nlb nub .4 lark - wake forest university · 2018. 3. 20. · cert, the theatre, or ·other acti...
TRANSCRIPT
indle; ded?· >aseball team re:h assignment of high preL.seaso~
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~arne with Clem>1ina were taut 1spenseful enougq g blood to ice ere ''must'' con..., ~acs.
.umped Clemoon, u-e PerrY Miller's loaded singled in ~ of the eleventh Shore Field. 'Lou' he route for the : his record to 7-
became involved lrt stoppeT, thd:s a before several
11 pitched for the .ady Luck swung other way. Mike i ne run in the top the score, .3-3.
ran into trouble, es. Bobby Bidcllir; L and retired the faced. A weak; • , scored the win- 1
Carolina crept I v.i.ctory aoo bettrenched in fimt
1ke last Tuesday Shore Field, bu1; ot last a full m-1. It was one big ;., Christie retired Wake ·.came to
;om of the first. j,
Dave Miller s thunder rolled ~ and lightening ky abcwe. · · the Deacs' next curve ball high
; field fence for uble, Almost as . 's foot touched 1gry rain poured field. The game . so?.n postponed: and 82 at bats,
; the double was 1
first extra base nia thinks there s, Wally. ray Wake's
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President Tribble S~ys ·Trus~ Plan Is Gaining Support nlb nub .4 lark Wake Athletic Teams
Bring Fans Suspense, Success And Sorrows
Page Three
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* Page Seven
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VOLUME' XLIX Wake Forest CQUege, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, May 11, 1964 NUMBER 2'l
Beale G~ts President's Trophy
~20 ROTC Cadets Honore~ Cadet ~1. Richard E. Beale,
Jr., !Senior of_ Bethesda, Md:, was· awarded the i964 president's trophy for excellence ~ citizenship, tscholarship and military science at the ROTC President's Review Tuesday.
Beale also received the ROTC certificalte of meritoriloUISl leadership achievement, awarded
: by the commanding general of the Third United Start;es. Army.
College President Harold WTribble presentJed both awa'I'ds.
Superior Cadet
Dr EdWin G. Wilson, dean of the school oi' •arts and ISICiences awarded the superitor cadet' decorations, which ·are presented by ·the Department of the .A:rnzy to one outstanding cadet in each ROTC claSIS• re
. commended by the Professor of Military Science and Dean of the College after review by a faculty board. The 1964 awards were presented to Oadet Lt. Col. P.aul G. Turner, senior of Washin,gtan, D. C.; Cadet Sgt. Major Baxter T. McR!ae Jr., junior of Peachland; Oadet Sgt.
'Stephen T. Daniel Jr., sophomore of Roxboro; and Cadet PFC Paul R. Snell, freshmoan !Of Winmon-8alem.'
Major Will.i.oam East, city editor of the Twin. City Sentinel, presented the re\SierVe officers associati0111 awards for excellence in the ROTC advanced course!SI Ito Cadet Sgit. May. Li.i:tdsay P. Pratt, junior of Goldlsboro. Cadet Lt. Col. David !M. Zacks, senior .of New Bern, received a year's subscription to tlle association's magazine.
DR. TRffiBLE, CADET COL. • . • , President's Trophy presented . • .
Hendricks Wins
achieved the most outstanding record in American Military History.
The Daughters of the AmeriThe Association of the U!!llited can Colonisofls Citizenship Medal,
State\SI Army Medal, oa.w!l..["ded which is awarded each year to to the MS III cadet selected by the freslbm:an cadet who has
·~· · 1hc ·!Prbfessor of Mili-tary ~i- an outstanding academic starnd: ence .ana, facultY. committee as ing in Military. Science and· has outStanding in leadership, schol· presented the best term <paper arship, and character, Wa!S pre· on National Securtty, was won sented to Cadet MSgt, William by Cadet PFC Thomo81S1 R. Gra-
-P. Hendricks•, junior of Beau- ham., freshm•an of Metuchen, fort, S. C. N. J.
Cadet Sgt, Winston M. Tor· "Minute Man" medals went now, sophomore of LauriD:burg, to Cadet Sgt. Maj. Edward E. received. the !Military Order of Grann.i!s· Jr., junior of FayetteWorld Wars Medial of Merit, Ville, and Oadet Sgt. Virgil R. ·awarded to second year balsic McMenamin, sophomore of Bel cadets who, having been ac- A:ir, Md. These awards ar€1 cepted for the Advanced POTC made each year by ·the North course, has demonstrated out- Carolina Society of the Sons of
· standing leadership ;potential the American Revolution to two atnd dedication to the prim.ci- students who are outstanding
',~ ples of freedom." in leaderlship, ·SOldierly· bearing Cadet Sgit. Steven T. Daniel . and acadenii.c excellence.
Jr., ·!SOphomore of Roxboro, re- The Amevican Legion . ROTC ceived tlle Daughters of the Medal was presented to Cadet American Revolution American Sgt. · Randolph J. 'I1omlinson, Military History !Medal •and sophomore of Columbia, S. C., Award. The Gen. JosePh Win- for demonstrating outstanding ston Chapter presents the qualitieJSo of military efficiency. award ammally to the cadet Cadet Maj. William L. Clapp, selected by .the . Professor of senior of Spartanburg, S. C., Military ,science who 'has received the Armed Forces
Rockefeller Leade-,;· To Speak To YRC
Edward ~aul !Mlattar III, national chairman of the Youth for Rockefeller for Prelsti.dent, will address the Wake Forest Young RepublicanJS Club 7:30 p. m. Tuesday. He will speak on ''Why Rockefeller for President."
The club will also elect officers for the 1964-65 school year, according to Adrian King, 'club chairmoan. The mE*!ting will be held m the Ea:st. LollJlJge of Reynolda Hall.
mgh Caliber
King said, "We .are p~eased ' to hiave a represelllflative of Governor Rockefeller'IS on our campus, especially someone of ~. '·Mattiar'ISI caliber.
"The Governor has made a unique and quite valuable' con·tribution ·to our country as a patriotic American ·and outsliandmg RepublicaJII! leader."
:A question-and-answer period will· foll~w .Mattar's remarks. Plans for participation in the
~· Fifth D i sIt r i c t congressional llace will be discwss~ ·at the meeting. The club will alssist Republican Wyatt A. CNabl Almfield in his bid rto unseat Democrat.incumbent Ralph Scott. ,
Mattar is heading the effort to attr:aot . college ~d young voterS support for Govern.or Nelson Rockefeller of New York in hils bid for .file Republican
. Presidential nomi!Diation. As ctbairman of the Youth for
Rockefeller committe~, he has
EDWARD MATTAR . . • to speak Tuesday • . •
traveled and lectured extenJSive~ throughout 'the country.
Mattar is a graduate of St. Francis College, and Mount Vernon School of Law. He is preisently on leave from doctoral studies. at Georgetown University. He is oMs<> chadrman IOf Century Twenty-one Limited a Maryland real estate and m~astment corporation.
He is assi!SIIlant to the editor of PlrogrS.mme Magazine, and executive director of the National Crusaders Youth Federa· tion. His home ils in Buffalo, N •. Y.
Chemical AS'sociation medal. This award is presented each year to the graduating cadet who ha's excelled in chemmy or tan allied !Science.
To the graduating senior who rendered outstanding service to the ROTC OadeL Corps, the ProfeSISOr · of 'Mill.tary Science award is presented each year. The •award this year went to Oadet Lt. &bert iL. Womack, senior of Winston-Salem.
Cadet Capt. John J. Gaskill J:r., senior of New Bern, WlllS
the recipient of the Unrted States Armor Alssociation ·award awarded.to an outstanding graduating ·Senior whio has chOISen Armor as his basic branch.
Chicago ·Tribune medals., presented to ·two owtstanding basic oadetls and two outstanding ady.anced cadets, were won by Cadet Lt. Col. JamEIS L. Israel, senior of South Ru.ilslip, England; Cadet 2nd Lt. Rlonald G. Ta~lor, junior of Washington, D.' C.; Oadet Sgt. Hugh G. Cherry Jr., .sophomore of ChambersbWlg, Pia.; Everette L. May Jr., sophomore of Bethesda, Md.
Company_. "D" was designated holll.or company for the next academic year and presented .the honor company streamer. Oadet Capt. Maurice M. Sponcler Jr., senior of Newman, Ga., is company comm•ander.
ODKPlans Leadership Conference
Seventy-J!',i,ve W,gh scihoo~ juniors from throughout North Carolina will arriw liere Friday; to participate in the Second Annuall Leadership Conference sponsored; by Omicron Delta Kappa, nono:r:ary men's Leadership fratimn.ity, and Tassels, women's honorary.
Dean Edwin G .. Wilson, ODK faculty advisor, will deliver the opening address of· the leadersh:i,p semina:r at a }Janquet Friday evellling. The students will be ,a:ble to attend either a concert, the theatre, or ·other activlti<>s which ODK will provide . 0~ Saturday, the coDfcrees
will attend classes of their choice during the morning. A seminar given by severall faculty members on the correlation between academics and extracurri,cular activities is planned for late morning.
During the afternoon, the students will. attend two workshops in the areals of student govern.mant honor council publications, theab-e, '(jjebate, athletics, College Union, or reli,gi.ous a.Jctivities.
Tours of .the cainpus arui op-. porttinities to meet faculty members will also be made avail:aible to the students.
Reynolds Portrait Unveiled·
A portvait of Zachary Smith ReYnolds was unveiled at Wake Forest College Friday afternoon.
Dr. S_hannon To Speak At Graduati()n Events
The portrait, which was commissioned by the colle:ge and pai.J1ted by Winston-Salem artist Joe King, hangs ,iJn, the -library Daflled in honor of Reynolds.
1Vtembe11s of the Z. Smith ReYnolds Foundation, which also was named in Reynolds' honor, adltetnded · the ceremony with friends of the family, College trustE*ls, dep_artment heads at the College and members of the faculty library committee.
Mrs. Gilbert Verney of Greenwich, Conn., vice president of the foundaltion, congratulated the college on · its !Scholastic improvement ·and ph y :s, i c a I Plllollt. ,
EDGAR F. SHANNON • , • U. Va. president .•.
W. RANDALL LOLLEY ••. W-S pastor ...
ROSENTHAL
WOOD ZACKS ... senior orators . . .
Rev. Lolly To Deliver Sermon
Dr. Edg•ar F. Shannon, pre-. sident of the Universtty of Virginia, will deliver the graduation addre!Sisr at Wake Forest June 8.
The Rev. W. Randall Lolley, pastor of the First Bapt Church in WialJston-Salem, will preach tthe bacca1Jaureate sermon June 7 and Heney Garrity, the College's new director of alumni affairs. and development will speak at the alumni dinner June 6.
"Our foundation is proud," she said, "of the small part we have played in lthe •growth of Wake Forest. We .take credit for giving the initia!l stimulus that set the wheels rolling but the real c~edit goes to others. Without you, tile trustee~ and faculty, without the BatytiJsts and their. convention, without thoUJS1ands of otheT
Judd On !.GOP Candidates: Three Days
They will be the prilllcipal speakers dw:-ing the three days of exercises which will' include the awarding of honorary degree!S, presentation of diS!tinguished service •awardls to alumni, reunions, receptions and
Not'ltb, Oarolmians of all re-Goldwater Has Big Advantage
. ligious denominations, Wake By ADRIAN KING FOl'est WOuld not be what it ASSOCIATE EDITOR
is today and the impetus given Former Republican Congress-by our foundation would have man Walter Judd commcnte4 been fruitless and meanmgless. Tuesday on the leadimlg candi-
Wake Forest U. dates for the GOP Presidenttal "May Wake Fores·t roapidly nomination. He made his ob
C9llJ.e of age and reacli her serva.tions in an interview wLth potential aJS one of the 'finest the Old Gold ·a-nd Black folcoUeges in the coun.try. May lowing his Chapel addreSlS. the day soon follow when we -On Senator Barry Goldspeak of Wiake FQrest Uni- water: "If Gold!wateT gets 500. Vetrosity." votes on the first ballot at rthe
An offeT from the foumdntioh (National Republican) convenin 1946 led the college to move :tion, he will win the nominato Win&ton-Saiem .. · . .. tion. But I don't think he would
W:ake Forest President Har- win the •general electioo in old W. Tribble also spoke, "The November." trusteeos l>f the Z. Smith Rey~ -On Governor Nelson Rockenold!s Foundation," Tribble said, feller: "He'LS got the bug. He "conceived an adventure into wants to be President. But the field of Cln'ilsrl:ian high- there are so many W()men who er education, challenging Wa:ke will not vote for him. They Fol'est to ·transplant century- would destroy him with the old roots to the Winston-Salem word 'homewreciker' ." conunumty and bring old tra- -On Richard M. Nixon: ditions in line with· the educa- "Nixon's not really seeking the tiona! demands of the modern 'thing (the nomination>. He had world. ' enough .abuse during the last
17 WF Students Hope For NCV
campaign. He'~ not lifting a finger and that's a fact. However, he recognizes that the Party could get into a ;situation at :the convention so that he w:ould be ,the best alternative."
-On Governor Willia;m ScrantOn: "Frankly the. situa,tion doe!Sn't look too good now and I'd rather save Governbr Scranton until 196S. He hoa.s potentially a tremendous ~litical future, and I'd hate for him to run and lose."
-On Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge: "Lodge represents an uncertainty. . -among rankand-file RepublicaniS. They seem unenthusia~tic about any of those who have announced. AIIld he's not here over-exposing himlself."
Concerning Goldwater, Judd added, "If he fails to get 500 votes, I believe his opposition will jell behind one candidate, probably Nixon and Nixon would win rthe nomim.ation,"
Favorite Son
Judd himself will be nominated by the Minnesota del~gation on ·the first roll-call. He explained he had no serious thoughtJs about wi.rutilrug the nomination, but hls favoriteson candidacy will be advanced to keep the Minnesota delegation fluid until J. definite trend
Seventeen Wake Forest stu-. dents Will undergo the final screening process this week in. their efforts to becO!llle North. Cal'olina Volunteers this sum-· mel'.
can be detected. versity, and the program will Judd was a congreSISman begin June 10. from Minnesota for 20 years,
The VolunteE:rs are a group of 100 student:; chosen from an original Jist of 800 applicants from. North Carolina colleges• anct universities who >villi work; in ten different deprEssed communities across the stat-e.
Volunteers will. condluct tutorial programs, operate care centers, assist with local health services, and perform other related tasks.
Each participant will receive room, board, and $250 for 11 we~ks of W10rk. He will live either in a college dormitory or a1 family home.
A one week orientation pro~ gram will be held at Duke Uni.-
The Volunteer program waS! from 1942 Wltil 1962. the result of a need for workers Goldwater's biggest problem to carry out the program initiat- is tlte people who h!a·ve attached ed by· the North Caro.tina Fund. themselves to him and who
The Fund was created by have whooped it up for his Governor Terry Sanford and candidacy. He is having to run other Nortl1 Cacrolinans in an at- 0111 the image 1some of these tern.pt to break the cycle of right-wing fanatics have ere-poverty in North Carolina. ated," Judd said.
Jim Beatty, former U.N.C. at The former medic·al milssion-Chapel Hili!. track star who is ary said 'he had discus-sed the an active distance runner, is situation with Goldwater and the director of-the program. He advised him he did not believe will speak in Ch!l.IPel on Thurs- these supporters would remain day, May 14. He will be avad!a- loyal if a platform not to their ble in the Chaplin's offi-ce fro~ liking is adopted at the con-11 to 12:30 for personal and vention. group interviews. Judd •agreed that GGldwater
North Carolina is tlte first · hais made 1some unfortumJa;te state to undertake such a pcro- statements during the pre-congram in connection with Presi- vention campaign·. "It's rtrue dent Johnson's drive to wipe out the cycle of poverty in the nation.
Poet Jean Garrigue Explains Her Work
Communist Is Wed. Lecturer
George Myers, who is identified by the Communist Information Lecture Bureau of thoe United States a-s a communist spokesman, will give a publiCI lecture at 8:15p.m. Wednesday m the auditorium of the Humanities Btilldi:ng,
By BEVERLY BURROUGHS STAFF WRITER
A contemporary American .P<let, Jean Garrigue, shared her verse with students and faculty in a Poetry Reading sponsored by the Colilege Union Lecture Conmuttee and the English Club last Wednesday in the Humanities Auditorium.
Dr. John Carter, assistant professor of English; introduced has been rea<i and reviewed in ·a 1\IJ:onday night session in anticipation of Miss Ganigue's visit.
As a teacher-lecturer, Miss Garrigue traveJ,S extensiv~y, but her Wake Forest arrival' marked her first trip into the South. Pleased by the gre~n and flower-
ing campus, she told the audience, "S.Jilnetim.e, I war..t to write a poem about the South.
Miss Garrigue_ began with readings from 'her first collec-· tion of poetry published in 1947,. "The Ego" o<>:nd "The Centaur," and .continued into later works. She used this prder of program, she sWd, "ro Y,OU .can see whether I've progressed or regressed.''
Mter the selections ''Primer of Plato," inspired by a phi!losophy course, andl "Song," she read from her second collection of poetry publish~ in 19!i3, "The Momument Rose."
As she . read, Miss Garrigue mentioned incidents which had
COmtfDued on page 4> ·
Dr. Robert G. Gregory, associate professor of history, said he arranged for Myers to visit the campus so that students in his freshman history class cou!ld a-ctually hear and talk to a communist.
Gregory said Myers probably will talk to .several history classes Wednesday and Thursday. Noo topic has bet!n announced for his public lel!ture.
Arnold Johnson, director of tile Communist Information Lecture Bureau, said Myers was. active in trade union movements• before . becoming chairma~ of \the Communist P.a.ey in Mazyland.
he has made .some off-hand recitals. comments and they've reacted Following class relllllion lunchon him. He has shot from the es which began .at 12:30 p. m. hip. A candidate for U. S. June 6, there will be an alumni President just can't do that." information program at 3 p. m.
Judd contended, however, that This will consist of a genel"al Goldwater is not as ememe di:scUISislion of the college by iofls as he has been pictured by chief officials. Garrity will t-oth opponents and some sup- speak at •the ·alumni dinner porters .... His -statement of for· which beginS at 6:30 p. m. eign policy in the January 17 Distinguished alumni service edition of Life iJs, one of the awards also will be presented best I've seen. It's rea-sonable at this time. and sound. •' The baccalaureate sermon
The form e r Congressman will be at 11 a. m. Sunday foloommented on the criticism lowed at 3 p, m. by the ·senior former President· Dwight D. orations. Prelsident and :Mrs. Eisenhower has received from .Harold W. Tribble will hold Reoublicanls concerning his role ·their annual reception for grad-. ,- ty f£ · ua:teos between 4:30 and 6 p. m. m par a ·arrs. b
"Eilsenhower bas deliberately followed at 7:30 P: m. Y a tried not to impose his will on commencement rec1tal by stutile Party. He has •always be- dents. licved :that ovel"all collective judgment will be wisest and it's not his job to tell the Republican P·arty whaot to do.
"However, he ~hould have built the Republican Party better than: he did. I3ut this came out of his yeal'ls as a military man. Ike's feeling, conditioned ty 40 years· in the military, Wa!S tha.t he was to be the president of •all the people, •and not so much .the leader of the Republican P·arty.
"He shQuld have intervened more in party aff·airs. As some of us advilsed him, in order for him to have been the president of all the people, he had to be the leader of the party to get his nation.oal policies.
"By the time he got around to seeing his error, it was toQ
(Continued on pa·ge 5)
. Award
Q)mmissioning
Commissioning ceremonies will be held ·at 9 a. m. Monday for ROTC cadets wi:th formal .grad· uation exerciseJS begilruning at 10:30 a. m.
All cl8JS1Ses up tln'ough 1913 will hold reunions along with the classes of 1918, · '19, '20, '24,. '39 '43 '44 '45 '54 and '62.
Senio; orators ~ill be Ronald Mcintyre of Stoneville, John Rx>senth•al of Roslyn Heights, N. Y., Fra:nk Wood of Miami, Fla., and David Zacks of New Bern. Alternates are Dan Custer of Palmyra, Pa., and CharlEIS Winberry of Statesville.
Shannon has been pretsident of the Unive11sity of Virginia since 1959 and the Rev. Mr. Lolley has been pastor of the church here since November, 1962.
Winners Two members of the Old Gold and Black staff were amo~ the first-prize winners last week in the College Press Awards contest sponsored by the Charlotte Observer and the Charlotte News. Winners were, (front row) Grant Blair, co-edi.~r of the N.C. State Technician, best editorial; Charles Osolin, editor of Old Gold and Black, best paper; (back row) AJ~ri Bunt staff writer for Old Gold, best feature; Curry Kirkpatri~k of the University of North Carolina D~ily Tar Heel, best sports story; and Mickey Blackwell, Dally Tar Heel, best news story.
l'AGE TWO Menday, May 11,1964 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Winherry~s Witty Tongue Slays Talent Show Crowd
I Cheerleader Elections
Legislature Tentatively Approves '.New Budget
Musicians To Perform
To BeHeld By ADRIAN KING ASSOCIATE I!DITOR
By TANYA STAFF WRITER
Ten cheerleaders, five men ·and five women, will be chosen by the Wake Forest students in a forthcoming. Chapel vote.
The 1964-65 student government budget was tentatively approved Thursday might by the Wake Fore!Sit Student Legisl~ure. The LegislaJture also .approved · several C!OOnmittee . appointments, ·and heard further appointments by Cliff Lowery, new student body pre&l.deDJt.
Blankets, red .spotlights, and the effluent humor of emcee Charlie Winberry provided a framework for the first annual Independent Talent Show Wednesday night.
Several previously uruklllown musicians displayed their various talents before an informal crowd of approximately 250 !Students on tlle lower lawn behind Reynolda Hall.
Giving solo performances in guitar ,styling were Ralph Husband, Dana InJgaHs, and Bill Bertrand. Ed MruJ.dy performed several accordian numbers, including rt:he traditional accordian-piece, "Lady of Spain." The latter drew much ·audience approval, dedicated to Mandy's favorite coed, Henrietta H.
The Madrigals, a speciallyformed group this year, presented several of the traditional sixteenth-century JSOillgS ''a cupella." This group, specializing in contrapuntal interopretatioll!s, includes John Edinger, Tim Peterson, Bob · McFall, Eddie Gaddy, Barbara Brewer, Jeannie Brewer, Sandra
COMBO performs at last Wednesday's Talent Show behind Reynolda Hall, spOnsored by the lndepend~nt ConneD.
Couples, Mary Lou Garrison, The rn101st salient feature of and Barbara Mazzei. the evening, •according .to audi-
Folk music was provided by ence applause, was the runThe Pathfinders., a group \\rhich ning repartee of },];aster of included the talents of Dana Ceremonies, Charlie Winberry. Ingalls, John Gaskill, and Blll The old "telegram" gag read Cooksey. Kathy Cline, p~aying as follows: "Sorry I couldn't the mandolin, was a pleasant ma·ke it to the lindependent a.ddition. to the group. Talent Show tonight; had to
Holiday Inn. Reece."
Csilgned) Mark
Other W:ake Forest personalities to fall to the witty 'aslsaults of CBW were Chaplain Hollingsworth, "obituary-writer'' Adrian King, Woman'IS Club speaker Harold Tribble.. and the ever..notorious "H o o p s" Hunt. Winning the award for "Most .attend a ·small party at the )foi:siest" were The Four Winds, .::.:_:.:.:_..::._ ____ .::._ _________________ _
a rock and roll gr<Jup composed of Rick 1\.l.zati, Stan Jacques, Dave Gross, and Frank Develle. Beatie numbers proved the crowd favorites, as coeds shreikcd :sarcastically to t..'le blatant strains of "I Want to
Young DeJnos Elect Robinson President
Hold Your Hand" wnd other · as the "peoples man to work old standards. LatTY Robinson, rising juruor ------------- J of Kinston, was elected prcsi- for them" addressed his audi-
ence as the "future non-tax
"TYPEWRITER IS OUR l.\UDDL"E NAME"
dent of the Wake Forest Ymmg payers of the state." Democrats Club in a recent The hefty 300-pound candidate meeting. said that wi1en his program of
Elected last week as vice- legalized gP.mbling, racing, and president of his cla1ss, Rob- lottery was adopted by the inlson will succeed Jim Mar- legislature in North Carolina, no tin. senior of Liberty. Robinson other taxes would be needed. urged his fellow Democrats to Burleson added that the 1.5 prepare for a year of work and billion raised from these activiservic:c to the party in the dec,. ·ties would allow every Tar Heel tion year ahead. to retire at age 55 with full pay.
The ele-ction of officers follow- Burleson predicted that un-ed a speech by Democratic Gu- less his program was adopted, bernatorial hopeful Bruce "Bo- breadlines would be comma~ zo" Burleson of Bakersville. throughout the state in two
Candidates for the position were ~Selected by members of the Cheerleading Committee after preliminary :try-outs.
Five coeds will be cblolsen from a <field of ten candid:JJtes, p,am Bain, Kris Romstad, Kathy Cline, Barbara Price, Vicki Tolar, Sylvia Stricklal!ld, Linda Rimel, :Marlene· Schmidt, Kay Su1lton, and Joyce Young.
Betty Lewis, <a cheerleader · for t'he past rthree years, who waJS not nominated by the committee, is a write-in candida.te.
Seven men will compete for the five positions open, Bob White, Gene Lawson, Ja~k Snyder, Roger Crawford, Eddie Wooten, Jim Monroe, and Linsey P11att. Mickey Taylor, a cheerleader last year who also waJS. not nominated, is a'lso conducting a wrilte-illl campaign.
Patton Named CuH20Head
Jobn Batton, !SOphomore of PompaJliO Beach, Fla., has been named by state and national Barry Goldwater campMgin leaders as North Carolina Youth for Goldwater chairman.
The 'appointment was announced jointly by Jim Ha.rf£, national director of Youth . for Goldwater, and Ken Thomas, N. C. Goldwater for President Committee chairmiun.
Patton, N. C. chairman of the Young Americ•ans for Freedom and a leader in the campus chapter, will be responsible for mobilizing college and high school students behind the candidacy of Sena·tor Barry Goldwater (R-Arizonal for President.
Thoma's said that Patton will
ARCHIE G. ALLEN • new. bank manager •
Allen Named BankManager
Archie G. Allen Jr;. ha:s been named manager of Wachovia Bank's. campus office.
Allen, who has been on the staff of <the ball!k's downtown office, haJs experience in both customer ·service and bank opera;tions. ·-
He is a native of . Winston· &dem and a member ·.Of Firtst Baptist Church. He majored in btminess 1admi.nistration at Da· vidson College befOre entering the U. S. Army as a second lieutenant assigned to Fort Bliss, Texas. ~ After his tour of duty, Allen did graduate work in . business administration .aJt Emory University before joining the bank in 1963.
He is ,treasurer of. the Winston-Salem Bachelor's Club and a member of the Wachau Investm~t Society.
CULLOM TO MEET
r.lbe record budget totals $2580.50. It was prepm-ed under .the direction of Jobn Mackovic, new studenJt body treasUTer. Since the new budget includes funds that h:a ve heretofore been :allocart:ed fur specific pw:poses by the Dean's Office, the. proposed budget will have to be approved by.Dean Edwin G. Wilson before it can be finallY ·adopted.
Increase
The major illlcrease came in section four entitled "Wake Fores,t in the State and Na.:: ti.OIIJ." U includes. proposed allocations for theN. C. Volunteers programs, community relations, the Bapti&t Trustee proP<JIOOl committee, Development program, N. c. Council on Human ·Rights, Wlorld Universilty Service, and the National Studelllt Association.
The 'NSA allocation sparked a lively queJSJtion and <aiJiSIWer exchange. A total of $565 is tenJtatively earmarked for NSA and related activities:; .
Several members · of the :uigisl.ature contended proposed NSA funds rshorild not be· included in the student government budget. They noted the motion adopted by the student body when approxiJng NS.t\ membership included the provision that the College Administration would pay the cbis11s.
Dr. Phyllis Trible, instructor in religion, will discuss "The' Relation of ·the Minister's Call to the Prophet's Call"· at a meeting of the Cullom Milllis• tcrial Conference at 7 p. m. Tuesday in Room 104, Wingate Hall.
Mackovic and · Lowery con. tended the pmposed allocations were included bec1ause the Dean's Office had indicated .a desire eta .1 hand over fundls to the Lelgislature that have been distributed on a project-byproject basis.
Dowery said the budget may
work closely with the senior ,--------------------~-----; group working for the senator. Patton is a political science major in pre-law. He ~s also a member of Wake Forest Young RepublicaniS.
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hlave .to be ·altered, but that the proposed allocations were deSi.gnaJted to indicalte in general the direction for student goyemment for the coming yell!.·
The budget was tentatively approved, but indicatiOIJSI are it will evoke more discussion.
The propQSed s:ta.tllte ch1ange giving the. president and vice presidellll: power to add ·additioDJatl members to existilig committees 3llld to appoint temporary eoDlJili,ttee'S was ap-proved. ·
At J!he beginning of the meet, ing, ·senior · Legislators. Bob Duvall and P:aul Patterson objected to rapprov~g propOsed committee chairmen. They said the meeting was a called one, but the proposed business WlBs not iln:cluded on the notifica. tion as required. _They aliso said Jthey had not had enough time to coDSider the proposed ·appoinitmellll:s. . .
,However, ll>wery and. Bill Slate, ~aker, said the meet· ing was announced · ~iilst week andi it' wa·s · assumed the legislators lmew ~they. had much work <to do. · Platterson'IS motion to table the commilttee' appointment untH neXt week was overridden ~d the.·.· 'lip:pOintments were approvecL
The Legislature fixed . every first and third Wednesday n]g;hts iJn each :mkmth 3LS' the regum meeting. time.
Two performances will. be presented by the Wlake Forest· instrumental music departm.ent thiJs. week in conjunction With NationiW. Music week. ·Music week: was last' week:, but due : to other events. the music depal."ltment had to PQStpOne the performances until. .this week .
The· Wake Forest Little. Sym~ phony Orchestra Will ;present a concert 'at 8:15 p. m:·tomlo±row in the lower auditorium at· WingJate Hall, The program . will featture the "Arioso~· of Bach; the serenade, · "EDie Kliene Nachtmusik" of MoZart; and five ' pieces for orchestra by' Bartok.
There are 18 members m the !Orchestra and the concert master is Michael TysoWISki, senior of Wilmington, Del.
On Thursdlay, the W.ake For· est concert band wiJ.l · present a · concellt in Wait Chapel. at , 8:15 p. m. . ·· /
. The band will feature Judith Lea, a junior of Lexing.ton, as piano soloist in the Gi"ieg Piano Concerto in A minor and . will. play the Symphony . No. 2 of Alexander Borodin. and. several seleclioiiiSI from the ·musical, "My ~air Lady." .
The Vetexan:s Administmtian pays .a training allowance of $110 ra month rt:o children who are enrolled full time. Under the War Orphms EducdioDal Assistance poogmm,
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OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 11,1964 PAGE THREE
WF Students -. ----_ ------To Present Trustee Proposal L::~ .. ~:!w~p,~ Is Gaining Ground
Kubricl~'s ~StrangelQve':Great , Sel{e~s, Hayden Star ·In Hot-Line Comedy
' By JIM SHERTZER ENTERTAINMENT COLUMNIST
"Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb"-A" Columbia presentation starring Peter HeliP.rs, George c. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Keenan Wynn, Slim Pickens, and Tracy Reed. Screenplay by Stanley Kubrick, Terry Southern,, and 'Peter George, based on ~e no.vel by Peter George •. MUSIC by Laurie Johnson .. Dueeted by Stanley Kubrick. At tlte center Theater in Greensboro.
The · American tradition . of ·self-criticism has often pro- -' duced some of our greatest motioo pictuTes. In the thrr-
. 'ties ,and early fol"lties (a periOd when America was , perhaps most critical · o.f itself), it was reswnsible for such film "greats" as Charlie Chaplin's "Mloder!J. Times," '
·.:._John Ford's "The Grapes of Wrath," . and Orson _Welles' "Oitizen Kane." For too long a --time, however, it ~as been
· 1yiDg latent behind -a facade of "adult" dramas. and, ·puritan -sex comedies. But\DOVI sOmething is astir in Anieriean pictures, and our old passion seems to be re-awak~ ening at · long last.
BeginDing weakly with "The Ugly American,'' a c:rilticism of :
·American for~ , eign policy, ,this renaissance hlllsi recein'tly ~ ga-: thering strength' with such pic-1 turets as "severi: · Days· in Mizy," (an attack on the American super~patriot), "Point ·of Order!" (a docu-
' '
mentary on the terrors of McClwthyj!&m), and "The Best Man" (a withering exiios:e of American pblitics). · Riding . the crest of the
wave, however, is Staniley Kubrick's. "Dr. Strangelove," a "nightmare 'comedy" ruthle'slsly criticizing American attitudes toward nuclear war.
Loosely based 0111: the Peter George novel "Red Alert," "Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Wlorrying and Love the Bomb" tells the story of the nuclear chain - reaction !Set off by a psychotic, war-mongering general. Convinced that the flouridation of water is in reality a monsterous Commie plot to detstroy our "precious bodily fluids," General J·ack D. Ripper (Sterling !Biaydcn) seals off his base and, (much to the distress of the President) sends his B-52 squadrons off to 1annihlli:ate the Soviets. Once begun, there iJs little tthat Presld:ent Merkin Muffley (Peters SellerS), ~ viet· Premier Dmitri Kisoff, General "Buck" Turgidlson, the Chairman of .the Joint Chiefs of Sliaff, (George C. Scott), Captain Lionel Mandr-illte, Ripper's aide,. (Peter Sellers, again), or Dr.·Strangelove, :the !President's "converted:" Nazi IDUclear specialislt (y~ers a.g~ain), or nny blody elise can do. With · Ripper the only living· man possessing the secret code that can reca11 the wing and a seCTet _Soviet "Doomsday · M'achine" primed to go off automati~ally in case of,sur-
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sent the ·secon(fset of lab plays at 7:15 p. m. Thursday lltlld Friday in :!;he ProtScenium Theater. E'ach of the plays ils directed by students.
The fotir plays will be presented each .night. "Fumed Oaik:," by Noel Coward, will I>e. the fir1SJt play of the evening, directed by Joyce Wilsie. Her cas.t includes Wayne James, Gail Puzak, Ertelle Brewer, and Susie Thomas.
Hayden, Sellera and director Kubrick on "Strangelove" set.
The second play of .the evening will be pre1Se111ted by Pam C'lodfelter, .a condensed version of Julian Thompson's "The Warrior's Husband." The theme concern:s an Amazon Slociety which finally introduces the wnusual custom of marriage. The cast of ·the comedy includes Nick Platella, Cindy Herrin, Carolyn Beach, Lou Green, Evelyn Knight, Moe King, and
prise atta<ek, they've all be-;-------------------_;:;=-----come the helpless· victims of. lll. G ::ter~::e~~:~~ardLs ·allld 1r.1.iss . · roome Plans
Charlene Ball. Ronnie Watts will direct "The
Valiant," and Felice Proctor's presentation of Anton Chekhov's "The Marriage Proposal" will close the evening. This cast includes Dan · Cu!Siter, Peter Bugel, and Sandy Allison.
Screenwriters K u._b rick,
-Southern am George present S l ·• 1: l R . •t l all 1this •BS satire (hence the · 0 0 , oca ec l a names Ripper, Muffley, Kils• off, -"Bat" Guano, "King" Kong, etc.), but much of what they depict may IIKlt be as far from' !the truth as we might like to imagine. For ex-ample, think imaginblg flotiridation a Communist plot is too far out? A 1959 study bY a noted · psychol~ fo'\ID(l respondents Whlo !lonest]y believed ;t;bJaJt 1th.is hea11;Jlful practice caused hardeniDg of the arteries, premature aging, loas of memory ·and nymphomania! And what about an that governmentail red tape? Could it possiblY stall any atltempts to aver-t a nuclear disaster? One wonders.
Kubrick''S cast is uniformly excellent. Sterling Hayden is superb as a mad general, and ~ovge C. Scott, previou:sly a Hollywood "heavy,'' displayJS rare comic style as Turgidson.
But Sellers is kiing, and in "Strangelove" he gives perhaps his best !Screen per~
rormance (performances?) to date. Alrthough a:1l of his portraits 'are good, hils Dr. Strangelove (Count Weirdiesliebe before his "Americani~ zatiOn"), the madNaziscient~. ist, is a masterpiece of ,act~ iillg,
But director Stanley . Kubrick deserves the lion'IS sba;re of ·the credit :for .the film. Writing, producing .and directing a- lfilm are all taxing jobs, and Kubrick has done 'a brilliant job in all three capacities. Sparks of geniUIS he's Shown us before (most noti.ably in "Paths of Grory" and "Lolita"), but in "StraJillgelove" he's ma:naged to suisJtain his talents throughout.
But is his present film really. a "comedy?" Yes, most empb:Bitically, for the basis of all true comedy is ultima.tely transcendence, and an audience that has laughed it& WJay through "Strangelove" is perhaps ·a little more capable of living sanely itl the terrify~ ing presence of the H-Bomb.
The President of the Wo-· retary o.f the College Union, man's GOvernment Association, president of Phi Sigma Iota, Joyce uroome, will display honorary romantic languag!ls her musical talent in a wlo society, and Honor Council recibal at 8:15 p, · m. Monday member. in the IDwer Auditorium of Miss Groome says the re-
Production managers for the College Theater's lab plays are Martha McClure, Charlotte Toml.illLron, Carole Saintsing, and B. C. May.
Wingate Hall. cital will be exciting. "I've Chopin, Nocturne, E major, Op, iMiss Groome will concen- competed in student ·recitals 62, N~. 2 ,and Waltz, C-shlaxp
trall:e an classicail numbers, and contests, bu,t this is my minor, Op. 64, No. 2. Debussy's with ·a few ]jght-clJalssical ren- first solo recibal. Preparation light numbers will conclude ditions from Debussy's ct>llec- for .this recitai hrus taken 50 the program. Miss Groome, tion. much work, but I do enjoy it.". \'vith the .assistance of her in~
An energetic senior who Plans MiSIS G1100me's prognam will structor, Christopher Giles, has to teach English or French in begin with Mozart'IS Adagio, B selected four numbers from high !SChool, iMiss Groome will minor, K. 540. This selection DebuSISy's large repertoire-The graduate with 3() hours in each will be followed by Sonata, Girl with the Flaxen Hiair, The of these subjects. She is a m~m- A Major, Op. 120, by- Schubert. Hills of Alllacapri, The Subher of Who's Wlm in American Atiter a brief intermission, she merged Cathedral, and Min-
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Intere1s.t and support for the Wake Forest trustee proposal ils growing, according to Dr. Harold W. Tribble, presidellllt of the College. He made the observation in an editorial in the April edttion of the Wake Forest alumni magazine. , He said the 60 pe·r cent ma
jority which the amended plan received Last November at the Baptist State Convention provides "a good foUIDdation upon which we might continue our effort and points toward approval by the Convention next November in GreeliiSboro."
Non-Baptists The propas,al required a two
thirds majority. It would remove thG' residence and denominational qualifications for a p:ortion of the 36-member Colle•ge Board of TrUJStees. The amendment which was turned down would have allowed a fourth, or nine members, of the Board to be non-North Carolinians, and 1lour of that number to be lllOn-Baptists. The origin'al plan offered , by the College would have removed denominational and residential quali!fications for 16 members of '!he Board of 'l1rustees.
Tribble said in the article that the College hrus esta'blidled a ·Statewide advisory committee to assislt the execu,tive committee of the Trustees in enlisting ·support for the prOposal, and is cOIOoperating with the Convention's Council on Christian Education.
He reported that the advioory committee met on the campuS February 25 and detspite the snow, 80 per . cetnt attended. "The discUISsion was creative and enthusmastic, lllllld lfhere wrus hearty unanimity in urging that the strOill!ges.t possible
case be made for the proposal this year and that elOISe and vital cooper.ation be maintained with the Council.
"The meeting reflec,ted the seemingly widespread ' feeling that the proposal should be adopted and that it should applY to all the ISe·ven collegets," Tribble !Said.
Tribble concluded t11a;t the case for the proposal is ''vastly stronger thils· year." For the College, he said, it is "of urgent importance." He s•aid the total program of the college is ilnvolved in the proPOIStal.
The Council on Christian Educatmn met on the campm in ea;rly March illld reached a decision concerning. the proposal . Tribble did not mentioin that meeting in the editorial, but according to Ben Filsher, executive secretary k>f the Coun~ cil, ·a.t that time, the decision reached was "satiGifactory to everybody.''
The decision will not be made public until July wken the Coum.cil's recommendation to the Executive ·Committee of the General Board will be made, he said. ' ·
However, other ·sources nave said the proposal th:at will be recommended to the Executive Committee will also apply to the other six Baptist Colleges.
Also, the plan. reportedly will eliminate the residenJtial and denommational qualifiCiatiOillS · for a folll"lth of the B<iaro of Trustees.
Dr. L. H. Hollingsworth, College chaplain, said Friday the College will undertake an ex~ telllSive campai.in similar to the drive last summer by college officials and 1sltaff. He expressed confidence in ·the prospects for the propOsal.
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WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, MAY 11, 1964
Testing The Gag Law At least one important aspect
in which Wake Forest is better off as a Baptist College than as a state institution will be demonstrated Wednesday when a member of the United States Communist pa1ty visits the campus.
Such a visit would be impossible at either the University of North Carolina or N. C. State, because of a law passed by the North Carolina legislature last summer prohibiting Communists or takers of the Fifth Amendment from speaking at state-supported institutions.
That the law is unnecessary, insulting, and embar.rassing, most educators, students, and even politicians would agree. North Carolina is the only state in the country with such a law, and national figures who have been told about it have almost un.animously denounced it as ridiculous.
Politically, though, it is such a hot potato that none of the major gubernatorial candidates dare to oppose too strongly, for fear of losing too many votes from those citizens who are so frightened of Communism that they believe any exposure to it will contaminate.
In light of this, it will indeed be interesting to note the reaction of Wake Forest students to Wednesday's speaker. If the sponsors of the bill "two of
whom are Wake Forest alunmi who should 'know something about Wake Forest students" are correct in their evaluation of the effects of a Com:munist speaker on young minds, then we can expect by the end of this week the formation of a new chapter of the Communist Youth Movement, demonstrations against the evil of capitalism and the free enterprises and the awarding of an honorary degree to Vladimir Lenin.
Somehow, though, we doubt Wake Forest students, or any other North Carolina college students, are quite that impressionable. Rather we feel that this first-hand experience with a Communist is opportunity to see for themselves how he thinks and how he is motivated, will provide students with an insight into the nature of Communism and a clue to how it can best1 be comfbatted. .
As Dr. Walter Judd pointed out in his Chapel speech just last Tuesday, the way to stop the march of Communism is to understand it, not to push it away and pretend it isn't there. Listening to and talking with this speaker vdll be an opportunity to take this advice. We hope it will also bring second thoughts about the speaker-han bill to the minds of North Carolina's lawmakers.
Political Conservatism That political conservatism
among college students is not more widespread is certainly more vociferous today than many members of the preceding college generation would hav~ believed possible. The traditional role of youth, especially college youth, is that of the dissatisfied reformer who demands change and progress, and who fights for an end to the injustices to society.
Today, however, the liberals .among college youth are a great ·deal more subdued, and the con.servative element has taken the ·opportunity to establish itself as a pressure agent far more powerful than its size would indicate. The social reason usually given for this up&urgence of conservatism is the affluence enjoyed by today's college generation since its birth. With no major wars, no depressions, and unparalleled economic prosperity as their only experience, it is natural, some say, that many college students would have no reason to demand change, and would want to cling to the status quo.
* * * Deeper psychological reasons,
however, have· been offered to explain conservative behavior, especially the extreme John Birchite behavior that many college conservatives seem to be flirting with of late.
The data gathered by a political scientist, H. McClosky, who has studied the personality make.UP of the extreme political conserva,tives in America, shows that conservative attitudes tend to characterize the uninformed, the poorly-educated, and the unintelligent. In addition, McClosky says "Conservatism .... appears to be far more characteristic of social isolates, of people who think poorly of themselves, who suffer personal disgruntlement and frustration, who are submissive, timid, and wanting in confidence, who lack a clear .sense of direction and purpose,
CHARLES OSOLIN Editor
who are uncertain about their values, and who are generally bewildered by the alarming task of having to tread their way through a society which seems to them too complex to fath()lm." ·
McClosky also finds "The extreme conservatives are easily the most hostile and suspicious, the most rigid and compulsive, the quickest to condemn others for their imperfections, for weaknesses, the most intolerate, the most easily moved to scorn lind disappointment in others, the most inflexible and unyielding in their perceptions and judgments ... Poorly integrated psychologically, anxious, often perceiving themselves as inadequate, and subject to excessive feelings of guilt, they seem inclined to project onto others the traits they most dislike or fear in themselves."
' * * * McClosky, in conclusion, says
"By a process which psychologists have labeled 'reaction formation,' the disgruntled often seem to venerate the very society which frustrates them ... Conservatives make a fetish of community, although it is apparent that in many ways they are more alienated from the community than most ... In the same vein, although the intensity of their patriotism exceeds that of any other group, their faith in democracy "American or otherwise" is lowest, while their scores on the totalitarian, elitist, and authoritarian values "which for the most part, the American creed rejects are the highest."
Moderate conservatives, in college or elsewhere, serve a needed role in society, but when they begin to mingle too closely with extremists such as those described by McClosky-who are actually closer than anyone else to the very group they so violently oppose-they are in danger. Responsible conservatism is a necessity; radical conservatism, like radical liberalism, is a threat to the American way of life.
JIM SINKWAY Business Manager
ADRIAN KING, Assoelate Editor CHARLES WINBERRY, Senior Editor LINETA CRAVEN, Managb]g Editor BILL BENTZ, Sports Editor BACREL FLOYD, .JO DeYOUNG, DONIA WW'tELEY, Feature Editor
Assistant Editors DENNIS HOFF, Assoclate Sports Editor LEON SPENCER, Circulation Manager
EDITORIAL STAFF: Barr Ashc11aft, Bill Brwnbach, Beverly Burroughs, Carol Claxon, Richan:l Fallis, J'3.llet Gross, Nancy Hellan, Marianna Hooper, Albert Runt, Keith HurtCiherson, Jim Lewis, Joann Judd, Jackie Lambert, Bob Lipper, RiC'hard Mills, Susan Patton, Walt Pettit, Sylvia Fridgen, Jim Shertzer, Robert Shory, Mayo stancil, Mickey Taylor, Bill Vernor, Betsy Winstead, Frank Wood, BUSINESS STAFF: Walt Brown, Barbara Bennett, Ed Fuller, Bill Hill.
. rounded J'anuar,v 15, 1918. U the student DeWBjllapep of Wake Forest College, Old Go14 and Black Ita publbhed eaeh lllonda3r during the school ye!ll' except during examtn•tton and lloJfdQ' periods u cllrected b7 the Wake Forest Publ!caUona Baud.
Jhmber ot f:be AAoelated CoDegiate Press. Represented for National AdvertlldDII ~ Katlaalll AdnriildDg s.ntce, Inc. Subscription rate: ~.~ per year. Second-clus poatap D814. WlD8too..s.Jem, N. c. Form 3579 Should be ma1led to Box T.MI7, WinatoD;salem, lf, C. moe. P!riJlad b7 '!'he NubvOle Grapblc, NaahviDe, N. C.
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Current Affairs
<AD letters to the editor must be signed; aam:es w:Ul be withheld on request.~
To The Editor: To you and all of, ynur col
league'S on the Old Gold and Black staff T want to exterid enthllsdastic congratulatiOlliS On. the three distinctiOIIIS recently', . received. You richly deserve all of· them and more. [ ·am very proud bf you and the paper.
Harold W. '!lrl.bbie· President
To The Editor:
LBJ: Politically Motivated?
In last week's Old Gold and Black, there .appeared ·ao "editorialette" which ·accused the local chapter of the YAF ·Of "!Spreading misrepresentaltions •and half-truth!S" •about NSA. It is possible . that · NSA w&9 milsrepresented by both its opponeillts .and its proponents, but is :that ·any excuse for the ~casm and bilgotry found in the .. Old Gold mnd Black's "edi~ .. torilalette"? The YAF may Or may !!lOt have misrepre6ellted NSA, bult comparing that oon~ervative Organization Ito the JJohn Birch Society ("Perhaps they will take aw.ay the local YAF's 'Impeach Earl· Warren' buttons") and ·advising it 1n !Seek out the AmC!ri.c:an N~zis is misrepresentation: ' of the worst order. Perhaps the Old Gold and Black ..should ·follOw the old maxim arnd not throw !Stones from its g1ass house. By JIV AN TABffiiAN
In· .the absence of any worldshaking events :abroad (and perhaps that is for the better) one's •attention focUJSeS more eaJsily 0111! the home front. Part of .the evolving reality within the United States today may have far-reaching consequences for the country and the world at large.
Pre-election politics undeniably constitute one such imstance of a crucial problem. In this contex,t, some ~:>f the following seem to colliStitute major questionJs: who will be the Republican candidate? what is the meaning of Governor Wallace'•s relatively substantial showilllg outside the Sout:h? and, who will be President Johnson's running mate on the DemoCI'la·tic ticket.?
As important, but less obvious, :iJs a more subtle quels-tion, however. ··.··c'·' suming that John- · • son's re-election is highly ... ble - tbiough nC>t · . certain-what po- · licies will the Pre· sident pursue, :and what· other policies will he at least tempo- TABmiAN rarily de-emphasize, in order to make a new term almast a certainty? Thexe is no need to reiterate here the commonlyobserved political overtones of the President's War on Poventy. Neither is there ·any need to doubt strong political motivations behind his publicized pro-
Debate Frat To Honor Top Speaker DEBATE FRAT TO HONOR ..
A new Speaker of the Year award will be presented in Chapel Thursday by the Wake Forest chapter of Delta Sigma Rho-'llau Kappa Alpha, fue national honorary forensics fraternity.
According ,to David Zacks, senior of New Bem: and president of the local group, the award will be to recognize "the one person not of our membership who we feel has made the most significant contribution of the year in and through the area of public spea:killlg."
Other members of the fraternity are Martha Swain, junior of F1ayetteville, Frank Wood, senior of Miami, Fla., Neal Tate, junior of Gastonia, Barry Dorsey, junior of Shelby, and Jim Walderufels, junior of Manhasset, N. Y.
The purpose of the award is not only to .:recognize outs:tanding speaking, said Zacks, but to stimulate an interest in and appreciation of public speaking on the part of the student body.
Poet '(Continued from pa.ge 1)
so impressed her that they became poems, Background in~
spiration for her poem "The Pony" carne in seeing on a New York street one spring day a Shetland pony· surrounded by children.
Of another selection, "The Maimed Grasshopper Speaks Up," Miss Garrigue said that the insect with one feeler broken which she describes !in her poem is "not only a grasshopper! speaking, but any human being
. with some of his sense impair~ ... but who must survive in his l.i.i\e. ,,
motion of the Civil Rights Bill and hi'S lllOt-too-publicized ·agreement on expedient amendments SOIOthing Southern Senatoi'IS.
Senator Goldwail:er'lS ,good furtune in the South calllllot leave the President indifferent. His recent visit to North Carolina, Tennessee, ;and Georgia may have well been intended to include more than poverty in the attractive Johnson package.
Means .Justified
So far, so good, since the means ISIOught for are justifiable and seem themselves quite justified, even though it rem,ains questionable whether the Marlows in: Rocky MoWJJt may have had more to eart and less to worry about after the Presidential vistt. One can even go so far as .to question the ethics :involved in "exploiting" ;poverty .to promote "affluence." But if it takes a "hard sell" and 2D honesrt: look into the wound in order to make Americans realize the tangible reality of :poverty, ,the fault is surely not Johnson's .alone in beilll•g rather candid •and uninhibited in making <the pitch.
Speaking IOf pitching, there
was •a lof of it in ·Johlnson's rather emphatic insi'Stence on avoiding the rail !strike. The unexpectedly easy !Settlement, after his intervention, of a conflect that had Jmgered for so long, ilnevitably leads one to W10nder. Did he promise both parties ,anything that the public ilgnores, or is •the Treasury's leniency in ,tax;ation policy cO'Ilcerning tUDI!lels all that was •actually offered? Or wa!S the setUement a pos~neme:nt without a comprehensive and extensive comprom~se and ·solu-tion? ·
In American politics, IIJ.O less tl~an elsewhere, you cannot .get something for nothing. Thus the :rela.tive success of President John\son in getting thi!Dgs done :iJs not .a Providential gut paid for only by warm handshares, pathetic appeals, ·aJ!ld garden-party press conferences.
In spite of all this, however, a l.ot is being said about President Johnson not :politicking. It is even Slllid that Lodge ooppor:ters aa-e considering keeping him in Saigon until the Convention, to balance the image of a busy ·· and disinterested Democrat in the White House
SenthnentalJourney
Whimsey B,. DONIA WIIITEL8Y
FEATURI: EDITOR
When considering possible sites for our •annual Pub Row Banquet, we hit upon the old Wake Forest campus as a fitting il.ocation. Mter all, here we were, an erutire generation of Deacons who had no :acquaintance ,aJt all with the original coUege. "Deacon !Hollow" and ".the foreiSIIIs of Wake" were just empty phrases to us, describing a loDJg .and rich tradition which had become sadly swallowed up in the more metropolitan iiilfluence of symmetrical Georgian architecture, busy city ISitreets, and Reynolds, Reynolds everywhere.
We arrived in the quiet town of Wake Forest, near R>aleigh, on a Sunday afternoon. Our g!IlaciouJs hoSt, Dr. E. E. Folk, entertained us with tales about his home, a ;tree-shaded, i!:hreestory dwelliiig directly across the r.oad from ,the school. Built iJn the early 1800's., the ~use carried a long history of pr:r fcssors and !Students who had occupied ilt over the decades.
Like The Magnolias
Crossing il:be road under the •guidance of Dr. Folk and a very candid caretll!ker, Mr. Sweatt, we entered the lowwalled growumds of the campus--what has been for these eight year\SI <the ·Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. Walking in a group over 1he old, mOISis-Covered brick walks, cJ.'IaDinlg our necks and snapping pictures !like so ma,ny tourists, we slowly perceived the real meaniiilg of ·the ;time-worn ;phrase, "Co.vers the ~ampus Like !the iMagnolias." The beau·tiful, rf:a1.l tree\Sl dotted the. g11ass aJS far a1s the eye could see, overshadowed only by il:be majestic oaks of "the forests of Wake."
We were glad we went when we did. .Although the grounds and most of the buildings were :the same ones where generatlions of Wake ForeSII: ISII:udents !Studied aJD.d played long before we or our parents or our grandparents were born, although the setting was the same for the most part, the slow changes
wrought by progress were painfully vi:sible to UJS sentimentalists whb ma~ bave naively expected that .the old place would settle doWIII! into a quiet repose as soon as lthe Deacons ' left it. A new library surprised UJS, as well as •a new donn and a beautiful Wait Chapel that few Deacons had ever sart· in. And to make room for t!h.em, ·tile old building!S had to come down.
The old 'alumni building, almost totally reduced w rubble, held >a very ilnteresing old story. According to Dr. Folk, two med students bad robbed a ·graveyard for a subject .to experiment on one dark night; hearing someone coming, however, just 1as they passed the buildig w'hich was then under construction, they hid the corpse tmderneail:h ·the concrete steps. A sparkle of miJschief gleamed in the good doctor'IS ·eye ·~s. he suveyed the pile of rubble in front of us. "Nobody ever knew for sur~." he rtold us, "but I guess we'll find out soon. I told them they better not d.M'e tear down those steps until I was here :to watch."
Old Pub Row
The most nOSitalgic scene of all, :t!h.ough, wals rt;he ruin of the old building which hoUISed the originail. "Pub Row" offices·. We tramped through piles of bricks and broken lumber, peeling wallpaPer ·and plaster •and old cardboard posters. The walls and ceilings almost totally demolished, doors hanging from their hinges, we had a bard time diJS<tinguishing the Howler office from t:he Student arnd the Student from the Old Gold and Blac!k. We were, indeed, sentimental.iists; we picked up posters, bricks, and any other movable souvenirs that we could possibly carry off back to Winston-salem, as reminders of 1a place tlmt was, in a semse, our birth-place; a place that would soon be em.tirely effaced from the campUIS to make room for that progl'eiSS that is as necessary as it is saddening.
by the image of a busy ambaJSSadloT in a oruel hotspot. Perhaps that is reaily how some RepublieanJs are seeing Johnson, ·but, .a!SISuredly, not all of fhem: Because there are others who, una.'ble to oppose him on poverty or civil· rights or strike settlements, all of
. which they ·recognize ~s 10penly political issues, d€1S1Perately try to picture the President ·aJS not busy enough. He is not busy enough· about Cuba, not busy enough about NATO; not busy enowgh about C).>yrus, and ll1IOt busy enough about South Vietnam.
Corroboration
Appearances •and occurances often corrobor-ate their feaTs. And Qne doeis not have to look too closely to see that Johnson enjoy!S playing more familiar games more often. One could undel'\Sitand why. After his rather undiplomatic letter to Bonn, in which he expressed underSitandilllg for Russi"an fears· of a restiDgent Germany, it would perhaps be betj:er if he .avoidedhilsless familiar games.
Soviet cautioUISi!less just prior to the November elections, lest new aggressiveneSS~ might encourage consei'V'atives in lthis country, ;fort:t.unately make JohnISIOlll's oneomded talents less dan.gerows now. But soon Jlftel'
Ralph Lake Class of' 'f>l
Lawyers Elec~ . Ford President:
Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity recently elected Ia:rry Ford, second year law student of Landis, president <Ma·gister) for 1964-65.
Other new o£ficers include William B. Crews, treaJSIUrer <Exchequea:-), second year student at Oxford; Leo Dau,ghitcy, secretary ,(Clerk) , second yea:r student of Newton Grove; allld John · Newitt, historian, second year student of Cha:r110tte.
Funny T~ing .•• Dr. William 0. Harris, former
Wiake Forest English instructor Who was released last spring before he achieved tenure, has repol1tedly been appointed visiting professor of English at the Univel1Sity of California at -Berkeley,, which has one .of .,the'· • • fines.t En,glish departmen.ts in· the colliiitry.
November, if he is still around; he may find that these inactive months in foreign affairs ~ have prepared far him a bitter harvest .
EditOrialettes Hope Springs Eternl!-!.
We notice that two Wake Forest students have an'" nouneed their candidacy for presidency and vice presi.:. dency of the United States.
They think they will be able to carry 'Yake For~st, Duke Carolina and State, and feel the1r campaign· might spread into South Carolina and · maybe over the nation.
Confidentially, we think they'll be lucky to carry their own suite.
What-No Sp!rit? Cheerleader-choosing time is with us again. You
know how they do it-first a small selection committee holds tryouts for preliminary eliminations, and thi:m the survivors are voted on in Chapel.
Well, a funny thing happened on the way to the Chapel.
You know that short blonde cheerleader, Betty Lewis? The on~ that shouts herself hoarse at every game, and turns dozens of cartwheels that would J?Ut a chimpanzee to shame? The one that bounces With the best of them, and always has a big "Hi-ho.w' you?" for everyone she meets on campus? The. one that the student body has voted in overwhelmmgly for two years, the sole survivor from her freshman cheerleading squad way back in '61? You know the one-' the short blonde one that hasn't missed a single home football or basketball game in three years, come rain, shine, quizzes, term papers, headaches, or tired feet. The one who has journeyed to nearly ev_ery away game in three years, including State, Carolma, Clemson Duke, and Tennessee. You know the one.
Well 'this short blonde cheerleader will be conspicuou'sly absent from the line-up in the front . of Chapel next week. She was eliminated by the selectiOn committee in the preliminary tryouts, you see. It see!I!s, according to certain eagle-eyed judges on the comnuttee, that Miss Lewis "JUST DIDN'T SHOW ENOUGH SPIRIT to be a cheerleader."
Can you bea·t that? Funny thing, how 2000 Deacons have had the wrong
idea about school spirit all this time. Be interesting to see what kind of ideas they have about it come Chapel~ cheerleading-choosing time next week.
* * * By the way, Miss Lewis isn't the only cheerleader who was left off the ballot. Mickey Taylor, who was on the . squad last y~ar, had a quiz during the tryout session and could not attend. All the other men who tried out were accepted by the committee.
Sounds like another case of the committee outvoting. the students. A write-in vote could splash some well-deserved .egg on c~rtain smug faces.
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ld Gold and red ·an "edi· accused the lhe YAF -of ;>resoo.taJti0111s 'about NSA. .t . NsA WIIL9 both its OIP~piOneiiits, but for the sar·
found in the lack'ls "edi~ . 'AF may Or :sreprelselllted 1g ;that contion ·Ito the 'f <"Perhaps ay the local :ar-1 · Warren' vising it to ~c:an NUis iom: . of the a.pS the old hould ·follOw d not th.mw ass house. ;>h :Lake ;s of' 'frl
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. Highway~nen· Go International O'Flaherty · With Folk Music And Humor Reads Paper
"An Esthetic Analysis of
By RACHEL FLO¥D A8818TANT EDITOR
-Take five young men, at least eight well-mastered and often unusual musical ilnlstruments, five.languages <English, French, Hebrew, Spanish, and international folk music), and 1,500 pairs of bands c.Iapping to "M~ry Don't You Weep," an-d you have Thursday's concert by the Highwaymen. ·
Performing in Wait Chapel under the sponsorship IJf . the freshman dass, the group was a hit from the emcee's last intr~>,ductory "Highwaymen" to thfl 'final "Bonjour ·Mes Amis" of the 'evening.
The audience, about half of , wham were Wake Forest ~tu
dents, sang reverently tq "Micllael," more lustily to ''Praetoria," and with great vigor to "Mary Don't You Weep," making ~ "sing-withus" songs the definite favorities of-the e\·ening.
Also featured were well-known selections such , as "Gypsy Rover," "Cotton Fieldls," and Rlllllbling Boy,", !Blong with less
well-knov;n tunes such as "Nothing to Look Forward To."
With one member, three languSiges, and seveJ.'Ial i.Mtru· ments imported, the group broug'ht a refreshing internation-
al flavor to the folk music they .:>fferect., relying mainly on variety and good music t{\ keep the attention of their audience, which alone wo!lld. make the five something of a novelty·. an'IOillg poplli.ar folk· singing groups,
Another ensemble w h o s e
members first met and sang while they were in college Logether; the Highwaymen displayed the unusually' successful harmony of voices and styles that has made them so successful in personall appearances and on records.
President's Panel Advises Students
.. '
By LOUIS· BISSETTE · STAFF WRITER
' \
A Young President's Organization Educational Panel, sponsored jointly by the College Ut:J.fon ·and The Young Americans for Freedom, stressed the unlimited opportunities for the college gradluate in the American free enterprise system. in a dis'cussion helje Tuesday evening.
mOO." The main ·theme of the ctiscus
sion was, "Oru>ort~ty' versus Security in the Free Ent...>rprise System." The members of the YPO panel were: John Redding, president of Pinehtm;t Textiles, Asheboro; Allen Owen, president of Piedmont Construction Co., Winstoo.-Salem; Tom Davis, president of Piedmont Airlines, Winston-Salem; Henderson Relk, president of Belk Co., Charl<;tte; and Beverly Howard, president of Hawthorne Aviation, Charleston, s. ·c.
Homman's 'Socratic Memorabilia' " was the· title of a paper presented by Dr. James C. 0'Flaherty, chairman of the Ge,rman Department, at :1 rnt.'Cting of the North Carolina Associ-· ati·on of Teachers of German at UNC-Greensboro last week.
O'Flaherty·s paper is Ito be part of a book on which he is presently working. The finished work will include the first English translation of .. th<! original German work. O'Flahcrty said he expected the paper to be p.art of the introduction and analysis of that translation.
The paper calls attention to certain dramatic elements contained in Hammon's 'essay and discUSisels them at length, O'Flaherty said that he undectook the work because he felt many German 'writers had been struck by these dramatic elements since the work was first published in 1859.
Among these writers was Goethe himself, who, as a youth, thought of writing a dramatic work based on Socrates. Goethe, said O'F:I.aherty, received his inspiratioo to write such a play from_ "Socratic Memorabilia."
The Young Presidents Organization is a voluntary association of company presidents. All of its members (over 1600) became the heads of their enterprises before reaching the age of 40. The pUl'pOSe of the organization is to "help its members become better presidents and beltter
The discussion' was conducted on a questiOIJllo'and-aiDSwetr basis with audience parti'cip;..tion. A WGA' Elec' ts wide range of issues .::oncerning
Accept Equal Rights Proctor Tells Students
t11e business world artd ~he col- N lege student were discussed. T ew Officers
The panel was ,unanimously opposed to the Public AcoomodlatiollJS and E:•air-EmploymentPractices sections of the Civil Rig'hts Bill now before Congress. It also object€d strongly to some points of President Johnson's War on Poverty campaign OiQ
the grownds that it would stifle individual initiative. The members of the panel agreed that labor unions had fulfilled a necessary task in the past, but but now th-eir role was diminish
Six · coeds were chosen as house presidents recently in WGA elections. They are Trish Grimsley, rising senior of Whiteville; Jo Honeycutt, rising senior of Mooresville; Nell Hoyle, rising senior of Thomasville; Susie Ewing, rising senior of Southern Pines; J.\.!orgie Bowman, rising senior of Alexambia, Va.; and Carolyn Peacock, rising junior o~ . Raleigh.
Dr. -Samuel D. Proctor, associate director of the Peace Corps &Jd. former -president of Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina in Greensboro, said in Chapel Thursdzy that in the "relationship of man to theSe times and destiny . . • equal rights is the dominant issue to-· day."
Accepted Customs
Things that were once strange and forbidden, Proctor said, are now · accepted customs. Citing· freedom of the press and women's suffr:age as coiillllon XJights once intolerable, Proctor
said that in the same way Americans must accept . difference in oolor among peoples as i,ncidental.
' The former m.lnlster · believes that by engaging mtellectual, dedicated people, the Church has the opportunilty to lead the cause of equal rights to "not let the voice of America be bigots and patriots."
ing. The panel agreed that the best
opportunity for adv-ancement :n the business world today is in a small-to-middle size company. The Panelists ~elt that tnany times a promising ;.roung executive is !lost in the crowd of a large covporation.
Other officers installed were president, Dana Hanna, rising senior of Dunn; vice president, Helen Strickknd rising senior of JRocky Mount; secretary, Suzanne Bost, rising junior of Charlotte; treasurer, Rose Hamrick, rising sophomore of Shelby; and social chairman, Carol R::in, nsing senior or Mu.ssape-'lUa, !S'e.w York. , The businessmen were asked
what kind of sati'Sfaction they received from bein-g the head of I PffiANDELLO TRYOUTS
NEAToHear OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday,Mayll, 1964 PAGE FIVE
Lois Edinger RepUblican Keynoter ·Says Lois· Edinger, president-elect N• D, 't w T R
of the National Education Asso- l"'V"Oll oesn a· nt ciation, will be the guest speaker .A. 0 un of the Student ~'EA at Wake Forest at 7:30 p, m. Thursday in the Humanities Building Auditoriu;m.
Miss Edinger, first North Carolinian to hold the NEA presidency, his completed theMaster's Degree in Education, and over a span of 13 years has served as a high school social studies teacher alid as the first television teacher nf American History in the state.
She has served the state association both aiS vice-president and president. Miss Edinger "was instrunlental in devising the legislative program of Gov. Terry Sanford, the first education governor that N10rth Oarolina hals enjoyed ~ince :the rturn of the century," accordin!g tq Dr. Frank Fuller, N. C. Education Association President.
Outside of the state Miss Edinger served as a member of the Defense Commission. She was elected vice-president of the NEA, said all interested persons and future teachers would be welcomed at the lecture. and educational administrators from throughout the Winston-SalemForsyth County School System.
ODK Notes Anniversary
The Wake Forest chapter of Omicron Delta Kappa, Hono:r:ary Men's leadership fraternity, this week celebr31tel!! its 25th Anni· 'Versary.
The organization will hold a banquet on Wednesday evening at 6:30. New members, who will be tapped Tuesday in Chapel, will be initiated . and new officers will be inducted.
W. W. Staton of Sanford, a member of the Boarrl of Trustees of the College and Democratic National Cemmitteemen from North Carolina, will present the after-dinner address. Staton is a graduate of Wake Forest and is a charter member of ODK.
{Continued from page 1) late."
Judd LSaid that if Eisenhower does decide to use his influence at the GOP convention, it will be in the form of support for a candidate, not by opposing ISOmcone.
He said ·that Goldwater's advantage is "So far, it iJs. not a fight between two candidatesbut a fight between Goldwater .and a group of other candid.aJtes, with Goldwater clearly in front. His 'Opposition will have to band together behind a single man if they hope to win at ·all."
Judd indicated he felt Rocke· feller hials· privately conceded he cannot win the nomination, but instead of bowing out and losmg f-ace, he is h'OPing to get as manY delegates •as possible and :then he would have some influence in selecting the nominee and the pla-tform.
"Lt was the same with Goldwa~er in the begirmiu.g. He never expected to be the front· runner. His original intention was not to seek the nommati.on, but to have enough tsup. port to influence the selection of the Party's nominee and the platform.
"However, when the band wagon got rolling, he could not stop it." Judd said.
He added: "Without Rockefeller's personal life troubles, he would proba,bly be the nominee."
Judd felt Nixon bas several points in his favor for the nomination. "He has experience and is well-qualified, perhaps more so than an~ of the other· candidab!ls.
"He would run a better campaign when he would be the captain of the team, whereas he could not be so ,well last time."
L. H. HOLLINGSWORTH, DR. WALTER JUDD former Congressman talks politics • . .
Judd indicated Nixon felt hampered during the 1960 Presiden.tila campajgn by being Ulllablc to propose changes too .drastic from the Eisenhower policies, which would have been interpreted as. back-hand criticis-m of the Eisenhower Administration.
"We should never -again· nominate a vice president il'<>r the Pres-idency. He is unable to manage his c-ampaign and make proposals with the necessary freedbm.''
Judd made the keynk)te address at the 1960 Republican Convention. He was defeated in1962for his seat in Congress. The Minnesota ISf:ate legislature redistriCJted their Congressdonal districts, and added several heavilY Democratic wards to hils Minneapolis district.
His Chapel speech dealt with the conflict between the Ulllli.ted States and oommunism.
Peace Caravans To Tour Country
An. opportunfi.ty for undergraduate students to carry.their .eonceorns about world peace and social justice to "Crossroads U.S.A. will be offered by th~ Peace Carav.an program of the American Friei!ds Service Comm.ittee this summer.
A "pea,ce caravan" consists of <m interra·cial group of four or five young ;men and womei\ who visit by cax ·a seg1nent o£ the country over a six weeks period. Local committees prepare a welcome for the caravanners, and also schedule meetings with local govevrunenll officials, civic, and church groups.
Peace Caravans are open to young persons with a minimtl1Di of one year col!lege or an acceptable equivalent.
2NamedTo :: Study.Plan
In tracing the history and develqpment of the American Negro, Proctor said there had been four ·sta-ges since the Emancipation Act. After emancipation came the first, disinte · gration. He spoke of the Negro, once integrated to the Southern w.ay of life, then nameless,
jobless, and: penniless as carpetbagge~s brought the fir3t ideas of segregation to the South ..
In the second period, imitation, Proctor said the Negro organized his own world. The first Negro churches were established as were other Negro organizations, but "walls of separation . . . must not · continue." He said the average student is ign6rant of the edu-cated, clean Negro existing today and.still descrhr.iilates in. his. attitude toward !the Negro.
a lar-ge corporation. With the Tryouts for the Reader's exception of Redding, they felt it Theater production of Pirandelwas the satisfaction of serving lo's "Six Characters in Search their em:ployees and the public. of an Auth('':'" will be held from
Redding replied with one word, 4 to 7 p. m. today in the Arena "Money." Theater.
Outgoing ·:>fiicers of the honorary fraternity an Charles Winberry, President; Jim Self, Vice President; and Walt Pettit, Secretary, Dean Edwin G. Wilson is the faculty advisor, .and Dr. Henry Stroupe is faculty secre-'tary. -
Two Wake Forest students have been selected to pamcipate in. the 1964 College Study-Work Program at· the h~me office of Pilot Life Insurance Co., Greensboro.
They are Dale R. Walker, junior of High Point, and James S. Flemmg, ju."lli.or of Plymouth.
The progran1, initiated last year by Pilot Life, is held each summer to "familiarize exceptional college students with ·the workings of the insurance in-
' · dustry in general and specifically with various insurance company departffients as thev relate to their college major." ·
Walker. and Flemings were emong 12 students selected from a large number of applicants :from calleges .and universities ovE:r a wide area.
AIR FORCE TEST
The United States Air Force .Training Schodl. selection team will test seniors interested i.n the Air FOil"ce ea.ch Friday in Room 105 of the Library.
Further information is available from MjSgt. Clement H. Bunn, Room 1002, Post Office Building, Winst0111-Salem or at PA 3-7014.
Speaking of the third stage, Litigation, Proctor provoked laughter when he said "A segregationist is as hopeless as a dOwntown Winston-Salem tomcat."
Reintegration, he said, is today's problem. Although many institutions are integrating, the dlifficulty, Proctor said, is "trying to get people to see skin. color the sam.e way they see hair color."
Proctor said he ·planned to spend the rest of rus life helping peopll.e to see this. "I remind the Negro people as often as you shout, and protest you must study and prepare."
"Your responsibility," he told the students, "is to see no more fuel is added to this fire. We must maintain channels of expression between beth peoples . .. Responsible leaders are the way to equal right.:;, he concluded, "and it's up to you."
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James Gardner,· Steve McQueen
VVednesday-Sunday: GERINOMO (Color) Chock «;onnor LAWRENCE, OF ARABIA (Color)
Alae Guinness, Pete O'Tole
LET'S HAVE AN
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RI~CHARDSON PREY·E·R Wants J.o Meet You
and you are cordially invited to a
GIANT PREYER FOR GOVERNOR RALLY
MEMORIAL COLISEUM MAY 15, 1964- 6:00 P. M.
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and wh~n you arrive you'll be as refreshed as eve~. These co-ordi~a«:s wil! never cause you worry. Wash and wear and little or no 1ronmg, .m easy-care Arnel. Knife pleated skirt $9.98, slim skirt also available $8.00, ascot top blouse $8.00 sleeveless solid blouse $7.00, print shell blouse $7.00, sizes 8-16 m' white, aqua or toast. r men who
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While.at the rally talk personally with Richardson Preyer, listen to his remarks and enjoy FREE FOOD and entertainment by NATIONALLY FAMOUS GROUP .
' .
All mail and phone l()rdel'IS ;promptly filled, write Robin's~ 223 W. Fourth St., WinstonSalem, N. C., PA 3-5596. Outside our regular delivery area add 35c postage, 3% sales tax required l()n •all items mailed to N. C. addres.s. State 1st ·and 2nd color choice.
-.·AGE SIX Monday, May 11, 1964 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
DEACS. • • Who Are GREEI(S
By WALT PETTIT STAFF WRITER
PETTIT I.F.C. Theme: "Just As I _4m?"
Carlyle To Speak At Banquet
Irvin!g E. Carlyle, president of the COllege Board of Trustees, will be the principal speaker for the ·annual Reynolds Scholarship AwardS Bam.quet
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Friday night at Tanglewood ~~~:~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiii The fraternity system, while! of each house. Perhaps ther Co~ege are asking. Park Manor House. ii ----;:;;;;;---------------~-ii
only one \Structure, has sev- most significant contribution Fin~~~· a few word~ on re- The Z. Smith Reynolds Foun- I eral roles. Fi.t,st, the system th 1 F C uld k d . g spons1bility and authonty. The da;tion will make rthe formal . . . lf . e . . co rna e unn 'bill''- f ...... tern to 1s m 1tse •an ' mterest group · respons1 ·•Y o •t.ue sys prelSenta·tion of $151,000 in schol-which exists on this carnpUJS for the next year would be an at- 1tself must be self-assumed. arships to eight outsrtanding the benefit of a segment of the tempt to change the attitude Only those making up the iil- North Carolina college seniors student body. Secondly, the of all fraternity men conce~n- tere:st group can say what shall who will enter the Bowman system is one structure among ing themselves. or shall not be done to, or for, Gray School of Medicine next many, which together com- Secondly, the fraternity sys- themselve!S. The question of the September. prise the total College com- tern may be viewed as one second function is a great deal Three 10f the winners, Allen munity. In other wordls, the among many structures in the different. It is apparent that B. Harvin of Raleigh, Herbert fraternity system is an entity College community. Undoubted- the community as ·a whole and M. Schiller of Winston-salem which c·an be viewed as •sucl1, ly, the system is much letSs especially those whose jnb it is and James ·L. Self of R:aleigh and a functional part of sam:!- sure of its role in this ·area. to advise and regulate the com- are Wake Forest students.
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thing larger. While the system as an entity munioty have a right to see that Carlyle, •a Wmston-Salem at-
Primanly, tile system must is· responsible only to itself, as every structure within the com- toroney and a member of the ;======================~ be responsible to itself-it must a participant in a society, it munity should contribute to the Board IQ£ Virsitors of the medi-J.ook out for the welfare of those hru; cel"ltain expectatinns placed tota:l purpose of the communi- 'cal school, will 15peak '0111 "The of whom it is comprised. Thexe- upon it which it must seek to ty. Thus .the fraternity ~stem Ingredients of Successful Medifore if the system is criticized fullill. During the last year may be allowed to "bang it- cal Education." as a system, it is because it is there has been a great deal self" if it is nJOt self-fu1£illing The scho'La:rships, ranging in failing to keep its ow.n hoUISe of discussion concerning the in terms of obligations tx> it- size from $2,400 oto $4,800 per straight-because iot is not serv- obligations of the I. F. C. to self; lit m>ay be ·assumed that year, wiill provide for the cost ing the membership. which pays the College. The unfurtunate it will 111ot be e[lowed oto ignore of four yearts of medical school to belong to it. Its obligations and :frustrating fact is th:at the indefintte]y, responsibility to and ltwlo years of hospital or fall in several categories: so- expectations •are quite unclear. Woake Forest College. Hope- postgradurate training. cial, athletic, scholastic, and Anti-Intellectual? fully, in tbe future, the fra- The decision on the amount (clmrglue-in-cheekl ISIPiritually·md ternity rsystem will begin to see each scholar will receive will morally. Generally <Speaking, Surely, however, one the di1Sitinction between the two be made at the banquet by the the observatiOills made in this tion would relate to the roles and conscientiously re- medical school committee on column have dealt with the by the College to create spond to the obligati0111s of both. admissions and the fou.ndation
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degree of success or failure of intellectual envirorunent; The NEWS OF GREEKS trustees, •after interviews with ~======================:; ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the System in fulfilling these question for the fraternity \lWS· the candidates. r '" general functions. tem becomes the following: Is (Lamda Chi Alpha) Charlie Each O!f the top four schOlar-
the system fumctionral or dys-- Corey, senior of Winchester, ships provides• .a $3,000 stipend Integrating Body functional for the creation and Mass., r e c e n t il y il.avaliered for the first year of medical
The •achievements or lack of maintenance of the environ- Joamie Tnmsou lo!f Elkin. Dan school with the amount increru;achievemcnts of the system ment? Does' rthe fraternity McGinn, senior of Lexington, in!g ·annually to $4,800 for the are correlated with how well tern enco~mage or dioscourage wa:s recently elected to Phi sixth year-a total of .$23,400. the I. F. C. func:tionls ars a111 such an atmosphere? The qaes- Beta Kappa. The other four rsclrolar.ships integrating body. Perhaps the tion must be approached :lir1om (Sigma Chi) A:l Lozier, jUI!lior each provid~ grants of $2,400 greatestshortcoming of the sys- the academic point of view of Mt. Holly, N. J., recently per year for six years, totaling tern has been that it hru;• failed since the ma.tter of ·gradets. is, pinned Amle Pecaric, jimior $14,400. to see itself as a self.,fulfill.ing at lealst at this point, not an coed of Trenton, N. J. The The recipients were selected entity and rather has seen it- important consideratioo. As Dr. chapter recently serenaded on the bas:ils of character, self atS a confederacy of ten Charles. Henderson reflects on Nancy Hellan, rsophoDliOre coed scholarship, potential as a phyhouses. Unfortlllll.ately, major the subject, do fraternities re- of Wilin.ingtac:, Del., who ils sician and financial need. legislation, designed for the present an anti-intellecl:ualism piuned to Ted Meredith, senior -==========-good of the total fraternity SYlS- which will eventually permeate of Edina, Minn. tern, has often been evaluated the entire College? Or, on the (Delta Sigma Phil in tenus of local interests. The positive side, are fraternities La'V'ay, freshman of Washing!. F. C. is not an interest ag- helping to create the a.tmos- ton, If C., receDtly pinned gregator, however. If there 1are phere which · should character- LYIIlda Murchison, freshman overall weaknesses in the fra- ize an institution of excellence? coed of Charlotte. They were tcronity system it iJS because of That, indeed, ils a question serenaded Wednesday night. an over-emphasis on the good which many members of the ----=------------..::::==...::.:..=~=====-
8DELI:S Reopened
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OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 11, l9&i PAGE SEVE!1
DeaCons Provide Excitement For Three Years
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BASKETBALL: Guard Billy Pack~r and Ali-Ameri-~ fon\"ard Len Chappell (above) provided two :Yiiara ··of aports thrills for Wake F~rest seniors. Perhaps the greatest waa . the Deacons' miracle ~.;vertime victory over St •. Joseph's in the NCAA r·Eaatem Regionals . (below), which eventually led
. :to a third-pia~ 'finish nationallr. Center Bob ~Woollard cans a short jumper agamst the ljawks.
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Chappell, Packer, -Sn.ead, Coon St~r
By BILL BENTZ SPORTS EDITOR
Wake Forest athletic teams· these past four years have provided their followers"with su~pense, success, 'and sorrows. Above all, however, Deacon tea:rns have provided excitement.
Here is a recap of the thrilling Wake Forest 'games, meets, and matches that have been played the past three years. A summary of the 1963-64 season will appear in this. column two weeks hence.·
Memories are made of this when viewing the Deacs.
1960-61-The football team loses its opener to Clemson, 28-7 ... The Tigers .score 3 touchdowns in the final 30 minutes to win ... The cross country team trips Cata.wba in ·a doozer, 27-28.
The Deacons edge Carolina, 13-12, before 36,000 at Kenan Stadium . . . Deacon halfback Freaerick make~ a diVing catch of a Snead pass in the end zone with 2 :21 left to win the game ... The·· cross country team downs Virginia for the first time ever, 27-29 ... Captain Bloodsworth finishes. third after climbing out of a sick bed to compete.
The Deacs hand Vi,rginia its 24th straight loss, 28-20, as a :fourth quarter Cavalier comeback is cut short . . . Gabriel out-duels Snead and State steals away with ·a 14-12 victory . . . Snead, the leading passer in the ·nation, cannot carry the team alone and LSU wins at ·Baton Rouge, 16-0.
The basketball team starts fast with ·an 85-79 home opener over Florida . . . Steele redecorates the face of the Gators' Luke. with a wicked elbow to the right nostril . . ·. Rod Thorn and his West Virginia ·mountain boys rip Wake, 80-73 ... Packer's clutch free throws freeze N. C. State, 68-:67 . ·.·. The swmmers get their first win of the season, 52-42, over Virginia . . . Carolina gets a one-:)Tear probation and thrashes Wake one hour late'r behind Moe and L~rese, 83-74.
A Kempton jump shot from the key with three seconds left gives St. Joseph's a 72-70 heart stopper over the Deacs here _ .. Chappell's 38 guides the Deacons 'to a wonderful 103-89 win over 7th ranked Duke. · The Deacs be·at Duke, 96-81, to win the ACC ... Wake whips St. John's, 97-74, in the NCAA's behind Wiedeman and Hart's combined 50 points . . . Woollard's superb play as a substitute helps Wake over St. Bonaventure, 78-73 . _ . St. Joe's wrecks the Deacs' NCAA ·advancement, 96-86.
Muller pitches a_two-hitter. agai:r;t$:Yirginia and East Carolina . . . The golf team edges South Carolina, 14-13 at home ... Coon's eighth inning, three run homer beats Maryland, 4-3 . . ~ Plemmons pitches Wake over State i:ri 10 innings, 4-3 as Franklin, Wilner star ...
1961-62- The football team 1beats Clemson, 17-13, for the first time since 1949 ... White runs 59 yards for a touchdown ... Wake's cross country team downs Virginia, 24-33, and Davidson, 24-31 ... The. Deacons close their season (4-6) with a· testy 17-14 win over favorite North Carolina ... A Walker field goal provides the victory margin. . ,
Ohio · State, with Luc·as, Havlicek, and crew, topple the Deacs, 84-72 at the Coliseum ... Chappeil's 30 poi!!ts later bombs Carolina, 91-72 . . . Len tabs 37 and Christie 22, but the Deacs are outscored by West Virginia, 101-99 . _ . The swimmers stroke past Virginia, 59-35 ... Chappell churns full speed ahead ... He stuffs in a record 50 points and grabs 24 rebounds in a brillif!.nt display over Virginia (Wake won in record score,
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PHOTOGRAPHY FOR ALL OCCASIONS
Special Consideration For All Wake Forest Students
SEE OUR CUSTOM 1\IIADE FRAMES ASK ABOUT OUR CUSTOM MADE FRAMES
'
*. STUDIOS OF .· PRESTON PHo:oGRAP~Y ,
FOOTBALL: Quarterback Norm Snead completes a 55-yard
116-67) ... In a fantastic team effort Wake routs Duke, 97-79, at the Coliseum.
The Deacs win the ACC title and move into NCAA competition ... Wake survives a scare of death, !but beats Yale in overtime, 92-82 ... The Deacs down St. Joe's, 96-85, in overtime ... No-body will ever· forget Packer's last second jump shot that climaxes an amazing comeback and saves an astounding Wake victory . . . Villanova falls, 79-69, and the Deacs march to Louisville ... A loss to Ohio State and a win over UCLA give the Deacs a third in the nation . . . It is an unbelievable NCAA effort by Wake Forest.
Wake's 12 man track team downs W &L's 35 man squad, 69-62 ... NCAA champion Purdue slips by the Deacs in golf, 16-11 here . . . Coon leads Deacs to a smashing 20-4 win over the toothless Clemson Tigers _ . . Wake goes to
. ·NCAA's in baseball ... The Deacons beat West Virginia, but lose to Florida State.
1962-63-The football team loses all ten of its games . . . Period . . . The cross country team completes best year·· in its history with a 6-3 record.
The basketball team squashes St. Joe's, 75-46 . .. It is one of the most humiliating defeats ever handed Hawk coach Jack Ramsey ... Wake pounds lOth rated Carolina, 78-70, behind Watts, Christie, and Woollard . . . The Deacs defeat Carolina for the third time in the season in the ACC's, 56-55 ... Cunningham's last second shot FOOTBALL: Halfback Johnny Morris breaks ~misses. away from a Clemson 'defender for a 15-yard . Pardue goes the r~mte, and Wake upenP.s Flori- gain in the first. game of the-·1961-~-season before
~-era. State, 7:.:5, in a battle of two Top Ten teams · a record crowd of 22,000. Wake lost the game here . . ·. The Deacon track team smashes all in the last quarter. sorts of records with a 104-41 win over hapless- l)Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiillliiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiilii-iiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiii Virgini-a ... The baseball team wins the ACC .. _ II The Deacs then lose in District finals to Florida State ... Turner breaks the school mile mark with a 4:12.5 clocking . · .. The golf team and Jay Sigel win ACC honors.
It was 'a thrilling three years.
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PAGE EIGHT Monday, May 11,1964 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
DeaconsDidNotBlow Title· White Backs Stomp Blacks
Golfers Win Tournament By. RICHARD MILLS
' SP6RTS WRITER
There's a certain frustration these days in opening the newSJ-. paper to the sports section. One might see headlines, "UNC Nips Deacons Second: Time in Row" or "Carolina Moves Closer TQ ACC Baseball Tilte" or "UNC r·lintbs To Fifth In National Poll; Dea"'s Fall From Top Ten" w others of an equally depressing nature.
Several of the players have · e:x;pressed concern that newspapesr have claimed that Wake "blew" the w;:.e. Coach Stallings defended the players by saying, : By ALBERT HUNT
STAFF WRITER
The annual Old Gold! and Black football game played two Saturdays ago turned into a rout as Brian Piccolo and Wayne W>elborn led the Whites to a 40-, 7 victory over the Blacks.
Piccolo, a 198 pound fullback from Fort Lauderdale, Fla. toted the ball for 177 yards in 19 carlies and scored two touchdowns. Welborn, a 181 pound scatbacl{ from Wake Forest ran fllr 116 yards in 17 carries and also tallied twice.
Head coach Bill Tate said, .. OvE'rall, I was re<Jl pleased with the spirit and enthusiasm of lhe kids. We still have a lot of work left but we hope to straighten out a lot of things thh, week."
Final Practice Closed
Approximatley 600 spectators attended the g<cme and most of them seemed pleased with the performance. T h e Deacons wound up their s,pring sessions this week, but tlle final scrimmage last Friday at Bowman Gray Stadium was closed to the public.
Wake Forest's golf team, lec!J by tlle red-hot shooting of AllAmerican Ken Folkes. smaJShed their way .past a. top f.light field to win tlle Southern Intercollegiate Golf Tournament,· April 30-May 1 at Athens, Ga. The Deacs totaled a card of 578.
Wake, leacldng the field by seven strokes going into the final round of p.J.ay, was awarded the championship after rain forced the .cancell.ation of the final day's plaY. The Deacs score of 578 was seven less than runnerup, the University of Georgia.
Folkes' low of 68 made him co-champion of the medalist play. He tied with Bert Green of the University of Tennessee. This 68 was a sizzling four-under-par for that particular course.
Incidentally, the Dea.cons also took the annual Medalist meet held between Wake Forest, the University of North Carolina and Duke Blue Devils.
McEvoy Sets Vault Mark
WAYNE MAR.TIN slamming a' two-bagger
Track Teanis 1(0 Davidson.
Record Is 2-2
It is disooncertirig to be faced with the faet th~t North Carolina is 'better than Wake Forest. After all, the record of gameS! between the two teams is 2-2. However, it must be noted that the two contests on the losing. side of the ledger were conference tilts and the vi-cto'l'ies were classified as exhibition games.
-At any rate, the team is 5-4 in the ACC, ;1.8-7 o')l'era'll at pres!:~ time. They stand the chance o~ fmishing .as ;ow ;IS fifth in the league they were supposed tQ own. It is difficult to analyze~ the reason for Wake's seeminlll failure but first it should j be
· said that they didb'l't fail. · "I think the biggest problem
is that we dldn't hit as well as we di<i last year," says Coacn
"This team won't quit. They haven't all year. Sportswriter51 · should· be more careful in saying! that we blew the ACC. Ever:v.r year it ;;eems · that someone "blows" the title. No one evell wins it."
North Carolina dlid earn the. · title. The eleven gaines they woq' without a loss cannot be argued~ According to Coa·ch Stalllnngs. "they had a phenomenal year. J; compare them. with us last year~ not that they :play the same; type of ball. They've won witq defense. Last season if we needed a play we got it, usualiiy it was a home run. UNC gets t.heil' big play too only usua!lly it ill defense that brmgs them home." ·
Baseball is best measured accurately in the long run. So don't think of Coach Sta:!Jings and Jill!: 21 young men as ha.vjng "blown" a championshl.P. In the eleven years the ACC has been in existence, Wake Forest is far out in front of the other seven teams.
The White squad, which consisted of the first and fourth teams, scored the first time they had their hands on the ball. After driving for two first downs, Welborn streaked 4o yards to the 5 yard line. From there quarterback John Mackovic called on Piccolo and the- big fullback crashed into the line three times, s.coring on the last attempt.
SPIRIT is apparent in Wake football drills as linemen follow By BARR ASHCRAFT I bers of the winning 440 yard 440 yard relay team. Teammate Stallings, "Last season some of SPORTS WRITER relay foursome and the winning !Newton Scott won the high jump, the fellas hit. for tremendous
After forcing the Blacks to punt, the Whites then moved again as Mackovic hit his big swing end Rich Cameron with a 40 yard pass to the Black 11 yard line. Welborn then went over standing up. In the second quarter Piccolo scored from the 3 making the score 20-0 at halftime.
Welborn opened up the scoring Ul the second half when he tallied from the 5 after Piccolo had set it up with a 30 yard run.
The Blacks hit the scoreboard late in the same P<>riod when Joe Berra, a rugged former end from Treverton, Pa. who was playing his first game at fullback, plunged over fro:rr. the 3.
In the final period the Whites marched down the field with Piccolo and Welborn again leading the attack. Joe Carazo, the other starting halfback, raced
blocking patterns.
over from the 6. W'nite quarterback Ma•ckovic rapped up the scoring with a 1 yard quarterback sneak late in the fourth period.
Ed McKinne;y, a native of Winstcn-Salem, did the place lucking for botil teams and converted on 5 of 7 point after touchdown attempts. Welborn, punting for the White, aver-aged 38.4 yard on 3 boots. Jon Wilson punted 6 times for the Blacks averaging 30.0 yards a punt.
Tate praised the all-around play of thP quarterbacks. "I tllought Ma c:kovic handled tlle White team real well," the head mentor said, "and Jon Wilson, a sophom?re. did a pretty good job with the Black team the first half."
Mackovic was impressive with his· choice of plays and on several long .pa::oses to his split end, Cameron, The blond Buckeye from Barberton, Ohio, showed semblances of rus e:ll'ly season form of two years ago when he passed for 195 yards against Army and their famed Chinese Bandits. After that game, Mackovic stood 8th in the mdicn in,
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· L . ~nile relay tec:m. Hartley also , placeil' second in the 120 yard averages and this year they hit passmg. a st yenr he played The Wake Forest varsity and. . placed ·second in the 220 yrurd high hurdles, andl third in the w.ell, but not fantastically. It'SI behind Karl Sweetan and saw freshm~n track ~ams added o~e -dash, just ahead of teammate 330 yard intermediate hurdles. like the 'ba·sketball player little action, but he appears to more viCtory apiece to run theiD Dick iJunlao F 1 il rd h ld averaging 35 J;>Oints one year have regair.:rl his confidence streaks to three as. tlley downed · • · !'.es Jman ~ e r~co 0 er, and twenty the next. That tv.;enty with the arrival of the new the nosting Davidson Wiildcats Hap Bulger won the 120 yard :"1 \·rehm:;m, tl~d With Paul ~nell points isn't something to laugh coaching staff. last Saturday with 77 to 68 and high hurdlE's. Weight man Bill m the nule With a ~:33.~ time. at." · "
Tate prais~d several other ball 88 to 52 scores respectively. It Hendricks won the shot put and Sn_e1ll we11t 011
. to .. ~~f thtede t~o A .__,,~.,. hi ~ • · 1 1 d third · th · lin rru e to remam u.uue ea m ccording to S~...,.s, s players after the <>arne and par- was the fourth vi-ctory With on Y P ace m e Jave and tl t t v· hro a1 1 ed charges lost two ACC games be-= t b k f t1 f--··"" discus Sam Thios took th high la even . le an so p ac ticularly signaled out third· team one se ac or le ''-""'-'· . · . e second in the half mile to Mike cause of the pitching and two tackle John Jurloovec for play I In the varsity division Wake JUmp .and Bill Bentz won the c h · 1 59 ·2 for lack of hits. "With last yea!r'S ing a "whale of a defensiv~ won ten of the seventeen' events j~vel:in to close out Wake's. event a~son w
0 WlOn m : · · , , hitting we probably would ~aye
· vtctories . J1m Glasheen leaped 21 6lh , ga~e .. He wu:. probably the best but on:-y rapped up th~ d<:>wn-to- · for first place in the broad jump. pulled out botll Carolina games, roam lll the nne ~oday." ~e wrre meet by wmmng the Other point winners were Ron Jnhn Jones placed second in ·:•our defense has cost us a
l'rior to the game the foot- f~al event of tlle afternoon, the Taylor, who pla·ced second in the the two nille run. Stuart Verch .couple of times," added the ball staff had a luncheon for mile relay. two mile and third in the mile, placed second m both s,prints to coach. Agamst UNC la,st Tues-
al h dred h' h h 1 Dave Turner was again one of and Barry Bates who placed w k • · day three· Deacon errors a<lded sever un 1g s!! oo second in the pole vault. close out a e s sconng. coaches and players from North the big guns for the Deacs. The up to two unearned nms for the and South Carolina. It. was held lanky senior from Towanda, In the freshmen division, the A · 'I1ar Heels. "Things like that in the gymnasium and received Pennisylvania closed out his Deacs carried off nine event WFDD To ir happelli because the boys are a very favorable response. Wake dual meet career by win- wins and picked up enough pressing too hardJ. They don't
ning the mile in 4:2s.s, the half seconds and thirds to rout the War Of Worlds have senioritis; they're just as mile in 1:58.3, and! by running Wildcat freshmen. Bob 'Me- dedicated as they always were.
G,et Well, Bones tlle third leg on the winning mile Evoy got the afternoon off with. The Wake Forest De,parbnent They ~ust aren't loose." relay team. a bang by shatterin·g his own cf Speech will present "War of ·'As a matter of fact pres ...
Horace <Bones) McKinney, Junior Pat Neary also did well freshmen and S·chool record in the Worlds" at 6 p. m. Friday sure has been a major factor all head basketball coach, has en- by winning the 330 yard interme- the pole vault. His leap of 13' 4" over WFDD radio. · season But it isn't the paptlrs or -tered a hospital for two to diate hurdles, rtUllring the second is one of the best in the confer- Pam Clodfelter, senior of Win- tne high ranking that is to blame. four weeks of rest from exhaus- leg on the winning 440 yard re- ence this year. Ha led team- stan-Salem, will direct and pro- They brought it on themselves;tion, according to Gene Hook, lay team, and placed third in mates Terry Startsman and Mike duce the drama. . they just wanted ,to <io real well athletic director. Hooks quoted the 120-yard high hurdles. Brutzman to a clean sweep. Written by H. G. Wells, "War and! they -couldn't loosen up. McKinney's doctor as saying the Ln the sprint events, Forest Versatile Mik>e· Lewis won the of the Worlds" was made tamous Usually when a team is wimling coach was suffering from a re- Ernst and Rick Hartley tied for quarter mile, placed. · s~cond in in the mid-thiTties when Orso~ they will relax out there, but curring ulcer and underweight first in the quarter mile. Both tne broad jump, and 220 yard Welles produced it unanounced even during our ten game strea1Q
·RONNY WATTS
Watts Is Captain :; Ronnie Watts, juni.or of Wash
ington, D. C., was elected caPtain of the 1964-65 basketball team last week by voLe of his teammates•.
and n-oeded a con:.plcte rec['t. Hartley and Ernst were mem- dash, and anchored the wirming over CBS. tlley were still ;pressing." ========~==~~~--~------------------~----~~--------------=-~~~======
He led tlle Wake Forest team ' in rebounds, hauling down an avera_ge of 12 per game, which \v.as second highest in the At"lantic Coast Conference. He
"averaged-13.8 points per game I! during (;he 1963-64 :.easool. ·
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