i'·.·. nr '•k

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' 'f . Happy New. Year-! .'Schedule· Of Fa'n Semester·. Exams / .,. r lll :,l::'·· ... .. . .. ... n,lb nub , f t I . ' . . . I '·.·. '•k nr Convention Prexy Asked To Speak To WF Audience Page Two * * Pa.ge · Three * 'VOLUME XLm. Clemson Offer A student viSitor at the ineetilig pointed ·out ihat, footlJall games Virtually "tbe onlY ii'oeial arid recreational activi.tie.s non-frater- nity men have in, the faii." . ·-rhe Student' Legislature went on record ··Thiirsday mgh.t as being riP.:Posed" to an Athletic Department. proposal that would 'li1ve :Wake Forest only three home fQ()tball -next fall. AthTetic. Director W. H. 'Gibson - .. · · asked the stt:dimt leaders to ex- L -h-- · 1 -- · -press an opip.lon on whether the : es.s . ·-.'_.--:·ape ' Deacons' garite with .Clemson next - November ·should ·be moved to D . E. · . s. c., for financial rea-. ays, · .. xec· Gibson; who was out of town A·- Thursday night,. has told Body· . sked Braswell, student body vice. presl- '<lelit; that tlie College h?s · been '. · gliafanieed $25,000 by Clemson ·.ofifdals if the game can be moved io Clemson. . · Proposals calling for fewer co.m- pulsory chapel programs,. and an 'iddition to the executive branch of student government will come· before the Student Ikgislature in its next meeting a : week from Thursday. Wake ForeSt WiristGn-Sa_lem, North Monday, 6, 1958 NUMBER 13 Famed Pianist CLAUDIO ARRAU Coming ·Tuesday Night Trustees' Dance Vo-te Set 24 The College Board of Trustees will meet Jan. 24 on tlie to deal once agairi with the question of on-campus dancing, · . Due to come up at the meeting is a resolution hy Dr. Geo_rge W. Paschal Jr. of Ralergh which would make on-campus dancing .legal. · I Action on the r.esolution, iatro-' S . • ·t c duced by Dr. Paschal at the OCie y up Board's last meeting, Dec. 13, wa$, · , deferred until the Jan. 24 meeting._ Contests . Paschal made clear at the Dec. · 13 meeting· that, his danCing re.- Set Today was only a "front" for a; deeper question. "We aren't pri- marily with dancing," he said in an interview, "but with the question of control and man- Traditional competition between agement of the College." the College's two literary · He had previously asserted that ties will start in the society halls the Baptist State Convention "has of Reynolda Hall today with the no right to manage the college" highly-prized SociytY Day cup go· and that the trustees are under ing to the winner. no "obligation to manage the col- An annual winter event, Society lege as the -convention directs!' Having lost considerable money ihls fali when the winless Deacs f:iiied to ·draw eriough . paying customers, the Athletic Depart- ment :feels such .. a proposition would do much to boost its finan- ces, Gibson told Braswell. Ooncert Series' Day pits members of the Euze- Committee To Report Will · Allred, senior class vice lia11 and Philomathesian literary oresident, wants the legislature to against each other in vari- The Jan. 24 vote on the matter tlie administration arid trus- ous speakng contests .. The team may depend in part on a report The game would serve as home- tees to limit· compulsory student p • · • t.. A . w •11 p·l H. T of a special committee at the 'same services to four each I aD IS ·rra_ U . . 1 , ay· . ere'· give Wake Forest only three home . . . . trustee chairman, after the trus- games: Maryland, Duke and N. C. Claudio Arrau, internationally- which is beg.5nnhig. this . mont.h. to E'\lrcpe again to play .in Beginning at 4 o'clock tod'ay, tees authorized the selection of a. State.' , . . . motion at the next session. The known pianist, will perform here His travels year carried him Berlin, Hamburg and other cities -:iontinuous rounds of speeches and nine-man group tO study the re- The College staged five contests motion was read to th repres nt tomorrow night in the year's third to every-part .of tl'ie world and, Germany. debathes 11 willcbe reeled off in tlle lationship ·between the trustees ana in Bowman Gray Stadium this . e e Concert-Lecture Series most . ·.to LQndon, where Rudolph Elie of the Boston two a s. on tests will continue the Convention. -year. and suffered abysmal losses atives. tion. - he played n ·the "TV Christmas Herald says this of Arrau· and will be completed to- Wade E. BroYm, Boone at- at .the gate, Gibson has reported. T.he concert, to be held Wait Spectacular" with -the .Bri·tishl "It · tt e 11 · d morrow afternoon. torney and chairman.of.the, com- A t' · t •t b' th · 1 ams WI as e 0 Y 0 con- Chapel, will begin at 8:30. Broadcasting Corporation Orches- 18 pre Y n;ra Y agree The cup will be awarded to- mi.ttee, said ·Friday his. comlllittee .. mo Ion agams swi c Ing e sider an executive committee to tra today Arrau Is m many ways morrow night at a banquet in the '11 ... ld ·t fi t J . .23 game.passed overwhelmingly with work with the president of the A nativ:e of Chile,, AiTa_ u has · , · the fore;most living pianist. He is Wl .uo 1 rs mee mg an.· only three oppOsing. Some legis- student body. It would function been playmg to audiences since The technically by no one, 1'4.1iognolia Room at 5:30. Members on the campus. . 1ators, hpwever, did concede they as "a sort of cabinet" Williams ·he was five ·years old, giving him ed four months which. is to say that there is no of both groups will attend. "The whole purpose of the trus-:. might approve of· the move .. if said. ' a of 48 years on the con- spnng,. returning. -to the Umted problem in ierms of execution on This afternoon's events in Eu tees and the is 'to bring some concessioils could. be ·made, · cert stage States m Jul,Y. He ap.,eared three the keyboard that he has not solv- Hall: about a, greater. harmony between a bus. caravliJ?. to another ·tilt A body elec.tion would A criti; for the Berlin (Ger- weeks in· Stratford Shakes- ed; ·indeed, it appear that Extemp·oraneous speaking-Rob- the College and the Convention';" and· ;tickets. ·at reduced · · be .required. to such a many) Morgenpost once said of pearean Festival in Canada. the more diffieult the -problem the ert Fitzgero.ld (Pl).i) va. Jane he said, :"whieh is on:e of· the,. · · Gibstjn Miami · . siilce mvolve ·tomorrow night's · In late summer he returne.d to more easily he solves it:• Freeman (Eu).'· things-· we '\Vill .desperately tty Gibson had not returned frqin cbange m ·the student con- "If I were asked who is the Europe again, playing at Salzburg Neville cardus' of the . Man- Declamil.tion-'-Joe' Grubbs (Phi) tO do." .. , ihe·New Year's :. 5 u ..• !1· _,' . pianist playing in the Festival in 'August. He then CllEister Guardian has said: vs. Larty Williams (Eu); ·The chairman said, that· PaS-· ·game in Miami, Fla., in. time lor :- .. reasons ·for I w.ould sli.y· .Without several weeks si&:ht-seeing in Is- · 'Every· Note A Peail' Sched_uled in Phi this _a!.- cnal's resolution .the , . .. He. ·was:, .scheduled, .t() . . · · hesitation, ylaud1o Arrau." tanbul before beginning a tour of "H" · t rf t ternoon: . , formation .oL the. committee .. and ... meet '\vitli Braswell ·:.to · ·#&cuss· genera-l .. ·.Galled:. No; 1 · PiaaiSt· . :south Africa·· ill' ·September and :de a':y· ... .Mt;m) . , .W that .the .:resolution_ will .be. · -, ' ''hear· the ·,. •campus .. ·· · ,_ , . · · - .. ·. ·-·· -_ .. -Another.·- prominent · ··American October. one of -them could ·have been·'}'iilt' .. · .• (Eu). .vs; ed in· its study.' . · .. . . . . ·· · . Many representatives comment-. . of the critic has referred to .him as "The Played In India on to. a plush tray and given as· a D1ck :Burleson and DaVld Hughes . · · Insp ct R d ed that transferring the-._game different ·standing_ ·eommittees. No. 1 pianist of our time." . India, Ceylon and Singapore pr,esent to. any other. living. pian- (Phi); . e · ecQ-r. 8 ·:·. '"v.•ouldn't be . good . for school . -"Make ·<recommendations to . Wake Forest will.be one ·of the. were the next stops for the fast- lst." . ·Tonight's agenda! . ·C?mn;Ittee members have. peen: sPirit,"- which, .some ·-believed, legislature.''·· . · · first stops. on. A:rrau's i9-58 tour ·moving pianist, an,d th_en he. . Poetry-Janet Binkley (Eu) vs. delvmgmto '"isn't .. good' no\·;.'' . "We need a small group ·to dis- · · ' ·re- A:nd Nieuwe Courant, ·a critie in Sherry Dailey (Phi).· lege: the constitutiOn of the · · BraS:we11 said told. him ·things," Williams said. The The Hague, has said: Oration-J olm Alford (Phi) vs. v:ent1on, and record'S of past . !!:C·, <' Clemooh's Athletic Director -Frank Legislature's function is to pass 'Ou.tstanding }0' · "Arrau makes of· -the piano the Daxie Hol:7bs (Eu). tu:.ns. of the trustees and the Con-· lfoward \Vas expecting an answ.er and act o.n th_em-consti- most inconceivably beautiful in- Men's Impromptu-Allen Car- he said._ The . "past this vrecit at a NCAA meeting in tution,al ·matters. Then·, too, a · · · sti·umimt,' or rather: orchestra ... roll (Phi) vs: Sam 'Harvey (Eu). hons. he noted, could_ go back'to Philadelphia. He did. not.say what smaller' gtoup would' have more s :.l· t. d this man is one .of the greatest Contestants in the Woman's the time the Convention was or- ·effect the Legislature's opinion ,freedom -of ·, '•.. .1. 4 enzors .e· ec ... ·e · ain:ong,st. 'the great, a recreative Impromptu division ··had not been ganized and the College estab- might have on the decision. · :. .:"We -could . discuss things more r and piarlistic. genius." selected Friday. lJshed .. · NeaTly all the legislators ex- '·he continued, "like Forest's "10 Outstanding! Black. Connelly,· is At the age of seven, Arrau and Three final events will be de- Speaking. for his eommittee, he .Pressed for the Athletic. the (Student Gonrenment) budget Semors ·elected by their editor of Old Gold and Black. •his ·family· went to ·Germany-at .cided tomorrow afternoon, begin- pointed out "We won't try to Department's problem and con- for instance."· · - ' . classmates m a chapel program the expense of the Chilean govern- ning at 4 o'clock: · change any policy ·but we will try ceded that-financially-it might A commit1ee_set up·to· publish just before Christmas holidays. Newsom, Ahoskie, is president ment-;-so, the young pianist could Women's Debate--Sherry Dailey to clarify the established policy.'' be · wise to move ' the game to -a semester calendar was ·given the Pictures of the 10 seniors will be of the senior class and president study under European teachers. and .Barbara Peele (Phi) vs. Ann C.ther committee members are Clez:1.son, But few felt, as oz;e. ex:. iO::ahead on its ·work Thursday included. in a special section of of Sigma Chi. Miss ,Aycock, Win- He now makes his home--when Julian and another Eu representa- Dr. W. Boyd Owen of· WaYues- pressed. it, that· "the financial ad-· .,ight, pending approval _of .ad- student yearbook, The Howler, ston-Salem, is- secretary. of the not travelling-in Long Island, tive. ville, the Rev. James J3. Willis of vanta.ie ·would outweigh the dam- \rertising funds by the Publi- which sponsors the annual elec- N. Y., with his wife, two children Dramatic Reading- R o z e II a Hamlet, Shearon Harris of Albe- age it mlrrht do to the students Board. The Pub Board will tion. student body. ·· and his old mother. Jewell (Eu) vs. J3ill Perry (Phi). marie, Dr. J. 'Bivins Helms of and tlle College." meet this week. Miss Owen; Canton, is president Morganton, Emory c. McCall of Chosen ·by the seniors were af the Woman's Government As- Lenoir, the Rev. Charles A. Mad· Melodrama Cast Wants Wild Popcorn Throwing Williams, Bob Williams sociation, and Miss Lewis, Jack- .UNC Prof Com ... ID·. g. Here . f D 'h T p u d Dav1'd Hughes B'Il c 11 ' ary 0 - .!o:!lgra:m -' Mtl g- . ' I onne Y sonvi'lle, Fla., 1"s co-editor of The · · .. · D. k' N ' neth of Lumberton and Mrs. IC re ewsome, Jane Aycock, H 1 · Joan Owen, Jane Lewis, Jimmy liam M. Upchurch Jr. of Durham. Powell and .Doug Graham. .. Powell, Greensboro, is state For Reli. gi· on p og Called 'Temporary' president of the f!SU and served . r ram J · 01 Larry Williams, from Burling- · . · udge ive Frida'" termed the two years on the Men's Honor J ton, is president of the student Council. Graham, Salisbury, was committee a 44 tentporary 11 group. body, former president of the BSU co-editor on last year's edition of A 'professor of lai.v at the Uni- Brainerd, Mimi., and he holds He called another coiinnittee au- Campus theater-goers will have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity Jan. 13-18 when Alpha Psi Omega ihonorary dramatics fraternity pre- sents "Pure As the Driven Snow" or , "A Working Girl's Secret.'' Mmbers of the cast will be sell- ing popcorn and will encourage the audience to throw it at the leading characters. · The popcorn-slinging will be in line with the rest of the produc- tion which is a bona fide, old-time with an 1890's setting. In addition, pink lemonade will be sold. A character described by technical director Bill McDuffie as a "circus barker type" will wel- come the ·audience to the per- formances. Vaudeville Acts Between the acts, Alpha Psi Omega members Dinah Gattis and Eddie Hudson will present vaude- ville comedy acts. Gaye Smith will provide background music for the play. Linda Willard is director of the play. The leading characters are a heroine portrayed by Dinah Gat- tis, a. villian playe_d by Jack Isert and a hero played by Jim Herring. Elaine James and Eddie Hudson have. leading roles as friends of the heroine. Dress rehearsals for the pl"o- duction will start Thursday. During the week's run of "Pure As the Driven Snow," the College Theater y.;ill hold tryouts for their Henrik Ibsen's "Ghosts." Tryouts have been set for Jan. 14, 15 and 16 from 3 to 5 p. m. and from 7 to 9 p. m. in the arena theater. Prof. James Walton, Theater director, has announced that three men and two women will ·be· select- ed for roles. Prod,uction date for "Ghost>" has been set as March 10-15. Re- hearsals will not begin until the spring semester, the· .!lirector spe- cified. and vice president of Sigma Chi. The Howler. · versity of Nm:t,h Carolina will be degrees from the University of thorized at the Dec. 13 meeting, Bob Williams, Chevy Chase, Md., one of the ·prinqi.p;al speakers Minnesota and Harvard u'niver- however, a "long-standing com- is co-editor of The Howler and during Religious Emphasis Week, sity. mittee." President of 'Sigma Phi Epsilon. DebaterS Meet to be held. on the campus Feb. He is a member of Phi B.eta The latter group, appointed by Hughes, Newman, Ga., is a 23 - 28 · Kappa, Delta Sigma Rho, the Olive, is .to meet with the Con- Freshman girls who will not Fr nk former chairman. of the Men's Dr. a W. Hanft, a promi- Ol·der of the Coif and the Golden vention's Committee of 17. It •vill have to observe closed study hours M• J 30 t M th d' d Honor Council, president of Kap- Iami an. nen e 0 1St layman, is the Fleece. During World War II he continue in operation until the . uring 1 the second semester have th f "Y c · b pa Sigma, a varsity debater and au or o ou ·Can Believe," a was awarded the J3ronze Star and onventwn's committee makes its een urged by the to enter a columnist for Old Gold and Wake· Fo.rest's vars1 ·ty debate book on the fundamentals of the French Croix de Guerre. report to the entire Convention competition for the women's roles. '--------------- team will travel to Miami, Fla. Christianity. He ·has had articles In addition to serving as teacher next fall. Jan. 30 to compete in the annual published in many legal and other of a young adL'lts' Sunday School "Mainly," Olive said, "this com- University of Miami .Invitational non-legal publications. class at the University Methodist mittee of seven is to ihelp the Debate Tournament. It will be Religious Emphasis Week, span- Church, he is lay leader of the Committee of 17 understand the the .first action of the team since sored jointly by the College and Durham District of the Methodist position of the College and the the tournament held Dac. 13-14 the Wake Forest Baptist Church, Church. trustees of the College." at the University of Pittsburgh. will be a six-day event including Student co-chairmen of Reli- Dr. Broadus E. Jones of Raleigh In pre-holiday competition the worship services, classroom visits, gious Emphasis Week are Larry is cllairman of the group. He has Wake debaters took part in the seminars, bull sessions .and per- Williams and George Braswell. tentatively set the first meeting of Dixie Classic Debate Tournament, sonal conferences. Dr. Thomas J. Turner of the Col- his committee for Jan. 23. He ex- held here Dec. 5-7·, and the Pitts- Dr. Hanft and several other lege physics department is faculty pects his group will meet with burgh debates. Since Wake Forest speakers will elaborate on the chairman, with Ed ·Christman, the Convention's committee dur- was the host team in the Dixie week's theme, "Christianity Con- BSU director, serving as co-ordi- ing February. Classic, the team was not eligible fronts Crises." nator of the week's activities. --------- for trophies. · · . The law P·rofessor is a native of Other Chairmen R C l I . ·The . University of .. Pittsburgh Student · sub-comr:cittee chair- 00m OR TQC ci'ebaters took first place in· the men and . their areas of activity R d A Classic with the best overall neg- include Jimmy Powell, arrange- equtre gazn ative-affirmative record. They ments; Joan Owen, literature; All students living in dormitory ,.,er· e num-ber one 1 ·n the negative Sandy Tueten, morning medita- . 11 •• rooms on campus WI have to dl ·v 1 ·s1 · 0 · n. · tions; Harvey Durham, classroom . 1 t f sign a renewa room con ract or ·The UniveT<:ity .of Florida won visitation; Earl Shaw, continua- the spring semester. Second Place in the. tournament tion; Rowland Thomas, finance; M Eli b th F " 't 1' According to Director of Resi• by. placing second in the negative ary za e armer, >LOSpi a dences Thomas C. Griffin room a ·l·Vl·si·on and fi'rst I'n the affi'rm- tv; Mike Price, bull sessions; U contracts for both coeds and male ative. Miami University took third Bet1y Jane D pchuGrchh, personbal students living in dormitory rooms .pl.ace ov.erall WI'th second .,..1-ce con erences; oug ra am, pu - . 1 . , . .,. · · were written to cover on y the fall in the affirmative division. Pitts- licity; David Hughes, seminars, term. Students have been asked bur!!h was third in the affirmative and Mary Britt, worship. •h ffi f h D" - ' Rep;resentatives of denomina- to go by '" e o ce o t e 1rector sec-tion. tions other than Baptist serve as of Residences, in room 6 Re:,'Ilolda Pete Martin of the University advisors to the steering committee. Hall, according to the following o{ South Carolina was named the schedule: top individual debator. Shirley They include Sally Heath, Presby- . terian stuuent worker; B o b Hoover of Wake Forest received Yountz, Methodist student worker, first place in after-dinner speak- and George Kemp, Episcopalian ing competition, and LeRoy Howe student worker. and Steve Sleppin of Miami tied The week's first service will be B .ILL McDUFFIE : . .. . for first in extemporaneous speak- the Sunday evening worshi'n ser- . proposes to LINDA WillA, RD in p-· lay · · .,.. 1ng. vice fu Wait Chapel Feb. 23. Week of Jan. 13-students room- ing in Johnson and Bostwick girls' dormitories, and in Kitchin and Poteat men's dormitories. Week of January 20-students rooming in Taylor and Davis dormitories.

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Page 1: I'·.·. nr '•k

' 'f .·

. Happy New. Year-!

.'Schedule· Of Fa'n Semester·. Exams

/

.,.

r

lll:,l::'·· ... ..

. ~~ .. ... n,lb nub , f t I . ' . . .

I'·.·. '•k nr Convention Prexy Asked To Speak To WF Audience

Page Two

* * Pa.ge · Three

* 'VOLUME XLm.

Clemson Offer

A student viSitor at the ineetilig pointed ·out ihat, footlJall games ar~i Virtually "tbe onlY ii'oeial arid recreational activi.tie.s non-frater­nity men have in, the faii." .

·-rhe Student' Legislature went on record ··Thiirsday mgh.t as being ••stro~gly riP.:Posed" to an Athletic Department. proposal that would 'li1ve :Wake Forest only three home fQ()tball ~mes -next fall.

AthTetic. Director W. H. 'Gibson - .. · · asked the stt:dimt leaders to ex- L c· -h-- · 1-- · -press an opip.lon on whether the : es.s . ·-.'_.--:·ape ' Deacons' garite with .Clemson next -November ·should ·be moved to D . E. · . -~~on, s. c., for financial rea-. ays, · .. xec·

Gibson; who was out of town A·-Thursday night,. has told Geor~e Body· . sked Braswell, student body vice. presl-'<lelit; that tlie College h?s · been '. · gliafanieed $25,000 by Clemson ·.ofifdals if the game can be moved io Clemson. . ·

Proposals calling for fewer co.m­pulsory chapel programs,. and an 'iddition to the executive branch of student government will come· before the Student Ikgislature in its next meeting a : week from Thursday.

Wake ForeSt ~eom~~e, WiristGn-Sa_lem, North Car~lina, Monday, Janu~ry 6, 1958 NUMBER 13 ------~---------------------------------------

Famed Pianist CLAUDIO ARRAU Coming ·Tuesday Night

Trustees' Dance Vo-te Set Jan~ 24

The College Board of Trustees will meet Jan. 24 on tlie campu~ to deal once agairi with the question of on-campus dancing, · . Due to come up at the meeting is a resolution prop()~ed

hy Dr. Geo_rge W. Paschal Jr. of Ralergh which would make on-campus dancing .legal. ·

I Action on the r.esolution, iatro-'

S . • ·t c duced by Dr. Paschal at the OCie y up Board's last meeting, Dec. 13, wa$, · , deferred until the Jan. 24 meeting._

Contests. Paschal made clear at the Dec. · 13 meeting· that, his danCing re.-

Set Today ~lution was only a "front" for a; deeper question. "We aren't pri­marily eonc~rned with dancing," he said in an interview, "but with the question of control and man­

Traditional competition between agement of the College." the College's two literary soci~- · He had previously asserted that ties will start in the society halls the Baptist State Convention "has of Reynolda Hall today with the no right to manage the college" highly-prized SociytY Day cup go· and that the trustees are under ing to the winner. no "obligation to manage the col­

An annual winter event, Society lege as the -convention directs!'

Having lost considerable money ihls fali when the winless Deacs f:iiied to ·draw eriough . paying customers, the Athletic Depart­ment :feels such .. a proposition would do much to boost its finan­ces, Gibson told Braswell.

Ooncert Series' Day pits members of the Euze- Committee To Report Will · Allred, senior class vice lia11 and Philomathesian literary

oresident, wants the legislature to ~ocieties against each other in vari- The Jan. 24 vote on the matter ~sk tlie administration arid trus- ous speakng contests .. The team may depend in part on a report

The game would serve as home- tees to limit· compulsory student p • · • t.. A . w •11 p·l H. T of a special committee at the 'same

~rm:~-~0~~~~~~~~ ~:~~ti ~~~~ ~:~t~. services to four each I aD IS ·rra_ U . . 1 , ay· . ere'· ~:J~~o~J:r~~eet:~si~~i~se ~~o~~~ :o~~~~fbyT~~d~~m~i~e~ ~-a~ii~~ give Wake Forest only three home . . . . trustee chairman, after the trus-games: Maryland, Duke and N. C. ~!~in:a~~ ;.~ns~~r::;::e :~~~t'! Claudio Arrau, internationally- which is beg.5nnhig. this . mont.h. ~urned to E'\lrcpe again to play .in Beginning at 4 o'clock tod'ay, tees authorized the selection of a. State.' , . . . motion at the next session. The known pianist, will perform here His travels l~st year carried him Berlin, Hamburg and other cities -:iontinuous rounds of speeches and nine-man group tO study the re-

The College staged five contests motion was read to th repres nt tomorrow night in the year's third to every-part .of tl'ie world and, ~n Germany. debathes11willcbe reeled off in tlle lationship ·between the trustees ana

in Bowman Gray Stadium this . e e • Concert-Lecture Series :Pr~senta- most . r~!lntly, ·.to LQndon, where Rudolph Elie of the Boston two a s. on tests will continue the Convention. -year. and suffered abysmal losses atives. tion. - he played n ·the "TV Christmas Herald says this of Arrau· ~onight and will be completed to- Wade E. BroYm, Boone at-at .the gate, Gibson has reported. ·w~tli~dent ~d!k ;~es~de:ttLarry T.he concert, to be held i~ Wait Spectacular" with -the .Bri·tishl "It · tt e 11 · d morrow afternoon. torney and chairman.of.the, com-

A t' · t •t b' th · 1 ams WI as e 0 Y 0 con- Chapel, will begin at 8:30. Broadcasting Corporation Orches- 18 pre Y ~ n;ra Y agree The cup will be awarded to- mi.ttee, said ·Friday his. comlllittee .. mo Ion agams swi c Ing e sider an executive committee to tra today th~t Arrau Is m many ways morrow night at a banquet in the '11 ... ld ·t fi t t· J . .23

game.passed overwhelmingly with work with the president of the A nativ:e of Chile,, AiTa_ u has · , · the fore;most living pianist. He is Wl .uo 1 s· rs mee mg an.· only three oppOsing. Some legis- student body. It would function been playmg to audiences since The 53-year-ol~ p~rformer t~r- exce~ded technically by no one, 1'4.1iognolia Room at 5:30. Members on the campus. . 1ators, hpwever, did concede they as "a sort of cabinet" Williams ·he was five ·years old, giving him ed .E~rope fo~ four months ~.st which. is to say that there is no of both groups will attend. "The whole purpose of the trus-:. might approve of· the move .. if said. ' a recor~ of 48 years on the con- spnng,. returning. -to the Umted problem in ierms of execution on This afternoon's events in Eu tees and the -com~ttee is 'to bring some concessioils could. be ·made, · cert stage States m Jul,Y. He ap.,eared three the keyboard that he has not solv- Hall: about a, greater. harmony between .1~ke a bus. caravliJ?. to another ·tilt A stu~ent body elec.tion would A criti; for the Berlin (Ger- weeks in· ttl~ Stratford Shakes- ed; ·indeed, it wou~d appear that Extemp·oraneous speaking-Rob- the College and the Convention';" and· ;tickets. ·at reduced ·rates~ · · be .required. to estabhs~ such a many) Morgenpost once said of pearean Festival in Canada. the more diffieult the -problem the ert Fitzgero.ld (Pl).i) va. Jane he said, :"whieh is on:e of· the,. · · Gibstjn ·~~a Miami · . cab;net~ siilce ~! ~ould mvolve a· ·tomorrow night's · Coneert-J~ectui-e In late summer he returne.d to more easily he solves it:• Freeman (Eu).'· things-· we '\Vill .desperately tty

Gibson had not returned frqin ~~J~o cbange m ·the student con- .~est: "If I were asked who is the Europe again, playing at Salzburg Neville cardus' of the . Man- Declamil.tion-'-Joe' Grubbs (Phi) tO do." .. , ihe·New Year's Day-Ornnge:Bo~l :.5 u ..• !1· _,' . gre~~st pianist playing in the Festival in 'August. He then spe~t CllEister Guardian has said: vs. Larty Williams (Eu); ·The chairman said, that· PaS-· ·game in Miami, Fla., in. time lor :- .. WI~h~~ '~~~ thr~~ reasons ·for woz::l~ ~day, I w.ould sli.y· .Without several weeks si&:ht-seeing in Is- · 'Every· Note A Peail' Sched_uled in Phi H~ll this _a!.- cnal's resolution precip,i~a.ted• .the , . ~nunent .. He. ·was:, .scheduled, .t() ':c~~at1~~ ·!!:!!!;~~~})lne~·.. . . · · hesitation, ylaud1o Arrau." tanbul before beginning a tour of "H" · t rf t ternoon: . , formation .oL the. committee .. and ... meet '\vitli Braswell ~at1frdaY, ·:.to · ,-1,1~:·: ~.Cit.il:~,·· ·#&cuss· genera-l .. ·.Galled:. No; 1 · PiaaiSt· . :south Africa·· ill' ·September and pearl1s0/~l :de 'e~=~o~; a':y· ... .Mt;m) . , l)eba,tE;.~ .W esJ~:y: ~eith that .the .:resolution_ will .be. i~ciud- · -, '

''hear· the I~~U§1ature!s"answel.";-· ·,. •campus .. ·~~em.~:' ~. ·· · ,_ , . · · - .. ·. ·-·· -_ .. -Another.·- prominent · ··American October. one of -them could ·have been·'}'iilt' a_~4 .. · Doi,L.~c!tooi;J,maker .• (Eu). .vs; ed in· its study.' . · .. . . . . · · · . Many representatives comment-. -"Discu~. ili~ . fl~:nction of the critic has referred to .him as "The Played In India on to. a plush tray and given as· a D1ck :Burleson and DaVld Hughes . · · Insp ct R d

ed that transferring the-._game different ·standing_ ·eommittees. No. 1 pianist of our time." . India, Ceylon and Singapore pr,esent to. any other. living. pian- (Phi); . e · ecQ-r. 8 ·:·.

'"v.•ouldn't be . good . for school . -"Make ·<recommendations to . Wake Forest will.be one ·of the. were the next stops for the fast- lst." . ·Tonight's agenda! . ·C?mn;Ittee members have. peen: sPirit,"- which, .some ·-believed, ~.e legislature.''·· . · · first stops. on. A:rrau's i9-58 tour ·moving pianist, an,d th_en he. . Poetry-Janet Binkley (Eu) vs. delvmgmto the_ch~rJ;erofthe C<M~· '"isn't .. good' no\·;.'' .· . "We need a small group ·to dis- · · ' ·re- A:nd Nieuwe Courant, ·a critie in Sherry Dailey (Phi).· lege: the constitutiOn of the Co~-.: · · BraS:we11 said Gib~on told. him ~uss ·things," Williams said. The The Hague, has said: Oration-J olm Alford (Phi) vs. v:ent1on, and record'S of past . !!:C·, <' Clemooh's Athletic Director -Frank Legislature's function is to pass 'Ou.tstanding }0' · "Arrau makes of· -the piano the Daxie Hol:7bs (Eu). tu:.ns. of the trustees and the Con-· lfoward \Vas expecting an answ.er l~W's and act o.n th_em-consti- most inconceivably beautiful in- Men's Impromptu-Allen Car- v_euti~n, he said._ The . "past ~c-this vrecit at a NCAA meeting in tution,al ·matters. Then·, too, a · · · sti·umimt,' or rather: orchestra ... roll (Phi) vs: Sam 'Harvey (Eu). hons. he noted, could_ go back'to Philadelphia. He did. not.say what smaller' gtoup would' have more ~o··· s· • s :.l· t. d this man is one .of the greatest Contestants in the Woman's the time the Convention was or-·effect the Legislature's opinion ,freedom -of discu~sion. ·, '•.. .1. 4 ~n enzors .e· ec ... ·e · ain:ong,st. 'the great, a recreative Impromptu division ··had not been ganized and the College estab-might have on the decision. · :. .:"We -could . discuss things more r and piarlistic. genius." selected Friday. lJshed .. · NeaTly all the legislators ex- -~ffec_tivelr,'' '·he continued, "like ~ak~, Forest's "10 Outstanding! Black. Connelly,· Mo~ganton, is At the age of seven, Arrau and Three final events will be de- Speaking. for his eommittee, he

.Pressed syr:~pathy for the Athletic. the (Student Gonrenment) budget Semors w~re ·elected by their editor of Old Gold and Black. •his ·family· went to ·Germany-at .cided tomorrow afternoon, begin- pointed out "We won't try to Department's problem and con- for instance."· · - ' . classmates m a chapel program the expense of the Chilean govern- ning at 4 o'clock: · change any policy ·but we will try ceded that-financially-it might A commit1ee_set up·to· publish just before Christmas holidays. Newsom, Ahoskie, is president ment-;-so, the young pianist could Women's Debate--Sherry Dailey to clarify the established policy.'' be · wise to move ' the game to -a semester calendar was ·given the Pictures of the 10 seniors will be of the senior class and president study under European teachers. and .Barbara Peele (Phi) vs. Ann C.ther committee members are Clez:1.son, But few felt, as oz;e. ex:. iO::ahead on its ·work Thursday included. in a special section of of Sigma Chi. Miss ,Aycock, Win- He now makes his home--when Julian and another Eu representa- Dr. W. Boyd Owen of· WaYues­pressed. it, that· "the financial ad-· .,ight, pending approval _of .ad- ~he_ student yearbook, The Howler, ston-Salem, is- secretary. of the not travelling-in Long Island, tive. ville, the Rev. James J3. Willis of vanta.ie ·would outweigh the dam- \rertising funds by the Publi- which sponsors the annual elec- N. Y., with his wife, two children Dramatic Reading- R o z e II a Hamlet, Shearon Harris of Albe-age it mlrrht do to the students ~ations Board. The Pub Board will tion. student body. ·· and his ~6-year old mother. Jewell (Eu) vs. J3ill Perry (Phi). marie, Dr. J. 'Bivins Helms of and tlle College." meet this week. Miss Owen; Canton, is president Morganton, Emory c. McCall of

Chosen ·by the seniors were af the Woman's Government As- Lenoir, the Rev. Charles A. Mad·

Melodrama Cast Wants Wild Popcorn Throwing

T~arry Williams, Bob Williams sociation, and Miss Lewis, Jack- .UNC Prof Com ... ID·. g. Here . f D 'h T p u d Dav1'd Hughes B'Il c 11 ' ary 0 - !Jr~.!!!m, .!o:!lgra:m - ' Mtl g-. ' I onne Y sonvi'lle, Fla., 1"s co-editor of The · · .. · D . k' N ' neth of Lumberton and Mrs. W;~ IC re ewsome, Jane Aycock, H 1 ·

Joan Owen, Jane Lewis, Jimmy ~ower. liam M. Upchurch Jr. of Durham. Powell and .Doug Graham. .. Powell, Greensboro, is state For Reli. gi· on p og Called 'Temporary'

president of the f!SU and served . r ram J · 01 Larry Williams, from Burling- · . · udge ive Frida'" termed the two years on the Men's Honor J

ton, is president of the student Council. Graham, Salisbury, was committee a 44 tentporary11 group. body, former president of the BSU co-editor on last year's edition of A 'professor of lai.v at the Uni- Brainerd, Mimi., and he holds He called another coiinnittee au-Campus theater-goers will have

a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity Jan. 13-18 when Alpha Psi Omega ihonorary dramatics fraternity pre­sents "Pure As the Driven Snow" or , "A Working Girl's Secret.'' Mmbers of the cast will be sell­ing popcorn and will encourage the audience to throw it at the leading characters.

· The popcorn-slinging will be in line with the rest of the produc­tion which is a bona fide, old-time mel~drama with an 1890's setting.

In addition, pink lemonade will be sold. A character described by technical director Bill McDuffie as a "circus barker type" will wel­come the ·audience to the per­formances.

Vaudeville Acts Between the acts, Alpha Psi

Omega members Dinah Gattis and Eddie Hudson will present vaude­ville comedy acts. Gaye Smith will provide background music for the play.

Linda Willard is director of the play. The leading characters are a heroine portrayed by Dinah Gat­tis, a. villian playe_d by Jack Isert and a hero played by Jim Herring.

Elaine James and Eddie Hudson have. leading roles as friends of the heroine.

Dress rehearsals for the pl"o­duction will start Thursday.

During the week's run of "Pure As the Driven Snow," the College Theater y.;ill hold tryouts for their Henrik Ibsen's "Ghosts."

Tryouts have been set for Jan. 14, 15 and 16 from 3 to 5 p. m. and from 7 to 9 p. m. in the arena theater.

Prof. James Walton, Theater director, has announced that three men and two women will ·be· select­ed for roles.

Prod,uction date for "Ghost>" has been set as March 10-15. Re­hearsals will not begin until the spring semester, the· .!lirector spe­cified.

and vice president of Sigma Chi. The Howler. · versity of Nm:t,h Carolina will be degrees from the University of thorized at the Dec. 13 meeting, Bob Williams, Chevy Chase, Md., one of the ·prinqi.p;al speakers Minnesota and Harvard u'niver- however, a "long-standing com-is co-editor of The Howler and during Religious Emphasis Week, sity. mittee." President of 'Sigma Phi Epsilon. DebaterS Meet to be held. on the campus Feb. He is a member of Phi B.eta The latter group, appointed by

Hughes, Newman, Ga., is a 23- 28· Kappa, Delta Sigma Rho, the Olive, is .to meet with the Con-Freshman girls who will not Fr nk former chairman. of the Men's Dr. a W. Hanft, a promi- Ol·der of the Coif and the Golden vention's Committee of 17. It •vill have to observe closed study hours M• • J 30 t M th d'

d Honor Council, president of Kap- Iami an. nen e 0 1St layman, is the Fleece. During World War II he continue in operation until the . uring 1the second semester have th f "Y c · b pa Sigma, a varsity debater and au or o ou ·Can Believe," a was awarded the J3ronze Star and onventwn's committee makes its een urged by the dir~ctor to enter

a columnist for Old Gold and Wake· Fo.rest's vars1·ty debate book on the fundamentals of the French Croix de Guerre. report to the entire Convention competition for the women's roles. '---------------team will travel to Miami, Fla. Christianity. He ·has had articles In addition to serving as teacher next fall. Jan. 30 to compete in the annual published in many legal and other of a young adL'lts' Sunday School "Mainly," Olive said, "this com­University of Miami .Invitational non-legal publications. class at the University Methodist mittee of seven is to ihelp the Debate Tournament. It will be Religious Emphasis Week, span- Church, he is lay leader of the Committee of 17 understand the the .first action of the team since sored jointly by the College and Durham District of the Methodist position of the College and the the tournament held Dac. 13-14 the Wake Forest Baptist Church, Church. trustees of the College." at the University of Pittsburgh. will be a six-day event including Student co-chairmen of Reli- Dr. Broadus E. Jones of Raleigh

In pre-holiday competition the worship services, classroom visits, gious Emphasis Week are Larry is cllairman of the group. He has Wake debaters took part in the seminars, bull sessions .and per- Williams and George Braswell. tentatively set the first meeting of Dixie Classic Debate Tournament, sonal conferences. Dr. Thomas J. Turner of the Col- his committee for Jan. 23. He ex­held here Dec. 5-7·, and the Pitts- Dr. Hanft and several other lege physics department is faculty pects his group will meet with burgh debates. Since Wake Forest speakers will elaborate on the chairman, with Ed ·Christman, the Convention's committee dur­was the host team in the Dixie week's theme, "Christianity Con- BSU director, serving as co-ordi- ing February. Classic, the team was not eligible fronts Crises." nator of the week's activities. ---------for trophies. · · . The law P·rofessor is a native of Other Chairmen R C l I . ·The . University of .. Pittsburgh Student · sub-comr:cittee chair- 00m OR TQC

ci'ebaters took first place in· the men and . their areas of activity R • d A • Classic with the best overall neg- include Jimmy Powell, arrange- equtre gazn ative-affirmative record. They ments; Joan Owen, literature; All students living in dormitory ,.,er· e num-ber one 1·n the negative Sandy Tueten, morning medita- .11 •• rooms on campus WI have to dl·v1·s1·0· n. · tions; Harvey Durham, classroom . 1 t f sign a renewa room con ract or

·The UniveT<:ity .of Florida won visitation; Earl Shaw, continua- the spring semester. Second Place in the. tournament tion; Rowland Thomas, finance;

M Eli b th F " 't 1' According to Director of Resi• by. placing second in the negative ary za e armer, >LOSpi a I· dences Thomas C. Griffin room a·l·Vl·si·on and fi'rst I'n the affi'rm- tv; Mike Price, bull sessions;

U contracts for both coeds and male ative. Miami University took third Bet1y Jane D pchuGrchh, personbal students living in dormitory rooms

.pl.ace ov.erall WI'th second .,..1-ce con erences; oug ra am, pu - . 1. , . .,. · · were written to cover on y the fall in the affirmative division. Pitts- licity; David Hughes, seminars, term. Students have been asked bur!!h was third in the affirmative and Mary Britt, worship. •h ffi f h D"

- ' Rep;resentatives of denomina- to go by '" e o ce o t e 1rector sec-tion. tions other than Baptist serve as of Residences, in room 6 Re:,'Ilolda

Pete Martin of the University advisors to the steering committee. Hall, according to the following o{ South Carolina was named the schedule: top individual debator. Shirley They include Sally Heath, Presby-. terian stuuent worker; B o b Hoover of Wake Forest received Yountz, Methodist student worker, first place in after-dinner speak- and George Kemp, Episcopalian ing competition, and LeRoy Howe student worker. and Steve Sleppin of Miami tied The week's first service will be

B. ILL McDUFFIE : . . . . for first in extemporaneous speak- the Sunday evening worshi'n ser-. proposes to LINDA WillA, RD in p-· lay · · .,.. 1ng. vice fu Wait Chapel Feb. 23.

Week of Jan. 13-students room­ing in Johnson and Bostwick girls' dormitories, and in Kitchin and Poteat men's dormitories.

Week of January 20-students rooming in Taylor and Davis dormitories.

Page 2: I'·.·. nr '•k

. ' . ' .,

-®1~ <&nlb uub ~lurk • * ·Wake Fore~t College * *

WI~STON-SALE~, N. C., MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1958

Week-End Hunger Pangs An absent-minded student or an

absent-minded professor has an ex­cellent chance of going hungry dur­ing week ends on the Wake Forest campus.

His bank. account may be full but his pockets and his stomach can :~­main empty if he forgets to pay a VISit to the campus bank during its "open" hours Monday through Friday.

In the "good old days," a student who let the bank close its doo_rs on his money could turn to several other check-cashing sources.

On the old campus, the College book store was always handy with extra money at .nearly all hours of the day.

The cafeteria provided cash as well as food-in return for checks~- of course.

The stores in the town of Wake Forest were nearby and ready and . willin'g to cash checks. ,

The situation is quite different now. The book store is no longer open early in the morning and late at night, and it now confines its check-cashing to payment for purchases.

The cafeteria has stopped cashing checks entirely. Vlinston-Salem stores, while ready to oblige, are inco·nven­ient as a cash source for transporta­tion-less students.

The stores on the campus can cash only a limited number of checks, a;nd those only during business hours.

Of all the doors closed to check­cashing. the cafeteria door is the most distressing- to hungry students, for the cafeteria is the only campus business

open on the week ends. We understand the problem the

cafeteria personnel and the other po­tential sources face when they agree _ to cash checks. This service to stu­dents leaves them wide open to finan­cial loss from the few ~tude~ts :vho would take advantage of their kmd-ness by cashing bad chec~s~ ·,

Our realization of their problem, however, does· not eliminate any _of the hunger pangs of the temporanly "broke" student.

The only thing" that will get rid of that empty feeling will be some means of cashin·g checks on the campus dur­ing the week end. If some ~ethod of getting ready cash was available on the old camnus, surely some method can be •found to solve the problem on the new campus. •

. One sugg-estion which might help IS a return to the old-time student i~~n­tification cards, including the familiar "jailbird" snapshot and number. ·

No matter how unflattering the pictures were, the cards at least gave check cashers some assurance that the name si•gned to the check was the student's own.

They also served as handy sub­stitutes for athletic ticket books, tak­ing un less billfold space than the cur­rent bulky type.

If this sug-gestion does no good, perhaps another would work. We think it is high time some solution is bein~?: searched for.

The problem, and the hunger pangs, are growin•g more ·acute.

-H:M.

Dollars For: Science While Soviet satellites are spinning, ties and personnel which probably

American scholarships are mounting cannot be provided fast enou•gh to to lure bright young men into science. meet the demand. And it is doubtful

We are behind in the arms race, that this over-crowded situation-al,-__ and justifiably afraid. ready existant under normal condi-

Public interest in education is tions~would be conducive to a su­booming as never before. We have perior program of instruction. examined our schools and found them It is said that Russia recruits-often 'lacking, and it is there we have plac- forcibly~--its best minds for scientific ed the blame for America,'s deficiency. pursuits. l'his method, apparentl;y-, has

During the next decade, promisin•g otit:Scored oiir traditional· way. -­students will be coaxed and cajoled But can we alter the situation by into the technical schools. Not only handing out innumerable scholar­will it be profitable for them to follow ships? Like good Americans, we seem the test tube and slide rule; it will to feel success can be bought. be patriotic as well.

It must delig-ht educators to see the The program will finance many sudden turn-about of public opinion.- brilliant-but-broke scholars. And it is After ignoring the halls of ivy for good. But there is no assurance it will year 5 innumerable, a frightened give us that indefinable quality that -America is read.y to pour its pesos spells superiority in any end~av~r. into an academic jackpot. But there Our deficiency beside Russia is em~ is a hitch. The public wants results barrassing, but not necessarily per­for this su.pport; i~ wants space ships manent. National pride makes us be­:md satellites, devices of destruction lieve able minds trained in the Ameri- -ICB:ll1's. It wants defense. It wan~ can tradition will eventually outstrip prestige. any competitor. But we must remem-

So the dollars will go to science. ber that all •great minds and great Perhaps this is good. It is unquestion- achievements have no respect for ably necessary. human boundaries. -

But what will happen to the long- Not only do we need skilled techni-su~fe.ring. liberal arts colleges while cians. We need educated men even this IS gomg on? Will the humanities more; men grounded in the liberal suffer from the new scientific em- arts· and ably prepared for the task phasis? of living and understand inS!' in a trv-

It looks as though they may, unless ing and confusing world. Otherwise the backers of this ambitious program we will be little men with bi11; toys; apply the brakes and look at the prob- tovs we can create but lack the wis-lem in its true p~rspective. dom to use wisely. _

Scientists are sorely needed. This The current is in the right direction. much is obvious. But America does not At last t-here is concern for edtH•ation necessarily need more scientists. It anrt its neens. But let's expand the needs better scientists. And while this program to include all areas of learn­program can give to the potential imr. so we may produce men trained technician training .that couldn't and :Jble in manv fields--and all ac-'· othen-:ise. be obtained, it may well comnlished in this business of living. havf! Its Ill effects. - Scientific superiority mu::;t not be

This ~udden "Go science voung the only goal: we should rather seek man" camu~ig-n is likely t~ 'flood superiority in human progress. If wP. technic::tl schools for the next few have this. the rest of our needs will years. That will require new facili- perhaps fall into place.

BII.L CONNELLY Editor '

ROWLAND THOMAS Business Manager

Founded J~nuary .16, 1916, as the•student newspaper o! Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black 1s published ·each Monday during the school year except during examination and hoJ,iday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

HANNAH :MILLER, Mana gin~ Editor LEON GATLIN, A11soeiate Editor

CA~TER HEDRICK, Associate Ecmor REID CROCKER, Circulation Mana~rer:

EDI;r'OJ.UAL STAFF: Jan~ Allen, Dottie Braddock, Sblille;v :Brice., Dllll' Ch~ BiJl DaVlS, Jeb Davis, Chl:c Forbes, Ann Gri:ffin, Donnie Griffin,; Wayne &utlii, Ed Jone~~, Camt ~~dmesser, Jo~ Mask, Cecil Merritt. Bettie Mobley, Sarah M~hy, Janet Shields, Vi;,-l'lnla Stap~ Jlnt T-a.:mer. ·

BUSINESS STAFF: Susan Da'ris, Bob Demsey, Ann G-r-egson, Chuck Jones, Ann Watkins.

CIRCULATION STAFF: Al Baucom, Frank Colvard, Livvie Doggett. Sandril. Limrick.

~ember of t~e. Assoclat:ed Collegiate Press. Represented for national advert:ishig by Na· tiona! Advertismg Sel'Vlce, Inc. SJJbseription rate: $2.50 per year. Second-Class mail pri'V'-ileges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C. ·

Offices In Reynolda lla.U 225-22'1 Telephone PArk 5-9711 P. o. Box 7oo'l

Extension 215 Reyn.olda Branch Winston-Salem. N. C.

'~ ·<' • /

Letters (All letters to the edlror must be siPed; name8 will be .. with~ held on request. The right to edit letters it$ reserved. Lett~ do n.t necessarily reflect the opinions of the editors.)

Magn:oti~--- . .

_·_:Leaves:._ Student Adinits Sin Of Using .Iron, Pays ODE TO THE DIRECTOR OF RESIDENCES:

Here's a: ~o~ th~t informs me That I have· done a. sin: An iron wa~ found in 315-D. It wasn't' even lfllugged in.

My r~o.m- 'tontract I have read through,

Over an hour it took; And when t'was done, so little I

knew, It was a tiresome book.

No Beverage Al<:ohol passes my door;

I ~mash no window lights, With a fine long rug I protect

the :floor, , And ayoid all water fights.-

1 keep . no strumpets on the hall, No pictures on·, my ceiling; · No nails are in the sacred walls; But still the paint is peeling. ·

And as a Baptist I~M professing, . To hell-raising I - don't give in. But of an electric iron posse~>sing, I' am as. guilty as "'Sin.

Un-Baptist, Uri-Democratic, · Un_. . •Christian • . •. NO! An iron is none of these. Hardly considered a moral agent,

so Let's ~rop these categories.

It consumes 625 watts, At 120 A. C. Now would you think that that's

a lot Of the College's electricity ?

On my honor, I've used it not (We have the Honor System ihere) More than· 10 minutes. on the dot, Throughout :the entire year.

Watts times h-ours diVided b,-, 1,000, .

Equals kilowatt hours. 650 times 1-6 divided by i,ooo, I've stolen .109 kilowatt hours.

Only 8-10 cents a KWH costs, On the ave~ge to the college. 0.008· times .109 equals loss; Duke Power supplies this know-

ledge.

So if my figures don't vary. ahy, I owe in the $0.000872 range. Enclosed please find a copper pen-

ny, And you may: keep the ehange.

Tommy Bunn senior class

.Mystery Of Steeple Solved By Architect To the editor:

The boys in suite 402 of Kitchin Dorm have noticed four prongs on -the steeple of Wait Chapel. This has . causeci a great deal of conversation for quite some time. Finally I was elected to find out what those prongs are supposed to sl{:ni!y. I asked Dr. George Grif­fin of the Religion Department and he mentioned something about the architect being Norw;egian. There­fure the significance should be o:t a Norwegian origin.

One person has said that it is derived from, an old superstition and that this symbol would keep the ~lemons auay. We would like very much 1x> know the answer if you..have one. ·

Gene McElroy (We're sorry boys, but a spokes­

r..mn for the architectural firm-that designed the campus says the prongs are only lightnin-g rods. The only demons .they keep away are forked flashes of lightning. Four prongs, the man says, are more effective .than one.-Ed.)

Military Ball Is Scheduled

The annual Military Ball, spon­sored by Scabbard and Blade military fraternity, will be qeld Mnr<:h 15th at the Reserve Armory on Stadium Drive. The Duke Am­bassadors will furnish music for the occasion.

Paul Ken:1edy, overall chairman for the Military Bill, has aiJ_noun­ced the appointments of commit~ee chairmen. They are Bob Williams, membership; Norman Kellum. decorations; Dick Avery, arrange­ments; Horace Steadman, refresh­ments: and Bob Hedrick, sponsors.

Sponsors Diane Lackey, Eliza­beth Prickett, Betty Jean Good­win, Jean Hobby, Bobbie Hill, Ann Cornwell, and Judy Simpkins wi11 be presented in special cere­monies at the dance.

Although the·- Military Ball is sponsored by_ Scabbard. and Blade, it is open tO all ROTC students who choose to become members of the Military Ball Association. Cadets may obtain memberships from any member o:t Scabbard and Blade or from Maj. Stuart Davies.

WATER POLO Pi Kappa Alpha and Xappa Sig­

ma will battle it out tonight to decide the intramural water polo crown in a meet slated for Ray­noids Gymnasium Pool at eight o'clock.

Holiday Room Mess Is Writer's Subject To the Editor: ·

It seems Santa paid a surprise visit to Wake Forest College this Christmas--in ·,fact, to every stu~

_ dent here. Remains were clearly - seen by returning students who were greeted .back by rooms in more- chaos than a garbage can that .had been ransacked by a. pack of hungry mongrels. . · · - Not only did students ihave to face the new:· year by . completely rearra.ng1ng their furniture but also in disappointment, bewilder­ment,, and in some cases anger ·as a result of ; items missing from their rooms: .

A certain student who came back· to Wake Forest College · a few days early entered his quarter~ to discover ~t- the per~iiri. hired- to

LITTLE·MAN .ON' CAMPUs__

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. '~cleanK ·his . r~oih w~ .tamperlng with the student's expensive high'. fidelity record player. :without ·per­mission from the. owner nor any knowledge of the· ~l~tri~ai- equip­ment. 'r.he student stopped the guilty party from tampering with the meehanisni but when he re­turned he found that the switch was still turn.e.d on. Several stu­dents/are missing such .things_ as textbooks, articles of clothing, and money. · .

I am · not !!laying that there is . anything -dishonest going on, but sOmething' is surelY _wrong some­where, and it seems high . time somethin,_g was done as_ to correct­ive measures. :Wake Foz:est is :the. only school in the state with. this

: problem as it is. Again I say some­. thing should ·be done-in correction of this fault. '

Bill Barrow Junior Class

· By Edie Hutchins -J.ust before Christmas· holiday;s,

a cold. wave caused the· thenno­meter to take a div.e, with the re­.sult that everyone haod trouible starting their car.s. But it waS es­pecially bad for th.e practice teach­ers who had to leave early in the mornlDg. · -

on Monday morning when. one of-. the girls found ·that her car wouldn't sta.1t, she -called a ser· Vice station. nearby, ana a .man came out and started it for her. 'Ilhe 'same thing was repeated on Tuesday and Wednesday. ·

Thursday morn- · ing when the coed went out to try to start ear, she · ·found the man standing beside the car waiting on her. ile exPlained that every · - m(]lrn'im!'

she had while he- was ' shaving and he was determined, not to be distlu!J;bed again.

A certain. novel on the best .sell­er list h~ been circUlating around­campus and- is · very popular with the students. Rumor has it, though, that t;he frateniities . have taken the bOok and indexed eertain ·pag-!)s so that they won't. have to read the whole book.

Many coeds returned from the holidays ·wif.li- "that extra some­thing" sparklirig- on theil- --"third finger, left hand." Therefo-re, this excenpt from another newspaper se~ms very a.ppropri~te:

"Sign on a ooed's wall; Food p1us sl%p minus study divided ·w boys minl1S: won.:. plus money min­us curfew pl'll!S engagement :rhig equals an ideal ·~ool year-."' ·

One of the student. teachers ~as. . ve~. thrilled . whEri:J. her . Students .. presented her with a gift of the · earving service in ·her sterling: silver.

-. But one li.ttle boy just -couldn't:. ~ understand why .she shoulg· be SG

-happy·" over mere''eating utensilsn ;,-

HUGHES' VIEWS -- - . By DAVID HUGHES

He -grunte4 cMsdaiDtully. !IJld··-said. "' ... that he had rather have ,a -llot~ ·-

'dOg. . . - .

A question ·which -was -&sked -=a.·· :

'House Cleaning' Causes Clfa:os; The $1.85 Steak Is· Now His~ry

" n'Uilllber. Of sfudentS "at 'home,~asi·•;;; . "What are -the. chrui._ces of starting: . -­a dance band at .Wake Forest?"_. : :

WE HAVE- RETURNED- In :full fo~ce we dancing Deacons have re­ceived our two weeks exposure to the wicked outside world and have made our way back to Canipe's Sodom and Gomorrah to the j_o:ys of finals, friends, freezing weather, and fouled up rooms.

Spealring of fouled up rooms, I am considered something of a menace as a housekeeper and the cha:>s that is rriy room has been threatening to become a to~ist attraction due to its sheer mess­iness.

My roomate of last year once philosophically rema_rked that as a result of my hab~t of filing things on the floor, not only was he the only student here who had to step down to get into bed, but our waste b3sket was the only one in school that gets full only when debris overflows into it.

However, never in my spotfull record of three semesters of slop­piness have I ever managed to create the completely chaotic mess that Mr. Griffin's boys and girls managed to make out of my ro0m and the others on the west

. side of the campus during· the Christmas vacation.

YOU HAVE NO IDEA how tll~ sight of paper on the floo.r, things piled upon things on a desk cun­ningly p-laced in front of the closet, the dresser placed so that you ·have to move the bed to get to your clothes, and everything completely backward in general ·can affect you at 5:30 in the morning when you at last get back to school, eager for a few hours -of sleep. ·

Last night I 'vio;ited a friend on ihe other side of Davis who tri­umphantly boasted that he had found his other- bedroom slipper afier being back two days. I con­gratulated him. He i!l the unsung hero of the month. Hi!! example should spur the rest of us on who still haven't round everything.

ACTUALLY, WE SHOULD all realize that Mr. Grif;fin's job is complicated . by a lot of things, such as shortage of help. I nave always fotmd Mr. Griffin to be as helpful and co-operative as he could be. Also, and this goes for _us in Davis, we have found that- the janitors many times go above and beyond the call of duty to help us out, and have become friends to us all.

But, whatever the cause, be it Mr. Griffin, the cleaners, our, house mothers Or whatever they are, we students living on a campUs with an expensive (for us) fetish for and condition of build·in~:s

].y be expected t-o greet with en- ' 'thusiam rooms that_ looked like · · they had eacii had their own pri­vate little hurricane over the holi­days.

--·-Ia c h a p e 1 last Thursdq,..

"Bones" McKirmey related .a:n c.in­cident· which occurred when_ he. was on a' trip one time: it. seemS. he had been tfriving a little faster than -he 'wus suppOsed to, and his wife had repeatedly asked him tor

---slo-w--. down:· Fiohlly, a· patriiliriah · pulled_ -h.im over, and asked "Bones" if, he l:new that he was

~---/ BESIDES, IF ANY OF our goOd Baptist Brethern over the ·state were to have seen them, I'm sure they would --swear that we• had had a mass, drunken, . dancing orgy in our rooms; Certainly _if we had .. the result would. have

_ .. ~~.~yeling .a ~:-~deal_t~§t&·:tb~ .. · . .:.: the designated speed limit. ::~

When "Bones.•~- answered "No,': :{'

been about the same. ·;· ' --To the Director of Residences

office about the best we can say is, better luck next time.

* • * I went out· and indulged in a

steak at Staley's tonight and the new steak room is really first class all the way around. I must express my sorrow at the passing of the $1.85 steak. This death in the Staley food family will make student steak eating even more difficult than it is now. I'm sorry I missed the funeral.

* * *

h:ls wife stuck her hea,d out of the Window, and' said, "Yes, you did. I asked ·you a dozen times -in the last haLf hour to slow down.'''-

At that the patl'.olman said, 'That's okay., bUddy;' GO rlght a­head. I've got ori~ -:juSt like her at ; home." ·'·

When. Bon<!s had- finished· tel­iing the joke, a boy sitting in the balcony turned to the boy beside him and said, "Never underesti-' r..1.ate the power of a wom-an."

Intercepted letter home: "Dear Mom and Dad: Haven't

heatd from you in three weeks. Please .send a check so I'll know you are okay."

- .

...

Larry Williams' idea. for a stu­dent government cabin_et is basically a good one, and, though nerhap~ in revis~>d forrri, it should help make student government more effective' if it can be put in working order.

One Wake F-orest professor has J described g-etting a first job "like ' getting the first olive out of the bottle."

SCHE.OULE OF EXAMINATIONS

January 22-30~ 1958

Morning 9:00-12:00

Wednesday 5th hr. T T S Classes Jan. 22

Thursday 2nd hr. M W F Classes Jan. 23

Friday 3rd hr. M W F (~.lasses Jan. 24

Math 1 and 3 and Saturday 3rd hr. T T. S Classes Jan. 25

1st hr. M W F Classes

4th hr. M W F·Glasses

Monda.7 Jan. 27

Tuesday~ Jan 28

Wednesday 2nd 'hr. T :r s Classes. Jan. 29

Thursday 6t.h hr. M W F -Classes Jan. 30

-Mternoon 2:00-5:00

English 1 a.nd 8th hr. T T S Classes

8th hr . . M W F Classes

1st hr. T T S Classes

- ·7th .hr. M W F Classes

4th br. T T S Classes

7th hr. T T S Classes

6th hr. T T S Classes . -

5th hr. M W F. Classes

"No deviation from this posted schedule will be allowed --except by special authorization of the Executive Committee."

' English 1 examinations will be given Jan. 22, 2:00-5:00. ·

Math 1 and 3•_examinations will be given Jan. 25, 9:00-12;00. ' - : ' '

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:,· .14,. ·< ·. ;_- · -~~.·: -:: ;:· -~i\.ssistahc~- ·· .con~eli.Jion Prexy nre.:·ut-ee · . _· __ · . · · .,~ ·s:V-oouc.GRAHAM - Is·P. l~dged- Park;erTo Spe~kHere

~-The. holid,ay~(afw~y:s. bring.~ ~~~~e number of mar- · Th"; rec'enuy-::el~cte.:! president _campaign is $750. Over $125 of · na:ges, engagements and pinnings ·for the ·:neacs Who T p· h. · · of th'e Baptist State Convention, .the goal has already been reached

· { are ;Greeks. And the cohiriin. this week ·could 'well be --0 . ro· ers · thG e Rebv .. A. --.llLeroyak. ~arkcher. of1 accTohrdint?t1to the director. ' headed, "Cupid's Corner~~· .·These ·were the- holida·y · reens oro, WI spe 10 ape e 1 e for the fund drive , h . . · ser;ices Thursday. . comes frC!rn :the campaign motto, ~ ppemngs: .. . . Officials of North Carolina's Dr. Parker has classified himself "Love -Impels Sacrifice Toward ,. Alpha Sigma Phi ' . severi Baptist colleges last week as a "middle-of-the-roader" in the Every Need," Chri'stman said. Re~ently ·mar~ied wer~'"Jaclt .Cotreii-and Elaine Anderson, Bill' gave the bo.ards'of trustees of-the current Baptist controversies~ con-

' K t · · k' - · · · co).Ieges a vote of confidence and -~ ner and.:Li~y:-.Gray Ba er, ~nd.All~n·Pope·and -Betty Dooley. pledged cooperation to the three cerl)..ing the College. . ·~Bill Earr·bec!lnie engaged. to Jill Laughridge. . ' · . committees named by the Baptist·. :pastor .of the Asheboro Street

f Clydw Capel pinned Brenda· .. Hurley' of Biscoe. . State, convention. Baptist Church in, Greensboro, Dr. I :' •.. : · .. :- : . . :. . :-l.i~l~a Signla Phi : . . The a.c:tions )!i_ere made last ;arker def~~ted fiv~ d other ~andi-

:cecil Merritt ma~ed Mary Kerley of Kittrell:.. Monday at a . three-hoUr called la eti~ ford . e· pthresl el:l,_cy ln ~n · · · rneetm· g of th ff" · 1 . G e ec on unng · e recent Baptist

Raleigh Holt pinned Elaine Towe, Charlotte coed. e o ICla s 1n reens... · . · · . . . · ·· · boro. The full statement is to be State Convep.tion m ~ale1gh. He · .-: _ · . ._ . · .. L~~a Chi. Alpha~ presented 'to. the cbnvention's succe~~ Dr. J. C. Carupe of Hen-·Engaged· were AI Baker. to Betty Forehand of Meredith College, ge!Jer~l board at its meeting Jan. dersonville.

Gene Carter't.o Shfrl«:!y-'P~ele;,:form~r-.coed,:·T. J. Jernigan to Jo Ann. 13-14 in Raleigh.- In chapel services tomorrow, ~p_arks, East· Carolina coed, and ".ro111 Roberts to Lynn Boelenback .. of - In tne statement the officials the· College' BSU will enter the Bay Shore, Long Island.. . .. .". . . , . . promised "support and cc,rnplete field ?f. dramatic~ with a p!ay

.. ~, . · :.B:r:ent.-Filson ·was 'ple~g.ed· before·the.holidays. · . cooperation" to_ the three. com- fadveBrtisJt~gt :fthe. Liste~ .campaign - - .. . . . . . ·mittees. Chairn;~en of the three . or _ap IS . or.eign missiOns.

. , ......... _.. . .·fi·Kappa .. Alph.., COIDn:littees .were present at the Ten· BSU. members, intr_?ctuced Engaged. du:r;in~ · tlie. 'holidays were Eadie· Ladd to Ami Smith of meeting. .A,lso present were the py Ed Chnstman, BSU director,

:(r .DurM,m, Ken.·F_'erreJI .to ·Mona Johnson of D\lrham, and Henry Von executive committee of the general will .. tal;:e part in a pantomime , Herman to· Beverly'· Mitchell, a· coed. . . · · . board and the board ·of trustees depicting "world need." ,f. .'D~u~ BaileY pin~~d .Car~ly.n. Lawson of the ·ljniver2ity of- West of the colleges. . Paui. Caudi:ll will portray the

·, V1rgm1a. · ; ·. . . · . , · · . -. · ·. Alumni Critici e studertt who _observes needy pee-D "d · }e. - U - · · · -. ·· ' · · .z pie by BSU members.

av1 :&a}y. y of. t.1I11 niversity . of ~iami: visited, the· chapter Two ?~ . ~e comm1~tees hav.e Christman said Thursday that last week~' .. · ·, . . . ·. .. · sa· ... ...:. .. Ch·.

1• -~.-- _· .-·.'. · .. · . ·. .. . . . ·. . beedn

1cnhcized by some alumni the Wake Forest goal in the Listen· REV. A. L. PARKER

. _ ..-- . an rustees of the- colleges on =======:::::======:::============~= .. ~he brothers, P.ledges; and· their. dates eiljoyed a. dinner. party and the grounds that they would ham. a.ri informal dance a~ the ForsYth Fish Cam:P: before the holidays. per academic freedom and restrict

."T.he .c~pter. presented' its annual C;hristmas 'serenade-at the girls' the authority of the trustees. Stu ;;,e-n· l· nap~. 'r . T T,·_(!·wl~ dorms and_ at Salem College Monday night. · The two co~mittees mentioned U 1 £ I f' ~ tD · The pledge class recently published the Deita News. above are the committee ·of 17

· ' · · · · · . wJ?c.·h wa_s named tc> study th~ R _ z• 0 . • · Sigma Ph. Epsilon-. · .. · .. t 1 1 f th 1 · R

Engaged during ~he holid~ys wai'Jim_Horn to Linda.Kinlaw. ~~:~s~~d ~h~nco~~~el:g;f.~~~~ U .. zng n . us·s lOJn S ' ·Pinned were Ronnie Guthrie to Christine Nichols, coed at Mary which wm-stuay the relationship . . ' Washington. College, Joe W.hite tQ coed Bobbie Hill ·and Bob Owen o:f the trustees to the convention -(Editors of the Daily Californian off. to. eoed. June Myers. ·. . '- . · · ·a;nd ·the convention to ihe trustees. eXpressed these .. views on the · How are we going to have ·some

:Initiated into -the fraternity before Christmas w..ere Buster Ledford.- The third collimittee, mentioned ''Outside World."-Ed.) · kind of an international. under-

OL:b GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Jart. 6, 1958 PAGE THREE

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Spaghetti - Pizza - Steaks - Salads · and Buddy McCorkle: · ,.. · .. in. ·the- resolution ;·was. named to It is seldom that we are so s!anding if. two cltildren -are go-

. D~mg .Sas.ser wa:a m~rried to .·Martha Kay Maultsby;. of Woman's .study the r:iresent and future insti_ aroused to wrat]l that we corn- ir>.g to start playing "keep out of --============================= -., College. . . ._ . - · tutional needs of the colleges. menton the Big_ World Outside. my sandliox"? _

I- . - . ~. . Si~a Pt . . The statement, endorsed by the There is enough, aftel· all, going . Both Russia . and the Unitecl . : George Coghilf-:married ·Sara "crews of Henderson. group o! around 40 leaders, in- on in this royal throne of pro- States are once again taking gi-

T. :W!lkinson -~i~Jned_ coed _Jea.n'nie ··Hunt.- .. eludes the following passages: fessors, this sceptered isle, this gantic strides toward that beauti----.,.--7-;.._.:._-::---:---:-:-""":'"---,..,-:--__;:._ ________ ·· "We, the elected leaders. of the blessed plot, this earth, this realm, ful day when· this poor old earth

agencies, committees and institu- this University to fill up these will become one big mushroom tions of. our convention, asstlre you ~olumns. cloud. By LARRY INGLE~ that we believe in our Baptist's Besides which, the Outside --'--------program and intend to do. every- World,. at this point, seems beyond thing possible to advance the work :ill reform. !

of our Lord around the world; However, we cannot let the re- Professor "Therefore, we · would like to cent action by ·the U. S. State

F. . A . . C. · . . f.. . · ask you, the members of .the gen- ~epartment get by without say~ Is Rep a· d - .-or / rms ~ on erence ~o~v:~~~' ~;t!~:cr~~ti~~eS~~i~ mg ~OME~;;:~Iosed . . 1 · . -ib.e ·w~ek «>t" Dec. ·.i~ sa~ .. the A .compromise was WOl'ked out lowing statements: Report froll} a local paper: "The \ It may take the College Lib­North -Atlaritic Treaty ·Orga.niza- wl:)ereby we :would consent to ne." .

1"1Firllst, fthat the genera( board State Dcpar~tment yesterday sealed rary a. little time to get its re-

tion- con!erence in Par;~ with all ca -a 0 our :f3-aptist people\~ "oti ·from Russian travelers (agri- cords straight, but the b()ok-hand-.., gotiate · Wlith- the ·Russians· on dis- N th C lin t b · · tp.e ··.leaders'· of'--'the. West in ·at- ?r :aro a 0 prayer · egm- -culturists, soil scientists, housing lers are like Abraham Lincoln

armament. We (under the guidance mnO' Feb 2 1958 ·n d eli t' t t ) ten

.. --.-e . "' · . , . , 1 re e ca 1on- exper s, e c .. · · another 45,000 when 1"t comes to m~ney .

........... · · · · '· ·- · of Dtilles) ·had flatly rejected the to our w rld 1 t k il v ,.,..,.e genera·l , f th. th. . . • o m1ss ons· as . spuare m es of the United States. Pro". John Chandler of w 1·111·ams .. ., .Pl!:l.'IPOse·o ega. -·idea ·of ·ady talks unles.s Russia E c f"d ~ erjng was to present.a united front xpress on l ence -an area including San Francisco, Colleg.e received a check for $4.25

against. t"'e· .~cent_. onslaught met us on our .terms. In turn the. "Second, we have confidence in Richmond, and all of" Stanislaus in the mail recently. It came from

n •-~ other. NATO promised to accept the boa ds f tru t e f · t Th d 1 made by the RuSsians in'the field · · o· r 0 se 8 0 our m-. coun Y • • • e ip omatic man- th library of his alma mater of aeronautics,· .. p·articulorly '·the ·bases. -~ . . stltutions and agencies and ex- euvering was . in retaliation for Wake Forest College; where h~

on the very .controyersial issue press our faith in their ·ability to similar steps taken by Russia last two .Spu~,_and gu1doo·_missiles. of whether to . .,.nnrov~e"the French administer their trust in the best August." _·c - :· ,4 . once taught in the Philosophy-' . President Eis- ..... , t - l"O>ychology D"'P<intanca~L; enhower and Se- demand that· ·th~. conferen.ce. en~ in erest of North Carolina Bap- In other words, if little brother A letter exp.Iaining the Sudden

dorse her position in .. Algllria, we tists. . _ Linus won't let us have a cookie, cretary ·or State· conveniently sidestepped by con- "Third, we pledge our support we'll kick him in the shins. payment read: Dulles went:.· tci · and complete cooperation to the Jt1st bec,..use Russ1·a 1·s stup1'd, "We have j'llSt received, from a

· ceding that historic, economic and " · ·-· f !h the meeting: With committee of 25 and the commit- does· that mean that .the United man m-.n.LIZOna, 0 W! om we know

O·n e prin._cl·p·1;,. other friendly ties bebween the two t f 17 d ·- d b th S · nothing the book ''High School - ... countries. would be "desirable." ees 0 an mne .name y e tates must be equally stupid'! ' .

rthought i:n ·mind: Baptist State Convention. Just because Russia is trying to Personnel . War~ Today," by Jane hOW to g-et' the.· · . The confererice did SUICceed by ·"Fourth, we fur'ther pledge our close all paths to future peace,! Warter. Smce It appears from Our other m;~mb.ers · draWing the NATO allies closer energies a11d spirit to the ~eatly does that mean -that we have to records that you had _charged this o! NATO to · al~ · to-gether, but it_ is doubtful tpat enlarged cooperative program goal help her _set . up the TOad blocks; book in 1949, but later believed it low United-States· it contributed anything to the de- adopted by the Baptist State Con- · Notice that the State Depart- lost and repaid us, I am enclosing missile ba:Ses. on J>ire for peace or for peace _itself. vention for the year 1958." ment edict does not seal off the a check for $4.25." their soil. - INGLE NATO haS been and probably will The seven Baptist· colleges rep- University from Russian visitors. So 'after eight years' Prof. . Up .until the third· day· of ·the remain ·an. instrument for military resented i.vere Wake Forest, Mere_ It doesn't have to. The University Chandler got his $4.25 back. The

se.sSiop..s.the United States. had not oorutainment of the Russians. - dith, Campbell, Wingate, Gard- was sealed off in another edict young professor taught here sev­successfully fir~d an intercontin- The united .s·tates showed at ner-Webb, Mars Hill and Ch_~wan. last year. , eral years before g.oing to the Wil­.ental missile ·which -would-of the gathering an· amazing lack of Wake. Forest was repres~nted Russians can still visit StanforQ liarnston, Mass., school in 1955. course-necessitate bases closer tO leadership and had .to be almost bY president Har?ld W. _Tnbble University, ho~ever. If t~ey can He returned to Wake Fore>st last

. Rt:JSsia. than any of oiir own. Dur- forced into .the most im orta.nt de- and..Hube~t E. Olive, president of get there, that ls. The entire area to teach .summer school . . d th. t Pf t· the board of trus-tees. . around Stanford has been sealecl

ing the con:t:erence, however, word ClSJOn rna e - a o nego ~~-came that· the Atlas missile had tions concerning disarmament. We been fpoed. · · still have no overall policy to ap-

The United States also proposed peal to the uncommitted countries to establish stoclq>iles of nuclear of· the world. warheads for the .use of any na- Whether we like it or not, Rus· tion which would accept the mis- sia's propaganda propoSals on dis­sile~. tl:;emselves. armament and the <outlav.riilg of

American officials had expected war are nia-king headwa.Y' among some opposition from the smaller these same people. ·So f~r we nations who reasoned that the have no policy to counter these existence of these bases on their propag.anda blasts and more im­territory wcruld only heighten the portan£, no policy ,to halt the chances of their. nations being at- spread of Communism other than tack. True to expections, Norway military containment, which has and· Denmark rejected the Arneri- proven in the past that it will · ' can: offer. not work.

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Page 4: I'·.·. nr '•k

PAGE FOUR 1\londay, Jan. 6, 1958 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Trustee's Opinions

Convention Draws

Student Views On Integration

Fire Are Favorable Another strongly-worded blast at 1 vention, as it _ha~l been manipu­

College President Harold w. Trib- luted to bury 1t m the vaults. of ble was issued before Christmas Wake Forest College" followmg _holidays by a Wake Forest trustee an investigat~on in 1955 by a ·whose term expires this year. trustee comm1ttce.

. Dr. Tyner was a member of the Dr. C~rl V. ~>:ner of ,Leaks;r•lle. trustee grO'i.l:P that investigated

a long-ttme cnt1c of tne Tnbble T ··"·bl , administration during d · · t t' l d ·• b1·t to 11" e 5

a mm1s ra 10n 1:1 qmce a . the heat of agit:ltion against the say also about the recent BaptJst .d t . the winter of 1954 State Convention and Yrhat he p~·es•. en m h t d have neve; termed "so:ne intemperate state- Fmdmgs of t e s u Y

.. . been released. ments made there. He pointed to the Rev. Douglali

Aiming his remarks first at the Branch of Rocky l\Iount as the Convention, Dr. Tyner said: leader of the move to give Dr.

"The Baptists of North Care- Trjbble a vote of confidence at lina owe other denominations an the convention, and to bury the a.pology, report in the Convention's execu·

"For a Baptist leader, a minist- tive committee. true, then certain elements of aUl' Pointing out that the recent er, to have the gall to say that Ccnvention voted adversely on other denominations, ones who al· every question concerning Wake low dancing in their schools. are Forest and appointed committees dying, when he knows such is not to study many- phases of campus the case, is something for us to life, he posed the que~;tion, "Why be asham.ed of, and he, most of all, have trustees?" sho•,1ld be .ashamed." "It is my understanding," he

He referred a~parently to a said. ''the Convention contrib>a<tes statement made at the Convention less than 10 per cent of the fin­by the Rev. Wendell G. Davis of ances of our Baptist colleges but statesville. Speaking against dane· the leadership now takes the posi­ing on denominational campuses, tion that they should have all the Rev. Davis said those schools per- conlrol. mitting dances were sponsored by "Under this same leadership "dying denominations." there is a further 'consolidation of

Continuing his comments. Dr. position' in order to maintain a Tyner said, "If his statement is stronger grip on the Convention true, then certain elements of our' We have pienty of good preachers. own Baptist denomination are dy- We also have plenty o·f good lay­ing for I. myself. have danced in men. \Ve have approximately 3,· the recreation room of one of our 000 ministers in the Convention Baptist churches. and I know of and ,800,000 ·laymen. other Baptist churches who allow "In view of this, just why are dancing in their rcCl'eation pro· there 48 ministers out of 84 on gram." the General Board? Thirteen of 23

Speaking next of what he called ne'w m·embers of the General "the Dr. Tribble thing," Dr. T) ner I B:mrd are ministers. Why are said "steamroller" tactics. were there ~ 1 ministers ~ut of 15 o~ th.; employed at the Convention to Cmmmttee to Nommate Member~ gain a vot.c of confidence for Dr. of Various Boards? Tribble. "VI'hY does Wake Forest Col-

He said similar tactics were lege have 12 ministers out of 36 used to get the Convention "to '"ru.stee members, and why were bury the TribiJle report in the Ex- five out of nine elected this year ecutive · Committee of the Con- ministers?"

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Integration in the pub 1 i c schools was favored by a three to one majority of United States col­lege students recently questioned in an Associated. ·Collegiate Pr~ poll.

College women were more strongly in favor of integration than were college men.

Seventy-eight per cent of the women questioned favored public s('hool integratiou. The men favor­ing integration totaled. 69 per cent.

Definite opinions against inte­gration were put forward by 29 per cent of the men interviewed. Only 26 per ceut of the '':omen were deffnitely against the mixing of the races 'in public elementary and high schools. ,

No Women Undecided None of the \"."Omen interviewed

were undecided on the integration question. Two per cent of the men said they had not made up their minds on the issue.

Many students qualified their answers .. dth remarks on the use of force in integration.

A senior at Knox College (Galesburg, Ill.) said he thought the r~ces should be integr::~ted, "but not by force." He favored ''subtle persuasion."

Was Against Force A Bradley University (Peoria,

Ill.) student thought the races should be integrated "except in cases whel'e force is necessary to enforce it."

Some of the shldent:; advanced the idea that mixing of the races in the public schools should be <4 gradtcal process instead of a sud­den change.

A University of Ven:,ont sopho­more coed said "integration should t egin/ in the first gr::de, not in high school," and a junior coed. at Biola College (Los Angeles, Cal.) 1·iould like to see integration "done slowly and carefully.''

Segregation 'Not Fair' A Wayne State University (De­

troit, l\lich.) grzduat~ student said "expe!'ienr:!es the two ra:::es will gain g:>ing to school together will te of benefit in life," and a sopho­m.ore coed at the University of Kentucky agreed by saying segre­gation "isn't fD.ir to either race. Each ~•as rnuch to learn from the other." A pro-integration Colorado State College junior commented. "This is Ar~'!eric:c:t."

Two mure students viewed inte. gration as imn itable but <lid not sdvocate the use of force. A sen­iur at the lVIissouri School of Mines said "this is something that is

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Coll~ge (Tyler, Texas) said inte-gration "should 1•ot be done in a forced wanner. When integration is successfully completed it will be a gradual process and the neonle· will be ready for it." S~veral ot the students ques­

tioned expressed the feeling that •1either n1ce wot:ld benefit from mixing +he races and others felt the country is not yet ready for integration.

Prof ToT~lk On Civil War

William B. Hesseltine, professor of histcl'Y at the University of Wisconsin, v:ill appear here Fri­day in a Concert Lecture Series ,,rogram. He will speak at 8 p. m. in the court room of the Law building on "The prison at An­dersonville."

Andersonville, Georgia is one of 1he ,,,_ost famous pdsons of the Civil War er<"\. Recently Hessel­tine reviewed McKinley Kantor's book. "Ande::sonville," in the Geo1:gia Review.

Hesc;eltine, a 1:ative of Virginia, attended Wnshingtoa and Lee University and Ohio State. He is a member of "Who's Who in America," nnd an aclthority on the history of the South.

Some of his most famous books are "Lincoln and the War of Gov­ernors," "Third Parties in Ameri­can History," aed "Confederate Leaders i!1 the New South."

Hesseltine has been visiting His­tory lecturer ut the University of South Carolina th:s semester and 'lext semester will finish work on 'l new book titled "Blue and Gray< '<lOP\: the Nile,'' which tells about Civil War veterans who fought together in Egy1 t.

Vvake Forest's art collection, con­taining 60 paintings, 35 etchings 'lnd lithographs and five pieces of sculpture has been stored since 1 052 for lack of gallery space. Most of the collection is in one of the empty rooms of ~1e library.

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Cl . Q n· ·W F Riflemen:' ass1c uee · 0

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LINDA KINLAW-

Kinlaw Reigns Over Tourney

More honors came to Linda Kinlaw during the Christmas holidays as the pop,ular coed fror:1. Fairmont was named Queen. of the 1957 Dixie Classic, basketball tournament, played in Raleigh Dec. 26-28.

As Queen, she reigned over the three-day event from her seat at midcourt and presented trophies to the eight teams as tbey.finished the tourney.

Beauty honors are nothini new to Linda. She was one ot five finalists in the Miss North Carolina beauty contest last smnmer and was chosen Miss Demon Deacon last fall in a campus-wide election.

A former Miss North Carolina Majorette, she is head baton twirler for the College Band.

By Virg·inians Wake Forest's ROTC riflemen

bowed to Virginia Military Insti.., .tute and Washington and Lee University in a shoulder-to-· shoulder match Dec. 14 in Lex­ington, Va.

VMI's sharpshooting cadets took first place in the event and Wash­ington _and Lee placed second, leaving the Wake Forest contin~ gent in third place.

Wake's Ed Hairfield fired, 381 of a possible 400 points in the match. He haa the highest score in the competition for kneeling and prone positions, and placed fifth 2mong cadets firing for the three schools. -

A long rest is at hand for the riflemen, who don't have another match until North .Georgia Col­lege comes to the Reynolds Gym firin~ range Feb. 15.

GSE Initiates 6 Gamma Sigma' Epsilon, honorary

chemical fraternity, initiated six new r..1embers nt a m.eeting helcli Monday, Dec. 16 in the science fraternities chapter ·room.

Those initiated were Mary Mel Farris, William Owens, Nancy Me_ Neill, Van B. Meadows, Zoe Styers· ?lld F'-ances Youngliiood.

James Macon' Peterson, presi­dent of the fraternity, was- in charge. of the initiation. Others taking part were Jim Gibbs, sec­retary; Richard Frazier, vice pre­sident, and David BJ:yant, treas­ur·er.

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n.er jobs cm11bining schola:;;tic V<1lues with opportunities for out­door living will find thousan?s of openings awa'iting them in Girl Scout camps.

Connselal'S over 18 yem·s old are needed to share these wholesome expe•·iences on n ]lartnership basis. The basic requirements are good health, en.thusiasm, 11atience, ad­aptability, and love of children.

For students 21 years or older, there are numerous openings as unit leaders, naterfront directors, !Jrogram consultants, food super­visor's, health supervisors, basiness managers, and assistant camp

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WHAT I? A POU~EMEN'S BALL 7

I!ENRV BURKHARDT, JR, U. OF DETROIT

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WHAT IS A POMPOUS BULLY?,

JAMES HIBBS INDIANA STATE

TEACHER·s CoLLEGE

Stuffy Toughie

WHAT IS PUPPY LOVE.7

MARINA LA MADRID

U. OF WASHINGTON _!JoUieFoUy

directors. Camp directors must oe 25 or over.

Any girl interested should call the nearest Girl Scout office for additional information on availa­ble openings. For jobs in other areas, wJ:ite to Miss Fanchon Ha1ailton, Recruitment and Refer­ral Advisor, Girl Scouts of the U. S .. A., 830 Third Avenue, New

AJLAN.Jtc·-cuAsr·coNFERENG£~­. BASKETBALL ON·· TVl-EVERY SATURDAY AT 2:00 E.·s.T.

lan.11 .. North·Carollna State·at Duke .

Feb. I ............ Duke'e at North Carolina c

York 22, N. Y. Jan. 18 .. North Carolina at Clemson·

Feb.15 •••• ~.Mi'iyland at No. Car~lina -state--~

Former President Harry S. Tru­man's visit to Winston-Salem in 1951 to - speak at the ground­breaking ceremonies for Wake Forest College was the' sixth offi­cial presidential trip to North Carolina in the history of the State.

Jan. 25:, •••••••• Citadel at Clemson

Fa ... 22 ••• Wake. Forest . at Sout~ Carolina

Feb.l ........ Maryland Mar. l .. South Carolln•:" at Maryland- · atNa~

.,..;.~ · See your loeal pap~r for ~nnei-

WHAT 11 A MARCHINI ·BAND THAT NEVER fJET$­

A lUfJI<Y 8R~AK? (SEE PARAt!RAPH __ tJEI.OW)

MEMO TO MAESTROS: is your band dawdling instead of tootling? Is it full of feeble :fifers and drooping drummers? Well, this musical slowdown may be traceable to lack of Luckies. Better give your band ii bre~-and ma;k:e it a Lucky one! A Lucky, you see, is a light smoke-the right smoke for everyone. It's all cigarette-all naturally light, wonderfully good-tasting tobacco. And Luckies' fine to­bacco is toasted to taste even better. Now then, what's a marching band that never gets a Lucky break? Why, it's a Sore Corps! (Wasn't that cymbal?)

STUCK FOR DOUGH? ~ START Sl'ICKLING! MAKE $25 ~ We'll pay $25 for every Stickler we print-and for ~ hundreds more that never get used! So start Stic~-they're so easy you can think of dozens in seconds! Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word r~yming answers. Both words must have the aame number of syllables. (Don't- do drawings.) Send 'em all with your name, address; college and· class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, :Mount Vernon, N.Y. -

WHAT'S A FRENCH BASKmALL PtAYEit?

MELVYN NIZNY

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WHAT IS A WELL·DRESSED BOXEll?

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LIGHT UP-A lig_ht SMOKE -LIGHT UP A LUCKYI l'roductoJ.3e~J"~-"J"~;,,,mildlf~· --- - . .

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. magazi c ptillin'

Wood the natic tures-on ally stre1 this Yan~

Thew: ·.Heel' stat

each othE played t1: Atlantic_ floor. He

Excite1 -.. Every·c tson in _re Then the ago in W

.;Hodg, Even •

ACC tom "at a .die throws it the iloor.

Parkin 'citing th whiCh wa

"But a Wr had spillt rigged fc

· Anotl:lE evening , he used

Dixie. Accorii

from Per Once he pills aria· again; Tc

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.. By; CARTER. HEDRICK. :·- ".i

Articlt{Savs_ACC . ~ ' . . . .., ' . .

. Is ~Wild, Frenzied' ,,

"You and you~ readers will get a terrific belt out of The . Country's Wildest· Basketball," promised "True" ·

. magazine's promotion _ director. Suh, you ·ain't jus~ ~ ptillin' mah leg:. It was -sho nuff the truth. ·

Wood Parkinson, in an 'article appearing in this month's issue of the national magazine, has written. one of the most humorous fea- · tures· on .North Carolina basketball to appear in recent years. ~iber­ally stretching southern speech and basketball facts to suit ihimself, this Yankee writer causes·no significant harm. ·. ·

The wriier says, that basketball dval!ry is so intense in the Tar ·. Heel'state "Tru;_t the schools wilr'use any weapon at-all .to clobber

each other, even Yankees. And when the University of North Carolina playf\d the University of South Carolina for the championship of !he Atlantic Co3.flt Conference, there ·.was only one Carolinian oh the floor. H~ was a boy from North Carolina playing for ~outh Carolil).a."

· Exci'tem;,mi runs so· high among students that violence often occurs. '"Every'cop in Ral~igih was dispatched to the scene," claims Parkin­

. eon in :refeirlng to an iriciaen:t '!:bat resulted 'following a State loss. Then there was the Wake Forest:-North !Jarolina riot of two Y~.ars ago in Woolen Gym with 50 Deacons taking on 5,450 Tarheels .

.;Hodges Canters ••• ·conspiracy · · Even wnen ·Governor Luther Hodges tosses up the first ball in the

ACC tournarnent,·a spectacle is in store-for spectators. The Governor "at a. dignified canter, dribbling the ball with grace and. precision, throws it up between the startled centers, catches it and dribbles off the .floor. ·_ ·

Park,inson says~ ~at _both students and coaches join in conspiracy, · citing the time ·:puke's Bucky A,llen suffered a bad ankle sprain, whiCh was kept_ in deep ·secret' before Duke's game with Wake Forest.

'1 But a Wake .Forest student dated a Duke coed whose sorority sister"

had spilled. the beans ap.d Wake~s coaches had a special 'defense l'igged for Bucky's replacement. ·

· Anotl:le~ game ·found two Deacon coaches spending an entire ) . -- .. ' ' ... ,.... . _,..

evening watching the Blue Devils' Joe Belmont to ·see 'whicli hand he used to begin dribbling inost ·often. · ' _. "' ·

Dixie. Bad? ... 'No Suh . .,

Accoraing:. to the writer, Clemson's Press Maravich, an import from Penrisy1vania, eats towels 'during actiorr to prevent ulcers. Once he quit 'for' ten days- and "had tO start "taking ·tranquil)izh~g. pills aria ·medicin-e for ulcers and in two weeks was back on the toweJ

·again; Towels.·a;re ch·eaper."-. ·. . ·· ., . . _ .. -,' Play became so 'tough for outsiders that Frank. Jo'hnson, South

carolfu'a coacn,"'iniported . a team· from· 'Pik¢11e Junior. Callege in . Kentucky, "inCluiling Grady· Wallace. ·"The Pikeville--coach gave ·up, tossed himself 'into ,the- package, and is.·now. assistant co\lch at South

... .. :.

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. '

First· Team .Position-' •

'OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Jan': 6, 1958 PAGE FIVE r . , ... · .. - . . .

Broadway Gets Classic Honors MOST CONVENIENT TO CAMPUS

Varsity Shell Service Wilke Forest's Olin Broadway- gave one of his best, performances to ·receive first team honors o·n the. ·Dixie Classic's All-Tournament team .released last week. Another Deacon, guard George_ Ritchie, place on the second team.·

· Pete Brennan; North Carolina's All-American forward candidate, was the only unanimous choice of sports writers, radio and TV announcers who covered the three"day tourney in Raleigh. ~ fir~t-place vote counted five points and a second­

place vote counted three points in the balloting. Following -Brennan on the first team· wtere:

Tommy Kearn~, 279 points; Whitey Bell, N. C. State, 271; ·Bucky Allen, Duke, 202; and Broadway, 188. . - . .

Named ·on the s-econd squad were 'Phil Warren, Northwestern, 177; Lou Pucillo, N. C. State, 146; Bob Vernon, Duke, 140; ·Bob Cunningham, North' ... . Carolina, 185; and Ritchie, 126. Only Brennan and · Warren are forwards All other members of the All-Tournament team are guards. .

Brennan was ·also named· the most valuable play­er in the tournament as lie led the Tar Heels to their second consecutive Classic title. He was the Scoring leader with 53 points.

Broadway· lifted his season's scoring average to 12.8 points per game as he ripped' the nets for 51 tallies as Wake won over Duquesne and lost to State and Duke. Only J3re'iman's. total of 53 was·· .: higher.

In addition to leading the Deacs in the ·scoring column, the rapidly-improving sharpshooter led the squad in rebounds with 28.

For the Classic Broadway hit on 19 of 35 shots from the floor to b_ring his accuracy mark Ior the season to 40.2 per cent.

Ritchie came back from a scoreless first game to lead Wa¥ with 20 points against State and 28 against Duke for 11th spot' in overall toul."nament scoring. .

The Cliatta~oy, W. Va., sophomore connected on·" 16 of 35 shots from the flo.or and 11 of 12 from the fre,e throw line. ·

I

Mu.ral.. ScQre Zoom~ High ~s Gy1n·Dandees __ Tally 100

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Intramural basketball gets back into full swi_pg again· today with four. games scheduled.'. Only foWJ

· 853 · Reynolda Rd.: .. Sandwiches .. And .Short Orders games were played last ,week with Phone PA S.SS5l · · _· . · ··: .. . · . .; . . ": '.1 ·- · ·~ ·' the Gyr,n Dandeestnkingthespot- ·~~~~~::~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ light by Scoring 100 points in top~ · ~~

·qarolina.~',:r-"'"~:· .. ~>-'.~:_·:r ~-:. 1 !·:.~{·· '( ~· .·. ~_._.·, __ ... _ ~--~ .... - · ·Commenting on··wake's' promotion of Mbrray 'Greason. lind Bones· ·

McKinney last spring;:Parkinson ~ttributes it to McKiriiley's' ·jumP.­ing up and down while drink-ing water. "Moral: if you wan~ th~: bess's. ·job, dump· water ·on· him •. " : ·. . :. . We.sWiped only part of the meat •of"the article> See, Mr. Parkin-·

Tht{ Sco:rehoard ·TJJ,is .W~k~~ ·-Schedule ... ·- . ',.· •.·.Today ...

Delta 'Sig ·~B·~··v.s:.· :M:on9_gram -·· ~-;

ping the Freshmen· Pumpers. ·It marked. the first time this season that a squad has reached the century .. mark · ·Other 'basketball' ,action : last week had Young Gentlemen· ovj;!I' Kappit Sigma "B:' 36-32; ·Kappa Sigma· over·· Lambda· 'Chi, 35-27;

.:-·· .. : lanu.ary. -:Clearciil,c(i_

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· ·ailld Sigma' Phi :Epsilon over Sigm·a Phi, 35-26.

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P. E. K. vs. PiKA "C" Thursday

Delta S'g "B" vs. Preachers 1\-Ionogram vs. Hunter Lambda 'Chi '!A" vs. SPE . Delta· Sig vs. Theta Chi . ·

Standings · Fraternity League

Sigma Chi ., ... ~.· ---~-·~.::. ___ 4 ·. 0 Sigma ·Phi Epsilon -------- 4 1 Pi Kappa Alpha ---------- 3 1 Kq.ppa Alpha ·------------ 3 1 Lambda Chi Alpha -------- 3 2 Xan!'a Sigr,m ------------- 2 3 Sigma Pi ___ : _____________ 1 3

Alpha Sigma Phi.·---------- 1 3 Delta Sigma Phi ---------- 1 4 Theta Chi =---------------- 0 4

Independent "Red" Gym Dandees ---:--------- 4 0 · Golden Rockets ----------- 4 0 1

Davis Dormitory ---------- 3 1 PiKA "B" -----------r---- 2 1 Young Gentlemen --------- 2 2 Freshmen Pumpers ________ 2 2 ,Alpha Kappa Psi _________ 0 3 Kap:'a Sig•na "B" 0 4

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PENN R. POST received his B.S. in engineering from U.C.L.A •. in 1956. He is now in the second year 'of General Electric's Technical Mar­keting Program, in the Company's General Purpose Motor Department.

''In a grovving .,

room for industry, there's me to grovv''

"Here at General Electric," says Penn R. Post, 24-year-old marketing trainee, "you hear a lot of talk about the futur~- even as far ahead as 1978. ~n fact, I've discovered that planning ahead for Amer­ica's needs 10 and 20 years from now is characteristic of the electrical industry. And, what's important to me, General Electric's long-range planning takes my futllre into account. I'm now on my fourth a.Ssign­ment in the Goinpany's Technical Marketing Program

;' -.all planned steps in my development.

' · "I'm pretty confident about the electrical future,

l I j. j

too. For one thing, ~merica's use of electricity has been doubling every ten years. And it will increase even faster as our population grows another 65 mil­lion by 1978 - and as research and development lead to new electrical products that help people live bet­ter. The way I look at it, the 'technical, manufactur4 ·ng and marketin~ resources of· large companies like

General Electric are important factors in the growth of the electrical industry. And in a growing indus­try, there's room for me to grow." ·

Young people like Penn Post are an important part of General Electric's plans to meet the oppor­tunities and challenges of the electrical future. Each of our 29,000 college-graduate employees is given opportunities for training and a climate for self-de­velopment that help him to achieve his fullest capa­bilities. For General Electric believes that the prog­ress of any industry- and of the nation- depends on the progress of the people in it.

'11-ogl'eS$ Is Ovr.Mosl lmpor18nf Protlvd

GENERALfJ ELECTRIC

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PAGE SIX Monday, Jan. 6, 1958 OLD ·GOLD AND BLACK ', . · .. Ha:rt· Lettcls.: Ace Meet

Stand BabY Dea~s TankTnen FaC~ Sldlti • Deacons To Open Home Thursday Night With Roosters · Fr,osh Cagers

. ,. . Set Two Tilts

' - . Returni~_g ~o action after a . two-weeks lay off, Wake's Baby Deacons ~ill ~e seeking to add to their list of victims this week in two games scheduled for Me:.

Wake Forest fans will get a chance this week to see Coach B o n e s McKinney's basketball squad in action at home for the first time in four weeks as the.

RAY PERICOLA

LENWOOD Ai\ll\iONS

Deacons play host to two strong Walt Hudson, Fred Luigs_ and Don -\tlantic Coast Conference op- Goodree. vonents. Herb Busch, a 6-7 juniOr center,

Thursday night South Carolina's leads Virginia in Saturday's en­:iamecocks bvade Memorial Coli- counter. The Cavalie;:- star ' is ;eum $nd Virginia will visit on second only to North Carolina's 3aturday night. Following the Pete Brennan in Ac·c sco;ring Virginia tilt, Wake will play host averages with an 18.8 mark. 'o Clemson, Duke, Maryland and Busch pla~·ed in only 10 contests :\forth Carolina before taking to last season but comrJiled 198 points ~he road again. to 'lead Virginia.

Junior guard Ray Pericola is Rounding out the starters for expecterl to lead South Carolina's V:irginia are 6-5 John Siewers and ~ttack Thursday night. Pericola, a 6~6 Bill Metzger at the forwards, '3-2 sharpshooter, is the Confer- and 6-3 Dick Stobbs and 6-0 Paul ·nee's third top scorer with a 17.9 Adkins at the guards. average. The tilt will be the second meet_

Noted for his drive-ins, Pericola ing of the year for the squads. '·earned with All-American Grady Virginia wori a hard fought 66-61 ·wallace to lead the Gamecocks victory over Wake just before the 'nto the ACC finals last season as Christmas holidays at Charlottes­'le averaged 15-points per game ville. Va. ·or the seaso;J. CoaC'h McKinney is expected to

HERB BUSCH

Teaming with Pericola at the start the same unit thnt opened )ther guard position will be Dickie against North Carolina at Chapel "Orater, a 6-3 Kentuckian who is Hill Saturd~v night. Thnt unit ~onsidered one of the best shots consists of ·wendell Carr, a 6-5 on the squad. senior, and Dickie Odom, 6-6 Ritchie with an 11-point average.

Rounding out the starting squad junior, at the ·forwards; Dave ·Carr has a 6-point r.1ark and •Nill be either 6-7 soph Bob Frantz Budd, a 6-6 sophomore, at center, Dickie Odom a 5.5 mark. 'Jr 6-8 junior Fred Lenz at center; with OIL11 Broadway, a 6-3 junior, ··Other Deacons exper.ted to see 3-1 junior Die!: Hoffman at one and George Ritchie, a 5-11 soph, considerable action are guard •orward spot and 6-6 soph Mike at the guard posts. Charlie Forte who is averaging Callahan at the other. Budd continues to le~d the Dea- 4.5, forwards Hank Bowers, with

Others who probably will see cons in scoring with a 15.2 aver- a 3:0. mark, and Ken' Cox with 1.0, ~ction :for Coach Frank Johnson age. He is closely followed by and center Winston Wiggins with 'lre twin 6-6 forwards Bury and Broadway v•ith ·a 12.8 mark, and, a 3.9-point average.

A. C. MOTSINGER, JR.

· morial Coliseum. In action be­fore Christmas the squad rolled up ·a 4-r record. . ,

Thursday night the Deaelets ;meet Pembroke State in a pre­

liminary to the Wake Forest­South Carolina game and Sa'tur­day nig:ht the squad will enter­tain Carolina's powerful Tar Babies before the varsity · meets Virginia.. . ·

Alley Hart, 5-10 guard from Kin.ston, continues to pace the Deaclets with .an 18.2 scoring average. But Elkin's 6-8 center, J~rry Steele is a close second with a 17.!3 average.

Three other Baby- Deacs are in double digit averages. Billy F'ennell, G-5 forward, has a 12.2 mark, w.hile Paul Wilner is 12.0 and Norman Snead 11.0. David Adkins is next at 9.6 followed by Eddie Holbrook at 5.2.

Coach Cl).arlie Bryant's frosh dropped their opener to Duke's Blue Imps, 83-69, but roared back to take State, 75-65; rOll

1 over Davidson, 80-54; turn back Oak Ridge, 83-56; and wallop High Point, 104-73, before tak­ing off for. the holidays.

Saturday night the frosh traveled to ·Chapel Hill to meet North Carolina's yearlings.

AMMON'S WF Improved I

In Tournament Dixie Classic Notes I By CARTER HEDRICK "They'll give :plenty of ~ood

Wake's 64-54 victory over favor· teams. some trouble up at Win­

ESSO Welcome

Servicenter Wake Forest

A~d Family

Students

An inspired band of basketball ed Duquesne brought onJy smiles ston-Salern," said Case. ·"Remem­Deacons knocked off favored Du- from Coach Horace McKinney. "It ber now, they've been on the quesne University, 64-54, to open was the best Christmas present road." the ninth annual Dixie Classic in they could have given me,'' .;aid . Raleigh during the Christmas va- McKinney. George Ritchie literally ran out cation ner'iod. However .losses to · Looking at the game's statistics ' of .his shoes against Duke. One N. C. State, 63-61, and Duke, 79- McKinney exclaimed "My friend .

1 shoe came' apart during the first

75, left Wake in fourth place for we> got 50 rebound~. That's .th~ half and MdGnniiY· il;J.mediat~ly · : the three-day event. squ3:d's .highest total·of the year'.~' subbed for the Dea(!on guard.

Wake ·floored a vastly improved McKinney glanced at the score 1 • -Minutes later RitChie returned

By'ED JONES. meets of ihe se~: ·. Coach Leo EllisoR's swimmers The freshmen' :Will face

have resumed 'fUll practice sch,e-' Park High School at Cl),,·a-Fintl~e dules in :Preparation for \two sWim Wednesday a.iid. Will ~. n~~~ meets this week. They will go .to the Clemson rre.Shmen in si Raleigh Jfrjday 1or a meet with events at the varsitY m~ N. C. State and then will enter- Saturday afternoon: ,. tain the Tigers from Clemaon here Maiyland beat the Denes· S2-24 Saturday in the W. N: Reynold's in a m¢et jtist befo~_ the e~ pool at 3:30 p. m. · · mas holidays. The Terps took first

Tpe Wolfpac~' is coached by and second in the' diving .'inatch Willis Casey. Letter.men include whicn· · Elljsan described as the Dick Christy, . Bob Erilun; . Dick "best \Ve have ever 5een here iri. Fadgen, and Frank Mercliel. · ·our· paol. Maryland· has ·

Clemson · coach Carl McHugh tionaliy gocid divers · has five lettermen: Louis· Acker:.. Chipll,lan shoYied up well ag;tirii~ man, Harcy Gilmer, Alan· lv,[c- thetn."·, · · · Cahan, Eric Philpott, and Bill :Wake Forest's Bobll"albert took Stover. first place in the 100 ·yard tree-

Ellison said that Clemson and style race with a 'time ·of 59.1 the ·Beacs are about equal in seconds. ·wake won the 440 strength and th"lt Saturday's match free-style ;relay by wo~ld probably ~ one of t)le ,~t ti«m. · · '

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Service team to give both old rivals a !'lheet again to murmur, ·~Hmrnm; 1 to the playing floor ~n black shoes; fight I before bowing in the final Budd looks like he can hit. . (The , which stood out as both squads minutes of both games, with the spph. center hit on ·10 of. Hl at- 1 were wearing white foot gear. . Prompt Service For. Sltud4~D[tS Duke battle going.i.rito an over- tempts from the floor.) And that's,.. ,~~~6~2~4~W~.~-4~th~~s~t.~==·=··;i .. i·i·:·::i·i=: .. i~·:=i=:E~aa5~~~~·

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time. . playing out of position. Why. he's . "One thing .about". the.se boys," . c_enter Dave Budd burned the really a forward." .. · .. ·.. -~ ! commented McKinney, · "."""·--"''~ , nets for 25 pOints and Olin Broad- Pausing a moment he· added, never a dull moment- " ·

way added 19 to pave the way for· "That Budd can smoke 'em' on there's crying or shouting. And (' . .·. I p " ·L " ·sh·. ·.· . ·a"-·<-: -. Wake~s victory over the Dukes. water." .. _. looks like we m·ight start d.oing a a·me ' awn· ·op·.. .... EJccellent playmaking and defense .little shou#ng." · · · . · · , · ., . . j.. I~· work by sub guard Charlie Fort~ After one game a pb~tographer · "Oh I holler at 'em," McKinneY · , highlighted the ·win. . · · -. asked one Deaeon to kneel in front continued, "but that's the way I "Home Of Low· Prices"

. . . A tap shot by center--Johp JMch~ so. ·be ·eould ~t him in a pieture. want it. When I stop hollerin' is '--------------------------~--·-· ter. ana.~ free throw. b:v·· ~i!e:-• ·-."Mail, l1_1Y bOys never Drind iE't- when it's time to 1\•orr.y." Men's And Laclies Wrist Watehe8 --·-·-·-·---····:~~---·'· ,$9:95 to $19.95 ---------------'--------------:--:---:-.--· ·Bell in the game'sfinal ao ~cotids t!ng on their knees," replied Me· McKinl'!ey's prediction for Wake: With Compiete Brand New. Guarantee . ' r-----~-----------"'""--.---~----"""""'!· ga,~e State its win ov~r Wake. ~iilney. , . · "This ball dub, just because they · · · ..... · · · · -' '

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tim to tt 1~-point overtime effort . Coaeh Everett Case of Stat.e ·by Bob Vernon, who seore_d ·all lik~d W:ake's sh'ooting. "Their

' Duke's points in the ·extra ·session. werall shod!rlnjt 'il;!l.s terrific.". said . Guard George Gitchie rut foT Gase. The Deaeons hit on 42.6 per

. -20 points ag<#nst State and 2~ cent a g a i n s t .DilSq_uesne, 51.3 against Duke to lead Wake's against State, and ·40.7 against sccirfng in both contests. · Duke.

Two Lettermen

Seton Hall's coach Honey Rus­sell ~as impressed with Wake's sop.h center Winston Wiggins. Rus-. sell tabbed Wiggins as one of the best sophomore prospects he had .;een in the :past two years.

Meeting Of Track Hopefuls Set

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All students interested in run­ning indoor or outdoor track this year have been asked to report to Coach Bill Jordan tomorrow night for a special meeting in Room 207 of Reynolds Gym at seven o'clock.

Jordan says that progress is being made on the College's out­door track whieh is due to be com .. pleted in time for 1 outdoor track.

at Washington, D. C. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii~~ Feb. 8-VMI Relays at ·Lexing- ~ ton, Va.; 22-Big Four Day at

"I want to see both freshman and Yarsity candidates," said J or­dan, "whether they intend to run indoor or outdoor track. And it's important that everyone attend."

Only two lettermen were on hand for first .'indoors drills last v.-eek. Senior Dick Frazier :md junior B::ob Medlin are the only veterans working out yet.

Sophomores Sam Jordan and Ga.il Ramsey, wl:ro ran cross coun­try this fall, are expected to help, while several more lettermen are expected to return this week.

Jordan reports that ,several good sp::-inters were among fresh­man candidates reporting last week. Bart Huston and larry Rogers are expected to lead the yearlings.

Tht squads will have the best equipment available Wake bas had in several years reports Jordan. A 220-yard track and a 70-yard straightaway for sprints and hurd­les has been layed off for run­ners.

One big im:proYement over last year according to Jordan is the fact that tracksters will be able to work out on the campus instead ,.,f having to go to Reynolds High School for workouts.'

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