i ': lark - wake forest university...ga t m d . es. c ame i urge d th a a t " 111 citu.rch...

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I_': 956 -·.·.r t ; rien. iide- 5'01:l;l 1ead. Lble,- 11. at Elie- >&Cli othis · hich ·· a.r- :'ient · :ling Jok.;.' ting l955 ,·be a 1an em- oiere ?laY - . · ... J ' l• Sta·ffer Braddock 'Forest' Play By Theater Page Two .·'· * * I lark * * Coach A'ttributes Bill Summerlin's To Work Page Five NUMBER 2i1 BSU Elects Two: Coeds Nominated Sets Sopi.Qmore For JVGA Presidency Co,mmittee On Removal N . · · /1. ·nominating co.mmittee _has Epsilon, _honorary mathmatics·· ew , -_ rexy selected Denis,e Baxter and _Mar-, fraternity, and serves as an as- tha- Bond Cook as candidates for sistant ·iri the physics depart- WillianJs Polls 59 ·Votes Larry Williams, Burlington soph_omore, -has- been eleeted .qent f1f ·the BSU for the coming yt>ar. · 1 -- He. was nomin&.ted for the OOsi- tion by a e<ommittee made up of senior meinhers of the- BSU .Coun- cil. The election · was held Mon- tk y .evening in the· old Eu H;,ll in WaitHalC . Other . po,s.itions on the Council wj.U be tonight hi electi'>DS by the Bsu: Thirteen· BSU mem- - bers .have riomiita.ted 'by the committee for th-e 13 P<!_S.ts. At the presidential election Wil" Iiams was oppo:!ed by Joe Killian. Atlanta, · Ga., junior, and Rod " Beals, Goldsbo-ro junior. Williams· president of Woman's Govern- ment. ,c ment Association. The commit- Miss Cook, Moultrie, Ga., jun- tee, composed of. 12 coeds and ior, is of Alpha Psi Dean Lois Johnson, will meet to- Omega, honorary drama fra- night to select candidates for ternity, Sigma Pi Alpha, mod- tl}e · remaining 11 ·positions on ern language fraternity, Pi the Executive Council. · Kappa Delta, forensics fratern- Th - · ity, social standards_, -College - presidential election will be ,held Thursday, but_ the gen- 'T'heater and Student Legis- lature. eral elections will be held next Two k v · amendment§ to the · otmg will take place WG_A's constitution were · rati·- m the two girls' dormatories. fied by the association members Miss Baxter, Hopewell Va. in Wednesday night dorm meet- junior, is this year's j'unio: ings. The _ am-endments revise WGA Executive Council ;epre- the membership of the executive a member of the Col- council and the number of can- lege· Theater, Woman's Recre- didates· nominated for each ation Association, Kappa Mu Council position. Names Bob Davis Group Chairman Student body President Tommy !<'rank ·has appointed Bob Davis, Wadesboro junior, rto he-ad a new student Removal 'Committee. The ,commttee will have a dual purpose of providing the student body with informaltion concerning the Winston-Salem ca.mpus and arranging for the removal to Rey- no·lda a number of tangible tradi- tions :f.rom this campus. received 59 votes, Bea:ls· got 25 a!1d · Davis, a member of Sigma Pi soda! frater;nity, said Friday he eJ--pects to a,ppoint a six-member 'c•;mmittee .this week. The group will be divided into subcommit- tees, with .two of the members to be designated '.as chaimnen of the smaller ·gr-oups. One Subcommittee wiil gather in- -formation •and present it to the swdents, and the other will plan thr removal of tl'aditions. Tradi- ·tional objects suggested for the n •. ove have been the bell in Wait Hall, •a section of the stone wall :3urrounding the campus and even the old weB. PHOTO" BY •. IRVIN GRIGG -:.AU Smiles NOW-- A little more than a week ago these five men were at ·with each other - on the basketball court at Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh in the finals of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. Wednesday they were all smiles as Wake Forest wished N. C. State's team good luck in further NCAA play. In the program were State team captain Phil Di- ·Nardo, Wake captain Lowell (Lefty) DaviS', State guard Vic Molodet, and DeaCOll$ J'ilck Murdock and .Jack Wiliia'III'S. · Killian polled 11 votes. The losin:; two were nominated from the of the 'meeting. Williams replaces Ken Freeman; Jonesville senior, as BSU _ presi- dent. · · Tonight the BSU will eleet two more offic-ere than have been ·eleeted in the past. Two first "lice Debate Team Student Rallv Honors 'J selected. .Enters Meet State Basketball Team jun<ior, and Helen -Smith, AshborJ At - Emor· yu . If the reception N. c. State's them on Saturday when the junior. B-ert Watton, Jacksonville : Wolfpack in Madison Square powerful Pack bounced the Dea- sophomore; will be in the running By CARTER HEDRICK Gai:den. tonight is half: as warm cons in the Atlantic Coast Con- for the o;ffice of social vice presi- MarJ"orie Thomas and Chris as the one it got in the College ference championship finals, but dent. BlOssom comp-eted with 14 teams Chapel here last week, Everett Wednesday Coach Case and two -G. J. Benner, Raeford junior, h:J.s in. the West Point District Six basketballers should have· of his stars received ·a rousing been nominated f-or extension no trouble downing Oanisius in ovation as their arch rivals of- director; Dave Britt, Asheville Elimination Tournament F1;iday . · d S tu d Tb t as h ld the fust round of the NCAA fered them a hearty send-off to- junior, has been nominated Sunday an · a r ay. e mee w e to - national competition. School _superintendent. Jack Ge1l- . -at "-Emo=---Uriiversity in Atlanta urney. _ Ga. .. ··" · . . :·.!. .; .. Captain .Phil. .DiNardo. !fld Vic try, Boonesv]lle junior, is -a candi- The twosC>me debated on both MolOdet. represented the <lute for·""'fr.aihing:''Uriii:m" director. sides of the question at the tour- · · pack at the program which was Jimmy !cared, Kannapolis junior, Lac -ks ·.Qu,. ortJm. an unusual gesture of sportsman- is a candidate for mission chair- nament, which served as a basis __ _ to select the top four teams in the ship in this area. Athletic Direc- man, while Carol Jennette, West- district to participate in the lOth In L 1 tor Bill Gibson arranged the minster, Md., junior, has be;n annual West Point National Tour- - egiS ature rally. - nominated -to be in charge of nament to b.e held April 25-28. . Also -·taking part ·in -the pro- publicity. h · · d t gram were Deacon Coach Murray Allan. Tu. ttle, Greens_b_oro sophL o- T e patr was accompame o For the secon.-1 t_ime this year th f h b P f F k i Greason; assistant Bones Me- l':lCJre, 1s m. e runnmg or .,. e the Atlanta meet. Y ro · ran - the Student Legislat,ure has failed &<. (C t ed 2) lin R. Shirley, debate coach .. Shir- . . Kinney, cagers Lefty Davis, Jac.K on mu on page ley is a member of the committee hold Its regular b1weekly -meet- Williams and Jackie Murdock and which chooses the teams to repre:-· mg because a quorum of the 22- College president Harold W. Trib- sent the district._ member group was not present. ble. She:_ is .composed . of. _ .Only of the legislators were Case called the rally "the finest Thea!er. Tryouts Set This Week m. _Kentucky, present for a scheduled meeting gesture -that has happened .to a Georgia, _ Alabama, MISSISSippi, . 1 ' team of .mine since I've 'been· at Tryouts for the College Florida South · Carolina and Thursday mght even though all State." production of North Carolina. the members had been reminded "We at State have always held speare's : "The Merchant of · Tourney This Week of the meeting by mail. the highest respect for Wake Venice" will be held this week. -This week the squad will attend The Constitution of the Student. Forest," he continued. "We will A cast of 20 will be selected GeorgetQwn .University's Eighth Body states that 14 members con- always remember this display of from tryouts held from .3:30 to Cherry Blossom Debate stitute ·a ·quorum. Only. 10 were sportsmanship and will always 5 o'clock each afternoon, start-. T t · w h' t D C have a warm spot in our ing today and ending Friday. ournamen ln as mg on, · present for another meeting· ._ Twenty-eight teams from the top - for Wake Forest." Selections will be made in the debate schools in each section will whi,9h had to be cancelled Jan. 5. The Wake Forest represents- theater room, third floor of the compete in the m.eet which will Absent -from last week's meet- tives all wished State "Good Alumni Building. MARTHA BOND COOK DENNY BAXTER WGA presidential nominees Campus Party Starts Politics; Slates Election Of President Frank, in establishing the committee, pointed out that many_ students have expressed con- cern {)-Ver •College fees, dorn1ito.ry and cafe<teria. conditions and other facets of life on campus next ' year. One subcommittee will study the $20 million campus in aii attempt t.:> answer students' questions. Davis .said this group will probably interview the 'College president, architect and other officials·. -Student government leaders have in th-e past few years mentioned !*:veral times the -possibility · of carrying <to the Winston campus ob;;ects of troditi-o.nal value her<J. Politics once again come to Wake Forest at ·the Campus Party has slated election of delegates to the party caucus for this week. independent men and coeds. , . The subcommittee assigned to this Student Party_ head Tom Frank project v.ill be ask-e-d to "feel out" · Broce McDimiel, co-whip of iast yea.r's party -organization, announe- said that his party had not yet .student opinion as to what land- made definite plans for election marks, if -any, should be relocated. of delegates. The date for Campus Davis said that he and his colll- Pa:rty oaucaus will be set this week mittee will be open ·to any sugge.s- by MtiDaniel. tions from students. ed last week tha.t the four Campus Party fraternities-Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha G ·and Sigma Phi Epsilon-will elect roun To Plan New Church delegates tonight at regular r ·ternity m-etings. · L 711 0 'T'l.. Tomorrow night, elections wiH n n .l..ltUrsday Night be held in the two coed dorms; the Bostwick balloting will be held ut By HANNAH MILLER Subcommittees were 7:30, while -Johnson elections will When W .ake Forest Colleg;e to with the problems of be held at 8 o'clock. mcves to WinSJtO'll-Salem in May it: bership, finance, educational ur.o- Independent men 'will meet at will lea\-e .a vital part of it·;el£ in gram, church staff, pastor's home, . Wake Forest. T't..e Wake l'Jres'" and the bet th 3:30 Thursday afternoon m John- . Jl " ween e son auditorum to elect their dele- Church, for yel!rS the (Continued on page 2) t M D . I d th t " 111 Citu.rch home of many Coller,:-e stu- ga es. c ame urge a a dents w·u · th ld independent men interested in ' I remam on e o cam- working with the Campus Party" r t" f th d attend -the meeting. ' .rea Iza Ion ° e nee fm· a begin Thursday and wind up Sat- ing W_s;!re President Frank, Legis- luck" in its NCAA play. Dr. Trib- The play will be p'resented as urday. · lature speaker and student body ble urged that Case's team ''win the Theater's annual Shake· He did not say how many dele- v . p · "d t 0 H · c the .national title so that the whole d t• d · th gates would be el2cted in each ses- Representing Wake Forest in the ICe res1 en wen errmg, . spearean pro uc 1on e Baptist Church on the new cam- pus has prompted the organiza- Fa_culty To Vote On 'No-Quiz Week tion a group of interested The College faculty this ptople. At .a meeting before Christ- noon will either ·approve or reject this group elected A. L. Ay- .: plan .authorized recently by the cock chairman, Dr. Geortie J. Student LewisLature which would Gl'iffin secretary, and Dr: T: J. eliminate the givmg of hoar Turner treasurer. quizzes during the week preceding J Benne•· ""-:Rt"chard D B d nation will know -that it ·took the Magnolia Festival. It w 1 "ll be sion. However, accordin!!:' to Partv. toilrney·wm. be David Hughes and · L' ay, u · - ;Barbara .Massey on the ne!!:'ati"ve Kelly, Joe Lancaster, Joan best team in the United States to. given on the. nights of April 30 rules, the number of _fraternity - M D" k" N R" h beat Wake Forest." d M 1 1 tl t and Miss Thomas and Blossom on auney, Ic te ewsome, IC - ·an ay · men equa s 1e -otal number of the affirmative. ard Odom, Saran Riecke, Carol ___________________ .:_ __________ _:_ __ .::..:.:==..... :.::.:.::_...:.::..=: ..... ::==-:::.=._::.:: Last week end the team par- Stroud and Dolly Washburn. . "' . Cl - c - s 0 ticipated in the University of West the agenda for approval by llllllary ears ein' etary Ite Virginia's anual N De- the Legislature was the appoint- , . . . . bate Tournament in Morgantown, ment of a replacement in' . the W. Va .. Pairings .for the tourna- Men's Honor Council. Student ·Pl A ·. · · · .......... ....!.. .... ,......... ,_ ............. ,..,._, ment were made on a North- body Tommy Frank was ots re Near . . .... South basis.. to nominate either Cary Copeland, · .. : ..... ·· Won 4 Of 10 Ruffin Johnson or Tom Simmons, WF· Golf Course · · Miss Massey and Miss Thomas tln·ee men suggested. to him by repr-esented Wake Forest on the the Council. While the College is- preparing affirmative at the meet and John 'Also, some Legislature mem- to move to new territory, Cella and Hughes .'debated the bers said they plamie'd to origin- eastern Ba.ptis·t. Theological Semi- negative · side of the national ate a discussion of'the State Bap- nary is evidently planning to stay I question. tist_ Convention rule· prohibiting in Wake Forest for g<>od. Both squads won two of their dancing on ,the campus. It is ex- Last week Seminary workmen five rounds: The affirmative won pected that they will propose a re- bl'gan clearing land for a ceme- decisions over the University of solution asking that dancing , be tL·ry for use -of the Seminary Vermont and Denison University allowed on the Winston-Salem family. (Continued on page 2) 1 The plo.t is' located near liig1I- ________ way U. S. 1 on Stadium Road, on 7 Offices land near .the golf course. The land was !included in the Semi- nary's purchase of the College. WFDD Elects .Staff The cemetezy will cover a space approximately 200 feet deep by thE. s-ame distance al-ong the ro.ad. positions for next year were filled A 20-feet wide drive will be cut so that work on the station Qn down the center, to end at a 40- the new campus in Winston-Salem foot circle near the cemetery. Seven staff positions for next year were filled by College radio station WFDD in elections . Wed- nesday. Jack Grose :was named chieE announcer; Gary Langhurst· is to be program d,irector; Anne Beatty w.as elected staff secretary; Tom:. my Bunn will be studio manager; Lloyd Jackson is sports director; Marsha Greenshields was named continuity director, and Jim Hin- son was elected news editor. Election of a station manager and business manager will be held later this anonth. Jlarge, present station manager, said that·· . the staff can be begun. The circle will be fully llind- W_FDD plans to cover spring scaped. A four-foot steel fe'nce · this· . year, · other will surround the land. Space for station Last year the approximately 420 graves is includ- station did not carry. the election ed-in the plot. returns from the Social Science Dr. Sydnor L. Stealy, president Building as had been done in the of the .Seminary, said that. the I past. Seminary had· hoped to "find a Also on tap the station dur- desirable plot in the town ceme- ing the re¥laining months of this tery to accommodate Seminary semester is a teen-age .. disk-jockey nee.ds for_ a number. of years." urogram. Students from Wake -However, he said that "no such Forest High School will broadcast plot was avaibil:tl-e." their own programs. three nigqts He explained that <Only a few of a week. (Continued on page 2) Pl:lOTO BY IRVIN GRIGG Clearing Land- Clearing land for r' Southeastern Baptist . Theological Seminaliy's cemetery, Zanny Moore, Semmary workman, uses the school's newly-acquired bull- dozer to :push up trees and brush. The cemetery will be completed in a few weeks and will be for tile· use of the family. f i A steering committee Qf seYcn examinations at the end of each "·as appointed by the group, wirh S<>mester. Dr. J. A. Easley as chairm"ln. Jr. If the faculty .adopts the ph:m C',nllists -of: President Harol:l ·w. at its regular meeting today, it Tribble, Miss Lois Johnson, ll>i1 will go .into -effl!ct this semester. Owen F. Herring, Grady S. P·1.t- C. J. Benner, chairman of the terson, Dr. H. S. Stroupe, Dr. stu dent Calendar Committee James O'Flaherty, and Dr. worked with Dr. E. Cocke', Easley. Dr. Griffin and Professor c.iliah·man of a similar faculty Aycock are ex-officio members by group, in formulating the plan. virtue of their positio)ls in the The quiz-free week was decided organization and Dr. J. _Glenn on rather than a proposed read- B.lackburn, church pastor, Is ad- ing day which would have preced- visor to the group. I ed the examination period. Annual Magnolia Festtv(ll Set For Week Begirtning·! April 30 By MARY ELISE BRIDGER The M·agnolia Festival will be held April 30-May '6 it was and- mmnced today by Prof. Thane Mc- Donald, chairman -of the festival committee. Other members of this year's committee are Prof. A. L. Aycock, Miss Marjorie Crisp, Dean Lois Johnson and Prof. Clyde Mc- Elroy. The :f:estival v.ill begin with a Shakespearean play presented by the lCallege Theater -on Monday and Tuesday nights, under Prof. Mc- Elroy's direction. An -al"t is scheduled for Wednesday afternoon under Prof. Aycock's supervision. The exhibit will display items done by s-tudents faculty and interested townspeople. Friday night .the Opera Work- shop Group under the direction of Dr. 10lifford Bair will present the "Cosi fan Tutti" (•translated: "So Do They All"). The presenta- tion -of the opera will commemor- ate the 200th anniversary of Moz- art's -birth. . The ·Coron,ation program will Eonor the Queen and her court Saturday afternoon. This year's pr-ogram will be a review of the of the eight ·wtth one dance bemg taken from each year. Jo Anne Powell Craw- f<,rd is the general chairman and Patsy Wilhelm is working with •the dance committee. All past queens and their courts will be in- vited. A concert by the band and glee club in the chapel ·at 4 p. m. Sun- day and a progt·am in the church at 7:45 p. m. -..viJJ cot!t:lude the fes- th·al Qn Sunday.

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Page 1: I ': lark - Wake Forest University...ga t M D . es. c ame I urge d th a a t " 111 Citu.rch dents w·u home of · many th Coller,:-e ld stu- independent men interested in ' I remam

I_':

956

-·.·.r

t ;

rien. iide-5'01:l;l 1ead. Lble,­h~o) 11. at Elie­>&Cli

re~t othis · hich ··

a.r­:'ient · :ling Jok.;.'

ting

l955 ,·be ~e; a ~luh 1an

em­oiere ?laY

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. · ...

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Sta·ffer Braddock Revi~ws 'Forest' Play By Theater

Page Two

.·'·

VO~UME ~LJ * * I

lark * *

Coach A'ttributes Bill Summerlin's S~ed To Work

Page Five

NUMBER 2i1

BSU Elects Two: Coeds Nominated Franl~ Sets Sopi.Qmore For JVGA Presidency Co,mmittee

On Removal N. · · p· /1. ·nominating co.mmittee _has Epsilon, _honorary mathmatics·· ew , -_ rexy selected Denis,e Baxter and _Mar-, fraternity, and serves as an as-tha- Bond Cook as candidates for sistant ·iri the physics depart-

WillianJs Polls 59 ·Votes ·For~Victory_ Larry Williams, Burlington

soph_omore, -has- been eleeted presi~ .qent f1f ·the BSU for the coming yt>ar. · 1

-- He. was nomin&.ted for the OOsi­tion by a e<ommittee made up of senior meinhers of the- BSU .Coun­cil. The election · was held Mon­tk y .evening in the· old Eu H;,ll in WaitHalC .

Other . po,s.itions on the Council wj.U be fi:ll~ tonight hi electi'>DS by the Bsu: Thirteen· BSU mem-

- bers .have -b~ riomiita.ted 'by the committee for th-e 13 P<!_S.ts.

At the presidential election Wil" Iiams was oppo:!ed by Joe Killian. Atlanta, · Ga., junior, and Rod

" Beals, Goldsbo-ro junior. Williams·

president of Woman's Govern- ment. ,c ment Association. The commit- Miss Cook, Moultrie, Ga., jun-tee, composed of. 12 coeds and ior, is se~retary of Alpha Psi Dean Lois Johnson, will meet to- Omega, honorary drama fra-night to select candidates for ternity, Sigma Pi Alpha, mod-tl}e · remaining 11 ·positions on ern language fraternity, Pi the Executive Council. · Kappa Delta, forensics fratern-

Th - · ity, social standards_, -College - e· presidential election will be ,held Thursday, but_ the gen- 'T'heater and Student Legis-

lature. eral elections will be held next Two

k v · amendment§ to the ~ee · otmg will take place WG_A's constitution were · rati·-m the two girls' dormatories. fied by the association members

Miss Baxter, Hopewell Va. in Wednesday night dorm meet-junior, is this year's j'unio: cJas~ ings. The _ am-endments revise WGA Executive Council ;epre- the membership of the executive s~ntative, a member of the Col- council and the number of can-lege· Theater, Woman's Recre- didates· nominated for each ation Association, Kappa Mu Council position.

Names Bob Davis Group Chairman Student body President Tommy

!<'rank ·has appointed Bob Davis, Wadesboro junior, rto he-ad a new student Removal 'Committee.

The ,commttee will have a dual purpose of providing the student body with informaltion concerning the Winston-Salem ca.mpus and arranging for the removal to Rey­no·lda a number of tangible tradi­tions :f.rom this campus.

received 59 votes, Bea:ls· got 25 a!1d ·

Davis, a member of Sigma Pi soda! frater;nity, said Friday he eJ--pects to a,ppoint a six-member

'c•;mmittee .this week. The group will be divided into -t~o subcommit­tees, with .two of the members to be designated '.as chaimnen of the smaller ·gr-oups.

One Subcommittee wiil gather in­-formation •and present it to the swdents, and the other will plan thr removal of tl'aditions. Tradi­·tional objects suggested for the n •. ove have been the bell in Wait Hall, •a section of the stone wall :3urrounding the campus and even the old weB.

PHOTO" BY •. IRVIN GRIGG

-:.AU Smiles NOW-- A little more than a week ago these five men were at odd~ ·with each other - on the basketball court at Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh in the finals of the

Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. Wednesday they were all smiles as Wake Forest wished N. C. State's team good luck in further NCAA play. In the program were State team captain Phil Di­

·Nardo, Wake captain Lowell (Lefty) DaviS', State guard Vic Molodet, and DeaCOll$ J'ilck Murdock and .Jack Wiliia'III'S. ·

Killian polled 11 votes. The losin:; two were nominated from the f~cor of the 'meeting.

Williams replaces Ken Freeman; Jonesville senior, as • BSU _ presi-dent. ·

· Tonight the BSU will eleet two more offic-ere than have been ·eleeted in the past. Two first "lice

Debate Team Student Rallv Honors B:~;:~~:::..:: it~: 'J selected.

.Enters Meet State Basketball Team de~0r:~~at~nfo~~:~sto:!~:.p~e~~ jun<ior, and Helen -Smith, AshborJ

At- Emor· y u . If the reception N. c. State's them on Saturday when the junior. B-ert Watton, Jacksonville : • Wolfpack g~ts in Madison Square powerful Pack bounced the Dea- sophomore; will be in the running

By CARTER HEDRICK Gai:den. tonight is half: as warm cons in the Atlantic Coast Con- for the o;ffice of social vice presi-MarJ"orie Thomas and Chris as the one it got in the College ference championship finals, but dent. •

BlOssom comp-eted with 14 teams Chapel here last week, Everett Wednesday Coach Case and two -G. J. Benner, Raeford junior, h:J.s in. the West Point District Six Case'~;~· basketballers should have· of his stars received ·a rousing been nominated f-or extension

no trouble downing Oanisius in ovation as their arch rivals of- director; Dave Britt, Asheville Elimination Tournament F1;iday . ·

d S tu d Tb t as h ld the fust round of the NCAA fered them a hearty send-off to- junior, has been nominated Sunday

an · a r ay. e mee w e to - national competition. School _superintendent. Jack Ge1l-. -at "-Emo=---Uriiversity in Atlanta urney. _

Ga. .. ··" · . . :·.!. -.·~·-w~:··-"-Forest~-students".~booed .; .. Captain .Phil. .DiNardo. !fld Vic try, Boonesv]lle junior, is -a candi-The twosC>me debated on both MolOdet. represented the W~lf- <lute for·""'fr.aihing:''Uriii:m" director.

sides of the question at the tour- · · pack at the program which was Jimmy !cared, Kannapolis junior,

Lac-ks ·.Qu,. ortJm. an unusual gesture of sportsman- is a candidate for mission chair-nament, which served as a basis __ _ to select the top four teams in the ship in this area. Athletic Direc- man, while Carol Jennette, West-district to participate in the lOth In L • 1 tor Bill Gibson arranged the minster, Md., junior, has be;n annual West Point National Tour- - egiS ature rally. - nominated -to be in charge of nament to b.e held April 25-28. . Also -·taking part ·in -the pro- publicity.

h · · d t gram were Deacon Coach Murray Allan. Tu. ttle, Greens_b_oro sophL o-T e patr was accompame o For the secon.-1 t_ime this year th f h

b P f F k i Greason; assistant Bones Me- l':lCJre, 1s m. e runnmg or .,. e the Atlanta meet. Y ro · ran - the Student Legislat,ure has failed &<. (C t ed 2) lin R. Shirley, debate coach .. Shir- . . Kinney, cagers Lefty Davis, Jac.K on mu on page ley is a member of the committee ~o hold Its regular b1weekly -meet- Williams and Jackie Murdock and which chooses the teams to repre:-· mg because a quorum of the 22- College president Harold W. Trib-sent the district._ member group was not present. ble.

Distric~ She:_ is .composed . of. _ .Only _1~ of the legislators were Case called the rally "the finest

Thea!er. Tryouts •

Set This Week -school~ m. _Kentucky, ~en~e~se~, present for a scheduled meeting gesture -that has happened .to a Georgia, _ Alabama, MISSISSippi, . 1 ' team of .mine since I've 'been· at Tryouts for the College Florida South · Carolina and Thursday mght even though all State." '.~;heater's production of ~hake-North Carolina. the members had been reminded "We at State have always held speare's : "The Merchant of

· Tourney This Week of the meeting by mail. the highest respect for Wake Venice" will be held this week. -This week the squad will attend The Constitution of the Student. Forest," he continued. "We will A cast of 20 will be selected

GeorgetQwn .University's Eighth Body states that 14 members con- always remember this display of from tryouts held from .3:30 to A~nual Cherry Blossom Debate stitute ·a ·quorum. Only. 10 were sportsmanship and will always 5 o'clock each afternoon, start-. T t · w h' t D C have a warm spot in our ~hearts ing today and ending Friday.

ournamen ln as mg on, • · present for another meeting· ._ Twenty-eight teams from the top - for Wake Forest." Selections will be made in the debate schools in each section will whi,9h had to be cancelled Jan. 5. The Wake Forest represents- theater room, third floor of the compete in the m.eet which will Absent -from last week's meet- tives all wished State "Good Alumni Building.

MARTHA BOND COOK DENNY BAXTER • WGA presidential nominees •

Campus Party Starts Politics; Slates Election Of Deleg~tes

President Frank, in establishing the committee, pointed out that many_ students have expressed con­cern {)-Ver •College fees, dorn1ito.ry and cafe<teria. conditions and other facets of life on campus next

' year. One subcommittee will study the

$20 million campus in aii attempt t.:> answer students' questions. Davis .said this group will probably interview the 'College president, architect and other officials·.

-Student government leaders have in th-e past few years mentioned !*:veral times the -possibility · of carrying <to the Winston campus ob;;ects of troditi-o.nal value her<J. Politics once again come to Wake

Forest at ·the Campus Party has slated election of delegates to the party caucus for this week.

independent men and coeds. , . The subcommittee assigned to this Student Party_ head Tom Frank project v.ill be ask-e-d to "feel out"

· Broce McDimiel, co-whip of iast yea.r's party -organization, announe­

said that his party had not yet .student opinion as to what land­made definite plans for election marks, if -any, should be relocated. of delegates. The date for Campus Davis said that he and his colll­Pa:rty oaucaus will be set this week mittee will be open ·to any sugge.s-by MtiDaniel. tions from students. ed last week tha.t the four Campus

Party fraternities-Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha G ·and Sigma Phi Epsilon-will elect roun To Plan New Church delegates tonight at regular fr~- r ·ternity m-etings. · L 711 • 0 'T'l..

Tomorrow night, elections wiH n lf~eetzng n .l..ltUrsday Night be held in the two coed dorms; the Bostwick balloting will be held ut By HANNAH MILLER Subcommittees were appoint~d, 7:30, while -Johnson elections will When W .ake Forest Colleg;e to dea~ with the problems of n~m-be held at 8 o'clock. mcves to WinSJtO'll-Salem in May it: bership, finance, educational ur.o-

Independent men 'will meet at will lea\-e .a vital part of it·;el£ in gram, church staff, pastor's home, . Wake Forest. T't..e Wake l'Jres'" and the ~=larti"onc·hi"p bet th 3:30 Thursday afternoon m John- . Jl • " ~~ ~ ween e

son auditorum to elect their dele- Bap~st Church, for yel!rS the (Continued on page 2) t M D . I d th t " 111 Citu.rch home of many Coller,:-e stu-ga es. c ame urge a a dents w·u · th ld

independent men interested in ' I remam on e o cam-working with the Campus Party" pu~ r t" f th d attend -the meeting. ' • .rea Iza Ion ° e nee fm· a

begin Thursday and wind up Sat- ing W_s;!re President Frank, Legis- luck" in its NCAA play. Dr. Trib- The play will be p'resented as urday. · lature speaker and student body ble urged that Case's team ''win the Theater's annual Shake· He did not say how many dele-

v. p · "d t 0 H · c the .national title so that the whole d t• d · th gates would be el2cted in each ses-Representing Wake Forest in the ICe res1 en wen errmg, . spearean pro uc 1on urm~ e

Baptist Church on the new cam-pus has prompted the organiza­

Fa_culty To Vote On 'No-Quiz Week

tion o~ a group of interested The College faculty this after~ ptople. At .a meeting before Christ- noon will either ·approve or reject n:~s this group elected A. L. Ay- .: plan .authorized recently by the cock chairman, Dr. Geortie J. Student LewisLature which would Gl'iffin secretary, and Dr: T: J. eliminate the givmg of hoar Turner treasurer. quizzes during the week preceding

J Benne•· ""-:Rt"chard D B d nation will know -that it ·took the Magnolia Festival. It w1"ll be sion. However, accordin!!:' to Partv. toilrney·wm. be David Hughes and · L' ay, u · -;Barbara .Massey on the ne!!:'ati"ve Kelly, Joe Lancaster, Joan best team in the United States to. given on the. nights of April 30 rules, the number of _fraternity

- M D" k" N R" h beat Wake Forest." d M 1 1 tl t and Miss Thomas and Blossom on auney, Ic te ewsome, IC - ·an ay · men equa s 1e -otal number of the affirmative. ard Odom, Saran Riecke, Carol ___________________ .:_ __________ _:_ __ .::..:.:==.....:.::.:.::_...:.::..=:.....::==-:::.=._::.:: Last week end the team par- Stroud and Dolly Washburn. s· . "' . Cl - c - s 0

ticipated in the University of West ~On the agenda for approval by e· llllllary ears ein' etary Ite Virginia's anual N orth~South De- the Legislature was the appoint- , . . . . bate Tournament in Morgantown, ment of a replacement in' . the W. Va .. Pairings .for the tourna- Men's Honor Council. Student ·Pl A ·. · · · .......... ....!.. .... , ......... ,_ ............. ,..,._, ment were made on a North- body Presid~nt Tommy Frank was ots re Near . . .... ~-South basis.. to nominate either Cary Copeland, · .. : ..... · ·

Won 4 Of 10 Ruffin Johnson or Tom Simmons, WF· Golf Course · · Miss Massey and Miss Thomas tln·ee men suggested. to him by

repr-esented Wake Forest on the the Council. While the College is- preparing affirmative at the meet and John 'Also, some Legislature mem- to move to new territory, South-~ Cella and Hughes .'debated the bers said they plamie'd to origin- eastern Ba.ptis·t. Theological Semi­negative · side of the national ate a discussion of'the State Bap- nary is evidently planning to stay I question. tist_ Convention rule· prohibiting in Wake Forest for g<>od.

Both squads won two of their dancing on ,the campus. It is ex- Last week Seminary workmen five rounds: The affirmative won pected that they will propose a re- bl'gan clearing land for a ceme­decisions over the University of solution asking that dancing , be tL·ry for use -of the Seminary Vermont and Denison University allowed on the Winston-Salem family.

(Continued on page 2) 1

-~ampus. The plo.t is' located near liig1I-------------~!.,_-------_: ________ way U. S. 1 on Stadium Road, on

7 Offices land near .the golf course. The land was !included in the Semi­nary's purchase of the College.

WFDD Elects .Staff The cemetezy will cover a space approximately 200 feet deep by thE. s-ame distance al-ong the ro.ad.

positions for next year were filled A 20-feet wide drive will be cut so that work on the station Qn down the center, to end at a 40-the new campus in Winston-Salem foot circle near the cemetery.

Seven staff positions for next year were filled by College radio station WFDD in elections . Wed­nesday.

Jack Grose :was named chieE announcer; Gary Langhurst· is to be program d,irector; Anne Beatty w.as elected staff secretary; Tom:. my Bunn will be studio manager; Lloyd Jackson is sports director; Marsha Greenshields was named continuity director, and Jim Hin­son was elected news editor.

Election of a station manager and business manager will be held later this anonth.

Bever~ly Jlarge, present station manager, said that·· . the staff

can be begun. The circle will be fully llind-W_FDD plans to cover spring scaped. A four-foot steel fe'nce

~lections · this· . year, · sa~d other will surround the land. Space for station officials~ Last year the approximately 420 graves is includ­station did not carry. the election ed-in the plot. returns from the Social Science Dr. Sydnor L. Stealy, president Building as had been done in the of the .Seminary, said that. the I past. Seminary had· hoped to "find a

Also on tap f~r the station dur- desirable plot in the town ceme­ing the re¥laining months of this tery to accommodate Seminary semester is a teen-age .. disk-jockey nee.ds for_ a number. of years." urogram. Students from Wake -However, he said that "no such Forest High School will broadcast plot was avaibil:tl-e." their own programs. three nigqts He explained that <Only a few of a week. (Continued on page 2)

Pl:lOTO BY IRVIN GRIGG

Clearing Land-Clearing land for r' Southeastern Baptist . Theological Seminaliy's cemetery, Zanny

Moore, Semmary workman, uses the school's newly-acquired bull­dozer to :push up trees and brush. The cemetery will be completed in a few weeks and will be for tile· use of the Se~inary family.

f i

A steering committee Qf seYcn examinations at the end of each "·as appointed by the group, wirh S<>mester. Dr. J. A. Easley as chairm"ln. Jr. If the faculty .adopts the ph:m C',nllists -of: President Harol:l ·w. at its regular meeting today, it Tribble, Miss Lois Johnson, ll>i1 ~. will go .into -effl!ct this semester. Owen F. Herring, Grady S. P·1.t- C. J. Benner, chairman of the terson, Dr. H. S. Stroupe, Dr. stu dent Calendar Committee James O'Flaherty, and Dr. worked with Dr. E. ~c. Cocke', Easley. Dr. Griffin and Professor c.iliah·man of a similar faculty Aycock are ex-officio members by group, in formulating the plan. virtue of their positio)ls in the The quiz-free week was decided organization and Dr. J. _Glenn on rather than a proposed read­B.lackburn, church pastor, Is ad- ing day which would have preced-visor to the group. I ed the examination period.

Annual Magnolia Festtv(ll Set For Week Begirtning·! April 30

By MARY ELISE BRIDGER

The M·agnolia Festival will be held April 30-May '6 it was and­mmnced today by Prof. Thane Mc­Donald, chairman -of the festival committee. Other members of this year's committee are Prof. A. L. Aycock, Miss Marjorie Crisp, Dean Lois Johnson and Prof. Clyde Mc­Elroy.

The :f:estival v.ill begin with a Shakespearean play presented by the lCallege Theater -on Monday and Tuesday nights, under Prof. Mc­Elroy's direction.

An -al"t e~hibit is scheduled for Wednesday afternoon under Prof. Aycock's supervision. The exhibit will display items done by s-tudents faculty and interested townspeople.

Friday night .the Opera Work­shop Group under the direction of

Dr. 10lifford Bair will present the ope~a "Cosi fan Tutti" (•translated: "So Do They All"). The presenta­tion -of the opera will commemor­ate the 200th anniversary of Moz­art's -birth. . The ·Coron,ation program will Eonor the Queen and her court Saturday afternoon. This year's pr-ogram will be a review of the p~ograms of the l~st eight ~·ears ·wtth one dance bemg taken from each year. Jo Anne Powell Craw­f<,rd is the general chairman and Patsy Wilhelm is working with •the dance committee. All past queens and their courts will be in­vited.

A concert by the band and glee club in the chapel ·at 4 p. m. Sun­day and a progt·am in the church at 7:45 p. m. -..viJJ cot!t:lude the fes­th·al Qn Sunday.

Page 2: I ': lark - Wake Forest University...ga t M D . es. c ame I urge d th a a t " 111 Citu.rch dents w·u home of · many th Coller,:-e ld stu- independent men interested in ' I remam

'•.

:----By }JILDA MAULDEN----------

(!)lb · 49olb anrb Jilack • • \Vake Forest Colle~e • •

Charles Newman Editor

Don Craver - Bub Jeffords Co-Business Manager:~

}londay, ~larch 12, 1956 ~~~~~~~~~~~-~

On Good .Sportsmanship Wake Forest may be on the way to proving to the At­

lantic Coast Conference, the nation and itself, that it can show good sportsmanship.

After riots, demonstrations, brawls, booing and referee-' baiting all year long, the school as a whole demonstrated Wednesday morning that good sportsmanship can be ~, good thing after alL

After the demonstration in December;-- the fi·ght last month and the lack of good sportsmanship_ all year, re­porters and sports columnists over the state and the con­ference area undertook to tear Wake Forest apart bit by bit. But after Wednesday's chapel :program, all the writers changed their tune. .

North Carolina State College beat Wake Forest in the final game of the Conference tournament. No one can deny that the Deacons were soundly overrun. But just because Wake Forest lost in the final round doesn't mean that a schobl has to cry excuses the rest of the year.

~. Magnolia. Leaves~ In an Education class the pro- tumes. The Phi Delts looked neat

fessor was explaining the princi-. in bow ties and pockets full of raw ples of good teaching. eggs. The Kappa. Sig "Viking

"You must teach each student Princes and Mouseketeers'' came that although some duties in life·; out with space helmets and pad-_ aren't 'Pleasant, they might be for dies to match.

. the best. All of us

you."

to do things we: . don't like: Take for exam­-ole castor oil; When you were little c h i 1 d r e n you didn't want to taste it, but it

really the thing ·for

· "But profes-sor," ·exclaimed one student, "that example presents only a means t~ an end!"

Lacerated Latin: Hie hilec hoc-Who's be_en drink-

ing? . Sic est ut dixi-1 was sick down

south

The following is a true analysis of a coed': •. ' ;

If she's a :freshman she wants to marry a football player • . • • She ·thinks things learned in col-. lege leave one intelligent . . . she tells her . mother everything ..

If she's a S!Jphomore she wants to marry a movie star . . • she think~-· .~hinfis. learned· in college leave one fairly intelligent ..• sh.e tells her 1:09mtnatel everything. r •.

If she's a. junior she wants· to marry a capitalist ... she thinks things learned in college leaves one intelligent enough . . . · she tel~s her diary everything.

if • she's a senior she wants to marry a man . ; . she thinks things learned in college leave one . . . she doesn't tell a darn thing.

. ·' . ...., '•, ~

. "· . ' .... i :..

' :-.·.' bv: Oick , Bibler LITTLE MAN. ON CAMPUS

' '

, . I

., . '·.

.. · ',

. New.- Ce1rte't~rjl .: · . . \ . . . . . . . :·.

·Plot Planned.·,:: ~... ~ ...

For Seminary . • I .

(Co~tinu,e~ :from.:page 1). the meni:bers· of the·· Seminary·' faculty couid ·.really· ·call Wak1',~ •· Porest their hometown; «Like moet · · anybody," .he. cantinueCl; "they want· : to .'be buri~d . Wibh _their frien_ds.'~ , The new cemetery- .proVided : f'~:· . this, he went on; · •· . .

Other, . Seminoary: .. officials · ·said .... tba.t "the way will ·b~- open" f?r

. n'egotiations with .the town of W~ke·: ·. 'l"orest-"if · 'they w~t- it" ...:..:for·· · land adjoining the SeminarY ])lot for .a,new town cie:nietery. · ' ·

A · Ma.Tine COrps-surplus 15ul1..; 1!ozer-oriiinaUy cOsting approx­imately $20,000, and whic:h':oos-t the · Semi~ry $200.- phis: .the OOS't ·of transporting it from ~mp Lejune ' an<J.a :few minor·repairs-is ·beinft·, ~.· used to cleat' <the land for ·.the' cern- .;r etery.

State coach Everett Case called the program "the fin­est gesture that has happened to a team of mine since

Lax no scripta-Too lazy to write Victoria gaudet--Victoria has it

Overheard in Bob's College Inn':

va:;. juni~r;· has been n~mi!l3~ · music . cli.airman. . Jim. Powell, G1>eensboro sopbo~re1 ·is a Candi'".

o .. ,Ln~.,·-RfMEMB£UsAoll:iWe'eD HAVEAJEST"TOPA"L" <W.te · br .<treasurer: ;Bill Perry; ----------------::_,....:.·~· -'-' ___ ___;_ __ .....;. ___ RidgecreSt sop'OOmore,: ·is in ·the I've been at 'State." Case underrated the program. It was It has be~n reported that last

the best thing that has happened to both schools in many week there was a sign in the col-years. lege book store which :read:

First, it ·gave Wake Forest a head start on receiving the "Professor Smiley did NOT set ACC sportsmanship trophy that has been only recently fire to his mother-in-law. Who-established. If the College were to win that a~ard, it ever said he did is crazy!" ' would be of more value than the trophies Wake Forest's I · -- -.. · athletic teams have almost won all ye-ar. It would show G:eek activities last w~ek at that the Wake Forest family can show only ,the best of lhl:Vldson <!allege were m full behavior towards other teams in the area. swmg. Thmgs were c_entered

Of course, the bh:rgest-the winners'-trophies are awreoeuknd GreHekl Wweek,k Brrhmsttone · d B W k F t d ... h" , or e p ee , w a ever

DICe to have ~roun . ut a e _orefil nee s no_ .,rop Ies name of the long hellacious time to show that It has the best athletic. teams. That Is a well- is appropriate es'~ablished fact as is shown b:v the nickname "The Giant Various. dut~es were plann€<1 b Kil_lers" that has been placed on the school by sports fraternities for the pledges t~ wnters. . , . perform. Out ,of their homey pig

Second, the p;ogram showed tha~ \Vake_ Forest IS way troughs· the PiKA "quadrapeds" ahead of other Conference schools. m that 1t demonstrated found nourishment for the week's that it can lose the big game and still shake hands and wcrk. The KA ;md Beta pledges give a pat on the back to the victors. lugged large bags · of bricks

Athletic Director Bill Gibson is to be congratulated for around the campus.

Coed: "Is your roommate 'bash­ful or is he just 'real cool'?"

Boy: "Listen, kid, he's so frigid he doesn't even shave in the morn~ inc;; he _iust chips the icicles off his jaws."

The .following notice .was posted. on Johnson Dorm's bulletin hoard Th~rsday: ·

Interested in spending an eve­ning with an entertaining male? Dark and handsome, tall ·for his age, possesses a good nature, will­ing to listen 'to your tales or your voice practice session. Usually goes to sleep about 9 P. M., so yot:'re f1·ee to study. If you find this descriDtion interesting, his parents will be 'delighted for you to call 445-7 anytime today.

Mrs. Percival P,erry

WF Debaters runnJng for the of:fice o~ liLSTEN' dudrman. _ 13· BSU Election.S

In Emorv Meet· . Sl~ted For Tonight Elections will .. be lield . .in · the

old Eu h:all at 6:45 this evening; Nominations may be made firom "'

( Contill'Ued from page 1) and dropped ' decisions to Kent State University, the University of Pittsburg and the University of Duquesne.

The negative twosome d~feated Geneva dollege and St. Vincent College and lost to ·Penn · State, Denison University and Rutgers University.

Miss 'Thomas 2nd

· (Continued from page 1)' offi-ce of dev-otional vice president. David Hirano, Honolulu, Hawaii, junior, is a candid!a.te for vesper ehaimnan, and Jo Ann King, MonkS Ctrn:er, S. c., }rmior, hils been nominated .as secretary.

Phillip Ann Gardner, Roanoke,

the floor. · • Me.mbers of the n~minating ~-o~- ·.

mittee are Sarah Riec'ke, chaii-man, Freeman, Jeff Roberts, Jane Ed.­wards, Nan Long, Gary •j:;opeland, Boib Overstreet, Jim Good, Barbara · Ba.rr, Dick 'Thro:rilton . anrl Bill Whedbee.·

ui.utkor of "Barefoot Boy. With Cheek,'~ etc.)

arranging the program. By such effo1·ts in the future he Many plf!dges wore unique cos· can help lead the attitude that leads the rest of the Con- ---------'-----------------

In the after-dimler speaking contest Miss Thomas was awarded the se~ond-place medal. Fourteen contestants .were entered in the contest. HOW TO BE A THUMPING BIG SUCCESS

ON CAMPUS ference schools. Letters To Editor But Old Gold hopes that the fine display of sport~man-

ship that was shown here Wednesday is contagious. AI- Rea· der Blas.ts Play though the other schools in the, area may not duplicate . the program of Wednesday, t11ey can catch the spirit of

Other schools represented in the tournament ware Marshall Col· lege, Marietta· College, Morris­Harvey College, . Fairmont. S.tate College, Conceord, William and Mary, Georgetown, B1·idgewater, the University of Richmond and the University of Maryland.

While up in the attic last week hiding from a bill collector I came across a letter, yellow now with age, that dear old Dad had sent me when I was a freshman. I read the letter again and recalled, with many a sigh and not a few tears,' what an inspira­tion it had been to me b.ack in my freshman days. I reproduce it .

it. If every school took up and continued the fine attitude To the Editor: shown here. ACC Commissioner Jim Weaver will have his hands full when it comes time to give out the awards for sportsmanship.

But that would be one task 01d Gold would like to see him have.

Politics And Spring Politics once again raises its ugly head to take over

campus ideas, conversation, and deeds. It won't be long now until the campus is covered with signs, posters, loud­speakers and loud speakers.

Politics on the Wake Forest campus always create

Please withhold my name from publication.

I think that the College Theater should not present such plays as "Another Part 'of the Forest." That play should not be present­ed anywhl!re.

The language used in the play was vulgar. But ·what was worse they· had some very evil ideas. Let me cite one example. Mrs. Hubbard was crazy, but she ap-~ . .

pea red to be very religious. You can interpret that to mean that religion is only for the crazy peo­ple.· I think the author was trying to make fun of religion.

This college is suppose to be a Baptist college, and the plays that it should present are those that lack vile languag-e and do not fill the audience with evil thoughts. I would be very happy if you printed this letter for your read­ers.

Name Withheld As Requested

According to Prof. Shi~ley, there are stili several vacancies on the team. Interested students may contact Shirley or attend. the team's practice sessions each Mon- 1

day, Wednesday and Friday at 3:30 on the third floo:r of the Alumni·-Building.

FOREST THEATRE

· below in the hope that it may light your way as it did mine.

"Dear Son, (Dad ·always called ine Son. This was short for Sonnenberg, which was originally my first name. I later traded it with a man named Max. He threw in two outfielders and a left­handed pitcher •.. But I digress.)

"Dear Son, (Dad wrote) . . "I suppose you are finding college very big and bewildering,

1 and maybe a little frightening too. Well, it need not be·that way if you will follow a few simple rules.

. havoc. It pits brother a·gainst brother, roommate against roommate. It splits life-long friendships and makes others. It gives the building and grounds men head and back aches.

But politics has one good aspect. It heralds the coming of spring. Through all the mud-slingirrg spring blossoms out. Between the banners and placards spring creeps through.

Thanks Old Gold And Black For Interest• In Government

~ Week Of March 12, 1956,

Shows-Man.- Fri. 3:15, 7:00, 9:00 Saturday-Continuous 1 - 11 Sunday-2:00, 3:45, 9:00

"First of all, if you have any problems, take them to your teachers. They want to help you. That's what they are there for. Perhaps they do seem rather aloof and f~rbidding, but that is only because they are so busy. You will find your teachers warm as toast and friendly a·s pups if you will call on them at an hour when they are not overly busy. Four a.m., for instance ..

"Second, learn to budget your time. What with classes, activi­ties, studying, and social. life all competing for your time, it is easy to fall into sloppy habits. You must set up· a rigid schedule and stick to it. Remember, there· are only 24 hours· in a day. Three pf these hours are spent in class. ~or every hour in class, you must-, of course, spend two hours studying. So there go six more hours. Then, as everyone knows, for every hour of study­ing, you must spend two hours sleeping. That accounts'for an-

To the Editor:

Though politics brings all of its troubles and problems, it's all worth it just to have spring and· warm. sunny days and cotton clothes and swimsuits and sun-bathing and convertables ... politics, and close behind it-sprin·g.­are at hand.

I would like to thank the staff of Old Gold and Black for their interest in student government and the excellent coverage they have given Legislature and Honor Council. Only by exposing the wol"k of these two bodies of ju­dicial and legislative ~overnment can the student body become :more fu1Iy aware of the responsibilities placed on these two organizations.

Cri.tic Praises Linda ln. College Theater's

Willard ~Forest'

The work of studen.t govern-

Group Will Plan Reynolda Church

By DO'ITIE BRADDOCK Except for the redeeming ·per­

formance of Und.a, Wi1Iard as Lovinia Hubbard in last week's College Theater production of "Another Part cf the Forest," anyone looking for good drama woul-d have been disappointed.

Miss Willard did an exceptional job in a role that definitely called for a sensitive interpretation. Her timing w~s near perfect in pick­ing up cues and executing entran­ces ·and exits. In fact, one might have gotten" the impression that she covered up the fluffs of other cast members several times.

The character of Lovinia Hub­bard should have been the stabi­lizing influence in the play, but she failed to offer any contrast to the other unb:l.lanced members of the Hubbard :family. This, however, was not the fault of Miss. Willard; the playwright, Lillian Hellman, is to blame.

Not Convincing In attempting to portray South­

ern life in the days following the Civil War, she produced some­thing less than a convincing pres­entation of the conflict between the nouveaux riches and the old aristocracy.

The result was nothing more than a poor man's "Gone with the Wind." ·

Even some of the play's charac­ters were obviously modeled after Margaret Mitchell's. John Bag­try's speech to Regina Hubbard in their first encounter on the stage contained some of the same words spoken by Ashley Wilkes in the library scene with Scarlet 0'.· IIara at the Twelve Oaks Barbe'­cue.

Two other actors who along with Miss Willard somewhat overcame the flaws in their roles were Jim Gross and Tommy

Frank. Gross, playing the father (Marcus Hubbard), was some­what miscast in terms of voice and ~anner but handled his role with finesse if not with emotion.

Hubbard Brother

(Continued from page 1) church ani the college.

The org.anizational meeting ol Frank, expanding his acl:ivities the new church will be rut 7 :l30

to the stage for the first time p. m., Thursday, in the Wake For­here, handled the part of the older est Baptist ,Church. All ·p-erso!lS sc.n (Benjamin) well, capitalizing interested in helping to form tl:!> on a mature appearance and voice. church wiiJ .attend. Walton Guthrie "deeply and sin-cerely" expounded on his troubles The meeting will includ:e the as the younger brother, Oscar. CI)Dvening of a cormcil · of minis-

ters from this area ·and <tne Wins-Mary Arm Satterwhite was ade- ton-Salem area which will ._,.ive

quate as the conniving sister Re- S2Jtction to the forma.tion of "the ?'ina, a~d. Dinah Gaddis, except new church. m a dtfftcult drunk scene was I "] convincing as a "scal·let lady'." t WI I also include the service

of organization in w:hich thosa Carel Jennette, though an al- who will constitute •the church wt;l

·most Yankee from Maryland did pr£sent .themselves with their the best job with the Southern chur-ch letters .and' will vote on a accen~a~d also combined deftly churc·h c<}iwenant ~nod sta,tementl the t_Jml~hty of the destitute Bag- of purpose prepar6d by tile com­try ram1ly and her :role's special mHtee of seven. charactistic of silliness. Fo-llowing the service of organi-

Ray Whitley, playing another zation, .a business :meeting will Bagtt·y, appeared ill at ease as a be held, in which a consti.tut1on romantic and left some wishing v;ill •be adopted:, a name for th he and Gross had exchanged :roles. church will be selected, and a. pas-

Jane Haywood, as a Negro ser- tor .may be ca1led. vant woman, supported Miss Wil- The trustees of t.he College have lard admirably, but the other bit agreed to assume for the first players added nothing to the ef- y~r the salary of the pastor ·and :feet. his expenses :for · hl)using and

Director Clyde McElroy, who secretary. · .. sometimes had to control the act- The new church will :meet in ion of as many as eight characters W.ait Chapel o;.· the new campus. on-stage at once, substituted Any suggeSibions. for the name of gracefui movement for what the new .church shoul<' be brought might easily have been awkward- to the organh.a-tio1 .a1. meeting ness. The res'ult was often cine- March 15. mascopic variance of the center -------------­of interest.

The stage crew, upholding a college theater tradition of good sets, worked overtime on its post­bellum Alabama mansion. Lead­ing off the main area were two deep openings representing the

hall and dining ro..>.n. These ex­tras, though they tended to TOb th& audience of upstage speeches, added authenticity to the bouse.

The pity was t;'lat Miss Hellman had filled that house with unau­thentic persons.

ment 'is important and will be.: come even more so in the move to Winston-Salem. It is' also import­ant that the student body should be infbrmed on the progress their legislature and honor · council is doing To this eitent, I must say that Old Gold and Black is doing a wonderful job. Thank you for your cooperation and eagerness to see Student Government in act-ion.

Vern Pike, sophomore Student ~egislature

Old Gold and Black

Managing Editor .... Lloyd Preslar Associate Editor .... Bill Connelly Assistant Editor .... Carter Hedrick Circulation Mgr ...... ~-- Mary Ann

Hampton Photographer ............ Irvin Grigg

Editorial Staff: P. C. Barwick, Lloyd Baucom, Mary Elise Bridger, John Earle, Marsha Greenshields, David Hughes, Barbara Jackson, Wesley Keith, Hilda Maulden, Hannah Miller, Peslie Rucker, John Shields, Notie Vay White Patsy Wilhelm. • '

Business Staff: Bob Goerlich, Dar­lene Her-man, Dan Lovelace, Joanne McMillan, Tommy. Pappen­dick, Billy Powell, Mary Smith­wick, Sue Weathers~ .Tolm Wag­ster, Bobby Worlrolan.

Circulation Staff: Jo Butler,- 1\iil­dred Edwards, Margaret Feeney, Gloria Flippin, Lib Hamrick, Bar­bara Hill, Alliene Hinkle, Sybil Hinkle,· Harriet Jane Lewis, Louise Mcllwain, John Mauney, Vann Mitchell, Janet. Parker, ·Marietta Perry, Carol Stroud.

Monday Tam Ewell & Sheree North

.-in­"LIEUT~NANT WORE SKIRTS"

\

Tuesday & Wednesday Errol Flynn & Joanne Dru

-in-"THE WARRIORS"

Thursday & Friday: Robert Taylor & Debra Paget

-in-"TBE LAST BUNT''

Saturday Mickey Rooney

-in-"TWINKLE IN GOD'S EYE" '

-also--Richard> Denning

-in-"CREA TURE WITH THE ATOM

BRAIN"

Sunday Jack Palance & Shelley Winters

-in-"1 DIED A THOUSAND TIMES"

COLLEGIATE THEATRE. Week Of March 12, 1956

Monday Shows 3:15 - 7:00 - 9:00

Kathryn Hepburn & Rossano Brazzi -in­

"SUMMERTIME"

Founded Jan. 15. 1916J and i publlshe~ each Monday during the school year ·ex- Tues. Through Sat.. . cept during examination and holiday Frank sma· tra & Eleanor Par'·er periods as directed by the Wake Forest "" Publi<!atlons Board.

Member of the AsSOC!Iated CoUegJate Pr.ess. Represented for national adver- , tlslng by National AdvertiSing Service, lnc. Su}!scrfption rate-$2.50 per year.

-..... -in-. "MAN WITH THE GOLDEN

. ARM"

Entered as second class matter January' · · 22. 1916, and re-entered APril s. 1943, at· S'!1nday-8hmvs 2:00 - 3:45 - 9:00 tbe post om.,e at Wake Forest, Nnrth J'ohn Irelaud & Marla English

Offices In The Student Center Telephone 4056 P. 0. Box 551

Carolina, under the act of. :Mareh a. ls'19. . • -Jn-

"HELL'S HORIZON"· • 0

' other twelve hours. Then there are meals-two hours each for breakfast and lunch, three hours for dinner: Never forget, Son­nenberg, you must ch~w each mouthful 288 times. You show me a backward student, and I'll show you,.a IIJiln who· bolts his food. ·

"But college is more than just sleeping, eating, and studying-. There are also many interesting and broadening activitieS, and you would be cheating yourself if yoa neglected them. you'll want to give at least an hour a day to the' campus newspaper a!_ld yearbook, and, of course, another hour each to the dramatic and music elul:js. And let's say a total of three hours daily to the stamp club, the foreign affairs club, and the debating society. Then, of course, a couple of hours for fencing and bird-walking, · a couple more for square dancing and basket weaving,and one . cr two for cribbage and ice-sculpturin·g. ·

'Winally, we.come to the most Important part of each day-what I call 'The Quiet Time.' This is a period in which you renew yourself-just relai and think green thoughts a-nd smoke Philip M<;~rris Cigarettes. · . . ·

~~~c<"_,.?, ~o.:v-v "''~ '

.. . ~~ .. ~ "Why Philip Morris? becaus·e they .are the natural comple­

ment to an active life; they are gentle, they are benign, they are tranquil, they are a treat to the tired, a boon,to the spent, a haven to the storm-t95sed •.. Tha.ff.~ why. , · .

"Well, Sonnenb~rg, I gueSs that's !!-bout-aU • .Your mother sends h~r love. She has jusf·finished putting up rather a large batch

. . of. pickles-in fact, 350,000 jars. I told her that with you away at school, we would not need so many, but lovable old Mother is such a creature. of habit that though I hit her quite hard several times, she insisted on going ahe,a.d. ·

Your ever lovin' Dad."

Cllu Sbulmaa. lD:st

:4a&>l~e to ire&hmerr. u not die baineu of the maker& o/ Philip Morris, &poruor• of •hh eolumn. But eigarerte& lor /reihmen h. Al&o cicarette• /or uppercla&&merr., gradlUIIe &ludent&, proj&, deaM, mad .er>~Prybodr el&e ..,lao enioJ"• a pntle, modem smoke. We mean Philip

. Morrill, o/ eorri&l

Page 3: I ': lark - Wake Forest University...ga t M D . es. c ame I urge d th a a t " 111 Citu.rch dents w·u home of · many th Coller,:-e ld stu- independent men interested in ' I remam

. ;

. •'

'•

~ry I 1) mmar:v· ·

Wake··· ke moet.· .ey want·: 'riends."

--:

:ted·' xa:r,~ · · . · r , . .

Is· said_., ~n" for. ~f wak:e> it" ..:.:.for: iy ·})lot·

s huu.· approoJt·· oos-t the· OOS't ·of' Lejune

is -~big'·. _ · b.e' eem-

tnin.atea . Po wen, ~ Candl:".

Perry; in 'the

..:LSTEN'

-in· the !vening. e :fa:om.

tg ~-OJl!- . aihnan, ne 'Ed-1peland, •. ~ar.ba:ra

:d BiH

nan

ss

l;or I I had and

Jira­'ce it. te.

; for a.ded left-

:ing, that

rour for. 1t is arm lOUr

tivi­it is dule day. lass, 1 six ldy-ai:t­for ~on­b.ow IO}tS

ing. and )u'll and and the ety. ing,. one.

·bat 1ew ilip

- f •

lle­tey :, a

tds ;ch, ·ay ter 1rd

ID58

rip r.o nd [ip

Itsi

.t!mplePhone Se~ice .. - ' t '

Planned !f'or R~yf!:olda By ROM WEATHERMAN capable of 8erving a, sr.1all tc>wn. ('Ihis is a ·~pri~t 'from tke . 300 Telephones 1 ·

-:Winriton-S&lem . Journal The Initially, about 300 tl'lt>phonc:; author,· who now is on the staff will be connect,ed ~o tr.t" system, of the Journal, is a. graduate of but the equ:iplnen.t ~ould serve Wilke Forest·&nd a former staff many .more. Alld., there is s~a ·memt»er of Old Gold aBd Blae~ fo-r expansion o.f both 3Witchboa.Tds Ed.). . ,... and dialing· ~uipment. ;

," ' . ~LD GOLD AND BLACK

Survey. Liata !$49

Many WF Grads-Teach Approximately 549 graduates of beTs <Yf the State Board o.f Edu.­

Wakl! .. Forest College are now con- c~Jotion a-ttended Wake Forest. nected with the public school sys-tem ·in North Carollna, according to a survey recently completed by Prof: .Jasper. -L. Memory of the Edu«<&tion Depa~mept.

or'the state'a 100 ccunty'school .st·perlntendents; 20 are g:mdu·

ROTC Awards Go To Cadets

·PAGE TIIREE

Movmg to Winston • Salem? Thea see :J • .A. YOST. Real~. We have approximately 150 homes to moose. from.

Time w.as ' w:hen many Wake . In addition to thiS system;· there Fcreat College studentS had to will be about 1>5 ~Separate . pay leave the campuS to find a ~le- 8 t a t i 0 n s strategically loca.ted phone. around -the campuS. Some 35 · of

ate-5 ·o! the College~ and *nme ,Sup- Scabbard and ·Blade . Mi:litary ·~ert:D.tendents ·of city school systems S o e i e t Y presented Outstanding are w&ke Forest men. -· · Milita.ry Cadet& Awards to three·------------­.The survey further revealed that men at ROTC drill period Marchi r------------""""' 133 ·oi 700 act:rediteci IWh'ite high 6 these w.ill be in booths. ·

.Although conditions were later C. D. Ourlin, supervisor of :improved, there . j_ u s t weren't tmner service fo.r · -the · Southern

· enough .. telephones· to go :around Bell Telepbone · and·' Telegraph ., ,dur.ing -the year8 immediately ft'l- Company here, and Thomas B..

Sowing W-orld ..Wa:r II.· T. . · . · ;.--Few: of -the administrative officPo lsdale, customer· service engineer, .. . saRI tha.t it t;Ook about nine ;months .. hail ·telephones .and those that did to engineer and .install the· sy8Wm.

were,.usually·closed at ni,jht. Pay ..They sa.id·.~e ......_.,..nt' one~-i. Bts.ti<m.s were located in girl's .. --- """

1 d. , • .. ;.: · h"ch · . • tion dia-l sw.itehbo&rd 'is so equip· ornu .... nes w ,1 were ~naccessJ· ped, tb.at it can . be expaooed -:to

,, bie . to men after certam hours.· 'two or 1oilNe ·position 'in th ·f _ Men's dorms were. phoneless. · · ture S... e u

Many a.lwnni w.ill reel.l.l- how · rthey.as students ·had to walk down- Inter-Campus Service tOwn to' Holden's Drui St~re . to They ex¢ained that the system make a long 'distance call. All will :Pro.vide in~r-eampus 'coon. Often as not, -there WM a waiting munication.s in addition to outside line ,there. telephone c»ntacl.

Often, .A Delay This will be accomplished by a

school 'prin~pala in-;. the state are Beverly Barge, Durham senior graduates of the College and ·in and commander of the regiment·

• addition 348 are servmg as high Joe L. McC~llough, Durham .fun: ~hool. teachers.. ' - ', ior, and··Warren ElliS, Lumberton -~ash 9ounty high scllola. em-· sophDJnore, r~ved medals' .for

ploy.-th_e l&J:gest-'nUJF~ ,of,· Wake. all~ 'profic.iericy· _m ROTC · Fore&t~ad!! with 24, wtille- Frank- .during .the- sprfn8: ·'semester_ of . lin county 'system l1aS 22. H&r· 1954 ..... ·· · • ... ·.. · >,-

nett County lista 2Q; Johnston, l8; · ~ are based. ~ ~~ Waite. -17; 'ColuJJt'tms, 16; Cleve- ing cl~ ,and drill field per. land; 1~;' Gull~rd, 14: Granville. forniance.. and pa.rticlpa.tian ·tn 13;.;RoCkinghami 13; .~!ax, 12; extm-currieular" ROTC activities.

----'~-_:_ __ ....:__~ ______ ....;:; ________ .:..._1M-eeklenburg, '1; Wa:vne, ·11; and An award is made tO a: mem.bei-

Ro_cky- Moun_ t Ccise_ --Plaintill!s =~::::;~~ ~t!;~~ o;f:e:a:eh::cl~:;; .. a-· y;;GO;If;;:A;t::::::.:; r:JJ ..-: of Public · ID.stniction Blld two

Seek To Prevent New Trail Public Instruction and two meni- ~~~~~ !~LS Paren-ts wantipg to reach stu- 'three-digit dffal, system fo_r' on·

dents ·bY "'telephone sc:mietime3 'had campus calls. Outside - numbers P . . · ~ubre·.o; getting calLs through. w1ll ,be reaciJed by .dialling "9" and -laintiffs in the North Rocky and ; dootrinea" of the B3.ptist 'ROTC Candidates G:reen Fees - Week Days ·--· .75

Sat., Sun., Holidays -·---·- $1.50 . There Wa,s often a delay in getting then th~ numi):>er. . . Mount Baptist Church ease have faath and that the chureh t>rope1.-ty, . . - . .

,tlte students .to, the tlepnon~. . _ _ Inc~ng _calls- Wlll go througrh filed an·_answ~ in Nash .Superi_or valued ~t s~me $250,000, ~hould go Will Take Exam , · B t · tlf- · · t i · h .. ' diff' - Tf·es· the -swrtchOOard,- with th€, ca.llera Court to. a mobon for li' new tnal t? a .mmonty group w.h1ch com-

We Rent- Clubs

MUMS .AND

CORSAGES for all··

~casiona

BEDDINGFIEUf FLORAL SHOP

Phone 246-1

·uu be es~ ~ ep hone th Jc~le1ge dialing a single number and then by ·the• defendants· in the m~re t'.an prised the true congrega.tiol'. His An· aptitude test requiTed of a.ll Wl . ~tso v w en e tcor:·· asking the opera' tor for the party two-year-old church fight. The decisjon, with minor modifications, · · · · · occuptes I new campus· a ..-..ey- . . - ked h h ,_ th S rJSmg JUmors wishing to enroll-in 11

Ida - Arter•hours :numbers will 1>e answer,. In essence, as that t e was up eld ·vY e tate Suprem3 the advanced Milta;ry Science pro-" EAST, SOUTH, WEST, or NORTH

You Can't Find Better Service 0st .d t . d f ult .11 listed fw ./calls made after the motion be disinissed. Court. .,.,.am will be given totnorr~· "·-· · u en s an ac y w1. never .' . .,. vyy ,......_

.be ~-ore than a few· srep:! from a o:reraltor g;>es off ~uty. . -Defendants in the -action, iu- The church fight_began Aug. 9, ing the regular ROTC drill per-telephone and the contact it pro- The engmeers sa1d phone:' m c;uding the church's fonner pastor, 1!~53, when the congregation voted, iod, 12:30-_2:30· p. m. · vides with home and practieail:1 the ho;mes of ~he colle~e prestden~ th~ Rev. Samuel H. W. Johnston, 241-144, to wibhdraw from the Candidates for the advanced any place in the world. and VIce presi~ents Wlll ~probably who now is pastor of the Ind'i"pell- Stote and -Sou.thern Baptist Clln- oow·se must r~eive a satisfac-

Western Electric Company work- be con_n_ected Wlth the _sWltchboard dent Baptist IChUl'Ch in Rocky venticms .. The .minority group tory mark on- this test to be eli­men are pu:tting the finishing to fac1htate ealls commg to them Mcunt, are seeking. to re-open the broought court action 'to ret.l{n 1 he gible for the last two years of rtm<ches on the installatto:i of an when bh!ey are off campus. case on the basis of alleged new church property and won bhe c::.se. ROTC iiJStruction. elaborate telephone system which Calls For Students evidence discovered since the ear- The -majority faction also made Any students not currently en-will tie the whole can1pns to -one A.!Tangemen:ts: will be ~de, lier trial and court decision in charges against Wake Forest Col- Toled in the basic ROTC coUTSe, switchboard. tltey sa.id, to ih.ave incoming calls favor of the plaintif-fs. lege, -indicating that the Sc'lO<)I but -who have completed the pre-

'11he board and dial equipment for s-tudents ehanneledi through The evidence claimed to have had deviated from true Baptist 1~quisites for the advanced pr-o-.at·e l'OCated in the n-ll'rt'twe5t winl! :pay stations located in the dol"lllli- been -discovered -by the defendants principles. College President Har- gram and desire to enroll next o[ Reynold~ Hall, the student-ad::. •tories. is a constitution alleged-ly adopted old w~· Tribble and several mem- fall may contact Lt. Col. W. M. minfstra.tiv-e center. The ·room is Moot such calls will probab:y be by the chUTCh around 1905. Ac- hers of the student body ie«~ified Peyton for further information the heart of a telephon! systemfmade at p.ight, they explained, cc.rding to the m<>tion. for a new in the or.igina:l trial. concerning the testing.

when the_. operator is off duty. trial, the constitution comprises In their Nov. 12 mo-tio.n for R

· This will :require students to--pro- new evidence whch would/reverse new trial, Johnston and his group .stituiion and bylaW'S which could vide relatives and friendls with t.h.e the Qutcome of the ca.se. c.t:.im that the newly discovere~l po.sgibly ·have been recognized by -number 01! the pay station nearest In answering the motion, the ccnstitution provides a new basis .the church or that mght be recog-their d-ormitory -room. plaintiffs· assert that the defen- for detennining whether t n e n!zed by Missionary Baptist

Cables serving the system and I dan:ts failed to }>Tovide "any .state-- elmr~h violated the governing r11- ChU'rehes ... " all feeder line have .been plact!d mE:'nts of witnesses, docume!lts ur strument and that "customs, prae- -------------­uv£.erground. in the same manner other evidlence which might show tices, usages and doctrines" of as .power lines. N-o overhead wir- that th_e alleged newly discovered thE Baptist :faith have no beaTing ing will be strung on the campus. evidence on another trial would on the issue in view of the alleged

The switchboard and dialing produce a different result or church constitution. equipment was ins:taHed unlhlr the might be the means of cau.'lhg The plaintiffs .aso;-ert in Hl.tlir direction of J. G. Newsom, ·West- the rig.ht to prevail .. :• answer, :filed recently at Nash-ern E\l-ectric supervisor. The tele- No copy of the constitution and ville, th~t trial of the church case ph-one receivers will be iit.stailed no names of witnesses to the was "not cortdueted: solely UPO!l the in April and May. alleged new evidence were fur- the-on' that there was no written

Yardley After Shaving Lot,ion · tops off any shave, electric or _lather f.

• soothes, refreshes the skin

• helps heal razor nicks

• c;ounteracts dryness

• gives brisk, masculine, non-lingering scent

Starts you off with your best faee forward/ At your campus store, $1.10 and $1.50, plus tax

Yardley products for America are created in England and finished in the U.S.A. from tile original Eng!lsll formulae, combinine imported and domestic in2redienb. Yard lev of London. Inc •• 620 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.

nished -the plaintiffs, the an~.we~· constitution or bylaws to govern •stated. · ~ •the chll!rCh, but upon the theory

The Superior Court jud~~ ruled that had there been a ~onstit.utlon b his decision that Johnst"n anj and bylaws; the defe!l:hn:s e<>uid hi~ followers had departed from nc;t have cCJnducted tilemse!ves as the "customs, practice3, usat;e:; tl ey did. and conform co any ro'l·

When the songs are light· - And the fire, s bright

For real delight-have a CAMEL!

h,-tha~ .· pure pleatute!

,• - '•

lfs a psychological fad: Pleasurenelps your disposition.

If you're a smoker, rel!lember

-more people get more pure pleasure from Camels

than from any other cigarette!

No other cigareHe is· so rich-tasting, yet so 111ild!

MEET ME .AT

·s H

0

0 H s

R

s Y'

T

T Y'

s

Underpass Service Station PATRONIZE OG&B ADVERTISERS

EAT MORE PAY LESS!

AT THE

College Cafeteria

For Style, .Quality, and Value . . . Shop The ---

8. & 5 .• DEPARTMENT STORE, INC. · Wake Forest, North Carolina

Page 4: I ': lark - Wake Forest University...ga t M D . es. c ame I urge d th a a t " 111 Citu.rch dents w·u home of · many th Coller,:-e ld stu- independent men interested in ' I remam

PAGE FOUR·

Veacs Who Are Greeks 'LITTLE' MAN ON CAMPUS :::

By CARTER HEDRICK

WFDD Radio Station Log MONDAY

7:00 a. m.-Alarm Clock Club 6:00 p. m.-Jim Andrews Classi-

cal Hour 7·0{}-News 7 :15-Transcription 7:3(}~\fusic from His Master's

Voice 8:00-Deacons' Wax-works 9:00-Sports News 9:15-BSU Hour 9 :30-Telequest

10:00-Late Date with Jack Wright 1 :00--Sign off

TUESDAY 7:00 a. m.-Morning Sh()iw 8:00 p. m.-Jim Andrews Classi-

,cal Hour 7:00-News 7:15-Music's No Mys-tery 7:30-Hillbilly Jamboree 8:00-Deacons' Wax-works 9:00-S:ports News , 9:15~BSU Hour 9:30-Telequest

10:00-La.te Date with Vern Pihe 1:00-Sign off

WEDNESDAY 7:00 a. m.-Morning Show 6:00 p. m.-Jim Andrews Classi-

cal Hour 7:00-News 7 :15-Transcription 7 :30---<Music from His Master's

Voice 8:00-Deacons' Waxworks 9:00-Sports News 9 :15-BSU Hour 9 :30--Telequest

1(1:00-Late Date with Bill Rich­ardson

1:00-.Sign off THURSDAY

7:00 a. m.-1\iorning Show 6:00 p. m.-Jim Andrews Classi-

cal Hour 7:00--News 7:15-Music's No MySitery 7 :SO-Hillbilly Jamboree 8:00-Deacons' Waxworks 9:00-Sports News 9:15-B.SU Hour 9 :30--Tele.quest

10:00-Late Date with Tommy Bunn

1:0G--Sign off FRIDAY

7:00 a. m.---Morning· Show 6:00 p. m.-Jim AnJrews Classi-

cal Hour 7:00-News 7 :l~anscription 7:3o-,r,'fusic from His Master's

Voice !<:00-Deacons' Waxworks

MUSIC OF ALL PUBLISHERS King and Selmer Band

Instruments Altec Hi-Fi System

"\Vebcor Phonographs and Tape Recorders

SEPARK MUSIC co·.

620 W. Fourth St. WINSTON-SALE!M, N. C.

9:00-Sports News 9:15--->BSU Hour 9:30-TEOlequest

10:00-Late Date with Kermit Isaacs

1:00--Sign off

SATURDAY 7:00 a. m.-:Mom:ting 7:()() p. m.-News 7:15-Danoo Party 9:00-Sports News 9:15--Dar.c~ Party

Show

10:00-Late Date Bal'ge

1 :0().-..,Sign off

SUNDAY

with Beverly

10:00 a. m.-Church Service 7:30 p. m.-Music from His

Master's Voice 8:00--A Night to Remember 9:00-Semi-Classioa.l Music

10 :00-J:.ate Date with W a I t Barge

12:00-Sign off

. ~)

ft~ . Spring Agaih ! -no better time to save a buck

by GREYHOUND •

One Way Charlotte· ·······-······················· $4.45 Winston-Salem ...... ............ .... 3.05 Asheville .................................. 6.90 Richmond, Va. ........................ 3.55 Washington, D. C. ................ 6.05 Wilmington ............................ 3.45 Norfolk, Va. ............................ 4.25 Florence, S. C. :.·-··-··············· 3.90 High Point .............................. 2.85 Greensboro ............................ 2.45 Albermarle ···-······················· 3.45

One Way Baltimore ............................ 6.25 Danville .............................. 2.65 Fayetteville ........................ 1.90 Goldsboro ............................ 1.75 Hickory .............................. 4.80 Lumberton .....................•...• 2.75 Statesville .......................... 4.05 Raleigh ................................ .45 Atlanta, Ga. ........................ 8.65 Columbia, S. C. ···········-····· 4.95 New York ················-······-··· 1.0-:05-

Plus U. S. Tax

Let Greyhound take your LAUNDRY HOME TO MOTHER You'll Save Time and $$$ too!

GREYHOUND TERMINAL 159 White St.

Charlie Wilson, Agent Phone 2252

OLD GO~D AND BLACK

Medic()s .To :·Hear Di<.Bo~k~s· In Sp~cial Lectur~ship To~ig~~

HEY-STOP!

WHAT'S THIS?-:.1 For solution see paragraph below.

SUNDIAL WITH

IT'S

5 O'CLOCK SHADOW Charles Segal

Clemson --- fiSHING AROUND for a better­\tasting Cigarette? Inv~stigate the · Droodle above: Skin diver taking ·Lucky break on shore. Moral:

OSTRICH IN DANGER Samuel Salkin

U. of California

Experts on deep-down enjoyment prefer Luckies because they taste better. As you:know, Luckies are made of fine tobacco ... natu­rally good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better. So get in the swim-light up a Lucky. You'll say it's the best­tasting cigarette you ever smoked!

DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price

NOON RUSH IN PIGPEN

kileen Peterson South Dakota State

r--------------------Students!

EARN $25! Cut yourael! in on the Lucky . DrooC:I.Ie gold mine. We pay $25 for all we use-and for a whole raft we don't use! Send your Droodles with descriptive titles. Include your name, address, col· lege and class and the name and

· address of the dealer in your col­lege town from whom you buy cigarettes most often. Address: LuckyDroodle,Box67A,Mount Vernon, N.Y.

CIGARET

' '

Jeffords. M.utual· . Insurance. AEencv .'

.;420 W. Fourth St •.

Winst~n-Salem, N. C.

Our Dividen~ Save Yo~ Money

General Insurance

.J. c. Jeffords . ('50)

W~lconie Deacons~ DOOKING FQR A . HOME 'IN. WINSTON -SALEM?. WE ARE MEMBERS OF 1 l'jiULTIPLE LISTING, .. AND ,OUR . OWN LISTINGS INCLUDE MANY HOMES NEAR YOUR NEW LOCATION.· RANGING IN· PRICE FROM $8750.00 FOR: TWO BEDROOM HOMES ·up· TO MUCH HIGHER PRICES· DEPENDING UPON YOUR NEEDS. ·WE ARE LOOKING FORWARD TO SERVING YOU AND KNOWING YOU. MAKE OUR OFFICE YOUR HEAD­QUAR'l;'ERS AT 216 N •. TRADE STREET, OR CALL US AT 3-1871.

·GAM BATES Real Estate

AND

Insurance Company.

MACON'S RADIO AND TELEVISION SERVICE

MOTOROLA

TV

820 ,S. Main I

Wake Forest

NORGE

APPLIANCES

Phone

473·1

"We Specialize In Quality Service"

-·oROOOLE TIME! '

l ~ . • •, . ·~""..- • '

, "'

'----------...:------·----·-·-----L;..~.:..::.:.:.:;::..::. ___ ...:..__;_.:.;.;;:..:_.:__J

LUCKIES TASTE BEllER-Cleaner, Fre.sher, Smoother! CA. T.Co.

. . (/;\ .

I'RODllCT OF ~~c.!~ AMERICA'S LEADING MANYFACTURER CIOARET'J:ES

;,

·'

fEn-el Jack

'r.l: Bast ... are :Micl scho cha.r

St& N.

NeV. the of i1 CJ;:OV

Tl I

a p1 Con: thes Pre.:: the ·in t are pro~

Gihl ,AC< : S1 but .Yor~

ACC heig off

Si wri~

The '·wrif like

Gri Vii

, 'nexl Am1 tent

. stac: gam

'A fere Co a coni a.n . nol{]

Tl Coli cro~

c bee1 citie

D :real

·-

Page 5: I ': lark - Wake Forest University...ga t M D . es. c ame I urge d th a a t " 111 Citu.rch dents w·u home of · many th Coller,:-e ld stu- independent men interested in ' I remam

--

---

--·

;,

..

··llf .llitL · coNNELtY . . .

·state., Will Threaten ' ' . ' ' . . ' . \ . ' ..

. C~amj;ion Deac·Nirte.

• 1 ·c~ach. Charlie Teague and his Deacon baseba~Jers

'get down ·to serious business this -week in .prepara~ion · • for their ·March 2.6 · op€mer againsLthe University of Delaware.· . · · . ·; . . . , . : .. It · looksi like ·another '~at ·year. for :the NCAA champs, with . a crew of seasoned veterans from· last year's 'clu·b . and ._a .:handfull of promising. sophomores '. on hand. But· -the Deacons still have a -rough road 1to travel if they hope to repeat as Atlantic Coa~t Con'· ·ference champions. ' · . ~- ..

N. C;: State's Wolfpaclc, a. te~ that almost kept .Wake Forest' from goi~g1 anywber~ last year, will 'De. the :nuljor threat to' Deaco'li.

' ' \ I • '

title hopes again thil?. season.· COach Vie Sorrell has :an . experienced . . ·''outfit returning .,for the new campaign, inclu~ing All.;ACC perfoJ;,m.: ·· · er&:Bill' Peed'.at .. first .. base.and,shortStop ·pub' Whitley •.. · _. ··. ' ,;

,.·A:n·c:t~ ~s ·alWays, don!t ·underestimate. carolina, 'Duke· a~d- the ·evet>~ · daz;tgerous Clemson Tigers. . · " · · · , ' · ·

Wake Forest's supel:"b pitching ··cor);,s ·could: make' the dif- · ference ·th~ season, .with ·such toP-flight hurlel:"s . as· Lefty Davis, Jack.· McGinley, John Stoke, Bill ·walsh and Buck Fichter .returning. ' The season's :first. real- test" will be the second' annual' Dixie Classic Basebali Tou~ment at Durham· April. 4-6. Wake and Colgate are ':favor.ed to . walk. off• with th~ 'laurels in that one, but Michigan, Amherst, Loyola of New Orleilnsl' and the other'Bii Four schools have different ideas. The .Deacons edged .State for the eh.ampi~nship of the first Classis tourney last year.

Stale To Meet Canisius Tonight N. C. State's ACC basketball champs meet canisius College in

Ne-W York's Madison Square Gal:"deil tonight in the first t;<?und, uf the NCAA'play-offs. And the Wolfpack will have the good wishes of its_ Big Four neighbors as it enters the scrambie ·for a national crown. , .

. The student· rally staged here last week to honor the 'Pack was ~perfect ending to a great basketball year in the Atlantic· Coast Conference. No finer gesture of sportsmanship has ,been seen ''in these parts--and nothing· was needed more. In the final Associated Press ratings, North Carolina's Big Four schools were listed among the top 20 teams in the nation. With competition of that caliber 'in the area, tens}?;n a~d tempers can produce student attitudes that· are not conducive 'to demonstrations of good sportsmanship, but programs· such as the one planned· h!'!re by Athletic "Director Bill Gibson could do much to pr!)mote better understanding among ,ACC schools. · , . S.~te ~s favored to !!lobber little. panisius in ·the Garden 'tonight, but Coach Everett Case is warning his men not to take the New .York school too lightly. A Canisius· scout who 'came down fpr the ACC tournament finals says he thinks his team, though lacking

I . . height, can upend the Wolfpack. The New Yorkers have knocked off some· highl;y:-regarded cage powers during the season. . .

State's Ronnie Shavlik, an All-American even with· a brok~n wrist, will, be ~he key to the W olfpaek's showing in the NCAA's. The brilliant center is looking better every game, with his ailing wrist protected by a.specialleather brace, and though he can't score like the Sbavlik of old, he's' still tops on rebounds.

Gridders Slate 2 Spring Games·· Wake Fo_rest's :f?otballers may play two spring practice games

, ·next month-<lne here and 'one. in Winston-Salem. Head Coach Paul Amen, _who opened off:season drills here Saturday, has anRounced tentative plans for an intra-squad game in Winston's Bowman Gray

. stadiwm April 7. The· Deacons will stage the annual varsity-alumni 'game here the following Saturday, April 14.

* * ~ * · A movement to choose another site for the Atlantic Coast Con­

ference basketball tournament gainS more support · every ~ear. Coaches and athletic officials from practicallr all of the ACCl schools contend that N. C. State, winner of nine qf the last 10 tourneys, has an unfair· advantage with· the tournam~n't on its nome court, Rey-noMs Coliseum. , .

The principle argument ·for keeping the channpicmship· tilts in the Coliseum is financial. Many believe the· tourney wouldn't d·raw crowds elsewhere and would· thus be a flop money-wise. ,

Charlotte, Winston!Salem, Durham and College Park, Md., have been mentioned as possible sites :for the event, and each of these cities have arenas tnat could accomodate the tournament. · ·

Don't be surprised if Ral~igb loses the big attractioiJ.· in a few · years-if not next seas6n. .

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'OI.u·.GOtD AND BL'Aat· r' ' ' '.

· 22 Freshmen ' • J

Grease Gloves For Baseball

Basketball Roundup

Some Say '56 Deacs Were All-Time Best

By BOB ·'GOERLICH ' The 19-9 w:on-lost record chalked z,t Raleigh. -Coo.ch Don 'Hipps will continue up -by Wake Forest during the · The biggest marg!n or defed

to· ruri. •his 22 freshman btse!>all U•55-56 basketball campaign is was in the opening game of the hopefuls through flhe1T pre-seaso;i orJy the fourth best--percentage- year when George Washington paces this week as ,they prepare wise-in Qoach Murray Greas()n's posted an 101-86 victory for a for a 14-g'ame ·schedule· beginning :!2 years at the helm, btrt to m!lnY 15-point spread, N. C. &tate won

. Vl'ith -N~ C. Sta:te here April 9. .sideliners the past season >:ouici two games by a 12-point margin Se.veral -good prospectS· turned easily be considered- as the best and Duke!s rone win was by aa

out ff>l" ·the initial workouts,' but in the -history of the sport here. e"e:n dozen points. ti.ere wen:_ also some absentees Given little consideration by the Toomament Recocds dut: to sprmg. f~ll practice. experts ·at the start of the season. Taking part in .three tourna-

The De~ets 'will p~ay seven the surprising Deaoon-s finishe<l ments during ·the season, the home games at Go,!e Field. Four third in the :Atlantic Coast Con· Dea.cs finished fi~ in the 'car-· tilts each are sla.ted with Stat~, fe:rence reg'Jl}ar-season race with !\ re>usel event' at Charlotte £:oturtlt Duke and Nollth Carolin~,, while 10-4 __ mark and advanced to t:he in the Dixie.Classk at Ral;igh, and two ~~ are scheduled w1t,1 ~ar- ACC tourney finals before losing second in the A<X:: tourney.' ~ve .Mlbta.ry Aeade.JPY: to N. C. :;!tate, 76-64. . The championship .sweep in the. · Incl~ded ?n ·the yearhng roster "While three other of my clubs Charlotte :tourney, along with the at~.· f1ve. :pitchers,_. two catchers, have· finished with·. better won- two wins each over Duke and

· s.ix\ infielders and six outfieM~t-s·. loss- reoords, I don't. believe any North Carolina and an 86-80 de~ -'Mainstays- oi -the pitching staff- of them bad to face· the · cali~t; '<ision over Brigham Young, were

are eJClpected to be Bob Lawrence, crf opposition. we face<l this :v~ar," the Jrigh spots of the season for

BILL SUMMERLIN •.. hard-running· senior

Bill Sul(nmerlin Preps Fo,r Last Track Fling . .

By JOHN SlliELDS A little seni<>r speedster whQ

already this year has galloped through two seasons as a distance runner is: now working out far spring track and his last few races for Wake Forest.

Billy Summerlin, according to il;he men who run with .him on the track team, is about the hardest­working track man f1nywhere.

"If you see a man spending his lunch hour ·running around' the practice fi~l<i with a · st<>p watch in his hand," !they say, "that's Bill."

Determined Runner ·

officiates intramural games and is a•1 officer in Phi Eps!ion K:tppa, physical educattion fraternity.

As a senior and' veteran of Dea­cou track wars, what does he think aoout the future of -the sport !orue? Summerlin is quick to an­S'Wer: "If Jordan stays, Wake .F'or­e<Jt will go places."

But in order to build a top-notch squad, ·he says, the College must import track stars from hig-n ISehools. "You can't expect a boy who is running .for the first time tQ oompete with a four-year ma.[l/ J!e conclude~.

Jim, Newtoq, Bob Edison, Paul the veteran Greas~ says. · ·the Baptists.. l\I~tthews add Ray Roge:son, ~it:h · Big .Four Loss.e's On a -~ntage basis, the ~ll Olm Broad-way and Manon ~hiler Of the nme setbacks, six vf rt>eord cmnp1led by a Greason~ behind the .plate. them came at the hands o.f Big coached Wake Forest club was by

Vying for starting positions at Four opposition. N. C. State ad- the 1944-4-5 .outfit which won H first base are Jack Phillips and nunistered four -of the losses whi'.c and lost three for an .824 mark. Ron Guthrie, but Gu·r.hrie may l.uJ Nc,rth Carolina and Duke se'Jr<d · T.he 1988-39 team, which wen-~ switched .to an outfield po~ition or:e truimph each over the Deacs. to the NCAA pl.ayocfs, had an lP.tei- in the year. Dick Avery is George Washington ~f the S?uth- 1;-,-4 record for an .818 mark, and

, working out at second base .1nJ is ern Con!erei1!Ce score-d a pair of the 1952-53 crew, winner of the .the only candidate for that pos- wins and Maryland got the othPr. Southem Conference' ehampion­tion so far. Three of the losses came in sue- ship, had a 22-7 record for a .75·.~

Fra.nk Skinner and Man~ Pitt~ CE:sson at the start of the sea:.-. on pe1-centa:ge. Tlhis · year's team man are tl}e leading men at the an<i t\\;"o came in t~~ Di:,:ie Classic fi'nished with a .679 mark. stol'tstop post, w.hile Phil Harris sems to have the nod at thit·d base.

With ali five starters finishing the season in double scoring fig­m·es, the Deacons closed out their 1955-56 ·basketball sla.te with the

Roaming the outer-garden for the Baby Deacs will he Rex Me· Millan, Byron Bullard and Bill Hanison, along with Joe Robin­.scn and Frank Meadows. Corn­netition is hot ~or the outfield posts and any of the five men ~onld win a s-tarting assignment .• second highest scoring average in

Last year'fl Baby D~acs turned the .school's his>tory. in an 8-8 record and HiJlps feels Individual scoring laurels for this edition can better that mark the season went to Lowell (Lefty) because of greater depth at many Davis, who finished with 538 points key positions and the high spirit ar.d a 19.2 ave>rage for 28 games . which has been <Shown so far. It was fitting that Davis captured

Several more promising frvsh the scoring title since he had been 'lre expected to join the team the runner-up to Dickie. Hemric after fo!_}tball drills are compJ.a~d. during both the 1953-54 and 1954-

The schedule: 5~ .campaigns. A "1 9 N / C S"-t h 11 'The team average of 80.7 poitits . pr1 , - . . .,... e · ere: ,

at Duke; 13, at Hargrave Military per ga.me is second only to the

8G.7 mark coqnpiled by last year's outfit in 27 games.

Ranking second behind Davis in th<: indivi-dual ch{\se was Jack Williams, who closed out with a. fat\t st>urt .to nose out Jackie Murdock for -the No.· 2 spot. Wi1-lhms, runl!ler-u.p to Hemric in 1952 before entering the service, bucketed 461 points for a 16.5 a~·erage while Mm·doclc tossed in 451 for a 16.1 mark.

Fourth place went to guard Ernie Wiggins with 374 markers and 13.4 · average while center Jim Gilley was the fifth man With 302 points a.nd a 10.8 ma:rk.

The fh•e starters accounted :for Academy (Chatham, Va.); 14, UNC here; 16, State here; 20, Di1ke here; 21, a.t State; 28, Har­zyave here; 24, at Duke; 25, at UNC; 28, -at State,

1:, UNC here. all but 133 of the 2,259 points Home games scheduled :for Moll- scored during the season. Wen{lell

day through Friday will begin at

1

Carr, who .saw action in 24 of the 3.30 ·p. m., and the Sarturday gamP.s 28 gannes, was the leading scorer •hE"re will begin at 3 o'cloc.~. among the reserves with 64 points~ May 1, at UNC; 2, Duke here:

Deacon Coach Bill Jordan, who has .. turtored Summerlin through thE' ' cross country and indoor track seasons 'this year, abo praises the- Mount Olive fiash for his spirit. , ESSO RESEARCH ~~rk~ ~b~de~s ~ith.·6il --

"If determi-nation alone would '-'-ill races,", . Coach Jordan says, "Ther-e's no doubt thalt Summerlin would aways place first. He never rr..n a race expecting to lose."

Summerlin came ·to Wake Forest. as a junior after three years a-t Edwards Military Institute. . He promptly went out for .the IS5 ~ c!•o.:~s country team-Wake Forest's fii·st in history, an'd ·he paced the team all that fall to win his let-ter. ;

.Since then ·he's .been running faithfully' for the Deacons, and ac­col.'ding to Jordan, "He's an: excel­lent -leader-the ki·nd of boy w.e

to spark the team. T.hough he hasn't venture\! in~o

any ;tport except track here, Sum­merlin. "'was active in football, ibaekectball and baseball at EMI. And for his work 'the Instrtatu awarded ·him s. "Distinguished ami Outstanding Service" medal gi...-en' only twce in the history of th..: school.·

But most of .Summerlin's friends don't lmow abo-ut .the award and hi:;· other achievements. He likes to call 1\>I•()unt Oliv-e his home, but h~> is actually from Summe:·tin s Cross-Roads. "That show& ·how , modest he is," a friend smiled.

Summe1:lin's rigid schedule 0-:1

thE> cinders would be enough to k(·ep most stud·eJJ.ts· busy, but he fhtds time for o;ther activitie:;·. He works daily at Wooten's Hon\•~tel. is an ·assistant to Coach Jordan,

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Page 6: I ': lark - Wake Forest University...ga t M D . es. c ame I urge d th a a t " 111 Citu.rch dents w·u home of · many th Coller,:-e ld stu- independent men interested in ' I remam

PAGE SIX

Teague _Says Champion Deacs Look 'Very Well"

Coach Of Year First Tilt. 2 Weeks Away With the season's opener

only two weeks away, Wa_ke Forest's National Champion baseballers a r e showing 11

"very well" in their daily workouts at Gore Field, ac-1 cording to new head Coach

Greason Lau-de-d

Charlie Teague. "All the boys are looking very

good for this time of year,". the young Deacon pili>t s'aid last 1 week. "Of course, it's. a little j· early to say how we'll do, 'but i right now they're looking pretty I'

goodl:"

By CARTER HEORiCK W'fike Forest's Murray Grcasrn,

th€ quiet,- balding little ri1an who ooache<l Deacon basketball

te..-:ms for 22 years has been chosen "CoaCh of the ·Y e ~r'' in the Atiantic cOOst' Conferenc~ by th€ AGC ~rts Writers A~sociation.

Greason, whose ca.lrn, expression­leSs poses seem even calmer with •shouting, gesticulaJting, w a t e r­drinking assistant Horace (Bones) M-cKinney on the bench, performed s"mething of a mimcle. in guiding this year's cage sqwid to the finals of the ACC champivnship t<-urnament.

OLD GOLD AND- BLACK

. BY. ,

Champion c e s-- Ten tired b~t smiling law stu:'dents .pot~e fo~ ~_.picture. Wedn~ay night ag r after they had defeated KaP·!>a Alpha for the All-Campus i~Jiramural

basketball crown. The Legal Eagles are, kneeling, Archie Lynch, ~eff Batts, Howard 'r:wigg~, _Geofge_ Sainsting a,nd Bruce McDaniel. Standing are Dick Gordon, Gene Boyce, Grady Barnhill, Fr-8nk Wyatt and manager Bill Mills.

.. j'.

MONDAY,. MARCH 12r 1956,

VolleyhaJl Race .Starts:-~

' ' _.._, '

Breathing hard on the heels rA. last week's basketba!ll play-tiffs; vol}eyiba.ll <:Ornpetihl-on now domi­nates the· intramural sports_ pro~ gram. "· . _.

And today through Frid'ay in­dividuals may enter the annual bhdmdritcm tournimtent, scheduled to start nex:t week. . ..

,Volleyball action week saw in-· and fraternity 'teamS

acli001, the defending ·All­campuS Champion Monogram CJ.ub defeathtg rbhe Parsons, :.1-5-11. ancf 18.:.16, in one -of the ~tc~~·. . .

The teams will be divided 'into· tvl'o Jraternity and two iDde:Pen­dent 1eagues. :A play-off toum~­ment"featuring the top two squads from each loop will close the. sea.-

The· Scor~bpqrd Gamea This Week ·

(First-listed .games .'will .:pe played._ on_- court oJ;~e, second­listed·· games on court t'!Vo·) . .

Today 7 :30-Sigma Pi vs. Pi Kappa.

. Alpha, La·mbda Chi vS. Kappa Sigma.

8:15-Sigma Phi Epsilo!l ys.

Teague has a ready answer for 1

the question he's likely to hear 1

quite often during the next few weeks. "Sure we can win the ACC, again," he says. I don't see why i we shouldn't, but of course it: won't be easy-Duke is always · g-ood and I hear Carolina and .

:State have good bali clubs. I : "Right now · our pitchers are

looking real good and our catch­ing is exceptionally good. (Bill) Walsh, (Jack) 1\feGinley and I (.John) Stokoe all are corning .

Wake Forest was ex~•:tcd to oe e "weak sister" of the Big Fm1r

after the loss of big All-American Dickie Hemric, .but aft~J· losing its f.irst three games, tl-je squad finished in ·a blaze of ghry with r. 77-5S victory over Carolina in the tourney semi-finals to earn its \\ ay into the title clash.

It marked -the third time in four yE.ars that W'llke. Fores't had met State in ihe finals for t;1~ con­ference champi~>ns.hip. In 1 ?.53, Greason directed the Deacons with tb::·ir "six iron men" to the South­err• <Conference title witn a 51-50 decision over Coach Everett Case's

Sigma Chi, ~pikers rs. Mono­gram Club.

Legal E~gl~s Clinch All-Ca~mpus~ Al~;:,-s~j~~~ph!ali~~~

MURRAY GREASON around very well. And we have a I h d 1 'b · • . . onol'e JY sen es ••• couple of sophomores who look --------------­like they might be a big help--

:'o~~~~n Whitn,~y and Bob Loven-, T earn Snaps 9 Open ''•th Det~·are School ~arks The Deacons' first tilt is slated

for March 26, when a strong Uni­sersity of Delaware nine will in­vade Gore Field to open the new campaign.

Michigan State will ·come to to\\'ll March 31, and the Deacs will open defense of theh· Dixie Classic crown at Durham April 4-6.

Teague says he hasn't "been able to find out a thing about Delaware," but comments that "Loyola is supposed to have a fine team and so is Colgate ... there's some good outfits entered in the Classic.''

Nine sch<lol records were broken ar.i! one was -tied by the Wake For-2-St basketbarl team during th€ 1£155-56 season.

Guard Ernie Wiggins set the lone single game individual mark when he made good on 12 of 13 field goo.) attempts in the final game of bh<·: regtrlar season against N. C. Sowte. His field goal accuracy of .923 bettered the previous mark of .722 set by Dickie Hemric ori 13 of 18 .attempts against Georgoe Was.~ing.ton last year. Heading the veteran-studded

team are Linwood Holt, an All- Six single game team reeor(ls American choice at catcher, Luther were broken and. one was tied. McKeel and Frank McRae in the The new records are: ' o u t f i e l d and infielders Bob Best field goal average---.596 Waggoner, Harold Moore, Jack against South Carolina; most free .Bryant and Bill Barnes. thews scored-43 against Calgat~;

McRae !\lay Shift most op:;>onent points scored-Only one major shift is being 130 by Clemson; largest combined

<"onsidered by Teague. McRae .may score-207 (Wake Forest 104, l;e moved in from his left field C!ems.on 103). slot to take over first base, ·which Fewest rebounds - 21 against would leave the Deacs 'vith an out- George Washington; and mo;>~ field problem. persona~ fouls~36 against Geo:·;..:e

Others expected to see a lot of Washington. The 55 free throws action this season are junior out- I attem~ted against Colgate tied fielder George Miller and second the school record. sacker AI Baker, who was a fresh star last vear.

warriors. Relying aga.in .on six men for

roost of the work, Greason's cagers fir:ishi!d in a :tie for second place in the final conference standings and compiled a 20-9 rec{}rd for the season-a record that gained them 18·th place in the latest Associated Press. poll.

33 Of 48 Votes . Greason received 33 of 48 possi­

ble votes in this year's balloting fc.r coach of the year anJ will re­ceive the Gerry -Gerard Award, a plaque presented annually as a n:ernorial to the 'late Duke basket­ball coach. Case received 11 vot~s while Clemson's Banks McFadden, Prank l'.fcGuire {}f North Cal'Olina and Bus Male .of Virginia :Ut!o IX•lled votes.

This is the second time in four years tha·t Greason, dean of ACC basketball coaches, has been de­signated coach of the year·. After 1-b. 1953 squad deprived N. C. State of ;;its ch-ampionship reign fer the only time in the last l 0 years, he was also a warded ti>e hmor ..

Caach Greason, now 54, was ol!~ (}f the ·College's top athletes dur­illg- his school days, excellins- in b<.sketball, baseball and foD<tball from 1921 to 1926.

Title By Nudging KA 1n Thriller ;r~~~·~:"!'~';;:.,.·~ .. ~ By WESLEY KEITH drew first blood when they got one Final.ly, in the last 50 seeonds, 9:00-Cullorn Ministerial vs •.

The Legal ·Eagles, .an Intiepen- pc-int from the bul line. Then, vdth the sco·re ·ti~ at 34-84, the Parsons, Lambda Chi vs. Sig.: dent League entry, edged Kappa BumhiH i=bbed a rebound for the E<~;gles staged ·a 30-se.cond freeze rna Chi. Alpha Wednesday night, 35-34, to E!i.gles and fire-d the ball to Frank which the KA's could not break. Thursday captti.re the Al1-'Campus. intn.- Wyatt, who laid up a two-point in the 'last 20 seconds the ball 7:30-Pi Kappa Alpha vs. no ural basketball championship. snowbird. changed hands several times . as Kapna Alpha, Hunter Hawks

Grady Barnhill's -free throw The rest of -the game -;yas the both teams fought- madly for pos- vs:· Snappers. with 12 seconds reinaining made same story. Both tea>ms wer!l even;- session. · 8:15-Alpha Sigma vs. Theta the difference in a ni.p-and'-tuck ly matched in backbo.ard strength, • Snee!ien then fouled .Barnhill, I Chi, S:.anpa Sigma vs. Sigma struggle ·whch rew th-e lead Change with Cliff Sneeden and Don E:l- who chucke9 in the d'ecisive poim. Phi Epsiion. h«.nds many times: · -------,....--------------:--------~----------.....:...;; The victorious Eagles ached wards of the KA's' grabbing then·

rbe de- share and BarnhiH sparkling for_, the championsMp finals y for t ·he the Eagles in •that department. II feating the .Drips, 40-21,

l'ldependent loop title M-onday Only once did the leading mar- I night. Kappa Alpha had gained gin ·reach five points, arv:l the Fraternity League honors the pre- Eagles were on the long end that vious week by downing Pi Kappa tlme. Alpha. Batts and Lynch racked up two

Jeff Batts pace-d the winners, quick snowbirds. late in the second buc:ke!Jing 17 points, while team- half to make it 31-26 in favor of mate ·Archie Lynch flipped in ·the Lawy€rs. But the KA's.stonned nir.e. Bil'l Moore was high man for back with shots by Edwards and Ko:ppa Alpha with 12 points.· M(){)re to gain the lead at 32-:~1.

The scramble was tit for tat Then the Lawyers retaLiated to from start to finish. The KA's ead again, 33-32.

So Good to your TASTE .., So Quick on the D-RAW!

' I -

STUD'ENTS

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. Lowell ·(Lefty) Davis, \Vake's G }£ s t 12 M h s h du} pitching ace in the drive to the II 0 ers e - ate c ·e e NCAA crown last year, is expect- .

ed to re~ort for practic~ this:To Be~ March 27 Vs rnm· 1• week, while Art Bonzag-n1, who ~ • saw a lot of warfa1·e at first base J_a~t campaign is also expected to :A,.-r:_ a~r:;-ctive ::~match slat-:~ in-JOID the team soon. dudL,g mterse~ctO'nal meenngs

Teague says he hasn't known wit~ Illinois State, O~io Uni·:ersit,r his bo~·s long, but declares they're 'I and Boston co:lege, IS on tap fol' an "awfullv good bunch.'' Wal~e Forest College's de"endinJ

"All of . them have that great Atlant!c Co:~~t Conreren ~e gcif spirit and desire to pia)·, and ch<:m:;>Ions tfd.S seas.cm. that'~ mighty important," he said. Th(! Dzacon linksmen w i ll •·I think we can give a good ac- l::!t;nc:'l their season against Tl]i­r.ount of ourselves.'' nois .State here March 27. Ohio

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

University comes here March 30 and Boston .College will be met htre on April 4. 'fhe remainmg nine matches will be -agains'l: ACC teams.

Hot·ace (Bones) MeKinnf'y, ·ch<) afsistant b:tsketball coa~n, w:ll again serve .as coach of tne golf.:rs. 1'-:icKinney coached the Oe:u;ons for thl' first time last yea;.

Lettermen retu1·nin~ from !he 1£155 conference ch'amp~ are Joim Gr:.rring, Henry Kerf;Jot and ,Toe 'furner. Phil Wiechman, a 1954 letterman who lost out sch;,lasti­cally last season, will b.! back this 3·ear. Wiechman was run•le<-un for medal honors in the Southern Amateur at Linville last .June.

Se1ninary Man To Be Coac/1

Harry >Chaffin, a student in t!u~· Seminary, will serve as ,ten:1is conch for- the college this seaso;·t, i~ has been announced by ,Bill Gib­son, director of athletics. ·

•Chaff-in played on the Mer.:cr Univ€rsity tennis team during 1P51, 1952 and 1953. He graduatf:ld fr<•ni M-ercer in 1953. He succeeds Pride Ratterree, a former foot­ball assistant.

This year's Deacon net club "'iii be built around three returning lftte:nnen and several promisin~ sophomores up from the hlb5 fr.eshman cl'Uib. The rctttrnin~; lettermen are Jasper Memory, Robert Garren and Albert Griffin.

The schedul-e follows: March 28, Michigan State horne;

31, George Washington borne. April 2, Notre Dame home; '•,

Brown University home; 7, ac · 1';. C. State; 11, at Nor:th Carolin>t; 11'1, South ·Carolina home; t!), -wil­liam and Mary home; .l4, DliKe home; 28, at Cle.mson.

May 1,· N. C. State home; 4, at Maryland; 5, at Virginia; 10-::.2, Atlantic 'Coast Conference tourna­ment.

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• 2. SUPERIOR FILTER So guick on the draw! Yes,1be flavor comes clean....::..through L&M's aU white Miracle Tip. Pur.e white inside, pure white outside for cleaner,bettet smoking. - . .

llM ._,_}].{LAX WITH bM M~K~JZDAY BIG' RED . LETTER DA'Y!

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