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I ' I I ' I ' t.. " " .... ' .,, ; ,'' .. , I ·, Old Gold & Black Picks Race. Issue 'As Story Of Year Page 'lbree _;VOLUME XLV l'll * * nlll unll iilark .l!ih. * * Wake OJUege. WIDstoD-Salem, North CaroUna, Monday, May 230 1960 Four Freshmen, Bill May Band Here Next Year Page Five NUMBER 21 ODJ( and Tassels_ . ..Bullard Picks Eight Students Tapped Four Seniors Will Hear . . . . '• .·Four coeds and four men As Chazrmen Drs. Branch NEWLY-TAPPED TASSELS inernbers prepare· to. enter the chapeL They are Jane 'Greer, Clyde Templeton, Sar.alyn Blanton and Bru.ce Howard. . ODK MEJYIEETIS are entert::rlned by David Hadley behllld stage. Others tapped are Gecrge Williamson, Howard Bullard and Bob Yarbrough. l{al Holbrook F·eatures Twain 'Services' students were t a P P e d in 'nl;e Student Legislature approved Tuesday's chapel services as appointments made by Howard Bul- ·new members of the Col- lard. Bullard the appont- lege's two organi- ments, which included summer zations, Tassels and Omicron school presidency, to the Legisla- Delta Kappa. Lure Thursday. · Those selected .for Tassels Bullard appoint€<1 Vic Smith, a are Saralyn Blanton of Shel- junior from Bristol, Va., president by, Jane Greer of Lexington, of the summer school Betty Bruce Howard of Fu- Other ·appointments are quay Springs and Clyde Templeton junim· from Atlanta, of Olin. are rising seniors. Ga., who will act as o1·ientation · New ODK members me Howard chairman next fall. Bill Strum, Bullard of FayetteVille, /David Bad- junior from Roxboro, will assume ley of Emporia, Va;, Geor.ge Wil- the chapel speakership. Ray Rol- ,li.amBQ!l -of Altlan1la, Ga., and Bob lins, a junior from Shelby will Yarbrough of Hadley and edit the Student Handbook. ' Y!ll"br.ougih &e ,graduating seniors; · The appointments were approved Bullard and Will.ilamison rising by a unanimous vote of the Legis- seniors. lature. · · Depp Speaks Other a-ction in the Legislature As part IOif initdiatlan ceremonies, meeting included the defeat of a •Of lbotb met Tues- motion ·that candidates for Student day night to hear an address by· Dr. Govermnent offioo 'be required to Mark Depp, .pastor of Celllte:niacy have a "C" average. Meflhodist Ohtirch in .Wiinston-Salem. Those. speaking for passing the The E?-ddress was lat a ban- motion felt 1lhart; lif a person ":really quet. m the Room. wanted to be in tlle student govern- . Miss Blianton, listed as outstand- ment he would work toward a 'C' . ing :iln sclwlia.rsbdp, .iS lll.ctirve in sever- averag€." Since a "C" average is al college organiz.adions, including necessary for graduation and for the Baptist Student Union, WFDD participation in other extracurricu- and the Student Magl8!line. She is Jar such as social fraternities some majoring lin educaltion. felt that it should be for Miss Greer, outstanding in wo- Student Government. . man's goVlei'll.IDent, has been Ia' mem- The Legislature voted il to 6 ber of the Honor Council, WGA, BSU,. in favor of passing the motion but · Wmnens Recreation Assocl;ation, the because of lack of a two-thirds Oll.rlstilan E?u<;ation and Service majority (-necessa:ry · to make a Olub and Phi Iota, !honorary statute cbJain.ge tihe motion was de- . language friateDDity. · feated. ' ·Miss Howard, -outstanddng d:n wo- The Legislature approved man'.s g'overnmeDJt, has• ibeen .active Foreign Exchange Committee and in WGA, Student Union, the Euze- a representative to serve liml Literacy Society, the College on rtihe committee from the Legis- theater and :as Ia' staff ·member of lature. Sar.alyn Blianton . will serve WFDD ·and the Howler. She is the as president of the committee, new .presidenJt of WGA. Other members are Ann Kinken, LAM By JOEL STEGALL ¥ore than 450 graduating seniors will hear Dr . .Lam Ch1-Fung and Dr. Douglas Branch in the commencement exercises June 5-6. ·Branch, general secretary of the Baptist State Conven- tion will deliver .the Baccalaureate sermon at 8 p.m. June 5. Lam, president of Hong Kong Baptist College and Pui Ching Middle School will speak at · - the gmduati()n exercises at 3 p. m. dets So June 6. He :is also vice president of · me 14 000 cadets were eligi- ble :Ear the award. the Baptist World Alliance. . . Among other events in coooection Ohief marsihalls will be Saralyn wiuh gradUJation are oo organ recital Blalll!ton and Glerm . at 3 p, m. J.une 5 in Wait Chapel, a Other mar.shlalls will be Bmntley reception f.nm 4:30 ;p. m. until 6 in Sandra Gibson, Karen Hop- Reynolda Hall and a senior -break- lcins, Floren.ce Weaver, Meyressa £ast at 8:30 a. m. in the cafeteria. Alfred Baker, Craven wu- A!lso included. will -be a Law Sclb.ool Iiams, Pat Renfrow, Kelley Griffi.th, breakfust at 9:30 in the cafeteria Smitih, Louise Floyd, David and senior orations, .and a Snider oo.d Lela Faye Ooltradn. oommi:ssiondng ceremony at 10:30 in The 450 seiiiiorS wl» are grad- the Law Court Room. ua.ti!Dg are of Ole Scbool. o.f Liberal Class Reunions Alts, Law, Medicine and Business Adrnin.istmtii.a. Commencement also includes re- unions for 11 classes amd a regular meeting of 1lhe BOiard -of 'llrustees. Lam, 'Wihose son, Timot:lzy", is a member of tihe graduating class, was born in interior China and came to Hong Kong 40 years ago to worl!:: ·a<s an -offiCe derk. He l-ater became one of the city's leading busanessmen. Aibout 10 years ago, ihe up all 100 business activities. One of the pu.rposes af ms Visit to this ootmtry is to arouse interest in the newly es1:lalblished college of wib!ioh he is president . Another of his soru; will receive a medical degree. Tillett Grants Aid To Study Soviet History . ' Dr. L<>well R. Tillett of the Col- lege history department has re- ceived a grant to study the jugg- ling of historical facts by the Rus- sians to meet the demands of com- · munist policy. · Tillett has awarded a South- ern Fellowships grant-m-aid to carry out 'the resear-ch at Columbia University and New Yock City Pub- lic. Libraries.' He will spend ex weeks studying Soviet periodicals that ihave appeared lin the IDst de- cade. Miss·. Templeton, outstanding .in Sam Leaman, Aim Diehl, Dan Jones student. governmem, has ·been active- and Sammy WiJ,lian1s. J one;: in WGA, BSU :and the <lhoir. She iis ·is the Leiislature representative. I the new vice president of WGA. Braooh, formerly pastor of the Fil'st Baptist Church of Rocky Mount last July succeeded Dr. M. A. Hug- gins to the Baptist State 'Conven- tion's most powerful post. A native of Wake County, ihe has pastored Clll:_.!'ches .at Kannapolis, Scotland Neck, Forest vi 11 e, Bethlehem, Bethany and Cary, be- --------,sides Rocky Mount. · He expects this work, plus re- Martba Mason search he has done in recent vears Miss Blanton iha:s been selected Tassels president. 'Dhe other new members 'are also . officers of the organization. Miss Templeton is vice president; Miss HoWlard is secre- tary-treasurer; and Miss Greer i:s social dlaiman. · - ' Bullard, "outstanding in studenrt government," ;is the new president of the Student Body. He llas !held the <Office of president of the sopho- more class, .the jmior class and Committee Approves Publications Heads Graduating with .tbe senior class to culminate in a book on will be Mar.tha Mason of Lattimore cal problems that have faced Rus- w:hotha)l!beeninaniion,lung:through: sian historians dm·ing the 10 out her college career. Stricken with years. in:Dantile pa11alysis while in the fiftih Tillett already has had one arti- gr:ade, she went to Ganhler-Webb cle published ce:ICe:r:ning a particu- ,Tunior College for her first two liar phase of this subject and has Publications· heads for next yea1·1 the newspapel' last years. She 1 at.tended class lectures recently completed another. One, have been approved by the faculty ve:-:r, ani was chief assistant to at Gardner-Webb •and Wake Forest which was printed in The South committee on publications. 'Brent Filson this ve.ar. by means of a communications sys- At!antic Quarterly, noted that By.R..'\.Y ROLLINS tonight,?' he explained. "I sliou,ted Kappa Sigma frnternity. He d:s ac- Ray Rollins. a 1'Jsmg seniol' of The Howler will. have co-edit•Jl'S tern set -up .between her thorne :and cot·ding to Soviet claims, t:u> Shr!lby who is majvring in En,5Esh. Mary Gail Koontz of Handen. the campus. woa:-ld's first airplaJne was built and will of Old Gold and Conn., and Don Phelps of Lexington Dr. Paul S. Rohirison, .associ•ate tested by a Russian naval captain, Black. Rolhns has worked with v;ill prc·pat·e th2 1961 edition ·cJie professor of music, will play 1ihe Alexander F. Mozhais1."Y, at a time Old Gold and Black fol·. t!iree years. yearbook. Miss Koontz is a organ recital set f01· June 5. when the Wright brothers were Last year he was assJst"n': e:l'toT senior majoring in education. .About 800 seats will·be reserved in still schoolboys. The date of the of the newspaper. yea,· wa_s '"as charge of bhe photogrr.phy Wait Ch!8.pel for ,tJhe graduating ser- first flight, July 20, 1882, was so. moved_ up to the posttJOn of associ· for this year's Howler. Last -year vice at 3 p, m. June 6. 'l'he reserve well publicized that it :must have. ate ed1tor. she was e. typist. seats are for senior :£a:milies. Bach been by heart by many air-- One _person who attended the as much as I felt I could. Too much tive, ,aJ,so in ROTC. "Mark Twain Tonight" perfor- shouting becomes tedious." · Hadley: Scholarship rnance Wednesday night told a The back-stage crowd seemed. not . HJadley, "outstanding ;in sohQlar- bronze, lean young man back-stage, to think Holbrook tedious at all, as ship," !haS received a Woodrow ·WH- "Y.ou were Mark Twain as far as the i.Jcitator ihappily son, a Danfur,flh IOOd a Southern I was. coneerned." his autograph. scholarship for study at Harvard Hal Holbrook smiled; He liked Holbrook was at the College as University. He h>aJS 'been active in the respvnsiveness of his full- the final' artist to appear in· the V'arious campus organizationS, iii- house audience, who eame out to 1959-60 Concert Lecture Series. He eluding ·1Jb.e BSU, International Re- attend ,the '\services." gave a three-act "re-creation· of lations :and has -been especially "Too bad." h.e said, "the audience America's Greatest Humorist." active 0111 ·the Student Union music- couldn't ·hear everything. They Dozens .of selections from the arts committee. ' II1iswd something of wih!at M}ark works of Mark Twain are included W1llia,mson, "owtanding in. stu- Twain had to say." in his repertoire of imitations·. denrt; ·govermment," was a. canilidJate tJbat Included in the Wednesd3 y night for Vhe president of fue' Student vo1ce . was . the m- 'programme" were '',Genuine Mexic Body, bas ibeen -a columnist for Old 1 , 1 effechve acoushcs of can Plug., from Twain's "Roughing Gold ·and Black, is pr.esident of ·sig- "I deliberetely spoke more sluwly It;" with an Interviewer, rna Ohi ftlaternity and :is a member a short story; "About· Accident of Circle .K. m St .-1 t Insurance," from the speeches of "oUJtslia!llding in Stu- ... WO Uuen S TW'.aim.; :from dent Union," ihas served <as presi- "Roughing It;" "The Evolution of dent of the Studeillt Union and in G' •ven c..:.r.nts Mphayn.::· from Twain's "Autobiogra- other -capacities in tihat organization. IL&- He served tihis year as vice president :Also, . "Ruck . tand Jim," iirom of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity. Two more ·NatiO!llal Defense Fel- "Huckleberry Finn;" "A ·Ghost lowships have been awarded to Sto;ry;," and "How to be Seventy," Wake Forest students. Ben L. from Twain's speeches. . Honeyctlltt mtd Dan Merrill have Intermissions received stipends of $6,600 each for During intermissions (the pro- three yea-rs study on the graduate gram promised "One . . . or two; level. probably) persons attending tl:}.e Honeycutt, a French major of performance were enthusiastic Cliffside, Wiill woa:-k toward· -tihe .about Holbrook's "very realistic" doctor's degree at Ohio State Uni- portrayal of Twain. Some were versity. Merrill, a history major of amazed that Holbrook is «only 35 Winston-Salem, '"ill study modern years old.'' · Russian history at Emory Univer- After the program was over, sity. Holbrook· was asked if Twain's The grant's allowed for aid of' material so.1netimes seems l1is own. $2,000 .. the first year,' $2,200 ·the "No, not greatly," he answered. second ,:;ear. and $2,400 .the third ''I don't forget the great :man I'm year. It is planned that recipients portraying. Familiarity with his of the awards will complete the material just makes me appreciate Ph. D. degree in three years. him more.'' Merrill pointed out that besides "Some of the things I say, how- the base stipend of $6,600, the ever,'-are my own," he not-ed. "To- fellowships provide for $400 per night I said things spontaneously year for each. dependent. I haven't used before." ' was interested in this, for he plans Holbrook told of a reception he to be married -before long. , had once in Hannibal, Mo., Twain's Merrill said that· !he plains to home and . !Jhe adventure grounds history on the college or of "Huck :and Jim." The.town had university level. ' . a "Mark Twain Day," willb: 'parades He had planned to attend the and colorful festivities. Holbrook University of North. Carolina, but came riding by train, don-e up as had· receiveq, no financial aid. He Mark 'l'wain. . .is cancelling application at Oa.ro- "The. whole town turned out to !ina to gq to Emory. cheer.," he related. Thousands of · J;Ioneycutt would like to teach in townsfolk and tourists. A big day." a college when 'he finishes his "That night," he added, "I ap- . 'training; He . eJapects to emphasize peared in !Jhe town hall for my per- . "eibher Medieval·. or Seventeenth . formance. ,. · - ' ·qentury · "57 paople attended."· .. , ... . ' . Forestry Degree Will Be Offered. Beginning next Wake Forest and. Duke University will jointly 4 operate a forestry· training program. . The program w.as approved by the Faculty at its ·meeting May 9. It was announced by Dean Edwin G. Wilson and Duke Dean E. S. Harrar of the School of Forestry. A student who participates in the program will spend three years in study of the arts and sciences at Wake Forest. He will spend the summer between his junior and senior years and the next two years at Duke U:njversity. When he has completed the program of study he will receive the BS degree from Wake Forest and the Master of Forestry degr·ee from Duke School of Forestry. Anyone interested in participat- ing in the program must ma'ke ap- plication to the Duke school not later 'than· the end of the first se- mester of ihis third year in college. To qualify, a student must have followed a planned course of study, must have the official recommend:J.- tion of Wake F.orest and bave an Qverall quality point . ratio of at · ieast 1.5. · He has donQ photography worl.;: Phelps ·is a risino· senior. He senior will receive three reserve conscious Soviet readers." t;e and befohre r:om- plans to enter He wc:·}.; 2 d tickets .. except. for man-ied ,seniors, .., Date Slipped. mg o a ·e was P• otogra- as fr::te:·nity editor for this who Will -rece1ve as· many as six. Tillett n t d , . pher and feature editor of The ·;,Iowler :> Senior Reception 75 th . 0 e • . .aowever, that the Cleveland Times, of - . · The reception June 6 Win be open ed banm;el"Sa!'Y the flight slip- County' North ·Cal·olina. He spent Bus mess manager. for the Howler eo -senior.s and 1:1heir ,wests which WI notice. "The reason some time at Gardner-Webb Col- for next. _year :" 111 -be Wayne according to Dr. C. or e edJtors' apparent lapse of lege before attending Wake Forest. Eudy, a l'!LSmg semor of Albemarle faculty m sbJ 11 ill bab memory · · · was that Soviet hi<>- Rollins already has named Lynne 111 ?jor·ing, in He assisted almost evS:. o: caJ: 0 ly be toria:n:>, enjoying th-eir new fre;- Smatihers of Bre-v,a.r-d •as man;ag. this years busmess manager, f cy pus a.t the dom m the post-Stalin era had :ng o!ditor. M.atteson, in getting ads for Jl11;; the awards to be given t!he a long shadow over Charles ( Ohuck) Jones of Cov- t e ooK. 1 morning of June 6 the most umJSUal sky s work, and had specifically ington, Ky., will be business man· Dwight Pickard will be next i for Willke Forest will be Wayne that crude fabri- -ager for Old Gold and Black. Jones Smith's Natio.nal Defense Tra.nspor- -cation._ A date i1D history! t?O, can is a 'rising senior majoring in busi- zme. Pickard 1s maJormg m Eng- tation Av,,ard, one of 20 in the ·na- su!fer 0 !, denun.C!IatiOill and ness. He worked in the advertising (Continued on page 4) 1 tion to go to graduating ROTC ca- qwet hqm<l'ati<Jn. Another. of articles whicl!. he just compl€ted, is study of a Moslem guerrilla leader :named The article points out that m a 1947 edition of one of the most popular Soviet history books Shamil's fighting in the mid- c-entury was represented as of a "democratic, progressive nature." NEWLY-ELECTED publication heads ar M G ·1 K t .r e ary ru oon z, Wayne Eudy, Don Phelps, Sylvia Burroue:hs, .. Ray Rollins ·and Chllck :.Jones. 1 Description Changed In 1950, a following edition of the. same textbook described the · as "not na.tional-liber- ?t!on and democratic movement JUt a reactionary and mov€ment. W!hich came into fhe ,;ervice _of British capitalis:n . . ... The _article goes on to describe the · contmually changing historical pic- ture of Shamil du1·ing the 1950's party dem:lllds shifted and con- '_'Whatever future the his- of Shamil may take, b:s treacl:erous path of the last a>: a n;minder of the d! ffiCuhies ;nh<:>rent 1n writing his- tory to meet Marxist requirements •• joh_:ed the Wake faculty m 19;:,6 after having taught at Carson-Newman College, He re- ceived the B. A. degree at Carson- Ne;':man, the mnster's at Colum- bia University anrl the Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina. I Circle K Charter Wake Forest's Circle K Club · <;ha.rtered Tuesday night in the Mag- n-oha Room in a ceremony which made it the eighth such club in the Car.olinas District -of Kiwanis Inter- , national. ilt·

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Old Gold & Black Picks Race. Issue 'As Story Of Year

Page 'lbree

_;VOLUME XLV

l'll * *

nlll unll iilark "e~ <ttu,.··e~ .l!ih. <~4- M~"'. * *

Wake Fores~ OJUege. WIDstoD-Salem, North CaroUna, Monday, May 230 1960

Four Freshmen, Bill May Band Here Next Year

Page Five

NUMBER 21

'·~ ODJ( and Tassels_ . ..Bullard Picks

Eight Outst~mding Students Tapped Four iu~iors Seniors Will Hear . . . . '• .·Four coeds and four men As Chazrmen Drs. ·Lam~ Branch

NEWLY-TAPPED TASSELS inernbers prepare· to. enter the chapeL They are Jane 'Greer, Clyde Templeton, Sar.alyn Blanton and ~etty Bru.ce Howard.

. ODK MEJYIEETIS are entert::rlned by David Hadley behllld stage. Others tapped are Gecrge Williamson, Howard Bullard and Bob Yarbrough.

l{al Holbrook F·eatures ·~· Marl~-Twain 'Services'

students were t a P P e d in 'nl;e Student Legislature approved Tuesday's chapel services as appointments made by Howard Bul­·new members of the Col- lard. Bullard pres~mt-ed the appont­lege's two l~adership organi- ments, which included the~ summer zations, Tassels and Omicron school presidency, to the Legisla-Delta Kappa. Lure Thursday. · Those selected .for Tassels Bullard appoint€<1 Vic Smith, a are Saralyn Blanton of Shel- junior from Bristol, Va., president by, Jane Greer of Lexington, of the summer school Betty Bruce Howard of Fu- Other ·appointments are quay Springs and Clyde Templeton Will~n, junim· from Atlanta, of Olin. AI~ are rising seniors. Ga., who will act as o1·ientation · New ODK members me Howard chairman next fall. Bill Strum,

Bullard of FayetteVille, /David Bad- junior from Roxboro, will assume ley of Emporia, Va;, Geor.ge Wil- the chapel speakership. Ray Rol­,li.amBQ!l -of Altlan1la, Ga., and Bob lins, a junior from Shelby will Yarbrough of Ralei~ Hadley and edit the Student Handbook. ' Y!ll"br.ougih &e ,graduating seniors; · The appointments were approved Bullard and Will.ilamison ~e rising by a unanimous vote of the Legis-seniors. lature. · ·

Depp Speaks Other a-ction in the Legislature As part IOif initdiatlan ceremonies, meeting included the defeat of a ~.s •Of lbotb grou~ met Tues- motion ·that candidates for Student day night to hear an address by· Dr. Govermnent offioo 'be required to Mark Depp, .pastor of Celllte:niacy have a "C" average. Meflhodist Ohtirch in .Wiinston-Salem. Those. speaking for passing the The E?-ddress was ·~ven: lat a ban- motion felt 1lhart; lif a person ":really quet. m the Ma~ol~a Room. wanted to be in tlle student govern­. Miss Blianton, listed as outstand- ment he would work toward a 'C'

. ing :iln sclwlia.rsbdp, .iS lll.ctirve in sever- averag€." Since a "C" average is al college organiz.adions, including necessary for graduation and for the Baptist Student Union, WFDD participation in other extracurricu­and the Student Magl8!line. She is Jar such as social fraternities some majoring lin educaltion. felt that it should be requir~d for

Miss Greer, outstanding in wo- Student Government. . man's goVlei'll.IDent, has been Ia' mem- The Legislature voted il to 6

ber of the Honor Council, WGA, BSU,. in favor of passing the motion but · Wmnens Recreation Assocl;ation, the because of lack of a two-thirds

Oll.rlstilan E?u<;ation and Service majority (-necessa:ry · to make a Olub and Phi ~ Iota, !honorary statute cbJain.ge tihe motion was de-

. language friateDDity. · feated. ' ·Miss Howard, -outstanddng d:n wo- The • Legislature approved th~

man'.s g'overnmeDJt, has• ibeen .active Foreign Exchange Committee and in WGA, Student Union, the Euze- appoint~d a representative to serve liml Literacy Society, the College on rtihe committee from the Legis­theater and :as Ia' staff ·member of lature. Sar.alyn Blianton . will serve WFDD ·and the Howler. She is the as president of the committee, new .presidenJt of WGA. Other members are Ann Kinken,

LAM

By JOEL STEGALL ¥ore than 450 graduating seniors will hear Dr . .Lam

Ch1-Fung and Dr. Douglas Branch in the commencement exercises June 5-6.

·Branch, general secretary of the Baptist State Conven­tion will deliver .the Baccalaureate sermon at 8 p.m. June 5.

Lam, president of Hong Kong Baptist College and Pui Ching Middle School will speak at · -the gmduati()n exercises at 3 p. m. dets So June 6. He :is also vice president of · me 14•000 cadets were eligi-ble :Ear the award. the Baptist World Alliance. . .

Among other events in coooection Ohief marsihalls will be Saralyn wiuh gradUJation are oo organ recital Blalll!ton and Glerm ~amm. . at 3 p, m. J.une 5 in Wait Chapel, a Other mar.shlalls will be Bmntley reception f.nm 4:30 ;p. m. until 6 in A~cock, Sandra Gibson, Karen Hop­Reynolda Hall and a senior -break- lcins, Floren.ce Weaver, Meyressa £ast at 8:30 a. m. in the cafeteria. ~ughes, Alfred Baker, Craven wu­A!lso included. will -be a Law Sclb.ool Iiams, Pat Renfrow, Kelley Griffi.th, breakfust at 9:30 in the cafeteria R~d Smitih, Louise Floyd, David and senior orations, a~~orards .and a Snider oo.d Lela Faye Ooltradn. oommi:ssiondng ceremony at 10:30 in The 450 seiiiiorS wl» are grad-the Law Court Room. ua.ti!Dg are of Ole Scbool. o.f Liberal

Class Reunions Alts, Law, Medicine and Business Adrnin.istmtii.a.

Commencement also includes re-unions for 11 classes amd a regular meeting of 1lhe BOiard -of 'llrustees.

Lam, 'Wihose son, Timot:lzy", is a member of tihe graduating class, was born in interior China and came to Hong Kong 40 years ago to worl!:: ·a<s an -offiCe derk. He l-ater became one of the city's leading busanessmen. Aibout 10 years ago, ihe ~ave up all 100 business activities. One of the pu.rposes af ms Visit to this ootmtry is to arouse interest in the newly es1:lalblished college of wib!ioh he is president .

Another of his soru; will receive a medical degree.

Tillett Grants Aid To Study Soviet History . ' Dr. L<>well R. Tillett of the Col­

lege history department has re­ceived a grant to study the jugg­ling of historical facts by the Rus­sians to meet the demands of com- · munist policy. ·

Tillett has be~n awarded a South­ern Fellowships grant-m-aid to carry out 'the resear-ch at Columbia University and New Yock City Pub­lic. Libraries.' He will spend ex weeks studying Soviet periodicals that ihave appeared lin the IDst de­cade.

Miss·. Templeton, outstanding .in Sam Leaman, Aim Diehl, Dan Jones student. governmem, has ·been active- and Sammy WiJ,lian1s. Ma~c:ia J one;: in WGA, BSU :and the <lhoir. She iis ·is the Leiislature representative. I the new vice president of WGA.

Braooh, formerly pastor of the Fil'st Baptist Church of Rocky Mount last July succeeded Dr. M. A. Hug­gins to the Baptist State 'Conven­tion's most powerful post. A native of Wake County, ihe has pastored Clll:_.!'ches .at Kannapolis, Scotland Neck, Forest vi 11 e, Bethlehem, Yotmg~.me, Bethany and Cary, be-

--------,sides Rocky Mount. · He expects this work, plus re-Martba Mason search he has done in recent vears Miss Blanton iha:s been selected

Tassels president. 'Dhe other new members 'are also . officers of the organization. Miss Templeton is vice president; Miss HoWlard is secre­tary-treasurer; and Miss Greer i:s social dlaiman. · -

' Bullard, "outstanding in studenrt government," ;is the new president of the Student Body. He llas !held the <Office of president of the sopho­more class, .the jmior class and

Committee Approves Publications Heads

Graduating with .tbe senior class to culminate in a book on id~ologi~ will be Mar.tha Mason of Lattimore cal problems that have faced Rus­w:hotha)l!beeninaniion,lung:through: sian historians dm·ing the p~st 10 out her college career. Stricken with years. in:Dantile pa11alysis while in the fiftih Tillett already has had one arti­gr:ade, she went to Ganhler-Webb cle published ce:ICe:r:ning a particu­,Tunior College for her first two liar phase of this subject and has

Publications· heads for next yea1·1 d~1r.rtment ~f the newspapel' last years. She 1at.tended class lectures recently completed another. One, have been approved by the faculty ve:-:r, ani was chief assistant to at Gardner-Webb •and Wake Forest which was printed in The South committee on publications. 'Brent Filson this ve.ar. by means of a communications sys- At!antic Quarterly, noted that "['~-

By.R..'\.Y ROLLINS tonight,?' he explained. "I sliou,ted Kappa Sigma frnternity. He d:s ac-Ray Rollins. a 1'Jsmg seniol' of The Howler will. have co-edit•Jl'S tern set -up .between her thorne :and cot·ding to Soviet claims, t:u>

Shr!lby who is majvring in En,5Esh. Mary Gail Koontz of Handen. the campus. woa:-ld's first airplaJne was built and will ~e. edi~or of Old Gold and Conn., and Don Phelps of Lexington Dr. Paul S. Rohirison, .associ•ate tested by a Russian naval captain, Black. Rolhns has worked with v;ill prc·pat·e th2 1961 edition o£ ·cJie professor of music, will play 1ihe Alexander F. Mozhais1."Y, at a time Old Gold and Black fol·. t!iree years. yearbook. Miss Koontz is a ri~ing organ recital set f01· June 5. when the Wright brothers were Last year he was assJst"n': e:l'toT senior majoring in education. s~e .About 800 seats will·be reserved in still schoolboys. The date of the of the newspaper. '1'-h.'i~ yea,· l~e wa_s '"as ~n charge of bhe photogrr.phy Wait Ch!8.pel for ,tJhe graduating ser- first flight, July 20, 1882, was so. moved_ up to the posttJOn of associ· for this year's Howler. Last -year vice at 3 p, m. June 6. 'l'he reserve well publicized that it :must have. ate ed1tor. she was e. typist. seats are for senior :£a:milies. Bach been l~ned by heart by many air--

One _person who attended the as much as I felt I could. Too much tive, ,aJ,so in ROTC. "Mark Twain Tonight" perfor- shouting becomes tedious." · Hadley: Scholarship rnance Wednesday night told a The back-stage crowd seemed. not . HJadley, "outstanding ;in sohQlar­bronze, lean young man back-stage, to think Holbrook tedious at all, as ship," !haS received a Woodrow ·WH­"Y.ou were Mark Twain as far as the pm.ise-~aden i.Jcitator ihappily son, a Danfur,flh IOOd a Southern I was. coneerned." sign~d his autograph. scholarship for study at Harvard

Hal Holbrook smiled; He liked Holbrook was at the College as University. He h>aJS 'been active in the respvnsiveness of his full- the final' artist to appear in· the V'arious campus organizationS, iii­house audience, who eame out to 1959-60 Concert Lecture Series. He eluding ·1Jb.e BSU, International Re­attend ,the '\services." gave a three-act "re-creation· of lations Clt~-b :and has -been especially

"Too bad." h.e said, "the audience America's Greatest Humorist." active 0111 ·the Student Union music-couldn't ·hear everything. They Dozens .of selections from the arts committee. ' II1iswd something of wih!at M}ark works of Mark Twain are included W1llia,mson, "owtanding in. stu-Twain had to say." in his repertoire of imitations·. denrt; ·govermment," was a. canilidJate ~elbrook ~eco.gn.!zed tJbat ~is Included in the Wednesd3 y night for Vhe president of fue' Student

vo1ce . was . m~ed b~ the m- 'programme" were '',Genuine Mexic Body, bas ibeen -a columnist for Old

1,

1 effechve acoushcs of W~t,Chapel. can Plug., from Twain's "Roughing Gold ·and Black, is pr.esident of ·sig-"I deliberetely spoke more sluwly It;" Enc~unter with an Interviewer, rna Ohi ftlaternity and :is a member

a short story; "About· Accident of Circle .K. m St .-1 t Insurance," from the speeches of Y.arbr.ou~; "oUJtslia!llding in Stu­... WO Uuen S TW'.aim.; ~'Sandwioh Isl~," :from dent Union," ihas served <as presi-

"Roughing It;" "The Evolution of dent of the Studeillt Union and in

G'•ven c..:.r.nts Mphayn.::· from Twain's "Autobiogra- other -capacities in tihat organization. • IL&- He served tihis year as vice president

:Also, . "Ruck . tand Jim," iirom of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity. Two more ·NatiO!llal Defense Fel- "Huckleberry Finn;" "A ·Ghost

lowships have been awarded to Sto;ry;," and "How to be Seventy," Wake Forest students. Ben L. from Twain's speeches. . Honeyctlltt mtd Dan Merrill have Intermissions received stipends of $6,600 each for During intermissions (the pro-three yea-rs study on the graduate gram promised "One . . . or two; level. probably) persons attending tl:}.e

Honeycutt, a French major of performance were enthusiastic Cliffside, Wiill woa:-k toward· -tihe .about Holbrook's "very realistic" doctor's degree at Ohio State Uni- portrayal of Twain. Some were versity. Merrill, a history major of amazed that Holbrook is «only 35 Winston-Salem, '"ill study modern years old.'' · Russian history at Emory Univer- After the program was over, sity. Holbrook· was asked if Twain's

The grant's allowed for aid of' material so.1netimes seems l1is own. $2,000 .. the first year,' $2,200 ·the "No, not greatly," he answered. second ,:;ear. and $2,400 .the third ''I don't forget the great :man I'm year. It is planned that recipients portraying. Familiarity with his of the awards will complete the material just makes me appreciate Ph. D. degree in three years. him more.''

Merrill pointed out that besides "Some of the things I say, how-the base stipend of $6,600, the ever,'-are my own," he not-ed. "To­fellowships provide for $400 per night I said things spontaneously year for each. dependent. M~ill I haven't used before." ' was interested in this, for he plans Holbrook told of a reception he to be married -before long. , had once in Hannibal, Mo., Twain's

Merrill said that· !he plains to home and . !Jhe adventure grounds t~ach history on the college or of "Huck :and Jim." The.town had university level. ' . a "Mark Twain Day," willb: 'parades

He had planned to attend the and colorful festivities. Holbrook University of North. Carolina, but came riding by train, don-e up as had· receiveq, no financial aid. He Mark 'l'wain. . • .is cancelling application at Oa.ro- "The. whole town turned out to !ina to gq to Emory. cheer.," he related. Thousands of · J;Ioneycutt would like to teach in townsfolk and tourists. A big day."

a college when 'he finishes his "That night," he added, "I ap-. 'training; He . eJapects to emphasize peared in !Jhe town hall for my per-. "eibher Medieval·. or Seventeenth . formance. ,. · - ' ·qentury F:.;ench.lit~~e, · "57 paople attended."· .. , ... . ' .

Forestry Degree Will Be Offered.

Beginning next y~r. Wake Forest and. Duke University will jointly

4operate a forestry· training

program. . The program w.as approved by

the Faculty at its ·meeting May 9. It was announced by Dean Edwin G. Wilson and Duke Dean E. S. Harrar of the School of Forestry.

A student who participates in the program will spend three years in study of the arts and sciences at Wake Forest. He will spend the summer between his junior and senior years and the next two years at Duke U:njversity. When he has completed the program of study he will receive the BS degree from Wake Forest and the Master of Forestry degr·ee from Duke School of Forestry.

Anyone interested in participat­ing in the program must ma'ke ap­plication to the Duke school not later 'than· the end of the first se­mester of ihis third year in college. To qualify, a student must have followed a planned course of study, must have the official recommend:J.­tion of Wake F.orest and bave an Qverall quality point . ratio of at

· ieast 1.5. ·

He has donQ photography worl.;: Phelps ·is a risino· senior. He senior will receive three reserve conscious Soviet readers." ~o1· t;e .:-..~spaFp€1', and befohre r:om- plans to enter n1e(lici~c. He wc:·}.; 2d tickets .. except. for man-ied ,seniors, .., Date Slipped. mg o a ·e or~st, was P• otogra- as fr::te:·nity editor for this 'ear·~ who Will -rece1ve as· many as six. Tillett n t d , . pher and feature editor of The ·;,Iowler :> ~ Senior Reception 75th . 0 e • . .aowever, that the Cleveland Times, of Cl~v.eland - . · The reception June 6 Win be open ed banm;el"Sa!'Y <>~ the flight slip-County' North ·Cal·olina. He spent Bus mess manager. for the Howler eo -senior.s and 1:1heir ,wests which ~ ~ WI ~out notice. "The reason some time at Gardner-Webb Col- for next. _year :"111 -be Wayne according to Dr. Joh~ C. Br~deri~ or e edJtors' apparent lapse of lege before attending Wake Forest. Eudy, a l'!LSmg semor of Albemarle faculty m sbJ 11 ill bab memory · · · was that Soviet hi<>­Rollins already has named Lynne 111?jor·ing, in ~iology. He assisted almost evS:. e>~e' o: caJ:

0 ly be toria:n:>, enjoying th-eir new fre;­

Smatihers of Bre-v,a.r-d •as man;ag. this years busmess manager, Row-~ f cy pus a.t the dom m the post-Stalin era had :ng o!ditor. l~ndb M.atteson, in getting ads for Jl11;; the awards to be given t!he cas~ a long shadow over M~zhai-

Charles ( Ohuck) Jones of Cov- t e ooK. 1 morning of June 6 the most umJSUal sky s work, and had specifically ington, Ky., will be business man· Dwight Pickard will be next i for Willke Forest will be Wayne lab~led that d~te ~ crude fabri­-ager for Old Gold and Black. Jones y~ar'::; t;d~tor o~ The;St~<len_t maga-~ Smith's Natio.nal Defense Tra.nspor- -cation._ A date i1D history! t?O, can is a 'rising senior majoring in busi- zme. Pickard 1s maJormg m Eng- tation Av,,ard, one of 20 in the ·na- su!fer ~he. fat~ 0 !, denun.C!IatiOill and ness. He worked in the advertising (Continued on page 4)

1 tion to go to graduating ROTC ca- qwet hqm<l'ati<Jn.

Another. of Till~tt·s articles whicl!. he ha~ just compl€ted, is ~ study of a Moslem guerrilla leader :named S~amil. The article points out that m a 1947 edition of one of the most popular Soviet history books Shamil's fighting in the mid-19~h c-entury was represented as of a "democratic, progressive nature."

NEWLY-ELECTED publication heads ar M G ·1 K t .r e ary ru oon z, Wayne Eudy, Don Phelps, Sylvia Burroue:hs, .. Ray Rollins ·and Chllck :.Jones. ~

1 Description Changed

In 1950, a following edition of the. same textbook described the · ac~1vities as "not ~ na.tional-liber­?t!on and democratic movement JUt a reactionary and nationalisti~ mov€ment. W!hich came into fhe ,;ervice _of British capitalis:n . . ... The _article goes on to describe the · contmually changing historical pic­ture of Shamil du1·ing the 1950's ~'s party dem:lllds shifted and con­:lu~les: '_'Whatever future the his­-~rtc-al f1gur~ of Shamil may take, b:s treacl:erous path of the last d:c~de ~erv~s a>: a n;minder of the d! ffiCuhies ;nh<:>rent 1n writing his­tory to meet Marxist requirements ••

Tillet~ joh_:ed the Wake Fore~t faculty m 19;:,6 after having taught at Carson-Newman College, He re­ceived the B. A. degree at Carson­Ne;':man, the mnster's at Colum­bia University anrl the Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina.

I Circle K Charter

Wake Forest's Circle K Club w~ · <;ha.rtered Tuesday night in the Mag­n-oha Room in a ceremony which made it the eighth such club in the Car.olinas District -of Kiwanis Inter- , national.

ilt·

''

PAGE TWO Monday. May 23, 1960 OLD GOLD AND BLACK: '

Bair Appointed Le~der j Veacs Who Are Greeks Of Workshop At Camp

Dr. CJifford Bair, resid~nt teach- five .pesos," :an American opel'la bas­t>r of singin-g, has been appointed ed on a p1ay .by Josephine Niggli of opel'a ,,.,·orl\shop director of the In- Caapel Hill. . . spiraticHl Point Fitte Arts Colony, In August Blau- Will serve on the lt>cated itl lh{! Ozark mountains of faculty of a regional vocal ads 11.rkansas. workshop located 1at West Chester

Bair, as a member of the swnmer State College, Penn., under the aus­facullv. w .. ill supervise production plces of the National Association of detail~ of the whole workshop pro-j Teachers o£ Singing. gram. 1 He will ·present a series of lee-

The colony, founded 11 years -ago, 1

1 tlrres contrasting the decline of the· js recognjzed for its uniqt!e program vocatioJllal •arts in Amedcn with of i.ndi\'idu:.al artist devolpment. The I their status in Europe. Also, he will colony staff is iheaded by Dr. Isaac' conduct a program demonstrating :Van Grove of New York City, some- V:lrious types of tmining vehicles times called the dean of Ame11ican for beginning music theater per-producer-s and known 'as artistic di- former•S. _, rectlll" of many musical enterprises. Bair is nationally lmoW!Il as the

In ·addition to supervising produc- founder of the National Association tion detuiLs -of .the whole opera for Ope!1a and for ihis pioneering ef­workshop, Bai.r will direct "The forts in founding numerous regional_ Impressario" 'and ·'The Magic j and local ope11a, oratorio, festival Flute" Dfozar.t) and "Su:tdr.y Costs, aad community •arts group.s.

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Alpha Sigma Phi Mary Nell Lee, 'a .freshrn~n at Salem College, was selected as

"Miss Apache" at the Apache Pa1·ty held Satlll'day niglht. Bob Street has 'become engag­

ed rbo Ann Tillson of Winston­Salem.

A banquet for gDadooting seniors was ·held Monday night.

~lurnni Ndck Porter •and :lrl.s wife •visited the rohapter recently.

Delta Sigma Phi ~ party for graduating seniors

will be held tonight at 52 Restau­rant.

Jim Ezzell ·llas been selected a.s outstanding fl>aternity man of the year, Frank Lord as outstanding pledge, Bill Baker as outstandling intr:amural athlete :and Frank Has­kell •as outstanding ·in campus par­ticipation.

Kappa Alpha A·n informal coml>o patty was !held

Saturday ·night •at '11he Patio. Music: · was furnished hy Joe Beck's Com­

bo.

Kappa Sigma

-.; :·-

MARY LEE

A parly in th.onor of graduating seniors was iheld Friday ,afterntlon. A combo party was held at 'l1anglewood Park SaturiLay afternoon. Bruce Ballh, ·Charles Sto'l"all, Bruce McLean, Maurice Helms and

Bill West were reeenty .initiated into the fraternity.

Lambda Chi Alpha Charles Pruitt and George Fisher were recently -initiated. The fraternity 'and Sigma Pi •fraternity met together recently for a

softball game, weiner roast .:md p-a-rty. House redecorations nre in pro'gress.

Pi Ka;";:-2t Alpha · Coed Bt:ck McCr.a.ry !las been selected as 1950' Dream Girl. She is

pinned to Druce N:::tions. -Seren:td~s were held re2e.nt!y for Miss McCrary. Janice Priode,

.pinned to BDbby Bt~o\~'n and H::rh<Jra Han-ington of Sale-m College, pinned to Bt:tch 1,V;lliams.

Sis:ma Chi The ch:1pter met recently \'ViHl Sigma Chi's o:l' N. C. Suate College. A party for S. 0. P. H. WP.S held \Vednesda~' ·afternoon. T:he party

included a web~r roast and a doance. An infom~~l p;;;·t:y for grar:r.1ting seniors was held 8-aW,rday night. David \Villi::!113 has p!r.n~d Nancy Coggins of E·ast Carolina ·col-

lege. Bob MPller ',\·as i:Jithced Mo-nday evening. Tommy Fran:din J:as been elected fraterndty chaplain, S::njors gave orat'ons Mo11clay eve-ning. The anntl'al party for seniors w:as held Friday at CJin:ard's Lake.

T!Jeta Chi Jim Warlick :has 11een voted most outstanding pledge. Serenades were held recently for Lynn Robertson of Salem College,

who is the 1950 Dream Girl and for Sandra Owens, pinned to George Freeman. . .

professional drivers got . 2'7.63.mpfi

in tke M obilga8 Economy Run ;·

voted ~car ol' tlse y'ea.r'"

by editors of Motor Trend

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Patte:e§onCj s Stratford Phat~macy

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German Study I , Program Still Has Vacancy

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Dr. Ke!meth Keeton, assis!Jant pro­fessor of German, says be is stdll looking for a student who' wants to travel to German-y with his study group.

A student who ihad sie;ned up to go with the group w1as iC>rced to drop •out. The group will study tale German language lin Germany.

Students interested in being con­sidered for filling the vacancy should see Keeton immediately. He has painted out ·thlat the sltip sails

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Keeton c~ ibe collltacte<l. in Ills of-fice on tJhe third floor of the li- , bl'!ary.

'Tihe dass will spend about 10 weeks 1abroad, :returning to New York about Aug. 22. Keeton ol'iginat­ed the idea of the tra-vel group and will direct ,an its ;a.ctivties aibroad. He has planned to ihiave a ·number of Gei'man lectm-ers speak to •the class. A German student W!i.ll live with the group, which will center ~-ts opera­tion •a-t Mooich.

Classes will be conducted two

I Ihoiu::s· ·a day during rbhe month· at Munich.

'l1he .trip is good for bhree semes­.ter hours credit if the student suc-cessfully completes the course.

Not WI the trip ·will be study lby any means, Keeton ihla.s podnted out. He .plans to include in the ttlur ~f Europe several {}pporhmities for sightseeing and >arttendance at'cul­tural events.

The group will visit pllaces such

I as Italy, Austria, Switzerland, Fran-ce and: Germany_ ~------------------

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Levitt Says U. S. ~eads Lunch Counter Dispute First

USSR In SPace Travel Poll Reveals ·Top Ten ·Stories Dr. I. M. Levitt, director of Fells Russians would sacrifice a man m The . lunch counter sit-in

P.Ianoel!aDum 1at J;'lhiladelphia, told :a ~ :Elignt for it would destroy "tJbe strike was the biggest story -oilliP of 8bo1it 40 .....,.........., d.tere Tues- ~a~e of 1Jhe ·world! -they are build- of the y· ear according to · ~ . .-~~-;-- , . urg m Rlussila." . ' . day 11Jlg;ht :1Jb:at. ~ Uruted: States JS . The inventor Jand authOr said also staff melnbers of Old Gold ahead ?f RUSSla m the me: to put llhat ihe :believes ,flbe ·pictmes the Bwi- and Black. A poll of the a man Wto space. ' sians ihave shown of 1lhe otiher side · ·

. Levitt, considered/an oauthority on of-the .moon ~are autJhenhlc because new~paper staf! for the' . space travel and 18StrOIDOilly, ,~ve 'he sees nothing thialt iJhey would years top 10 stones reveal~d \~ two reasans why :he t:hi.nks the gam by faking llbe shots. that the l!lnch. counter dis-u~ States ds ialhead of Russia. A nmn ·wn1 reach llbe moon "wWbh pute, which mvolved 22

Russia, he said ihas fiiOot solved the cel'flainty" within 10 years, he pre- Wake Forest studel}ts, was problem of how .to ire-enter 1lhe dieted. "But I cannot .ten you if. the the best :p.ews source of the earih's .atmosphere.'. It lhias not, he ne~t olunar probe will lbe successful. year .. sa.J.d, even rthoroug:hly e01Il.Siderl!11 A country, lle believes, m~t .get The matter of segregaliion provid-this proibl~. . . a man to the moon before i!J;~. can ed most of the year's excitement, as

'.lbe SoVIet Unaon !bias not deve1o~ carry out any space laJSpimtiom. . evidenced ruso in. otfrle number two ed a satisfiactory ltr.ackin:g system to The moan is, .accoroing to Levitt, stoey the Leg!i.i;lature's decision to keep !traick: IQf IWl e~str.onoaut' a more logical place 'oth•an tlie ~ ·put the question to the student body . in space ~t or a system to from Wlhiah to Jauneh ollher flights on Wlhether it wished to admit Ne­transmit siglll~ls !before or <;luring a deeper into Space. R reqrures less .groes to Wake Forest Coll~ge. space ~aps~e s r~~· . . f.u~l 1to take off £rom •the moon, lhe The pLans for filming a Holly-

Leviitt srud be didn t lbhlnk rthe pointed oUJt. wood movie lhere •Came iin third in

r----=-==~~:":"':=-~~~:-:::=-~~~~-----:!'- ·the _lpoll. Although libe plans were . :NEW. ASIA R'ESTAURANT; ·Inc~ changed. ·and the campus did not ~4mcMw.m:zm-g.-:v.:;;*~%'f.&."':W'.&':ti~ Chinese Dinners That Are The 'l!alk Of The ToWn

Lunch . 75c - Dinners 95c · ., These Were Tops w. D. TARN, MANAGER D . Th . y

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involVIing Wiake Forest students. 2. T.he Legis-laue ·vote on

· Wlhether .to :admit Negroes to tihe College.

3. PJoam for filmoing 13. Holly-wood movie here. . '

4. The :eoutr.Oversy imvolving the ·control of WFDD •

5. T.h.e Dixie Cllassi.c clhampion~ .ship wm iby Wake FOil'-est basket­l:iaD.ers.

6. The LegiJslatW'e"s attempts to oust Jim Tux:ner. -

7. Almouncement of a ReYMlds grant for 13 new .girls' dormitory. a: Honor Cowncil Sll:Spensioris.

NUMBER ONE STORY of the year was the arrest of 22 Wake Forest students for participating in a downtown lunch counter demonstration. Here a Winston-Salem policeman guides Wake Forest student George WUliams'on from the elevator at City Hall.

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. ~o~;~~;~::~:\wuon. JOE LAPCHICI TENNIS SHOES · • HIGH· and LOW CUT e BUILT IN ARCH

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9 A. M.- 6 P. M.·-· SATS.

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mm~~~~~~~~-~ FOR get to see Bing Crosby, Carol Lyn· B k tb II G T • H dL II ley and "F~bian,l" the shlr caused IS 8 a ' ym, InniS, 81 ua by tihe announcement was still sig- · · ni:ficaJilt, the staff :feLt. $3.99 to .$4.99

'11he number four- story of the year AT was othe controversy around ltihe con-iflrol of WFDD, whether llhe student K. ' sr ,_ St radio sllation would be -controlled by . znney 8 II,Oe Ore tihe :liacuilty or 'l>y studients.

A :sports story came in fifbh. The ::..--------..;4;,;,;,19;;...;;,N..;._'TR~A;;;;;D;;.E;;;;..;S;;.T~.---~----.: W~ake Forest basketball team's oa~ _________ ...;...._.;_ _____ ___::..__ ____ _

turing the ,Dixie ClaiSsic cr.own for ;------------------------; lbhe 1ikst time jn the tournament's 12-year !history ma-de ~od reading fQr ·the College student oodlV.

Jim Turner's efforts to· bold his ' position :as .treasurer Qf t11e student -body WICtS sdxth. Turll!er .did not at­tend 1any meetings of lihe Legisla­ture. Some membern tried to oust him, lbut 111ever :got the necessary two-.bhiTds majority.

Oakcrest Florist · .. We Keep An Ample Supply Of Fresh Cut Flowers"

SPECIALIZING IN

• · Hospital and Party Arrangements • Wedding Work • Arm Bouquets

PA3-7139 DAY 0~ NIGHT 314 FRIENDSWP .CIRCLE

OLD ~OLD AND BLACK Monday, May 23, 1960 PAGE THREE '

FOR ANT BEAIJTT PROBLEM CALL

U)\\\.. ~

~,.... .... _ HAIRDRESSiiRS Hair Color Speelallata -Na&aral aDII Color Perwa-1 .. 1

Thruway Shopping Center - Ph. PA 5-8081 Mezzaine Robt. E. Lee Hotel- Ph. PA 2-6161 Northside Shopping Center - Ph. P A 4-6387

·e NEW GERMAN LLOYD CARS REAL ECONOMY- OPERATES FOR lePER Mll.E

e SUPERIOR USED CARS

-TWIN CITY MOTOR MART, litO. 1190 WEST FIRST ST. - P A 59727

r-:-----------. I 'FREE PASS I I

.TO

Little Duffer Course NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CE;NTER

I u.s. ROYAL TIREajf~·_F--,-.IS_K T_IR_E_s ___.

. 400Jooff on Recapping lEW AND USED TIRES - APPLIAICES

SPORTINIIOODS

Piedmont Tire Servi'e Bi~hway S2 North - Next To 52 Diner

PA 3-1836

The Tire Center, In,. 1-118 S. · SA-atford Road

PA 3·0719

Wake Forest Musical Football 1 Given

FREE Number seven story \~as the ·an­nouncement of •a Reynolds ·gnant al­lowing for .the CO!IlStrudion of a new girls' dornmory.

"----------~--------~-------• Lncreased activit_y by t;qe :student .._ ____ , ________________ ;.,__...,.! •---------------...0..-------• Honor Gonncil made the number

With Any Pprchase Of $20 Or More r-----_....-_________ .;._, _________ eight story .. The Honor Council sus-

LENWOOD ·AMMONS A. C. MOTSINGER, JR.

·AMMON'S ESSO Servicenter. Welc.ome Wake Forest Students

And Family <

Emergency. AAA' Service

R 0 A D S ·E· R Y 1- C E TIRES - ACCESSORIES - ·BA TTERI1ES

1200 Reynolda Road P,~:ner Robin Hood· Road PHONE 5-2681

pended five persons dluring. the year in ·a 1CI'1ack-down 011 .student oheatiilg and ·cooduct.

Sturlerut .body elections filled the number mine/ spot in lihe poll. Staff members selected tile :story primar­ily because of .the unique -campaigns snaged by some o;!' the candidates, suoh as the parachute jump :by Jack Pryor.

Announcement :of a $50 jncrease m tuition was coonsidered ,1Jhe ·num­ber 10 story of the year by the staff memiber.s.

In voting on the stores lihe s1iaff' did not clloose th-osE which were best ~itten or most .sensatio11al. Poten­tial news value mid oa:mpus reaction were the main CollJSider.ation.s.

Awards Given ByAq~aClub

Trophies were !aWarded to Gene Petnasy, Sonny P~t001, Bettye Lee King and James Joihnson at tih.e

~===============~======~ M!ar.ibimer's banqu« JJast 'fuesday ;. Dlgbt in tbe El Cam Bey Boom In the Reynolds Bwddng. .

K and w CAFETER'IA·

YO.R .liND OF EADII ·PLADE

422 N. CHERRY S~.

Wll!fSTON-SALEM, N. C.

Serving Breakfast, Luncheon/ And Dinner

~.

Pemasy received ih:is .trophy f-or being the Most Oubtanding Varsity Swimmer, Poston for being the Most Outstandtng Freslb:mlan SW1immer; Miss King for be~ the Most Out­st~ Girl M1aritim.er am John­son ;f-or being ~ Most OUtstanding Boy Maritimer • . The tropbles were awarded by

Dr. Harold Ban-ow, ihead of ·the PhysiCal Departmen,t of tbe college;

Coladl Leo Ellisool. and ~ wife, and Dr. Robert Brebme Mel his wi1e were also .special guests at the baa.­quet.

The club will ibave a .special meet­ing Tuesday· nd,ght for fur.tlher dis­cussion of the -constitlltion.

11he sponsor for this year's Miss Universe contest in. North CaroLina has :release.d! ·entey requirements.

Contestants are judged solely an tile basis -<>f beauty, personality aDd poise. 'Da:lent as not a requirement. Elnitries must be between 18 and 28

. year old, unm.am~ and a resident of Nol'lllb Qarolinia. :for ilt -least six months.

Ha_ri'J Southerland Clothes Made 'To Measure

ALTERATIONS ·~ 624 w. ~th . ·J!A !2011 .

Have a real cigarette.;...have a CAMEL '· .

®l!l Ojnl~ au~ ~lark * * Wake Forest College • •

WINS70N..SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, MAY 23, 1960

1-,he Year In Review The top 10 stories of the year as

selected by Old Gold and Black's staff reveal that the year has not been an uneventful one. Not since the year of the Dancing Convention has there been so much to get excited about. (The Baptists, in such an eventful year in ·which criticism of the College mio-ht not command the headlines--o .

even of Old Gold and Black-have turned to a pastime that may get national publicity- condemning pre­sidential candidates.)

Well. the year has taught us some­thing.

The number one story of the year­the sit-in strikes -is not finished. There will continue to be sit-in strikes throughout the South. Perhaps there will be more activitY in Winston­Salem; perhaps Wake Forest students will again be involved.

Whether they will be right the next time, we can't say. Editorially, we felt that they were right this year when they j o i ned in the demonstration dov.rntown. And in saying so, we were­n't naive. We have always realized that violence can be the result of such demonstrations. Actually we think it takes a somewhat naive person to be­lieve that everything can be settled just as well without violence. We

. don't advocate ,violence; human na­ture just demands it ·sometimes, it seems.

The student body vote 0!1 the ad­mission of Negroes to Wake Fo:rest College was the number two story of the year. From this hap;_Jening we learned-rather l:ad confirmed-that most people believe what they want to. One enlightened student made the obserYation in chapel that the Student Legislature ballot was unnecessarily wot·dy in asking that the student body vote 1)e sent to the Trustees. "The Trustees are going to consider this admis:sions policy the first thing," he explained. --we don't have to ask them to consider it." Well, everybody be­lieved him. It happened, of course, that the Trustees didn't consider the admissions policy.

There was excitement about the film also. We almost predicted that, for one reason or another, it would not be filmed here. In retrospect we may think that the cancellation of the plans was fortunate. We got an unexpected snow, and it would have taken more than leaves on the trees to have pro­duced any semblance of fall. And all the Route Three preachers in the state had to find some other evil to de­nounce in the states newspapers.

We leamed from another of the year's top 10 stories of the College's increasing efforts to get students here -by increasing tuition by $50. We said that continued hikes in costs w·ill produce a different ~ort of· student body. Not so, we were assured. We were told that part of the increase would go for faculty salaries; some

· might go for scholarships. Of course, few faculty members have beim heard praising the meager raises. Nobody has mentioned the proposal to increase scholarship aid; the p r'o p o s a I, of course, never reached the Trus~ees.

JOHN ALFORD Editor

Jim Turner remained treasurer of the student body all year. It is inter­esting to note that with the exception of one person-a senior-everybody who voted to keep him in was re­elected to an office. Could it be that these people were afraid to do. any­thing that . would hurt their chances this spring? One can wonder.

Then there were the student g()V­

ernment elections. We learned that college students are ·not necessarily educated enough to be immune . to tricks, stunts, that sort of stuff. Issues don't matter too much. But since none

· of the candidates for honor council en­gaged in the spectacular, we don't have to feel too ashamed. For after all, the Honor Council is the only branch of student government that has J!lUCh importance.

The Honor Council this year added to its importance by asserting its au­.thority--strongly on five different oc­cations, when it suspended or ex­pelled a student. Good!

There were two stories we were glad to have to print: the Reynolds grant that will allow a new girls' dormitory and the Dixie Classic bas­ketball win.

This year has provided more· stories of a sensational nature than many previous years. We have not always been happy about the fact, but it has made our job more enjoyable.

Out On Time The Howler finally has something

to howl about. It got out on time. 'But it has done an immense dis­

service to all of us who hope to get out of this place with respectable or even passing g·rad.es.

In the first place it has upset the examination schedule. Students have learned that they owe money for dormitory damages and can't get their annual until they pay. Some of them sianply don't have the money, others don't want to pay. In.either case, :what do you have? A group of complaining and unhappy students, hardly the sort of mood that will allow one to do his best on an examination.

In the second place, the early ap­pearance of the yearbooks has left everybody with a feeling of despair and indifference. Who will be able to study? There doesn't seem to .J?e any­thing to look forward to after ex­aminations. There always were the Howlers ... but not this year.

But why even talk about studying; nobody wants to. All the activity that should go into preparing for examina­tions is being used to sign Howlers.

Well since the Howler staff has ' ' . caused so much trouble by refusmg to follow tradition (the tradition of getting out the Howlers late), we hope they learn their lesson.

In the past they were .the last pub­lication· on the row to get out their product. No:w they're has-beens just like all the rest of us.

BREI':lT FILSON Business Manager

F0unded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of ·wake Forest C~llege, Old ·.~ld and Black is published each Monday during the school year except durmg examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Boanl.

RAY ROLLINS JOEL STEGALL ZENO MARTIN Ass·ociate Editor

FRANCIS FENDERSON Circulation Manager

Managing Editor Sports Editor

FRANK LORD Asst. Circulation Manager

----------------------~~:~ EDITORIAL STAFF: Barr Ashcraft, Jim Batterson, Sylvia Burroughs, Sid Eagles, Diane ~ay;Son, Sue Fulkerson, Kelley Griffith, David Hadley, Charles Johnson, Glenn Hamm, Carolyn McBee, Doc Ma{{drey. Sarah lVIurphy, Dwight Pickru:d, Geo;·ge Pruden, Kenne1fu Quarterman, Carolyn Rowe, Don Schoonmaker, L:~-,me Smathers, George Williamson, Pat Woodard.

BUSINESS STAFF: Brent Filson, Chuck Jones.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. R-e-p-re_s_e-nt_e_d_f_o_r_n_a_t.,.-io-nal advertising by Na~ tional Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per y~ar. Second-Class mail privi­leges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C.

Offices In Reynolda Hall 225·227 Telephcne PArk 5-2711 P. 0. Box 756'7

Extension 215 Reynolda' Branch Winston-Salem, N. C.

-·~· '

'

LIT'l'LE MAN ON ' '

Back and Forth By "Doc" Maddrey

SPEAI(ING FRANI(L Y By Georg~ Williamson

As we approach tlhe advent of swnmer sun, sand IB.l1d sin, a large segment 'or our student :l>ody finds itself paUJSi:ng, bllnk!ing, and dis· covering :that <a:nobher year has pass­ed and they ;are no different fua:n ~hey were when lit ibegan. Some, in fact are .realizing .that they 'have wrapped up a major segment o-f

their lives withouit one whit -of profilt; except, of course,

.. that they can add, ·· subtl"act, multiply,

and divide .rea­sol1lalb1y well and

. can spell enough words and come close enough to the rest to be un­derstood on paper, that they ihave

WILLIAMSON gained a super­ficial sophistication that can be pas·SI'Od for worldly wisdom, that they· have learned hlley can get along just fine without religion, anu have mastered the •art of indifference. Of course, we can't stop here-there are :always .those imoaluable experi­ences with Late Date, and ·those un­forgettable nights with "The Polo G.irl."

The big question ~. what bappens next.

Blink. Well, I g:uess we can safely say

that the are:x.t part of life ·Will :00.. al>out as free £rom responsibility and inv~lvement ras the las~ as pressed with dlt, as lbhe case may be.

The bitter Jiacl is ,tJha:t most of us who didn'·t like Wiake Forest, won't, be liking "The World" either, and those of us wlho didn't enjoy the process of .educatiQil probably won't like makiing a living.

I w->nder if bhe man who ~Said tihat life is what you make it was l'!i:gl!it. SU!I'ely not. Well, never mind. Only YQU graduating Seniors !have t<> face tha:t. The rest of us 1still iblave our Alma Mater .and our parents to see that we don't •have 'anything to WOITY about, and :anyway, summer is com­ing-that's :no time .to think about stuff like ·tbds.

Choir Elections Paul Sulliv.an, .rising senior from

M•axton, was elected next year's · president of the ohoir Thursday at

. the last choir rehearsal. Other· offi­ce~s .are Tommy Howell, Cherry­ville, vice president; and .Anrua Ruth Current, Taylorsville, who will .oorve as secretary-treasurer for the second , consecutive year.

Sullivan .rep1aces Rlay Ehent, and Howell succeeds Roy Hughes. ,

Receive Medals

I

And the end of this year·- has crept upon .us as quickly as have the years of .the past. 'Dhe warmth of the spl'ing :sllJ1.Sih1ne has dispelled once agJain the tho~ts of winter from our minds.

The dull roar of ,tJhe .Jawmnowers and the clattering of the construc­tion workens should ihiave left no doubt as to tlhe proximity o:f ·gred-uatio.n, summer and j{>y. ·

But... . 'Dhe air !is •heavy with .flhe weight

of depr4$sing thought. Lt .i_s bl!e first re>al e}!jperience for OUl' eenel'ation with the . fear of ronflict amd de­struction.

'I\he wor;ds w.!J:Wh .are spoken are quiet .amd reflective. For it lis· fitting to ·be qllli.et an!Cl rto ref.lect at. a mo­ment Of impending ctJsls.

The eyes ;thlat look to illhe ruw.re belie the surety .that once wa:s .1lheh­forte. For IIlOW tihe fwture may not lbe the utopia which shall blossom forth

.I like magic •at gmdwation. · Heart Examines Self .

The J:oog dormant ·heam examines itself with a baste approaching panic. For tihe fear of insecurity · moves quiokly and conquers q;ui&1;1y.

A!lld we know bh.at the world we hJa'Ve merited .is plummeting itself to almost <:enbain disaster: And we also realize that we .are affect:ed by the' mte,matiooal-yet we feel the £utility of our meager efforts.

The need fur Wlderstanding. rom· munication and oompromise is ever before ·US. For· once agJain man's toys ta·re ~ masters.

But from what fountain of per­fection will bhe solution spl'.ini? We cannOtt conjure up in a moment lihe antithesis to a society 'Wihich has for generations .so carefully and tlhomughly inculcated ibs al/atreds, prejudices 1aiJJd mi:sgmued ideal£.

[s !Lt reascmable to tass.ume. relief from the great' problems when we eacli: da.y dJanm tlhe smallest ad­vances of \human brotherhood?

One Only Wonders One can only wo~der if this ~ the

:best of all possible worlds. I£ so, man fully deserves his unfortumte lo.t.

There is ,s.till hope in om- s,ociety. Alfred Nortlh Whitehead s•ays: ••cul­ture is •activity of .thought •and re­

. ceptiveness to !beauty and: hum!jD.e · feeling. SC11aps of information !have nothing to· do with it." 1

It is so ,appalling that .the modern mind !is >Conditioned to synthesize the scraps or" information into theor­~es and bombs· .while leaving the beauty .and lb.umane feeling in a never-never land,' Picnic's Ratio

Favors Pr9fs . . By CAROLYN YOUNG

Long renowned foc outvoting stu­dents in matters such ISS cl!Janging quiz grades and. givi:ng free rum, bh.e faculty illas now succeeded in outnumbering them. The il"ati-o at the Student-Faculty picnic }qolday strongly favored the professors.

Convel1Siation manged from specu. labion iB!bout exams to smnmer plains as students .and teachers .at last worked together for a common goal -the consumption {}f ,bar-ib-ooe, baked ·beans ~<md soft drinkls.

Since no picnic is complete with· out children, the faculty offspring contrtbuted ·to .the occasion by pro­vidi:ng enterta!inment during tJhe meal. After !inspecting bhe.Lake, pliay· ing ,tJa-g and ihavi.ng a few rousing minutes of b~ball, bhey climaxed tbeir act lby having a contest to see who could get ,tJhe dirtiest. Imp!l!r· tial iObservers decided ,1Jhat it SOOUld result in a dnaw.

Offi<liial mealtime entertainment was provided by .the Hungry Five, led by Emerson Head. However, they oame very dose Ito ibeing tJhe Hungry Four, s\nce ~e baseball from tlhe clJ.ildren's game almost hecame wedged in the tuba.

In spite -of its !initial numerical vdctory, the faculty w.as finally S\11'· passed 1by the students. As Davye Hiatt .and the Hi-Atters appropriate­ly led off with "Moonglow,'' sleepy ohildren were taken ihome, and those people remaining ibeg1a111 tan evening of waltzes, rock 'n ;roll and cba.­clms.

Publications Heads Named

(Continued from page 1)

lish. H.e is from Lexington. He was an assistant -editor on this year's Student staff and contributed a number of short stories and poems ..

1 Sylvia Burroughs, a rising- so-pho­more of Bat Cave, will 'be business manager. Publications Board waiv­et! the ':equi;:emenL of at least jumor standing for Miss Burroughs. She worketl on this year's Student .aml Old Gold and Black, in bot11 the editorial and business depart-:nents. . ~

There were no nominees for the pc·s1tions of business and station rnanaget• of WFDD. because the student radio station will be com­pletely under faculty control next y~1· as an FM . station.

. Cadets Visit. Ft., Bragg~ Juniors :and selected sophomores

of .fihe College ROTC Corps received am onientatiOill for summer cmnp to be oondueted June 18 .to July 24 at Fort Bragg Friday. ·

ROTC awards were presented at the fin.al .reView and A'Will:l'ds Cere­nlony 1ast ~esday.

'11he Oade1;s at Fort Bmgg wit­nessed .Airmecl Forces Day events in­cluding static displtay, artillery slhoot, and mass adroborne jumps into the Sicily drop 7JQIIle of For:t Bragg.

The 159th Engineer Coostntction Group, XVlli Ak:borne Corps. were

Letters (All letters to the editor must be signed; names will be with­held on request.)

To bhe Editor: You have this year's final Au­

:fwiedel1Sehen edition of Old Gold and Black in your hland, the last chance for lbhem to print my name. false. Let· me take this chance to say :hello to •all my W18ke F'orest friends. '.Dhe iirsit exchange year between Wiake Forest· and lihe F'ree University of Berlin came to an end. You read about the program, about its finarrrcial problems, etc.; do you remember, w.hen we sat in the lounge and discussea wocld politics, .the . relationship petween the Americans and Germans in Germany •and all the other themes in which you 18rrld I were. illlterested ? The fil'ISt time was on Snnday Sept. 13, 1959 at the' reception for all new students at Wake Forest. Since that time so many .!Jhl.ngs happened whichrC!hang­ed you .and me. For me everything was new, everything. was a new impression. So every minute of this year. gave me sometJhing and I can say that it was ·very successful for me. I :studied all different kinds of

· courses, visited £a·ctordes ana travel~ ed over 12,000 miles during this year.

In · the campuS newspape1·s you read about Dari Jones' impressions in Berlin. He got much out of this exchange year 1as I did here. For these opportunities ".Ve want to thank the !institutioP...s on both sides. I'm verv thankful for tthe possibility to study .this year here in Wake For­est, <thankful .to every one, profes­sors, students and: administration, \Vlid helped me to make this year

· so successful. Ulrich ZieteJt .

host to the cadets at Fort Bragg. At t!he ·Aw:ar.ds Ceremony T-ues­

day Kermit W. Smith, Gilbert L. Fr.a:nk, Arnom H. Harris and :Roy H. Rockwell .received the Superio:r Senior Cadet Ribbons awarded to· one man lin eacih MS class hy tihe Dept. of Army.

West Honored Jerry West received the ROTC

Certificate of MerJ.torious Leader­ship, presented hy the Oommamding General 11hird U. s. Army to a senior :selected lby !the PresideDit of the College. J·ames. M. Geiger was awarded the Reserve Officers .As­sociation of U. S. Med~.

J01hn C. Munn Jr., William A. Ski.ppon, William C.•. Waynick, ood Robert C. Wollard received •the, :Re­serve Officers As.sociatlan of U. S.

. Oer.tificate of Merit aWilli.ded to one member of each MS claJSs.

Howard A. Bul1ard and Charles: E. Reiley ·recei-ved the Minute Ma.n. Medals :Presented by ibhe N. C. So­ciety of S<?ns .of ·the Ainencan Re-vo­lution.

Sid Eagles • Sid Eagles Jr. was .aw.arded the

Association of the U.S. Army Medial. William M. ·P.aris, Sid Eagles J'l'.,

Michael Starling and George B. Snuggs reCei'Ved Scabbard .and Blade Society Medals. - '

Erle · W. Thomas received tib.e annual ROTC Individual Riile .Maxksmanship AWJal'ld given to bhe cadet with .the hl[l'hest aggregate SC()re. La~ence W. Meyer .received the medial for tile cadet with the seoond highest ~re.

"D" Company, commanded iby ·Cadet Oa.pt. Jdh!n. c. MWllll Jr., :re­ceived the Honor Company Designa­tion.

Erie W .. · Thomas, l.Ja;wence W. Mey;er, J,ames R. Hodges, Robert. S. Boatwri~t. Jiames Geiger, Fmnk S. Woody, William. R. Turner and Ber~-y L. Davison received Expert

· 'Marksmanslb.ip Medals.

Delta Kappa Nu, women's business fua.tevnity, held its-rumual picnic at Miller Bark Monday afternoon, May 16. The following o~fices were in­stalled: President, Phyllis JoJmson; Vice-President, Anna Ruth Current, Secretary, Jo Ann Kirkpatrick; Treasurer, Ruth Bridgi!rs; Social Ohairman, Savah Murphy; Projects -Chairman, Linda Neal. Mt.er installa­tion of the officers, !!he Business · Student WQmall of the Year Award was pr-esented to Llew Bauoom.

For man has a .right 1and a duty · :to ques•tioo the underly;ing motirn-, mons of a world seemingly hent on its own destruction:

And in the midst of spr.ing IJhese / are sad thaughts. But these are the llhe>ughts whicth . cry for e~pression. The time f<hl' consideration may al­ready be past-but there is no Ol!lher r;ecourse but ihope. ·

M~gnolia. ·Leaves

'' By GEORGE PRUDEN

·It seems a bit dronic: rbbtat the book store gives. ouit matchbOOks. with ·tlhe following ioocriptioo: "I:f you ihiave quit !high school - before you g!l1aduated, .send for our free booklet ..• "

After tlie Magnolia Festival laSt SatUrday IBif.te:roooo so:nl.eoiie was asked ·if he en,joyed it. He .replied, "Yes, I did. I ;really lilted the "Snow · Whlte" number;· )'OU .(l(}Uld .see wihlat you was ,getting.'' i

The study ;;furoad group. met ilast, week with ibh~ travel agent, wihO ' gave :son;te .last minute tips. He told how, on bhe ship everyOIIle would . be awakened by his mbi:n steward. Tthe girls were overjoyed to learn thiat ,the steward would'knock >O!ll the· capm door •and. say, "Command me!"

Dr. Keeton said th.at ihe would lilre y for the students to Check d.n. /at a cel'ltain spot so ·llbat :he w:ould know if tall ha!d made it to the :.Sillip on bime. He a:sked tJhe agent for the bes:t pltace ·to make ilhe ciheck. With; out hesibattioolbhe agent replied, "T!he Bar!"

Dr. Keeton w:a:s talking 1aoout dis· cipline · <a~l>road and W<Jund up by saying that he was !!lot · ·gojng to speak to anyone until he h<ad to oarry lhim 'back to t:he hctel.

Overiheard after •a quiz: "I think ·I'll ,g9 and thr-ow a small fit."

'Dhe I. Beverly Lake -campaign bus stopped here 1ast Friday :a.:::d some of lli:s ·supporters 'had a Sllllall de­mons·tnation in the :big parking lot· f. behind ·tlie ohapel. ·Disrupting some classes in Wingate were the strains of "Dixie" floating up from the ac­companying band. Someone rom­mented, "All I'd like .to d.o for ·I. Beverly Lake is ;to ,flhr~w him in one."

Lay S~holars Are Selected For 1960~61.

By CAROL YOUNG Wesley's rolllmll!lity of lay scl»l­

a.rs 'nave 'been cho.sen for !lle:xJt year. T.rus is an effort ro provide the ohurdh with artieulate, well-iliform­ed lay or 111on-clerioal leaders.

The .plan inoo!l'pQl'181tes .a fou.r­fold. eJ:l'lPllasis of .commumity study, community worsbdp, commamity life t9gether ood community mi.ssdon. &riot discipline is involved through­out each structure. The fou.r se­mesters work includes existential !in­volvement, rustocical inv:Oivement, readings iin Cihurcll tradition tamd ethical divisions.

This e~ental endeavor vro.s begun two years ago, and ~involves a two year -commitment. 'llhe curri­culum tis ISimiloc to :that of !Jhree year branches at Duke University and the Undversity of North Caro­lina.

The experiment received recogni­tion .and a gr.ant from the Dalllforth F1ounda11ion. This groot will :be used for ·bringing in outstanding ;profes­sional and lay ,tJhOO!og;i,ans. A small amount will :be used for :publicity. Speakel1S 1n ·!!he past !have lincluded Paul '11i11ioh, Jom Bailey, Carl Mi­chaelsQil l8l1ld a.__,recent visitor to the Wake Forest campus, Joe Matllhews.

The community of lay sCholars is o.pen .to .anyone noi going into .pro­fes;Sii0l11al churcih work; it is con­sciously !OOn-d.eno.rni.nlationtal. Quali­":ftications for membet.sallp are ibalsed upon the ement to which the student is involved present :problems of :tiailtih and culture.

· Members of ·the first lay com­rimnity for next year are Ken Gmi­,1Jano, Dave Smith, Br.!Jmtley Aycock, Bob Ward, Linda Adams, Mary Ann

·Stallings CSalemJ, Linda Leeard (Salem), Dea.n Major (Salem), Nancy Young 13itld Miary Miartin PicEar:d.

'11he senior community of lay sDh<l1ars, a new feature this year will i:nclude Don Bailey, Bill Davis, Sally Ludlum, Cliaudia Arrowwood, F;laine By:a.see, Ann Butler <Saleml and Jerry Wilson.

Present cpmmunity scholars who will continue into next year. are 1\<~arcia Jo:nes, Mary Anne Oopen~ hiauer, Dwight Pickiard, Judy Park­er, Max Beverly, 1\.fury Beverly, Charley B lance, Susan Hughes

. <S:aleml ·and I.i)jby Hatley ( Saleml. BOb ·Younts iS' dir-e &or of Wesley

activities. ·

J

\

.· '

., ~

. ~··

\

I

·!

,.

~~

., t.

'',J ' ., '',

·. Rec~rds.Siolen From.WFDD I

&i.<ti() Station WFDD ihas · ore- I ·the year, 35 have ,been retumed. por:ted tJhat .a number of its a:ecord Most of ·the albums retJurned were a~bulns !have been stolen dul'ling kept from a week to sever~al the year. At one time during the monbhs. year, 38 albums were missing. The records ibave been of a

Staff offiicials are presently fi>l- popuJar :and show .tune type; Jowmg :up evidence .thad; may a:e- 'I1he unauthorized ;r~oord trafidc veal w1ho- has been stealing and at the s-tation has ·been a mJ~Stery

' oor:a:owing ~ allbums. Tlhe stu- . and incomvenience, rto the sbation dent ds not" a member of the all year. The first diay the smbion WFDD ISitaff. went on the air ,flhjs year, .22 il."ec-

Of othe 57 albums taken during 1 ords were .missing.

Want To Be· N ~atly Dressed For The Fall and Winter Activities?

GO TO

Cahill & Swain, Inc. ' . .

for the best in McGREGOR and PURITAN CARDIGAN SWEATERS

. SPORT SIDRTS and TAYLOR-1.\UDE SHOES Corner of 4th and Cherry St..

Als~ ;Billy May ·Odell-Matthews Motors. DeSoto Plymou~h ·

Valiant Fiat

Four· Freshmen-To Appear

&38 W. ·Fourth St •.

Pete Knight's tv and Appli~nce Go. · Thruway Shopping Center· and

Nol'thside Shopping Center

RCA and ADMIRAL I

Stereo-HiFi headquarters 'for Winston-Salem Open Nightly Till 9

EASY TERMS

-

Attention Studen~ts If you have a neat appearance, pleasing personality, a car, and

would like to earn $1200 this summer plus scholarships

write:

MR. CABLE BOX 4763 WINSTON ·SALEM'

Give your school address . and phone number plus your home· .location.·.

PATRONIZE OG&B ADVERTISERS

KCJDL KROSSWORD' . ACROSS s. Tai Mabal site

'· You feel Xool'a 1. World War.II _ deep down

priee agency in your threat 4. Penny Pitou'a 5. Firat name of

footwear Plop and Chao 8. Sinatra's 6. Units of

waa tender measurement 12. This eould 7. Teams and

be strained tea ts 14. You'll- botb

0have It

a_bout Kool'a . B. Send MeDthol Made 9• Lecher

15. By virtue of with teeth 16. Related 10. Latin bird 17. Lady with 11. Inadvisable

18. ~=ve of =~~.S: for J. Arneaal 13. Back there, ·

20.CompomtiOD& mate like

22. Only a Kool .19• Make•--- real t'o Kool's Menthol Magic 21. ~:~t,!Z.~agie ·

23. Cal's frienaly last name 1 money

27 LittleNewYork 24. Two worda that ' start a

28. Look, ~&; long sentence no eoglDe. 25 U of the

2'.1. Bulli"!' like • sChool :year a·Tro)an

SO. Slow-moving 26. Short years animal liS' _ yourself a

sz. Deliberately carton of KoQl o"erlookll :>.9. What speakers (2 words) have a lot of

36. Eagle's pad · (2 words) -11. Author of 31. Fo1Jletful

"A Death in penod . the Family'' 32. Boat follower

'I1he BH!y May Orchestrra !and t:he Four fl'eshmen will be aJt Wake Forest next cflall for tibe Hom~ Dance.

The da~. to- ·be sponsored by ·the lnter:fr:ater:nity Councillllilld the Student Union, wiJl lbe held Nov. 12. .

' 'Dhe Four Freshmen began their _"<big time" career in 1950 at Day­ton, Ohio Wlhen Capitol Records ;artist ·Stan Kent()l!l heard llhem sing. ·He was so impre55ed fualt ihe · sold Capitol Records on the Four Freshmen and sold ·the Four

. Freshmen ®·Capitol. As soon as they oompleted .their Dayton en­-.gagement ,1Jhey set out for Holly- ·

Che·erleaders Are Selected

Cheerleaders elected by Jtihe stu­dent body in chapel last Tuesday are .Ann Herring, Wannie Wag­ster, B•a:rrb,a·ra Metoolf, Faye Yormg, Vic Smith, Arnom Harris, Eddie Hu:nnicut, rand Larry All­

.good. The new cheerleaders met last

Wednesday •affem()on and unani­mously elected Srruillh .head cheer­leader.

The cheerleaders were :selected ' kom a group of 15 ·students which

.included Charlie · .Stone, . Noocy Mitc.hell, J eraii!Ilie Why.te, Pat Har­-ris, Bonnie Sullivan, Aliln Hul·ton, and Bebe Davis. The~e students were selected hy

a cheerleadi.ng committee Who judged tryouts Joast Mo.nday after­norut. Tihe coiiUIJ£ttee was com­posed of .representatives :from the Mo.nog11am Club, Jerry Ball, Jerry Steele and Earl Thomas; student 'b-ody offiicers Bow.ard· Bull:ard, Alma· Ruth 'Current, and Buck Kitch.in; and ~a.st year's cheer- ' leaders Pete Daniel, Ann Hed·ge­petlh, Albert Thornton am Ray­mond AlexJalllder. Alpproximately 30 studeiilts tried out ·before the -committee.

Ball was in cbal1ge of -voting and -the counting of votes.

No..,1&

42. A Picasso 33-'Stravinslcy 44. The cigarette 34. Newcomers

to come up to 35, Early . 46. Tuneless tune .British;

46. While's alt. spelling litst name 37. French ands

Wheh yout thr-Oat tells you its time fur- a chahge,

· · you need 4'1'. Gaelic. . ss. Grande, 48 .. us•• times s P,e Janeiro, etc.

39. Motels' unclm DOWN 40. With a goose,

they're Dotbing

a real change .... 1. Leather flask 48. They go 2. J?_oclr with outs

YOU NEED THE

01960, BROWN & WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP.

wood and •a' Capitol <:omtract. Si:nce 1950, the Fo-ur Fresblnen

have ·performed at Jerry Wald's Studio Olu:b om :t!he W-est Coast, on ·the Steve Allen Sho\v and have had a spot in the Metro-Goldwym­Ma.yer !picture, "Rioh, Young, and Pretty."

They oove played in most of the major nrght clubs in the country and most of ·!Jhe rnaje>r colleges.

Besides sdnging, all .bhe Four Freshmen play !instrwnents. Bob

. Fl:amigan sings the top voice, pLays trom~ne and doubl~ -on string .bass; Ross Barbour is maJSter of ceremonies, s1ngs third 'Voice, and plays d11.U11S ·and trumpet; Ken Albers, ,fue hass voice of the group, plays trumpet .a·nd mello­phm~e; Don Barbour <handles many of .the .vooal solos Md pLays guitar.

Southern OaJi:fornia ds the home station for 1lhe Four Fresihmen, bu~·,public performances keep them on the ~o.ad nearly 11 m01111lhs of the year.

BATON TWIRLER ~lary Lou Butts of South Hill, Va., tries out for 'the Wake Forest Baton Twirling Corps • Miss Butts, who has served as head majorette at Park View High School at South Hill for four years, has won 22 awards in na- · tiona] competition in se-ven states ·in the last tWo years. Her awards include &he titles, Virginia High­lands Strutting Champion;• "Vir­ginia Twirling Queen," and "Miss Majorette of OCtober" for Drum Major Magazine.

\,

STUDENTS ·Send Your Luggage Home

I

By

RAILWAY EXPRESS

Or

AIR EXPRESS

Pick Up Tickets At The Infor­mation Desk in Reynoldn Hall.

For Nice Things To Wear And Relaxed Suburban S~oppin~

Visit

Thnnvay Shopping Center

Open Every Night Till g·

Monday Through Friday

I .

1960 Class Plans To Furnish Patio

"' The 1960 gr:aduatlng class is p1am.ning to huy mor~ ful'niture for .the pati,o of Reynolda Hall for its class project.

Vice President Neil MacLean, who is hrandlirng bhe .project since President Dick Bua:leson has been ill, says me doesn't know 'eXaCtly

· bow 'much bhe class will buy be­cause many of the dass members !have Mt yet paid the fee asked ·of each member.

Eacoh sendor is expected to pay $1.5() towrard l!he project.

MacLean. .said that •a person will be stationed a.t the Infonnation' Desk irn Reynolda Hall the first poc.t of this week .to rolled money from .any seniors·· who hra:ven't paid.

Center .. 427 N. LIBERTY

DOUBLE FEATURE MONDAY - TUESDAY

Victor Mature

"Samson & Delilah" and

Fred MacMurray

"Quantez"

WED. - THURS.

"Gigantis The Fire Monster"

'and

''Teena.gers From Outer Space"

SUN. - MON. - TUES. May 29 - 30 - 31

Clint Walker

"Y ello\vstone Kelly"

and Sophia Loren

"That Kind Of \Voman"

WED. - THURS, JUNE 1 - 2

Brigitte Bardot­

"La Parisienne" And

"North By North­west"

SHOWS CONTINUOUS EACH DAY 11:00 A. M.-11:00 P.M.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 23, 1960 PAGE FIVE

City Beverage DELIVERY SERVICE

If you're. planning a BLAST see us. We h4ve a complete assortment · of refreshments for you.

BEST PRIDES IN TOWN! PA 22774 904 BURKE ST. PA 51481

Let's Go Bowling!

LEARN TO BOWL •• Fre·e Instruction Daily , From 9 A.M. to & P.M.

Special Rates For Wake Forest Stv.denta

3 GAMES •• $1.00 SHOES 10c

Before~ P. M_- Monday tkru Frida7 ALL FRATERNITY ATHLETIC CHAIRMEN INTERESTED IN E~TERING OUR FRATERNITY BOWLIN~.} LEAGUE CALL MR. INGRAM AT PA 2-3991.

Expresswray Lanes ''LANES OF THE CHAMPIONS"

JUST ARRIVED! NEW SHiPMENT!

LOAFERS e LATEST STYLES e BROWN & BLACK e B - C - D WIDTHS e SIZES 7-.12

8.95 - ·10.95 VALUES UP. TO $15.00

Jayson's. ·Shoes OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 - FREE PARKING 532 N. TRADE ST. PHONE PA 3-0051

~----~------~·:1~----------------------------~

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24HourService NEW 24HourService

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"The House of Fine Sandwiches 2803 REYNOLDA ROAD

., PAGE SIX Monday, May 23, 1960 OLD GOLD AND BLACKi

:Qonorary Speech Fraternity Chooses Coed As President

Shen-y Dailey, junior of 'Dallas, brought into the group :for their TexJaS thias been elected president of participation in debate actdvities.

' • T7"- They areAl Baker, Oharles Taylor, the Wake Forest cltapter of P1 .Ni:lP· Glenn Black.burn Jl"., Claiborne pa Del<t;a. natio!llal ihonorary speech Hopkins ,and Ed Gaskins. fraternity. Ulrich Zieten and Lon Boggs

Four other offti.cers were also were initiated into the organdzation cbosen at lihe meetmg iheld Monday for their work !in oratory. in Euzelian HalL Glmrles 'naylor The wtiation and election of of­WiaS selected vice 'president; Susie ficers came aflter a supper in the Jones, secreta:y; Al Baker, tx:el;ls- Magno1ia Room at Wlhich the mem­urer, amd Linda Guy, publicity bers •and prospective members were chairman. present. ·

'Tille i>fficers were chosen after the 'I1h.e group is planning. to ihiave a chapter's initiation ceremonies. dinner Tuesday at -the home of Dr. Eight new members were taken into F1vanklin R. Shirley. Shirley js the the group, Beba ·chapter of the na- College adviser to debate . ?<IId ds tiona! fuaternity. chairman of the newly-formed

Six of 1Jbe new members were . speech department.

-PART TIME-STUDENT TO WORK 3 HOURS PER DAY

$42.15 PER WEEK - GOOD CHARACTER & CAll Write P. 0. 4763, Winston-Salem, N. C. Giving Pho11e Number & Mailing Address

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GOLF SPECIAL e Put, 3. 5, 7, 9 Irons

SnAKTER SJfi : ~~~ --~---::.~-.--·-········----$•39 • 9 5 e 9 Irons

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MAN ON CAMPUS German Frat ., . .

Makes Public New Officers

Z E S T·O ACROSS FROM NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CENTEB

;__FREE I;" ASSES TO LITl'LE DUFFER COURSE-:-

BURGERS 19c , FRIES

HOTDOGS MILK SHAKES· -

I • I • •

.. ·

'•.

New officers for next year's Del­'ta Phi Alpha oblapter bere were IID­troduced: Mionday to members of the or~ation. The ·group is illll honorary Ql'ganization for German students. L-----;....'-'---------------~....1

Ha·s 'Art' Theme

Joyce May will ser¥e next year as 'president. Bill Ri<ih is Vice presi­dent, and Jooet Shields. is the new .secretary-treasurer.

Other business ilncluded the initda· tion of .tlhree new members, Jeanne Sims, M\arilyn WalLace and Mikal Barnes. ruteen people ~attended.

Dr. James c. O'F1ah&ty, chair­man ·of bhe Germoo depa.rbnent and adviser to the .group, pre00nted a book on !the life of Goethe .to the outstanding sendor in the :£ratel'lllity. Pale Bridgewater, outgoing presi­dent of the ·group, was chosen tihe outsll81!1ding senior.

The meeting was Delta Ohl.'s :Last of 1lhe year. It was iheld in .1Jhe little Magnolia Room. 1 ~

Storage

Student Expected 'llhomars P. Griffin, director of

res.idenees, hiais• asked that men stu­dents wishing to store items between

Soon bhe end of •this ~ester and the fir.st summer ;sesmon should read tihe UQtices posted on the bulletin

Ilast issue of The Student ·maga- play, Louviona, presented during ~ar~ of tb:~ dormitories. Students zme is e~ected ,to 'he ready for dis- the laboratory series of the College Witllh i~ In storage !have also trdbution .to students about the first Theater, will be printed in· its en- been aSkea t? ;read the amwrunce-week of el\'!aminations. tirety. Ken Garitano lbJas. pulblislb.ed ments for detadls. Dwi~t Pickard, candidate for his second short story of .the yem-- . . ·

editOrsMp of neXlt year's Student, is ''The Hitchihiker." 'Dhe other shOl'lt • Demand ds lheaV\}T aOO supply ~ getting the material ready for the story, "A Perfect Da~ for P!iranm ~ for gmdl!ates of N. C. states issue. Janet Binkley, outgoing ed1tor, .Fislh," is iby Pickard. Sch()()l of Agnculture. js letting Pic~ard ihlandle the entire . Coed Featured opemJtion. Lynn Koss, Wake Forest fresh·

.Agent· For

John Robarts Wake Forest Rings .

With Ne~ Wait Chapel c ,-. ~rices from $26 to $34 ompare.

/

------------------------ Contents Preview man coed, will be featured in a AGEE'S. B,-erli And Steele AAA

24 Hour Wrecker Serwice Also General Repair I Body Work

Fritts Motor Company 967 Brookstown Ave. . PA B-167'1

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TOWN STEAK HOUSE

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300 S. . STRATFORD RD.

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Happy Vacation! To all Wake Forest Stl.ldents and ~acuity. We Wish The Graduat­ing Seniors The Best Of Luck. ·

We will remain open during Summer . School.

This is our 50th Friendly Year Serving Men and Boys

At ..... '~ "'IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWiMIIIHihiliiilfihilliMII~~

)' FRAJU! .. !:-.~1'-!H .. ~ JdiUI ... IHIIUD...J .

Fourth at Cherry

.Pdckard /has released a ;preview of ~pecial photographic display by An­the contents. He intends to carry dy Har-mon. out a ,flheme .on !3rt. Representa1live There will be poetry by Mary works of Jobiam. Sten, student <n-tist BeverLy, 1a jWJior of W18ke Forest of Sweden, visiting Salem Co1lege, College, :and Pickaro. will ibe f~atured. The portfolio in- A member of the, fooulty, Dr. eludes three ~abstrlacts :and two col- Tnnoflhy D. Murphy, ihas ~tribut­leges. ed oflhe Jead article, a discussiOill- of

There is also an engraving by exiJStentialdsm Wld t!lnvolvement. Mur­Torui Lamberti of Salem. John Al- phy is a member of llb.e. plhilosophy

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~~:.s written ·an essay on mod- de~c!:~tdoes llOit klnow the EOOlCt Fashiellll Now Avallable ' Send Old Gold and Blacl To The Folks at H•• Two short stories and a play also date of distr:rbution. He. expects the =-::::::::::::::::::::::::J.===-=:.===-==::...:===-:::__::_::_:_:::::_=_.::==

1are d!ncluded. Sam Allen's one-act m~ine "not !adler tblan M.ay 26." -

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El C~tn Rey RESTAURANT

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WHEN ACCOMPANIED WITH I PAID ADMISSION

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REYNOLDA RD. OLD TOWI .• --------------

, I I I I I I . I I I I I I I ~I -

Do J6u T!Jink lOr YOuJ'Se/F? (PUT THIS QUIZ IN YOUR THINK~T~NK AND SEE WHAT DEVELOPS"')

IF YOU HAP to write the advertising for a small car, would you say, (A) "Hard to get into? Man, you don't get into it at all-you put it on!" Or, (B) "You can park it on a dirne-in fact; with most meters you can park two on a dime." Or, (C) "Gives you· more miles to the gallon because the gauge is set for Imperial gallons/' A 0 B 0 C 0

FOR A NEW frying pan, would your advertising say, (A} "Cooks pancakes in no time fiat!" Or, (B) .,Made of a new metal that dis"­tributes the beat evenly all over." Or, (C) "Folks, it's made by us folks who love t' make folksy fryin' :pans fer good ol' folksy :fried mush."

AOBOCO

TO ADVERTISE a filter cig­arette, would you teD cus­

_,.,,.,...,r:::::=~-- tomers, (A) "Pay no attention .to the filter~ it's the strong taste that counts -and it sure is strong!"

•.,;~q;7J~~ Or, (B)"Makeupyourown _, mind about what you want

in a filter cigarette-then choose the brand that Rives

l'it~~ it to you." Or, (C) "'l'hat weak, thin taste you: get teUs you our cigarette baa a tight, wadded-up filter."

AD eO qo· YOU"RE SELLING a trip around the world. W~u.ld you say in your ads, . (A) "Get into orbit, man!'~ Or, (B) "See people who look as crazy to you as you do to them." Or, (C) "Go now -Pop,will pay later."

AOeoco·

Thinking men and women know Viceroy does the job of smoothing the smoke without killing the taste-gives you a scientific filter design for the smooth taste a smoking man .wants. Yes, ,Viceroy is the thinking man's choice. Viceroy Filters ... bas a smoking man's taste. Find it out for yourself. Try Viceroy!

·*If you have picked (B) in these questions­-you think f!Jr yourself!

Familiar PllDIC , or crush­proof box.

THE MAN WHO THINKS FOR HIMSELF USUALLY CHOOSES VICEROY

A Thinking ·Man's Choice-Viceroy Filters \ • .. HAS A SMOKING MAN'S. TASTE!

_ 01960,Brow:n&:Wllllam,!OnTobaec»Corp.

. ,'.

I . .

',I

PA For the

' I

By ZENO MARTIN

VIEWING the DEAtS

Th~ Year Ahead The· sports year, 1959·60, •has been til1e most .successful for Wake

Forest since it hlas been dn Wiilston-Salem. It produced Coach of the Year .aw;ards for two Wake coaohes in major sports, llhe fi11st ·Winning . fp()tbcll season :since 1955, and illle ·Of •th:e lbest. basketbial:l teams m 1Jbe .sohoal's history. In tfrle spring spor.ts, where Wtak:e Foorest fared 'so well last year, the reoor.d dropped somewhat with· the .Joate season slump of the lb:a:seball team and .fihe failure of Bill Cullen to lreep ibd.s ACC tennis ohampiollJShip, bu.t Ronnie Thomas helped to a:ede~m ·tib.in~ somewhlat iby winning a share of the A:CC :golf dhampionsh.tp. for tihe second 00111-

secuti.'ve year, . . · ' · : ·· I ~~~~ : With •all of .this past lhistoiy l'apidly being forgotten, whart can be

expected for tlhe coming sports year? . · . Foo.tba1l •Sihould get the yeiai ilff to a good start, for, ibarring in­

juries, Wake :fo'orest will ~a'V'e lits ·best football .team~ .tJhe la:st 10 years this falL Wdth qwavterfb:ack Norman Snead ·back ~ect the Amen­patented doub!e•barrelled offense .for ,another year, .the Dea.oons cari be bowJ,bound if they can get off to a iiaost·sta:rit •by defeati·ng Clemson in tlhe opening game. ' ·

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 23, 1960 PAGE SEVEN

Cut Yo·ur

LAUNDRY BILL SAVE MONEY AT

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Dry ·Cleaners "SOUTH'S LARGEST COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY"

20c For Wash JOe For Dry I DAY SHIRT SERVICE

.Spirit-wise, ·t:.'lte spring football season easily surpassEd the Deacon .teanll; of the I:ast four year.s. Thia.t, coupled wil:Jh the talelllt that Coaoo Billy Hiklebm.nd and 1h!is young ruld ·capable staff. have ·gJathered for this fall .&hould ~oduce ·a real cont~nder for ·tfrle AOC ohiampionshlp.

' This ms,y be the year for the really big w.tnner, !l"ermniscent of lbhe 1944 Wiake team ;thiat bad an 8-1 re.oor>d ... that i:s, ;if la'llY'Olle c;an remember

KAPPA ·SIGMA'S AI Thornton looks at pitch by Wesley Fox, Kappa Alpha, as th~ two fraternities engage in intramural softball competition. Norman

Snead is u~pire. The game is part of the regular ·intramural activity. of social fraternities and other . groups. The KA's won the game, 19-4.

LOCATED AT

NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

tlliat :f:ar back. ·' Cagers Strong Again • . •

·Will B~.nes have it :a~ain tlhls winter?' , . Judgh1g by ·his recruiting pnJgress for next year'.s freshman team,

. it may b~ quite a while' before the ibenah...sitti:ng parson goes without a · Winner. Despite the loss of ·Teliables Dave Budd 1ancl George Ritchie, the

Jbaf.!w1boa:ling Deacs :TIJay ~ell :be loaded for the coming yeEu: ... and· ,could canceivaNy be a better hall club tlhian tthe one last wmter. The -big q<:es~ion in Wake's success is truly 1a .big one, for 1he s:tands s.ix feet,,

. ten rincheq. 'I1.b1at, of course, is the :!Jig fresJunm1, Bob Woollard, who ?an' ibe jus.t what is needed for Bones and his Deacons. With •a front li.i1e of Len Cha:Jpell and Je:·ry Steele, each of whom. stan.is six feet, eight

+ ·· inc11:o:-s,' .:r'd Woollard, tJhe Deacons .cou1d pose a formidable problem fo·r 'any team. ·

Not only does Wiake Forest htal'e,.the all-importa,nt height, ibut it h:as .the' gcod :it!:le men in Hilly Packer, Alley Hart :and David Wie:deman. If Wei.rlema'l pJ.ays the ball ·bhat :he :is capable of playing, Wake :forest will have the mos-t depth '::md power thia·t it has ever had in bhe. back~ court. If Lha1t doesn't ,come about next .season, it will in 1961-62 because of .the :addition of fres~man :ace George Leihmann :and ·his ,backcourt mate, wi~'Jse signing ·has not y,et been annolinced, :but who, like ·Leh­maonn \'l"a~ one of the most sou•g;ht ·after !higih sehoolers in_.uhe country.

W:ake Forest basketball should be ·set £o!1" :another year, barring any · imforseen edicts. .

Minor Sports To Pick Up ... Looking to the spring s.!'ason ·of 1961, baseball f,igures .to have a ;bet-

ter year. Biggest loss will be in the infield, where 1second. baseman · H(}bby Brown :a'lld third baseman Charlie Forte will :have ·to ibe replaced. There should be some ·help from the freshman :team, and the pitohlng 'Will easily be more balanced. J;ack StaUings' club c~m be the cbaanpion~

' ship .contender .t;hat mainy pr.edicted it would ibe .thls. season. '' 'Dhe picture; then for ,the major sports looks ibrigb.t for the coming

year. Wh1at aoout -the min.or sports?. All of .these 1are still bll.lcling, 'but v will be haV'ing addition>al sohoLars1hip :help next year ~ every case. The

:liacilities for these minor ·spolibs ::m:l excellent at W:ake Forest, and ;there may soon be :a time when bhe overall prog:r1am Wlill have the aid that it 111eec1s to produ<Je a team capaible <lf competing with ,tJhe .sohools m the ACC i!:hat h:a-ve a more :diversi.fi:ed aid prO<gr.am for all athletics. It will !lake a .long .time, perbaJps, .to catch up til the school that lis il'IWl!lldng

,;

•,I

. far aihead in thd3 category, t!he University of Miarytand, but 1Jhe time will come .•..

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1960 Wake Forest Baseball Statistics

Overall record: 14-7 ACC record: 7-7 (fifth in stand­ings) Player AB H RBI PCT. Forte _______ :. 84 30 14 .357

. Wilner ------- 80 27 26 .338 Franklin ..:. _____ 72 22. 7 .306 Currie ________ 84 · 24 17 .286 Covington __ _:_ 28 8 4 .276. Brown -------- 70 19 15 .271 Williams ------ 73 17 . 6 .233· Goodman _____ 88 20 7 .227 Backer _______ 57 12 8 .211 Plemmons ____ 33 6 1 .182 Pitching IP ERA WI; PCT. • West ______ 211/3 0.41 2 0 1.000 Muller ____ -20 2/3 3.48 2 0 1.000 Lang ______ 2()2/3 · 4.35 1 0 1.000 Roth _____ 15 2/3 2.29 1 0 1.000 Kiarcher _:..:. 9 2/3 9.36 1 0 1.000 ·Plemmons _ 811/3 3.09 6 5 .545 Galehouse _ 18 2/3 7.23 1 2 .333 I

Cullen Loses· Tennis Title

Wiake Forest'IS Bill Cullen, . de­fending Atl'antic ·Coast Conference tel1il'Us singles' dbiatp:pion, Jost the title flhat ihe had won in 1959 to Bruce Sylvia of tJhe Urui.versity of NO'nth Oarolinia in the .tournament pLayed ll"ecently at Chapel ffill. Syl-· via, a junior :at Norl:Jh Caro.lina who had defeated :Cullen in reguliar sea­son ;play, /beat ;the Wiake Forest 'num­:ber ooe malll by scores ·of 6-2, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1.

'llhe crew-cut Sylvia teamed with his doubles J)a!rtner Ben Keyes to beat Wake F<Jrest' s '.top pair of CUI­len and,Jim Duffy m straig!Lt sets, 6-2, 6:1, 6-1.

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Oullen ihad .tmuible witih his power-

ful first serve, laitd with that render- ~jiijijijijijijijijijijijiijjijiijijijijijijjiiiiiiiii~~~.-......_~~~~.,~~~~~-~~;!~~~~~~~~~~~:::~~~ ed virtuallw ineffective, Sylvia did '--------------------------...J li4;: a~ ::a • not ibla:ve much trouble in ddsposmg of his rival.

Sylvia is. the brotilier of lihe for-

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mer two time :ebarnpion of !the SoutJher.n Conference, Del Sylvia, who used to play 1al.so for the Re­lei~ · ohwnpionsihip · tennie teams. Del also attended the University of North; Carolina.

Cullen and Duffy lbad a:eached the finals of tihe doubles .championship by winndng over 'Clemson's Bob Bums 1and William ·Cooper by de· fault, lbhen defeating Duke's Joe Gia:ston 'lalld Dick Katz by scores of 8-6, 6-2.

Syivia and Keyes ihad reaohed 1lhe finals .by defeatmg t.he top doubles combiDJation of N. C.· State, 6-1, 6-1. MUSihtag Se~ 1and Jim H:art oom­posed· ·the State twosome.

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PAGE EIGHT Monday, May 23, 1960 OLD GOLD AND BLACK } d S Mary an nares

Baseball Coach Gives Resume ACC Track Win By JIM BATTERSON against the Deacoru; in ACC oom- The University of Maryland c.ap-

Coooh Jack Stallings of the Wake petition. The first WI3S •a 1-0 loss ~ t red its fifth consecutive Atlantic Forest ibaseball team iS'\l.Il1med up Duke wJJ.en Wake Forest W1aS still u . the past season Friday as "gratify- well in oontention with a 7~2 Con- Coast Conference trac~ c~ampu>n­ing in some w.a:ys, disappointing 'in ference record. ship ihere Saturday, w~ 8 of otihers." The secmld oame a week later 15 events and scoring 98 points.

Stallings was referring primarily wihen tlle Deacs bowed .to 'Oar'olina Duke University was second with to the fact that although. Wake 2-1 ;to ibe vll-tua:lly elimiinated from 40 oints emerged from the season wath an the Conference race. Both those P · . · 14-7 recor~. all of :the seven losses games could have gone the other The T.en-a.pms were led o: N1~k occ_urx~ a:n Atlantic CoaSt Cooler- way· in 1iact Stallings noted that Kovalak1des, who won the Javehn en~ competiti<m.. non; of the· Tuns which Duke and throw in record fashion and fol-

Wake dropped to fifth place in the Carolina scored in those games was !<Jwed with a win in the _sho~ put Conference standings. It ti.ed for earned. and fourth place in the discus. first in 1lhe Conference durmg the 'llhe . team s~ off to a :£ast Norbh OaN>lina p1Jaccd llhird witlh reguliar seaS<Oi!l last year. • • • • 28% points, followed by South

Looking back over the season, stM.t, winning rune of Its f.mst 1° Carolina with 20, Clemson 19¥.!, Stallings felt llhat tihere were really games, but llhen slumped to a 5-6 Virgirua 16, Wake Forest 2, and N. two games W\hich turned the tide record for tlhe :remaindng 11 glames. c. State 1. .

~ililililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilla~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiililililiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil~ Kovalakides set a record in the I javelin for the second consecutive

d·ay with a 220-foot heave on :his

E I ( 0 second try. This was two inches better than his performance Friday.

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" KING AND FOUR QUEENS" -Clark Gable STARTING NEXT SUNDAY

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3 ROAD RUNNER CARTOONS :AND RACING SHORTS

"FIBBER" Wjsh.es All Students And Faculty, A Pleasant Summer

Catskills Cagers To Get 2 D~acs , How do college basketball players

spend illhe summers? A great ml!\llY of .them play sum·

mer lbaskebball in rthe Catskills, and W'<lke Forest's sophomore sensation of 1asl: year, Len Obappe1l, ~ one' or them. For tbe last .two years Oblap­pellllas worked for Kutclter's Cotm· try Club, a lb.otel resort i!l1 upper New York sbate. While ·there Ohap­pell has played on 1lhe basketball team while ~ on the hotel bell· hop IS1Jaff. Tlhis ~ummer ihe plan5 to return and to take Wake Forest's six~ten fresblnen, Bob WooUard, witlh 1Wn.

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SENIO,RS! We of Belcher's, Inc. wish you all the success in the world in .. what­ever you may undertake.

And to you · undergraduates, we· wish you a pleasant summer and will be looking forward to seeing you next year at·. . . ·

Belch,r' s, Inc. NISSEN BLDG.

OPEN TIL 9 FRIDAY NIGHT

CiRADUA.TION SALE

JACKIE 11-lURDOCK, f41rmer Wake Forest basketball star. is the new 'Vake freshman basket· ball coach. Murdock was appoint­ed to fill the vacancy created in the basketball department follow­ing AI DcPorter's resignation. Murclocl\ played for the Deacons in the years 1954-57, and was a star for the \Vake Forest varsity in 73 consecuth·c games. He m::tde Chuck Taylor's All-Ameri­can team in 1957.

Deacon Golfer Co-Champion

"I started caddying when I was nine years old, and two years later I was playing," two-time At­lantic Coast. Conference golf cham­pion Ronnie Thomas sa;d. Since .that time Thomas has emerged as one of golf's best bets for futm·e stardom.

Before con1ing i.o Wake Forest, the Burlington senior was. N'=!rth Carolina High School Champ1on. In his sophomore 'year he placed second in the Aoc· tourney. Last year he set three .records in the ACC meet at Chapel Hill. His win­ning 138 mark for the 36 holes set a new course record, a ne-w con­ference 1·~cord, and his , own per­sonal record f01· tournament compe-tition. .

After helping pace Wake to a mediocre 6-~ record tilis year, Thoin·as successfully defend-<:'d his AOC title ·by having rounds of 70-72 and .tying MaryLand's Deane Eea­man for the ACC championship in individual play.

After graduation from Wake Forest this spring, Thomas plaru; to teach in Winston-Salem city schools, before turning to profes-sional g-olf. ··

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The "BIG 7" s~y thank you for y~ur patronage during the past year :and invite you to visit them during 'the ·summer.

West· 4th Street· BARBE-R S.HOP

•' .

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