.·~.?lllbf!f.~~~-, 61i rill ··1•

At John Hancock, there's more to Ufelnsurance than selling Ufe Insurance.

We'll be hereon February 27 to prove it to you.

Alan Smith works in our Salary Ad­min.istration Division in Boston. AJan earned his B.A. from Harvard in 1965.

Chorles Grier is a management trainee in the Policy Contract Service Depart. ment in Boston. Chuck graduated in 1966 from Tuskegee Institute.

Selling life insurance is big busi­ness. Sp big that John Hancock is selling nationwide. So we need a lot of talented salesmen like Frederick Brown -who can choose their own locations. But that's just the beginning, we also need a lot of talented nonsalesmen like Alan Smith and Charles Grier for positions as:

computer programmers And mathematicians. And accountants. And researchers. And management trainees. And people to manage these people. And people to manage the whole business.- (Presidents are made, not born.)

You'll find that no matter what your degree will be, John Hancock probably has a career for you. The John Hancock recruiter will be here to see you.

Check your college placement office for details. -

Frederick Brown, Jr. graduated from the Pennsylvania Military College In 1964. Rick is a Sales Representative at the Mordecai Gerson Agency, Philadelphia.

UFE INSURANCE

An Equal Opportunity Employer

IT ISN'T OBVIOUS • • • what Ann Bancroft is trying to do to yoong Dustin Hofllman in the scene above. But that isn't anything compared to what will happen to him later.

Nidl.ols aliso uses·'l~ >c1bse~~ up to attract atti!ntion. The beginning party sequelliCe is built arol.Uld tlhis tedmique. Ben:j-amin descendS the stair­way; eyes wander; hands grab, The room is the scene o.f a party, but one would ra­ther !Jhlink it is a prison in the camern.'s eye.

Besides :fl}asby, but intrigu­ing camerawork, Nilchols has made the most of his Tecbni­color print. The various drives through the country mirror not only nature's beauty but Benjamin's thoughts. The wild seareh, photographed in day and night, shows the desper­ation of mood and the consurn­a.tion of a total effect.

Blatant Barb Henry and Willingham's

script is not free from flaws, but it is ·thi! moot blatanrt barb to perpetrate the screen in many yeaTS. When Benjamin arrives at ·flhe Taft Hotel, he wanders aimless·ly around the lobby.

The destk clerk (played by Henry) inqtLir.es. "Are you here for an affair. S·ir?"

. DID YOU KNOW TH'ESE RECENT BEST -SELLERS ARE NOW IN PAPER?

e GAMES PEOPLE PLAY by Berne • EVERYTHING BUT MONEY by Levenson • THE .MAGIC BARREL by Malamud • LSD ON THE CAMPUS by Young & Hixson • THE SOVIET~ by Goldstone e DRUGS by Laurie • HANDBOOK OF PRESCRIPTION DRUGS

by Burack • FUN WITH MATHEMATICS by Meyer • THE HARRAD EXPERIMENT by Rimmer e BLACK LIKE ME by Griffin • UNDERSTANDING MEDIA by McLuhan e CAPITALISM: THE UNKNOWN IDEAL

by Ayn Rand • IN COLD BLOOD by Capote

AND MANY, MANY M~ORE

College Book Store "ON THE CAMPUS"

Owned and Operated by Wake Forest College for Convenience Of Students And Faculty

MIHTay Baniiiron, lfllam Daniels, and Elizabeth Willson as• Mr. Robinson and Benja­min's parents respectively, are dle'Vasting as they fllounder · around: looking at Benjamin with disgust and lbve. · _

Dustin Hoffman, as Benja- , min, is uncautious in achiev­ing success• in his role. For US, the audiience, as well for. those goldbricking produc~rs' in Hollywood, Hoffman spares no effort to bring Braddrek ·to· life. His glow as Benjamin is utterly UIWsual for a .film star. · Hi's acting from the -stage is brilLiant for cinema it is a sur­render of most sterotypes no:t in existence - a landmark to be reckoned with.

Film Is Landmark And the film is a landmark.

as well, of sheer coherence. The polished manner of Nich· ol's dlirection forms and shapes everything from the vantage point of young Braddock. It has been said by other re­viewers that the film is not in Ben's viewpoint and that the mid-dle savs. I can only say hat thi-c; is a matter of seman­tics. and the viewers in ques­tion can on·ly see beyond the marquee.

For Nichols. and us, the film succeeds immediately and remains that way through­out. However, it is only m the' i minds of us. the college ·com· · munity, that "The Graduate" can be a total success. It is a·: su--cess based on throwing: away preconceived notions and . letting our minds be momen­tarily disinterested in life.

@ .

~· lilllll'~.

HAIRDRESSERS

Forthe * Hairstyles · -Fashionable Women Prefer.

Three Locations Reynolda Manor . . '722-61~ Northside .......... · 767-0231 Thruway . . . .... : '123-6791

Thurs. & Fri. Nltes by Appointment

State s gan, carJ.( af Attorn Carolina, nesday F meeting e

facu1ty, a Morgan

Harnett< 1 p.m.: in the U.

Th 42-yl tered the lnst monl Ralei::h p he 'vould Wac!c B;:'l · Pa!it.'ca·

Hlid th<.t d( the m\ mary. E drawn se1 the last 1 Morgan i: a· vigorm seat .him. ·:Morgan

'' Eas.t Care Wcke For of Law. Jl ct!reer ev· from_ the paigning

2 Is Tol -The ne~ torial bo; magazine they will during th• one regul; ial poetry

Both iss April. The follow the mat esf:l Brown, fo1 signed re academic

The issu 24 psges 1 more col01 of visual • out in the

EuroJ

Scholj

AreA A ii;:'~i

s~holarsni! 4 being of soices of Seminar, ~ ,zation whi< rolled col other adul1 mark, Fin

1 Sweden. Young A

dians of S\ apply foro. ships give: folk high s tion for the comprising­study a"J:I from Au7 u These~

con~i>ts of .~ivP langu: dividual tu ricu'um of .?.t the fell \V€

1 1. !l.o; ,::~ c:ourses.

Th>" 01'!'9

indel:er:id.•;ti thl· :-tucler M11ny m01j 'e;res :ond u tia; or full • mw year.

E;tch $50 ers one-four tot.Hl fee a portatirm f1 Sweden. l;: tuition boaJ the year. ·; ___ _

ALS<

Fri4 967 BR

GIRl

Page 3: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

... . '. <':'z~

...

emotions' and the,

a superla-.· To laud

would be, would lie ,

':'

• \

I ,

SCn~ RObert Morgan To Speak Next·Week

State senator Robert Mor­gan, cand·idate for IJhe office of Attorney General of North Carolina, wiH be here Wefl­n~y Feb. 28 to address a meeting of young Democr<tts, facu1ty, and law students.

Morgan, a Democrat from Harnett County. will speak at 1 p. m. fol1owing a luncooon in the Little Magnolia Room.

Th 42-year-old Ie~islator en-' tered the Demo-.:ratic primary

last month, announcing at a Ralei:;h press conference that he would cha!lens-re incumbent Wsc0 Bruton. -· Po!it.'cal predictors have

faid th<.t the ra·ce wiH be one or the most active in the pri­mary. Bruton's office h:ts drawn severe criticism during the last several months, and Morgan is expected to wage a· vigorous campaign to un­seat him. ·:Morgan is a graduate of

., East Caro:inn UniversLty and W::ke Forest U::Iiversity School of Law. He berran his politkal career even before graduating from . the I. J.-..v School. cam­paigning su('ces·.sfully for the

oJfice of clerk of superior court while still a student

After cm.e term, he was elect­~,;·d to the state senate where t:e has served five regular term~ and several s·pecial ses­sions.

In 1965 Morgan was elected president pro tern of the sen­ate, t.hus chairing the senate rules committee and presiding over the senat~ in the absence of the lieutenant governor.

. He !e)! the battle last year to clavate East Cc<ro1ina to university status. Morgan was ~l~o :J. leader in r·mmoting in­c:ro:::.sed fadlitie:> for higher edi.!<::ation, better mental h~Cllth f1::cilities. jail reform, and improvements in the pub­lic school system.

When he announced ns can­did.ate for Attorney General, Morgan noted that he was moved to do so by the demands of the peop!.e for "more vig­orous, more imaginative, more aggressive, and more capable :c::dership."

Mo·rgan's visit Is being co­ordinated by the Young Demo· crats Club and Students for Morgan Committee.

2 Issues Of The _Sit1dent To Be Published In A.pril · The new three-member edi­torial board of The Student magazine have announced that they will publish two issues during the spring semester­one regular issue and a spec­ial poetry issue.

Both issues will <!0111e out in April. The regular issue will follow the same general for­mat established by Tim Brown, former editor who re­signed recently because of academic reasons.

The issue, however, will be 24 pages longer and will have more color .and a greater use of visual effects. It will eome out in the latter part of April.

European Study

Scholarships

Are A·vailable

The special poetry edition will mark the first time The Student has published an ex­clusively poetry magazine. It will be available in early April.

The three editors-Claire Ivey, junior of Farmingdale. N. J.; Ted Boushy, junior of Fayetteville; and Bill Twy· ford, junior of Nashville, Tenn. -also announced other chang­es in the magazine's staff and management.

One of the changes calls for the initation of a poetry semi­nar and lay-out workshop for the benefit of new and old staff members.

The mai.n fault of previous staffs, according to the edi­torial board, has been a fail­ure to build . up enough mG­mentum to carry the staff over the next year. While be­fore it was an editor's respon­sibility to appoint his own

, . ~ staff, the,. goaL of1"the_ .. Jl~W. A si;:'~ciai opportunity- f~r b d . to .....,. J..H~h

scholars'hip'' sfud:Y' in'"Eilra.p4!· ti~~ng 1~/.""."J-a~ ::;~~ ~:: ~ being offered under the au· "What ·we are primarily in­soices of .the Scandinavian Seminar, ari American orgar.i- terested in is the development

of a staff capable of running ,ozation which since 1949 has en- the magazine more effectively rolled college students and and of continuing their inter-other adults for study in Den- est in publications over from mark, Finland, Norway, and one year to the next," Boushy

' Sweden. said. Young Americans or Cana- For the time neing, how-

diam of Sweclish descent may ever, the Student's most pres-apply for one of the 22 scholar- s_ing problem is the publica-!ihips given by the Swedish uon of tbe December issue, folk high schools in participa- already two months late. tion for the seminar program, Technically, since Brown's comprisin~ nine months of resignation does not become study a'Jd livin~ in Swede:-. formally effective until the dis-from Au,;ust until May 1969. tribution of the February is-

The seminar academic year sue, the upcoming Student is c:on~i>ts of family stays, inte:1· his responsibility. It is sched­. ~h·P language instmction, in- uled to come out next week. d!vidual tutoring, a wide cur- The new editors are also ricu~um of ~~beral arts studie3 int:erested -in more students 2t the fclk high schools, as becoming involved in the prG-we'l ~;; ~~ecial lectures and duction of the magazine. c:ourses. There are {Jj!>Cnings on the

ThE- Pl'0"ram encl:; with an poetry, fiction, and essay indeJ,end.•at ~tucly proje;;t in staffs in particular. thl• :-tudent';; speciul field. "Being on a small college Many maj )!' American col- magazine, the editorial board ·e~es :md unive:·sities give par- can afford to deal with all tia; or full credit for the semi· new perspective writers on a nar year.. personal leveL They are invit-

E!lch $501) s·~ho!arship cov· ed to come up at any time," crs one-fourth of the seminar's B<lushy said. total fee and includes trans- A director Gf exchange ·who porl<•licn from New York to will gather ideas, opinions, Sweden. language materials, lay-outs and so forth from tuition board, and room for other college publications is the year. also being sought. ·

'ir-------------------------~------,

24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE ALSO GENERAL REPAIR AND BODY WORK

Fritts Motor Company 967 BROOKSTOWN AVE. PA 2-1677

~]Or-l LAUNDRY and

DRY CLEANING "On The Campus"

ROBERT MORGAN . Political Hopeful

Crockett Will Receive Scholarship

Roger Crockett, a sopho­more from Penns Grove, N. J .. has been selected by the German d<!:Jartment to study a-t the Free University of Ber­~.la as t!Je UniversHy's Ex­change Scholar for 1968-G9.

Candidates for the scholar­.hip must have had at leas• t\·,ro year.:; of German at the c..: ic_::! level or its equivalent.

'L ••e s\Jholarship provides ~-!liJ marks per month for liv­ing expenses, the remission ,,f a'Ll fees, including insurance, and 200 marks· pr semester for books.

Four German marks are c quivalent to one dollar

T'h:e student must provide his own cost of transportation.

W!JJl~ in Germany, Oroc­kett Will spend six weeks in language instruction at a Goethe Institute somewhere cutside of Ber2in. As of yet, il:e . ex&c:t Ioca.tJion has . not been disclosed.

During a break in studies from March through April;- the student is allowed to travel under the direction of a sub­.s·idized student tour.

Richard' Pantera 1s Wake Forest's present scholar in Berlin.

ROTC Openings For Sophomores t\'~ Ann" ' "'" .. (d''' ~;e.. . ,oun~tr _ )·, ..

Openings for 1ihe two-year ROTC program were announ­ced this week by CoL Hugh J. Turner, Jr., professor military science.

The two-year program is de­~igned for sophomores wish" ing to enter advanced ROTC who have not taken the two­year basic course. They are required to attend a s~x-week summer camp at Fort Ben­ning, Ga., beginning on June 8 or June 15.

In the fall, students who have successfully ..:ompleted the summer camp enroll in th" advanced ROTC course atlii participa.te in a second sum­mer camp, usua11y between the junior and senior years.

Advanced course ·cadets re­ceive $50 per month and upon graduation are commissioned second lieutenants in the Uni­ted States Army Reserve •Jr in the Regulai" Army.

ROTC stu::!·ents are granted a 1-D draft status which exempts them from military servi'.:.e until graduation. Un­der normal circumstances an ROTC graduate may be defer­red in order to pUTsue a gra­duate degree.

w H A T I

C.I.P. s , •

-

GIRLS •· JOHNSON DORM BOYS -- TAYutR DORM .MR. BOY BEAMER~ Manager -

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Mo~y, Feb.19, 1968 PAGE~

Marceau's 1.4tnguage Is An Action · "You cannot slide over a ban­

aM peel with words," a-.:cord­ing to Marcel Marceau. His Monday night performall('e proved that there is a Limit to too spoken and written word. Rather than words and lines he used gestures aDd move­ment. His physical actions and facial express·ions sug­gested the depth of content of J'.OCms, stories, even novels, as he commented on what it is to be human through the art of time.

"Mimo is the common de­nominator of man, the lang­uage of humanity," Ma.rceau said. He was signing programs for the more ·then fifty au­dience members who could not leave after his perfor­mance.

To review that performance is only to seek new superla­tive adjectives. To rely upon str~h cliches as "superb. as­tounding, iocomparab!e" is trite, but true. Moving is not only intrinsk to his art; it is also des-criptive of the au­d!ience response.

There were rumors of tear.s, sustaine·d cries of laughter, sore hand> that kept applaud· ing, long after the near capa­·~ity crowd had paid Ma·rceau h's deserved respect: a stand­ing ovation.

But the long standing ova­tion did not convey a response equal in depth to the level of his art. The only juct review of Marceau's work would be '' poem, written by another !3au'delaire. one of his favo­l'ite poets.

'friump!t In Simplicity And the worst that might be

written is that this a·rtist, who comes to America after stand· ing - room - only appearanc:es across four continents, ac­hieves a victory in style and a poetic statement through

beautiful and articulate move­ment. His performance was a triumph in s·implicity

But what is most difficult is that which "looks so com­mon and so simple," sa-i.e! Marceau. More people wen: ~::ending in programs and sou: veruir booklets. Signing: a.~ . other program, he crossed 1o the door and closed it with his foot. The room was silent.

He returned to too make­up table. Leaning against it, he explained that an actor must be oriented t.o the ground. "But mine," he said, his mind suddenly rett.rnin! to the stage. ''is like this.''

His eyt•s S3emed to see be­yond the Leiling ·as his hands rose s!.owly over, then beyond, his face. "Always upward, al­ways to the air." His hands dropped slowly. "Mime is al­ways a little in the air."

He expressed himself so clearly that it was difficult l;) believe that he was a French artist who used no words in his art.

As he traced his career he remembered when, as a child, he paraded "with banners fashioned from tattered hand­kerchiefs" through the streets of the smaoH . French village; where he was ' born in 1923. Speaking of v:liat might be called .h:is firSt min1;;, com­pany, a group of cbildh!lo:::l friends, he recaEed, "We were Napoleon, Robinron Crusoe, Caesar, and - of coUTEe Charlie Chaplin."

Silent Artists He referred to Chaplin often

and emphasized other silent screen artists who influenced ·him: Buster Keaton, Harry Langdon, Stan Laurel. But it was Oliver Hardy- who inspir­ed him to pursue the ~r.t of silence a~ a profession:· '

In 1946 he enrolled at Char­les Dullin's Sclwol of Drama-

in a class ·bu iiSBII!

Vacation time. Weekend time. Any time you're planning on leaving the campus, you'll find

,.., .. .tile going .is ea.si~.r,<!nc! .f~ter w~en you _ .: take Piedmon,."se~.yo.ur,tra,vel agent •· ' 6r'l:aWPiedtn.aiit 1\irlines·: • - ~

PIEDMONT AIRLINES growing service for going people •

68-CN-2

Hall-p•·iee to collt!ge s_tude11ts tlntl ftreultg: fl1.e llf!lVSpUptJI• flltlf II~!IVSJ1Bpt!1• Jlt!.OJJI e ,.,.~. ''· . 0 •

At lust count, we had more than ·3,800 n::··wR~ pap::r editors on our list of subscrillers to Th~ Chri»tiun Science Monitor. Editors fr0m all o\·er the world.

There is a good reason why the»e ''pros" re<H1 the :l\Ionitor: the Monitor is the world's 1;i1l:r daily international newspaper. l'nlil'e Joc~ll JJ<lpers, the Monitor focuses exclu::;iye]y on world news- the important news.

The Monitor selects the news it con~i~~er" most significa11i: and reports it interpret~: i L, ~~Haiyzes it- in depth. It takes you further into the news than any local paper can.

If this is the kind of pape:· you would like to be readil1g, we will send it to you risrht aw<w at half the regular price of $24.00 a year.

Clip the coupon. Find ont why new,.;paper­rnen themHelves read the Monitor - and why they invariably name it as one of the tlve best papers in the world.

. . .. ··;r:.:,: .. ,:<::i~. ·>,..:: ~· ... ~.~: •• '·. ,· ... __ ... ·,<.,.'0'«<,'·· •. ,.

THE CHI{.lSTIA~i SClENCE · MONITO .~ - ..... ~· '. . " . . . . :'}:::~::'.~~::.:-:::..~~'?-;..: ,;-··· .... ';~~:~:; v ~-::··.!,. '-'( "\ 't) t..: ........... r••'•·•- ..................................... ._ ....... _ 7 <; • • ''y '\ ",

.r· ·-·l-'·''' ......... ~t ... ttt.- ...... _;> ·] r~~t·'"'*ff·c··'·' .,'· ... , . . '• .... ~:).,." ............ ,.. ---------------------------------Th(' Clll'btian Science Monitor I Norway Stn•~t, Boston, 1\'inssachusdls 02116 Please enter a l\{onitor subsniption fot· th~ name' bt'low. I am enclosing !j;. . .... (U. f". funds) fot· the period checked. 0 1 year $12 0 9 months $9 0 .G months $6

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C!t.y Zip 0 C•111,. 1 .~L' ~tur,flnt . )'"'ear of gt·r:•lualiun [l F':.t.•ulty nH.::•: .. :~· p.r:,~t·:i --. .... -------~--·-- -----·----"

tic Art in Lhe Sarah · Bem· hardt Theatre in Paris. Later, he studied with the great ma;;­ter, El!i.enne Decroux, un.til Jean-Louis Barrault made him a member of his company.

His interpretation of Arle­quin in Barrault's production of "Baptiste" won such ac­claim that he was encouraged to present hls first "mino­drama,"' "Praxitelc and the Golden Fish." The success of this production assured his career.

A year later "Bip" was born, and the Mar.eau trade­;Hark imrne:ltiately meot warm ; c:::eption. "Bip is the poetic pn·t of myse'•f." Marceau ~aid. "The funny parts," he conthmed, "I observe in hu­manity."

Marceau spoke often of hu­manity with a sense of rever­ance, humility, and honesty. He em:::hasized tmth in the aesthetit·~ of his art. "You cannot lie in mime," he said, ·'becau,;e thf' ·mdience would not understand. You can lie with wo·rds, put you cannot lie with action. Because tho moment of truU1 is an action.··

As he autographed more ;-rn:;z·ams he paused to draw Bip's sm2)l flower on ea·.·h cover. "You are moved," !w continued, "by ·«n actor by ihe way he says his words. But in mime you are moved by the story and the style."

He s·poke o£. "Youth, Matu­rity, Old Age, and Death," 011e

of the mimes he had perform

MARCEL MARCEAU . • . delighted a near capacity crowd in Wait Cbapel Monday night with his pantomime artistry. The French master's Slilent performance received a staDdfng ovation from the audience.

ed that night. "Lt is not be­en me I died that you were moved," he said. "It is the poetic feeling of death." He adde<l that, as an art, mime comes c!oser "to the identifi­cation with both human being:-; and inanimate objects and ex· prec;;ses the most carefully hidden feeldngs."

The feelings of one audience member. however, were not hidden. A young man, current­ly studying mime at the North Ca·rc>lina School of Performing Arts, entered the dressing room. All that he could say was: '·Mr. Marceau, r want to study with you," and "Mr. Mar~eau, I love you. Mr. Mar­ceau." The room was silent again.

Marceau '-h!S the f;rst to speak. Qu:et!y he sccid, "Thank

you." Thousands of people had

known the satisfaction and depth of Marceau's feeling in an auditorium. Some few saw a similar intensity of love and beauty in a small dressing room.

EarLier he half said that mime was "a universal art and a means of communion between aH the people of the world who crave for love and beauty." he had nourished that craving.

For this we must not only res·pect and applaud Marcel Marceau. We also must thank him

- Te<l Boushy (Editor's Note: Bousby, a

poet aDd playwright, is one of the three members of The Student t>ditorial board.)

If you don't agree that business desl .. oys individuality, maybe it's beeaase you're an individual.

There's ceitain campus talk that claims individuality is dead in the business world. That big business is a big brother destroy­ing initiative ..

But freedom of thought and action, when backed with reason and conviction's cour­age, will keep and nurture individuality whatever the scene: in the arts, the sciences, and in business.

Scoffers to the contrary, the red corpus­cles of individuality pay off. No mistake.

Encouraging individuality rather than suppressing it is policy in a business like Western E!ectric-where we make and pro-

vide things Bell telephone companies need. Because communications are changing fast, these needs are great and diverse.

Being involved with a system that helps keep people in touch, lets doctors send car­diograms across country for quick analysis, helps transmit news instantly, is demand­ing. Demanding of individuals.

If your ambition is strong and your abili­ties commensurate, you'll never be truly happy with the status quo. You'll seek ways to change it and-wonderful feeling!­som~ of them will work.

Could be at Western Electric.

Iii\ W(!sfern Electric ~ MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT Of THE BELL SYSTEM

Page 4: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

HENRY H. BOSTIC, JR. RALPH A. SIMPSON

C. Editors

JJlark DICK BEIDGERD Business Manager

LINDA CARTER, Managing Editor LINDA LEVI, Associate Editor J. D. WIL'SON, Associate Ediror

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, FEB. 19, 1968

Challenge's Challenge Challenge '69 was rescued last

week from apparent death by a generous $3,000 donation from the Men's Residence Council. But the gift was not nearly so import­ant for the long-range success of the symposium as the act in it­self, for it vigorously demonstra­ted the undeniable student sup­port for the venture.

This unselfish act by one of the financially less well off ele­ments at the University could very well provide the impetus !or securing other monies-and ulti­mately the success of Challenge "this year or any year." It pro­claimed to the entire academic community that there is not only a need but an intense desire as well for such a program at Wake Forest University.

The MRS's donation will be a. challenge to the other University student organizations for similar contributions. It will also be a stimulant to the individual stu­dent to provide, from his own 110cket, for something that will benefit him. The resulting show of enthusiastic student solidarity and support through monetary contributions will have a pro­found effect on the success Chal­lenge '69 has in raising necessary funds.

Enthusiasm and support mea­sured in monetary sums are basic, tactical considerations when ap­proaching possible sources of

l,'evenue whether they be individ­uals or corporations. Such advan­tages are basic to the success of fund-raising drives. The first question any possible donor asks is: How have those who will benefit from my contribution shown their support? If the an­swer is positive, then the donor's answer is more likely to be posi­tive.

This axiom can also apply to the University. Although the Universitv has no financial obli­gation wlwt~oever to Challenge, positive student support for the symposium in the form of mone­tary contributions could greatly in fhH'nrc· t hr University to give some measure of budgetary sup­port. Specifically, Challange's leadership's attempts to request and obtain funds from the Uni­versity's Board of Trustees could be strengthened immensely by gene-rons stnrlrnt C'Ontributions. If such were t hf' <·~se, Challenge leadership might even be in the position to request a challenge­type arrangement with the Trus­tees where student donations would be matched by University funds.

The wonderful opportunity has been presented, due in large part to the generous gifts of the Men's Residence Council. But will the students take advantage of it'? Here lies the "challenge" of Challenge '69.

Sanford Grows Taller CHAPEL Htl-1- WEEKLY.

Terry Sanford's decision not to seek the Democratic nomination for the United States Senate this spring is going to receive mixed notices all over North Carolina, just as his candidacy would have.

For Senator Sam Ervin, of course, it's about the best news he's likely to get this year. Pos­sibly he could have beaten San­ford and come out of the pri­mary in good enough shape to survive the general election next November. But as Senator Ervin himself said, it's· much more re­laxing to run unopposed, or with only token opposition. Facing a challenge from Terry Sanford \Vould have put the Senator all out of sorts, if not out of office.

Thousands of North Carolina Democrats, and not only those wedded to Senator Ervin, will greet the Sanford decision with a huge sigh of relief. It is hard to conceive of a race that would have split the Party wider and deeper than a Sanford-Ervin con­test would have. Pitting the San­ford wing of the Party against the conservative coalition that supports Ervin would have had all the overtones of a vendetta.

In other years, when the Democratic pnmary was the whole shooting match, such blood-feuding would have been taken more or less for granted, and certainly would not have dis­mayed Party regulars. Until now, Democratic nominees as a rule, although halt and bleeding from the primary, had been able to breeze past Republicans. Those headly days are gone, perhaps fo1·ever.

This year will see the strongest and broadest Repu'blican chal­lenge in this century. It could turn out that a Democratic nomi­nation, usually as sound as a 1912 dollar, won't be worth a Confederate. That gloomy possi­bility sired those fond yearnings some months ago for a consensus candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor. And it was such a possibility that made those Democrats who set great store by Party unity de­plore a Sanford-Ervin blood bath. Thus, that huge sigh of relief.

For the Republicans, the San­ford decision is bound to be a keen disappointment, especially

for that convey seeking the GOP nomination ·for the .Senate~· Reo.· -publican chances of capturing· .,. the Senate seat have been measur­ably reduced, if not busted. Many Republicans consider Sam Ervin, despite his nominal Party affili­ation, to be one of their own. They will go after him, rather than lose the race by default. But it will be strictly a matter of making the motions, without any real relish. (Sanford would have been attacked with great glee.) A Repuiblican candidate taking a strong issue with Sam Ervin will find himself in the awkard posi­tion of attacking the basic phi· losphy of his own party.

Those most disappointed of all by Sanford's decision, naturally, will be the charter members of the Sanford wing. They have been spoiling since Richardson Preyer's defeat for Governor in 1964 and this looked like their chance for a new life-not with an heir but with the once and future king himself. They can only let the adrenalin subside and wait for another day.

In our estimation, Terry San­ford has grown several feet in stature, not so much because he decided to lay off but ·because of why he arrived at this decision. His own soundings had shown that he would have no worse than an even chance to win, and those odds are about as good as anyone could reasonably ask against an incumbent. But his soundings had also shown that the race issue would tower in a campaign against Ervin. And it was this more than anything else that turned Sanford away from the challenge.

Undoubtedly, Sanford didn't have much stomach for trying to do in Senator Ervin, who at 71 is in the twilight of a distinguish­ed career of public service. But it was the prospect of roiling racial antagonisms, along with the prospect of fracturing the Democratic Party in a critical year, that backed him away.

One who voluntarily banks the fires of his personal ambition for the good of the State merits high praise. At the possi'ble cost to himself .of a United States Senate seat, Terry Sanford has decided not to risk having race set against race, and in so doing he has ser­ved us all exceptionally well.

Founded January ~5, 1916, as the student newspaper or Wake Forest University Old Gold and Black is pubhshed ~aeh Monday during the school yea.r except during e;,amination and holiday periods as ducc.ted by the Wake Forest Publications Board Mailed each Tues· day, one day after publicatiOn da.te.

Member of the Associate~ .. Coll~giate Press. Repres.ented for National Advertising by Na· tlonal Educational Advert1smg Sen'lce, Inc., a divisiOn of Reader's Digest Sales and serv· lee. Subscription rate: $3.50. Second-Class postage paid, Winston-Salem, N. c. Form 3579 should be· mailed to Box 7567, Reynolda Station. Wlnston-'Salem, N. c. 27109. Printed\ by The Nashville Graphic, Nashville, N. c.

'The Trophy Room'

·Freshmen Coeds Become A Part Of 'Wake Society'

By SHARON LYNCII STAFF WRITER

Society Rush ~dro Friday, and now many freshmen coeds are happily a part vf "Wake Society."

The miraculous rebirth has agmn been accomplished. In less. thoo two weeks the upperclassmen coeds finally got to koow aU of the freshmen girls. Even more importantly, the freshmen girls were able to overcome a six-month so­dety-knowledge vacuum in just a few days.

Self-assmed! after a rush course in so­ciety, the enlightened girls pledged to become members in organizations dedi­cated to friendship and cooperation.

But one has only to observe the rush­ex·hausted coeds trying to make-up the academic work of the .past two weeks, or see the growing disLlus.iomnent of the new society members, to know that something inherently wrong happened during the last two weeks. That "some­thing inherently wrong" is not to be found in the "idea" of society rush, but in its unbelievable limitations - its im­possible rules and regulations.

Look Who's Here!

In two short weeks each society tries to sort the fr~n. The freshmen try to sort the societies. Both are crippled by a six-month knowledge-vacuum. First impressions a:re critf.:ai. Preferentials are designatecl. Bids are delivered. Pledges are made. And at the pledge dinner old and new society members alike look around in surprise to see who is there!

farce on camp~. Tbe homble crime i:: that societies nave so much potential! FrieOOs'hip is one of the worthiest and· most fulfilling goals in life.

Wake coeds need societies. but not so­cieties as they are today. DisiJ[usioned new members, and, indeed, disgusted and eWiausted old members, cannoli help but realize that bhe mismanagement, lethergy, and apathy in societies are born of and perpetuated by the annual rush.

Why are societies ~furoudedl in mystery until rush? Why aren't rush rules rea-

. listie? How can anyone be expootedi to overcome a six-month news bladt.:OU.t and learn everything about societies or ¥eshmen coeds in S\1\!h a ridiculously short time? ·Why aren't societies tihe ac­tivity of two semesters instead of jusJ two weeks? ·

Open To Questions

Instead of societies being in a vac­umn, why can't they always be open to the questions of would-be members? At ·the beginning of the fall semester each society SJhould be assigned or draw rots fur smoker dares and the -chance Ito intro­duce themselves to the fres!hman coeds. All through the semester informal "get­to-know-each-other's" could p~ re­place the weekly society meetings.

Friendslhips would 'have time to grow natura1ltf instead of being squeezed into a two-weeks rush. And, in an effort to . earn new mem~rs. the societies would : gain new life and a sense of purpose.

By tlhe beginning of second semester, the wdeties and the freshmen would be able to make knowledgeab1e decisions . about each other. Rush wouldn't be ex- . hausting to the members and a matter of blind choice by rusihees, but only tile furtmality of the formal pledge.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Ill! the coming weeks, coed: life will be- · come nonnail again. The societies will hold their weekly meetings, and the new members will learn, much too late to avoid the embarrassment of ''de-sister­illlg," ·bhat a rush-week society is mostly painted smiles and artifidal enthusiasm: that the orgamilzations of friendrs·lrlp rise cut of their stagnant weekly meetings only long enough to quarrel among them­selves about the fall carnival, to be ex­hausted during rush week, and to cat­fight with the other societies dur-ing Der­by Days.

~re can be no doubt llbat the society system must ·be radically reformed if the societies are to accomplish flheir 1

fundamental goals. The above p1an is : but a sketchy outline - a suggestion Let FREEDMAN Ring bo initiate the thoughts of others, but · somehing must be don.e. Societies must· utilize the potential inherent in flheir ammai rebirth, and such a development can come only through an intelligent and open rush system. ;

With d€-ep apologies to Sidney Harris, I present s-ome "thoughts at large."

-As the second semester gets into full swing, the senior class ~gins to worry about how much money they will give back to the school in grateful re­cognition of the "total education" wlrich they r~.:eived.

This should be be an almost automatic process, but, in the traditional Wake Forest manner' the altiri:mi of: :!'lei~ has. made the fund raising drive into a combination of a los­ing crusade and an ex­tended satire on the book "How to Win Friends and Influence

FREEDMAN People." -Althou:;h Wake professes to be a

Baptist i11stitution, and in fact is owned by these souls, the religion of Apatheism has become far more prominent than the mor-e common Protestant sects_ No where can this be seen better than among the faculty.

True, there are members of the facul­ty who are dedicated, interested, and in­tere.<;tin:!. but the majority of the pro­fessors are either unibearably bol'ing, un­prepared, conservative in their method, or so engrossed in detail that a stu­dent never has a charr~..e. to show him­self.

Coated With Banalities

-This year's rush programs was as usual coated with banalities. The fresh­men seemed to be more fiekle, un.cer­tain, ;end generally of more confused qua1ity vhan in bhe past. Nonellheless, the fraternity and society members should be proud of tile people they pledged. There is little else to cheer about. -I read in the MRC newsletter Pho­

nix this week that the men of Taylor HoL!se are hecoming increasingly wor­ried that "brotherhood" must be streng­thened. They may he hard pressed to figure a way to eliminate more indepen­cer.·ts frcm their ranks without having to pay rent like the other fraternities. -

Letters ••• (All letters to the editor must be signed; names will\ be withheld 011 request Spelling 3nd _ punctuation are the writer's own.)

Ashamed? To the Editors:

As a Baptist layman, I w~ particular­ly enthusiastic about watchmg our good oX! Deacons play Chapel Hill Coll~e on television last week. It always thriJ.ls me when our fine Baptist institution gets good coverage.

I almost wish I'd never heard of Wake Forest when r began watching the game, thcugh. It was a disgrace. It was a shame. The conduct of the students, the throwing of ice and paper cups, and the yelling of obscene cheers was enough to turn my stomadl.

I only ask myself: when :-vm you peo­ple begin acting like Baptists are s~p­]Hlsei:l to act? I hope and pray you w.tll •change your attitude toward good Chris­tian sportsmanship and away from such unbecoming conduct.

William H. Long White Oak, N. C.

-The coming of Dinne Warkick pro. duced Jon~ like and steady ticket buy­ing. This is really kind of ironic, because in the past, no matter how great the performer, if a student had to pay he wouldn't go. Now if a performance i:> free, no one goes.

The "society" has become a tolerated

Fine 'Southron 'Gentleman Has Bright Career---Ahead

-The CU movies are getting ·better all (Editor's note: The following letter is do just about anything. As for example the time, hut interest has not im.:reased a spoof. It was written in jest by Dr. he •has for the past four years maintain- · markedly. Perhaps the members of this Robert N. Shorter, assistant professor ed the ffction that he is a footbali play-committee would do we1E to cut dlown on of English, as a joke on senior football er. So successful has been his deception the ·number of flicJ\:s .ano ipcteas_e. ~Hie~:~,_p~ay~r::s9J..ol.~~. ~l!,'lPerJ:'~~~P*'I(,;Fts;::;~~·tJW ~ofJJt "* :<nld, ~~ •. ~- kJ1Dw he number of' cartoons:·.· .... •·u;· .. ,,,~~~""'·~·~est,- m~·l>~~Ji<W}to ~~~3f;.~Y.-~1SI1_~: .~-•s7rtotJme (thougb_.#,>metimes :l-am not-

Knowing the student body here the at- In~ for adllllssron -to. the Umverstty of sure a~ the coach who, despite what tendence would swell. 'I1his would ~ one Chtcago Law School, IS quoted, from re- you nught !have heard from the alumnus-more example of givin" the student -liable sources as . having said, "Oh my ·es, is doing such a fine job building what he wants and an e~en better ex- God, you didn't really send this," when C'haracters, than whom none is a better ample showing' the s-tudents how really Shorter showed it to.~· . example. t~an ~errez.) I think, however ridiculous they can be. No, Dr. Shorter dum t really send 1t, that he iS llltelligent enough to know he

but we felt that you would be interested cannot live a Ide forever, for lately he Same Old Stereotype in seeing how an absent-minded profes- has taken to wearing a ddsguise. Mr. 1

sor could possibly botch a student's ad- Parentz is nothing jf not practical -The admiss·ioru; office is doLg their usual fine job of getting n~w freshmen to replace old seniors. It is odd that the umversity prides itself on attracting peopJ.e of varying areas, religion:;, and now· ;aces.

But the appaJlling fact remains that ir­regardless of these differences, the re­lative social, economl'..:, .:;;··: ''" lne _ap­praisals of the students may be plotted on a very small graph.

-Hence, anyone who shows any spark of nonconformity is U9Ually shunned by the "polite" society of little boys and girls.

-A very tiring phrase heard often around campus is "Carolina has it, why can't we?" There are two good reasons why we have no right to say this.

First we are not yet -in a position to be 'compared to Carolina. And sec­ond, we live in Wireton-Salem, the town that t<Jbacco put to sleep.

-Along with the rise of the graduate school the students and iaculty would like ~ see a growth of the college. Where is it, Dr. Scales?

-Often .I start to feel sorry for some of the administration. Every Tom, Di\.:k, and Harry is taking potshots at Mr. Crease and Miss Reake. Basically, they ru-e gocd people. They just got misled when they went to the pla'C!Cment office.

Dedicated Men

-The new Ecumenical Institute is trying to und'O all tll.e work of Martin Luther, John Ca:lvin, and the rest. Here were dedicated men who risked their lives to divide the Christian religion, and now Wake Forest is trying to undue all their fine work by putting old Hump­ty Dumpty back together aga!in

Even though Wake Forest may lose some money in the deal, for the sake of progress in education, the Baptist monkey should be ·removed from our -backs.

-One of the most enjoyable ex­periences one can have at Wake Fores.t is becoming involved in some1lbi.ng. But only a few do, and fewer stihl· under­~tand why.

-The basketball team has proven the worth of the old cliche, "You can't win them ail." Somehow though, I was hoping somewhere in the midst of this year's basketball debris, there would be a star born.

Only Jack McCloskey's son at Bishop McGuiness High made any sort of en­trance into the world.

mission cltances by a careless letter of Another faucet oli Mr. Perdrez's chal"' · · · recommendation. We don't recommend acter is the fact that he is not jll5t egg- _ the sort of action on the part of profes· headed but is also interested in the sors, especially if the student is a foot- whole man - or actually the whole wo-baU player. There could be dire con- man; because I have in mind a foreign sequences. girl that he has often been seen with

Dean George Fee The Law School

10 February 1968 even though he doesn'.t take her to many

The University of Chicago 1111 East 60th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637 Dear Dean Fee: I am a English teacher and! have

taught Robert E. Lee Pen-etz, Jll". - at least he has sat in on some of my courses. As you can see from his name

· he is a fine old southron gentleman, al­though !like many a soutlmmer he cladms to be from the north so thaJt he won't· be embarased by the s:hadow of defeat which hangs over the heads of so many fine old southron gentlmnen. Illl certain­ly i!ldicates a bright career for him in law - I mean the fact that he is able to abandon his herita:ge and: his prin­ciples in order to be on the winning side.

Suitable For Law Another clear indJcation of his suit­

abHity for a career in leg2l1 law is his interest in money, for which he will

pUblic places preferring to spend his weeltends in apartments with t!rer, study· ing I am sure. I am sure they study be­cause they were both in one of my classes one time and all he did: was stare at her brain. (Lucky a shv:!d:P.:r doesn'-t need' biology, because he alway-s seem so sure where her was.)

I don't mean to say tlrat Pedro is a good student - I wil:l let his speak for that. He never fa!tls behind his work, and when he does he is ways able to ~a11c:h up eventually. As example when he was a sophomore didn't know anything about Chlaucer, now here he is years later knowing actly where to go for a pony.

All in all I hope you Mr. what's· his-name, because we in Wilnsb:m-IW1em would be glad if he went to Chicago.

Yours Very truly, Robert N. Shorter English Perfessor

-Being a New Yorker, I have always liked the New York Mets. Thank you, Wake Forest, for, no matter what sea· son it may be, I will always biave a team to love. " 'I ~ow, I Know- But~ Still It's Beginning to Bug Me.'" .

SOPH l chlring a culmi the six

10:

Of 126 for rush, more am Friday : six socie

cameo lie Skeer Campbel Wy&S c

and Bets boro.

Fidele~ '\ Judy A

Shelly A Va.; Sall ster, N. of Pisgal of Dayto aldson c

Mary Ar. burg

other elude: F Paulo, B of Frank stra of A

• Jordan Lougee Patton c Dottie Sc Md.·

Etta ' ville Bea ofRock-ii' Dlfnn;·'!'I Greensbo of Gasto deles.

Laurel hie Boon Va.; Be\.:l Mount; ~

l of Bethel Beaufort; ietta, G! Newton, Robbins c

Other i Chris me Jenny I1 Catherine Ellen B Diane Ha Fla.; ROl thews; a ham of (

Cheryl 1

J. Ann St Nancy D< Fla.; Kat ton-Salem Wincheste of Coral Cherry I ville, Fla. rels.

Les Soe Connie An nette Bac1 Connie G1 Debbie H Woodson, Judy Jolm Jan Saw Tenn.; St laski, Va. of Charlot

Betty Sl Jan Vince Holly Haw Susan Har

'Red' Celtic Here

Aroold general m coach of will speak m. in De' in a lectur College Ur

In the 1 bach coaor ton won ni titles and ketball AS1 ~hips. Aue his coaCJhi11 ter winnin .s-hips for l as Cel~ c

AuerbaclJ known for l and develo wanted pi players in

Page 5: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

e y' ~le crime i:: ll potential! lrthiest and·

but not so­lismusioned I, disgusted cannoll help tamgement, lcieties are the amual

~in mystery I rules rea­expected/ to 'S black-out societies or ridiculously ~ties the ac­eadof"t ~~-

IS

· in a vac-be open to

embers? At nester each cr- draw lots rvce Ito intro­man coeds. OmNI1 "get­partially re- . ~tings. me to grow tueezed into an effort to . ieties would : purpose.

d semester, ~would: be le decisions . ldn't be ex- . ld a matter >ut only tile :lge. ; the society reformed if lplish their >Ve plan is :

suggestion others, but . :ieties must· rlt in their levelopment 1 intelligent

nan ~ad :or example l"S maintain- . 10tbal1 play­lis deception ~- knp~ he !S .L·am not ·. le.Spite what healwnnus­ob butlding , is a better Ilk, however to know he

>r lately he :Sgllise. Mr. ·actica} drez's ohal"" · 10t just egg- . · ;ted' in the e whole wo­ld a foreign ll seen with IMlr to many • spend his 1 her, study· ey study be· one of my he did!

Pedro is t his ···---~· L1s behind es he is llally. As •phomore Thlaucer, knowing y. t Mr. "'"'"t'•>-

'I' :er il"

lg Me.'"

,,

..... 131 Men End Rush Period By Pledging 9 Fraternities

Broadway Play Here Wednesday

OLD GoLD AND BLACK Monday, Feb. 19,1968 PAGE li'IVE

2 University Students Named Wilson Fellows

-PHOTO BY MCNEILL

SOPH RUSHEES . . . are eDtertailled by the society sisters d11J'ing the SOPH formal party last week. The parties were a culmination of two weeks of rush which saw 101 coeds pledge the six societies.

_One hundred and thirty-three Steve Harvey, Trenton, N. J.; men pledged nine fraternities Mike Kelley, Rockville, Md.; Thursday night ending a se- Joe Krieger, Huntington, W. mester of defen-ed rush and Va. over two weeks of traditional Other Lambda Chi pledges smokers and competition be· are: Harmon McDaniel, Ma· tween the fraternities for com- con, Ga.; Hank Malsbury,

· mittals. Lawrenceville, N. J.; Steve Sigma Phi Epsilon and Sig- Moore, Siler City; Jay Mullen,

rna Chi fraternities led in the Bridgeport, W. Va.; Mark number of pledges with 24 and Richardson, Hunting, W. Va.; 22 respectively. Mac Smith, Greenville, S. C.;

Alpha Sigma Phi pledges in- Jeff Tweed, Huntington, W. clnde: Richard Malcolm Ba- Va.; and Colin Walker, Win· zoian, Manchester, N.H.; Lee ston-Salem. Alan Clymer, Allentown, Pa.; Due to extenuating circum· Paul Eugene Craighead, Rock- stances, there were oo pledges mart, Ga.; Larry Wayne Yat- for Pi Kappa Alpha. sko, Olowick, N. J.; Douglas Sigma Chi pledges include: Floyd Osbume, Jr., Leaks. Ronald Gay Blanchard, Salem· ville; Joseph Alexander Win. burg; Wayne Douglas Brum­gate, Grifton. baugh, Cantlonsvillle, Md.;

10 I Coeds Becom·e New Society Pledges

Other Alpha Sig pledges John Paul Bullock, Jr., Sum· are: Robert Alexander Pet- ter, S. C.; Paul Harrell Cale, ring, Hamilton Square, N. J.; Jr., Crozet, Va.; Lawrence J. Bruce Harland Garland, Tren- Chamberlain, Butler, Pa.; ton, N. J.; Tam Spicer Hutch- Bolling Stovall DuBose, Ath­inson, Jr., North Wilkesboro; ens, Ga.; Aubrey Lee Ger­George Henry Koother III. laugh, Martinsville, Va.; Ar­Glen Burnie, Maryland, and thur Henry Getz, Jr., Grosse Charles Rufus Hayes, Wilkes- Pointe, Mich.; James L. Ho· boro. gan, Ocean City, N .. T.; Rich·

Delta Sigma Pi pledges in- ard Johnson Horton, Hamil· Of 126 giTls who registered Fla.; Lind1a Setterstrom of st. elude: Charles Taylor, Dan- ton, N. Y.; Samuel Freeman

for rush, 101 freshmen, sopho- Louis, Mo.; Pa.t Hod~es u-£ ville, Va.; Gregg Budd, Del- Lewis, Burlington. · d · · coed !edged Charlot.te·, and Martha Howard mar, Md.; Marv Bond, Balti- Other Sigma Chi pledges

more an JllnlOr s P more, Md.; Larry Carroll, are: Clarence McCain Me­Friday into tfue University's of Charlotte also· pledged Les Chicago, DI.·, Bob Utley, Fay- Collom, Jr., Monroe: David six societies. Soeurs.

led · s H etteville, Ark.; Rick Potter, Huff Maner Adelphi, Md.; Cameo pledges include Hal· Thooe P gmg .O.P. · <~O· Cleveland, Ohio; Carl Keller, Mark William Ogren, Lock-

lie Skeen of High Point; Terri ciety include: Patti Allen of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. port, Ill.; Charlie Pullen, Bur· Ca bell f C rd Jud;:y LouisvHie, Kv .. ; Bettv. Benton

mp o onco ; Other Delta Sig pledges are: gaw; Timothy Lee Quigg, Wyfm of Wilmington, Del.. of Mount Holly; Beth Crad- Bert M. Moody, Charlotte; Pleasantville, N. J.; James and Betsy Dwiggins of Greens- do-.:k of Cary; Betsy Daniel of Bennie Krause, Woodbud:ge, Richardson, Jr.; Winston-Sal-boro. Wilson; Martha Early of Va.; Wily Doby, Winston-Sal- em; Julian Edward Ruffin,

Fideles pled.ges include: Greensboro; Jean Fogleman em; Paul Crissman, Graham; Rocky Mount; Lester Dupey, \ Judy Aldrich of Gastonia; of Winston-Salem; C3·rol Row- John Hutton, NewbiH'gh, N. Sears, Farmville, Va.; George

f F 'rf erton of Blad!:burg, Va.; Sl u lmin and Shelly Abernathy o ar ax, Kathy Key of Indian Hatrbor Y.; Bob Young, Ridgeway, aon IJA, Wi · gton; Va.; Sally Ainsworth of Web· Beach, F1a.; and D$1>ie Krue- Va.; and Marion Turbeville, Charles Stafford Wright, Kings· ster, N. Y.; Diane Brachett of I di 1. Ind Turberville, S. C. port, Tenn. of Pisgah Forest; Ann Callison ger n anapo IS, · Kappa Alpha pledges are: Sigma Phi Epsilon pledges of Dayton, Ohio; Susan Don- Other new S.O.P.H. mem· David Lindsay Smith, Rich- include: James Calhoun Daily, aldson of Greensboro; and hers include: Ann Landsperg- mond, Va.; John Robert Per- Medford Lake, N. J.; Christo­Mary Ann English of Laurin- er of Greensboro; Susanne kinson, Jr., Oxford; Paul Jer- pher Keen Barnes, Cincinnati. burg Meisburg of LouisviLle, Ky.; aid Stainback, Henderson; Guy Ohio; Donald Richard Ort,

O~ara Jean Miohae}s of Mor- R II B • B li to D I t p J tha Other Fideles pledges in- usse 01eman, ur ng n; ay es own, a.; ona n elude: Karen Fa!l•lon of Sao ganton; Paula Moore of Green- Alexander Brown Coxe, Green- Crawford Robinson, Media, Paulo, Brazil; Kathy Graves ville, S. C.; Charlene Mortez, wich, Conn. Pa.; Robert Waters Scheuker-of Frankfort, Ky.; Kay Hiern- Belmont; Carol Naylor of Co· Also pledging Kappa Alpha . meyer, Johnstontown, Pa.;

lumbia, S. C,· ·Ma.ry Owen of R AI Ad B I Do ld M N Iso Ft stra of Atlanta. Ga.; Margaret were: on an ams, a· na ason e n, . Jordan of Charlotte; Carol Waynesville; Toni Sin(!'leton c,f timore, Md.; William James Devens, Mass.; David Robert

Btirke, Va.; Kathy Sirkle of Benn tt W t p I B l p Medi a N y Clr"f Lougee of Durham; Mary e , es am eac 1, arsons, n , - .; -Patton of Macon, Ga.; and Greensboro; Linda Welfare of Fla.; Warren Fitzhugh Hoyle, ford Anthony Peed, Shilling­Dottle Soper of Silver Spring. GreenSboro; ~ mgi Zimmer- Lincolnton; and Michael Ed- ton; Pa. . Md . man _of Marti:nsb~, W Va. ward Keenan, Newton. Other Srg Ep pledges are:

· . . h _ Strmgs pledges IDclude: Nell Kappa Sigma pledges in- Benjamin Hall Yarborough, .~tt~ W~~~ ~ ~rrg ~ Barnes of Charlotte; Mary elude": Ronald R. Beceuvair. Petersburg, Va.; Joseph Clay­

vf1Re --'~.ac.h, ·, vD 11-Y'P.ermr • . Jane Antonopoles.,~J~J.ur, .. "EJ.<rin, Ill;, Robert P. William~, ton Holloday, Jr., Winston-o · U\.'1\o'lng am; o y eay or· ~- . r ·· B ~ ... -~ ~-~r.!·e·:· - _ . .,...,.. · · J.. .. .. ~ • • • •• •

Difn ."1'D"' -~""Hila&: '''ii'"'b'f' ~:YP:-~·:1'!<\!! r . IJ,. ;ttl ~! '"~r~-,!I'roy' ~--W:Jlson, John Salem, Douglas Kent Bailey, n, rane ran , ville; Audrey Itton· o os· P. Crowder, Steven F. Heiner, Jacksonville, Fla.; Robert

Greensbor?; and Nanny Fal._::; kie; Vicky Oavagrotti of Falls n:enneth R. Benton, David B. Carl Kovarik, Jr.; Arlington, of Gastoma also pledged Fr. Church, Va.; Rosadind DU!Ck of Hawkins, William E. .Joe., Va.; Richard Michael Loflin, deles. Mars Hill; Connie G~es of Charlotte, N. c. High Point; Donald Hurst

Laurel pledges include: Deb- Greensboro; Sally Glarze o1 Also pledging Kappa Sigma Crowe, Morehead City; Walter bie Boone of Roneeverte, W. Pompano Beach, Fla.; and were: Parks R. Huffstetler, Scott Arby, Washingtun; Mon· Va.; Bed:y Edwards of Rocky Leslie Hall, Alexandria, Va. Gastonia; Britton D. Mann, roe Jackson Stutts, III, Char· Mount; Sally Ann Wihitehurst Qther Strings pledges in· Southpoint, Ohio; John G. Cur- lotte.

·i of Bethel; Linda Tilghman of elude: Jon Hill of Kannapolis; ris, Graham; Timothy K. Also. pledging Sig Ep were: Beaufort; Diane Little CJf Mar- Pam Jones of Galax, Va.; Arnold Falls Church, Va.; Ronald Douglas Pruette,_Char· ietta, Ga.; Lynn M'OOaU of JuHa Manning of Gas.tonia; Gordon' P. Selfridge, West- lotte; James Quentin Taylor, Newton, N. Y.; and Karen Susan Nance of Clinrton; Cathy field, N. J. Jr., Severn; Joey Caldwell Robbins of Worthington, Ohio. O'She:•l of Berwyn, Pa.; Elaine Lambda Chi Alpha pledges McConnell, Jr., Cornelius;

Other Laur-el pledges are: Vescovi of Silver Spring, Md.; include: Greg Bergmann, Mid- Thomas William Sadler, Han· Christie Perry of Charlotte; Dee Wiley of Timonium, Md.; dletown, N. J.; John Bern- over, Pa.; James Frederick Jenny Robinson of Boone; Kathy Young of Greensboro; hardt, Hamil~n Sq., N. J.; Poole, Ashland, Mass.; Earl Catherine West of High Pint; Carc-le Beatly of KanruJJpolis; BOO Brady, Salisbury; Jon Preston Zack, Washington, D. Ellen Bryson of Brevard; Lynn Padjett of Henderson- Brassel, Rockville, Md.; Dav- C.; Carl Arthur Peterson, Ser-Diane Hansen of Cocoa Beach, ville; and Wanda Parton of id Cordier, Collingwood, N. J.; vington, N. J.; and Barry Fla.; Roxie Brevard of Mat- Rutherfordton. Richard Embry, Salisbury; Leonard Brelow, Woodbridge, thews; and Marry Cunning­ham of Charleston, W. Va.

Cheryl Gale of Bassett, Va.; J. Ann Stanfield of Reidsville; Nancy Dando of Jacksonville, Fla.; Kathy WiHiams of Wins· ton-Salem; Ma-ribeth Watts of Winchester, Va.; Kitty Peters of Coral Gables, Fla.; and Cherry Duncan of Jackson­ville, Fla. also pledged Lau­rels.

'World Of Sandburg' Merely Hints At Artistic Performance

Les Soeurs pledges include: Connie Ange, Williamston; An­nette Bacon, Kingsport, Tenn.; Connie Goehring of Durham; Debbie Hodge of Troy; Pam Woodson, Richmond, Va.; Judy Johnson of Atlanta, Ga.;· Jan Sawyer of Nashville, Tenn.; Susan Alburt of Pu­laski, Va.; and Anne Hobson of Charlotte.

Betty Shephard of Monroe: Jan Vince of Bennington, Vt.; Holly Hawkins of Miami, Fla.; Susan Hamill of Winter Park,

'Red' Auerbach, Celtic Ma~ager, Here Tomorrow

/

A. REVIEW

Three lights, three stools, two tables, a podium, and .a· ohair was all that there was to the set of the Alpha Omega Player's Tuesday night pro­duction of Nonnan Corwin's "The World of Carl Sand­burg." That was practically all that there was to the pro­duction.

There were also three ac­tors: Maureen McKovich, Ric Sloeyn, Jim Bob Kessinger. Together with Drexel Riley, director of all Alpha Omega touring units, they should be blamed for a production that, at most, only hinted at artis­tive sensitivity,literary aware. ness, ;professional standards, or justified intrepretation.

-PHOTO BY McNEILL

THE WORLD ..• of Carl Sandburg is portrayed by the Alpba Omega players last week in an evening Chapel program. '111.e three actors gave oral and musical interpretation of Sand-· burg's poetry,

N.J. Sigma Pi pledges are: Joel

M. Baillie, Zanesville, Ohio; W. Jackson Blanchard, Salem­burg; J. Craig Easley, Rocky Motmt; Tteven V. Freed­man, Seaford, N. Y.; Thomas I,. Hughes, West Jefferson; Michael E. Lewis. Winston­Salem; James C. O'Brien, Easton, Pa.; Richard L. Rar· din, Roanoke, Va.; Jimmy D. Reeves, Crumpler.

"Stop the World, I want to Get Off," will be presented in Wait Chapel WednesdaJY at 8:30 p. m. by Jackie Warner's Broadway Company.

The play was written by Leslie Briscusse, a well-estab· lished English song-writer and fHm s-cenarist, a·nd Anthony Newley, a riising British actor.

"Stop the World, I want to Get Off" is a: somef:imes light­hearted, sometimes threaten­ingly serious probe into the character of Little\.lhap, a dr­Ct!S clown with more than or­dinary ambitions.

Two University stlldents are ~ mon_g 1,124 college seniors m lL.c United States u·nd Canada deslgnated today by the Wood .. row W1lson National FeHow­f·hin Found:ation aS' among the best future college teacher prospects on the continent.

The students are Jo Cheryl Exum of Kinsto11> ai'd Richard l'ay~or Williams of Mt. Holly.

Miss Exum, a religion major, is a member of Phi Sigma Iota, national language frnternity. Sh~ aJso sings in F~c choir and has served as a fre~-:-.man orienta•tion advisot·.

al leadership fraternity, and Gamm:t Sigma Epsilon, na­tional chemistry fraternity.

Graduate s c h o o 1 deans across the nation are receiv­ing a list of the designates' names with tlhe recommenda­tion from the foundation that ;;11 are "wortihy of financial support in grad!llalte school."

This marks a change in the foundation's program.

Theta Chi pledges include: Lloyd Arthur Lewis, Vie111Ila, Va.; Jeffery Scott Nelson, Cinnaminson, N. J.; Roy Allen Hare, Durham; Douglas Car­lyle Waller, Philippine Islands; J. Michael Nifong, Melbourne, Fla.; John Douglas Walch, Morristown, N. J.

Other Theta Chi pledges are: Wayne Beard Tudor, Trenron, N. J.; Donald Edward Wal­ker, West Long Branch, N. J.; Jeffrey G. Mohlman, Cincin­nati, Ohio; Everette Wayne Coates, Durham;' Raymond Ralph Emerick, Ellicot City, Md.; Jay Hubert Kegerreis, Ric:hmond, Pa.; Andrew Stuart, Wilmington, Del ; and Robert Dale Mills, Moores­ville, and Michael Gray Kal· lam.

He falls in love with and marries Evie who convenient· ly hanpep_<; to be !Jhe boss's d:mgl!Jter. Litt!echap, aided by hh new found status, is pro· moted to manager of the nor· thern office.

Williams is a phys•ics major. He i!> a member oft Kappa Mu EpJi!on, national matrematics fr:temdty.

Steve Wilson, a chemistrv nwjor of Leaksville, received an honorab~e mention in the ~e'•ection. He is a member of tr-e Men's Residence Coundl, Omicron De!ta Kappa, nation-

In the past ten years, with funds from the Foro Founda· tion amounting to $52 million, the Wilson foundation was able to make direct grants to approximately 1,000 American and Canadian students annual­ly to support llheir first yea<r of graduate school.

"Now our major role is to identify for gradu:ate depart­ments those students who in our view have the best poten­tial for college teadhing," Sir Hugh Tayior, president of the foundation, said.

Student Aid Balances Tuition Hike

(Continued from Page 1) In some institutions in

North Carolina, up to 40 per cent of the undergraduate stu­dent body is receiving financial aid of some sort. The percent­age is dec~dedly higher among graduate students.

According to William Star­ling, director of admission, be­tween 20 and 25 percent of the University's student body, ex­cluding athletes, receives some type of financial aid, whether it be in the form of scholar­ships or loans.

Many more students finance their education through sum­mer jobs and or part-time jobs during the academic year.

The University does not have a centralized job agency fhat .. hires. and fires .students.

The placement office under · the direction of Col. John F. Reed does attempt to find part-time and summer jobs for students but the office is not specifically coordinated into the financial aid depart­ment of the University.

Several tuition plans and federal measures to aid the student have been proposed in the past several years.

Fixed Tuition The . fixed tuition plan­

whereby a student's tuition for four years is fixed at the amount he was charged his fresmnan year, regardless of subsequent tuition increases­has been tried by several col­leges and universities in the past years.

However, more schools have dropped the plan in recent years than have adopted it. 'J1his is due partially to con­tinued inflation throughout the country. According to Dr. James Ralph Scales, Presi­dent of the University, "the University cannot afford to commit itself to a fixed dollar tuition for several years in advance."

Measures taken previously by the federal government have not proved to be as ef­fective as hoped. As a con­sequence, other programs such as the tax credit plan and: the "common stock" pro­posal are being discussed.

According to another Obser­ver article, "proponents of tax credit contend that tax laws have traditionally been used to encourage education, and under this system no long­range government indebted~ ness would be incurred by either students or parents."

Critics, on the other hand, argue that the tax credit plan would not alleviate the finan­cial burden placed on the par­ents by college expenses.

Common Stock Approach

Littlechap finds himself caught in a world moving too fast for him to grasp its meaning and, tragically, too relem~essly for him to find a way out.

"Stop the World" has won the London Drama Critics' Circle Award as the best prv­duction <1f the year in the Bri­tish capitaL The lead song, "What Kind of Fool Am I?", won lire Ivor Novello Award as the best song of tlhe year, and a II of the songs were chosen as the best .su~re of the year:

Tickets are on sale at the College Books-tore to s-tudents and faculty at 75>c, 1.25, 1.50, amd 2.00, and to the public at 1.50, 2.50, 3.00 and 4.00

Vietnam War May Hurt Grad School

. (Con.tinued from Page 1) wrll nuss the skilled techni­cians and teachers. This is a foolish, .soortsided policy on Congress's part."

Dr. Henry S. Stroupe, Dean of the Graduate School, said that he was aware of the fact that the draft will reduce the number of qualified appli­cants, but that the school would cut back in the number of stiiaents rather than. admit inferior~:sfudent.S: · · · · · -

Not Only Wake Forest

. The draft is not only hurt- · 1ng Wake Forest. The House Education Subcommittee was told that 65% of graduate stu­dents expected to enroll in graduate schools this fall would be inducted.

Many schools expect drops in applications of up to 50 per cent. Even the top schools like Harvard expect drops of around 10 per cent.

Whereas the Selective Ser­vice's announcement will not drastically affect the .Univer­sity's ·graduate program now, it has had slight effects dur­ing the last year or so. Ac­cording to an official in the System's office in Winsron­Salem, the policy of deferring only medical students was generally being followed any­way.

Not' Eligible "Among those who would

not be eligible," Stroupe said, "are the twenty·five per cent who are disqualified from ser­vice, those who have already been in, those who have not been called up as of yet, and those over the age of twenty­six."

"Our school may consist of women, madmen, veterans, and teachers," Stroupe said recently.

Estimates of the number of apptications for the next scoool year :have run from anywhere "about the same" to "down anywhere from 30 per cent to 50 per cent."

NCSU Professor To Lecture Here

Challenge 'Adoption' By SG Was Illegal

(Continued from Page 1) . Scales objected, saying that Late in September, 1966, Challenge as a separate or­

student government voted to ganization was not assured. rescue the "floundering" pro- Separation of Challenge from ject. student government would in-·

But neither the faculty nor dicate that the symposium the student affairs committee lac'ked student support, he whi~ had approved the origi: said. nul proposal, were asked to Cooper answered that Chal­act on the major change in lenge '67 had been too severe organization. a drain on the finances and

Jerry Baker, of Kannapolis, manpower of the entire leg­now a senior and vice presi- islature. He did want to retain dent of the Student body, for the Legislature the power was named director. Under to appoint Challenge direc· h1s guidance, money was tors. again raised by soliciting from Since that meeting Miss foundations and individuals. Murdoch and Shoaf have been

Many of these benefactors, attempting to secure funds for oowever, indicated that they Challenge, and to convince would not donate if asked to Scales that it dese ·ves inde· support the next symposium pendent status. in 1969. "Challenge is still officially

Challenge '67, "The Implica. an independent organization, tions of Prosperity," met with although it has received help limited success. from student government,"

During the same month, Miss Murdoch said last week. March 1967, student govern- 'I'he proposal as adopted in ment appealed to the Board of 1964 in no way obligated the Trustees to provide an $8,600 Unive~sity to provide .funds, budget for the next sympos- she said, but the changmg at-

: ium, 'to 'J:>e· divid~Jnto $4,300. ti!Ud~'of'donors over~ pa~t ·for Two· years: .. " .. · · ·'"'four· years has ~essltated·· a

. request for a subsrdy. 'Worthy Projec&'

Tlhe request read, in part: We feel that this project is worthy of Student Govern­ment's sponsorship because it contributes to the student body as a whole as well as the col­lege in general.

"In the past, funds for the Challenge symposium have been raised entirely by stu­dents. However, due to an in­creasing difficulty to raise funds entirely on student inia­tive, we believe· the college should subsidize this worth­while project."

The request was denied. In January of this year Stu­

dent body President Chip Cooper appointed Tim Brown, junior of Richmond, Va. and AI Shoaf, sophomore of Lex­ington to direct Challenge '69. Norma Murdoch, junior of Macon, Ga., was named exe­cutive director when Brown resigned because of academic difficulties.

Reorganization Plans

But during the Feb. 7 legis­lature meeting Cooper pre­sented University President James Ralph Scales with the legislature's plans for reor· ganization, including the re­quest for a separate $12,000 budget for Challenge.

MRC Pledges $3,000 Gift For Challenge

(Continued from Page 1) all last week and unavailable for comment.

Since then, however, Miss Murdoch and Shoaf have made plans to go through "proper channels" and make an official request for funds.

Miss Murdoch said they would cancel their Wednesday appointment with Scales and instead meet Tuesday with University Vice President for financial affairs Gene T. Lucas to discuss their request.

The planned procedure is to take a budget request to Dean Elmore, then Provost Edwin G. Wilson, Scales and finally the Trustee budget committee. If the Trustee committee denies the petition, an appeal can be made to the entire Board of Trustees.

The Trustee committee is scheduled to meet March 1. Miss Murdoch said a request would probably be made for as mucb as one-third of the Challenge budget, $4,000.

A student petition express­ing support probably will be presented with lihe request.

JOSEPH E. LEVINE ~R[5(r.t7S "ONE OF THE YEAR'S MIKE NICHOLS­LAWRENCE TURMAN 10 BESTI"·N[WYORKTIM£5

.J~

. .

"DON'T MISS

IT!" -NBC TV

TODAY SHO~'\'

Aroold "Red" Auerbach. general manager and fonner coach of the Boston Celtics, will speak Tuesday at 8: 15 n. m. in DeTamble Aurutorium in a lecture sponsored by the College Union.

In the 16 years that Auer· bach coached the Ce1Ucs, Boc;­oon won nine Eastern Division titles and nine National Ba'5-ketball Association champion· ~hips. Auerbach retired from his coaething dluties in 1966 af­ter winning NBA champion­ships for his last eight years as Cel~ coach.

The subtle h'ints at their dramatic accomplishment, i. e., professional mediocrity, were evident in a few partial­ly successful moments. The actors had memor'ized their scripts and recited , rather than read. Some bits of busi­ness proved exciting and orig· ina!. Three of four of the oral and musical interpretations might be considered justified. The narration was handled adequately.

But their overacted, melo­dramatic, burlesque approach to nearly every poem al~ost entirely ruined the production.

movement from the sewer scene of "Guys and Dolls" to illustrate a Marshall of France who only speaks, in too poem, not acts, !'ike a gambler throwing cards and cubes.

Later in the poem his imper­sonation of a soldier for the duration of three lines brought new life to his interpretation. But the rest of his recitation

.. had been killed by the absence of imagination and technique. With the exception of "Tn A Colorado Grave-yard,'' his other readings were poorer:.

poem which demands a soft­ness in handling. She manag· ed, however, to sustain a Tow, monotone, importuning, and histrionic quality of voice which produced, of course, boredom.

She thoroughly misread "Elizabeth Umstead," a dra­matic monologue. Had she not missed the essential earthiness and not used an English ac· cent, the selection would have been the most dramatic and PXciting event of the evening. Unfortunately, her delivery was remeniscent of a lady, w'hose background was of Southern Aristocracy, rather than a Netrro whore.

The "common stock" ap­proach, according to the Ob:­server article "would enable students to finance their edu­cation by borrowing from the federal government, with the students paying the money back in extra income tax over Lhe course of their working Jives.

Dr. C. H. Bostian, professor of genetics at N. C. Stai!e Uni· versity, will lecture at 6:30 D. m. Wednesday in Lecture Room A of Winston Hahl at the University.

His topic will be "Citrorna­somal Aberra,tions in Man." The lecture is sponsored by Beta Beta Beta, honoracy bio­logy fraternity, and is open to the publil!.

The Phytotron, a facility which provides an exactly controlled environment fur re­seareh in plant growth has been built at both Duke Uni­versity and North CaroLina State University by coopera­tive planning between Duke, North Carolina State, and the University of Norfh Caroilna aJt Chapel Hill. Only a few of these elaborate installations now exist in the world.

~-=~·.;;..~-.. :

"Benjamin-do you find me undesirable?" "Oh, no Mrs. Robinson I think you're the most attractive of all my parents' friends."

THE GRADUATE TECHNJCOLQR· PANAVISION'

Auerbach was especially known for his kna..:k of finding and developing unsung or un· wanted players ir1W useful players in ltis Cellic machine.

Slocyn's recitation of "The Unknown War," for instance, began with what appeared to be . his characterization of a Mad ·Scientist, starring in a C-film on a 1956 "Inner Sanc­tum'; program. From there, he u.sed as a ~ture a stock

Miss McKovich sounded l~e a cooky, practicing auctioneer in her first selection, "Can You Make Baby Poems,'' a -TED BOUSHY

Rising tuition across the na­tion is seriously affecting stu­dents at both private and pub· lie institutions. However, tlre student who wants a college education, can find financial aid available, and can supple­ment it with part-time work and a strict austerity pro­gram.

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Page 6: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

PA<lE SIX Moaday, Feb. 19, 1968 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Four Young Alumni Receive Recognition

Four University alumni, two from Winston-Salem, will be included in .the 1968 edition of "Outstanding Young Men in America."

They are Dr. Robert John­son and Craven Williams, both of Winston-Salem, James R. Phillips of Greensboro, and James Wilson Mackie of Phila· delphia.

Phillips is an insurance exe­cutive and Maekie is an offi­cial of a chain of food stores.

"Outstanding Young Men of America" is an annual bio­graphical compilation of about 10,000 young men. Most nomi­nations come from chapters of the Junior Chamber of Com­merce arxl college alumni as­sociations.

Doug Blankenship, past U.S.

..

ADMINISTRATORS Gene T. Lucas, Harold S. Moore, and Mark ~ answer questions supplied by students in Chapel last Thursday during an open forum. Queries ranged from the activity fee, curtailed maid

:__PHOTOS BY

service for tbe men, and meal plans to the proposed College Union center. The forum was instituted last year to answer stude!Dt questions.

Administrators In _Forum

I I . ,

Folklorist, Athlete Slated For Chapel

A Baltimore Colts lineback­er and a California folklorist will appem- in chapel thls week.

Don Shinnick, linebacker for the Colts and one Qf the fore­most American athletes to par­ticipate in the work of the Fellowship of Christian Ath­letes will speak Ttresday.

Shinnick leads aU profes­sional linebackers in inter­ceptions with a total of 33.

He participated in baseball, track, and football at San Pedro (Calif.) High School

and lett«ed in football for three years, 1954-56 at the University of California at Los Angeles. While at UCLA Shinnick played blocking back; fullback, and guard.

National Cbampious

While he was at UCLA the Bruin gridders won 25 ~f 30 contests, and in 1954 they were named the National Collegiate champions by the Football Writers ol America. That year the Bruins were undefeated · in nine games.

J. C. Brown~ Increases Scholarship

Junius Calvin Brown, a :re­tired Madison attorney, has added approximately $65,000 to his scholarship fund, mak­ing it the University's thm:l largest.

The Brown Scholanilip fund, established in 1957, now is valued at more than $90,000. Brown established the schol­arship fund in hooor of his wife, Eliza Pratt Brown.

Money is given to needy and deserving students from North Carolina, with preference to those frOm the town of MacH­son and from Rockingha.ril CoUnty.

Johnson is associate profes­sor of mathematics at the Uni­versity and Williams is assist­ant director of development and alwnni affairs at the Uni­versity. In March Williams will become vice president for development at Mary Baldwin College.

Jaycee president who is chair­man of the selection board, said those selected "have dis­tinguished themselves in one or more fields of endeavor to the point of being outstand­ing." The men chosen are be­tween the ages of 21 and 35.

STEVE'S Italian Ristorante

Students Voice Complaints

As a sophomore Shinnick averaged 7.5 yards per carry while playing behind All­American fullback Bob Daven­port.

Shinnick also earned a Rug-by letter at UCLA. ·

In 1956, :he was chosen 'DY the United Press All-Pro sec­ond team.

Brown was graduated and received the lL.B. degree from Wake Forest in 1913. In the same year he began prac­ticing law in Madison and in Reidsville.

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By GRAY LAWRENCE STAFF WRITER

Students voiced numerous complaints and three adminis­trators supplied the answers last Thursday when an open forum was conducted in chap­el.

Written queries from stu­dents were read to Gene T. Lucas, Vice-President of Busi­ness and Finance; Harold S. Moore, Superintendent of Build­ings and Grounds; and Mark Reece, Dean of Men by Chap­lain L. H. Hollingsworth.

One question, directed to Reece, asked what was in­volved in the $150 student ac-

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tivity fee. It was turned over to Lucas.

"Student publications, WFDD. College Union activities, stu­dent g{)vernment, speakers, the intramural program, the ath-

. letic program, and the health center-which takes one of the largest single chunks-are all involved in the activity fee," Lucas answered.

"Other parts of the pro­gram are orientation and guid­ance, the Student Bar Asso­ciation, identification cards, chaperones, certain capital re­novations dealing with student activities, the MRC, WGA and all other programs not fWlded by University revenue, he add­ed.

Curtailed Maid Service Another student asked where

the funds from the defunct maid service would be distri­buted and, if the remaining maids could! not be more ef­fective, why they should not be abolished altogether. Moore answered the question.

"One of the principle reasons for discontinuing tbe maids was a shor.tage of fW!rls," he ex­plained. ''Another reason was the consolidation of funds and the elimination of marginal and unnecessary service so that more capable help more susceptible to motivation could be proctllred in the personnel and cleaning areas."

Why doesn't the University have a better plan for meals? Does the University have any control Dver the prices stu­dents have to pay in the cafe­teria? What is the cafeteria's profit? These were three points of a question directed to Lucas.

"The University does have some control over prices charg­ed in the cafeteria," he an­swered, ''hut so do students, for the meal plan is optional."

He explained some of the facets of cafeteria service over which the University had no control.

Wage Scale Increase Since 1961, he explained,

the wage scale has increased 65 to 75 per cent. While the market is obviously a factor, the fact that colleges and other non-profit organizations have come under the mini­mum-wage law and rising food costs are also involved.

"While,food costs have gone up 30 to 40 per cent and the wage scale some 65 to 75 per cent, the board plan has in­creased only 6 2/3 per cent," Lucas noted.

"The reason we pay only $12 a week for almost $18 worth of food is because some students don't show up for meals," he added. "If a meal ticket were issued only for meals actually eaten, the per­sons who did eat would ac-

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tually pay more. As partici­pation increases, the rate would also probably increase."

Moore answered a student's concern over plans for a Col­lege Union center. He men­tioned that plans were being made for Reynolda ·Hall to be turned over to the College Union in September of 1969.

"Depending on develop~nt in the new school of business administration, there is a pos­sibility that the business de­partment will move out, a.o:; well as the mathematics de­partment.

"We have had experts on campus making recommenda­tions," Moore continued. "All agree that Reyoolda Hall would be the best place for a student center.

"They estimate $3 j 4 million for renovation as a student center."

Probably the most eon trover­sial topic concerned ,f.he drink­ing regulations and Reree's answer to the problem. "Since the rules are not enforced and since there are no ill effects," a student had asked, ''why not do away witb them?"

There were scattered hisses as Reece defmed hiis position. "As far as the IDdividual is concerned, the ill effects are not apparent until years· later, when he has a problem," he said. "Every year male stu­dents request to move off

:~calDpu8 because of the noise." · ~-::He-poiiited ouHmt 1:00 dtink­

ing [email protected] were not unique among colleges and wnversi­ties-"even a liberal institu., tion like the Universty of Cali­fornia at Berkeley :bas them," he said.

"I have confidence that many or you are here be­cause of the rules and regu­lations we have," Reece con­tinued. "Many parents are looking for a small liberal arts college to shelter their children."

"If the regulation is ever loosened, we will not sell alcohol in the bookstore," Lucas quipped.

Lucas denied that there was any significant cOOnection' be­tween the establisbment of the Ecmnenical Institute and the $100 ·hike in tuition.

He tied the National Foot­ball League pass interception record in 1959, rare accom­plisbment for a NFL lineback-er.

Plans To Coach After he finishes ·playing

professional football, Shinnick plans to coach.

Guy Carawan, folklorist-in­residence at Pitzer College in Claremont, Calif., will give a concert Thursday.

Carawan is a recllrding star and -television personality who plays the guitar, banjo, 12-string recorder.

ln addition to his appear­ance in chapel, Carawan will perform in the Attic coffee­house Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights.

Holton Named

Vice-President

Of Corporation PI'ri'SBURGH, PA.-George

W. Holton, a 1939 graduate of the University, has been named vice-president of West-inghouoo Electric Corp. ·

A native of Roper, Holton bas been designated as gen­eral manager of the motor and industrial control divi­sions. These divisions are the industrial systems, general contro1- 1· " 1~-e .. AC · .amt... DC

·-:=~;~~~~~ in Buffalo and the small motor division at Lima, Ohio.

He joined Westinghouse in 1941 after graduation from Jolms Hop k i r; s University, where he received a bacllelor of engineering degree. His degree from Wake Forest was a bachelor of science.

After engineering assign­ments in Brazil, he held man­agerial posts in district salEs offices at Oolumbus and Akron, Ohio. He was transferred to the ·motor and g~ division in Buffalo in 1963 and was named general manager of the division in 1965.

Senior Invitations

On Sale This Week

He was Rockingham County attorney for 22 years and was Madison town attorney for 50 years. He was a mem­ber of ·the state Senate in 1923 and 1924. He has held numer­ous elective offices in local and state DemocraUc organi­zations, in veterans organiza­tions and bar associations.

Dr. Turner Gives Talk.=­At Stetson

Dr. Thomas J. Turner, chair­man of the physics depart­ment, will be a visiting lectur­er at Stetson University, De­Land, Fla., Thursday and Fri­day.

His lectures will be part of llhe American Association of Physics Teachers and the American Institute of Physics' drive to stimulate interest in physics. The program now in its eleventh year, is supported by the National Science Foun­dation.

Turner's visit will include formal lectures, informal dis­cussions, assistance to faculty members in the areas of cur­riculum and research prob­

lems and talks with students.

who at

1952, also research

the Atomic F.ru:ln!V Com­

His studies of solid-state physics have been published in sev­eral international journals.

In 1963-64 Turner studied in a ·nuclear laboratory in Mol, Belgium on a National Science Foundation grant.

Turner ,received his B.A. De­gree from the University of North Carolina, the master's from Clemson University and the Ph.D. from the University of Virginia.

He taug:ht at Clemson and at the University of New Hampshire before be came to Wake Forest as professor of physics and chairman of the department. "The greatest part of in­

stru<:tionali costs are in the r~ of facu:lty salaries," he

.;.iiiiii;;:~iiiiii;;:~iiiiiii;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;iiiiiiiii-iii. said. "In this area, they are

l·ts;_ IN- 18 to 20 per cent lower tbaii

Commencement invitations will be on sale to seniors until Wednesday at the main infor­mation desk in Reynolda ffi)ll.

Turner is a member of the American Physical Society, tbe American Association of Physics Teachers, Si~ Pi Sigma and Sigma XI. · average along the Atlantic The i:nvitations, which must

be paid for at the time of purcb2se, will be sold f.rom 11 a. m.-1:30 p. m. and 4:30 p. m.-6:30 p, m. to

dinner, d~nce or to a allow-

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7:00-C of Wake on inter persona Iii

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TUESIJ

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' Genese seniors a majors i

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The dJ the Nortl the Arts view per rich Dun this wee!

Previev open to charge, Vi day, We day.

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Prof

Page 7: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

3hip h'own, a re­ttorney, has ttely $65,000 I ftmd, mak­~rsity' s -thinl

·lanhip fund, 67, now is than $90,000. i the schol­!OOOr of his Brown. ~needy and ; from North reference to wn of Madi­Rockingharri

1duated and ... B. degree t in 1913. In began prac­iison and in

ham County years and

w attorney /Vas a mem­mate in 1923 held nwner­:es in local ·atic organi­ts organiza­:iations.

rner ralk~

son rrner, chair­ics depart­:iting lectur­i'ersity, De­ay and Fri-

II be part Association ~rs and the of Physics' interest in

·am now in s supported ience Foun-

vill include formal dis­~ to faculty ·eas of cur­arch prob­ts and talks h students. ~r7 who :,. ~ugJ:t,t at · Urtiversity ce 1952, also s research the Atomic ~ Coim­:sion. His 1te physics ed in sev­journals.

· studied in ·ry in Mol, nal Science

tis B.A. De­tiversity of e master's 1ersity and University

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MONDAY THURSDAY

7:00--Ca.n).pus Report: News of Wake Forest with emphasis on inter.views with campus personaliti~.

7:1~Wake Forest Sports: An interview with a sports personality.

9:00-Reynolda Hall Lecture Series: The important speech­es made recently on the Wake Forest campus.

TUESDAY

7:00- Georgetown Forum: From this Washington univer­sity a series of panel discus­sions on significant subjects.

9:00 - Search for Mental Health: "How Does Psychia­try Help?" by Dr. Jordan :Scher.

9·30- Pollution Explosion: 'Authoritative guests explore .all the facets of one of the ,prime areas of concern in the 'n;ltion today.

WEDNESDAY

4:5~Wall Street Report: A summary of the day's finan­cial activities with the closing price of selected stocks.

7:00- Business Roundtable: Leading figures in business and industry discuss current policy questions that touch on many aspects of American life.

9:00-Seminars in Theater: Michael Shultz, Rosalind Cash. and David Downing, members of the Negro Ensemble, talk about their company.

7:00-NER Washington For­um: Matthew Clark, profes­sional anti-war demonstrator, is interviewed by Vic Suss­man.

9:00-Toward a New World: "The Democratic Mythology: a New Look," by Dr. Fred Krinsky, professor of politir:al science, University of Southern California.

FRIDAY

7: 00-Special of the Week: First of two programs report­ing a Toronto teach-in on re­ligion, international affairs. war, and race.

9:00 - Hope of Mankind: ''What Price Civilization?" by Carey McWilliams. editor of "The Nation."

SATURDAY

2:00 - Metropolitan Opera: Wagner: Walkuere.

8:00-Music off the Beaten Path: J. S. Bach: Art of the Fugue.

SUNDAY

11:00-Wake Forest Baptist Church service led by Dr. War­ren Carr, minister.

3:30--Ancient European Or-gans: Location: Church at Mansala. Finland.

8:00- Showcase: Features Winston-Salem and area musi­cians and musical organiza­tions in recordings of live con­certs.

Fellowships at three uni­versities are available for graduating seniors interested in a career in public admin­istration in the national, state or local government.

Participants will begin in June a three-month's intern­ship with a government agen­cy in Alabama. Kentucky or Tennessee. Agencies include the Tennessee Valley Authori­ty, the Marshall Space Flight Center and state government departments.

During the 1968-69 academic year participants will take graduate courses in public ad­ministration at the universi­ties of Alabama. Kentucky and Tennessee.

Completion of the 12-month train'ing period will entitle participants to a certificate in

Art Competition

In State Slated The Erdahl-Cloyd Union of

North Carolina State Uni­versity is sponsoring an art competition for students in colleges and universities in North Carolina.

No more than two entries­in the categories of painting, sculpture, prints and draw­ings-may be submitted by each artist.

All work must be original and completed within the past two years. Deadline for re­ceiving all entries in Mar. 4: there js no entry fee.

public administration. They also may receive: a master's degree at the university they attend if they ·complete a thesis and pass' appropriate examinations.

Fellowships for single par· ticipants total $4,300 each. The stipend i~ $3,300 and the remaining money is for fees and tuition at tiro universities.

Fellowships for married par­ticipants total $4,700 each.

Interested students should write to Coleman B. Ransone, educational director, Southern Regional Training Program in Public Administration, Draw­er I, · Uni~rsity, Alabama :J:i486 •.

Any American citizen who will have a bachelor's degree in a recognized major by June, 1968 is eligible. The deadline for applications is March 1, 1968.

Fitness Program Scheduled

A special swnmer course on the basic scientific principles of physical fitness will be con­ducted at the University May 30 through June 8.

Placement Office Schedules_: 29 ·Employment Opportunities

The course, spollBOred by Wake Forest's department of physical education, will be taught by Dr. Michael Pollock. assistant professor of physical · education and director of the University's new physical fit­ness research laboratory.

The program will offer two hol.bl"s of advanced undergrad­uate o-r graduate credit and also will count as credit for renewal of state certification.

The following 29 agencies and companies will intervi~w this week:

' Genesco, Inc.-Today. Male seniors and ·grad students with majors in liberal arts, math,

· business and accounting. Will consider draft-exempt only.

Thalhimer Bros, Inc.-T~ day. Men and women seniors, any major.

Weyerhaeuser Co.-Today. Male seniors ~ith majors in

. account~g . ~na .. eliemist~

. w ~ l'Wor'~Jt.' er· ~oda ~ t' -~~-~·, ··-.-:7'\i~. ~ .. mformatton.

N. C. Department of Public Instruction-Today. Business administration majors for positions as Distributive Edu­cation coordinators.

Y.W.C.A.-Today. No infor-

School Of Arts Will Dramatize Durrenmatt Plav

" The drama department at the North Carolina School of the Arts will present pre­view performances of Fried­rich Durrenrnatt's "The Visit" this week.

Previews, which will be open to the public without charge, will be presented Tues­day, Wednesday and Thurs­day.

"The Visit" opened on Broad­way May 5, 1958 with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in the leading roles. The play has been described as a "deep­ly moving tragedy with a scathing indictment of the power of greed."

Beginning Friday eight reg­ular performances will also be presented. All perform­ances __ will begin at 8:15 p. m. Reservations--for preview and regular performances can be made by calling the theater bo2: office.

mation. Arthur Anderson & Co.­

Tuesday. Men and women sen­iors and graduate students With majors in accounting or equivalent and law students.

Cameron-Brown Co.-Tues­day. Male seniors, With ma­jors in business and econ<>­mics.

I.B.M. Corp.-Tuesday. Men and women seniors and gradu­ate students with majors in

;_;-patlP,~,p_!IY~icsjp.1lusin~s~r-"'a-c­-couffiii:ltf'-Gln!f·~henilstrytJvm

Mutual Life Insurance O>m­pany of New York-Tuesday. Men and women seniors and graduate students in liberal arts and business.

U.S. Edgewood Arsenal, Md. -Tuesday. Men and women seniors and graduate students in all fields.

U. S. Department of Hous­ing and Urban Development -Tuesday. Will interview at Reynolda House. Major inter­ests are finance, accounting, real estate, economics, busi­ness, and political science.

U. S. Veterans Administra­tion-Tuesday. Men and w<>­men seniors with majors in business, accounting and law students.

Dow Corning Corp.--Wednes­day. Men and women seniors and graduate students with majors in chemistry and busi­ness.

Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.-Wednesday. Men and w<>­rnen seniors with accounting majors.

Rose's Stores. Inc.-Wednes­day. Men and women seniors with business or any non­technical degree for positions as management trainees.

Seaboard Citizens National Bank-Wednesday. Male sen­iors with business, finanee, economics and related de­grees.

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Swift & Company-Wednes­day. No information.

U. S. Naval Research-Wed­nesday. No information.

Cannon Mills ·Company -Thursday. Male seniors with majors hi business, acc.:.-unt­ing, chemistry. math, ec<>­nomics, English and history.

Pilot Life Lnsurance Co.­Thursday. Men and women seniors and graduate students with· majors in math, liberal

''artsr·accounting aud ~s. -:in~ !M: "Emlen- &:>~'£hill's·

day. Men and women with ma­Jors in accounting and law.

University of North Carolina and North Carolina Memorial Hospital-Thursday. No infor­mation.

Upjohn Co. - Thursday. No information.

Congolewn-Nairn Inc. - Fri­day. Male seniors with any business or non-technical lib­eral arts degree.

Price Waterhouse & Co. -Friday. Men and women sen­iors, with majors in account­ing.

U. S. Naval Ordnance Sta­tion-Friday. Men and women seniors and graduate students with major,s -in chemistry and physics.

Wallace Business Forms, Inc. -Friday. No information.

University of South Caro­lina-Friday. Men and women seniors, any major.

Enrollment in the program will be limited to 20. Tuition will be $35. Arrangements for room and board can be made for students who live at a dis­tance from Winston-Salem.

APO Fraternitv J

Gets 5 Brothers, 13 New Pledges

Five men were inducted ; last Sunday into Kappa Theta: . ; chapter of Alpha Phi Omega­

national service fraternity. They are Jerry Dickerson, junior of Glen Allen, Va.; Roger Hull, sophomore of Mt. Pleasant, Tenn.; Mike Lee, sophomore of Jackson­ville Beach, Fla.; Mac Mc­Quillen, sophomore of South Charleston, W. Va.; and Steve Powell, sophomore of Levit­town, N. Y.

Attending the induction cere­monies were Mr. and Mrs. William Wyatt II of Raleigh, parents of the deceased bro­ther from whom the pledge class was named.

Tuesday 13 men were in­ducted into the pledge class. They are John Burger, John Greenhaugh, Phil Maness, Paul Neer. Doug Osborne, Dennis Patterson, John Perry, Chuck Rose, Bucky Scarborough, Tom Seaver, Larry Sweazey, Sormy Teague, and Randy Thompson.

DEBBIE BEST

A PORTRAIT the perfe-ct gift for any occaSion

McNABIB STUDIO Wake f.' orest University

Fh~ne 123~4640

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Feb. 19, 1968 PAGE SEVEN

Lilienthal, U. S . .lVIiddle East Advisor, Denies Jewish Right Over Palestine

By DIANNE JONES STAFF WRITER

A United States consultant on Middle East affairs said here Wednesday that it does­n't make sense for a land that is 60 per cent Arabic to be controlled by a Zionist minori­ty.

Lilienthal revealed his fami­liarity with the Middle East: with both a race of peoples who pray to Jehovah and those who bow down to Allah.

Lilienthal challenged the Wake Forest students to ex­<~mine "the other side of the coin," a side which dcesn·t evoke the sympathy of the

world, the side which 1'1111 one day cau.se a majot· world crisis. '

Lilienthal declared, "Tsraool must de-Zionize its govern· ment and make a bi-national stale: none of the Arabtr. m. lions will recognize Isr.'ltl be­fore th~ Arabs ar:: given eqml rights. Dr. Alfred M. Lilienthal, au­

thpr of "What Price Is Israel" and "The Other Side of the Coin," emphasized the little­known and even less recog­nized sentiment in the Mid­dle East conflict, which, a.c­cording to the political scien­tist, "has more than one side."

CameiPawnShop,lnc .. I ' Mcney To Loan On AnythiPg Of Value" I -PHOTO BY McNEILL

· A member of the New York Bar Association, Lilienthal be­gan his political career in a fight against the Communist­controlled American Youth Congress in New York. Re­cently, he served as U. S. Army Middle East Consultaht to the U. S. delegation to the U.N.

LILIENTHAL ... Middle East Consultant ...

tary, and economic support, and most of the other influ­ential nations have followed suit."

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The Zionist Jews h;Jve con­centrated themselves in an "unfertile, parched" lard and proceeded to make IsrapJ "flow with milk and honey," with the aid of Jews all over the world.

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Agreeing that the Jewish people, "the chosen race," had a right to develop their own customs, traditions, and be­liefs, Lilienthal denied their right to control the country of Palestine, because thi~ rule violated the rights of the Arabic race.

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Delving into the ongms of the trouble, Lilienthal said, "It took a Hitler for the Jew­ish people to unite. Before the war they were scattered

over the entire European con­tinent."

After World War II the U. N., with overwhelming sup­port from the U. S. and Rus­sia, created the state of Is­rael, "They gave a country that had ·a rriajority of Araus to the Jews. The world bas given the Moslems little aid or respect in the twenty years that have followed," Lil­ienthal, a non-Zionist Jew con­tinued.

A writer and adventlll'er,

"Where else but to Russia can these violatile Arabic countries turn for aid?" the journalist bluntly questioned. America has denied one of the most important areas in the world mot.al, political, mil~

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Page 8: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

-PHOTO 6Y McNEIL.L.

SWIMMING COACH Leo Ellison, cigarette in hand. times one of Deacon tankers in a recent mffi.

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Tankers Tie, Lose, Trounce Appalachian

By BILL UPTON ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

The Wake Forest swim team splashed to a convincing 68-36 victory over the Appalachian last Monday in a meet held at the Deacons' pooL

The win upprd Wake's sea­son record to 5-4-1, including last Friday's t e with Clem­son and Satm lay·s loss to South Carolina.

Bob Dunckel • •ok two firsts for the Deacons. winning both the 200-yard fre, ;tyle (2:06.3) <1nd the 200-y~ .-d butterfly (2:17.9).

Other first-place finishers for Wake were Milt Ackerman in the 50-yard freestyle ( :23.-6), Mike Neale in the 200-yard individual medley (2:-20.0), David Slaton in diving. Ernie Glass in the 100-yard freestyle ( :55.4), Frank Stell­ing in the 200-yard 'back­stroke (2:22.4), and Burt Moody in the 200-yard breast­stroke (2:40.0).

''I'm real proud of the team's showing so far tlti.s season." said Coach Leo El­lison. "We were setting our ~oals high at the beginning or the sc;J·.un and aimed for

an 8-4 overall record. Although it's impossible for us to ach·ievc this record now, the team has done a fine job. We had three meets this season which were decided in the last race (one win, one loss, and a tie)."

This is the first season in which the freshman-eligibility rule has been operative and Ellison attributes the ' fine showing of the team to the performances in key spots of many of these first-year men.

"The loss of Bruce Lamm was a big blow, but fresh­man Jim Hogan stepped right into the bac)5stroking position and has shown up very well for us. Jim Richardson, in the breaststroke, has done one whale of a job."

Other freshmen who have stepped into key roles on this year's team are Paul Trivette in the distanct freestyle, Lar­ry Chamberlain in the butter­lly, and Ernie Glass in free­!.ilyle.

'"The team has showed strong spirit and desire and has risen to the occasi<Jn many times this season," concluded l~llison.

DAVE ROBERTS RUDY ASHTON Sports Editor Assoc. Sports Editor

s-OLD GOLD .-\N"D BLACK, Monday, Feb. 19, 1968

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Runners Fall, To EC ·Bucs, .

' VMIKeydets

In their fll"st team track 1

meet of the indoor season the Deacon cindermen came' out on the short end of a tri-meet against the VMI Keydets and the East Carolina Buccaneers ' held at Lexington, Va. last Monday.

Being an UI!()fficial meet pr~riliy :held for pr~ and experience, the meet's score was not recorded. VMI 1 c-aptured the most places: ~

TAF' . YOUR MARKS •.. With gun in hand • -PHOTO BY MCNEIL.L. freestyle in meet with Clemson.

Jack Dolbin was a double winner for the Deacs, winning ~he 60 yard dash and the long Jump. Freshman Lee Clymer placed third in both of these events and veteran Dave ~sche was fourth in the long Jump. . ,

thr ;tarter Is ready ro trigger the l(J().yard

Deac Baseball 'I,eam's Schedule To Include 21 ACC Encounters

Distanceman John Hodsdon was again the Deacons' work­horse, running in both the mile and the two-mile. Mter :unning a 4:24 mile and plac­mg second, Hodsdon came hack with a superb 9:20 and victory in the two-mile.

Saturday the Deacons were <~t Chapel Hill for a meet with North Carolina, N. C. State, and South Carolina. The high­light of the day was expected to be the two-mile, with Hods­don challenging the Game­cocks' Petty and UNC's Good- · win.

Twenty-one ACC games highlight the 1968 Wake For­est baseball schedule, an­nounced last week by Ath­letic Director Gene Hooks.

The schedule calls for :11 games plus an appearance in the Florida State Tournament at Tallahassee, March 27-30. 11. will mark the most games in a single season by the Dea­cons in five years.

Under a new conference ar­l'<~Bgement, each ACC mem­ber will play each of the other seven schools three times in­stead of the usual two, which has been the pattern the past several years. The third game in each, series will be played as part of a doubleheader. with both games scheduled for seven innings.

The Deacons will play 16 games at home, including three twin bills. Four night games are slated, including a doubleheader with N. C. State, April 27. Other home doubleheaders are slated with

VirgiHia on May 4 and South Carolina. May 11.

Tnc opening game is sched­uled with Kent State at Ernk Shore Field, March 20. The Dcac-s will then head south for g3mes at Georgia South­ern and the tournament at Florida State before returning l1ome April 1.

Conch Jack Stallings, start­ing his ninth season as head t:oach, w'ill have 12 lettermen hack from last year's club whieh finished with an 8-15-1 record, the poorest for thE' Deaeons since 1946.

The sche-dule: !v1arch 20, Kent State; 22.

G~orgi.a Southern at States­boro, Ga.; 23_, Georgia South­ern at ·Statesboro, Ga.; 27-30, F:orida State Tournament at Tallahassee, Fla.

April 1, Maine; 2, Brown; 3, Colby: 5, South Carolina at Columbia; 6; Clemson(two) at Clemscn; 9, Virginia Tech; 12. Maryland (two) at College Park; 13, Virginia at Charlot­tesville; 16, Virginia Tech at

Wake Recruiters Sign· 20

IJtg-h:Scluiijl~!k-Btosp~ Head football coach Bill

1'ate and his staff are busily trying to recruit some of the lop players in the eastern sec­tor of the country for next year's Baby Deacon squad

Since Joe Madden resigned from Tate's staff after the football season, assistant coach Joe Popp has been plac­ed in charge of the recruiting program.

Already twenty boys have been signed to letters of in­tent and Popp expects to add ten more shortly. These twenty boys include four from Ferrum (Va.) Junior College, who will be coming to Win­ston-Salem nexf fall along with one of their coaches, Rick Tolley. The best of the junior colleges prospects ap­pears to be 6-4, 245 pound tight end Ed George who also is an excellent hurdler for the track team.

As in the past, the coaches bave concentrated their re­cruiting efforts in North Caro­lina, Pennsylvania, New York, Chicago, New England, and

Canada. Six of the athletes al­ready signed are from the Tar Heel state.

Popp said he anti liis staff lla V£> been primarily interested in tackles, halfbacks, and quarterbacks. Popp. stated that it was possible four of five quarterbacks might be s·igned because of their great versatility.

Joe's brother and last sea­son's frosh coach, Bob Popp. felt thai the singing of four or five boys who play the same pos'ilion often weakens the freshman squad. However, he added that this method streng­thc;;J the varsity program in 1 he '·long run. '

Not one of t.he boys that has been sig-ned was considered to be a high school All-American last fall. It appears that the fc.te of next year's freshman team rests in the quality of the last len signed. However, most All-Americans like to en­joy the free weekends at many different colleges before signing.

UO N. SPR,UCE ST. THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER

Blacksburg; 19, Georgia-south ern; 20, Duke (two) at Dur­ham; 23, North Carolina <!light); 27, N. C. State 1two, night); 30. Duke (night).

May 3, Maryland; 4, Vir­ginia (two); 7, North Carolina (two) at Chapel Hill; 10, Clem­son; 11, South Carolina (two) ; 15, N. C. State at Raleigh;18, North Carolina at Asheboro (night).

This Saturday the Deacons return to Chapel Hill for the Big Seven Meet against UNC, N. C. State, Duke, Davidson. North Carolina College, and East Carolina.

'ltlural Basketball Teams To Play Deciding Games ·

By RUDY ASHTON ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

The fi-nal week of the .intra­mural basketball season be­gins today, with IJIOSt of the league titles still in que-stion. Both fraternity and independ­ent leagues have crucial games scheduled to be played this week, with the likelihood that playoffs will be needed to de­cide the winners.

Kappa Alpha and the Alpha Sig's remained undefeated, and go into the final week with 7-0 and ~-0 records, respect­ively. Last· week the KA's beat the Lambda Chi's, 64-26, and Alpha Sig's t<Jpped a strong Kappa Sig team, 55-33. This week the unci afeated teams meet in wh;:~t cvuld be the de­ciding game.

Sig Ep's Next

Sigma Phi EpsiLm held on to third place with a 42-34 win over Theta Chi and a 61-29 stomping of Sigma Pi. The Sig Ep's are now 5-1, with big games against K-appa Sig and the Alpha Sig's this week. Should the Alpha Sig's beat the KA's, and the Sig Ep's top the Alpha Sig's and the Kappa Sig's, there will be a three way · tie for the league title.

In other fraternity action. Sigma Chi gilt in the winning column by nipping Theta Chi, 54-52.

The league title in Dorm League One is going down to the wire also. The Taylor Gen­erals remained undefeated by beating the Barons 56-46 and winning over the Blue Streaks by forfeit. Their record is now 7-0.

This week the Genrals meet the Davis Doormats in the de­ciding game of the season. The Doormats are also 7-0 and are the highest scoring team

in the intramural circuit. No team has yet to come

within 30 points of the Door­mats. Last week they stomp­ed the Sly Five, 91-52 and completely annihilated the Resident Rejex 110-27.

Sparking this high scoring team are seniors Roger May- t hew and George Robinson, junior Dave Glendeniing, and sophomores Joe Dohner and Roman Wszelaki.

In Independent League One, PAD fell from the ranks of the ulioeate'ifi :as r fne-:; ·'bUcks downed them, 69-58. The Sen­ior Medics handed the Faculty their third close loss, 42-38.

Independent League Two is still controlled by the Defend­ers. They knocked off the Soph Medics, 48-24, to re­main unheated. The Extermin­ators helped the Defenders by exterminating second place Delta Sigma, 72-39, and the Choppers, 77-49.

The Th>rm League Two race also tightened as the league­leading Tigers fell to second place Highballers 75-35. The Panthers beat the Buds by forfeit and the Bombers top­ped the Vultures, 58-18, and nipped GAS, 41-40.

League Tie

In Dorm League Three, the second place Chargers topped the leading SharipShooters, 42-32, to put the league lead in a lie. ,

The Fraternity B League remained close with the lead­ing Pubs beating the Chokes, 48-28, and the Emerald Tide topping the Moon Pis, 45-38. ln Frat C League play the KA Roses and Ragman re­mained undefeated.

Volleyball entries are due t.hls week by Wednesday. Play will start Feb. 26.

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Page 9: , Inauguration Address Revives Challenge '69 · son we stopped staying open all! mgbt w~ because Of degradation in om box section. It was merely for security pur poses," he said

team track season, the

came out of a tri-meet Keydets and ~

Buccaneers Va. last

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~~ ........... ~~~,..... ... Baby Deacs Top Laurinburg, _·VIEWING·:

!, the . DEACS '•

t: ·-

By DAVE ROBERTS Sports Editor

LOeacs Lack Instincts ~; . When the cheerle~ders begin ;~~e~r . chant. of, ~!'What's the matter w_1th the team? 1t ~~ 1mposs1b~e ..:..ror me to respond w1th the expected, The tea!ll s .::::.\II right," without suffering the pang~ of a gudty '·~onscience.

;<; ·.The Deac6n•s performance against Cle;rnson and Duke showed that, whatever merits the team may

\ave it is definitely not "all .right." The team cer­~:;ainly can, as Coach Jack _McClosk~y says, Pll!-Y :Jetter than it has been playmg, but 1t has certam .'::aults which have combi_ned to prevent it from reach-dng its expected . potential. ·

~ The first of these faults is the lack o~ a~ int~~gibl_e =~.uality which we call "basketball mstmct: This

~·nstinct enables a player to know su~h thmgs as '~hether to pass on a fast break or drive f?r the bas­'ket and whether to take a shot from outstde or look iror' someone to pass to.

· ~ A player's talent has little to do with his instinct ·.:_there are good players without it and b~d players ·with it. The Deaco~s as .a team possess little of I~, and the most obvious place the absence shows up IS

::m a fast break. Even when the team has a two-o~­"one three-on-two, or even three-on-one bre-ak, It oft~n fails to get the basket because th~ players do not have the instinctive ability to decide whether 'to drive or pass.

* * * . An·other quality the Deacons lack is ball handling -the basic aibility to pass and catch the basketball. This is not something which can be measurably improved once a player reaches the coll~ge leve•l­either he can handle the ball or he can t, and any ·bad habits he may have are usually too old to break.

Ball handling can be impr.ov.ed and turnovers re­duced by simply teaching players how to av<?id cer­tain situations in which the ·ball may be easdy los~. The Deacons have improved in this respect, but their physical ball handling> deficiency remains to hamper !;heir attack.· A good, crisp. pass is useless if the re­ceiver is unable to handle it; this problem., about which nothing can be done, has cost the Deacons numerous shots this year.

McCloskey stresses the importance -of .g'OOd ball handling, and this year's team shows that such an em, n"ha~~,;t. i"'_.-i~s:._+;.+'~~.... .,,; '"''' "--'J" ,,, ... ~ .... u.,.b.n'',·:_ .. fi __ ··.:,:

.1:'\.t' ::>.r:l "t >' • :'fJ'it.- ~ - - f:JS(j<'!:l. -:;.' _ •• ab:CI'l',Y[ !J ·i.l " .. r. n -ir'\!"' f~.rr: ~('fr.l'ft ~···!'~-r:'lh

* * * A third· factor in the team's failure to develop is

th!E! absence of an outstanding player or a team leader. The importance of such a player to a team was well illustrated by the perfonnance of Clem­son's sophomore guard Butch Zatazelo in the Tigers' victory -over the Deacons in Winston-Salem.

Without Zatazelo, Clemson is obviously inferior to Wake Forest. Coach Bobby Roberts was so de­spondent before the season began that he said the team would win one or two games if junior Richie Mahaffey had a good year! But Zatazelo has. taken over the leadership of the team. and has been the key to a better-than-expected season.

Zatazelo is· the kind of player who can put the ball in the basket when left open, -or can tie up two or three defenders ·in a mad chase, and then hit an open man created when he is so pursued. In short, a team must concentrate on him to stop him, and when they do, he passes to someone else for an open shot.

The Deacons don't have anybody like that.

Paul Long was that kind of player f-or Wake For­est last year. He was a fantastic shooter with an amazing ability to get loose for unorthodox shots and hit many of them. He forced opponents to con­centrate on him, freeing teammates for good shots.

* * * This year, the Deacons don't have such a player,

and the lack has been costly. No one has shot well -enough to shock an opponent out of a zone defense; no ·one 'has the ability to create shots and then hit them so that the opposing team must concentrate on him and leave an opening somewhere else in its defense.

All these problems keep the Deacons from being better than a "good" basketball team. At. their best, they would not challenge North Carolina or Duke for the ACC crown. But they are not playing their best, and they have not consistently challenged even the league's Jesser powers. ·

The main problem has been a lack of concentration which has resulted in abnormal numbers of turn­overs and missed layups. The team has apparently let its handicaps get it down and has lost confidence in itself.

Perhaps what the team needs is the pressure­relieving realization that it has no place to go but up.

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Edged By Duke In Overtime By RICHARD SINK

STAFF WRITER.

Clutch free Lhrow shooting in the overtime period proved the difference for the Duke fresltmen Wednesday night as the Blue ImJ)IS handed the Wake Forest freshmen their second Big Four loss of the season, 106-100.

Boflh teams hit four field goals in the extra period, but Duke hit seven of eight free throws compared to one of three for the Deaclets.

lied at 91-all. . Davis hit the first field goal

in the overtime period t;o give Wake the lead for the first time in the game. Duke tied ft at 93 before· the .beacon frosh went back ahead and led at one point, 98-95.

The Blue Imps tnen capital­ized on free 'throws and out scored Wake 11-2 the rest of the way. Five points by Den· ton and four each by Evans and DeVenzio paced the Duke f rosh in the extra period.

Playmaker

He also proved that he rould hit when given the room as he scored 18 points, but his true value to the Duke team is as a playmaker and passer. His s... ... ring is just an added bene­fit.

Prior to the Duke contest, the Deaclets' last game was against Laurinburg Institute. Wake's win over Laurinburg snappE-d a two-game losing streak suffered at the hands of the Riohmond and North Carolina freshman clubs.

The game was forced into overtime after a fantastic t•omeback by the Baby Deacs.

Wifh 3:45 left to play in the second half. the Wake frosh were down by ten points, but from there until the end of the half . Charlie Davis took cha;ge. Davis grabbed re­bounds, hit bombs from out­side, made Jay-ups. and drew foul!::.

For the game. Davis was the high scorer for the Deac­lets with 37 points. 'l'his was the highest point production for any.Wake Forest freshman player this year. Davis ron­tinned to slip a little at the free throw line, making only seven of nine.

Laurinburg, which has pro· duced such outstandin,g bas­ketball players as Sam Jones, Jimmy Walker, Charlie Sco~t, alld, of course Charlie Dav1s, proved against the Baby Dea­cons that they are not up to par this year.

--PHOTO BY MCNABB DEACON CAGERS scramble for loose baD as Richie Mahaffey makes his usual protest. Lou BeUo calls "jump ball" and Clemson's

Davis made a three-poin1 play with less than 30 seconds to play to cut the Duke lead to !l1-89. Neil Pastushok fouled Duke's fine forward Rich Ka­therman, and Katherman mis­se:i the first of a one-and-one opportunity with 17 seconds left.

McGregor Scores 21 With Laurinburg's tallest McGregor was the second player being only 6-4, Me·

h'igh man for Wake wibh. ·21 Greoor dominalL':l the game . points. Big Gil s-oowed 1m- McGregor came up with his provement at the free throw hig·h scoring output of the sea· line ·over the Laurinburg wn-36 pvints and also broke game, making all seven of his !Jis own Wake Forest fresh­attempts. Bo DliiBose had ~ne man rebounding record with of his finest games, sconng 33 retrieves. Big Gil rnadt• 16 points. . only eight of 18 throws, or

V ai~sity Loses Two More, Victillls Of Clelllson, Dul{.e :

Ties Score

The Baby Deacs got the IJall to Davis, who rut a 15-foot jumper. After Davis' shot, Duke had ten seconds to score to win the game. Little Dick DeVenzio tried a 50-foot set shot which hit the back of the rim, the front of the rim, and spun off.

Duke went on to win in over­time, thanks t.o their free l:hrow shooting, but they still had trouble stopping Davjg. Davis accounted for seven Df the nine Baby Deacon points in the overtime.

In' the first half, the Duke frosh jumped off to an early lead and steadily increased it. The game was tied only once at 2-2, and Duke went on to a 46-37 halftime lead.

For most of the second half, the Blue Imp lead ranged from nine to fourteen points. In the .. closing minutes, how­ever Davis went to work to send' the game into overtime

Pastu.shok slipped below his he could have had more season average with 14, fol- points. Pastushok and Davis lowed· by Rhoads with 12. As were runners-up for high sco~­u team the Deaclets were out- ing honors with 26 each. Davis shot from the field, 46-40, but made 10 of 15 shots from the made 20 of 25 free throws, floor but again had a bad compared to 14 of 20 for Duke night at the free throw_ line -most of Duke's came in the (for ·him), making only siX of clutch, however. eight. Rhoads and DuB_ose

Denton won his individual finished With ten and e1gh1 scoring duel with McGregor points, respectively. as he poured in 33 points to Halftime Lead lead the Blue Imps, but Mc-Gregor won the individual re- Wake Forest led at the h~f bound contest. Most of Den- 49-26 and outscored Laurm­ton's came from ten to twenty burg 61-44 in the second half f t t to win, lliHO. 'l'he Deaclets ~ 00

- . f th Evans followed Denton wlth outshot Laurinburg rom e 24 points, including the three- floor 42-3.0. point play which tied the gaz: Both teams were cold at the at 98-all .. Kather~ follow line. The Baby Deacs made 18 Evans WJ~h 21 polll~. I 5 10 - of 33 Laurinburg only ten of

DeVenzro, the litt ~ · 19

' ., guard who was a questionable . , h 1 starter bef~re the game, plfay1i th~e Wa~e F-g~~!t f~~ur~-=~ ed the entire contest at u . eir ne~ ' f en­speed and put on quite a show. mght ag~mst the ~e. re;he DeVenzio made numerous as- men. This game WI grve sists-his favorite target being Baby Deacs a c:hanc:~o ~:~ Katherman on the back-door the season series Wl t b ck

and al:so a chance to ge a play. in the race for tbe Big Four

freshman cltampionsmp. on saturdar aftern~n ,the

Deaclets travi!l.~~h' 'to meet the N. c. State Wolflets . Wake WDn the first rontest played this year, 87-75.

By DOUG BUCKLEY STAFF WRITER

Well over half of the 8600 peo;>le in attendance at Duke Tndoor Stadium last Thursday night arrived after the excit­lllg frosh basketball game be­tween the Baoy Deacs and the Duke Blue Imps. These unfor­\ unate people missed the only rontest of the night because !he nationally ranked Duke varsity squad defeated Wake Forest, 105-65, the worst mas­sacre seen in the South since ihe Civil War.

The Deacons, who act as they are being sent into com­bat in Vietnam each time they play a road game, were beaten soundly at both ends of the court as they suffered one of their worst defeats in recent years. In fact, Coach McClos­key felt that the 40 point mar­gin could have been a lot high­er if Duke Coach Vic Bubas had not used his reserves so early in the contest.

While the Deacons were looking inept in almost every phase of the game, the po":er­ful Duke team was impressmg observers with its rebounding strength and its great depth.

Mike Lewis (6-7) was the bulwark of the Duke back­board strength as he grabbed 20 rebounds in only 26 min­utes of action. In addition,

·-~· ~.~all .scorers with 31 points, including a 13-18 per~ formance from the field. It was the muscular Lewis woo broke the game wide open in

-PHOTO 11Y McNI!ILJ.

DICKIE WALKER and Riehle Mahaffey exchange elbows while rebonnding In Deacon's 78-66 loss to Clemson.

' - - --:. ---- - -.. • • • • - -· - -- """"t- • - -

-PHOTO BY McNEILL

JIM BROADWAY and Dickie Wa1ker exemplify Wake's fu.. tility as they battle each o&her for a rebouDd.

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the first half when he shat­tered an otherwise effective Deacon zone defense wi~i1 20 points. Each time that Lewis got the ball in the low post he turned around and scored on his soft jumper as if 6-8 Dan Ackley wasn't even in the game.

After the first ten minutes of action, Duke led the Dea­cons by a 20-9 margin. The Blue Devils soon built this lead up to 25 points and left the court at halftime with a healthy 47-23 lead. Many of Lhe spectators left at halftime because the final score was the only remaining unanswer­ed question.

Reserves Sharp During the later stages of

the first half and throughout much of the second, Bubas tested his ~rve strength; Only Rtarting guard Ron Wen­delin failed-to score out of the 14 players that saw aetion. All the Blue Devil reserves play­ed well, but Claudius Clai­borne was especially effective, finishing a distant second to Lewis in scoring with 11 points.

Guards Jerry Montgomery and Norwood Todmann led the impotent Wake Forest at­tack with 12 points. Although he failed to score in the first half, Dickie Walker managed 10 garbage points in the sec­ond half ..

Previously, the Deacons had played almost as badly as they did against Duke while being thwnped; by Clemson 78-66 on Feb. 10.

The Tigers, who did not look anything like their 3-13 ret:?rd, led by ten or more pomts throughout almost the entire game. Wake Forest could come no closer than one point, when Norwood Tod­mann hit a jump shot to cut Clemson's lead to 3-2 after two minutes of play.

The clash shared with the VMI game the distinction of being the dullest rontest play­ed in the Coliseum this year. There was so little action that the fans did not even boo the referees nor did the student band director get off his courtside chair once in an emotional outburst. Even the antics of refree Lou Bello fail­ed to keep the crowtr" awak~.

The key to the Clemson wm was their two-three zone de­felliSe that held Wake Forest to a 32 per cent shooting percen­tage for the ga!!le and just 27 points in the first half. The

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Deacons looked about as or: ganized against this zone a:i the Atlantic City Sea GulL~ M against the Harlem Globetrot: ters. Normally Clemson's de-. fense gives up well over 80 points a game.

Another important factor in the '!'iger win was 5-11 soph Butch Zatezalo. The Aliquip­pa, Pennsylvania native, who reminds people of Bob Verga, scored 29 points while strut7 ting around the court like the former Duke All-American did. Butch, who just may n·ip Carolina's Larry Miller for the Atlantic Coast Conference scoring crown, also made some great passes and was all over the court on defense.

Double Figures Other Tigers hitting doublq

figures were Dave Demsey; 14, and Dick Thomas, 11. The Deacons did manage to hold Captain Richie MahaffeY. under double figures for the first time this year but the 6-7 center had 12 i'ebounds: Leaper Trip Jones (6-5) snar~ ed a game high of 14 recov, er:ies. .t

Only Norwood Todmann (2H did much scoring for the Dea­cons against the Tigers. Walj ker was second in line with l2J but connected on only five o~ 19 &hots from the field. De~; spite his limited playing timer, Jim Broadway hit double fig1 ures with 11 to match Mont-t gomery, who shot just a~ poorly as Walker. i

Clemson has no\\! won four. games this season which ~~ two more than Coach Robb1e Roberts thought that the Tig~ ers would win. Both "bonus". wins have come against the disappointing and declinin& ~aeons. ~

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PAGE TEN Monday,~- 19, 1968 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Deacons To Play l(ey ACC GaDies

By RICHARD SINK STAF"F" WRITER

Another tough w~k is in store for the W nke Forest ba'l· ketbal\ team with three games on tap. Tonight the Deacons remain up north (after fadng Maryland Saturday afternoonl to meet the Virginia Cavaliers.

Thursday night the Deacs return home for the last time this season to face the nation· nllv-rankect Dul\e Blue Devils. Th.en Sn turd:1y afternoon at :'1!. C. State. the W~1ke Forest cagers are. on re~ional tele­vision for the ~rcond conseeu· tive week.

in the first game. and had 31 points in the se·:·ond game al· though he pbycd only 25 mrn­utes.

Lewis pulled down 20 re­bound' in the second contest to increa-se his lead among the ACC's reboundet·s. He also leads the conference in sear­ing with a 25 point per game ;tverage.

Duke should also start 6-7 junior Steve Vandenberg and 6-6 senior .Joe Kennedy on the front line.

At guard Duke starts 6·2 Dave Golden and 6-0 Ron Wendelin. GGlden i~ a junior and Wendelin a senior. Tonight's match with Virginia

could go a long way toward deciding the ftnal seedings for the ACC tournament. The Ca­valiers presently h<n·e a 3-8 ronference record with one of their defeats :.1 !!7-!10 loss to thr Dcacm1• earlier in the sea­son

Kinn Hct

Duke also has an exception· al bench. ru; shown by Wake's !~Sit meeting with the Blue Devils. Coach Vic Bubas sub· stituted .freely after 11 minutes had been played. Duke's sub­!'titutes a·,:countd for 48 of the n!ue Devils' 105 points.

The Denes complete their ronfcreruce season nt N. C. State Saturday afternoon. These two teams met in the first game of the season with State pulling away from a l::llftimc tie to win, 79-63.

TOM LYNCH tries to stay with Clemson's slick sophomore guard Butch Zatazelo, whose

--PHOTO BY McNEILL 29 points and numerous assists destroyed the Deacons.

In that ~~rtn1C Tony Kinn. a · orhomorc ~unrd. wr~s out· -tamling for Vin:i:Jia. cxhibit­inr: a · Jon£! outs,icc jumper whi:lr 11\1,· mn:l7.in'2h' ac'cll· rak. For the season .. T\inn is tite Cm·a!icrs· ~ccond leadin~ :.:.corer.

Sophs Murphy And Maravich Pack Balanced

Balance characteri~es the wolfpack. If there is one in­dividual star, it is senior guard Eddie Biedenbach, who has been hampered with min· or injuries this year, but when healthy, has pLayed well.

Score Points, Spark Teams Virginia's leading scorer is

.<t'l'icJr forward Mike Kato-;. wll:> is averaging about 1"1 i'Oi th a l!'ame and is also a :!,JOd rebuunder.

Tt:e ccnter is 6-9 :"Torm l:armi-:-bael. a junior who has ;. lH'lil n much improvement l1\'l't' his sophomore year. Vir­t:~cia's other starters could be 6-; :\•like Wi~kes ::t forward and eithPr Tom .Joyce or chnb­h·: Gary L11ws at guard.

Tile Blue Derils have demol­ished the Deacons in two pre­l·ious mectiw~s this year, win­nin;; 103-76 ;>t Gceen>boro dur· ing the ClH·i~tmas recess and 105-G5 last week nl Dul;e. The g~>me at rireen."boro did not c·ounr in 1 he ACC standings.

,\\!-American ..:nndidate Mikr I.e11i:'. lw> heen fant<hlic in 1 h.; t 1ru !J:·m~'" 11 ith the Deacs. :i!i~tlty l\l:ke scored 35 points

Bi€denbach is the s1parkplug for State and is adept at steal· ins the ball from hlis oppon· ents.

The biggest surprise for the \Volfpack this season has· been tl~e nl2~· of l'Ophomore Vann Williford, who hac; done a sur­prising job scoring and re­bounding. Sophomore Nelson JE!ey has alo;o S'cored weH for I he 'Pa,k at time.<; this year.

Oddly enough, neither Willi· ford nor Isley start for State. Besides Biedenbach, Coach Norman Sloan starts Dick Braucher at guard, BHI Kret· :.cer at center. and Joe Serdich :md BHI Mavredes at the for· ward1s.

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Tlllls season there are many outs,tanding sophomore basket­ball players in the country. Howevet·, the two sop!ls who are at-tJ.·atc:ting most of the attention are Calvin Murphy of Ninga•ra and Pete Maravich of LSU. The two sophs appeared tQ be in SJimilar situations at the start of l.'he current season. Both Murphy and Maravich had! averaged· over 40 points a game as freshmen }as,t year and were expected to combine with four mediocre players to turn loslng records into win­ning ones. Thus, both inrlivi· dua!ls had ~.:or~iderable pres· . sure on them at the start of the season.

Despite an Dpening game loss to sma!tl coLlege power Long Island, Murphy and his Purple Eagle teammates seemed headed for an out· stand~ng year, a.s Calvin scor· ed wehl over 30 points in tha·t ·contest. Murphy then averaged over 40 points in the next four outings as Niagara won three of the games.

High Point The highlTght of the season

came when Cal'Vin hit 19-35 from the field and 14·14 from the charity line for 52 points as Niagara wallopped a good LaSalle team. 100-83. Murphy's 52 points was a Padestra scor· i.ng record.

Shortly after the start of the year, N-iagara began to have p-rob~ems both on and off the court. Since Niagara does not p'-ay foobbaltl, the people at Nia-gara cons-ider t!hemselves a basketball sC'hool. While the Pur_ple Eagles have suffer€<! t:hrough losing seasons in the past thr~ or four years, they have had some fme teams in the past and the interest among the student body has

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always beeru high. Consequent· ly, the stu!dent body became upset when Niagara dropped consecutive games to Villa­nova and St. Bonaventure and blamed coa~it Jim Maloney for the defeats.

Maloney soon handed in his -resignation, which :was to be effective at the end of the season, and stated that the sit· u:ation at Niagara had become impossible for his team, fam­ily, and himse~f.

In addition. t~· - e ru· mors tba' ·. · . ·.~"' want to transfer at ~ne end of the stchool year. FinalQy, 6-8 center Manny Le-aks came out with the Sltatement that the s:ohool is prejudiced against Negroes.

Overcomes Problems Despite these problems,

Murphy has pel'formed like an All-American most of the time on the comt. A1tiholllo"h he stands only 5·91h, he may be the fastest and quickest play­er ever to p:tay the game. He needs on'ly a momentary screen to get off his jumper. which is deadly in the ra·nge of 15 to 20 feet from the hoop_ He is also a great baU handler and is virtually impossible t.o s.top with a normal man to man dJefense.

However, Murphy ~an be stopped with a welil organized zone. Since he does not like to drive and :his- lack of height prevents him from be­ing mooh of an inside threat, Murphy has trouble scoring against the zone.

The low po.illlt o.f the sopho­more's season came ¥-hen Vil­lanova held him to 24 points on a 5·20 shooting night. In behalf of Munphy, it can be said that VHllaoovat'.s tough zone held Jimm!Y Walker, the former Providence All-Ameri­can. t(\ just one basket and five points a year ago.

Even if the situation at Ni­agai'a does not improve in the future, Calvin Murphy will be­come one of the leading scor­ers in the history of college basketball and will become a fine pro player.

LSU Different The Pete Maravich's LSU

story is quite a contras-t to the one at Niaga-ra. Last sea­son, the Tigers suffered Lhr~h a disastrous 3·23 sea­son at footlbaH minded LSU. Thus, the fans who began com· ing to the baskethaH games for the first time were not expe~·t­ing as much as the fans as Niagara. In add1Uon, coach Press Maravi:c.h, the father of Pete and a fomle'!' N. c_ State

coach, was given great free­dom in his recruiting.

At the start of the season, 1 he Tigers pJ.a!Yed. a relatively easy schedule and began tu win consdsterutly with Mara­viclt averaging about 45 points a game. "Pis·tol Pete" be­came -the "fair haired boy" at LSU anrl could do no wrong in the eyes of the fans.

LSU plays run and shoot bas:ketbaH which is ideal for Pete's st~le of play. Mara­vich's favorite maneuver is to take the baN up the court by himseJf and shoot a jumper from the foul line. It is also not unusual for Pete to take 40 or 50 s:tlots in a game. For instanse, in a game against Kentucky, Maravich scored 52 points while hitting onJy 1 ~ of 51 shots from the floor.

Shot Record The gunner then broke his

own school record for most shots in a game when he miss· ed on 35 of 57 sthots against Van<ierbtlt despite wearing his lucky socks. However, Pete playe<l the contest w1th a 104 degree temperature.

Still!, Pe·te is a great player anrl he has changed LSU into an exciting and winning bas­ketball team. At 6·5, Pete has more ·height than Murphy and as a result is much more ef­fective on the drive. Pel'1haps Ma-ravich's greatest asset is his unbelievable ba<ey control whi~,.h enables hdm to twist and turn between the two and three df'fenders that often cover him.. Moreover, he is an exce.'lent ball hammer, which will add him in becoming a guard in the professional ranks. To addl some variety to the LSU attack, Maravich wil-l even thTow up a two hand set shot oru occasion. Despite hav· ing a slight build, Maravich is aJso one of the leading re­bounders on the team.

Weak On Boards Although the Tigers battled

for the Southeas-tern confer­ence lead at times, LSU will propably have difficulty retain· in:g -this position in the future. The reason for the Tiger's problem is that they are ex· tremely weak on the boards.

Both Mur.phy and Maravich are virtual one-man teams at present and wiLl have to learn how to ptay team ba-ll in the pros. Nevertheless, the abun· dance of basiketbailll ability that each possesses should over­\.:Ome this problem and others that might be encountered in the future, both on and off the COUl't.

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I Multiple Troubles Contribute I To Faculty Cagers' Defeat I In the twili:ght of a g-lori- mooted, "When Hugh has a Also J·im Wilson seemed ~{ ol!S career Hugh Himan felt ~ad nig~t it's n~s." Some· under' par for the evening, ~l the nerves of increasing age. tJmes his ibad- mghts would perhaps dtre to the fact that ~i The last of the great "little" be average for anyone else. his ..:·at B1al11Che gave birth d big men suddenly lost hi,~ ~en asked by reporters if to a kitten between Jim's @ i"ho::ting touch from the r:nor Hlman w~ld work on his legs as he watched "The :" H and fQul ldne and with it foul shooting Schiwartz was Jolmny Carson Show" re-f~ went tbe falC~ty's caw;e _as ~:andi~., "It's ~p to Hugh. cen(lly. M tlley bowed to the Semor Hurgthte s ~t JUS~ ~not_her One of the rays of sunshine ~ Medos, 44-42. phayer. !fe s an _ms~tution. for the faculty was Don W J ·t . You cant treat him like the Schoonmaker's performance *:1 us one year ago m a other boys because I ' . t . if pressure-packed batUe be· oot J'k them , t.e s JUs "Schooey" finall~ fl:ashed lltween .f,he two tearns it had . 1 e · some of the ·potentiatl. he had i/J been Himan who time and fl}man's P€~'~<»;nance wa~ shown as a siflarter with the · · tm ~ime again pulled t·he facul· not the onLy diff~~·~t~, fa~etJ Walt Whitma~ Junio~ High ~ ~ t.y from the precipice of de· by the faculity · B1g Dick Schoo! squad m HWltington, ~

1:, feat. This night it was a Sears, pl-agued by ooforse~ N. Y. some years eail'lier. ~ ~ year Ja.ter and a different able events through?ut ~Is !Vith his patented "schooner- 11 : story. Said Hugh after the car~. was forced If!to m· Is~,". a d.ri~g, ful!l·c~mrt, ~~ . game, "It felt lonely, real action due t~ a comrmtment whl!"lmg·dervJsh shot, Schoo- ~ ~~ lonely on that line ton:igiht." to trhe experimental college. ny electri:fied the crowd. [~ ~ Wlren asked to comment on The spectators got a big m

Coach "Red" S_cllwartz this problem, Dick mwnbled kick out of a situation which ~1 scoffed a.t . suggestions of aUm.oot inaudibly, "I never arose from a cut on Sam ~) Hugh's dedme. Red com- get a break." Merrill's arm. #

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Rick Tolley To Become Line Coach

Rick Tolaey, a line coa-oh at Ferrum Junrior Co11elge the past ~hree years. has lM!en hired to fiH the vacancy on the Wake Forest footllaH coa<:h· ing stafif, AthLetic Director Gene Hooks announced last week.

The new aide. 28, replaces Bob Lord, who resigned re· cently as Watl\e'ISI d~ensive line coach. "We are deJ.ighted to have R.ick on ~he staff,'' head Coach" BiU Tate said. "He comes hi:ghly recommend· rd."

Tolley, a native of Havaco, W. Va., was an Al~-S-tate se­lection at Mullins High School in West Vi·l'l5fu,ia. He played l:t!nter and linebacker a1t Vir· ginia Tech, where he earned a B.S. degree in 1961. He re· ·ceived h6s Mastber's· at the University of Virginia.

FeJTum, wltll Toltley on the staff, compiled a 25-2-1 rec­ord, includi,ng the national ju-nrilor college champiOO>S'hliP in 1965 and was runn€!l'up in 1966. More significantly, no team gained as maiJtV as 100 yards rushing in a single game against Fe!'rum in the J>a8t·$:ee seasons.

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