l -·····. k n 1 v nuu · 2018. 3. 20. · chairman of the st,!lering commit- government...
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![Page 1: l -·····. k n 1 v nuu · 2018. 3. 20. · chairman of the st,!lering commit- government offices at the conven- to Vivian Butler. Sylvia Mangum, Hirano, independent, was nomi](https://reader033.vdocuments.site/reader033/viewer/2022060911/60a624e7b236311cd0323794/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
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Discus~~s New Basketball, Rules
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VOLUM·E XL .. WAKE.FOREST COLLEGE. WAKE FORES'l'o;:Jl~RTH CAROLiftA•.-. ~~NDAY,_ ~ARCH 28, 1955 NUMBER 21
lfr~e»Jafl ~amed~~~~~ ~eJ CaiJlpus ~~i-ty.Chooses B~~ette BSUPrestdent By···counc_it·Stui_: e_ n_-t _Body Prexy Nomt.nee
By CHARLES NEWMAN - .
. Ken F~eem.an, J oilesville junior, has been elected pre~i- _Judicial Body Liats dent of the Baptist Student Union for the coming year·. _ ,He was elected Wednesday night in a presidential election Rules For Election 'by an ·open meeting of the.~S,U. - . ,· · _ '
. Freeman, the unanii:nous choice of the BSU .nominating April 26 ha,s ,be~n set for the committee, defeated Gary. Copeland who· was nominated I forthcoming stud~nt government from the floor during the meet- · elections ·by the Student Council. ing. _,. .
. The .BSU nominating committee has selected candidates for other BSU offices. They are to be voted on wednesday at 7 p.m. in th.e oia Euzelian Hall on third floor of Wait Hall in a general election.·
Joe Killian has ·been nominated for first vice· president in. charge of enlistment. Barbar~ Barr is the committee's
candidate for second (social) ·vice A •
president. Frz ~is . Crl!mpler ~s the third (devotional) vice presldential nominee.
Extension Director ·Dick Thornton has -been nomi
nated for extension director. Bill. Whedbee is missions nominee, and Jim Goode has been nominated for music chairman.
Sarah Riecke has been nomi' nated publicity . di~ector; Polly · Binkley is nominee for secretary.
Joe Millsaps is cand,idate for Sunday School superintendent, a~d Rod Beals is· Training Union director nominee.
Copeland, Freeman's opponent, ~ has been nominated for treasurer.
Bob Overstreet is .vespers. chair--
Runoffs are to be held Aprii . 28.
The Council also set c•J.t rules fdr the election. According to Bruce McDaiuei, council chairman, they ·inchide:
1. No campaign posters will appear on Pub ~ow walls.
2: There ·'\\-ill be. no signs on, against, or attached ·to Wait Hall or the Chapel.
3 .' There will be no campaigning within 12 feet of the polls.
4. There will be no more than two ·Council members and two voters in the voting rooms :at the sa~e time. There will be no politicking in the voting rooms.
5. Proper- written identification KEN FREEMAN must be presented to the. Student
. . . BSU president • • • : ' Council member at :the polls who -------------- will use his discretion about that
idep.tification. 6. Student Couneil monitors
will be on duty to see that al1 rules are observed. All jurisdiction will be in the hands of Student Cc'Llllcil members.
Paper To Run Articles About Wake-Forest The council · also ruled that a
clear majority will be necessary Wake Forest College will be for the election. where one office
man noininee. featured April 7 in a special page is involved. Where more than one Transfer Student , in Charity and Children, publicat- office is involved, -the top number
Freeman, a transfer student ion of the. Mills Home Baptist of candidates for that number .. of from Mars Hill College, ca~e to Orphanage in Thomasville. offices will be elected. · Wake Forest. last fall. While at · · Mars Hill; he was BTU director, The article is to be one. of a Balloting. 'Will take place in the and was· awarded the most out-. series;_of stories pf North Carolina offices on Publications Row. Polls standing student medal by stu- Baptist · institutions of higher wlll be open· for voting oetween 8 dents and faculty. learning .. A page of the paper is a. m. and 5 p. m.
Since coming to Wake Forest, devoted for seven successive weeks Present seniors will vote in the he is- a member of the Phi Society, to each of the seven institutions. Recreation · room. Other classes social vice president of the Cullom The series is a program of the will vote in WFDD, Howler, and Ministerial Conference, a BTU State Baptist Convention's Council the Student offices.
·group captain, Sunday· School 'on Christian Education. It was Election results will be posted class president, a member of Del- begun March 3 with a story on in front of the Social Science ta" Kappa Alph~ honorary mix;i~- campbell College. Building. terial fraternity,· and a partici- Gardner-Webb College was --------------pant in BSU extension work. featured March 1!), and Meredith
He is a ministerial student and College Ma.I:ch 17. The March 24th a history. major. issue featlured Chowan College.
'T-welfth Night' Tr~out~ ·Held
Tryouts J.or the cast of the College Theater's production . of "Twelfth Night" wHl continue through ·this afternoon:
Selections for methbers of the cast are to be held in the theater room, third floor of the Alumni Building.
The next issue, March 31, 'Will contain stories on Wingate College. •
After the story on Wake Forest, Mars Hlll College will be featured in the April 14th issue to end :the series.
Each article carries pictures of campus life at each ·school along with a message from the Rtesident of the school. Some articles include essays on .the school, and some, highlights of - the school year.
APOToHold Charity_ Dance
Alpha Phi Omega, honorary service fratemity, 'will sponsor a. dance to be ·held April 15 at the Community House. ,
The informal .dance will feature a floor show at the inter· mission. Plans for the affair include music by a .combo and . local talent for· the floor show.
The dance has been set from 7 :30 to 11 p.m. Completed plans are to be ar-ranged this week.
_ Proceeds from the dance are . to go to char,ity.
GRAY BOYETTE Campus Party presidential nomi"ee
,Student Party Resets Meel For Wednesday
Johnson, Maulden, Freeman, Day Get Top 5 Norninations
· Gray Boyette was nominated as the Campus Party candidate for president of the student body· in an open~ five ho'ur nominating convention Friday night . - Other Campus Party candidates for· the top five student government posts are Ruffin Johnson, vice president; Hilda Maulden, secretary; Ken Freeman, treasurer; --------------- and Richard Day, president of the
WGA Picl~s Candidates
Munn, Lide, White Run For. President
By WILLIAM PATE The nominations committee· of
Woman's Government Association has selected three candidates for president of WGA - Lorraine Munn; Ann Lide, and Notie Vay White.
senior class. Bruce McDaniel served as
chairman of the convention which lasted from ~ i.o 11 p.m. Twenty- ' four de!eg'a '33, composed of seven in_dependent 'lten, five coeds, and three each T'Om Kapp~ Alpha, Kappa' Sigma 'Lambda ~ni Alpha, and Sigma Ph Epsil~~~ social fraternitie:;;, votec.. lor the 35 nominees. Tom Simmons served as vice chairman, - Lynne Laughrun as secretary, and Jack Kehoe ·as treasui·er of the party.
Boyette, . KA, was accepted for the presidential nomination by acclamation. Johnson, Kappa Sig, got the vice presidential nomi
Election for president of WGA nation after Joe Millsaps, Lambda will be held April 5. The other 11. Chi, was declared ineligible beposts will be filled in an election cause of his class standing' as to April 6. WGA officers constitute number of hours. the new Women's Honor Council. Miss Maulden, a coed, was un-
Petitions for c~ndidates other opposed in the nomination for than those nominated by the com- secretary. Freeman, an independmittee must be in by 12 noon Fri- ~nt, got the bid for treasurer over day. These petitions must be sign- Charles Reid, Kappa Sig, ~nd Keed by at least 10 per cent of the hoe, independent. Day, KA, was coeds. unopposed for president of the
senior class. Senior Class
Committee Members The nominating committee con
sists of Miss Lois Johnson, dean Other nominees for senior class of women, the -WGA president, posts are Kehoe for vice president,
· h ~ · f th s · 1 St d. and· Carol Stroud, coed, for secre-Student Party dal:, egates have re- dependent; Gordori Tayloe, Sigm<> c airman o e oCia · an ards .., tt tary-treasurer. Kehoe defeated
set the•~ nominatmg" convention Chi·, Ann Kitchen, Bostwick Dol~ Commi ee, and 10 members J K J h ... .... · oe Dupree, appa Sig, and o n for Wednesday at 6 p. m. in the coed; Ruth Woodlief, Johnson selected from the four classes by Brantley, Lambda Chi. Miss Social Science Building. Dorm coed; Ted Russ, Sigma Pi; the women members of their re- Stroud was unopposed.
The convention had originally and Jim Adams, Pi Kappa f\lpha. spective classes. Nominees for senior class Men's been slated for last Thursday Ed Brannock, PiKa, is chairman Candidates for the post of vice Honor Council seats are A. T. night, but was postponed because of the platform committee. Others president of WQA are Betty Jo Austin, Lambda Chi; Bill Whedmost of the delegates wanted to are Sammy Flynn, Alpha Sig; Hansen and the two runners-up bee, independent; Bill Walsh, inattend the. concert by the Don Larry Vanhoy, independent; Bee in the presidential race. dependent; Owen Herring, · indeCossack Chorus, according to Joe Bell, Sigma Chi; Jo Butler, Bost- Miriam Allred, Martha Bond pendent; Dupree; and Robert Hough. wick Dorm coed; Notie Vay White, Cdok, and Dee Hughes will vie Caldwell, KA.
Hough was named chairman of Johnson Dorm coed; Don Craver, for secretary. Those nominated for They won over Char!P.s Sramey, ·the party without opposition, and Theta Chi; Don Cannady, Sigma treasurer are .Jo Chandler, Sybil SPE; Jasper Memory, KA; Brant-Abe Elmore was accepted as party Pi; and Tommy Morris, independ- Hinkle, and Lynne Laughrun. ley; Bob Waggoner, SPE; and treas'ill'er by acclamation. ent. Other Nominees Louis Myers, independent.
Nominees for chairman of the Senior class Student Legis-Patsy Wilhelm, who i.s nqt a The 20 de.lega. tes to the s. tudent social Standards Comm1·ttee are
d I t to th t P t t t lature nominees are Joan Mauney, e ega e e conven lOU, was ar Y nomma mg co~ven lon ar~ Billie Olive. Marietta. Perry, and coed; Waggoner; Sarah Riecke,
elected party secretary ove: dele- composed of three mdepend~nti Carol Stroud. Those for town girls' coed; and Tom Simmons, indegates Callie Ann Coughlm and men, three coeds from Bostwick representative are Polly Binkley, pendent. They won over 'Ben StitNotie Vay .White. Dorm, four coeds from Johnson Sally Patterson, and Virginia ton, independent; Jo Anne Powell,
Hough appointE!d a· steering Dorm, an~ two. delegate~ . e~h Pearson. .,coed; and Bob Bartholomew, KA. committee to plan all campaign from the flve soclal fratermtles m · Johnson Dorm president nomi- Junior Class functions for the. Student Party the party. nees are Hilda Maulden, Vann Junior class presidential nomi· and a platform committee. The delegates will elect the Mitchell, and Sarah Riecke. Presi- nation went to Joe Millsaps over
Doug Maynard, Theta Chi, is party's candidates· for 35 student dent of Bostwick Dorm bids went Bill Starling, Kappa Sig. David chairman of the st,!lering commit- government offices at the conven- to Vivian Butler. Sylvia Mangum, Hirano, independent, was nomitee. Others are Jack cottrell, AI- tion Wednesday, according to and Joyce Ann Porter. Gloria Flip- nated for vice president over Walt pha Sigma Phi; Tony Wrenn, in- Hough. pin, Joanne King, and Joan Pierce Ward, KA, and Starling. Dee
will vie for corresponding secre- Hughes was accepted for secreThe production, a . Shakespear:~ ean comedy, is to be presented as a part of· the Magnolia Festival to be held early·. in May. The Theater traditionally presents a play by Shakespeare during the
The front-page masthead of the school paper on each campus is tised . to .head the page. Special emphasis in each story is given to an outStanding characteristic of each school, such as the Wake Forest removal program, the Mars' Hill centerini,al program,' and the Gardner.l.Webb golden anniverary program.
Kinjo Plan~ To Teach English tary-treasurer by acclamation.
tary. Nominees for Men's Honor Class RepresentativeS Council from the junior class are
Those running for senior class Starling; Ward; Lloyd Preslar, representative are Janice Edwards, independent; and Jackie Murdock, Nancy Evans, and Chris Ford. For independent. They defeated Joe junior class representative will be Killian, SPE; Chester Howe, KapDenise Baxter, Phillip Ann Gard- pa Sig; and Bill Pearce, Lambda ner, and Helen Smith. Sophomore Chi.
Festival week. · · Tryouts ·began· Friday a'itd will
continue at 3:30 p.m. this afternoon.
A ·-specific da~ for the Festival has not _yet been set. ·
Glaude F. Gaddy, director of the· education council, is in charge of the,program. Marse Grant is editor of Charity and. Children.
Dr. Lovelace ·Gets Fellowship For Research In Near\East ·
Dr. Marc Lovelace, associate Included in his studies at professor o f Arcllaeology at Jerusalem will be ·in: the excava- · Southeastern Seminary, has been ltions at Old Testamenf Jericho. awarded a fellowship in the Dr. Lovelace will participate in American School of Oriental Re- the excavation· as a member of search in Jerusalem for thel .tlie staff under the direction of academic. year of 1955-56. Miss Kathaleen' Kenyon. The dig-
The announcement was made re- ging season will b11 in January, cently by Seminary President S. Febrrary, and March of next L. Stealey. year ,
Dr. Lovelac~ lias been granted Dr\ E. W. Hamrick, professor a Sabbatical leave by the Board of· Archaeology in the College, of Trustees aDd expects to be was a fellow at the Jerusalem abroad for about 15 months. school in 1961-52. ·
Live Jn Jerusalem Travel Seminar Dr. Lovelace and Dr. Pope D.un-
The Corporation of the Ameri- can are conducting this summer can Schools of Oriental Research the Southeastern Baptist Theemaintains two schools, one at logical Seminary Travel Seminar, Jerusalem and one at Baghdad. and wm leave New York on May Dr. Lovelace and his family win 28 with a party of about 40 perlive in ierusalem. · sons for a study tour which will
Duke University, Wake Forest, include Europe, the Middle East, and the Seminary Jtre the North and the Holy' Land, for which Carolina members of the corpora- 'academic credit will be grante!L'tion. Other schools included in Dr. Lovelace will leave the the 90 in the- organization are party at the .Shannon airport in Columbia, J<>hn Hopkins, Prince- Ireland, and return to· France for ton, and Ya\~· . · · two months of study. He plans to
Dr.· Lovelace will sp!)nd two meet his :family. in . BeiJ::ut, I.emonths this: summer in· France banon, and proceed with them to in preparato~i studies. Jerusalem. ·
PHOTO BY IRVIN GRIGG
·:English .Teacher- Seiki Kinjo •. senior st~dent from Okinawa, studl!!S for his Wake Forest
classes. Although,-he soml;!times ha5 to use a Japanese "poney" for the. more technical courses, Kinjo plans to return to his, homeland
· after graduation to te;lch English in the schools there.
Wants To Tell About America
By 'fiLFRED WINSTEAD A young man who traveled
half way around the world to
class nominees are Nancy Fogle- Junior class Student Legislaman. Joan Owen, and Linda Wil- ture nominees are J. L. Dawkins, lard. (Continued On Page Two)
attend Wake Forest College plans fJ'l. •bbl 'T' 'T' if: 1 T • l 'to return io his native Okinawa .L TZ e .L 0 ~ estz y U · TZU ; after graduation in June to · .teach English grammar and B A k V R' t t• ~~r~u;,~eli~h;:-:b::~~~;:;~~~ ryan._. s s r or ~ rae lOU .
Seiki Kinjo, 21-year-old Japan- By BOB GIRARD requestmg a formal retraction. ese student who is rounding out College President Harold W. Dean Bryan stated in the letter, his third year at Wake Forest Tribble will appear as a witness "This is to inform you that I has many things he wants to tell for the defense in the Moot C~urt ?ons~der. the photog~aph and the his prospective students but the case of Dean D. B. Bryal_l agamst rmphcatwns along wrth the words first feature he conside;s worth Old Gold and Black .e~ttor Dan thereu.nder to be a false repreof t k"n i t h" 1 '! Poole and reporter Wtlham Pate. sentation and defamatory to me."
. a 1 g. n ° Is c assroom 15 In a surprise move by the de- Answers Letter the Amerrcan honor system. fense attorneys Dick Kennedy In an answer to this letter
At home, Kinjo says, "teachers and Albert Russ: Dr; Tribble was Poole contended t h e r e w a ~ don't trust ~tudents." .He relates subpoenaed to appear at the night nothing to retract. He said, "We bad memorres of high school session of the Wake Forest Moot have tried in ·ever'!} way to coteachers who sat in front of the Court on April 19 as a witness. operate with you and the adroom on quiz day, furtively Dean Gaines M. Rogers of the ministration and will continue to watching students over a news- School of Business will also ap- do so in the future. However, we paper or through holes punched pear as a witness for the defense. feel that we were justified in in it. The two defendants, Poole and printing the aforementioned pic-
No Cheating Here Pate, and photographer Irvin ture and cannot conceive how it "At Wake Forest was the fir3 t Grigg are the other \vitnesses could have possibly caused the
'time I have been trusted in called by the defense. injuries complained of in your For Plaintiff letter."
exams," he points out. "I have Attorneys Wes Bailey and John The case will be brought before never seen an instance of cheating Hall, council ·for Dean Bryan, the first spring session of the here." have called Dr. Robert E. Lee, Wake Forest Moot Court on April
Professors and students in. Prof. Ernest Machen, both of the 19 at 7:30 p.m. It is expected America are "like friends," says Law School, and Prof. Jasper that the jury will be composed of Kin~o, who would like to create Memory as witnesses for the towns people, adding local inthis relationship with . his stu- plaintiff. Dean Bryan is also ex- terest to the case. dents. He quotes Confucius, whose pected to take the stand in his John Blackwell has been as-teachings have been for genera~ own behalf. signed the duties of clerk of tions the Japanese "national Defendant Pool recently re- court and Pat Mast will perform
{Continued 0~ Pa&"e Two) eeived a letter from Dean Bryan tasks of sheriff.
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Wake Forest College· • •
Dan Poole Editor
Gray Boyette Business Manager
:Monday, 1\farch 28; 1955
Issue Y s. Personality · While endeavoring to remain aloof from
political battles, Old Gold and Black would . nevertheless like to make a few suggestio~s to both political parties this year concerning party platforms.
In the past, it has often been the policy for a party to sort out those ideas not adopted in the previous year~s platform and to include them into its own. For three years straight, one'if party didn't even bother to change its platform.. .
Some of the gems vote-hunting politicians have come up with in the past include television in the girls' dorms, more lights on the campus, promoting better relationship in the "colleg<e family," promoting athletics, improving telephone service in dorms fiproviding information services, improving physical facilities of the campus, promoting a "Social Standards Committee,'' and so on-ad infin-itum. .
Usually either these selling points weren't matters for student government to concern themselves with, or they were just plain ridiculous. Occasionally, some decent prom· ise of legislation would slip in-that is if the parties slipped up. -
This year, for a change, it would be nice to see both parties exert some effort to find genuine items for improvement of student affairs instead of contesting with each other for the honor of promising the most for which they can deliver the least.
Here are some suggestions that might .form a basis for a platform which can fulfill what it promises. These su·ggestions are offered to any and all parties without discrimination.
1) Perhaps the only document on this cam~ pus that is more ambiguous than the Student Body Constitution is the constitution of the Women's Government Association. To both we would suggest selection of a committee on ·style. a committee especially set up to make provisions in both constitutions say what they mean to say.
2) Create the class offices. The constitution mentions some of these offices and what several of them are_ But nowhere are these offices established, their numbers set, or their duties fully defined.
3) Clarify the standing of WGA in relation to student body government. In the same constitution there are two provisions which appear to be working at cross purposes.
On the one hand Article XIX of the constitution recognizes WGA as a "governing body" with executive, judicial, and legislative powers to control the conduct o:f "the social conduct of women students."
On the other hand, Section 2 of Article VI states that the Women's Honor Council shall be composed of those officers that also compose WGA, thereby placing WGA i-n direct relation to student body g'overnment and making it a part of it.
A stand one way or another should be taken on the true relationship of WGA to the stude.nt body government.
These ·are only three proposals on which the coming campaigns can base a definite stand. There assuredly are others.
Heretofore the parties that have risen on this campus have n.ot taken a stand on issues. They have had none. Elections have tended lo be mere popularity contests. The m.or!'! evidences of popul~rity a candidate could place beside his name, the better chance he would have. ·
It is time that candidates were elected to office on their merits. It is time candidates were selected on the basis of what they will do, not what they have been.
This can be done mainly through the parties, through those parties which ar~ w~lling to offer constructive improvement m student gov.er:qment as their excuse for being.
We Like Politicians A new ruling of the Student Council, the
body which handles all rule-making concerning elections, states that there shall be no campaignin·g within 12 feet of the· polls.
We are happy to hear of this ruling-particularly so since the elections are held every year on publications row. It not orily-may keep politicians from roaming the Old Gold office, but will serve enormously in keeping that expected mass of campaign material out of our hair. Maybe we'll keep a clean office this year.
Sun Tan University A proposal to build a new bathing beach at
Florida's University of Miami resulted in a blistering editorial in the Miarui Hurricane, which attacked the plan as furthering the detrimental "country club reputation" now facing the school.
"It's hard en·ough now," said the editors, "to present the real University of Miamithe study and the research, the cultural and the educational •growth going on daily. It's hard enough to convince people that there may be playboys within the school, but that it is not a playboy school.
The editorial was accompanied by a cartoon showing a student bather shaking his fist at black ·clouds hovering over a beach. The caption: "Why isn't the sun out? I paid my tuition!"
...
--r=By Wiu..iAM PAT
1 ==Magno!~ Lea~es _ It §eem8 To .ztle J;ly WILFRED· WINSTEA.n ..
·caB1pus PaJ!ty .. Pic~~,]lqyett~ For President When a history professor comes
into class, his students. ra,rely breathe easily until he has seated himself. For then they know that in all probability he will not give a pop quiz. ·
Last week the prof entefed the classroo:mr::.,. a!'!d,, after a few Iii c);. ments, took his seat .. He t h e n surpri'Sed 11 i s students by ..an,.. noun~ing that he: _ was a b 0 u t ti> give a differ• ent kind of quiz.
He read orally a g'ro up of
multiple-choice questions ·about current events to which the ·students were to write answers. A student asked if the pops were to be handed in- ·
"No," said the prof, "they are only for your own mortification_"
Political advice: "Every vote counts-some of 'em
count two."-(Coy Privette, present student body president.)
One evening, two coeds . passing a magnolia on the campus noticed a pair of crutches. ·one was leaning .against the tree; another lay on the ground. They paused, curious.
In the darkness of the magnolia a couple chuckled.
The two coeds hastened on.
As candidates for the Campus Party nomination to the student body treasurer's post got up to leave the room for voting in Friday night's convention, one of lthem went to the convention secretary .and whispered in her ear. She got up and erased his name, then rewrote it-
She had misspelled his name.
Because of the striking personality of the accompanying photograph of one of l~~t year's IDGAD (I Don't Give A Darn) Party candidates for office in :the spring elections, it has hung in the Old Gold office gallery.
Recently, a coed in passing glanced at it, did a double take, and peered at it closely.
"Gor' be!" she exclaimed. "Isn't that awful? Who is it?"
A reporter pointed out the gentleman who had posed for the picture. The coed blushed.
Another coed with her also inspected the picture. She· didn't mind being frank in her opinion. - "I'll see that in my sleep to
night," she said.
Discussing Whitman's poetry in the class by that name, a student said:
"Dr. Snuggs, if this stuff is poetry, I've had a rather provincial conception of poetry-..... all my life.''
Replied Dr. Snuggs: "That's a logical conclusion.''
Two fronds of a potted plant
began to tickle the back of the neck of a student sitting in a re'staurant. He tried to brush ·them away but tli~y came back. He tried to bend them back inside the plant- They popped out again.
Suddenly he gave up. With . exaSperation he stood up a~!l: pushed the whole plant out of his way_ Then he · finished his meal with an air of satisfactio.n.
On Joe Jlough's Stuclent ?~rty; Majorettes Upget Over Tcyouts
JOE HOUGH'S Student Party gave the Campus a: real taste" of democracy last week. _ .
The Student Party caucus, · which postponed !itud.ent govern~ . ment nominations Thursday ·night
to pei"mit the delegates to attend the Don Cossack Chorus, opened. with Hough presiding. · · . ' . \
A:ll in fun, Hough said the caucus needed a chairman and he though he wa.S. the man for the job. He entertained a motion· to that effect, and it was made. Hough daied 'ariy opposition .to show itself, shook his fist. at . the g r o u p, ·and declared·· himself elected.
·Then, turning to the two Old Gold and ·Black 'staffers there, !:Tough asked, "Is· this democracy, press ? " Hence, this column item.
-The press assumes that it's democracy--of a sorlr-and notes that apparently Hough wanted the ;iob.
C a m p u s Party presidential nominee Gray Boyette's logical opponent is Tommy Frank, Sigma Chi who has been groomed for
the post ·since he ran up a. phenomenal 222 votes in his freshman candidacy for a legislative -post ..
Fr!lnlf, incidenta,lly, . was the first choice of the ·BSU. nominat~ ing committee . for . president of that organization. Informed of the decision ·:on ~ Fri~ay, i),e turne.d down . the nomin~tion the., .. following Thursday, according to a. member of the cOmmittee, because he hadn't ".had time·· to decide."
The c~mmittee had discussed the · possibility of 'a provision to the effect that the BSU president cculdn't serve as vice preside~t or president of the stUdent body, but the ma~ter didn't get beyond the discussion stage. .
COLLEGE MAJORETTES are up in the air. Aft~r being chosen last spring, they paid out last summer about '$50 api~ce, accord-· ing to one of them, for maierial f()r uniforms, bato,ns, and' the like. · ·
They · didn't mind d9ing this.
Kinjo Wants To ·Teach They h~d been told that they would not have to try out for their positions again · by band director Angelo Capparella. · · ·
Now, though, the times· s~em to. have ch~~:n~ed. The · liand directo:r plans to bring a numbe:r o'{ high school majorettes who . will be here next · year· to 'Wake Forest for tryouts against · tli.e - present ·
(Contin':led From Page One) morality," as telling stude~ts, ' "Don't walk in the shadow of your teacher; stay three steps behind."
The Japanese youth, who notes :that "Okinawans think of Japan like Southerners think of Ameri.ca," will receh-e a Bachelor of Arts degree in June. He entered Wake Forest in the fall of 1951 as a sophomore, transferring n year's credit from the post-i'ar, American-financed University of ~he Ryukus on Okinawa.
World War II He was in the fifth grade at
Okinawa when World War II caused his family to move to the mainland of Japan. Later, he re'turned to Okinawa to finish high school.
Kinjo came .to Wake Forest on aU. S. Army-sponsored Exchange of Persons scholarship, which paid travel and jncidentals_ Room and board were paid by a Rotary Club grant, arid Wake Farest took care of tuition and fees.
A firm believer in democracy, Kinjo will take back to Olj;inawa his conception. of the "traditional American idea of freedom.'' To .'him, this means the statements <Jf the U. S. Constitution-freedom of press, religion and assembly - and the Jeffersonian principles of democracy.
Kinjo has seen most of the eastern seaboard, from Boston to Miami, and calls optimism, friendliness and kindness the characteristic traits of the American people.
His gratitude is "limitless" to persons who have helped him,
including those who have read books to him, helped him to learn to- use a typewriter, and invited him to their homes. With a broad 1grin he adds one special kindness: "thumbing," he laughs, gesturing with the familiar request ft>r a ride. "' ,
To tli'ose who drop by his small .dormitory room, Kinjo returns this hospitality, and the visitor is likely to be handed a glass of steaming hot, bitter green tea, which· the host explains is as common to Japanese as coffee ~s to Americans.
Well - informed on current events, Kinjo dislikes what he calls the trend in this country "toward things contrary to fundamental American rights." As examples, he cites the military service academies' prevention' of cadets from participating in this year's controversial Red China .debate topic· and the recent prohibition of the sale of Russian :newspapers.
"Since this is a representative government," Kin j o observes, "these things will _go on if the people· like them. During the war we couldn't hear certain radio broadcasts or read American newspapers. If you deny, something to the people, you are not trusting them."
American students are more indifferent and less political-minded than Japanese students, Kinjo believes, because they are living comfortable 1 i.v e s. "Americans think how to live tomorrow, what to buy next, not if they will live tomorrow," he says, _speaking as
majorettes. . · · · ' . Needless to say the majorettes
are perturbed. And it would seem that t[ley haxe cause to be.
one who has seen his people sell their blood for money' to buy food.
Kinjo's usually cheerful countenance sobers when he recalls 1the war, "We were· guilty.'' he volunteers, ",but we lost everything we had. Our desire now is not to do it ·again." With conviction he declares, "It is impera-lthTe!" · ·
Speaking as a Japanese student with warm feelings for America, Kinjo says, "We have to promote ·understanding, humaneness. We ~ave to avoid war.'' The basic t1eeds of the Japanese are time and peace, in ·which to carry out ,democracy a,nd complete the social evolution, according. to Kinjo.
With a flourish of pride, Kinjo exclaims, "M o s t certainly, I think I will be first Okinawan to g,raduate from Wake Forest. If any students here go to Okinawa, .look for me. We have big talk about Wake Forest."
He lias enjoyed life in this country and is grateful for the l()pportu~ity to study }Jere. "You ~an't 001fbt," :he says earl).estly, "the human feeling I have for American people, and this feeling, enlarging to· other peoples, is. the best thing 'you· can IElarn studying in an American colleg·e-"
(Continued From Page One) SPE; Rod ~eals; Lainhda Chi; and :P<m ~c~.J.t. in<1ep,endent. rh~.Y W91l. over Pearce; How~, ·1\;'lartha Bond Cook, coed; Barbara ·Hill, coed; -Charles Snipes, KA> 'Brunson• Sa,lley, K~ppa S.ig; ~i,lli~n; :·· ~.~d Ken Hill, ~A~ . · . · .
· · · Sophomore Clasfl Nominee for president"· "of the
soph9more class. is · Larry WilIia~s; . independent. ~e defeate~ Bobby Northcutt, Kappa Sig,. and.: WaHace Freeman, KA. _
·Tommy Bunn, Lambda chi, was nom,in~ted. 'for vic~ P~est!ient of the sopliomore class over Northcutt and Freeman. Dottie Braddock, coed, was ·unopposed for ·,
. sEcretary-treasurer. · •· · -Nominees for sophomore class
Men's Honor Council seats are Jimmy Powell, KA; Fred Simpson, independent; and David Hughes,. Kappa Sig. They won over Vern_ Pike,. SPE; . Fred Turnage, independent; and North:. cui£. . . .. .
Slate Tabulations Sophomo;e . class nominees for
Student Legislature are'.Pike and Lynne Lau.ghrun, CC)e~. rhey. defeated Nancy Fogleman, coed; Jeff Helms, 'KA; and Northcutt:
The Campus Party slate in·'cludes 12 independent men, seven coeds, five · KA's, · four · Kappa;. Sigs·, four Lambdft· Chi's, and three SPE)'s. .- ·
A platform committee was appointed with Millsaps as chair~an. Ot~er meni.bers a,re Boyette, Coy Privette, Miss Maulden, Ke-h<;~e ~nd Joh1;1so~. ·
Wheaton Ghost Creates Furor.
(ACP) - Lenora,. the Elgin Ghost, created a pprtentuous fur(/r on the campus of ·Wheaton College ~ere, according to a ghostwriter for the Wheaton Re-cord. ·
. It all started, the Record relates, en a Friday afternoon when a 'sophomore talked. five friends into making a midnight tri"O to Elgin,· lll., to find a "ghost" he had seen there earlier in the w~ek. The "ghost;" a - simple,· luminous white post on a Ioney country roa,d, impressed t h e I!T()Up, not with its spectral quali-
. ties. but with its macabre potentialities.
The five returned to· the campus, offered whispered rumors which grew into, anxious doubts,ne.rvous laughs, and shivers. Mo:re carloads· of students investigated Saturday and Sunday, and · on ' their . return the whisperings mounted to ominous·· proportions.
Strange· Initiations Marked Golden Bough
On . Monday night the biggest .e-host raid in. _ the . history of Wheaton ·surged··upon the inno.; cent white post.· Several hundred students participated,; state police were called by the eitizen):'y; Lenora was dul:?· splotched .. with initials and lipsti~'k and, $.e El~in Gl1,ost d.e·materializ~d into ~ thing of the past~
But now. queried the Record's ghos}writf1r, ,;have· you heard of the Vaml!ire of West ~urcira ?"
By SHIRLEY MUDGE Black-robed men c a r r y in g
lighted candles entered the darkened chapel. Silently they walked :among the students until the men they sought were located and tapped on the shoulder.
Thus began in 1925 the initiation ceremony for an organization known as the· Golden Bougb, predecessor on the . Wake Forest campus of Omicron Delta Kappa, national honorary leadership :fraternity.
Mter new members were tapped (and this ceremony always took place on a night when the moon was full), they were led very solemnly out to the golf course, up to tbe north end of what is now hole four. There in , the moonlight amidst a grove of · trees, a wierd, mysterious service took place.
Mythical. Story . First a narrator spoke to the·
men impressing on them the seriousness and sacredness of the occasion. Then a ceremony began which was based on the ·mythical story of Aeneas and the golden bough.
Dr. Hubert Poteat, dressed in long robe and false beard took the part of the wise AeneasDown through the woods h~ came bearing the precious bough of gold which he explains is the symbol of high ideals, noble traditions and unselfish service.
Weary from his long journey, Aeneas wishes to plant the bough in this grove if the youth he meets there will defend and guard it with their lives. One young man dressed in a white 1·obe agrees to guard the sacred bough, then leaves to go and find his companions.
Make Attempt While he is gone, si:x: meri
dressed in black ~P.Pel:!r and try to steal the bough from the old man. The youtli in white returns in time, however, bringing his friends, and together they cap-
ture the black-robed ones and 1· by sign, word, or token to ·reveal found that he Was spen4ing carry them bodily. away. Aeneas any of the mysteries ·Of the nearly all of "his time dealing then praises the young men and brotherhood which should not with students who were not doing commends the bough to their properly be known. as well as they s'hould, either in keeping. The ceremony completed, all academic work or otherwise. -
Then the initiates are brought are bidden to go in peace and So he suggested to Dr. Poteat, before the old man. .A,l,l kneel never to forget thi!'; solemn night. who was then president of. the Old Gold
.Staff and with hands over their hearts Bryan's Idea . College, that perhaps more time take an oath in wl;lich they Dean Daniel B. Bryim a,nd Dr. should be devoted to working promise to promote the· welfare William Louis Poteat were re- hard and trying to make good. of the members of this order, to sponsible for the beginning of the Faculty Chose uphold the high ideals and ·noble Golden Bough organization ·here traditions of Wake Forest, to in 1925. teach and practice the doctrine Dean Bryan explains that since of unselfish service, and . never he became dean, he had always
LITTLE AVIAN ON CAMPUS by Pick Gibler
"Okay, okay, -you ·'guys! ·Let's quit clownin' aroon• ·with that shot-put!"
Thus the honor organization was decided on and the :faculty was asked to vote on the top ~tudents, basing their decisions on qualities of leadership, character, and academic achievement. Membership was limited to a cer-
. tain percentage of the student body. ·
ManaghJ.g Ed.·--· Charles Newman Associate Editor .... William Pate Spo,rts .Eil~tl)r -~------ Lloyd Preslar Circulation l'tfgr.· _.,_ Patsy Pearee Pho~ogrl:\ph(lr -.----··-- Tommy ~unn
l;i)Q._i.t.qrial Staff: Lloyd Baucom, Kitty Booth, Linda Boothe, Dottie. Braddock, Durell Bullock, Delores Carson, Bill Connely, Bob Girard, ·
From its beginning in 1925 David McKay, Shirley Mudge, until the coming' of ODK -in .1.939, Darrell Oberg, Jo Anne 'Powell, the Golden Bough- was an active Nancy Smith, Marjorie Thomas, orga,nization. It at t e m..p ted. Tony Wrenl).. through its members. to promote . h.igh idea:}s m-all- eanmus--acti~i-.- "-Busiiiesg- Smff·-Btm--Cmver.··Wil-~··-t1es and it did a good bit of work b E 1 D i H rman 'Hild -on the honor system, trying · to ur ar y, . ar ene e . • a build up stl:ldent · interest. Maulden, L1?nel Pate, B1lly Powell,
Be OD,u Gravely Re1d, Ann Scruggs, Sue
came ,... " Weathers In 1939 the active members of ----·---,--...-------
the Golden Bough became charter members of the . Beta Alpha Circle of ODK, and all alumni members of the old organization became automatically candi.dates for associate membership in O;DK. Many have returned to the campus to be initiated i!ito the new honor so.ciety. · ·
Five years ago, in 1950, which · · was· the· twenty-fifth anniversary
of the :founding of the Golden · Bough, ODK sent special invita
tions to all the charter members of th"at society to come and be initiated into · tiie new.
Qti~t"e a few of the men came, amorig them some of North Carolina's ·: most important citizens. Luthern E. Barnhardt; who is now speaker of the State Senate, and U. ·s. Cot;~gressman Charles B. Deane were received into the orlfanization · at tliat time.
•· '
Circulation Staff: · Dolly Brock, Sue Deaton, Carolyn- Farnsworth, Ma;rgaret Feeney, Bob Fi!i:t.er, Chris Ford, Mary Ann Hampton, Hildl:! Maulden, Larry Pearce, Becky Powers, Gayle Prive';te, Sarah Riecke, Joanne Till, Blair Tucker.
FoW!-de<!, Jan_ 15, 19i6, and publishe,. each Monday during the school year ex· cept during exanrlnatlon and holiday p~ods a.s directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board:
lllember of the Associated Collegiate Press. ·Represented. for national adver• tlsing by Natloilal' Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate--$2.50 · per year.
I .
In T.he Student Center . 4056 ·· P. Q. Box 551
![Page 3: l -·····. k n 1 v nuu · 2018. 3. 20. · chairman of the st,!lering commit- government offices at the conven- to Vivian Butler. Sylvia Mangum, Hirano, independent, was nomi](https://reader033.vdocuments.site/reader033/viewer/2022060911/60a624e7b236311cd0323794/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
•
Whyd·o ~ollege lftf!n and
. -- .. ~ .. · "' ' . ;~ .
\ more·
Women smoke - ' ·:
VltEROYS STUDENTS than any other
filter cigtlrette? Duke, UNC Ahead ,In -Politics / We Specialize I_n, Hair Cutting
. .
BECAUSE ONLY·- VICE/ROY GIVES YOU :A PURE, NON-M.INERAL.,
NON-TOXIC FILTER WITH
By CHARLES NEWMAN 1 as are the Chairman of Social While Wake Forest politics are 1 Standards, WSGA secretary and
just getting into the starting treasurer, and representatives Phases, .other Big Four. schools from each class. have been bickering an-d battering But on West Campus- the political mud-slinging for several men's side - politics are a differ-weeks. ent matter.
At Duke, where politics are just Bryant Aldridge, a varsity footabout double the confusion they ball player, is. the Campus Party are here_ because of separate men's nominee. Opposing him is beand women's campuses and there- specaled Herd·· Bennett, Union by two separate governments, the· Party candidate. presidential race . blows hot and Boiling-, Bickering heavy. · ·· · Before the political pot 'started
·20,.0.00·. FILTE_·R TRAPS IN EVERY FILTER ·-ytp'f
The coed voting is over; East I ?oiling, pre-nominatio~ bic~ering campus governmental figures I mcl~ded a party fence-Jumpm~ by have already - been named. Elsa nommee-hopeful Sam McMillan
,~.-. Reese;: a . comely brunette, came go~ uc~lon ~ol. Camp~s Party. The out the victor over carol Smith u e rome e, semi-weekly puba honey-blond, for the Women'~ llcati,;m. quoted "informed sources" Student Government Association as . saying Mc~llan made the presidency. · . switch because he :felt that the
1 Yes, only Viceroy has this filter composed of 20,000 . e tiny filte.r traps: You cannot obtain the same filtering
action in any other cigarette •.
-2~ Besides being non-mineral and non-toxic, this cellulose-acetate filter .never shreds or crumbles.
, ·3· - The Viceroy filte~ wasn't just whipped ·up and rushed ·- e to ~arket to ~eet the new and skyrocketing demand
·for ·filtered cigarette8: ·.viceroy pioneered. Started :research more than 20 years ago to create the pure
4. 5.
and perfect filter. .. · '
Smokers en masse reporCthat filtered Viceroys have a finer flavor even than cigarettes without filters. Rich, satisfying; yet pleasantly ~ld~~
Viceroy draws· so easily that you ~ouldn't know, without looking, that it even had a filte~ tip •.• and Viceroys cost oply a penny' or two more than ciga-rettes Wi~hout filtem! · ·· · .
That's why more coJlege men anq women smoke VICEROYS than any ot11er filter,.cigarette ; • .'that's why VICEROY is the 1argest-sellirig·filter cigarette in the world!
-·2o,OQo_JlNY FllT:E'R tRAPS ••.
. ' '
pi u.s_ ~.ch.er• Smoother Flavor. . ~ - . . ,•
· . Campus Party could assure him East Campus 'better independent representation•
On E!U!t Campus there are no in its noniinations." · · _ P()litical partitfS; coeds m~rely get Last- week the Chronicle came
together and . nominate two of out with a front page editorial their best looking for each office. supporting Bennett, listing his A chairman of the Judicial Board foriner student posts and includis also at stake iD. East elections, ing · .mem~ership in the Duke
/ / She's saving money
Jt tfa:ck of .chewing gum would about their products. Se11h1g cost more if it weren't for ad- this. way makes mass produbt,ion vertising. · possible-which means lower
You get 5 sticks· with. 18 · production costs. lower selling wrappings for only .a ·nickel- -costs, lower prices. the same price as 40 years ago. Yes, advertising 'is a low-cost Gum manUfacturers use adver• se~ method that helps keep lising as their lowest-cost way your living costs down. to sprea~ news and information .
T~r. a4•erd .. mml pr~pMn 67 lAo A4•fR':IIU.tt Foderoticr& t>/ Americ•
marching band. Bennett, the edi- ALSTON'S · BARBER SHOP torial said, invented the entrance . __ formation used by the band.
In the same issue, on the back- Located in Wilkinson Bldg.
the sport-page, the Chronicle ran :~===========================~ a picture of Aldridge, in full foot-ball uniform, as one of the start-ing eleven in the Blue-White intl·a-squad game that ended spring practice.
UNC Politics The Daily Tar Heel, University
of North Carolina newspaper, ha.S been filled with screaming headlines on politics for several weeks.
The University Party took only five minutes to nominate Ed McCurry Cbrother of Wake Forester Nell McCurry) a.s its presidential · candidate.
ALL WORK IS GUARANTEED WHEN YOU HAVE IT DONE
-at.-
Wake Forest Laundry &· Cleaners Locat~ On The Comer or· White And Wait Street
"TO SERVE YOU IS OUR BUSINESS"
Two days earlier, the DTH an:r:ounced that Manning Muntzing would run for the presidency on .-------------------------_:;_::..,::,:: the Student Party ballot. Then a third name popped into the race: Don Fowler tried to get the SP bid, but :failed, and decided to try his luck as an independent. \'
Dissention In Ranks Fowler's entrance caused dis- I
sension among Student Party 1 ranks, as David Reid, floorleader of the Student Party decided -he I could not aupport Muntzing, having backed Fowler in the caucus, I and resigned his post to support the independent. . .
OIL
GAS "Do .or Die . . . "
TIRES
GREASE JOBS Two University Party men,
Charles Ackerman, UP publicity chairman, and Lionel King, UP nominee for a Student Legislature seat, and member of the Party's steering committee, withdrew :from
their party to support Fowler. i===========~===============~ The editorship of the Dally Tar Heel is also on the political table.
GARDNER'S ESSO SER~IC£ STATION
Louis Kraar, a columnist :for the paper, and Ed Yoder, a reporter, are jointly running :for co-editorship and they have the endorsement o:f both parties.
Introduces Blll Sophomore David :Mundy, · a
"fOrmer columnist for the Daily Tar Heel," at first announced his candidacy for editorship and tried to get Student Party backing. This -!ailed- when that grQUP voted to endorse the co-nominees, and Mundy withdrew from the race, saying he would "not be a candidate . . . as an independent."
The University Party introduced a bill in the Student Legislature previous to nomination caucuses that would have established a. "bipartisan board for the selectron" of candidates for DTH editors and would have taken the editorship out of politics. It faiied, 'Dut the same -stipulation 'WS.S put .in the party's platform.
UNC students vote tomorrow for governmental officers.
·BQ.B'S COLLEGE :INN Across From The Campus
At The Underpass
. The Home of Personalized Service
Remember "Bob, Jr. Wants To See You!"
~omplefe Dinners Steaks Chops
Seafoods Chicken r'
..
:. 'I
j Fo·r _-Style~, ·aualit·y, and· Value . . . Shop The _
S. ·oEPARTMEN·r STORE, INC. · · Wake F North Carolina ·
![Page 4: l -·····. k n 1 v nuu · 2018. 3. 20. · chairman of the st,!lering commit- government offices at the conven- to Vivian Butler. Sylvia Mangum, Hirano, independent, was nomi](https://reader033.vdocuments.site/reader033/viewer/2022060911/60a624e7b236311cd0323794/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
PAGE FOUR
--History Profs Attend Civil War· Discussion
Dr. Percival Perry, Dr. Henry S. Stroupe, and Dr. W. B. Yearns of the college History Department attended an organizational meeting of The North Carolina Civil War Round Table at Greensboro last week.
The organization is composed of history professors, authors, and other persons interested in Civil War history, and will meet every six weeks during the school year.
Highlight of the inital meeting was a• lecture by Col. Robert s. Henry, author of "The Story of the Confereracy," and other works on the Civil War.
Col. Henry, who is a vice president of the Association of American Railroads, spoke on the career of Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, Confederate Cavalry Commander.
Col. Henry denounced as falsehoods the beliefs that Forrest was
WF Math Profs Attend Convention
illiterate and that his formula for victory' was "git thar fustest with. the mostest." ...
The next meeting of tQ.e group will be held at Smithfield where members will tour the battlefield at Bentonville, site of the last Ci'vil War battle in this area.
Frats In Akron Top Averages
The University of Akron fraternity system recently ·received a pat on the back fmm the College Fraternity Scholarship Processing service. In a press release from this service, Colonel Ralph w. Wilson, executive director, noted • amazement at the fact that all eight fraternities on this campus posted grade averages above the all-men's average.
"This situation is u~usu~l among colleges," commented Richard L. Hansford, adviser of Men. "Akron
Three Wake Forest mathematics is one of the few universities in professors recently attended the the country where all fraternities annual confer~nce of the Ameri- top the men's average," he added. can Mat~at1?-S Association held The CFSP release pointed to the at the Umv~rs1ty of Tennesse. fact that Akron fraternities oper-Re~resentmg the college at the ate on the deferred-pledging plan,
meetmg were Dr. I. C. Gentry, Dr. whereby men wait a semester to G. W. Medlin, and Prof. R. L. Gay/ pledge; and must have made their r--------------' 2-point average .before being elig-
ible to pledge. Smith's Shoe Shop "Shoes Repaired The New
Cement 'Vay" One Day Ser\ice - Phone 3756
The figures listed in the release, which is sent to colleges and universities over the coontry, were: undergraduate men - 2.299 average, fraternity men - 2.435 and
I non-frfl.ternitv men-2'.253.
EAST, SOUTH, WEST, o~ NORTH You Can't Find Better Service
Underpass Service Station
(Author of"Bare/oot Bo11 With Cheek," etc.)
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE The first thought that comes into our minds upon entering
college is, of course, marriage. But how many of us go about seeking mates, as I like to call them, in a truly scientific manner? Not many, you may be sure. Most of us simply marry the first person who comes along. This can lead to unpleasant consequences, especially if the person we marry is already married.
Let us today make a scientific survey of the three principle causes of marriage-homogamy, personality need, and propinquity. We will examine these one at a time.
Homogamy means the attraction of like for like. In marriage it is rarely opposites which attract; the great majority of people choose mates who resemble themselves in taste, personality, uutlook, and, perhaps most important of all, cultural level. ' Take, for example, the case of two" students of a few years ago named Anselm Glottis and Florence Catapult. Anselm fell madly in love with Florence. but she rejected him because she was majoring in the Don Juanian Poets and he was in the lowly school of forestry. After graduation Anselm got a job as a forest ranger. Still determined to win Florence, he read every single Don Juanian Poet cover to cover while sitting in his lookout tower.
His plan, alas, miscarried. Florence, sent on a world cruise as a graduation present. picked up the betel nut habit in the Indies. Today, a derelict, she keeps body and soul together by working as a sampan off Mozambique. And Anselmt engrossed in the Don Juanian Poets, failed to notice a forest fire which destroyed 29,000,000 acres of second gro'wth blue spruce. Today,
· a derelict. he teaches Herrick and Lovelace at the Connecticut School of Mines.
The second reason why people marry, personality need, means that you often choose a mate because he or she possesses certain qualities that complete and fulfill your own personality. Take,. for instance, the case of Alanson Duck. As a freshman, Alanson made a fine scholastic record, played varsity lacrosse, and was very popular with his fellow students. Yet Alanson was not happy. There was something lacking in his life, something vague and indefinable that was needed to make his personality complete.
Then one day Alanson discovered what it was. As he was walking out of his class in Flemish pottery. a fetching coed named Grace Ek offered him a handsome brown package and said, "Philip Morris'!"
"Yes!" he cried, for all at once he knew what he had been needing to round out his personality-the gentle fulfillment of Philip Morris Cigarettes, the soul-repairing mildness of their vintage tobaccos, the balm of their unparalleled taste, th~ ease and convenience of their bonny brown Snap-Open pack. "Yes, I will take a Philip Morris!" cried Alanson. "..(\.nd I will also take you to wife if you will have me!"
"La!" she exclaimed, throwing her apron over her face, but after a while she removed it and they were married. Today they live in Prince Rupert, British Columbil\, where Alanson is with an ·otter glazing firm and Grace is a bookie •.
Propinquity, the third cause of marriage, means closeness. Put a boy and a girl in a confined space for a long period and they will almost surely get married. A perfect example is the case of Fafnir Sigafoos. While a freshman at Louisiana State, he was required to crawl through the Big Inch pipeline as part of his fraternity initiation. He entered the pipe at Baton Rouge. As he passed Lafayette, Ind., he was agreeably surprised to be joined by a comely girl named Mary Alice Isinglass, a Purdue freshman, who had to crawl through. the Big Inch as part of her sorority initiation. When they emerged from the pipeline at Burlington, Vermont, they were engaged, and, after a good hot bath, they were married. Today they live in Klamath Falls, Ore., where Fafnir is in the weights and measures department and Mary Alice is in the roofing game. They have three children, all named Norman. C>Hu Shulman. 1955
For your enjoy~ne the maker11 of Philip Morri• AaW! prepared • handwme. illrutrated booklet called MAX SHVLMAN REYISITED, eontaining a •eleerion. ol the lw•t o/ theae columna. Cet your eopy, ab11olueely free, -.irla the purchrue of a couple pock• of Philip Morri• at your jafJOrile tobaeeo counter. Hurry! Tlae 11upply is limited.
OLD GOiD AND BLACK
THINGS· TO TALK " ..
~m.yTeam To inspect._ Local ROTC
- . By BOB GmAB.D·
The Wake ,Porest Reserve ,Officers T~iniri~ Corps will undergo its annual inspection ·by' a special team from the Third ·Army Dis:.. trict today and tomorrow. ·
Col. Richard D. stevens. presiding officer of the""'team,. Lt. Col.
· Edwin ·o. Selby, and Lt. Col. John S. Wood Jr.,' will inspect the equipment belonging to this unit and visit classrooms tOday.
On '1\lesday the entire corps of cadets will be inspected during the regular drill period.
ROTC .Band
,, . ~ '· ' . .;
~ •• L ··,,: ,.J.~',:)_".\'., • ~, ' '•, 'o• o
· ' MOND:AY; MARCH. :28{ 1& ' ' ' ~ , ' . ' ' • .. r •
-; '.
CJJea.cs _:'Wf16::. Ai~t.:· ~Gret1:5;::: ·_a;y :A:._T.:.Ausl"J.N , · ,. . . . , . ' . ' ·. . , I
ALPHA, SIGMA PHI , . and GarY ·west ·have been rum:.ed. Defiliite· plans sre. nnw uncler~. ~Phi ~ui:Kappa;.·. -: · ·.'-~ .
way for t~ _ aitnua_l Apache Pari~ .. _. Di~ ~emric h~. be·en rialne«l · to be held Apr1118 at _the Tar-Heel: .~o an~Yter All-American teiuu. Club in Raleigh., ::. ,) . .1 : , _compcjsect of.Sil!'ina 'cbL basketball -. · · Ann ~tchen,- MaXton coed; was ~- ~e team ·was ·chooen bY · re~ntly•chosen. Alpha ·Big sw~t- ~tch Lonberg, -.dil'eetor' ·of. the'· heart. She: is p~nned· to- Dave· Lee. Natfpnal Colleltiate Athletic Asso_. . Jim. Gross Was- recently .. elected .eia~ion bas~tball .toumei iD Kan- ~
historian of Delta Sigma Pi busi- sas Cit:v. .. · . - ·- - _ · neB§ ~rat~rnity for. next year. ·Nick ConsOles has beez1 eieei,ed,
The ehapte~ held a. . formal co-captain of next year's footbaU ~oker l&m; week. Those· pledgiilg team. · · · this semester were Harry Aicher, c. ,·
Gordon Mann, Jtin :qa_lrympfe, Bob Goerlich,, Harold Christman, Joe Cowley, Dudley ·watsOn, Son.;. ny Lewis, Sal Marchese, and· Jimmy Black. A party was held,Satur.:.. day. nighi at the . chapter house honoring the new pledges and their dates/
LAMBDA CHI 4LPBA
F~REST· THEATRE_. ·-Week," Of !larch 28. 1951)
~. · ·.·'Monday
Shows 3:15 - 7:oo - 9:00 Roberf'Wagn~r & Debra Paget
-in- ·
The ROTC band, under ·the direction of Angelo Capparella, will preseJ;J.t the .chapel program today. They will play !'The Rolling Thun-der March," "Fountain of Youth Lambda Chi's held a dance at
.. WHITE FEATHER,. CINEMAS COPE.
, Overture" with a soloette trumpet the hous~ Friday night with music --------:--------------------- trio of Bud Hames,.-.Robert Gore- furnished by Johnny· Mitner's
WFDDRadioLog lich, and Otis Sizemore, "Come combo from Raleigh. Back To Sorrento," and "Birth Tuesday night the Wake Forest of the Blues." Hames will also chapter· won second place in 'the have the solo part in the last two four-);eam Inter-Zeta Basketball numbers. tournament at ChaPel Hill.
·Tuesday & Wednesday Shows 3:15 ·- 7:00 - 9:00
John Derek ~~r-· Joan Evans 2 -in-
"THE QOTCAST'•. 1\'IONDAY
4:00-580 Club 6:00-News 6:15--Thought For Today 6:30-Music For Dining 7:00-Music To Remembe1· 8:00-Campus Capers 8:30--Here's To Veterans 8 :45-Platter Parade 9:06-News 9:05-Deacontown Varieties 9 :30-Serenade In Blue 9:45-Music Miller :Made
10:00---Sports News 10:15-Theater Show 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News 12:05-Rendezvous With Music 12:30-Sign Off
TUESDAY 4:00-580 Club 6:00-News 6:15-Music For Dining 7:00----'Music To Remember 8:00-Campus Capers 8 :30-Stargazillg 9:00-News 9:05-Deacontown Varieties 9:30-Masterworks From
France 10:00-Sports News 10:15-Join The Navy 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News 12:05-Rendezvous With Music
WED~ESDAY
4:00---<580 Club 6:00-News 6:15....!...Thought For Today 6:15-Music For Dining 7:00-Music To Remember 8:00-Campus Capers 8:30-Here's To Veterans 8:45-Spanish Show 9:00-News 9:05-Deacontown Varieties 9:30-'Paris Star Time
10:00-Sports News 10:15--Theater Show 10 :30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News 12 :05-Rendezvous With Music 12 :30-Sign Off
THURSDAY 4:0{}--580 Club 6:00-News 6:15-Music For Dinner 7:0Q-...Music To Remember _8:00-Campus Capers 8:30-That Wonderful Feeling 8 :45-P.la tter ·Parade 9:00-News 9:05-Tune Toppers
10:00-Sports News 10:15-Sports Panel 10 :30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News 12:05-Rendezvous With Music 12:30-Sign Off
FRIDAY 4:00-580 Club 6:00-News 6i15-Music F9r Dining 7:00-Music To Remember 8:00-Campus Capers 8:30-Here's To Veterans 8 :45-Platter Parade 9:00-News 9:05-Deacontown Varieties. 9:30-'Serenade In Blue 9:45-Music By Glenn Miller 10:00-Sports News 10:15-Guest Star 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News · 12:05-Rendezvous With Music 12:30-Sign Off
SATURDAY 7:00-News· 7:15-Guest Star 7 :30-Campus Capers 8:00-Saturday Night Dance
Party ' 9:00-News 9:05-Deacon'town Varieties 1
9:30-Masterworks 'From · France
MEET ME AT
s s H Y' ., 0 T
H s 0
R T
Y' s
10:00--Sports News 10:15--Jazz Show 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News
'12:05-Rendezvous With Music
The sophomore cad~ts have Sandy McAllister, Randolf-M La bd · Ch · · Thursday & Friday finished taking the RQ-3 screen- aeon m a i, recently visit-. Shows 3:15 • 7:00 - ~9:0t
ing test for enrollment in the ad- ed the _chapter. Gprdon Scott vanced ROTC course. More than SIGMA PI . . -in-,.. . 86 per cent of the class passed the Local 'Sigma Pi's played the "":.:ARZAN'S HIDD~N .JUNGLE'" 12 :30-Sign Off
SUNDAY 10:30-Saered Music 10:55--!-Church Service 12:00-News
standards and will 'be admitted to State College chapter In a softball .. the advance courses. game Saturday afternoon. After
Rifle Team , . tl1e game _players,· spectators, and Lt. Col. Joseph Terrell .. an- dates went to 'Gresham~s Lake. for
12:00-Piano Portraits 12:15-Let's Go To Town 12 :30-Platter Parade
nounced that "Those who did not a weiner roast~ ' · quite make the necessary grade Chapero~es- fo~, the annual Ormay have a second chance to ap- chid Ball, to be held May 14, are ply for the advanced course. I am Capt. and Mrs. S. H. ·Davies and quite pleased with the results of Prof. and Mrs. William Durham.
12 :45-U N Review 1 :00-Musical Memories 3:00-:iYiusic On A Sunday
Afternoon the test. They are the best we KAPPA ALPHA
4 :00-Baptist Hour. 4:30-Music To Remember
have had." During the past week the rifle
team swept through four matches
Neil McCurry and Tony Stone were initiated into the fraternity Monday night. 5 :30-Paris Star Time
6:00-Dinner Music For Sunday 7:00-News
without a defeat. The Wake Forest An attic party was held during cadets posted one of their highest ~he week end. .
7:15-Broadway In Review 7:30-Sacred Music 7:45-Church Service 9:00-Sunday Serenade
10:00-Caravan of Music 12:00-News 12:05-Moonlight Whispers 12:30-Sign Off
School Ousts ~Name' Bands
There will be no future big name bands on the campus of the Uni
scores of the year, 1882 points, Penn. State, Wofford University, Penn Military College, and the University of Kentucky were no match for the Deacon marksmen.
This week the rifle team will fire in postal matches against North Georgia College, University of Mississippi, and Tuskegee Institute.
Duke To Hold Problems Meet
versity of Wyoming, unless the A second conference on school Associated Students can get some law problems, including the segreother campus organization to un- gation issue, has been scheduled at derwrite at least half the cost. The Duke University for June 21-22. Dave Brubeck jazz concert, which The University's pioneer meetwas requested by the students, lost ing last year brought to the State $500 because so few people attend- national authorities in school law ed, Richard Brown, student body problems and led to the creation president, stated here recently. of a new National Organization
"The students on this campus for Legal Problems of Educational are not taking advantage of all Administration. the cultural aspects offered them This year's conference will folhere at the University," Brown· iowa similar pattern. Sessiong-on continued, "and they don't know the legal problems of school · fiwhat they're missing." The Bru- nance and property and pupil and beck concert, jazz with a longhair staff pe1·sonnel again will be view, was to be a signpost to de- scheduled. In addition, a special cide whether future events of the session on desegregation in the type would be held. · schools, embracing the legal and
Four KA's were recently named to Phi Beta Kappa. They include Carwile LeRoy, Guy Revelle, Bob Mann, and Glen Garrison.
Bob Bartholomew was recently elected co-captain for next year's football team.
THETA CHI The 'local chapter recently won
first place in scholarship over last year among the nations Theta Chi chapters.
Sponsors for the Interfraternity Council's Spring Dance are Dodson_ Mathias and Doug Maynard.
The chapter has started plans for the annual Dream Girl Ball to be held in April.
A new volleyball and net have been purchased, and plans are being made for a pledge-member tournament.
Russ Rowland, Doug Maynard, and Bob Jeffords visited Howard' College in Birmingham,. Ala., during the past week.
Frank Medford recently pinned Sandra Williams of Canton.
SIGMA CHi: Nominating -committees for fra
ternity. offices for the comlng' year have been appointed by Sigma Chi president Al Birmingham.
Bobby Ike Caldwell, Joe Hough,
Sa turd~ Shows Continuous 1 To 11 P. H.
1 T~Cx Ritter -in
"~ULLETS FOR. BANDITS,; ~}so--
Johnny Weismuller ·;._in-
/ "JUNGLE MANEATERS,.
. Sunday Shows 2:00 - 3:45 - 9:00
Kirk Douglas & Bella Darvi -in
''THE RACERS" CINEMAS COPE
COLLEGIATE THEATRE Week Of March 28, 1955
Monday Shows 3:15 • 7:00 - 9:oo
Boderick Crawford &' Ruth Romaa -in-
" DOWN THREE DARK STREETS,.
Tues. - Wed, - Thurs. Shows 3:15 - 7:00 - 9:00
Rock Hudson & Barbara .Rush. · . ' -·-"CAPTAIN LIGHTFOOT'" CINEMASCOPE
Fri. and Sat. ·Shows 3:'1:5. - 7:00 - 9:011
Victor. l'lla~ure . -in-.
"CHIEF CRAZY HORSE" in CINEMASCOPE
Sunday . Shows 2:01) • 3:45 • 9~
Kirk Douglas & Jeanne Craia -. -in-
"MAN· WITHOUT A STAir
'1
"We don't expect to make money administrative 'Implications has on events of this type," Brown been planned. added, "but we do expect to come Leading specialists in the variout somewhere near even. We ous fields of school law and school thought Brubeck would appeal to administration have been invited a .large cross-section of students to speak or to lead panel discuson the campus, since so many had sions. A wide range of professional asked for a Jazz concert," said groups again will be invited to at-
50 million times a day.· . .
Brown. tend.
This eek BOOKS ON THE ·sHELF. FORMERLY 2 BOOKS FOR $1.00.
.,. ...
Now 3 Can Be Purchased For The ·Same Amount
College Book Store 4'<;}n The Campus"·
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There's nothing like -a
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THE CAPIT~ COCA-COLA BOTTLI~G COMPANY "'Cob" Ia cr ngla-.cl ~ ""'"· , , 0 tP$4, THI! COCA:-COLA ~,.,ANY
I . ·~
s
L C01l'IJ.lt of coli
- aied 1 .. ' .. game, thre.e · free-tt
T ion, til first c severa playei: shot:
" the b~ ~oals < lation, until n
Pt out frc pointe! 'Second the~ba~
w Unless months gets b1 retqrn foi_"~ar ave:r:ag, .. Ja ball.,.ha shootin scored·
Tl: 42.2 pc improv.
' ally· co: 1 with th
Le .are Jin from tl
,',and she dor. Gi foot-six He's a veloped
Th to wor a faste: the De and to1 second
Un from tl accurac
.after al
. The NE Committe bonus fre the full 4 and widez from sud
The bo will appl)l AAU ~nd sented gn the wider to college
The. b.OI used durii awarded~ the first o 37 nunute in the la two-shot ·
(
Three o announcec next seasc one is des stalling bY. possession
H. V. Pc tary of thE
"The ole ball when • onto the b! within gu: yard- of the player time by dr: gu!l-.tcli_!lg _a ·That paz
called, ac1 within the dribbler is
A flagrai next seasoz throws ins: by the pre1
. The COI
crack at ti its rule on starting tlJ the ball lea time will b
·been legall: jumpers .. ~ seconds los tapped ille1
A ComP.l< Etc. For
THE 1l Five PoiJ
![Page 5: l -·····. k n 1 v nuu · 2018. 3. 20. · chairman of the st,!lering commit- government offices at the conven- to Vivian Butler. Sylvia Mangum, Hirano, independent, was nomi](https://reader033.vdocuments.site/reader033/viewer/2022060911/60a624e7b236311cd0323794/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
· .. " .·
OLD GOLD· 4\N~ B~ACK . • ~ I' . ' .. ·' ·.' • .. . • ' • ' • PJ\GE FIVB .. -.. .:. ... ---": ......... -··--· -· .. _ -·-·-·- ....... :-~·----- ... -·--.·-··· -:-~- ... --... ............. - ... -·~ ...... --·-· --~ ... ·~ --- ... ~--· .. ; . ,. ·- ~ ... ·- ·- ·-· . ..-·.·-·- ... .
Cheerlet;lders Pick New Sqn.3d SPORTR:AITS · ,WRA To Hold {-Fun Festival'
I • • .~ ' •• , '· •.,_ ' • ~ ' . • ,
Contest Between DQrmitories • • . • -' • " ·~ -. • • ; •• ,. ' f •
.Group. Enlarged To. 1,. ~ J.flf!.'tJ1bers.-
-, .
New Cag~ _Rules Will Widen·
A Carthage. College (ill.) professor noted that students are checked for attendance at chapel by secretaries sitting in a balcony, suggested the students adopt the theme song "When the Roll is Called Up Yonder, I'll Be There."
La L B · Sh --,. ... - and-one and bonus rules brought . · ne,- ncFease onus . Q S_ about a .steady ·decrease tn per-sonal fouls ·the past three years,
. The National Basketball Rules I to start over· · Porter said. Committee last week changed the Paul Hinkle of Butler University, Personal fouls have reduced by bonus free throw rule tO apply to new b~etball committee chair- eight, six, and five per cent seathe f~ 40 minutes playing times man, said the wider lanes, which sonally the last three years or 19 and_ widened the free throw lanes will now be the same as the Olyzn- per cent less in 1954-55 compared from six' to 12 feet. PiC and professional standets, to three Canlpaigns' ago. Porter ,
The bonus free throw revision shouid tend to Aut down appre- said it J:l;OW is eviqe,nt that. it pays will applf · to college, high school, ciably on the "cheap goals after to play without fouling as proved AAU ~n~ YMCA'- groups repre- tree throws." by the one-and-one and bonus sented c;>n.the rules committee~_but ·Rese~rch ,has proved the one- rules.
the wider lanes will lw restncted 1 ;======·===;:::=:::======:;========::; to college a,nd AAU: teams. · It The. bonus free throw rule was
used· during the 1954.;.95 season. It awarded B. second free throw when the first o"ne wa.s made 1n the first 37 Ininutes of :the game. All' fouls . in the last three minutes were two-shot Violations .•
other Changes Three other changes were also
announced in the· playing code for next season. The most important one is designed to put a curb on stalling by ·making the five-sec~nd possession· rule apply to dribblers.
H. v. Porter of Chicago, secre-- tary of the committee, -said:
"The old r1lle called for a jump ball when an offensive piayer held onto the ball for five seconds' when within guarding distance. - one yard- of a defensive.pla.Yer. Now the player won't be able· to kill time by dribbling while within the guarding area." ·nat pai:ticufar 'violation will· be
called, according to Porter, if within the mind of the official the dribbler is trying to kill 'time; '
A flagrant technical violation next season rwill draw .two free throws instead of one called for by the present rules. ·
l'1Dllp Balls · The committee took another
crack at tim,e-killing .by chang!ng its rule on jump balls. Instead of starting the clock from the time the ball leaves the official's hands, time will be in after the ball has . been legally tapped by one of the jumpers .. That would eliminate seconds lost when a jump ball is tapped illegally and the play has
A Complet~ Line Of Outlines, Etc. For 1 All Your Cours~s.
THE BOOK EXCHaNGE ·,, Five Points DurhJim, N. c.
FOR
FINE
FOOD
. VISIT.· ~ ' ..
FRAN(IS' .. GRILL
The Early Azaleas, Late Camellias, And A Host Of Beautiful Spring Flowers Are In Full Bloom In. The Gardens Of His-to ric
ORTON: PLA·NTA l-ION NEAR WILMINGTON·
The Spectacular Show Of Azaleas Will Last UntiJ. After>Easter.,Fine Plants. May
,Be Pu~chcuied .At-Th~-N~rsery. . .· · . : ~ "' ~ .- "
STUDENTS ..• For The ·Best In Sandwiches, Drinks, and Soups, Vis~t "P. D's" To Enjoy A Light Snack.
CoUege Soda S.hop & Appliance . Company·
It's The Same Town, Same Year o·f 1955, But the Service We Give Is SUPERIOR To The Same 'Ole Style!
CITY BARBER SHOP
lUCKY DROOD1T:S! LOADS 01= lAUGHS!
WHAT'S THIS? For solution-see paragraph below•
t .
SMALL GIRL SKIPPING ROPE OUTSIDE WINDOW
Pierre Midol-Monnet Lehigh University
•• : ~·~ t ·.: • ••••• ~.; .... <F ••
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• .. • • til • ... • • .. . : .... • . . . ... ~ ..... • ...
.~;~~::{: ;: }J{~~~~~tJ~ AERIAL VIEW OF
CUSTER'S LAST STAND Robert L. Wright
Uni~X~rsity of Virgin_ia
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
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0 Q
0 0
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LAST SUNSET SEEN IIY PIRATE WALKING PLANK
Ernest Gorospe University of Hawaii
FAT MAN AND FAt LADY BEHIND IIEACH UMBRELLA
Judy Gendreau Marquette University
...................... . • . • • • . • • . • • I • • • • • • • • •
STUDENTS!
EARN $25! Lucky Droodles* a~ pour-ing in! Where are yours? We pay $25 for all we use, and for many we dpn't use • So send every original Droodle in your noodle, with its. descriptive title, to Lucky Droodle, P. 0. Box: 67, New York 46, N.Y.
~ROODLES.CO~~~ht1953 by no~er PrJce
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7o taste 6efler f NO MATTER WHERE YOU ARE, you'll get more pleasure from your cigarette·if it's a Lucky Strike. That's the point of the Droodle above, titled: Three deep~sea divers enjoying Luckies. You get deep-down smoking e~joyment from Luckies because they taste better. 'Why do they taste 'better? That's easy tofathom. First of all, Lucky Strike means :fine tobacco. Then, that tobacco is toasted to taste better. "It's Toasted"-the famous Lucky Strike process-tones up Luckies' light, mild, good~ tasting tobacco to make it taste even better ... cleaner, fresher, smoother. So, when it's light-up time. light up the better-tasting cigarette . : • Lucky Strike.
![Page 6: l -·····. k n 1 v nuu · 2018. 3. 20. · chairman of the st,!lering commit- government offices at the conven- to Vivian Butler. Sylvia Mangum, Hirano, independent, was nomi](https://reader033.vdocuments.site/reader033/viewer/2022060911/60a624e7b236311cd0323794/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
PAGE SIX
ECC Will Play Here Tomorrow
By CHARLES NEW:MAN Wake Forest faces three baseball opponents here this
"Week. The Deacons opened here Saturday against N. C. State Colle'ge.
East Carolina College will be here tomorrow, Michigan State will take on the Deacons Thursday, and Maryland will play on Gore Field Saturday. The games are set for 3:30 p, m.
Last vear ·wake Forest :faced ECC's Pirates three times and won in each game. Deacon coach Taylor Sanford said that the Pirates "had a good team last year." He added that they did ~ot lose many from last year's team.
Frats, Others Continue Race In Volleyball
"The Cline brothers-one is a pitcher and the other plays third By LLOYD BAUCOM base-are back, and both of them Volleyball remained foremost on are good ball players," Sanford the intramural program last week said. "Then they've still got with four fraternity matches and Cecil Heath, their second base- four inde;:>endent matches played. man; he hit pretty well against Monday afternoon the Sigma us last year." Chi team ran over an Alpha Sigma
Wake Forest did not meet Phi group, followed by a contest Michigan State last year. "I'm in which Lambda Chi Alpha came 11ot sure what they've got," said back after losing the first game Sanford, "except that they always to defeat the Theta Chi's. have a good team. Their coach A strong Kappa Alpha team has been in Mexico coaching the beat Sigma Pi, while the Rebels United States team in the Pan- overcame Phi Alpha Delta No. American games," he added. Two's furore lawyers in other
All-Star Team ' Monday afternoon contests. The U. S. team this year is The Sig Clowns, never able to
OLD GOLD AND BLACK . lfONDAY,' MARCJ. 28; 't955 ·
Wf Nip.e ·~Pretty GOod,' . D~C ~unners Bob Waggoner. B'elie·ves·.· Prepare For:. · · · · · · Clemson. Meet
··~
Vet~1-an lnfield~r Begins 3rd Year Bob Waggoner· has begun his
third year of varsity" baseball at first base for Wake Forest.
When he came to school here three years ago, freshmen could play on the varsity under Southern conference rules. ·That year he didn't play much, playing· be-hind Buddy Smith. ·
But the next year, last year, he started for- the Deacons at first.
.c 4 Made Varsity "Yeah," he recalls,, "Linwood
<Holt), Luke <McKeel), and Frank (McRae), and I all began on the varsity together." Except for McKeel, none of the four· saw much• action that year. Now the quartet are regulaors in the lineup.
The Salisbury business major hit only .194 over the season last year. With that, he usually st!ll-t.: ed sixth or seventh in the batting order. ·
By_ J.LO'JD-' PRESLAR T~ vatstty. tracl;t team, coached
by Harold· B!lrrow, wlll enter its. second meet . of the sea.sOn Saturday a.ftemoo:Q. when the "l>eaeons take on Clelnson college 1n Clem-. · son, S.C.· .. ,;~_ .. : ·:.· ,~. . . ·
The Wake Foresti tre,ck men .lost. their first match WedJiesday ·iii., Durham to a· strong DUke University , team.· The Blue Devils . took ali:. but one first place as they 'out- " clasSed · Wake Forest from the ~~a:rt .. Wfnl11ng by,l02 1-:2- 23 1-2 .
· · ·Coach Barrow said that the I meet turned out "as expected" and
that ·he was pleased with his men's
BOB WAGGONER- -Deacon first baseman •
With Waggoner and 10 other lettermen back, the Deacons have been termed "the team to beat" by newspapers.
For Waggoner and his team:m~tes, the season has just !Jegun.
, showing. This is the . first -track team here in ,_several years. Bar- · rciy.r was especially pleased. with the showings of Dick Daniels, Jack Ladner, ·.~nd John ·Parham.
Ladner took the only first place for. Wake Forest with a near-record javelin throw of 192 feet and one inch-less than five feet un- •, der the Atlimtic Coast Conference record. H:e was ·third in the. discus throw.
Daniels was high for the Dea-
made up of all-stars from college get started, fell before a _hardbaseball teams. The Michigan spiking prospective preachers 'State coach was picked to coach team, the Seminary No. Two tapthe' squad. siers Wed~esday afternoon. The
STAFF PHOTO BY TOMMY BUNN
New Sport?_Isabel "Shorty" Crook and Penny May at-• tempt to go fly their kite as March wi:ndE
"All last year I was making ttf'e same mistake," he explained. He demonstrated his mistake by dipping his left shoulder as he swung. · "But in that game the other day againSt Duke," ile said, "I found out what was Wl'Ong. I've bee!).· working on straightening it out-I ought to hit a iittle better this year."
Worst Ga~e
Walker ·Plans Talk. Tonight
cons with seven. points on seconds in bO.th hurdles and a third in the broad jump.' Parham placed. sec- I
ond in the 100-~ard dash and third in the 22-yard" dash.
Joel Shankle · was hero . of the. day for the Blue Devils. 'setting a " new dual meet record of 27 points. He scorec;i · first in four eyents-pole vault. " big~- and low . h•..trdles, and broad jump.' Shankle was recently voted -the out stand-, imr athlete of 1954 in the ACC.
Marvland and Wake Forest thrill match of the week was beplayed. two games last year, eacl1 tween PAD No. One ·and the winning one. They ·will meet Sat- Colonial Club, with the clubmen urday for the first time this year . .edging · t li r o u g h the dying "They were good last year. We moments of the final game to take bea_! them by only one l'Un here the set, 15-13, 11-15, and 15-12.
brought out kites and several 'Wake Foresters to see who could get the high~st. After many unsuccessful· trys to get the kite into the air, one of the sticks broke. It was mended with a string splint, but the kite wasn't the same. Unflustered, they gave it back to the little boy they had "borrowed it from. '
{6-<>) and then they beat :us at Other Wedilesday Action ~ol.lege Park," Sanford said. "I seminary No. One advanced on Deheve they have most of last I f 't f th s· B' h'l , t b k , a or e1 rom e 1g s, w 1 e )"e~:~fo:;mhas a~~ lettermen back \Sigma. Chi beat the_ Sigma Pi from last year's team. The Dea- team m a loose affa1r. All these
Golf Team To Open Season AB·ainst USC rhere Friday.
cons have been picked as a lead- games were played Wedn~sday. By JOHN 'VAGSTER ing contender for the Atlantic The schedul~ fm· t~ls "':eek The Wake Forest golf 'team Coast Conference Championship. sends Alpha Slgma Phi agamst will open its season this week Expei:ience and a strong pitching Kappa Sigma and Sigma Phi Ep- with matches against the Unistaff have put them in the lime- silon against Pi Kappa Alpha at versity of South Carolina and light. 3 :45 p. m. today. At 4:30 the Sig Clemson College. Both matches
Sophomore Pitchers Clowns meet the Colonial Club, are away. Four pitchers have come up while PAD No. Two battles the The Deacons will meet the from last year's freshman team. Sig B's.
· M . Gamecocks Friday in Columbia, They are John Stokoe, Jack c- Regular season play m the In- S C d -11 1 Cl s n's Ginley, Buck Fickter, and Oren d d t L ·n d w d · ·• an WI P ay em o · epen en eague Wl en e - Tigers Saturday at Clemson, S. Muse. These are. expected to add ne_sday afternoo_l! wh_en two games C .. Wake Forest w!'ll be favor·ed to the already impressive staff 1 I headed bv Lowell "Lefty" Davis w~ll be P ayed. Semmary No. Two in both contests, although South and Bill ·walsh, a right-hander. Wlll battl~ PAD No. _one an~ the Carolina is expecting the. strong-
All-conference catcher Linwood Rebels Will clash Wlth Semmary est team in its history. No. One on the other court. .
Holt, a .303 hitter last year, is Fraternity Schedule The Dea~o~ lm~ste1·s, who ~ave
Andy Clement, Charlie Vaughn, and Ben Sutton may be used o'ccasionally during the season.
This year's team will suffer from the loss of Arnold Palmer, National J\,mateur Champion and now a professional, and :Phil Weichman, who dropped out of school because of scholastic difficulties. Palmer and Weichman were the top two men on last season's team, which won 14 matches and lost four.
The Deacon r!!cord for the past 'three seasons is 34 wins and 10
He recalled perhaps the worst game of last season as that against ·Clemson at Gore Field. The Tigers won, 5-0, as Clemson pitcher Billy O'Dell held the Deacons to three hits. "It was the only time all year that we didn't score at all," Waggoner said. "I'm sure glad he's playing pro ball now."
"We ought to have a pretty good team this year." he predicted.
The speaker for the 17th annual Teague Memorial Award banquet tonight in Greensboro will . be Douglas Clyde "Peahead" Walker.
The former Wake Fores.t football , coach now directs the M;ontreal klouettes in the Canadian professional league.
Winners of the Teague Awards as outstanding amateur athletes of the Carolinas for 1954 were two golfe1·s, Billy Joe Patton of Morganton, a former Wake Forest
losses. This was compiled against golfer, and Marge Burns of such competition as Kentucky, Greensboro. Mic~igan,. Purdu~.. Georgia, and The awards are a memorial to Flor1d~, m add1t1on to strong the late Lewis E. Teague a forAtlantic Coast Conference teams. mer Carolinas Amateur Athletic
The match with South Carolina ·union official. · · scheduled for today in Raleigh Walker was head football coach was cancelled by the Gamecocks. at Wake Forest from 1937 until
The freshman golf team, led 19.50 when he moved to the Caby Ralph James and Dave Ogilbie, nadi~n team. He :replaced Jim will open its season Saturday Weaver when he started here, against Wilmington College in Weaver moving to the post of Wilmington. Other matches on Athletic Director. Tom Rogers the freshman schedule have not took over as head coach after yet been' named. Weaver left.
' Coach Barrow named Billy Jones as his Ieadin~ dist.an~e runner. Jones was the only Deacon cinder man to score in the long runs. He took third in both the· one-and two-mile races.
Seven , other fNake Forest men -got into the scoring Wednesday. all of them taking or bing; for third place. Bob WeathersPOOn placed f11 the shot-put, Bill Slade scored in the 440-yard dash, and Bruce Hillenbran showed in the 100-yard dash.
Jack Ladner was number-three hurler in the discus throw. Two. Deacons, Don Scalf and Bill Whedbee tierl at third in the pole vault; and Jim Adams tied with Duke's Junior Morgan at third in the high jump.
back and will be called on for Sigma Chi versus Kappa Sigma been pract~emg smce th~ mxddle power duty at the plate. He bats and Lambda Chi Alpha versus Pi of February, show prom1se of a jn the clean-up spot and led the Kappa Alpha will cmnpose the ac- well-b_alanced squad. All of ~he CAMPUS "STAND-OUTS" * * * Man Most Likely To-team in runs-batted-in and home t h b h t tion for late Wednesday afternoon op SIX men ave een s 00 mg runs last year. d c es and
Bill Livengood, one o:f.the ACC's play. After Alpha Sigma Phi par a':. near-par s or • .. top hitters last year with a .378 meets Kappa Alpha and Theta competitiOn for the top positiOns average, will be used as a spot Chi meets SPE Thursday after- has been keen. . . hitter in the outfield. A foot in- noon, only two games will remain _Gallagher, GerrJng :V1e jury will keep him out of the in the Fraternity League. Vymg for the number-one slot starting lineup. Volleyball play-offs will be held are Mickey Gallagher and John
next week, probably at night: and Gerr.ing. Gallagher, a veter~n re
Netters Lose To GWBy8-l
<3eorge Washington's tennis team overcame Wake Forest, 8-l, here Friday afternoon in a season opener on the asphalt courts.
The Colonials won five of six singles matches and all three dG\lbles events to clinch the victory. AI Griffin was the only Deacon netter to win.
Next match for the Deacons will be played here tomorrow at 2 p. m. u.gain:st Dartmouth College, a .strong intersectional fee.
Pride Ratteree, Deacon coach, sa.id·that his team suffered Friday, mostly from a lack of practice. He said that George Washington had a "pretty good team," but that they had also practiced longer. "We weren't ready to play," he concluded.
The Colonials had little trouble jn downing the Deacs, and ex:.. cept for Griffin's win, the outcomes were decisive. The scoring was as follows:
Singles: Bernie Steiner <GW> over Jasper Memory, 6-0, 6-2; Ken Garrison CGW> over Blackie Patterson, 6-t, 6-3; Bill Wilson <GW) over Boo Mann, 7-5, 6-1: Herb Rappaport over Clay Daughtridge, 6-0, 6-1; Micki'e Boteler (GW) <()"\'er Bill Rogers, 6-2, 6-2; Griffin IWF) over Bill Russell, 6-1, 6-0.
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the softball tournament will begin turnmg from four years m the then, with play in the afternoons. ~ir Force, was. number-three man
The Badminton Tournament has: m 1949. Gerrmg, a sophomore, advanced to the second round. All was a consistent winner on last contestants who have not played year's freshman team. Both men. their matches by tomorrow after- play sub-p!lr g?lf. . . noon have been asked to meet on Alternatmg m the remammg the courts then for play. four positions will be Al Birming-
Winner of a match will place ham, Henry Kerfoot, Joe Turner, the results on . the tournament and Sandy Burton. All four letbracket, posting a forfeit if his .termen a1·e evenly matched. opponent does not show up.
Double.s: Garrison - Rappaport CGW) over Memory-Mann, 6-2, 6-1; Steiner-Wilson <GW> over Patterson-Daughtridge, 6-2. 6-0; Boteler-Russell <GW) over Billy Jones-Bob Garren, 6-4, 6-4 .
Outlines, etc., Reference Books-Everything in Boo~s
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