wilson walks out his trial - wake forest university · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is ed...

8
to ;e of 1rtu- ,nted ,is Ed- ltry. I Will just- In mrts new- is a who peti- , has :mall eally :ter- ·okes 1 the :him ween ion." 1oper 1man team tron:: .. . . \., · Heery BS iNS ON been sports 1 or a Kathy ucation ·n, New team's !S this 1 ; will 'uesday edtheir :; team :onettes !ighteen :o-come their !, The ·26. playing Lr under der the 1omen·s' :e the players ressure es are around Lvorable ent of- already UNC-G, a good the team sopho- , Car- Villa, .n of :e Sulli- anassas, d, soph- dy Rich- 1 n, Maple on, Joan khmond, , sopho- and Beth arle. ted arten ls. Coach to coach e girls ' ., ·,, TODAY, INSIDE TODAY, EDITORIAlLY WFU 1962 VISITATION PLEDGES THEATRE * HONOR SYSTEM * * * A Prize- Winning Newspaper * * * VOLUME LV Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Friday, February 27, 1970 Number 18 Wilson Walks Out On His Own Trial BY JOHN E LLJOTT Omega Wilson, sophomore of Mebane charged with a violation of the honor code, walked out of his trial by the Honor Council moments after it had begun Wednesday night. His action followed reading by the Afro- American Society of a resolution calling for ''due and proper changes" in the Honor Coun- cil and "the elimination of all present Honor Council members from any revised system." Jim East, senior of Charlotte and chair- man of the Honor Council, had just opened the trial, saying "We are here tonight to consider the case of Omega Wilson ... ," when Tom Jones, sophomore of Enfield, stood in front of East and read the following reso- lution: "To whom it may concern: The Afro- American Society of Wake Forest University 'resolves as of February 25, 1970: ''That no members of the Wake Forest University student body will be allowed to go before the present Honor Council un- til due and proper changes have been made and approved by the entire student body; and ''That among these changes must necessi- tate the elimination of all present Honor Council members from any revised system in the trial of the accused Omega Wilson or any· student henceforth.' " WILSON'S APPEAL .•.• The Council has pre-determined guilt in the Wilson case, as evidenced by their letter criticizing the executive committee's decision in the Bowden case for "failing to reflect the severity of the offense." Since the two cases are so closely related, this statement illustrates that the council has also pre-determined guilt in Wilson's case. The appeal concluded, "I realize that this is an irregular procedure, but circumstances and past events demand that such action be taken." The members or the Society rose and applauded after Jones read the resolution and the appeal, When East again attempted to begin the trial, Jones began to re-read the resolution, and the society members, including Wilson, walked out of the trial room. East declared the case closed because the defendant was not present• East immediately informed Thomas E. Mullen, dean of the college and chairman of the executive committee, of the action which had taken place• Mullen said in· response to a question, "There is a crisis confronting us right now. The future of the University is at stake at this point. 1 would rather not spec- ulate about what will happen." The Honor Council had made four re- visions in its procedures after criticism by the Afro-American Society and other stu- first time in the Wilson case. The revisions Jones also read an appeal by Wilson to are: the executive committee requesting that ital- ••.• A student on trial may have an advisor low him to "by-pass any trial by the present of his choice, but the defense attorney will Horior Council on the grounds that it would be still be chosen from the Council itself. impossible for me to get a fair trial under .... The defendant, his advisor, and the this system and its members.'' attorneys for the prosecution and the de- The appeal said that since the present fense will be excluded from all delibera- Honor Council would be "prejudiced'' in lions of the Council of the verdict and any case "similar in circumstances and the penalty. identical in charges" to that of Steve Bow- •••. The chairman of the Council will no den, it had "disqualified itself" from try- longer question the defendant or witnesses, ing Wilson's case. thus avoiding being labeled as a prose- The appeal listed four reasons why the cutor. present Honor Council would be "prejudiced" •..•A permanent tape will be made of every Dick Gregory Will Speak Sunday Black Comedian To Lecture In Wait Chapel Sunda.r Night Dick Gregory, nationally kn,,. 1 comedian, author, lecturer, and actor, wh .. ;peakinWait Chapel this Sunday, at 8 p.m. His appearance is being sponsored by the University Afro- American Society. Gregory spoke at the University four years ago for the Challenge '67 program. His books include "Sermons," and his autobiography, ''Nigger," which has become a best seller, He is also the author of "Write Me In," a book explaining why he should have been a write-in Presidentiai candidate during the 1968 elections. Gregory has starred on Broadway, tele- vision shows, and made a motion picture debut in ''Sweet Love, Bitter." universities throughout the country, always having overflow attandance and speaking as many as three hours. Robert Neal, sophomore of Reidsville, and president of the AAS, said the society is sponsoring Gregory in conjunction with the University chaplain, Ed Christman. Last spring the group presented "Black Week", a series of lectures and programs focusing on the plight of the black man in American society. But Neal said the AAS would be unable to do so this year because of insufficient finance. It was originally scheduled for Feb- ruary 16-20. in the Wilson case: investigation and trial. •-'l'he Wilson case is closely related to the Bowden case, both having practically He is currently lecturing at colleges and Tickets for the Gregory lecture are on sale now. The student price is one dollar with ID and $1.50 for the general public. identical investigations, charges, and de- fenses. .Wilson is a member of the Afro- Society, which was "severely crit- lctzed by the Honor Council for request- ing the executive committee to review the Bowden case," .... The Honor Council would be defending themselves and the Honor Council system against recent criticism of the Council. Students Vent Opinions On Council By JOHN ELLIOTT and SUE ENGLISH Bewilderment, anger, disgust--these are some of the words which describe students' reactions to the continuing controversy re- garding the Honor Council, the Steve Bowden trial, and the decision of the executive com- mittee to put Bowden on probation mstead of suspending him. The Honor Council suspended Bowden, a sophomore of Mebane, for the se- mester after finding him _guilty of cheating on a history examination. The executive committee reduced the penalty to proba- tion after an appeal by the Afro-American Society, of which Bowden is a member. The Society and other students criticized the Honor Council on several counts, charging that adequate records are not kept of trials and that guilt is pre-determined by the Council. An Honor Council member said that she thinks the Honor Council is doing a good job, and remarked that "the executive com- mittee' s actions reflect on the Honor Coun- cil and hurt them. "It is good, however, that the controversy arose because it makes the student body aware that they are a neces- sary part" of the honor system." A University athlete said that the Bowden case was "clearcut cheating" and that Bow- den had "done enough to be kicked out." He said that the Afro-American Society had "turned a judicial issue into a racial prob- lem, when there was no racial issue in- volved.'' they should have let the student go alto- gether.'' On the other hand many students feel, like Mary Pipines, sophomore of Franklin Lakes, N. J,, that -- reversal was unfair to the other students who 11ad been convicted prior to this case.'' Hal White, junior of Raleigh, said that "the Honor Coun- cil is inequitable" and "should be challenged and investigated more," but remarked, "It is unfortunate that the executive committee had to abrogate a student decision. In other words, the system should have been beyond reproach already, and any student should be able to receive justice even if he isn't in such a favored position." In defense of the executive committee's stand, however, another Honor Council mem- ber, although saying that she disagreed with the penalty given Bowden by the committee, said, "If we as students cannot retain our faith in the integrity and impartialit)' of the groups to which we give power, ti we no longer believe that their decisions are based on concern for the individual, as well as the University as a whole. then the entire normative structure of the University, not just the honor system, may be severely damaged.'' SLC Agrees To Place Motion Before Faculty BY DIANNE JONES Managing Editor Visitation received a faint green light W.ednesday afternoon when the student life committee voted to recommend to the facul- ty that intervisitation be implemented on a trial basis for one year, effective upon ap- proval of the undergraduate Iacuity. 'The student government passed the visi- tation bill, which would allow women stu- dents in men's dorm rooms on a limited basis, on February 17. The proposal was exactly like the original visitation bill passed Nov. 5 of last year except for further limi- tation of visiting hours and a section which demanded that the resolution be sent to the Student Life Committee instead of the exec- utive committee. The student life committee is made up of nine faculty members and six voting stu- dent members. The executive committee is made up of the dean of the College, the dean of the school of business administration, and six faculty members. The faculty will meet March 9, but due to business already on the agenda might have to postpone acting on the visitation proposal. Dr. Richard Zuber, associate professo;. of history and a member of the SLC said Wednesday night, "This does mean the stu- dent life committee supports intervisitation, but it doesn't mean we think we have the right to implement it." Zuber predicted there would be a ''great debate" both on the jurisdiction'' of the executive and student life t:ommittees and "the proposal itself.'' FACULTY DECIDES "We wanted the faculty to decide whether or not we ought to be dealing with it," he said. The question over the jurisdiction into which the visitation proposal falls is vague. The executive committee has jurisdiction over situations involving individual students, while the student life committee has juris- diction over student organizations. But the student life committee also has jurisdiction over the "social life of the student.'' Dr. Richard Barnett, associate professor of history and a member of the :;tudent life ;·ommJnee, presented the proposal to the committee. He explained that while he didn't ·"really approve it" he thought students should find out for themselves that visitation was "silly," Barnett emphasized that he hoped Dr. James Ralph Scales, president ofthe Univer- sity would tell the faculty exactly "how he feels" on the matter. Barnett said it would save the faculty work and confusion if the president would direct them. Scales, although unavailable for comment Wednesday night, said earlier in the week that his own position on intervisitation was :"unchanged." After the passage of the first intervisitation bill, Scales had said, "The answer is no" to visitation. Scales, referring to the student govern- ment said, "1 don't blame them for trying," but he expressed displeasure with the Leg- islature's action, He seems most concerned with the reaction the second passage of the proposal would have on the members of the quality of life committee, which was created by the executive committee to study the quality of student social life, The committee was established early this year primarily because of "the prohibition on bedroom visiting," Scales said. The Legislature's action was not an at- tack on president Scales, nor did it renege our commitment to the quality or life com- mittee, but it did show our concern'' over "University structure and authority," Jim Cross, president of the student body, said Wednesday. Resolution Gives Students Access To Information A resolution has been passed by the faculty permitting "interested" students access to information concerning faculty meetings, The resolution will make known the ac- tions of the faculty, but not individual mem- bers, The resolution, adopted February 9, reads "At the discretion of the chairman and sec- retary of the faculty, the Director of Com- munications of the University shall be au- thorized to make available to interested stu- dents information concerning actions of the faculty unless the faculty shall have deemed otherwise, This provision shall apply to action dated January 1970 or there- after." One faculty member said the resolution was adopted by an'' overwhelming majority," Debate centered around the question of wheth- er or not students had a right to know what goes on, particularly on issues which are important to them. The resolution supposedly will "regular- ize'' the information on faculty meetings which reaches students and will prevent certain leaks to students which could give a false impression of the faculty's posi- tion, said the faculty member. Dr: Thomas- E. Mullen, dean of the College, is faculty chairman. Dr. J. Edwin Hendricks, associate professor of history, is secretary. Russell H. Brantley is the University's director of communications, SG Committee To Study , Honor Council Systems A committee to study thestudentsentiment on the Honor Council was appointed this week, according to Ed· Wooters, vice president of the student body. "We're not going in with the idea we have to change anything," Wooters said, "We're going to study honor councils at other schools. Members of the committee include, Karen Barnette, sophomore of Statesville; Gerald McKoy, sophomore of Fayetteville; Gary Burke, senior of Winston-Salem; Sally Ains- worth, junior of Webster, N.Y.; Sam Lewis, junior of Burlington; and Wooters, Wooters said faculty members would be appointed to the committee in the next few weeks. Quick Exit Dr. Robert A. Dyer, assistant dean of the college and secretary of the executive com· mittee, defended the committee's stand by saying that during the 13 years he has served as secretary, the committee has not been swayed by public opinion, but "has done its most to see that the students get the benefit of the doubt." Teach Accounting And Sociology Tom Jones, a member of the University'l> Afro-American Society, reads a resolution demanding a change in the honor system dur- ing the Honor Council trial of Omega Wilson Wednesday night. Shortly afterward, society members applauded Jones' effort and walked out of the room. The defendant, who has al- ready refused to be tried by the Council, walked out with them. Support Legislature Gives To Curriculum Proposals Feeling that the present curriculum is too rigid-with too many required courses and not enough imaginative courses-the stu- dent governmPnt voted Wednesday to support the tentative curriculum change published in last week's "Old Gold and Black". The resolution that was submitted i:n· Don Shafer, vice president of the senior class, and pa•;,; ·J ''-'the Legislature, reads: "The Student Legislature of W:J.ke University supports the Faculty Curriculum , Study Committee·s plan for curriculum ' change '.Is outlined in the February 13, 1970, issue of tht> "Old Gold and Bl:1ck' '. It remains for the resolution to be passed by the faculty and trustees, The :;t·J,)r.at also vuteu to contint1e the formation of the Honor Coun- cil review commit tee. The question arose as to why a mem •_,er of the Afro-American Society is on the committee and not repre- sentatives from other organizations. It was decided that since the society posed the quesli.Jn :1:1out the honor council they should be represented. Ted Keller, sophomore legislature, proposed a resolution to allow voting priv- ileges in next year's Legislature to Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, According to the resolution, one representative from APO will be added to Kitchin complex, The Legislature a in the student financial responsibility act by passing the approval of various University organizations and allowing the Legislature itse If to pass it. Ed Wooters, vice of the student governme11t, said, "We need to take a dif- ferent in the legislature. The stu- dl!nt gmernment is the only political izatiO!I on campu3 and it de- cisions. We should take stands instead of getting the approval of all," RELUCTANT Many students appeared reluctant to dis- cuss the controversy, declining to comment or asking that their names not be used, One freshman coed, when asked her opinion, protested, ''No, nothing about the Honor Council.' • Among those who did express their opinions, some appeared disgusted with the Honor Council and its procedures, others felt that Bowden had "gotten off . easily" because he is black and an athlete, and others held both of these views or seemed confused by the whole affair. Mike Harrawood, sophomore of Charlotte, said, "I think the whole system is wrong. The honor system is too rigid and inflex- ible," He said, on the other hand, that the executive committee decision "completely breaks all precedent and makes people like Jim East the puppet of the administration." Robert Neal, sophomore of Reidsville and president of the Afro-American Society, said that "there is no way that any black student on this campus could get a fair trial now from the Honor Council." ·He described the present method of election of Honor Council members as a "popularity contest, and suggested that at least some of the members of the council should be appointed by a faculty or administrative com- mittee. Neal said regarding the executive com- mittee's decision to put Bowden on probation ''Since they found reason to reduce the charge: University By PATTIALLEN What would bring a black professor to Wake Forest? For the first time this semester there are two black professors at the University, and the reasons that brought them here are, simply, need plus qualifications. The Uni- versity needed two professors, and these men had the qualification to fill those needs. JOSEPH JOWERS ••. Sociology ... Hires Two Black Profs Dr. Joseph Norman is a recent addition to the accounting and economics department. He comes from the accounting department of North Carolina College in Durham. He is a graduate of Philander-Smith College in Little Rock, Ark., where he was a business major. He also holds the distinction of "the first black graduate" at the University of Okla- homa where he received his graduate account- ing degree. He taught at Gramlin College and Langston University in Oklahoma. He and his wife, himself a native of Arkan- sas and she a native of Oklahoma, live on Booker Street in Winston-sarem with their six childre·n. He is beginning a professional school to train Certified Public Accountants, He currently has five students but hopes to build a higher enrollment shortly. Norman said when Delmer P. Hylton, pr .. fessor of accounting, asked him to come here, he had a free hour-[rom nine to ten and agreed to teach one course in prin- ciples of accounting. He in turn arranged for Hylton to come to his school to teach a subject to his students, Norman said he "trains strictly for CPA exams" in his school, and the program, one of the first professional schools for accoun- tants in the nation, takes from 12 to 18 months to complete. He said he sees the need for some specialized training schools to teach actual skills and also said that liberal arts schools are "reducing account- ing programs on the undergraduate level. There must be somewhere to get thP know- •.. Accounting ••• ledge needed, he said, "speaking of spe- cialized programs.'· Norman said he felt no uneasiness at being the first black professor at the University. He feels his qualifications for the job in the :1ccounting department are all that is im- portant to his life at the University. Dr. Joseph Jowers of Greensboro is the other black professor. He teaches princi- (Continued on page 5)

Upload: others

Post on 27-Jun-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Wilson Walks Out His Trial - Wake Forest University · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is Ed ltry. I Will just-'· In mrts new is a who peti, has :mall eally :ter ·okes 1 the

to ;e of 1rtu­,nted ,is Ed­

ltry. I Will

just-'· In mrts

new­is a who

peti­, has :mall eally

:ter­·okes 1 the :him ween ion." 1oper 1man team tron::

.. ~'l•:,r

:~JE~f~:{ ;·;:;r:~

iJ.;::i~\~ . ;:-~·.'.}.~ .1.!}-:;-r·n~ ~"~.:.do·~~

. \.,

· Heery

BS

~ts

iNS ON

been sports 1 or a

Kathy ucation ·n, New team's !S this 1

; will 'uesday

edtheir :; team :onettes • !ighteen :o-come

their !, The ·26. playing

Lr under der the 1omen·s' :e the players ressure es are around

Lvorable ent of-

already UNC-G, a good the team

sopho-, Car­~t. Villa, .n of :e Sulli­anassas, d, soph­dy Rich- 1 n, Maple on, Joan khmond, , sopho­and Beth arle. ted arten ls. Coach to coach

e girls

' .,

·,,

TODAY, INSIDE TODAY, EDITORIAlLY

• WFU 1962 • VISITATION

• PLEDGES

• THEATRE * HONOR SYSTEM

* * * A Prize- Winning Newspaper * * * VOLUME LV Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Friday, February 27, 1970 Number 18

Wilson Walks Out On His Own Trial

BY JOHN E LLJOTT

Omega Wilson, sophomore of Mebane charged with a violation of the honor code, walked out of his trial by the Honor Council moments after it had begun Wednesday night. His action followed reading by the Afro­American Society of a resolution calling for ''due and proper changes" in the Honor Coun­cil and "the elimination of all present Honor Council members from any revised system."

Jim East, senior of Charlotte and chair­man of the Honor Council, had just opened the trial, saying "We are here tonight to consider the case of Omega Wilson ... ," when Tom Jones, sophomore of Enfield, stood in front of East and read the following reso­lution:

"To whom it may concern: The Afro­American Society of Wake Forest University

'resolves as of February 25, 1970: ''That no members of the Wake Forest

University student body will be allowed to go before the present Honor Council un­til due and proper changes have been made and approved by the entire student body; and

''That among these changes must necessi­tate the elimination of all present Honor Council members from any revised system in the trial of the accused Omega Wilson or any· student henceforth.' "

WILSON'S APPEAL

.•.• The Council has pre-determined guilt in the Wilson case, as evidenced by their letter criticizing the executive committee's decision in the Bowden case for "failing to reflect the severity of the offense." Since the two cases are so closely related, this statement illustrates that the council has also pre-determined guilt in Wilson's case.

The appeal concluded, "I realize that this is an irregular procedure, but circumstances and past events demand that such action be taken."

The members or the Society rose and applauded after Jones read the resolution and the appeal, When East again attempted to begin the trial, Jones began to re-read the resolution, and the society members, including Wilson, walked out of the trial room. East declared the case closed because the defendant was not present •

East immediately informed Thomas E. Mullen, dean of the college and chairman of the executive committee, of the action which had taken place •

Mullen said in· response to a question, "There is a crisis confronting us right now. The future of the University is at stake at this point. 1 would rather not spec­ulate about what will happen."

The Honor Council had made four re­visions in its procedures after criticism by the Afro-American Society and other stu­~~.a~~P~Md~~e~mfur~ first time in the Wilson case. The revisions

Jones also read an appeal by Wilson to are: the executive committee requesting that ital- ••.• A student on trial may have an advisor low him to "by-pass any trial by the present of his choice, but the defense attorney will Horior Council on the grounds that it would be still be chosen from the Council itself. impossible for me to get a fair trial under .... The defendant, his advisor, and the this system and its members.'' attorneys for the prosecution and the de-

The appeal said that since the present fense will be excluded from all delibera­Honor Council would be "prejudiced'' in lions of the Council of the verdict and any case "similar in circumstances and the penalty. identical in charges" to that of Steve Bow- •••. The chairman of the Council will no den, it had "disqualified itself" from try- longer question the defendant or witnesses, ing Wilson's case. thus avoiding being labeled as a prose-

The appeal listed four reasons why the cutor. present Honor Council would be "prejudiced" •..• A permanent tape will be made of every

Dick Gregory Will Speak Sunday

Black Comedian To Lecture In Wait Chapel Sunda.r Night

Dick Gregory, nationally kn,,. 1 comedian, author, lecturer, and actor, wh .. ;peakinWait Chapel this Sunday, at 8 p.m. His appearance is being sponsored by the University Afro­American Society.

Gregory spoke at the University four years ago for the Challenge '67 program.

His books include "Sermons," and his autobiography, ''Nigger," which has become a best seller,

He is also the author of "Write Me In," a book explaining why he should have been a write-in Presidentiai candidate during the 1968 elections.

Gregory has starred on Broadway, tele­vision shows, and made a motion picture debut in ''Sweet Love, Bitter."

universities throughout the country, always having overflow attandance and speaking as many as three hours.

Robert Neal, sophomore of Reidsville, and president of the AAS, said the society is sponsoring Gregory in conjunction with the University chaplain, Ed Christman.

Last spring the group presented "Black Week", a series of lectures and programs focusing on the plight of the black man in American society.

But Neal said the AAS would be unable to do so this year because of insufficient finance. It was originally scheduled for Feb­ruary 16-20.

in the Wilson case: investigation and trial. •-'l'he Wilson case is closely related to ----------------,;_-------------------~---------------the Bowden case, both having practically

He is currently lecturing at colleges and

Tickets for the Gregory lecture are on sale now. The student price is one dollar with ID and $1.50 for the general public.

identical investigations, charges, and de­fenses.

.Wilson is a member of the Afro­~~erican Society, which was "severely crit­lctzed by the Honor Council for request­ing the executive committee to review the Bowden case,"

.... The Honor Council would be defending themselves and the Honor Council system against recent criticism of the Council.

Students Vent Opinions On Council By JOHN ELLIOTT and SUE ENGLISH

Bewilderment, anger, disgust--these are some of the words which describe students' reactions to the continuing controversy re­garding the Honor Council, the Steve Bowden trial, and the decision of the executive com-

mittee to put Bowden on probation mstead of suspending him.

The Honor Council suspended Bowden, a sophomore of Mebane, for the ~pring se­mester after finding him _guilty of cheating on a history examination. The executive committee reduced the penalty to proba­tion after an appeal by the Afro-American Society, of which Bowden is a member. The Society and other students criticized the Honor Council on several counts, charging that adequate records are not kept of trials and that guilt is pre-determined by the Council.

An Honor Council member said that she thinks the Honor Council is doing a good job, and remarked that "the executive com­mittee' s actions reflect on the Honor Coun­cil and hurt them. "It is good, however, that the controversy arose because it makes the student body aware that they are a neces­sary part" of the honor system."

A University athlete said that the Bowden case was "clearcut cheating" and that Bow­den had "done enough to be kicked out." He said that the Afro-American Society had "turned a judicial issue into a racial prob­lem, when there was no racial issue in­volved.''

they should have let the student go alto­gether.''

On the other hand many students feel, like Mary Pipines, sophomore of Franklin Lakes, N. J,, that -- reversal was unfair to the other students who 11ad been convicted prior to this case.'' Hal White, junior of Raleigh, said that "the Honor Coun­cil is inequitable" and "should be challenged and investigated more," but remarked, "It is unfortunate that the executive committee had to abrogate a student decision. In other words, the system should have been beyond reproach already, and any student should be able to receive justice even if he isn't in such a favored position."

In defense of the executive committee's stand, however, another Honor Council mem­ber, although saying that she disagreed with the penalty given Bowden by the committee, said, "If we as students cannot retain our faith in the integrity and impartialit)' of the groups to which we give power, ti we no longer believe that their decisions are based on concern for the individual, as well as the University as a whole. then the entire normative structure of the University, not just the honor system, may be severely damaged.''

SLC Agrees To Place Motion Before Faculty

BY DIANNE JONES Managing Editor

Visitation received a faint green light W.ednesday afternoon when the student life committee voted to recommend to the facul­ty that intervisitation be implemented on a trial basis for one year, effective upon ap­proval of the undergraduate Iacuity.

'The student government passed the visi­tation bill, which would allow women stu­dents in men's dorm rooms on a limited basis, on February 17. The proposal was exactly like the original visitation bill passed Nov. 5 of last year except for further limi­tation of visiting hours and a section which demanded that the resolution be sent to the Student Life Committee instead of the exec­utive committee.

The student life committee is made up of nine faculty members and six voting stu­dent members. The executive committee is made up of the dean of the College, the dean of the school of business administration, and six faculty members.

The faculty will meet March 9, but due to business already on the agenda might have to postpone acting on the visitation proposal.

Dr. Richard Zuber, associate professo;. of history and a member of the SLC said Wednesday night, "This does mean the stu­dent life committee supports intervisitation, but it doesn't mean we think we have the right to implement it."

Zuber predicted there would be a ''great debate" both on the jurisdiction'' of the executive and student life t:ommittees and "the proposal itself.''

FACULTY DECIDES

"We wanted the faculty to decide whether or not we ought to be dealing with it," he said.

The question over the jurisdiction into which the visitation proposal falls is vague. The executive committee has jurisdiction over situations involving individual students, while the student life committee has juris­diction over student organizations. But the student life committee also has jurisdiction over the "social life of the student.''

Dr. Richard Barnett, associate professor of history and a member of the :;tudent life ;·ommJnee, presented the proposal to the committee. He explained that while he didn't ·"really approve it" he thought students should find out for themselves that visitation was "silly,"

Barnett emphasized that he hoped Dr. James Ralph Scales, president ofthe Univer­sity would tell the faculty exactly "how he feels" on the matter. Barnett said it would save the faculty work and confusion if the president would direct them.

Scales, although unavailable for comment Wednesday night, said earlier in the week that his own position on intervisitation was :"unchanged." After the passage of the first intervisitation bill, Scales had said, "The answer is no" to visitation.

Scales, referring to the student govern­ment said, "1 don't blame them for trying," but he expressed displeasure with the Leg­islature's action, He seems most concerned with the reaction the second passage of the proposal would have on the members of the

quality of life committee, which was created by the executive committee to study the quality of student social life, The committee was established early this year primarily because of "the prohibition on bedroom visiting," Scales said.

The Legislature's action was not an at­tack on president Scales, nor did it renege our commitment to the quality or life com­mittee, but it did show our concern'' over "University structure and authority," Jim Cross, president of the student body, said Wednesday.

Resolution Gives Students Access To Information

A resolution has been passed by the faculty permitting "interested" students access to information concerning faculty meetings,

The resolution will make known the ac­tions of the faculty, but not individual mem­bers,

The resolution, adopted February 9, reads "At the discretion of the chairman and sec­retary of the faculty, the Director of Com­munications of the University shall be au­thorized to make available to interested stu­dents information concerning actions of the faculty unless the faculty shall have deemed otherwise, This provision shall apply to action dated January 1970 or there­after."

One faculty member said the resolution was adopted by an'' overwhelming majority," Debate centered around the question of wheth­er or not students had a right to know what goes on, particularly on issues which are important to them.

The resolution supposedly will "regular­ize'' the information on faculty meetings which reaches students and will prevent certain leaks to students which could give a false impression of the faculty's posi­tion, said the faculty member.

Dr: Thomas- E. Mullen, dean of the College, is faculty chairman. Dr. J. Edwin Hendricks, associate professor of history, is secretary. Russell H. Brantley is the University's director of communications,

SG Committee To Study , Honor

Council Systems A committee to study thestudentsentiment

on the Honor Council was appointed this week, according to Ed· Wooters, vice president of the student body.

"We're not going in with the idea we have to change anything," Wooters said, "We're going to study honor councils at other schools.

Members of the committee include, Karen Barnette, sophomore of Statesville; Gerald McKoy, sophomore of Fayetteville; Gary Burke, senior of Winston-Salem; Sally Ains­worth, junior of Webster, N.Y.; Sam Lewis, junior of Burlington; and Wooters,

Wooters said faculty members would be appointed to the committee in the next few weeks.

Quick Exit Dr. Robert A. Dyer, assistant dean of the

college and secretary of the executive com· mittee, defended the committee's stand by saying that during the 13 years he has served as secretary, the committee has not been swayed by public opinion, but "has done its most to see that the students get the benefit of the doubt."

Teach Accounting And Sociology Tom Jones, a member of the University'l>

Afro-American Society, reads a resolution demanding a change in the honor system dur­ing the Honor Council trial of Omega Wilson Wednesday night. Shortly afterward, society

members applauded Jones' effort and walked out of the room. The defendant, who has al­ready refused to be tried by the Council, walked out with them.

Support Legislature Gives

To Curriculum Proposals Feeling that the present curriculum is

too rigid-with too many required courses and not enough imaginative courses-the stu­dent governmPnt voted Wednesday to support the tentative curriculum change published in last week's "Old Gold and Black".

The resolution that was submitted i:n· Don Shafer, vice president of the senior class, and pa•;,; ·J ''-'the Legislature, reads:

"The Student Legislature of W:J.ke Fore~. University supports the Faculty Curriculum

, Study Committee·s plan for curriculum ' change '.Is outlined in the February 13, 1970,

issue of tht> "Old Gold and Bl:1ck' '.

It remains for the resolution to be passed by the faculty and trustees,

The :;t·J,)r.at governm~nt also vuteu to contint1e the formation of the Honor Coun­cil review commit tee. The question arose as to why a mem •_,er of the Afro-American Society is on the committee and not repre-

sentatives from other organizations. It was decided that since the society posed the quesli.Jn :1:1out the honor council they should be represented.

Ted Keller, sophomore legislature, proposed a resolution to allow voting priv­ileges in next year's Legislature to Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, According to the resolution, one representative from APO will be added to Kitchin complex,

The Legislature propos~d a ~.:uange in the student financial responsibility act by passing the approval of various University organizations and allowing the Legislature itse If to pass it.

Ed Wooters, vice presid~nt of the student governme11t, said, "We need to take a dif­ferent approa,~h in the legislature. The stu­dl!nt gmernment is the only political or~n­izatiO!I on campu3 and it shJ~ld mak~ de­cisions. We should take stands instead of getting the approval of all,"

RELUCTANT Many students appeared reluctant to dis­

cuss the controversy, declining to comment or asking that their names not be used, One freshman coed, when asked her opinion, protested, ''No, nothing about the Honor Council.' • Among those who did express their opinions, some appeared disgusted with the Honor Council and its procedures, others felt that Bowden had "gotten off . easily" because he is black and an athlete, and others held both of these views or seemed confused by the whole affair.

Mike Harrawood, sophomore of Charlotte, said, "I think the whole system is wrong. The honor system is too rigid and inflex­ible," He said, on the other hand, that the executive committee decision "completely breaks all precedent and makes people like Jim East the puppet of the administration."

Robert Neal, sophomore of Reidsville and president of the Afro-American Society, said that "there is no way that any black student on this campus could get a fair trial now from the Honor Council." ·He described the present method of election of Honor Council members as a "popularity contest, and suggested that at least some of the members of the council should be appointed by a faculty or administrative com­mittee.

Neal said regarding the executive com­mittee's decision to put Bowden on probation ''Since they found reason to reduce the charge:

University By PATTIALLEN

What would bring a black professor to Wake Forest?

For the first time this semester there are two black professors at the University, and the reasons that brought them here are, simply, need plus qualifications. The Uni­versity needed two professors, and these men had the qualification to fill those needs.

JOSEPH JOWERS ••. Sociology ...

Hires Two Black Profs Dr. Joseph Norman is a recent addition

to the accounting and economics department. He comes from the accounting department of North Carolina College in Durham. He is a graduate of Philander-Smith College in Little Rock, Ark., where he was a business major. He also holds the distinction of "the first black graduate" at the University of Okla­homa where he received his graduate account­ing degree. He taught at Gramlin College and Langston University in Oklahoma.

He and his wife, himself a native of Arkan­sas and she a native of Oklahoma, live on Booker Street in Winston-sarem with their six childre·n. He is beginning a professional school to train Certified Public Accountants, He currently has five students but hopes to build a higher enrollment shortly.

Norman said when Delmer P. Hylton, pr .. fessor of accounting, asked him to come here, he had a free hour-[rom nine to ten and agreed to teach one course in prin­ciples of accounting. He in turn arranged for Hylton to come to his school to teach a subject to his students,

Norman said he "trains strictly for CPA exams" in his school, and the program, one of the first professional schools for accoun­tants in the nation, takes from 12 to 18 months to complete. He said he sees the need for some specialized training schools to teach actual skills and also said that liberal arts schools are "reducing account­ing programs on the undergraduate level. There must be somewhere to get thP know-

•.. Accounting •••

ledge needed, he said, "speaking of spe­cialized programs.'·

Norman said he felt no uneasiness at being the first black professor at the University. He feels his qualifications for the job in the :1ccounting department are all that is im­portant to his life at the University.

Dr. Joseph Jowers of Greensboro is the other black professor. He teaches princi­

(Continued on page 5)

Page 2: Wilson Walks Out His Trial - Wake Forest University · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is Ed ltry. I Will just-'· In mrts new is a who peti, has :mall eally :ter ·okes 1 the

PAGE TWO Friliay, February 27 1970, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

PASCHAL SHOE REPAIR Integration, Chapel Issues· Of 1961-1962

lhl. "" AI:YNDLDA MA .. D"

PA 49422

/llor• comfort, /one•r weer, b•"•• loolle

In .,..,,}obi

COME GROW WITH COBB

Representatives of the Cobb County School System, a. school system in the suburbs of Atlanta, were on campus on Tuesday, February 10, 1970 to interview prospecti~e teachers. If you were unable to schedule an interview ou that day and are interested in employment in the Cobb County Schools, please contact,: Clinton J, Taylor, Assistant Superintendent for Personnel Services, Cobb County Schools, Marietta, Georgia. PhnnP.- 422-3471

"Sleep ...

••• •ost bea1tlfll

uperleace 11 life ...

ncept drlak"

BY GRAY LAWRENCE

This article, third in a series on the historr of the Univer­sity 19o0-1970, takes a look at the academic year 1961-1962.

In September, 1960, enrollment hit a record 2,853.

A new football seating com­promise was finally reached: the east side of Bowman Gray Stadium was divided, into 24 sections, of which ten each went to fraternities and independent groups and two each to law and med students.

Edward Reynolds, the Ghanian student whose application had been denied by the trustees in the spring of 1961, entered Shaw University in Raleigh·. Students and f~culty at the College, had contnbuted enough money to pay for Reynolds' transportation to American and support him at Shaw for one semester.

Eleanor Roosevelt spoke in chapel·-this was back in the day when the College required students to attend that in­stitution twice a week-·before a rare capacity audience. She portrayed the United States as a spiritual leader in the world's struggle to ward off commu­nism.

FOOTBALL SEASON

The Deacs opened theirfoot­ball season by losing to Baylor 31-0. ,

lion of a proposed $1,650,000 classroom building.

Telephones were first allowed in men'.$ dormitory suites in early fall. The student Legisla­ture agreed to underwrite half of the $100 deposit and handle negotations between suites and the telephone company.

In early November, several students were placed on conduct and cut probation for taking part in the first successful panty raid in years. While most male students milled around the girls' dormitories, some streamed into the buildings--two men, in fact, managed to get as far as tbe second floor. Others shinned up the porch columns.

The alteration of an Honor Council decision by the execu­tive committee christened 1970 tbe descendant of 1961. One student involved in the panty raid was placed on probation by the Council; the executive com­mittee, however, charged him with "participation in a-campus riot" and susoended him from tne CollevP •

Later in !be month, the Baptist State Convention authoriz~>d the College to borrow $700,000 for a new classroom building and passed a resolution urging the seven North Carolina Baptist colleges to " move as quickly as possible" toward integration.

A proposal to extend Silas Creek Parkway through College property aroused an indignant barrage of resolutions from College faculty, students and the Legislature.

CAGERS

While the football team ended the season with a "surprising" 4-6 record, the Deac cagers, co-captained by Len Chappell and Billy Packer, went intothe 1961-1962 season ranked number three in the nation.

In their January meeting, the trustees deferred a decision on integration and approved Paul s. Rake, previously assistant director of development at Tu­lane University, as the College's first director of development.

Students wbo returned for sec­ond semester were greeted witb the news ofa$50tuitionincrease. A book by Russell Brantley, the College's director of commu­nications, was accepted byMac­millan Publishing Company. A MacMillan review described the book as "bright, open, , naive, nicely observed, sober at heart, warm and compact." The book? "The education of Jonathan Beam," what else?

N.C. FUNDAMENTALIST

It was a story of a young North Carolina fundamentalist

·who, upon entering college (one bearing an undeniable resemb­lance to Wake Forest), is ex­horted by his parents to seek and report any "evil" he finds there. ·

In the middle of February, stu­dent government removed the re­sponsibility for stud en!­telephone company dealings from its special committee because of

a fear that the project would be a "dud,"

A College sophomore fell a­sleep at the wheel of his car,ran the stop sign at the west en­trance of the campus, struck the traffic island, sheared off the "Faculty and Visitors Only" sign, and richocheted off three cars. Damage was estimated at $1,150. The driver emerged from the tangled wreckage un­hurt.

Falstaff, a pedigreed boxer, became a recognized social af­filiate of the College chapter of Theta Chi social fraternity.

Chappell was named to theAs­sociated Press first team All­American squad,' The Deacs trounced Villanova, 79-69, in the Eastern Regionals and headed for the NCAA finals in Louisville, Ky. They were beaten, 84-68, by Ohio State, but secured third place by beating UCLA, 82-80.

An excitement over the Deac basketball squad abated, the stu­dent Legislature made mandatory a "C" average for all candi­dates for student body offices and voted to pay $28 for a Reserve Officers Training Corps drum broken at the NCAA finals in Louisville.

indicated on supplied forms how well they heard them.

In a mundane election, with only 53 per cent of the, student body voting, the United and Progressive parties split the student government and class of­fices.

In May, Lois J obnson retired as dean of women. Miss John­son, who had served as dean for 20 vears. was temporarily succeeded by Dr. Jeanne Owen then associate professor ofbusi~ ness law.

The ''Biblical Recorder," the North Carolina Baptist news ,magazine, took sharp issue with a humor edition of the "Student" magazine. Single out as par­ticular targets for Baptist re­monstrances were the sentence "a dirty mind is a healthy mind" and a story called "W.F, To F oresake Sin," a spoof on Dr. Billy Graham (referred to in the story as "Wally Grimes").

"A PRIVILEGE"

Letters flooded into the "Biblical Recorder" office. One read, "It is a privilege to at­tend a Christian school and anyone who cannot show re­spect for Christianity , and Christ's representatives should be refused admission, or, if already a student, should be expelled."

year was destined to reverber­ate around campus for the re­mainder of the decade, for the College has been blessed and cursed by the tenacity with which it bas adhered to its history.

JOHN CURRIN •••• IFC Presiednt ....

Currin Elected Interfraternity

~ouncil Head John Currin, JUil!Or 01 uraham

and a member of Kappa Sigma social fraternity, was elected president of the University's In­terfraternity Council last week.

Currin succeeds Caesar Clarke, senior of McMurray, Pa.

On Oct. 15, 1961, the Col­lege celebrated its tenth year in Winston~Salem. Lionel Ham-

~;~~~~~t:~g~1 f'Thi:~w;;~;-:=,.1 ;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~~~~~~::~::~~ TODAY SUNDAY

Forty Civil Defense shelter signs, displayed on various cam­pus buildings, offended the aesthetic principles of College students, who proceeded to tear them down as quickly as they were put up. The blue and white signs, marking areas on campus which would serve as shelters in the event of an emergency, were described as "unnecessary," "too gaudy" and "completely useless."

There was some talk in the Interfraternity Council about deferred rush, but the old. much­,lamented system (allowing rush •during the first three weeks in the fall semester) was destined to prevail for several years.

Another letter suggested that the author of the Graham satire was "venting his sarcasm" toward the Baptist evangelist "because the naked, undiluted Gospel is strange to his ears on a Baptist College campus."

With these rumblings, the academic year came to a close. What had happened during that

Other offices elected were: vice president, Sam Neill, soph­omore of Hendersonville, and a member of Lambda Chi Alpha,. treasurer, Henry Koether, junior of Glen Burnie, Md.; rush chair­man, Ben Yarborough, junior of Petersburg, Va., and a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon; and sec­retary, Fritz Heidgerd, sopho­more of Boca Raton, Fla., and a member of Kappa Alpha,

The Pied111ont youth fare •. That's the ticket! With a Piedmont I.D, card, certifying you're between the ages of 12 and 2.1, inclusive, you ,con save about 20%! You get a reserved seat, and you con save anytime­there are no holiday restrictions! Next trip to Washington, Chicago, New York, Atlanta or over 70, o:tber .citj~s., .• ~e )(ouqljj"J:ll.~eJ,ogent. or coli PleC1mon't. 'EnjO'.y 7~7 fafile.t'o'r new Rolls-Royce

powered prop jet service. And a fare deal!

PIEDMONT AIRLINES

3 p.m.-Lecture: Dr. A. Douglas Tushingham, chief ar­chaelogist of Royal Toronto Museum, "New TestamentJeru­salem,'' Winston A.

3,7, 9:30 p.m.-CU Movie: "Rosemary's Baby,'' De-Tamble, 50 cents admission.

4 p.m.-Babcock Research Seminar: Dr. Frank Edwards,­University of Florida, "Public Welfare and Policy Implica­tions of Pesticide Usage," Bab­cock 21.

8:15 p.m.-Opera: "An Eve­ning of Opera," presented by the. school of music, N.~.School of th.e Arts, II}ain , auditorium, admission $1 for students. ' .. . ., . ~

TOMORROW

1 - 5 p.m.-"Co-rec" after­noon, sponsored by the MRC, Reynolds Gymnasium.

2, 7:30 p.m. - CU movie: " Rosemary's Baby," De-Tamble, 50 cents admission.

8 p.m.-Basketball: WF vs. Clemson, away.

8-12 midnight - MRC combo party: The Grand Impacts, Convention Center. Admission charge for non-house members.

8:15 p,m"-NCSA Opera, main auditorium.

NewCamaro. Feb. 26th.

We've never announced a car at this Ume before. But then nobody's ever announced a car like this before.

Super Hugger If it were an ordinary sportster, we'd ha\·e intro­

duced it at the ordinary time. Instead we took the time to build a whole new .

Camaro. \Ve stal'ted \\·ith a sleek new shape and a low road­

hugging stanl·e. And added more hood. A faster fastback. \\'ider

doors. Anclnew deeply contoured bucket seats. The instrument panel wraps around you. With

enough dials to make you thin]\ you'l"e piloting a 7-17. . There are four transmissions. And six po\\·er plants .~

up to the Tm·bo-J et :~96 \'8 that you can orclel".

Pick the one that best suits your driving. Then go pick on an open road.

And make it one with plenty of twisting turns. Because Camaro has a remarkable new suspension. Ancl standard front disc brakes for a leech-like grip on the road.

New Camaro. The Super Hugger. Othe1· sportsters always feared it might

come to this. And they were right. Only their tim­

·~ ing was wrong. ~· \ Putting you first, keeps us firs1...t. __

See it. At your Olevrolet Sports Dept.

(·anWitl ~"'pori (\HIJit' lfifh R.:.;; IIJUipmru!.

3, 8 p.m.-The Kinetic Art, DeTarnble, admission.

8 p.m.-Lecture: Dick Gre­gory, Wait Chapel, admission.

MONDAY

8:15 p.m.-Lecture: Heinz Politzer, University of Cali­fornia at Berkeley, " Kafka's Unknown Novel," DeTamble.

TUESDAY

10 a.m.-Davis Chapel Wor­ship Service: Warren T. Carr, pastor, Wake Forest Baptist , Church. . .

11 a.m.-to,5p.m.-BloodDrive; Reynolds gym.

8:15 p.m.-Lecture: Roderick MacLeish, DeTamble.

8:30 p. m.-Winston-Salem Civic Music Association: The Camerata Singers, Reynolds Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

3 and 8 p.m.-CU movie: ''Ju­lius Caesar," DeTamble.

THURSDAY 10 a.m.-Lecture Series:John

E. Parker, chairman, educa­tion department, DeTamble.

"THE EDUCATION ••• "

In April, the Rev. Wendell Davis, a College trustee, sent letters to his colleagues urging them to read "The Education of Jonathan Beam." Davis said that the book, a criticism of the educationally stifling ele­ments in the Ba)Jtist control over the College, was filled with "vulgarity, foul language, a picture of drunkenness and other misconduct at Wak& Forest Col­lege." He suggested'tbe pos-, sibility of some ;kind of 'Of­ficial action against Brantley, but the trustees ignored the proposal and refused to take any steps against Brantley or his novel.

At the same meeting, the trustees ordered " immediate" desegregation of the under­graduate school.

Never let it be said that a lot­of worthwhile accomplishments weren't made in biweekly chapels. One chapel program, for instance, was designed to test the acoustics of Wait Chapel: while two professors read a selected set of words, students

We'll

~~l You pay the other. ...----------SPECIAL HALF·PRICE RATE

FOR FACULTY, STUDENTS, SCHOOL LIBRARIES

0 1 year$13 D 9 mos. $9.75 0 6 mos. $6.50

0 Check or money order enclosed

0 Bill me Name ______________ __

Address _____________ _

City:__ ______________ _

State ___________ Zip __ __ P-CN

THE CHIQSTIAN SCIENCE

MONITOR® Bo• 125, Astor Station

Boston, Massachusetts 02123

There's ·A "SPECIAL FEELING" About A Northwestern Savings Account ... a special feeling of knowing where your money is •.. exactly how much you have ... that it is earning interesi, En,joy the prestige of a Northwestern Savings Account. It's just a short drive to Reynollia, Manor and the new office opening September 27 at Oldtown Shopping Center. OPEN YOUR A<;: COUNT TODAY I •

~·NORTHWESTERN BANK Mlnlb.,F•G•r~D~l.lftAII .... , 5 dfP

$

I I

\ f ;• ,, . ~

'

! , I

,,

,-,l

' .

' ~ i ' , • ! r ' l

1 I

~ i

' 1 l i

·, 1

;

' .

:1 I Theatrt

Pia· By DE

The Univet production o Heller's "W Haven," wll at,B:l5 p.m.

The play, anti-war me a group o~ are sent to : to carry ou1 all over the dividuals do is sending II or why.

Performan p.m. on M1 March 9 an• performance presented on

One hundr1 students acc1 from ten of ties, Pledge weeks of int<

. fraternity pa: Sigma Pi 1

included on Pledges of

Jimmy Guff: Franklin; Ste man of Wim

,,, Rubbo, fresh

WE

j FIRST BA

Fifth & ~

Winston Worstup tJ

Sunday .Church Sci Sunday c

I :..~ Busses lea,

at 4:30

For Ilk wear 1

aaburb

~ 'I I

lldlall Dr1111

Tl Shopp --· • 1117

.,

I(

Page 3: Wilson Walks Out His Trial - Wake Forest University · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is Ed ltry. I Will just-'· In mrts new is a who peti, has :mall eally :ter ·okes 1 the

62 ) reverber­or there­le, for the 'ssed and f with which its history.

t ••••

:cted

nity

ead ot uraham

1ppa Sigma lS elected ~rsity' s In· last week.

Caesar .1ur ray, Pa. ~ted were: Neill, soph­rille, and a Chi Alpha,. ther, junior rush chair· 1, junior of I a member 1; and sec­)rd, sopho· ., Fla., and lpha.

'II

~ other. ---:E RATE I DENTS, RIES I mos. $6.50

f order

_Zip __ P-CN

:IENCE R

® ation tts 02123

K ......

. I I

I ,

.'

·, I ,, j

Theatre's Third Production

Play Will Open On Friday By DEBBIE HARTIS

The Unive~sity Theatre's third production of the year, Joseph Heller's "We Bombed in New Haven," will open next Friday at8:15 p.m.

The play, concerning the anti-war movement, describes a group o~ military men who are sent to an Air Force base to carry out bombing missions all over the world. These in­dividuals do not understand who is sending them on the missions or why.

Performances will be at 8:15 p.m. on March 6 and 7, and March 9 and 10. An afternoon performance at 3 p.m. will be presented on March 8.

Dr. Donald Wolfe is the di- . of Lenoir, are in charge of rector for this play, and Dr. · sound, . David Welker instructor in The cast includes: the maJor, stagecraft, d~signed the set. John Lytton, senior of Lumber-

Steve Cochran freshman of ton; Stakey, Wiley Jones, senior McLean, Va., is the stage man- of Charlottesville, V~.; Serg~ant ager; Kay Smiley, freshman ~enderson, Robert S1mms, J~n-of Winston-Salem, is as- 10r _of Greer, s .. c.; CorporalSm- , sistant director; Brenda cla1r, Steve Simpson, graduate . Shackleford, junior of Mt. stu_dent of Teynauca, Okla.; Olive, is in charge of proper- Pnvate Joe Carron, ~am ties; Jodi Whittington, sopho- Cardea, sophomo~e of Ke~smg­more of N. Wilkesboro, and ton, Md._; and Prtvate FISher, Kathie deMobriga, sophomore of Brad Bnll, sophomore of Lock-Kingsport, Tenn., are costume port, Ill. . . directors; Homer Vernon, soph- Others m. the cast . m~lude: omore of Whitakers. is in Golger, David Waugh, ]uruor of charge of lights; and George B_urhngton; Hunter, Ken Lan­Bryan, sophomore of Winston- Zlllo, freshman of ~orth Ramp­Salem, and Dick Norris, junior ton, N.H.; Young Ftsher, Steve

Stevens, sophomore of Atlanta, Ga.; Young Starkey, Doug Hux, sophomore . of Reidsville; and the three idiots - Jeff Tweel, junior .of Huntington, W. Va.; Bruce 'Beck, sophomore of Bur­lington; and Rolando Rivero, jun­ior of Tarija, Bolivia.

Ruth will be played by Frankie Watson, junior of High Point.

Correction In the Feb. 20 issue .of

·"Old Gold . and Black", it was erroneously reported that Dr. A. Douglas Tushingham, chief archaeologist ofthe Royal Ontario Museum at Toronto, Canada, would speak" today"-­"today" being Friday, Feb. 20.

l:'hoto By

"We Bombed~ •• " To Open Next Friday

Actually, Tushingham will speak at 3 p.m. "today"--Feb. 27-- in room A of Winston Hall.

131 Accept Frat Bids One hundred thirty-one male

students accepted bids last week from ten of 11 social fraterni­ties. Pledge night climaxed two weeks of intensive rushing and

Gerald Smith, freshman or'Lees~ ville, S.C.; Harold Vannoy, fresh­man of Lenoir; and Robert Tim­othy Wingate, freshman of Grifton.

! I

• , fraternity parties, Twelve men were pledged by

Delta Kappa Epsilon, an off­campus fraternity recognized by national DKE headquarters but not by the University. They are Mitch Baker, freshman of Lumberton; Cliff Christian, freshman of Westfield; Dave Danser, sophomore of Delran, N.J.; ~en Griffin, freshman of Bradenton, Fla.; Ron Drowder, sophomore of Thomasville; Chip Patterson, sophomore of Ashe­ville; and Mark Reinecke, fresh­man of Delray Beach, Fla.

Larry Hurst, freshman of At­lanta, Ga.; Reid Whiteside, jun­ior of San Francisco, Calif.; Warren Linde, sophomore of Charlotte; Jeff Barber, sopho­more of Waverly, N, Y.; Rick Saum, sophomore of Washington, D.C.; and Reid Suttles, fresh­man of Mooresville.

.. )I " ~~

~ !"l ' :;J ,, !'.~I ~~ -~~

,,

'• :: ,-I

' ~.-,· ~I

~~ I n &

r I '\

) 'I

~ I . ~ I

' ! u

' J

5

~ I .,

I

~ 1

. r ! ' <

\

''

I{ .

Sigma Pi preferred not to be included on the ·pledging list.

Pledges of Alpha Sigma Phi are Jimmy Guffie, sophomore of Franklin; Stephen Lewis, fresh­man of Winston-Salem; Daniel Rubbo, freshman of Paoli, Pa,;

WELCOME

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Fifth & l:ipruce Streets W inston-~a1em, .N.l-.

Worsmp u ..... m. ana ti r'.M. Sunday .Church School9:45 A.M. Sunday Coffee-Buns

Discussion Busses leave Johnson Dorm at 4:30

Fur Die• thblp to weu aaca relued aaburb&D abopp~

'f'flft

~.J~ ~r--...... -·· ..............

Dl u..ali ... ..,

Thruway Shopp~· Center O...Jhwr HIP&'Im I Ml Cq 'llllwl' ,....._

DKZ PLEDGES Other DKE pledges are Powell

Jenkins, freshman of Rocky Mount; Mike Jordan, freshman of Raeford; Mike Sheffield, jun­ior of Atlanta, Ga.; Steve Stev­ens, sophomore of Atlanta; and John Walton, freshman of Alex­andt:ia, Va,

Delta Sigma Phi pledged Bill Parker, freshman of Salisbury, Md.; Dave Copeland, freshman of Edenton; Bill Forti, freshman of Camden, S.C.; Tom Fife, freshman of. Manassas, Va.; Ken Lanzillo, freshman of Stratham, N.H.; Don Perry, freshman of Hertford; Bill We!l, freshman of Elkton, Md., Chip Monteith, freshman of Charlotte; Mike Blatt, freshman of Marietta, Ga.; Tye Van Buren, freshman of Atlanta, Ga.; and Gary Terrig­no, freshman of Youngstown, Ohio.

Theta Chi pledges include Steven Carchedi, freshman of Silver Spring, Md.; Steve Man· near, freshman of Ma::bn, S.C.; John Kummer, freshman of Covington, Kv.; Tom Shearer. tiU!JuuulUt e OI r ayen~:<v utt::; nuys Suer, freshman of Creve Coeur, Mo.; Bruce Cooper, freshman of Rockvill<> Mrl.; and Steve Spra­.gins, sopuumore of Rock~ille.

Other Theta Chi pledges are

Men who pledged Kappa Alpha include Thomas Alexander, freshman of Rockymount; Thomas Barefoot, freshman of Raleigh; Timothy Barnes, fresh­man of W, Long Branch, N,J.; John Blair, freshman of, Rich­mond, Va.; William Br,itt, fresh­man of Wendell; Mike ·crowley, freshman of Spartanburg, S.C.; Edwin Dalrymple, sophomore of Sanford; Neil Godfrey, freshman of Sandord; and Joseph Good­man, freshman of Paris, Ky.

Others are William Jackson, freshman of Lakeland, Fla.; Pat­rick Jones, freshman of Falls Church, Fa.; Frank Longino, freshman of Greenville; Henry Richmond, freshman of Rich­mond, Ky.; James Bradley Sim­ons, sophomore of Butler, Pa.; Ronald Smith, freshman of Mar­tinsv;_lle, Va.; William Teague, freshman of Smithfield; and David Weir, freshman of Spar­tanburg, S.C.

Kappa Sigma pledges are Ed­die Tatarski, freshma:J. of Reidsville; Steve Poe,,freshman of Charlotte; Steve W9ekley, freshman of Charlotte; Ron Al­lashuski, freshman of Reading, · Pa.; Lee Towr1s"!a 1, freshman of Falls Church, Va.; Steve Swihart, fresi1man of Elkhart, Ind.; Bill Freeman, freshman of Albe­marle; Chris Teague, freshman of Roxboro; and Gary Germaa, freshman of Kettering, Ohio,

LAMBDA CHI ALPHA

Pledges of LamWa Chi Al­pha include Dennis Allen, fresh­man of Akron, Oi1ioi- James Craig, freshman of Winston­Salem, Charles Fergusson, freshman of Hurlson, Ohio; David Grundies, freshman of

RESTAURANT

SILAS CREEK PARKWAY AT STRATFORD ROAD

Wrjnson-Salem 's Welcomes Your

'' .

Newest anJ Finest Restaurant Patronage and the Opportunity

to Serve You-

~ NOW

SERVING .lUNCH AND DINNER 11:00 A.M.-11:00 P.M.

Blood Drive To Be Held· On Tuesday

Politzer Will Speak PAGE THREE Friday, Februarr 27, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Lighthouse Grill . '

• Where You Meet Your Friend• In D~Tamble Monday

A blood drive sponsored by Sea~bard and Blade, military honor society, will be held in Reynolds gymnasium on Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

All students under 21. years of age should obtain forms for parental permission before giv­ing'blood. The forms are avail­able at the information desk and in the ROTC department.

All blood donated will go into the local blood bank,

Fraternity Taps Eight

ROTC Men Three senior and five junior

cadets in the University's Re­serve Officer Training Corps were tapped Tuesday into Scab­bard and Blade, national mili­tary honorary fraternity.

Senior cadetsare: FrankBeck, of Lexington; Nelson Isenhower, of Maiden; and Steve Darnell, of Charlotte. ·

Junior cadets who weretapped are: Henry Black of Wilming­ton, Del.; Don Klittger, of Hamp­ton, Va.; James MacLaren, of Towanda, Pa.; Dupuy Sears, of Farmville, Va.; and David Maner, of Adelphi, Md.

freshman of Stockton, N.J.; Douglas Sullivan, freshman of Summit, N..J .• ; Rick Deaton, Jreshman of Southern Pines; Newark, Ohio; David Harrill, freshman of Greenville, S.C.; Richard Howerton, freshman of Blacksburg, Va.; Charles Jar­dis. fr·~sltman nf Greensboro; anci Douglas Kahle, freshman of Newport News, Va.

Heinz Politzer, professor of German at the University of California at Berkeley and a Franz Kafka scholar, will speak Monday night at 8:15 inDeTamble Auditorium on "Kafka's Unknown Novel,"

Politzer will be here for sev­eral ·ctays to discuss Kafka with students in the interdisciplinary honors program, who are st\]dy­ing him this semester along with Van Gogh and Marx. The De­Tamble speech will be the only public lecture during his sta v.

Politzer was born in 1910 in Vienna, Austria, He attended the universities of Vienna and Prague, studying Gtrman and English philology, He came to the United States in 1947, and attended the graduate schools at the University of Pennsylvania .. and Bryn Mawr College,

He taught at Bryn Mawr, and at Oberlin College before going to Berkeley in 1960.

He has received numerous hon­ors and awards, including the Austrian Cross of Honor for Arts and Letters, First Class, and the Commander's Cross of Merit of' the Federal Republic of Germany.

Politzel' has written numerous books· and papers on various as­pects of Kafka.

Franz Kafka (1883-1924) was a Bohemian writer of Jewish de­scent. He wrote visionary novels,

Robert Garner, freshman of La Vale, Mq.; David Crowder, fresh.'llan of Charlotte; James MlJndy, .fresi1man of Ellicott, Md.; Eugne Pepinsky, freshmaa of Paoli, Pa.; and Donald Hut­. chins on, freshman of Malvern, Pa. . Others are Joseph Merrill, freshman of Arlington, Va.; Ne­ville Chaney, freshman of Win· ston-Salem; Julius Hodge, fresh· man of Charlotte; Stephen Braun, freshman )f Leesburg, Fla.; and George Penn, freshman of Kings­port, Tenn.

Sigma Chi pledgoo:l.J ones Aber­nathy, freshman of Hickory; Joe Aldrich, freshman of Gas­tonia; James Blackburn, fresh-

·-man• •of ··Ca.ry·.•·Bonald. Brown··· ' ' freshman of£utlel', Pa.; Mic~el

~Currin freshman or Olifortl;· Jer.:.·;

stories, parables, and sketches, all in German. His writings cen­ter on the problematic cexistence of modern man, including specifically, the incomprehensi­bility of· God, and the ambiv­alf'nce of family relationships.

The most famous of his works are the stories," The Judgment.'' "The Metamorphosis," and "In the Penal Colony."

HEINZ POLITZER ... To S~ak Here.; .

• Good F9od at Economical Price• More bl'ead etc. at no extra char1re

• Quick Service Comer ot Barb uc1 Brooutowu

ONE ISI.OCK FROM BE&BS

. Mack'S Sportswear· & Clothing

Highway 52 at Midway

Route #9 • Winston,SCiem, N. C. ;271 07

STO~E HOUR!; ~ • T.UESOAY tnru FRIDAY 12 00 to 9 p m SATURDAY 1 ' • ·

0.00 to 6:00 p.m. • Closed Sunday ond Monday

Friend Of The Student

Complete Line Of Quality

Clothing At Money

Savin~ Values.

I. A. .UMI PHONE 764.0152

WOULD YOU LIKE

'

TO BECOME A

MINISTER? ORDINATION is without question and for life. 'LEGAL in all 50 states and most foreign countries. Perform legal marriages, ordinationS, and funerals. Receive discounts on some fares. Over 265,000 ministers have already been ordained. Minister's credentials and license sent; an ordainment certificate for fral\ting and an ID card for your billfold. We need 'your help to cover mailing, handling, and administration costs. Your generous con­tribution is appreciated. ENCLOSE A FREE WILL OFFERING.

. I

,,. •.

Write to~

UNIVERSAL LIFE CHURCH

BOX 8071

-FT. LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA 33314

other Lamda Chi pledges are Frederick Kozak, sophomore of Alexandria, Va.; MarkMeachum, freshman of Bluefield, W. Va.; David Pe1my, freshman of Baby­lon, N.Y.; James Perude, fresh­malt of Salisbury, Md.; William Rucker, sophomore of Charlotte; Darrell Secrest, freshman of

·Greensboro; John Vickery, freshman of Pickens, S.C.; Al­fred Visito, freshman ofMdr'r!s· town, N.J.,; and Larry Kil­bourne, freshman of Salisbury, Md.

ferson Davis, freshman of Win- J,...,,......----------------------.--------------' ston-Salem; David Deacon,fresh-

PI KAPPA ALPHA Pledges of Pi Kappa Alpha

1re Arch Bradsher, freshman of Roxboro; Russ Perry, fresh­man of Winston-Salem; Dave Kodner, sophomore of Highland Park, Ill.; P!ul Holt, sophomore of Overland Park, Kans; Bryan Cabo, · and Rod Duke, freshmen of Kinston; Mickey Neher, sopho­more of Forest Park, Ill; Wil­liam Gor~. junior of Rocking-

. ham; Steve Nixon, junior of

Staunton, Va.; Mark Bruch,fres­man of Bluefield, W. Va.; and Doug Williamson; freshman of Elyria, Ohio.

Sigma Phi Epsilon pledges in­clude Albert Moore, freshman of Whitehouse, N.J.; JaniesGrover,

man of Salisbury, Md.; Bruce Dickson, freshman of Luther­~ille, Md.; James Edwards, freshman of Jacksonville; and William Frohlich, freshman of Treasure Island, Fla.

Other Sigma Chi pledges are Aubrey Gerlaugh, junior of Martinsville, Va.; Bailey Green, freshman of Atlanta, Ga.; Mi­chael Holilfelder, freshman of Fairfax, Va.; Robert Laney, freshman of Shelby; Douglas Mc­Millan, freshman of Raleigh; Joe Neal fr ashma:-~ of Hunting­ton, W. Va.; James Rash, fresh­man of Charlotte; James Rey­nierson, freshman of Danville, Ky.; James Williams, fresh­rna:~ of Charlottesville, Va.; and Lindsay Yancey, freshman nf Oxford.

COME

TOGETHER

AT

~JU ~ tfSMART • .:. Thruway

For A

'Young Edwardian' Fashion Show

Saturday, Feb. 28---2 P.M.

see Young Edwardian, Young Victorian and Young Inno­

cent--the very latest in fashions. See an out-of-sight

Souno .. uu .u1ght show that will rock your mind.

Win Prizes! Win a Young Edwardian outfit, Win a gift certificate

from fiosenthal's Bootery. Win a Peter Fonda pillow,

Win a mystery Love Meter.

Tired Of The Same

Old Food?

TRY A­

STEAK

BDNIRZI. SIIU.D!N PIT®

834 . -$. -STRATFORD ROAD JUST .SOUTH :Of THRUWAY . PHONE 765·4266

-,. •• .. ·• •

• • • .. . . • •

• • .

.· ,. _, •' ;..•

•' •• •• .. ,. " $

~ . '

·--------• r . . . '

' . . . . . . ' . . . . ' . . . : . . . . . .

. . . . ' . . ' ' . .

Page 4: Wilson Walks Out His Trial - Wake Forest University · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is Ed ltry. I Will just-'· In mrts new is a who peti, has :mall eally :ter ·okes 1 the

lllurk GRAY LAWRENCE, BARRY ROBINSON

Co-Editors

BEV SHAW Business Manager

BILl BENNETT Advertising

Manager

DIANNE JONES Managing Editor

PATTI ALLEN Assistant Editor

Winston-Salem, N. C., Friday, February 27, 1970

Justice For Students The refusal of Omega Wilson

to be tried by the Honor Council saved that body from a great deal of embarassment and useless work. For no matter what the council could have decided in the case, it most likely would have landed in the outstretched hands of the all-powerful executive committee anyway. That the Honor Council is not only dead but has been buried is indisputable; that the executive committee fired the gun and is itself now replacing the Honor CounCil is also indis­putable.

The executive committee dem­onstrated in the Bowden trial that it has little regard for the de­cisions of students, and hence for student responsibility. It is all right for the committee to act as an appeal board, for that is cuu151 uous with due proces·s· of law, but it is not all right for it to uphold a verdict and then change the penalty, a penalty which had been established by many precedents. The committee should have concerned itself only

with the question of guilt; now it has worked itself into a dilem­ma; it must uphold the same penalty in all similar cases.

The student-operated-and-oriented honor system died with the Honor Council. The executive committee will now try all honor violations, and in so doing must restructure the system so that it will be administration-oriented. This negates the idea of right­to-trial by peers and turns the whole judicial system into a high schoolish-affair.

We don't think many students • or professors are going to operate under an honor system in which they have little faith. We do think, however, that stu­dents are responsible enough to devise a fair honor system, and run it themselves without outside interference. The alternatives are clear: a complete break-down of any type of honor system at Wake Forest, or the immediate establishment by students of a !;letter system, one that will ex­clude the evils of their old one.

Lines Of Authority V is1tation, that dear ol' con­

troversy about allowing women into men's dorm rooms, has passed another hurdle in its struggle to entrench itself into the lives _g! University students. On Wednes-

' day afternoon the student life committee adopted a resolution to recommend to the faculty that visitation be put on a one year

, trial basis. The mere fact that the student

life committee accepted the visi­tation proposal is noteworthy. Nine faculty members and six students sit on the committee and a ma­jority would require at least eight votes. Therefore it is safe to as­sume that at least two faculty members voted FOR visitation.

But in addition to endorsing the visitation proposal as a right of the students, the student life committee recognized something far more important. The chan­nels of authority and power at this University are in fact vague and confusing, making any digni­fied and smooth transaction of student demands impossible. The student life committee has handed the bill to the faculty. Its recom­mendation will probably have some weight; how much is yet to be seen, and there is sure to be a fight over the proposal itself.

But the fight will be where it should have been in the first place, and the inadequacies of the power structure will have to be recognized.

The executive committee which acted on the first visitation bill claims authority over affairs of individual students. The student life· committee c~ims jurisdic­tion over the student organiza­tions. BUT the student life com­mittee also says it has authority over the social life of the stu­dents. So where does the visi­tation bill belong? It concerns individuals. It definitely involves the social life of the students. The administration and faculty don't know exactly where to put the proposal. Hqw ·could the stu­dents?

Visitation, primarily a social .issue, has taken on new per­spective. Whether or not the fac­ulty votes for visitation •: 'li not be as important as the 'sults of the examination of 'lap-hazard power structure a; the University. hile we hoP• for favorable , tts on visl on, we DEMA.NL a clear anc: li-fied resolution which will define student rights and the authority of the executive and student life committees.

i'"''"''""'"'''"~''""''"'"'''''"'"''''''''"''''*"''''''''"""""*""'x''='"':Z::;;;;;•'"~:"'~Th;"i~~-;::;-·~"""""""'"""""""-.1

I! CU: 'Leave Well Enough Alone' I To The E:ditors:

As cha.irman of the College Union's film cornrnitt~e, and not as a columnist for the "Old Gold and Black,'' I should like to pass on some relevant remarks to the paper's readers concerning the student gov­ernment tirade against the organizations that did not accept the SG's "responsibility act".

The term "responsibility" for the students is rnisle:tding in the case oft his act-- its con­ception, debate and passage. Jim Cross and his bona fide brotherhood on the second floor of ReynQlda seem to think that the only way students may achieve "responsibility" is through Uteir operation-- the student govern­ment. Y~t, to blame the other organizations involved in the "responsibility mess" is very much like calling someone dirty when you need a bath yourself.

As a tnember of one of the organization-­the College Union, perhaps the most money­ed organization on campus--! can assure Cross a,nd his company that all elements were taken into deliberation when we discussed the bill to set up a com rnittee, composed primarily of students, that would distribute whatever funds Gene T. Lucas gave out from the activity fee budget. We felt that the general principle was g 10d and we really could not defer to our own self: ishness to halt tile progress of the Uni­versity student community at large. So, in contrast to the edict issued by honor­able Cross and gentlemen, we did not re­fuse to work with SG on the basis of keep­ing power to ourselves. But we did refuse on other grounds. They are: .

--A lack of interest on SG's part to find out wllat the various organizations a­bout to ~e included feltaboutthebillBEFORE proceedings were started to draft the bill. Thus, tl\e bill to activate such a committee was dra.fted, approved by members of the administration (we at the CU were never told their names, since there was certain definite disapproval from some adminis­tration members on our entry into such a gr_oup) a.nd made to be the "only way to do thmgs" by SG, unless the bill was defeated by one-tourth of the groups needed to ratify it.

--A lack of management on the part of

SG to handle and improve the bill once it was in committee. Objections and inquiries into the nature of the bill were met by a brusque "What other alternatives do you have?" If this is politics, fine! But what­ever Cross and company might think, the College Union is not politics. We use money not for the particular propagation of

a certain ide-ology, t>ut for the buildinR' of programs that appeal to tl1e · humanitarian aspect of a student's life here, regardless of affiliation or interest. And this leads to· my final argument.

The student government, no matter how it pleads is laying the first cornerstone with this bi_ll_to building a student govern-

tt~--TOLD YA . WE' SHOULD'VE' FUMt_GATED

S EM E"S TE't2. IHE" SAR.N LAST

rnent assoctatlon on campus, where all or­ga~zations drawing money from the stu­dents ( Wilether it oo dues of activity fees) are responsible. in the matter. of programs, plflicies, budget and actual officers to the student government, not the student body! And the fine line here lsthat."thestudent gov­ernment is or represents the student body better than any other organization. ·

Now, the passage of. the recent bUl did student governniemt .. NOte, plea_~.· that the groups, are responsible to the student gov­ernment, not the student body I Alftl the fine line here is that the student government is or represents the· stuqent bedy better than any other organization.

Now, the> passage of Ute recent bill did not mean we would have tlieaboye-mentioned control over cp projects--the concerts you hear, the gallery shows and films you se~ the lectures that stimulate your thinking; but the lifeline of the projects--the money-­would be in jeopardy, and the most expensive group of the ones mentioned for the appro­priations committee is the College Union. Undoubtedly, as a matter of fiscal planning and getting other groups student-funded the College Union, being the one with the ~ost money, would get its Junds cut. And cut thev would be even u tne programs were left stagnant; for the College Union, in order to· keep its programs constant, must" constantly increase its well of funds. Would the stu­dent government understand with so many other groups added to the pot? Could they validly investigate a CU program with much backing when politics, not the arts Is the keystone fC?r .their being in existence?

r do not mean to downgrade the people in the student government their abilities or their sense of artistic 'apprecation but one ~onders if ·a group, which obvi~usly worsh1ps Appalachian State University and ~ts ~GA (which controls all student. life), IS hberal enough to allow other organiza­tions the internal freedom that is needed.

'Horses' Is Bleak Social Critique

~rue, I do not deny that the College U ruon has faults of its own (especially in the concert -giving, where student taste is not always represented or eclucated), but our flaws are minor when compared to the recently proposed bill. We have put on programs such as lectures, film and art series, the travel jaunts and the interna­tional shows--all of which, if they had to receive their funds ·via the student govern­ment, would be pale shadows of their pres­ent 'Selves~

""'lllfii"DOUG LEMZA

The :advance word from ABC Pictures Corp. about the film "Tiley Shoot Horses, Don't They?" was one of bleak, solitary con­frontati6n between the audience and the era oFtne:~ance-hall marathons· of the thirties.

The Deople themselves would be bleak. The attltucJes they carried would be inclica­tive of the hopeless run-arouncl they got and haq to perform in the smoky, musty pleasur~ palace called the Pacific Ballroom. Many ot them would be people without careers1 drifters unable to get a start, parasites on the movie community near-by.

A honking voice sent forth by the garrulous master of ceremonies would incite the par­ticipant~ to join the ilour after hou_r centest of endurance. This voice, so sweetly bound­ing frotn the microphone at first (giving rn oments of joy to the ringside spectators and pleasure to us, the film's audience), turns il)to a rampant call for the corning of the animals. The "animals" are the par­ticipant~ a few hours after the start of the rnarathQn. Each blast from the podium's microphone signals another step down the evolutionary ladder. The de-humanization process bas begun.

As the descent of these inclividuals is in progress, we can see the automatic reve­latio~ of the ballroom; a giant cavern becomes a sweevmg cross-sectwn, a sharp plunge into th~ strata of these people -- some-

times exposing their backround, sometimes delving into their tissues, their bones, their minds. The race for rife from which the last three couples are eliminated becomes the most effective part of tile film, illus­trating the grasping inhuman humanity ex­hibited by the promoters and the spectators, and finally by the dancers thernsel ves. This torture becomes excruciating for the per­formers and ourselves. If there ever was a film that tried to impart enclurance as some slow form of hideous death, "They Shoo.t Horses, Don't They?" is the most suecess­ful ancl least hopeful of them all.

A certain languishing, then erupting, or­gasmatic spell is woven; we fit in only at the leisure of tile screen's characters. It is a movie that spits at us and dares the audience to take it, grime and all •

And like "Bonnie and Clyde," "Horses" evokes an age mystical to the under-thirty set; yet with the same mystical, magical potion used for "B & G" the plot and char­acters become real, horrid, sordidandalive. {So often with twenties and thirties "period" films, the characters become in­cidental to the supposecl mood of the Holly­wood craftsman. The best examples are the films made out of the Fitzgerald novels, where the "evokers" drown the substance of the story in bits of business that are not fun to watch and are irrelevant to the idea of projecting a sympathetic story.)

difficulties), but I do feel that his answer to the policeman's question of why he killed Jane Fonda lthe title of the picture) is mark­edly inferior to the events and actions that precede it.

But ~be best part in t~e. filrn. )s·, the one <fig _Y,puog .plays. As the "Yassuh-yassah". master of ceremonies, Young· has been relieved of his second-fiddle, lover-boy roles to come on strong and funny, and then strong and -ominous in a. part that instigates fear and witless hortor.

Dire<;tor Pollack concentrates on the con­ception and the drama of the thirties dance­hall. He is more than adequate in trans­forming the pain of the dancers into our concern. His concerted efforts have shaped a drama of bold, adult fascination and frank pertinence to life.

With the ar·rival of "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" at the Thruway, three intense­ly personal films have made it to Winston. "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" at the Park­way and "Z" at the Winston are the others. Don't miss any!

I also doubt the continued expansion of these prograins could have been had under arrangements in this bill; In short if the College Union· accepted this bill as it stood the quality of these and other program~ WQJM1,d~~~riorate ·and vanish.

'I'be question of refusing or accepting the bill was not one of sqpporting the stu·~ den~s ·or the adrninfstraHon, or even of havmg students controlling their own money as opposed to the present method. Instead the question was of having a student-run' student-oriented quality program opposed by a system that promised no future and much confusion in the quality of arts brought to the University community. The College Union Cllted for the old way of doing things, where the students are definitely getting a better piece of the action for their dollar.

uoug Lernza Class of '70

SG, Part II To The Editors:

I have been cheated out of my Do away with the system! (Continued on page 5)

rights!

Axle Me Wheel Sounds Off

IDGAD Has Unique Plans The worst is about to happen at Wake

Forest, the best of all possible worlds. from the sky, you've got to be kidding. First of all, you've got to have.a philosophy about government."

I •

Allegory Retells MR C-IFC 'Battle'

Director Sidney Pollack ancl his associ­ates (producers Irwin Winkler and Robert Chart off) have made a film devoid of the overripe cliches of the Fitzgerald dramas and have chosen instead to put into focus the story of the marathon from several points (lf view. Their diligence has paid off as "Horses" rarely fools itself with passion­ate drama so thick you can cut it with the knife and opts for a direct attaek O!l our way of life, the American dream (which may or may not be the Hollywood dream fac­tory) and personal insecurity in tQ(Jay' s world.

As you well remember (you do, don't you? Of course you do.), last week, I ran into Gunther T. Mornus, the chairman of the IDGAD (I Don't Give A Damn) Party, and learned that he was planning a po­litical revival of that once dead (for good, we had hoped) paragon of political entities.

· "Bud we do. We on' none uf us give a damn about nuttin 'cept havin1 a real good l '

time. What more d' ya wan us t' believe in? Motherhood?"

Setting: The Land OJ 'Nodance' By CAESAR CLARKE

(Editor's Note: The following allegory by Caesar Clarke, former president of the In­terfraternity Council, was written in re­sponse to a column by Jim Spears, Men's Resiclence Council president, which ap- · pea red in the "Old Gold and Black" on Jan. 16, 1970. Previously, the two presidents had been invited to write columns on the MRC as a social institution. Spears re­butted Clarke's contentions, Herewith, Clarke's rebuttal of a rebuttal.)

In disrespect to a non -article written several issues ago by a Men's Residence Council officer who criticized the Inter­fraternity Council president (now gone to the ancient elephant burial ground or wher­ever old IFC presidents go--don't say it) for criticizing the MRC by adroitly at­tacking the IFC officer instead of the is­sues in his article, we would offer you a little-known prophecy from the War of the "C's'" which has come to pass-fail.

Once upon a time, then and now, in the land of Nodance, now called Deaconland there were two C's. They were not CC'~

from the dark English valley, but were/are the IF(C) and the MR(C). The IFC was old and proven, so of course everyone hated it (after all, it had passed the credibility age of no return, 3.0). For many years the IFC had been providing the Deacons with socials and an occasional academic scheme here and there, through its own resources-­the villain. But aha! (old Nodance phrase previously used in conjunction with "you over-cut" ),others would not let the lFC go uncontested, for they wanted fun and dues and jackets and houses as well, so the goodly wizards of Reynolds Tower createcl out of milk and honey the MRC (always accompanied by the sound of trumpets and visions of morn's apple pie). The MRC (golden trumpets) would do what the dirty IFC did and thereby prove the lFC un­worthy,

(We should mention the presence of those rascals the independents, but since the MRC (trumpets) and the wizards cared nought for them, neither shall we··e,.en the lFC, the criminals, were known not to care about them),

At first the mean IFC eyed the MRC

Founded January 15, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest University, Old Gold and Black is published each Friday during the school year exceot durillf.t ex­aminatwn surnrn~>r and houday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board, Maiied each week. · , Members of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for National Advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, lnc., a division of Reader's Digest Sales anrl ServicE', Subscription rate: $4.00. Second-class postage ~d, Winston­Salem. ~.c. Farm 3579 should be mailed to Box 7576, Reynolda Statlon. Winston­Salem. N.C. ?.7109. Printed by Community Press, Incorporated, King, N.C.

(Flutes with indifference, as did everyone else. The IFC oaly cared about its filthy 2.0 anG better Deacons, and it could let the MRC (violins) have the rest. But the MRC (hooray) found its champions (sic) and at­tacked the IFC for being a success, having parties (how bad!), paying dues, having house­men, ~eing higher than the all men's av­erage, and being unlike the MRC (flutes and. trumpets). Everyone rallied to the MRC's (bugles) ranks to flight the IFC for being exactly unlike the MRC (bombs bursting in air). The war of the C' s be­~;.tn.

Many a fierce battle was fought on tile plains of Oldgolden black--the only place available because of the furniture market. The MRC (drums and bugles) attacked first by getting some of everyone's money and produced an academic program (the new ultimate weapon). The IFC the rat countered ' . by _having Greek Week and enjoying College U man (the typical unrewarded faithful dog) (indeed this was dirty pool--also available in Taylor House from 12 to 9 p.m. except on cookie mght). And so the battle ra~reci. Then outside agitators (over-protective muthets), not to be confusecl with Yankees or other rascals from " Hair" became en· • camped in the towers of Reynolda and formed the brotherhood of the Administration, and

. they Passed down edicts of judgment on the IFC b~cause the lFC helped themselves, did not ta~e money from everyone, paid for their space~. and did not impersonate the College Union, The administration and many of it~ vassals from the sea people of Faculty lOtned the MRC (comets), and so the IFC

Where their conception of the c:ha racters meets today• s blustering reality is in the motion of people getting hurt, shunted aside with bullying comments and destroyed with­out reason. Transferring the circus-world atmosphere of the dance-hall to the suburbia of today would not hurt, but allowing it to settle in the gnawing, unsettling realm of the Pacific Ballroom permits the story and characters to gain focus and relevance.

Part of this triumph lies with the screen­play by James Poe and Robert E. Thomp­son from the novel of the same name by Horace McCoy. lt is explicit and subtle, clemonstrative of the period"s reality, focused and wise ()Yithout getting pseuclo-profound about its "message").

Fallowing the example of the director and the screen-writers are the performers. Jane Fonda breaks from her Vadim-Svengali trance to give a bitchy, harrowing, confound­ing performance. The scene with her running aro~;nd the track with Red Buttons a ](lhe justifies her Academy-Award nomination. Red Buttons as the cut-up ex-sailor, Bonnie Bedelia as the pregnant Oakie in the middle of all this endurance mess and Susannah York as the Jean Harlow incarnation all flabbergast the imagination with the con­centrated, brute-force strength and subtlety of people caught (willingly so, for the most part) by greed and envy.

Michael !>arrazin sticks out like a sore thumb in this crew possibly ·pecause of the

-bland role he is playing. I haven't been able b feel him ont Yl': (z :•cl tl:at c:~.·c~' ;~1.::·., for

Well, since then, Momus has done ab­solutely nothing. But, then, he has remained consistent with party philosophy. He doesn't give a damn about how. the resurrection of the party is organized (or disorganized).

But I finally founcl him, asleep under the magnolias, dreaming of unmentionable pleasures, an_d ruqely awakened him. He mumbled something about "having a real good time", and· slowly rolled over onto the remains of a magnolia blossom." Ouch," Gunther said, among other things largely unprintable, "and I was having such a real good time."

So Gunter got up and consented to discuss his plans for the campaign -as he made them up. "Wall, I jest figgered dat ifn we all jest got together an plotted de whole ting out, real n~ce an like, we jest might git a runnin start on SNAG (Students for Non­Active Government) and push SLUM (Stu­dents for Lying Under the Magnolias) rite inta th' position uf power hear on campus. Whudda ya ting o' clat. Din we could all have a real good time."

"Well Gunther, 1 think t.!Jat' s fine. Who are your officers going to be for this year?"

"Wall, thet's one 'a our bigger prob­lems. We je:_;t ain't got nobody whut don't give enougga damn ta ebern keer 'bout runnin fur nuttin. Bud 1 figger dat ifn we jest lay back he'ar under these purdy trees rite onna dis crappy grass, sturntin' 11 cum up whut'll solve alia our problems, an den we'uns kin .Jest sit back an have a real good time."

"But Gunter,'' I protested, "If all you're going to do is sit back, or lie back, as is your wish to do, and exnect candidates and a platform, and campaign money ana [Jt:U!Jl"

to ramrod the campaign through to just fall

"Well, that's· nice, But if you really don't give a damn, why worry about having a campaign?"

"Does I look lik' I'm a worryin?" ''You've got a point there. But why would

anybody who doesn't give a ·damn about anything want to become a 9LUM officer? It would seem that their only concern would be, as you so ·quaintly put it, llaving a real good time."

"Wall, ya see; it's dis way. lfn a guy don't give a damn, an wants t' have a real good time, den he's gotta make sure dat 1

alia de odder people's having a real good time. An ifn dey' re alia de time in de lawmakin room play in like dey' re doing some good when dey're really doin nuttin, den dey's not havin a real good time. Sos we figger dat ifn we git 'lected, we won' jest play like wes doin' somtin when we really ain't, we' 11 jest not do nuttin at all, an make no pretend 'bout it, dere won' be nuttin ta keep us all frurn havin'a real P."ood time. See?"

"Oh, I believe I am beginning to see what you mean. Instead qf playing the part of a figurehead government which really doesn't do anything at all, even though it puts on a big show of legislative innovation, the IDGAD people won't try to put on a show at all. They' 11 just make it a point from the start of doing nothing."

"An have a real good time," Gunther aptly added in his unique style.

"And we really won't lla ve anything dif • ferent froin what we have now; except for a lot of hot air which won't be there any more."

"An we'll have a real good time." "Well, Gunther, I think that you have won

, me over to the side of reason. Move over." And I ended· the day lying under the mag­nolias.

.,

' ·t

.,

•(

' ...

Thougl Governm a bad id< My main assumed proposed

Before man girl book. Sh member choice. decision! to subsc by the pc ing the ! was neit on this publicati of the p dopted.

Membl sented! I durns ar' ever, I < even see ion. Wit! general! the stude

Perha1 is not th' have yot Men's RE

As far con<'erne to recog light of

If stw achieved, point rnt to expre responsil dent govE on the isl

]

To TheE When

cy, becc the targ communi the pOS! communi absolute planation quests f, rode the involved.

The H mittee h able que bodies ~ they un< sucil as the sake ceive th quate de received not in t cerned",

There! ture of for refc rnittee t committE the stud honor co, professo and rece: rights o meeting order to of the co:

The cc nably, b of its t~ an unrea jection) • dent Leg mittee c, erendum

In sho. involved open and

~ Ki4 up

Go da1 Kal L1 otic K1 ter a you d1 let" s I best tl.

in&. Wt ·to the NATUI

St Me

INTEf SHERAT

A

Page 5: Wilson Walks Out His Trial - Wake Forest University · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is Ed ltry. I Will just-'· In mrts new is a who peti, has :mall eally :ter ·okes 1 the

where all or­rom the stu­activity fees)

· of programs, tfficers to the student body!

te student gov­! student body :ion, ·ecent blll did lea&e, that the ~ student gov­' I Alftl the fine 1t governmen~ tt bedy better

recent bill did aye-mentioned e concerts you films you se~, your thinking; --the money-­nos! expensive for the appro­:ollege Union, fiscal planning mt-funded, the with the most • And cut thev ; were left on, in order to' mst' constantly ~ ould the stu­with so many t? Could they ~am with much lie arts is the ;tence? ~de the people heir abilities, precation, but tich ·obviously Jniversity and student life),

her organiza­lat is needed. t the College •n (especially student taste

educated), but mpared to the

have put on film and art I the inte rna­if they had to udent govern­of their pres-

expansion of !en had under short, if the

lll as it stood, ter programs

or accepting ~ting the stu·~

or even of ;ir own money hod, Instead, . student-run, m opposed by ure and much ts brought to The College doing things,

tely getting a their dollar. Class of '70

II of my rights!

;tern! I)

rlS

>e kidding. First philosophy about

•ne uf us give a

' •

) . rin' a real good an us t' believe

you really don't about having a

rryin?" l. But why would

a damn about . 9LUM officer? .y concern would it, having a real

way. Ifn a guy s t' have a real make sure dat

ing a real good de time in de

:e dey' re doing ally doin nuttin, good time, Sos

ed, we won' jest when we really 1ttin at all, an , dere won' be m havin'a real

ming to see what ng the part of a :h really doesn't t10ugh it puts on

innovation, the put 011 a show at

1 point from the

time," Gunther le. ve anything dif­now; except for

•n' t be there any

d time." hat you have won :on. Move over." under the mag-

.,

. •(

.,

Letters To The Editor

Student: 'Why Wasn't I Asked?' (Continued from page 4)

Though do' ·ay with the Women's Government dation might not be suP-h a bad idea that is not my present intention. My main c~ncern now is the position the WGA assumed on the recentfinancialautonomy bill proposed by the student government.

Before entering the University every fresh­man girl receives a copy of the WC::A hand­book. She is informed that she 1s now a member of that organization. She has no choice. She is subject to the rules an~ decisions of the WGA, Eyen · so, I refuse to subscribe to the selfish position adopted by the power structure of the WGA concern­ing the SG bill. As a member of ~he. WGA, I was neither given the opportumty to vote on this issue, nor informed. previous to publication in the "Old Gold and Black" of the position the power structure had a-dopted. .

Members of the WGA have not been repre­sented! In a representative system, referen­dums are not practical for all issues. How­ever I contend that those in power did not even' seek out a general concensus of opin­ion. With a resolution of such importance to general student responsibility, should not we, the students, have been consulted? .

Perhaps the power structure of the WGA is not the only group at fault. College Union, have your members been polled? And the Men's Residence Council?

As far as the Honor Council's position is cont'erned, such a paradoxical unwillingness to recognize. student responsibility in the light of recent events is just too puzzling,

If student . responsibility is ever to be achieved, elected representatives at some point must give the student body a chance· to express its willingness to have this responsibility. ! recommend that t~e stu­dent government call. a general referendum on the issue of financial autonomy.

Lois Stovall .. Class of 172

: _,.

Honor Council To The Editors:

When an institution, shrouded in secre­cy, becomes the object 'of controversy and the target of challenges ·from within the community, it is worthwhile . to consider the possibilities of reform·. An academic community cannot be expected to accept absolute decisions handed down without ex­planation or elaboration. Surely such re­quests for acquiescence will inevitably e­rode the legitimacy of all the institutions involved. · ·· .. · · · ·· · ·

, ' . - • • 1 • ~ ~.,,, I t r.-. . -r1 ·1

The Honor Ccnll'lt!il 'and .. executive com~ : mittee have been 'confronted. with reason- ' able questions ·and demands: are tnese bodies serving the ends of justice? Are they unduly influenced by tangent issues such as race, athletics and stability for the sake of stability? Do the accused re­ceive the due process of law and ·an ade­quate defense? The only answer we have received, that "we cannot answer and do not in the best interests of everyone con­cerned'', is simply not sufficient ·

Therefore, we suggest that the Legisla­ture of the student body, the proper place for reform in this case, create a com­mittee to consider reforms. Ideally, this committee would include repres.entatives of the students, faculty, executive committee, honor council; Afro-American Society, and a professor. of law familiar with due process and recent court decisions involving the civil rights of .'students. In addition, the initial meeting of the CQmmittee would be· open in order to entertain suggestions from any part of the community.

The committee: should not meet intermi­nably, but for two months. The urgency of its task should not make the deadline an unreasonable .burden. Acceptance.(or re­jection) of the proposal reforms by the stu­dent Legislature, faculty and executive com­mittee could be endorsed by a popular ref-erendum.

In short, the "best interests of everyone" involved are not served by secrecy, but by open and honest attempts at needed reforms.

Kick

Duke Wilson Don Schoonmaker Joe Reinhardt

up )Olir heels

Pizza Inn To The Editors:

Now that two sides of the coin have been presented concerning a group of University students having a gun pulled upon them by the manager of Pizza Inn, 1 would like to present the third side, the analytical edge to this particular coin, if you please.

First of all, I would like to make it clearly understood that three visits were paid by the students to Pizza Inn. On the first visit, they dined there. After finding them­selves overcharged, · they returned im­mediately for a second visit and called to the attention of the manager that they had been overcharged. The third visit was at 12:30 when the students returned at the manager's invitation to check the register tape v:ith him. I was a member -Of the party of students on the first two visits when we dined ·there and when we returned upon dis­covering the error. I was not with the _group when it last returned to Pizza Inn at 12:30 yet I can attest to the character aM general conduct of these young men. Three of them· I live with, one other used to live in the same suite, and the remaining three (only seven returned at 12:30, not eight as Mr. Vichus stated) are friends. None of these young men are hoodlums, rough-necks, or troublemakers, nor are any of them pre­varicators. To be specific, these are re­sponsible, well - mannered, conscientious young men.

The original party of eight, including my­self, went in two groups. The first group, of which I was a member, consisted of five students. They· had already placed their orders when the last three men joined them. Nonetheless, the waiter added these last three to the same ticket. I would like to mention here that we had requested sepa­rate checks for each of us when we placed our first five orders, but we were told that the check would be divided at the register.

Each of the first five students had car­ried a discount coupon for the special exam price, consequently each of them ordered a separate pizza. None of the last three had coupons, No immoderate amount of beer was consumed, so it would be false to as­sume that these students later reacted under the influence of alcohol •

When we paid the manager we paid him separately with the five coupon orders first. Then we first five left for our car and re­turned to school. It was in the boondocks parking lot that we were joined by the last three students who informed us they had been overcharged. Immediately all eight returned to Pizza Inn. We tried to explain the mistake to the manager, and we were polite enough until he implied that 'we' were tr.Y~ng to·· play him ·t.he . fool and -gYJ?,!him,, At this time he made his remarlh~t he neither u needed nor cared for college stu­dents" at his business, and we could go in the future to the Trophy Room or Tavern • Notice that it was first the manager who be­came insolent, and he' made no other offer of settlement besides suggesting that we return two hours later at 12:30 when he would close out the register. I admit that we then reacted with disgust, but we agreed to return.

I would also like to emphasize that it was the customers who discovered the error, not the management, as v. R. Vichus im­plied in his letter last week. OtherwisP why would the students have bothered to return? And if the manager had found the error first, why should he have refused to reimburse his customers before 12:30?

The group of seven, excluding myself, which returned to Pizza Inn at 12:30 once again explained the mistake to the manager. They pointed out to him the difference between the amount overcharged and the amount paid due to the coupon discount. My fellow students admit their tempers grew short, but not until after tile manager had told two of them never to come back again. Obviously the manager regarded the young men as "smart alecks." Or could it be that it annoys him to admit his mistakes?

My friends maintain they did not invite the manager outside "to get his rear stomped." (The term "stout fellows" does not reflect upon the size of any of us, but was originally used by us merely to keep consistent with the satirical vein of our first letter.) They have told me--and I have reason to believe them--that he willfully followed them out-

side, and he continued to taunt them with re­marks of his own, thus abetting the continu­ation of hostile exchange. At this time, the driver called the manager a ''sonofa bitch." The manager pulled a pistol from underneath his apron (concealed weapon?).

I seriousiy question whether the invective ''son of a bitch" is adequate provocation in any instance for pulling a gun and pointing it at a person. I have severe doubts. lt seems to me that the manager's gunslinging was irresponsible and unjustifiable on any grounds.

Concerning the desires of Pizza Inn to keep an orderly establishment and wholesome atmosphere, "even if it means telling a mi­nority of students how we feel," !point to the statement "neither need nor care for college students." That statement involves not a minority of students, but a majority--indeed it unanimously includes ALL students! Mr. Vichus says they will gladly tell us that. Yes! At the point of a gun, Mr. Vichus?

Finally. I would like to propose some remedies that could have possibly prevented this and perhaps other similar unfortunate incidents. First of all, and most obvious of all, the Pizza Inn could give separate checks. To do so would eliminate much confusion from dividing payments at the register. Each check would be returned and canceled with its payment (a Ia Sam's a la K & W, ala Tavern on the Green~. A second solution may possibly have been for the Pizza Inn manager to have counted his coupons re­ceived. If he had found five turned in for the five who claimed to use them, then he would have had a receipt of payment for them. But this was not done· either. A third and, I admit, less acceptable solution would have been to accept the word of the custo­mers on faith. It is doubtful that eight men would return to a place of business to quar­rel over· $1.70 had they not felt justified.

In conclusion, concerning the remark of Mr. Vichus concerning the statement "Sup­port Old Gold Advertisers--They Support You," I will remind you that mere blind patronage of a business despite known facts is as foolhardy as mere blind patriotism de­spite conscientious objection.

Robert F. Johnson Class of 1970

Sickening

To The Editors: The Bowden trial made me sick. From the

story in the "Old Gold and Black", it seems as though Bowden was convicted for cheating. Cheating here calls for dismissal. But· not for Bowden he's BLACK, and he belongs to the "great•'• Afro-American Society which protested his antiquated system.

So what happens -- Dr. James Ralph Scales proved himself a gutless wonder. Scales and the whole executive board blew it! They killed the honor system be~ause they were afraid the blacks would vigor­ously protest. I go along with the signs I have seen around campus which say "Give Equality to White Cheaters". Many students-­WHITE--students --have been thrown out on less evidence than that which convicted Bowden. Should Scales have overturned their verdict too? I feel either Bowden ought to be thrown nnt and the honor system revised to a workable form or the honor system ought to be abolished and student. now kicked out of the University brought back.

You can't be gutless and be a college president these days. You can't let a mi­nority of blacks threaten you or else more signs will appear--but none better than'' Give Equality to White Cheaters".

Bill Angle Class of '70

Humbug!

To The Editors: Balderdash!

Charles KirkPatrick Class of '69

REZNICK'S THRUWAY SEE OUR COMPLETE STOCI OF MUSICAL INSTIUMINU SHEET MUSIC, IIUOKS, ACCESSORIES AND POSTERS

Two Favorites With Their Latest Releases.·

Go dancing, enjoy the KOM Kal Lounge, Dine in the ex· otic Kona Kai Restaurant, Af· ter a long wet.k or studyill( you deserve to relax. And let's race it-Sheraton's the best olace around for relax­in&. Wed., Fri., and Sat. dance to the music of THE FOUR

Simon & Garfunkel... Bridge Over Troubled Water ·Chicago

NATURAlS. (g) ~*;

(Formerly Chicago Transit Authority) ... Chicago

••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• et

We ALWAYS Have The LARGEST Selection Of The 'LATEST Records At The LOWEST Prices!

REZNICK'S! Sheraton ,..,..~ ....... hm · Downtown - 400 N, Liberty Thruway Shopping Center

INTERSTATE 40, KNOll WOOD. STREET SHERATON HOTELS AND MOTOR INN!

A WORlllWIOf SfR\'ICE OF 11'1

"lt's·Been REZNJC.K'S FN· Records For Years" Oper. Week Nights 'Tll 9:00

PAGE FIVE Friday, February 27, 1970, OLD GOLD .AND BLACK

Allegory· Describes 'Battle' Of MRC, IFC Setting: The Land Of 'Nodance'

(Continued from page 4)

lost their faculties. At ·least the IFC was getting what it de·

served, They would be shown that no C is an island and that they must join the welfare state of Deaconland and take eollege funds to run their evil programs (Pro Hu­manitate).

But evil Is not so easily conquered.· The IFC fought on and used their own dirty money. They juggled their black budget and sponsored more academic programs, they essayed into Oldgoldenblack, the ad­mitted blacks to their ranks even as they left the MRC, they competed with the Col-

PROFESSORS (Continued from.page 1)

ples of sociology. Jowers Is a·lso a pro­fessor of sociology at Winston-Salem State College.

Jowers received the A, B. degree from Paine College at Augusta, Ga., the B.D. from . Drew University and the Ph.D. from the New School for Social Research. He also holds the LL.B.degree from Blackstoiie School of Law.

Jowers has been a member ·of the Win­ston-Salem State faculty for six years, Last year he also lectured at GreensboroCollege. He was a professor at A. and T. Univer­sity for two years. He also has taught at Bennett College where he served as pastor of St. Mark United Methodist Church.

Support

Old Gold Advertisers

Thev ""

Support You!

lege Union, they faced issues and didn't attack personalities, and they publicized their evil deeds.

Then on the Oldgoldenblack the two lead­ers of the C' s met. The Golden Spear of the MRC ("you are my sunshine, my only sunshine") Increased his academic arsenal of lectures, libraries and semtnars and let loose his total academic e.<perience un the mad Caesar. The Golden Spear built up his collection of brochures from grad schools (sometimes known as after-life) impartially starting first with medical scl:tools, which would be his own just reward.- Next he neatly maneuvered his attack frum the peri­lous issues of finance, participation and ac­cess and cleverly attacked Caesar, a well­known villain, But for all things worthwhile, sacrifices had to be made and so even the Golden Spear was thrown into one of the dirtiest issues, membership. But even as the heroes of . old Nodance, the Spear es­caped (sighs of relief) and proudly declared that the MRC (trumpets with cherubs flying about) was not open--so he met the lFC on its own termsi then he proclaimed thEo MRC (cymbals and gongs) to have "never pur­ported to totally represent the student body" and thereby proved to one and all the long history of the MRC's (sounds of women cheering) source to all. Finally he announced that the MRC (reaching crescendo) had be­come "a branch of the college" (hysteria), thereby completing a new College Union

(sing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic") · while simultaneously destroying the old one. ·

Surely now, the IFC must see its short­comings (Ret a taller .Caesar?) ·and amend its ways. The MRC Union had found Nir· vana in Deaconland (long thought by many to be impossible). The IFC-if Indeed there is any good in its heart--hereafter must no ·. longer use its heathen Greek names but . take on those of men from Administration, must not finance itself, pay rent, but must take Deaconland's money, must remain closed, must hate the College Union (Co~lege Union is a bad doggy, bad doggy I) and must abandon its fraternity system and become · like the MRC ("William Tell Overture")--· which in other worlds is known as a local· fraternity.

And so, good readers, the tale of the War of the C's ends--but not its moral implica-: tion. We told this tale in the hopes that in this way we could finally reach that mis- · understanding number of you who had never . previously entered the vile center, Letter­land of. Oldgoldenblack, with any semblance of perception in the hopes that you would grasp what is going on in Deaconland would no longer sit smilingly back watching one C · being absorbed into the other (it is hard to tell which C is which) and also in the hopes that you would realize that all is not well that ends well and, in many cases, it is bet­ter to leave well enough alone If we are to live happily ever after. '

"Sleep ... the K & W cafeterias ••• •ost lttaltlf•l

tlptrlnct

II . lift .•.

ucept drlak"

JNVITE I'OIJ ,TO DINE WITH THEM TODAY 0& An DAY AT YOUR. CONVENIENCE - AT. ANY OQ. 01' THEI& FIVE LOCATIONS

r ~! r - 1..:: ; .K ._

Excellent Food, Service, and Sa tis faction

WINSTON-SALEM CiRF:ENSBORO

Ardmore Tap Room 13" 1 S.Hawtlior1e Rd.

.422 North ChPrry S\, P'~w'y Pl»7.a Sh<>PI""R Cenlt•r

Knollwood at Thruw;,v

Fn,.ndl y Shuppang C~nt•r RALI-:lGU :'olurlh lltlls Shuprnng """'~'

STEVE'S Italian Ri.storante

Bell lnllaliaa f .... SPACHEnl u- PIZZA

ALSO AN AMERICAN MENU

Open 11:00 A.M. • lO:OO.P. M. ClOSED ·SUIDAY

112 Oakwood Drive (ACROSS FROM 'nfRU1UY .SHOPPING CEN'I'!mi

Camel PawnShop, Inc. "Money To Loan On Anythin~r Of Value~

422 N. Liberty

Bargains In Out-Of-Pawn Merchudite Radfos ............ 9 95up WedGIDg Budl ... 1.11 .. Phooograpbs .... , . l.UO np Tramlstor Tape · BllfiCulars .. .. .. .. 1Uhp R.ecorden ....... lUhp Port. and Desk . · Electric Tape

'l'ypewriten ...... 29.59up Reeorden ....... 29.5Qwp Guitars ........... 12.50 up Cameras .. .. .. .... Uhp

Suitcases .. . . . ..... • ..... Winston-Salem's Authorized Fender, Gretsch, Martin, Yamaha and Harmony Guitar and Amplifiertlon Dealer

Q!nllrgr irurrugr for

The finest of champagnes

imported wines · beer

BEER BY THE CASE AT SPECIAL PRICES

Phone 722·3167 102 Radford Street

Next to MacDonald's

Page 6: Wilson Walks Out His Trial - Wake Forest University · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is Ed ltry. I Will just-'· In mrts new is a who peti, has :mall eally :ter ·okes 1 the

PAGE SIX Friday, February 27, 19.70, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

'Rosemary ... ' Heads Filtns-BY DOUG LEMZA

Witches, pre-natal care, tan­nis roots, women falling out of buildings, Elisha Cook Jr., and Shakespeare all get mixed up in this week's College Union film series.

The first five categories men­tioned above are derived from

Homan Polanski's adaptation of Ira Levin's novel, "Rosemary's Baby,'' a high camp laugh at the Christ tale, only this time told in reverse.

''Rosemary's Baby" is really the son of the devil, Satan, Luci­fer and that whole wild crowd. The woman they (the devil's gang) choose must be disillusioned with

Roderick MacLeish To Speak Tuesday .

the church (in this case the Cath­olic Church) and quite unsure of herself as well.

Following the Bible "re­ligiously, ' Levin and Polanski turn Palestine into New York. City and the site of Bethlehem into the famous "Dakota" apartment building_ in Central Park West.

'The Grand Impact' Will Appear Tomorrow

Kinetic Art Program Is Sunday

The last in a series o! three programs in "The Kinetic Art" will be shown Sunday in DeTarn­ble Auditorium at 3 and a p.m.

"The Kinetic Art" is a series of short films, ranging in length from 55 seconds to 55 minutes, produced by film-makers of ten different countries. Each of the three programs of shorts is about 90 minutes in length.

The series is being sponsored by the department of sper!ch.

TONIGHT

7:55 --This Week in City Gov­ernment: William Turner, Di­rector oftheWinston-Salem Con­vention Center.

8:00 -- Special of the Week: "Great Decisions, 1970"-Pros.: peels for the Kremlin, Secretary of State Rogers and others are interviewed.

8:30 -- Evening Concert: The Carrnina Burana.

10:00 -- Dimensions in Jazz. ll :00 -- Deaconlight Serenade:

Richard Honeycutt.

11:00 -- Deaconlight Serenade: Richard Honeycutt.

MONDAY

7:55 -- Focusing on the Arts: Cultural calendar.

8:00 --Campus Report. 8:15 -- Wake Forest Sports. 10:00 Reynolda Hall Lecture:

William Rusher, publisher of the "Natioual Review"--'' Have Stu­dents Gone Crazy?"

ll:OO -- Deaconlight Serenade: Vaud Travis.

Roderick Macl.eish, a tele­vision commentator, correspon­dent, novelist and communist af­fairs specialist, will discuss the Arab-Israeli crisis Tuesday at 8:15 p.m. in DeTamble auditor­ium.

the war and its political back­grounds. His book, "The Sun Stoo•l Still", describPd the six­day conflict.

To make the characters stand out in this wild tale, Polanski chose the top character actors and actresses to do their stuff. Included are Ralph Bellamy,Sid­ney Blackmer, Ruth Gordon (who got an Academy-Award for this role), Elisha Cook Jr., and Mau­rice Evans. The two main parts are taken by Mia Farrow, finally freed from "Peyton Place," and John Cassavetes, the star of "The Dirty Dozen."

-------------------------------- TUESDAY

After his first middle east trip, he wa·, assigned by West­inghouse Broadcasting Com­pany to cover the emPt':o;ency ses­sions or ~h: United N.1tions se­curity council and general as­sembly. He also reported on the conference between Lyndon B. Johnson and Alexl'!i Kosy:;ia in Glassborough, N.J.

MRC Fling Will Begin Tomorrow

Medical Frat Inducts Bowman Gray

SATURDAY·

7:30 -- Metropolitan Opera Matinee: Strauss -- Der Rosen­ka valier (live),

7:55 -- Fi!rncast: Movie Re­view.

MacLeish has recently re­turner] [rom a s•~veral-munth stay in the rnideast. On an earlier trip, he cons:tlted leaders in Cai­ro and Tel Aviv anct broadcast

RODERICK MAC LEISH ••. To Speak Tuesday ...

MacLeish, a traveler in 74 countries. has interviewed form­er Soviet premier Nikita Khrush­chev, Italian communist lead­er Palmira Gogliatti, the last three English prime m isisters and many of the "revisionist" communist theoreticians.

In regular attendance at the major disarmament conferences for the past eight years, Mac­Leisit has covered the Algerian war for independence and once spent the night in a Pathet Lao camp in.Laos •

"Rosemary's Baby,'· one of the most successful color films of 1968, produced by William Castle and written and directed by R~man Pol_anski, will be shown tonight at 3, 7 and 9:30 p.m. and tomorrow at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Admission to these De­Tamble showing~ is fifty cents.

On Wednesday, the College Union will present the J oho Houseman -Joseph Mankiewicz production of Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" starring Marlon Branda as .t\nthony, James Mason as Brutus, John Gielgud as Cas­sius and Deborah Kerr as Cal­purnia,Caesar's wife.

"Julius Caesar" will have two showings Wednesday in De­Tarnble at 3 and B p.m. It is free and the· film replaces Lau­rence Olivier's production of "Henry V ."

A variety ofactivites will high­light the "GDMHC Fling", to be presented tomorrow by the Men's Residence Coundl.

Tomorrow from 1 to 5 p.m. a "co- rec afternoon" will be held in Reynolds gymnasium with coeds from Johnson dormitory. Trophies will be presented tothe hall with the best record in each event.

From 8 to 12 p.m. the MRC will host a combo p~rty, fea­turing th-: Grand. Impact, at the Winston-Salem Convention Cen­ter. Admission is ·free to house­men and $2 per couple for non­house members,

9 At Nine students at the Bowman

Gray school of medicine have been elected to membership ·in Alpha Omega Alpha, national medical honor ~ociety.

Election to membership inAOA is based on scholastic achieve­ment and character.

Senior students who were tap­ped for mernb'l!rship are Charles F. Alexa!lder lfl, of Oshkosh, Wis.; William J. Casey, of Ar­lington Hei'ghts, Ill.; Michael J, Hensley, of Raleigh; David L, Heymann, of Galeton, Pa.; Samuel Pegram, of Greensboro; and Lovett P. Reddick of Greenwood,

A Message: to Business, Commeree and Liberal Arts Graduates .•• •

' '

'' Wouldn't you like to build your career WHERE

THE MONEY IS? Welf you can, by simply

investigating the many job opportunities

available to you in BANKING at the Equitable

Trust Company in Baltimore.

OUR RAPID GROWTH ASSURES YOUR RAPID DEVELOPMENT • If you want to be not only "Where The Money Is," but also WHERE THE ACTION IS in today's business world, then you belong in BANKING. Keen competi­tion in banking has created the need for needle-sharp marketing and sales techniques. Exciting innovations in bank operations call for imaginative ideas in the management of men and machines to support a rate of growth which is outstripping other Baltimore banks.

SYSTEMATIC MANAGEMENT TRAINING ASSURES RAPID ADVANCEMENT • It'll be "out of the frying pan and into the fire" when it comes to continuing the learning process in Equitable's scholarly (yet bank-oriented) Administrative Training Program. Excellent development curriculums are con­ducted in all the various banking operations.

DOUGLAS KIRK

WILL BE ON YOUR CAMPUS

TUESDAY, MARCH 3

ATTRACTIVE OPPORTUNITIES FOR MA's AND MBA's • You may be more than a little surprised to hear what's in store if you choose BANKING as a career. This is especially true at Equitable Trust where we look upon people with your level of educational achieve­ment with particular appreciation.

~~~~?~~~;:~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~1 OF COURSE OUR BANK HAS EMPlOYEE ~ ii BENEFITS (insurance, pensions, hospitalization ~ ~~ and the like) WHICH ARE DESIGNED TO MAKE ~ ~,!i PEOPlE WANT TO SPEND THEIR ENTIRE ~ ~~ WORKING liVES WITH US. ~ ~ ~ i>!U:t~~~if~i>~ti~~?;if!i~~~~~~f!i~t!i~f!i

C We'd be happy to tell all about us as

well as learn something· abo'ut YOU, if

you'll contact your school's Placement

Department and make an appointment

to see our representative on campus. Do it today!

"An Equal Opportunity Employer" Equitable

Trust Bank BALTIMORE, MARYLAND 21203

S.C. Elected from the junior class

were Warner M. Burch Jr. of Grifton; W. David Purnell' of - ' Charlotte; and Donald W. Shel-ley, of Columbia, S.c.

The new members were in­ducted at the annual banquet of the North Carolina Beta Chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha in Winston-Salem. Dr. David E. Rogers, vice president for medi­cine at Johns Hopkins Univer­sity, delivered the banquet ad­-dress.

The aims of Alpha Omega are the promotion of scholarship and research in medical schools, the encouragement of a high standard of character and conduct among medical students and. graduates; and the recognition of high attainment in medical science.

Pub

B :00 -- The Art of Glenn Gould. 9:00 -- Mozart Festival in

Wurzburg, Germany, 1969: Li­tanae de vererabili altaris sac­ramento in E flat major; Ves­perae solennes de confessore.

10:30 -- The Goon Show: "Shangri-la Again". ·

11:00 -- Deacon!ight Serenade: Dave Hartley.

SUNDAY

11:00 -- Wake Forest Baptist Church,

3:00 --The Auditorium Organ Concert.

3:30 -- French Music· and French Musicians: Couperinand Faure - Concerto in C minor; Mozart --Symphony in D minor, no. Bl; Caldara--Sonata op, I, no. 5; Praetorius --Dancesfrom "Terpsichore"; Tessarini -­Sonata in D major; Veracini-­Concerto in E minor; Offenbach­iana.

8:30 -- BBC World Theatre: Shakespeare--Coriolanus.

The Action Cologne For Active Men

·in soap bar, cologne, talc, and after -shave

also other colognes and "accessories at a convenient location

We have a selection of ladies' cosmetics also

AN DREws· PHARMACY S. Hawthorn• at Ma&nolia Winston-Sal•m, N. c ..

Phone 723-1679

ANDREWS-SUMMIT PHARMACY 1214 Rc.ynolda Road Winston-Salem, N. c.

Phoo.e 722-1144

8:00 -- Swedish Folk Music: Song and dance.

8:15 -- At Issue. 8:30 -- Music In Our Time:

A special series of programs featuring contemporary mu­sicians in concert in New York City.

10:30 -- Spectrum: Environ­mental Control, part II.

II :00 :- Deaconlight Serenade: Tim Shouse.

WEDNESDAY

2:00 -- BBC World Theatre: Shakespeare's Coriolanus.

7:30 -- Dutch Composers Of The 20th Century.

8:00 -- Transatlantic Profiles. 8:15 ~- London Echo.

10:00 --The Asia Society Pre­sents

10:30 -- Cornternporary Irish Composers: Sean O'Raida.

11:00 -- Deaconlight Serenade: George Bryan.

THURSDAY

7: 55 -- Tol?ic ... North Caroli.Da.

8:00 --ANestofSingingBirds: Romeo and Juliet.

10:00 -- Book Beat: Anthony Tuttle, author of "Drive for the

' Green."

10:30 -- The Drum

·11:00 -- Deaconlight Serenade: Richard Norris.

Library Gets

New Directory

0 f Employment

The· 1970 edition of ''Sum­mer Employment Directory of the United States", contai.1ing

.listings of 80,000 summer job

.openings at resorts, summer camps, national parks, sum­m"er theaters, ranches and res­taurants, has been received by the library.

Employers throughout the U­nited States and Canada are in­cluded in the listings. Camp coun­seling jobs are the most nu­merous.

Sales and Sales Management Training Program

This Program is designed to develop young college graduates for careers in life insurance sales and sales management. It provides an initial training period of 3 months (including 2 weeks at a Home Office School) before moving into full sales work.

Those trainees who are interested in and who are found qualified for management responsibility are assured of ample opportunity to move on to such work in either our field offices or in_ the Home Office after an initial period in sales.

Aggressive expansion plans provide unusual opportunities for those accepted.

Arrange with the placement office for an interview with:

Ivane. Hinrichs, C.L.U. Agency Supervisor

Thursday, March 12, 1970

Connecticut Mutual Life INSURANCE COMPANY • HARTFORD • The Blue Chip Company o Since 1846

l)

I •

·'

I '

·'

·~,. D ¥4 U ¥4

v·1 1 tht

By

t •••• ,

c. Charlie Da1

llna State• s r AI Heartley : Vann Willifor

while hangir board and dro]

While C.D. , through the life to becor ference.

Unlike most up in middle of Manhattan per cent of t exposed to th so prevalentJ•

Fortunately, of belonging t

• children. "Ou but we were we either fe vantage of eve

"My parent " certain things

.You learned 1

you e:ot in trou •u me stovef

enable him to doing too wei had a vivid i1

'was real and n After finish

for Brooklyn in New York mainly wante< I sat next to a '

1' C.D. entere~ 148 blacks ar averaged 25 p play in basketb

"I figured t did for 3 1/2

. .' of my senior : had exploited conscious, C.D him for his ba~

During fiiS s• Packer and N Forest. Davis·

·· the Deacon cc him if three know if the Sou

Aithough he , decided to lea' South. C.D. wa Charlie Scott, basketball colo a desire to be ~

Since C.D. s , Laurinburg In:

semester of I scared to deatl for the first I car from Faye where I was."

At Lauringbu ,, to the academi

principal, had blacks."lt was to 1"ave. J. au willing to go to

Some fast ta him to stay tht in the fall. Pat

· to make sure Laurinburg.

When C.D. c progress. "I c else. He also well as a game.

"The Univer. · \\oas a job. It

something of a money out of fill

• Although he E

basketball at W here.

" There is not not enough invo been brought u Really, it is not

"I feel that don't feel that t at me or says if I don't like

"My coaching basketball. The 'not so long as day-1 don't thiD bad games in a I would have the

Before the r .,culating arounc in the contest allowed the rur the game. If I black, then l wo1

Many student towards the s• through school.

· screaming abot walk across tiie gone to Carolil ~ave here, the Blacks.

Although C.D. it does not af basketball abili or anywhere. I

C.D. has one b~fore he gets ·year, he can dr if he is knocked

·'

Page 7: Wilson Walks Out His Trial - Wake Forest University · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is Ed ltry. I Will just-'· In mrts new is a who peti, has :mall eally :ter ·okes 1 the

Serenade:

the Arts:

rt. ;t Sports. Lecture:

1er of the Have Stu-

lerenade:

~ovie Re-

.k Music:

ur Time: >rograms ry mu­lew York

Environ-

lerenade:

Theatre: us.

lOSers Of

Profiles.

:iety Pre-

l.ry Irish ida.

Serenade:

Carolina.

ingBirds:

Anthony ~e for the

Serenade:

J' F'Jt

of "Sum­·ectory of contai.1ing mmer job

;, summer rks, sum­; and res­!ceived by

out the U­ja are in­ampcoun­most nu-

, '

I '

·'

·~,,

v.-IEWIN.G the ·DEACS

PAGE SEVEN Friday, February OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Bah y De a cs C I o s e Season .......-iiiiiiiiil8iiii--.-iiiliil

With Three Straight Wins

By DOUG BUCKLEY Sports Editor

C. D. The Person Charlie Davis brings the ball up the court against North Caro­

lina State's man-to-man defense. He gets a step on his defender Al Heartley and drives down the lane. As 6-9 Paul Coder and 6-6 Vann Williford converge on him, C.D. arches a shot at the basket _ while hanging in midair. The ball barely brushes against the back­board and drops cleanly through the hoop. It looks so easy.

While C.D. never had too much trouble putting the basketball , through the nets, he has had to overcome many obstacles in his life to become one of the top players in the Atlantic Coast Con­ference.

U~like. most students at ~ake Forest, Charies i5av1s did uui grow up lfi middle class Amenca. He was raised in the h<~.rlem section

1• of Manhattan where 99 per cent of the people are black and 95 per cent of the inh~~itants poor black. At an early age, C.D, was exposed to the reahhes of prostitution, drugs and crime that are so prevalentJn •ho ghettos of our nation. '

Fortu~tely, C.u., ~is brother and two sisters had thll advantage of. belongmg to a famtly where the parents took great pride m their

• chtldren. "Our entire family was very close. We were JJOOr Kids, but we were happy. Growing up around a lot of hazards as we did we either fell into those hazards or went to school auu wok ad~ vantage of every opportunity.''

"M_Y pa~ents brought me up on trial and error. They let me do certam thtngs that I wanted to do which I thought was magnificent.

·You lea.rned eveything on your own, but they were always lhere if you e:ot m trouble."

•u me s~::veftth grade, C.D. was put in a special class whlch would e~ble him to skip the eighth grade if he did well e.!]u11 ~i· ' j .wasD!J; domg too well so ~he school sent me to a psychiatrist. He said I

, had a vivid imagination. I couldn't tell the difference o~tween what was real and not."

After finishing junior high school, C.D. took an admissions test ~or Brooklyn Technical High School, the number one public school m . New York City at that time. "My Mother wanted it so bad. I mamly wanted t.o get in just to make her proud. During the test,

, I sat next to a Chmese boy and cheated off his paper." · C.D. entered Brooklyn Tech as a freshman where he was one of

148 blacks among 6,000. Davis quickly excelled in basketball and aver~ged 25 points per ~me his s~pbornore season. his outstanding play m basketball affected his attitude.

. "I figured the school needed me and would give the grades. They dtd for 3 1/2 years until my eligibility was up in early February

., ' of my sen_ior year. They almost threw me out on my ear. I felt they had e.xplo1ted me.': With the blacks becoming more and more race c?nsctous.' C.D. beheved that white people and not the school had used h1~ f~r h1~. basketball talents. "I vowed it would never happen again."

Duripg his senior year at Brooklyn Tech, bothAssista11t Coach Billy Packer and Norwood Todmann talked to C,D. about atteac:ting Wake Fore st. Davis was impressed with Packer's honesty when hE< questioned

" t~e ~eacon coach about Wake Forest and the South. ''Vt11en I asked htm i! three blacks could start for Wake Forest, he said ne didn't know if the South was ready for that yet."

PAT KELLY Scores Driving Layup

BY LARRY LYON Staff Writer

Wake Forest's freshman basketball squad closed out their season last week the same way they started it, with three big victories.

It was a happy ending for Coach NeilJohnstonandhiscrew, for it gave the Baby Deacs an even 8-8 final record for the long season. Perhaps even more satisfying than the final record was the win over North Carolina State last Saturday night, the Deaclets' first win of the season over major college opposition.

Behind the amazing outside shooting of Willie Griffin, the Baby Deacs whipped the Wolf­lets 77-66 to avenge an earlier defeat to State back in January at Memorial Coliseum. The con­test was not as close as the score indicates, as the Baby Deacs en­joyed a 13 point halftime lead and led by as much as 20 points several times in the final haif.

While sharpshooter Griffin was bagging 30 points, little Eddie Payne was helping out in the scor­ing column with 24 points of his own. The non-scholarship player

Deac Thin clads Top Lynchburg;

Finish Season With ACC Meet·

from Charlotte was just adding another brilliaDt performance to a consistently brilliant season.

Wake had broken their losing habits on the Wednesday pre­ceding the State game, when they downed a strong Gaston Col­lege outfit by 21 points, 93-72. Gaston entered the eveningwitha gaudy 24-2 record, including wins over · Clemson and Frank Mc­

Guire's heralded South Carolina C'..arnebiddies. But the Baby Deacs were not impressed.

With Pat Kelly enjoying his fin­est night of the season, Wake pulled a way from Gaston in the last five minutes to start their three game winning string. The 6-10 Kelly poured in 30 points while sinking 13 of 16 shots from the field and a perfect four of four from the charity stripe. The Bountiful, Utah native also snared 18 rebounds.

On Monday night the Baby Deacs annihilated Frederick Mil­itary Academy 105-68 in their final and runniest effort of the season. The hapless Frederick squad put on a display of basket­ball that rivaled Clemson Univer­sity basketball on a bad night for laughs.

Aside from Frederick's rather ~'ltiful play, the Baby Deacs staged an awesome show in run­ning up a 36 point lead at in­termission. Kelly thoroughly dominated the backboards

· throughout the contest, pulling down 26 rebounds. The Baby Deac subs played much of the

By CHARLES DAYTON Staff Writer

George, who, like Dolbin, also Une of these was the continued second half and did so on even stars for the Deacs in football, fine performance of Dolbin, who terms. won the shot put with a heave matched his previous time of 6.3 The Deaclets' play over the last

The Wake Forest indoor track of 51 feet 1 1/2 inches. This seconds in the 60 yard dash. three encounters is most en-team will . close out its 1970 distance is almost a foot longer • Tl!e other was the time of John couraging to varsity coach Jack season tomorrow with the At- than George!s outdoor record. McCloskey and his staff. Those 1 F Danforth in the 600 yard run. antic Coast Conference meet inishing second in the shot was I1auforth's time was l:l5•5 which three games, plus the two close

at Chapel Hill. Going into the another Deac, Ed Bradley. placed him fourth in the race. calls with the Duke frosh, were season's finale, the Deacon thing Other Deacs who won their indicative of the potential the l Concerning Danforth's time,

c ads have a 1-1 record in events were John Danforth in the Baby Deacs possessed • d 600 Coach Rhea said, "This is real ual meets plus a sixth place yard run, Wayne Hagenbuch Willie Griffin emerged as the

f . · · t good for. the amount of work we mtsh in the North Carolina Big m he one mile run, Phil Beav- squad's leading· scorer when the S I . are able to get in. If we had

even ndoor Meet, ers w the two mile run and final statistics were composed. Aft F nk F · indoor facilities, I'm sure Dan A A er suffering a 79-31 defeat ra ussell in the pole vault. n tkins High product, Willie

t V T could cut at least three seconds o irginia Military Institute in he Demon Deacon mile relay averaged 20,3 points and shot off of his time.'' their opening dual meet, theDea- team, consisting of Ken Busch, 45% from the field, excellent

cons bounced back to capture a John Angell, Browder, and Dan- In looking ahead to the confer- considering that most of Griffin's 67-37 win over Lynchburg Col- fotth, alsoplacedfirstwithatime erence meet, Rhea feels that the -~ were long range bombs. lege. of 3:40.0. Deacs have a good opportunity ~·Payne followed Griffininscor-

Pacing the Demon Deacons in · Last Saturday, the Wake Forest to pick up points in the shotput ing, with a final 19.4 average. their triumph were Jack Dolbin squad competed in the North Car- if George and Bradley perform Eddie hit on nearly 53% of his and Ed George. Dolbin collected .olina Big Seven Indoor Meet along as well as they have thus far. field goal attempts, and shot-.. *. * * * a total of 'Is·· points ~s he won ,:-vit~ the other BigFo~rm~mbers The ~eacon. mentor also feels. ·B9%·f~om tii.e. ·raul line, missing

, · the 60 .y,arfh4Nsh and the 60 plus East Carohnar,..,.·,Nor~k""··that~if.Dolbm-has•a. good. day,~ • .o.lll'y.elghtdreebies-all year.. , •. ~~ Aithough he dici not have a big desire to attend Wake Forest, C,D,. yard. low hurdles, P!aced sec- Carolina Central, and Davidson.'· the·· Deacons could add a few · · The ·6•!0 Kelly;' showiilg lre.:f'·'

,decided to leave New York City for the first time in his life ana head on? 1~ the. 60-yard htgh hurdles, The meet was won handily ~ore points to their total. And rnendous improvement, tallied South. C.D. was partly influenced by the fact that Todmann C:..roli.na's thud m the highjump.andsecond ·by North Carolina, and theDeacs if Danforth continues his irn- 15.9 points per contest and also Charlie Scott, and Davidson's Mike Maloy had already broken the in the long jump. In ·his 60 yard were. able to finish only ahead provement, he may also pick up grabbed 15 rebounds per game. basketball color barrier in the State of North Carolina. ' i uidn' l nave dash victory • Dolbin's time was ?f .Davidson, As their finish another ~oint or two. . Kelly led Wake in field goal a desire to be a pioneer anywhere." · 6.3 seconds, which was only one mdtcates, the deacons did not Even if all of these hopefuls percentage, shooting 57,5%.

Since C.D. still needed his high school diploma, he came down to tent~ of a second off of the time perform .well overall, bu~ there per~o.r!ll to their maximum .ca- Th: two other BabyDeacstart-Laurinburg Institute in Eastern North Carolina for the second reqmred to qualify for the NCAA were still a couple of bright pabthhes the Deacs ~ave .l~ttle ers, Joe Neal and Jeff Stewart, semester of his senior year and .the following summer. "I was Indoor Track Meet. spots for Coach Harold Rhea. hope for a very h1gh ftmsh. averaged 17.3 and 7 .4, respec-scared to death when I got down there. I saw pigs, chickens a.ud cows:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::-:·:·!':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;;:·:·:·:·:·:·:········:·; for the first time other than in a zoo. I saw only two people and a!;!; ............................. ·.··~;~; car from Fayetteville to Laurinburg when I came down. 1 wondered!;!; ;!;! where I was.'' :::: ::::

At Lauringburg, C.D. found the work rather elementary compared !!~! 1 {(/. Id d ~ I t !l!i ,,to the academic environment at Brooklyn Tech. Mr.Mcuuffie the:::: d Wll an atR ::::

principal, had made Laurinburg into a place of second chanc~ for:!;!: !;!; blacks."lt was a second chance for me, but many times I wanted E;!; ._,..- ..., !;!; to.

111."'avet • i atmost left with a month left in summer school. I was !;!; ..... • . ...... !;!;

w1 mg o go to work.'' =:~ :;:: . Some fast talking by C.D.'s mother and Coach Packer convinced J TOM JENNINGS DOUG BUCKLEY GEORGE WRIGHT ~~li

~1m to stay the last month at Laurinburg and come to Wake Forest !;!; Associate Editor Assistant l!~! lfi the fall. Packer also had Todmann and Gil McGregor call i.Javis !;!; FRIDAY 'FEBRUARY 27 1970 :;:;

· t1o ~ake sure that he would not go home before gL·aduating from ;:;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::. .... ,.:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;.:·:·:·!·:·.·························:. •.• ·.·:·::.;::;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:;; aurwburg. .. · · · · · · · · · · · · ········ · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·- · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ········ · · · · · · · · ·- · · · · · · · · · · · · ····•

When C.D. carne to Wake Forest, his basketball begau to realJ.y progress. "I conv~ced myself I had the ability to play with anyone else. He also realized that basketball was a profession for him as well as a game."

. , "The ,University was paying my way to college so in a sense it \\'its a . JOb. It will probably become my livelihood; it has become somethmg of a business. If I have a bad game, it might take some money out of my pockets."

* * * * · Although he enjoys the competiveness of Atlantic Coast Conference basketball at Wake Forest, C,D. readily admits that he is not happy here.

"There is. not enough for black students to do off campus; definitely not enough mvolvement with him on campus. Blacks and Whites ha~e been br.ou.ght up differently so it is not that easy to mix socially, Really, 1t 1s not a comfortable feeling.

"I feel that the majority of people here are a buncu of fakes I don't feel that they are true people. If you don't like me don't smiie ~t me o~ s~y something just because I am scoring baske.s. riecause if I don t hke you, I am not going to have anything to do wllh you,"

"My coaching staff is genuinely interested in my education more than .basketball. The rest of the peq:~le don't care whether 1 graduate or not so long as I put the ball in the basket. I am just waiting for the day-I don't. think it will ever happen-when I have two or three really bad games m a row. 1 would just like to see show many white friendS I would have then."

I;lefore the recent Carolina home game, there were rumurs cir-. ,~ulating around campus th:.t C.D. and McGregor \IIOuld not play m the contest because of Steve Bowden's Honor Council tnal. "I allowed the rumor to circulate, but I never though of .uuL 1uay ing in the game. If I had thought that Steve was convicted because he is black, then I would not have played,"

Many students may think that C.D.'s attitude is awfully bitter towards the school considering Wake Forest is paying his way through school. Still, most Whites do not run around thtl plaza

·screaming ab__out how much they love Wake Forest. Insteari, \hey walk across the plaza grass mumbling about how they wish they had gone to Carolina. In comparison to the social opportunities Vt hites ~ave here, the situation appears to be almost unbearaol~ for mo.st Blacks.

Although C.D. may not be especially proud to play for Wake Forest, it does not affect his play on the court. "I feel mre pride in my basketball ability than I do in Wake Forest. I could play in Podunk or anywhere, I hate to lose wherever I am; I hate to be outdone."

C.D. has one more college basketball season to suffer through b\!fore he gets paid for displaying his basketball talents. After next year, he can drive down the lane and know that a foul will be called if he is knocked to the floor.

(Continued on page 8)

·'

For Th Fl1est 01ality Portrait

Call

McNabb Studio WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY

Call 723-4640 Today!

Professional Cleaning & Laundry

Or.

. You Can DO IT YOURSELF With

Coin-Operated Laundry And CJeanfnr Machines. - .

Dry

Sherwood Plaza Restaurant

(where quality preva,i/s) SERVING THREE

COMPlETE MEALS A DAY OPEN 6:30

.SHERWOOD 8:30 MONDAY-SATURDAY

PUZA SHOPPING CENTER

D 0 w N .J 0 w N E R

M 0 T 0 R

I N N

2nd & Ch.,rry•.Street

Phone 723-8861

RESTAURANT OPEN DAILY 6:00 ~.M. to ·10:00 P.M.

FEATURING: Open Hearth Steaks live Main Lobster

FOUR FLAME·S RESTAURANT Phone 723-8861

Vi.~it the New Four Flames

Lounge 150 Seats Fountain Bar Live Entertainment .Nightly Featuring Billy Mack Dull

i.>io L;over Charv.e Monday Thru Thursday $1.00 .Per .l'erson Friday and Saturday

R E s T A ·u R A ·N T

L 0 u N G E

tively. Neal led the scoring pa­rade much ofthe year before tail­ing off, while Stewart's main con­tributions were defense.

Bell Bottom Pants The sixth man, Jake Clapper­

ton, proved invaluable in the clos­in_g weeks. Clapperton replaced Rtck Deaton in midseason after a back injury had shelved Jake for the first half of the season His floor play was instrumentai in the crucial win over State.

At present, it appears that only Kelly is a possible starter on ne~t year's varsity five. His height should take some of the rebounding burden off of Gil Mc­Gregor's broad shoulders

and The Body Shirt

. .

GOLDEN

~·-·

BOAR LOUNGE

449 N. TRADE OPPOSIH P05TOFF1Cl

el'OVERDALE KITCHEN

Cloverdale Plaza Shopping Center 1ir.t. Hours: 7 c1.111. 'til 10 '·'"· ~ M.nday thru Saturday

We feature a complete ana varie>t:l menu that's sure to please the entire ... student body, Come and See!

SERVING QUALITY fOODS AT POPULAR PRICES

Sand...;iches lunches ••. St•o••

7 Varieti11 of Pa11cakes Seafood

Italian Dish" lrollod

Food.

We Invite All Wake Forest

Students To Vi.~it

STALEY'S O·PEN HEARTH RESTAURANT

The hou~e that service and quality

built -the favorite of Woke Forest students and faculty. We specialize in steaks, short orders, sandwiches o~d dinn~rs •

OUR NEW HOURS

Mon thru Thurs:

Fri. and Sat:

7 A.M. til 1 A.M. 7 A.M. til 2 A.M.

Sun: 8A.M,til 12:00

2803 REYNOLDA ROAD (Across from Reynolda N\anor)

PAJ-9703

AL DILLARQ, Manarer

·.

Page 8: Wilson Walks Out His Trial - Wake Forest University · 2018-03-20 · to ;e of 1rtu,nted ,is Ed ltry. I Will just-'· In mrts new is a who peti, has :mall eally :ter ·okes 1 the

PAGE EIGHT Friday, February 27; 1970, OLD GOLD Al'<D BLACK

State Sinks Tankmen In, Swimming Finale

By TOM JENNINGS

The Nmth Carolma State Uni­versity swimming team, defend­ing conference cha m[Jions, out­lasted the Deac<•n s1nmmers, 71-42, last Saturday.

The me~t closed out there~­Iar season competitiuu and ex­tended the Deacuns· swimming record to 7-6. State closed out its season with a 6-4 record.

George Bell, lm l'ing recover­ed from an automobile acci<ient a month ago, bruke a record he had set earlier this season in the 100 yard freestyle. His time of 50.0 broke his record of 50.2 and earned him a first place finish in that event.

Bell also anchor~d the 400 yard freestyle relay team which outswam the State team to win in 3:27.2 Ernest Glass, Steve Bil­lings, and Paul Trivette swam on that winning team.

The only other first plac~ fin-

® WESTERN OUTFITTERS

331 Waughtown St.

'LET US OUTFIT YOU H£AD TO TOE'

isn wr the Deacon swimmers was in the 200 yard butterfly. Andy Anderson won the event with a time of 2;01,7, Steve Billings was second in that race.

Bill Mixson placed in two e­vents for the Deacon tankmen. He was second in the gruelling 1000 yard freestyle and third in the 500 yard freestyle.

In the 50 yard freestyle, Richard Whittington placed sec­ond while State swimmers were first and third, Jim Hogan took second in the 200 yard back­stroke.

In the 200 yard breaststroke, Jim Hichanlson finished third for the Deacons. Mike Neale placed third in the 200 yard individual medley.

David Slaton continued his con­sistent performance in the diving events, He placed second in both the one meter and three meter diving events.

Coach Leo Ellison was pleased that Bell had finally recovered from his accident. "He finally snapped around. His times were good in the State meet. By the championships, he could be top notch. He will help us cons id­erably ,"

The ACC championships are being held in Chapel Hill. They began Thursday and will end to­morrow. Maryland is the favorite

MEN AND LADIES to replace N.C. State as con-WESTERN HATS ference champions. N.C. State

and the University of North Car-SHIRTS, TIES, BLOUSES, olina may have a strong battle PANTS, BELTS, BOOTS, for second place.

lNLJJAN MOCCASINS Currently the Deacons are fifth ALL TYPE WESTERN in the conference with a 4-3 rec-RIDING EQUIPMENT ord, They are tops among those MEN-LADIES-LEE schools not considered very JEANS AND JACKETS strong in swimming--Duke, Vir-

.. _________ _, ginia, Clemson, and Wake For-est.

, •. '"· '"\"!" 1'>'-"'W '1' W'""'l1'"i"lo.

, :' ;:~. ~· :# .. r· .. t,;_i:.--\~::. &~~~"

Com,e join our

Grand Opening SATURDAY, FEB. 28TH

COME HEtP US CELEoRATE'

GET A FAaULOUS aRAZtER

BURGER FOR ONLY A DIME

WHEN YOU BUY ONE AT REGULAR

PRtCE. BRING YOUR GAL, aRtNG A PAL,

BRING THE FAMILY. YOU'Ll WANT TO TRY

OUR FAMOUS DAIRY QUEEN TREATS. TOO!

YOUR BRAPID HEW DAIRY QUEEH

3666 REYNOLO.A ROAD, N.W. 0~0 TOWN WINSION'·SAlEM, N C

.< . ··:·· :- .• -.~

.:·Da•ra.t ·Queen:

brazier

"THE YEAR'S BEST COMEDY!"

-Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review

• ICe

liTHE LIVELIEST AMERICAN

COMEDY SO FAR

THIS YEAR!" -Pauline Kael,

The New Yorker

liTHE FUNNIEST AND FRESH­

EST FILM OF THE YEAR!''

-McCall's

"AS FUNNY AS ANY AMERICAN

COMEDY THIS DECADE!"

-RIChard Schockel, L1fe

COLUMBIA PICTURES P~Utrll~ A fR.t.Nioi.O\IICH PRODUC!ION

NATALIE WOOD/ROBERTCULP

BOB_&_C~ROL & TED & ALICE I ( R ) ELLIOTTGOULD/DYAN CANNON

Now Playing Sllows At 1:25

3:17 5:09 7:11 9:08

Winston-Salem's Finest

Photo Beery DICKIE WALKER Ftres Jumper Over Riback In His Final Home Game

Surprising Deacs Succumb To Late Gamecock Surge

ByCHARLES DAYTON

It was supposed to be anotner rout similar to the one suf­fered earlier in Columbia. In their previous meeting, South Carolina completely over­whelmed the Deacons as tney ran to an 81-54 victory, There was no reason to think the second game would be any dif­ferent.

Apparently, the Wake ForE~st students did not think so for the student section was far frClm being full. However, someone must have forgotten to t~ll the Deacons they they did 1\ot have a chance against the nul\1-ber three ranked Gamecocks.

For 34 minutes, the Deacons played with South Carolina in even terms, before succumbing to the overall strength of the· Gamecocks, The final score was 67-51, but the score does not do · the Wake F ores! effort justice.

If the Deacs had only been able to match their effort with a respectable shooting pet­centage, the outcome mighthave been different-- it certainly would have been closer.

However the Deacons were able to hit on only 32,8 percent of field gfJals attempts during the game. It was the Deacl)n squad's worst shooting perfor­mance of the season.

Despite their cold shooting, the Deacons trailed by only

seven, 46-39, with six minutes left to play. But at this point South Carolina Coach Frank McGuire had his team go into a stall in order to force Wake Forest out of their box­and-one defense. Throughout the contest, the Deacons had been able to contain the potent Gamecock offense by effectively using the box-and-one.

However, when South Carolina went into their stall, the Deacons were forced to abandon their box­and-one in favor of man-to­man coverage. This was what the Gamecocks had been waiting for because it enabled Roche to drive more and gave theSouthCarolina big men better rebounding posi­tion.

The Cocks took full advantage of their new opportunity as they scored twelve points to four for the Deacons and took a com­manding 58-43 lead with 2:39 remaining.

It had looked as though the Gamecocks might break the game open early in the second half as they built up a 30-22 lead. But the Deacons came back on consecutive field goals by Dan Ackley, Charlie Davis, and Gil McGregor. The Deacs continued to close the gap until a jump shot by Lewkowicz put them out in front 35-34 with 12:18 remaining.

The lead turned out to be short lived as Roche hit on a jumper from the top of the key

Viewing The Deacs BY DOUG BUCKLEY

(Continu~d from page 7)

to put the Gamecoc~ back in front. Then, South Carolina slowly built up their seven point margin before exploding in the final six minutes.

A three point play by Willi­ford put the Wolfpack in front by three, 63-60. Leftwich fol­lowed with another jump shot from the left corner as State ran off ten straight points be­·fore the Deacs could score again.

The Wolfpack continued to add to their margin, but for the final ten minutes the most outstanding individual on the court was Charlie Davis. C,D., who had spent most of the first half driv­ing to the basket, began to throw in bombs from long range as the partisan Wolfpack crowd mur[J1ured in appreciation at the talent he displayed,

A possible reason for Davis deciding to go with outside shoot­ing rather than driving was that he had taken a bad physical beating throughout the con­test from W olfpack defenders.

Finally, Deacon Coach Jack McCloskey was charged with a technical foul when he vehe­mently protested what he thought should have been a foul against a State defender.

Davis finished the game with a seasonal of 42 points,

NOMINATED FOR 7

ACADEMY AWARDS

With the pre sense of the ABA and the continued expansion of the established NBA, it appears that Davis will be a first round draft choice. Unless the leagues merge in the next year, C.D. can also take advantage of the bidding war to get as much money as possible. "I'm going where the money is," he says. _

BEST PICTURE! BEST DIRECTION! CD. will have to overcom~ a size and weight problem .if he is to

survive the rigorous 100 ga111e schedules of the professional ranks. ·"Pros will be afraid of m~ if I stay tne same size. As much as I would like to go in the first round, they may shy away.'

Offense will cause no difficulties for C,D. in the pros. he has all the moves and all the shots. Yet, he must improve his ruan-to-man defense. "! might be the worst defensive player awund. H won't bother me when someone takes me inside, but it ruay bother tile coach.''

:0111 Cen•u•, Fo• P•ru~ll

FAULNEWMAN R08ERT REDFORD KAtHARINE ROSS

BUttH CASSIDY ANO THE SUNDANCE KID

Maybe C.D. will forget some of tile unhappy moments he has spent off the court at Wake Forest when he becomes a star in pro basket­ball. Hopefully, just the memories of beating Carolina or scoring e=~==== 51 points against American University will linger after i1e leaves school.

"I have been lucky and goit~:<u qutte a few breaks along the way,"" Wake Forest has even been luekier to get a player of C.D.'s character and ability, Without him, the disappointing 13-11 mark of Lhis year's varsity could have been another 5-21 record similar to the season two years ago.

COME SEE US For the·aest Car Wash In Tow•

• •

1nd Receave a Fr•• Wax Ja' ... Clip this ad and bring It to

Reynold a Mini t Car Wash Reynolda Manor

bperluce A New Conc.ept Ia Dry Cle11i11 Service een

Grand Opening March 3-7

Every 10th Order Free· Every C11stomer Kecelvu 1 Fru Qlfart Of Coke And 1 Free Dollar Of ·Every $4.00 Order Of Drydeanlng.

Begl1111g T11sday 5 s•lrts For $1.25 (If •r•11•t 11 Tns., Wed., or Thrs.)

MASTER KLEEN 2185 anNOLDA RD.

ACROSS FROM IEYIIOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTER

The

THE

END ZONE GREENSBORO

2114 Walker Anne 6 Blocks West Of UNC·G

Friday March 6

TASSELS Saturday March 7

KALAB ASH Coming March 14

CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD

CASTAWAYS Greensboro

'The South's #l Collegiate Club' Offers

Top Entertainment

Thursday, Friday,

Saturday, And Sunday

You The Best

Each

Nights.

NEW! SNACK SHOP TIMES

723-8711 • REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTER

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A SURPRISE AND A SHOCK!

Monday Thru Friday

9 A.M. • 7:30 P.M. ·

3:30 P.M. 11:30 P.M.

Saturday

9 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.

Sunday

7:30P.M.· 11:30 P.M.

JIM BOLTON'S DAUGHTER, DORIS, JUST GOT MARRIED YESTERDAY­SO JIM WILL BE MEETING HIS SON·IN·LAW FOR THE FIRST TIME.

That's A Surprise! DORIS, IS HAVING THEIR BABY TOMORROW

That's A Shock! THEY DON'T HAVE A BABY DOCTOR_

That's A Surprise! BECAUSE THEY PLAN TO DELIVER THE BABY THEMSELVES!

SEE IT TODAY!

That's A Shock!

'Generotion' M A SPARKLING COMEDY

COLOR SHOWS ·2·4·6-8-10

I

\"'

I.

I •

I

'

l ll

I ' .

The in the form containing and cerning academic

records records

·i political The <n ... •••

in part: " should be questions opinions always be