au - wakespace scholarship · au * wake forest college, ... for uppercla51smen only in the first...

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. 723-'1183 \ \ '\ Fraternities Pledge 141 ·New 'Members Wedriesday N1ght Pan 'lbree * au * Wake Forest College, Wfnston-Balem, Carolina, Feb. 20, 1967 * * Audience Swings To The Sound Of Dixieland Jazz Page Two NUMBER l8 MRC May Get College Aid Law Degree Is Changed- -PHOTO BY ·DAUGHTRY on. 'l'be $50 cheek, wblch was raised sellhlg bumper stickers, ·was given to Bennett at a Wednesday night buffet in the House. FiXellTuition Bill Prepared For ·InspectiC)n Of Trustees BALPH SEWPSON AIISOCIATE IIDITOR . The fixed 'tuition bill, whicb Was passed· by the Legislature two weeks ago and is present- ly 'llJider committee study pro- bably will be brought before the Board of Trustees lat their next meeting. Norma Murdoch, chai.rnla.DI of the tlii.tion bill, indicated this weekend that if progress con· tdnues as it did during the last week, Trustees will con- sider the bill at their April meeting. Fixed Tuition times," · he 98ikl, "when in- creases needed colllld not be borne entirely by the entering Cl!IISS." The main problem that Davidson has run into with its program is that of budgeting, tbe llreasurer ilndicaJted. · Mary BaldWin hias bad no such diifficulty. In the Murdoch proposal that went before the Legisla· ture, the CoiJege was attacked for ills "unexpected and unex- plained tuition raises," which clause "great damage to stu- . dent morale and produce a generally negative attitude within the student body." The biD said "tulition has risen every year for the past nine years for ,a, total rise of $700." The Charlotte Observer did a study of rrising college costs aill over North Carolina, en- titled "Colllege Costs Olimb Like Ivy," and found that Wake Forest isn't alone dn ris. !.ng tuition. The Feb. 8, article said costs 'at Queens wowld go up $350 next yeaT, $250 aJt Belmont Abbey .College, $200 at Guil- .ford, $200 at SaJlem, and $200 at Duke. According to the Murdocb ·proposal, a student would throilihout .. ius oniiy. thit. am.mmt of tUition siui-" ted in the bulletin of the ter:in' · in which he entered. - · - .:New · --...... ;,.,..: .... ,.. ... " 8th Management Seminar Pruce increases for any year"- would be. ·levied only on ne\1{ studenlls, ·Milss Murdoch said. By GRAY LAWRENCE STAFF WRITER In 'lin e!lfort to make the bill, The College's Management "not too rigid," a clause will Institute, ;a division of the be inc<luded in ·the bill that. School of BtiiSiness, will 'begin woulld allow trustees to l"aise i:ts ei:gbt annual Management class tuitlo!B QI" activity fees Seminar l!hls week and for the for uppercla51Smen only in the first time it will be under the evenlt of a "major financial leadership of a full-time di- emergen.cy." rector. Committee activity last week I Carl L. Whitney, a 25-year included correspondence with 1 veteran of Army service, will colleges •and universities which '' direct the prognam this year. have adopted similar pro- He joined the business school grams. staff em Feb. 10. Works WeD The trea.surer of Mary Bald- win College in Staunton, Va., said the gua;ranrteed · tuibion pl:an" at hrls college "has been. very favor.ably received." He said this was "due main. ly to the f.act that a freshman parent or guardian can plan ahead wdth a degree of cer- tainty as to what the four years of c01llege will cost ·and make plJialliS accordingly." The treasurer of Davidlson College admitted that his plan plan "might have to periodi- ,, cally mise costs for all stu- dents in order to catch up. "There will undoubtedly be. Until Whiltney took over as director of the Institute on a lfull-time basis, Dr. B.alph C. Heath, professor of marketing at the College, had headed the Institute since its organi- zation in 1959. "The ll'apid growth that merited the selecti<m of a fulil- time dilrector," Whltney said, "has come about as a result of the outstanding work, and planning of Professor Heath." The seminar which runs from Feb. 22 to May 11 is an effor.t •to "provide a pro- gram of continuilllg education in ma.n1agement and executive development for the business and indus1lrial communilty of North Carolina," Whitney said. "The Institute is dedicated to a :program of corutinuing education," he re-emphasized. "These ,programs consist of three-da-Y workshops, semi- :na-r.s of vary:im:g lengths, and a special lecture and symposium type of instruction." Beginning February 22, ap- proximately rthlrty students wi:ll meet one da:y a week •through May 11. A second group of about the same size wilil. begin February 23 and continue through May 11. The groups will begin with an early mornirig breakfast at 7:30 on February 22 and 23. Both groups graduate May 11, when they will receive a cer- tificate signifying completion of the Semi.noail". The Management SeminaT consists of a series of professo.rs, who will speak on such topics .a-s "The Frontiers · of Management," "The En- terprise System and Business Economics," "The Marketing Process," "The Fin,ancilal Pro- cess," "Capital F.ormart:ion fo.r tile &naY Business," and "De- veloping Organization Team- wurk." (Continued on page 5) Future gradurates of the Col- lege's School of Law IWIIlil re- ceive the J.D. instead of the LL.B. degree. The c!Hmge,, effective with this spring's commencement, was announced Saturday by Law School Dean Carroll W. Weathers. The J.D. Sbands for jurlis doctor •and the LL.B. for bachelor Olf laws. lmportllllt Change "The ch;ange will mean our graduates will receive a pro- fessiona:l doctonrte in law," - Dean Weathers sa:id. "The J.iQ. is to lthe law sclwol gra- duate what the M.D. is 1o !the medical school graduate or the D.D.S. Ito the dental school gl"aduate." Weathers said there are at least 67 accredited law schools in rt:bis country JJOW cOIIlfe-rtiag · rthe J.D. a-s the first sionai degree in law. He also said that about 50 law schools have made the switch from LL.B. to the J.D. during. the past five years and that the number is lincreasing. - The change also has been recommended by the Ameri:. can Bar Assoclation'.s Section of Legal Education and Ad· mission to the Bar, a study committee of the Assocli:atiou of AmeriC8'11. Law Schools arui the Ameriaan La.w Student As- sociation. --PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY CHINESE EXPERT . • . Dr. Han Snyin makes a gesture that approaches a shrug daring her lecture Thursday even- ing i.n DeTamble Auditorium. While discussing the political tempo of China, Dr. Suyin employed the term cultural revo- lution and offered other hints that her political orientation was rather left. Work to get the degree name s Dr. uym· Interprets and facullty. The school's' Student Bar Alssociation made -: A ' p s d the _ _change one of' itS . . Sl• a s . ::-.·resent t-an main projects· laSt year. Larry Pitl!s, a second year law stu.dems from Newrton who was •a member of the Student Bar Assoaialtion's committee to study the degree chmge, salid that there were two main reasons for wa111.ting to change from the LL.B. to the J.D. More Salary First of alll he ·said, the hold- er· of the J.D. would be en- tiltled .to preferentiail treatment in ·salary and rank over the holder of the LL.B. degree among certain of the govern- menta[ agencies. Secondly, in some areas of teaching, the 'of 1U1e J.D. is paid more and has greater latitude of advancement. Pitts gave other reasons why the student committee felt the degtree should be changed. The J.D. will place the graduates of law schools on an equarr level with the g-raduates of medical and den- tal schools who recedve pro- fessional doctomrtes. It would en.h:aJJice the profes- sionaJ stature of the holders of lthe degree, Pitts said. The receipt of a second bachelor's degree by [aw school gradru- ates tends to ·impair the im- age of the legal profesSiion, <Continued oo ?!age 5) By LAURA FORD STAFF WRITER "W' are fiacing a new a new epochone of world re· voluti.on," acoord.illg tu the Chinese novatist and C!I'i.tic Dr. Han Suyin. Spealcing on campll','l il.ast Thursday on 'The Current Re. volt lin China," Dr. Han pre- sented her justification, based on first-band observations, of China's adbption of Marxist dogma. The first step in presenting this justilicla.tion was .estalblish- .ing the premise whiat Westernens reg!Md as historical "fact" is often invalid. "By me, history is regarded as the most inexact and prejudicial non-science; it must be per- petuali!y challenged . . . All over the world today history is being reWTitten." Control Others The specific area of hilS'tory referred to was Asia, with its rising tide of post-World War II nation.a];jsm. The ideology being chaNenged is the nine- teenth century view that "the masters· of yesterday - the Western rU!lers - should con. trol others. In regard to the recent po- liticall upheavals in the Far East, Dr. Han reminded. her audience tllat similar revolts and civil wa.rs have occurred in the United States in 1776 and 1861. "Sometimes the Westernerts .forget that these things happened to them," she said. Dr. Hian then proceeded to briefly outlfrne the history of China as it has re511lted in recent dijsturbances. The period between 1911 and 1923 was one of decay. The beginning of modern Chi!na is dated from 1919, when young Chinese inltell:lectuals were dlis- Hlusioned by the terms of the Peace of Versaill!les and the failure of the League of Na- tions. Dr. Han qu,oted the Chmnese emperor of that time as saying, "We have nothing to gain from· the West - they do not learn from history, and we will look smewhere else." Party Formed Professor Predicts 'Lean'·Years In 1921, the Communist Youth Barty was formed, and from then Uilti!l. 1949 chaos and =sac:res l'aV'aged the coun- try. The regime of Chii.ang Kaishek waiS too wealc to last, and the peop-le were prepared to turn to Mao Tse Tung when he led the 1950 revolution. Dr. Han pointed out that the $6 billion given to Chiang in 1947 played directly into tile hands of the COmmunists, since na- tlionalist forces were deserting by the tens of thoUlSoands. Thus, Communist troops were ''beau-- tifully equipped with Amen- can weapons." By RALPH ASSOCIATE EDITOR A young Wake Forest pro- lfessor predicted Thursday night that the College would go through a period of "many lean years" in its recruitment of "good graduate students." Before the poliitical scien- tist had finished his statement, however, a chem.lstry. profes- sor chlarged black tbat his de- partment is 8ilready getting graduate students as good as those at either Duke or the University of North Cardlina. Thiis consideretion of the quality of the graduate stu· dent was part · of Poteat House's discusslion on "Wake Forest - University: Hell.p or Hindrance?" FOUil." professors, represent- ing four departm.enlts, partici- pated ill the two· hour discus- sion, wldch was 13Jttended by about 25 men. The professors were Dr. Judson Alllen, talslsistant profes· sor of English; Dr. Gross, associate professor of c:hemisljry; Dr; Xelstb Pricbard. associate professoa:- of educa- tion; and Dr. Doruald Schoon- maker, assistant professor of political science. Gross· w-as lthe most empha- tic professor in deferuse of the univei1Sity-gr<aduate program idea. Gross ·said that . after the College "makes the assump- tion that it wants to move to- ward university status in the fUJ!dest sense, the quickest wa:y ois 1x> go lllh.e6d 'and sa-y it." He was replying to a state- ment made by Allen that the .recem name change to univer- sity was "premature." Allen 'Said ail.though the Col- lege ds in 1a sense a university with its dlifferent schools, when it "compares itself w.ith a real university it is a fair distance away." SchoonJIIIaker said the de- bate !used to be "whether Wake Forest cot.ild be a strong liiberal arts college or a uni- versity. "Now," he said, "thds isn't a live question of debate." The political science profes- .sor said that questions of dis- cru;sion now lincdude increase in tuition, a static or increas- ilng studEl!llt-fa<:ulty ratio, largetl" C!La!sses, and the possi- bility of graduate students teaching. "Will these things happen at Wake Forest?" he asked. Another p r o b 1 e m that Schoonmaker mentioned was that of enlarging the staff. "Either you have to hl.re new staff members or arrange for J'a•rger courses and grn.- duate student instructors," he explained. Increased faculty, he con- tinued, "cost more·money." The four professors •allso dis- cussed the relationship be- tween the undergraduate stu- dent and the gradwate student. Prichard predicted a strain lbevween the ltwo groups of Sbu- dems, and what each group d·s •aUowed to do. The -students on any Saturdray afternoon have their bottles out in pl.adn .sight:" Prichard said, referring to ex- isting diiScrepanaies in the regulations. "And chapel, too," the Po- te-at housemaster continued. Allen was more worried about curriculum. It distresses me," he said, "when we think about the B. A., M. A., Ph. D. There ought to be some more sign of creative openness to new ideas. "Else we'll be another To- bacco University iike the one down the road," Allen said, referring to Duke. Mien sadd he "would rath- er h-ave some one come out (of Wake Forest) good in one thing than well-rounded in no- thing." One question that was re- lated to much of the dilscussion but primarily that part deal- mg with money !W'as lthe Col- lege-Convention controversy. The professors &aid broader bases of ffinlancial suppont were needed but prill'ate foundations were holding off until the Col- lege took advantages of fede- ral grants. SeveraQ of the men predict- ed it would be five years be- fore any kind of separation took pl\'31Ce. Prichard insisted that there were "fewer strings attached to federal money than there are on Baptist money." Gross said large amounts of other money are 'all'ailable to the College, citling foundations and lfederail. money, and that these monies would more than compensa.te for the $375,000 received yearly from the Bap- tist State Convention. He also recalled several in- stances where the College has previolllSly accepted federal money, in:clu.din:g N atlional Science IIJld federal loans to build dormitol"ies•. The Poteat House discus- sions have been heil.d weekly, and next week'.s disctiiSsion, accordling to chairman Tim Shouse, freshman of W.inston- SaJ.em, will de8il with "sex and the college male." Participants will include Bowman-Gray School of Medi- cine, L. H. iHoJ.lingsowonth, chaplai,n, of the Coll.ege, and Edga;r Christman assisotfant chapla'ln and director of the Ba,ptilst student UciOlll. Concerruing the polliticall. cli· mate of ·China today, Dr. Han insisted tbalt the country is not Communist-oriented. 'China i's not a1 Communist state - it is tradition8'1. state, which will last at least a century," she said. Her per- sonal eV'aJl.lllatiOIIl was, "All 1 am aware of has been change, change, and more change." Mao Practical Mao Tse Tung was charac- terized as "a very pl'aoti-cal man." The speaker emphasiz- ed that there lils "deep prag- matic realism" in iiS be- ing done in China today. Looking to the future, Han Suyin predicted lthat the Chi- nese Revolution w.ili be over by the end of thiS slle also stated that, Within eight- een yeaxs, the <hmmunist re- ·Wme will be tsel:f-sufficient enough Ito !feed all of .its people. Interest Reassuring, Pres. Tribble Says HENRY BOSTIC, JR. MANAGING EDITOR The College's president said Tuesdta'Y night that the Men's Reslidence Counchl "can fully expect the administration .to support the MRC program wlith funds" next year. President Harold W. Tribble made the statement after he had attended a Kitchin House buffet supper. The buffet was held so tblat Kitchin House could present its> proceeds from the sale of bumper stick.. ers this fall to the stadiium fund. Bert Bennett, local business. man and chadrman of the sta- dium fund committee, accept- ed the $50 ddllar donation. The progress of the MRC is "very encouraging indeed," Tribble sadd, "when you con- sider that they had to start allmost from scratch." Real Test According to the president, the "real test'' as far as the admini-stration was concerned was the responsiibility of the men. "There were two at- tempts before this," said Trib_ ble. "The College gave them assi.'"tance, but the men did not show respomibility nor dlid they follow up the pro- gram." "But this time," he said, "the men had the enthusiasm, got lliings started, and are foiLlowing up the start with responsibility and enthu- siasm.'' "The admli7listratl!on is now willing to do more," Tribble emphaslized. "The men hiave and a readiness to _persist." The MRC i::a.ti expect money from the administration, he said, "but I do not knGW in wh•at amount yet. We willllirst have to have a conference to see what is needed." Earlier in the evendng both Tribble and Bennett had given progress reports about the new stadium's progress. BSU WF-Baptist Relations Probed B'y HENRY BOSTIC A Baptist layman -and yer said Friday nii.ght that a separation between Wake Fo- rest and the Baptist State Con. ve:ntion could possibly jeopar- dize the money th!at the Col- lege gets from the Reynolds Foundation. Lester Marlin, Jr., of Mocks- ville, told students and faculty at the Friday night Baptist student Union Supper Forum that because of certafin "con- tract stipulatioiiiS," the Col- lege "I1lilllS the risk of losing the Reynolds Foundation money'' if it separates from the Convention. Martin Wa!S a member of a panel which at- tempted to "cl·arify mi-scon- ceptioiiiS" and inform students and facullty about the present relationship between the Col- lege and Convention. It was oallso intended to .show that Baptists 18re 'IV'illing to serious- ly discuss possible tions of the realationship. But a prominent Baptist minister said he feat that "a complete separation would be easier th•an another form of change in the relationship." The Reverend H. L. Fergu- son , pastor of the Thomasboro Baptilst Church in Charlotte a.nd a member of the General Board of the Baptist State Convention, staid there wouJ.d be "more problems with a modified relatiOl!JSMp than with separation." Martin said that the 1946 contract m>ade between the Trustees of the College and the Reynolds Foundation trus. tees contains cerflain clauses which seem to name the Con- vention as ,a. party of the con- tract. Specif.ical1y he said there are two such clauses. In the first place, Mla·rtin said, the (Continued on Page 5) Bennett said that there had been about $1.4 million rtafised for the new s!ladium and the CoE.ege has now the right to borrow the remainder. "But ibor.rowin.g is not as easy as it seems. It seeiiiS like anything e!llW has a hole in fit a.!l(YWay," he quipped. "We have no coume but to move on," Bennett stressed. "Everyone wmts the sta· d.ium." However he cautioned that after the stadium is bUilt the College will have to fiilll the 30,000 seats. "l think," said Bennett, "that this :is when the people of Forsyth County and Northwestern North Caro- lina will reailily support Wake FIOrest and fill that stadium." Bennett added that he thought the stadium will "shortly" be a realicy. Things Humming About the stadium Tribble said, "Things are really hum- ming now!" "We are on our way to get- ting the stadium," he contin- ued. "We are going to surprise those who think tbat there will never be a stadium at Wake Forest College. 'We -are making definie pro- gress," Tribble pointed out. "I talked with the people who might build the stadium yes- terday, a;s· a matter of flact." TI1ibble -a-lso had some com. plim.entary wards for the job that Bennett has done as chiair. man of the stadium fund drlive. "We've got a winner in Bennett," Tribble exclaim- ed. He Is a "magnificent lead· er," he said, '!.and -has given inspired aeadership and whole_ hearted effort to tbe stadium campaign." "We at Wake Forest are deeply grateful for what you have done \for the College," Tribble said to Bennett. "We feel that you are a part of our program now." Bobby Ferrell, president of Kitchin House and a sopho- more of Greensboro, present- ed the $50 check to Bennett. While . pre.<;enting it he said, ••Although :ilt is small we tl'li:ed." At thiJS remark Jete Walker, junior of Morganton and mas- ter of ceremonies for the event joked, '"I'h:is may well be the widow's mite." Interest Shown President Tribble had this to say about the donation: "We appreciate what you are doling. We don't expect the students to give a lot of money but what you can give in in- terest and dedication will in- spire beyond money. It will make the people outside the College see the interest in the stadium and t;his will help." In addition to Bennett and Tribble, others attending the buffet dncoluded Coach Bob Lord, who represented the footbaJl.l team in Coach Bill Tate's absence; Dean Thomas Elmore; Dr. Keith Pritchard, housemaster of Poteoat House; imd Dr. Donialld: Schoonmaker, housemaster of Kitchin. About 40 K.itchdn House men attended the buffet which was catered by A.R.A. Slater. Serendipities Will Be Brought Here By Challenge '67 The Serendipity Singel'IS will present a concert in Wait Chapel March 3 an enter- tainment-extra to Chalilenge '67. The Righteous Brothel'IS, an· other well-known American enterta.inment group, were orl.giDally contracted for the appearance, but have failed to fU!lf'dH the requirements for the appearance. The Serendipity Singers have made numerous televi- sioo 1appea:rances in the last year that have them at the top of the list of favorite entertainment groups lin Amer- ican colleges and universit:ies. Billboard Mlagazine ha>S re- peatedly hailed them a.s "one of America's Hottest Cdllege .Concert Attra•ctions." TheiT conceilt will be open to Wake students, townspeople and Cha1lege

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. 723-'1183

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\

'\

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Fraternities Pledge 141 ·New 'Members Wedriesday N1ght

Pan 'lbree

* au

* Wake Forest College, Wfnston-Balem, ~orih Carolina, Monda~. Feb. 20, 1967 * *

Audience Swings To The Sound Of Dixieland Jazz

Page Two

NUMBER l8

MRC May Get College Aid Law Degree Is Changed-

-PHOTO BY ·DAUGHTRY on. 'l'be $50 cheek, wblch was raised b~ sellhlg bumper stickers, ·was given to Bennett at a Wednesday night buffet in the House.

FiXellTuition Bill Prepared For ·InspectiC)n Of Trustees

B~ BALPH SEWPSON AIISOCIATE IIDITOR .

The fixed 'tuition bill, whicb Was passed· by the Legislature two weeks ago and is present­ly 'llJider committee study pro­bably will be brought before the Board of Trustees lat their next meeting.

Norma Murdoch, chai.rnla.DI of the tlii.tion bill, indicated this weekend that if progress con· tdnues as it did during the last week, Trustees will con­sider the bill at their April meeting.

Fixed Tuition

times," · he 98ikl, "when in­creases needed colllld not be borne entirely by the entering Cl!IISS."

The main problem that Davidson has run into with its program is that of budgeting, tbe llreasurer ilndicaJted. · Mary BaldWin hias bad no such diifficulty.

In the Murdoch proposal that went before the Legisla· ture, the CoiJege was attacked for ills "unexpected and unex­plained tuition raises," which clause "great damage to stu­

. dent morale and produce a generally negative attitude

within the student body." The biD said "tulition has

risen every year for the past nine years for ,a, total rise of $700."

The Charlotte Observer did a study of rrising college costs aill over North Carolina, en­titled "Colllege Costs Olimb Like Ivy," and found that Wake Forest isn't alone dn ris. !.ng tuition.

The Feb. 8, article said costs 'at Queens wowld go up $350 next yeaT, $250 aJt Belmont Abbey .College, $200 at Guil­.ford, $200 at SaJlem, and $200 at Duke.

According to the Murdocb ·proposal, a student would ~. throilihout .. ius ~":Yea'i.-s. oniiy. thit. am.mmt of tUition siui-" ted in the bulletin of the ter:in' · in which he entered. - · -

.:New Dire~tor ~(Jrgan:~~f18 · --...... ·-~ ;,.,..: .... ,.. ... "

8th Management Seminar Pruce increases for any year"­

would be. ·levied only on ne\1{ studenlls, ·Milss Murdoch said.

By GRAY LAWRENCE STAFF WRITER

In 'lin e!lfort to make the bill, The College's Management "not too rigid," a clause will Institute, ;a division of the be inc<luded in ·the bill that. School of BtiiSiness, will 'begin woulld allow trustees to l"aise i:ts ei:gbt annual Management class tuitlo!B QI" activity fees Seminar l!hls week and for the for uppercla51Smen only in the first time it will be under the evenlt of a "major financial leadership of a full-time di-emergen.cy." rector.

Committee activity last week I Carl L. Whitney, a 25-year included correspondence with 1 veteran of Army service, will colleges •and universities which '' direct the prognam this year. have adopted similar pro- He joined the business school grams. staff em Feb. 10.

Works WeD The trea.surer of Mary Bald­

win College in Staunton, Va., said the gua;ranrteed · tuibion pl:an" at hrls college "has been. very favor.ably received."

He said this was "due main. ly to the f.act that a freshman parent or guardian can plan ahead wdth a degree of cer­tainty as to what the four years of c01llege will cost ·and make plJialliS accordingly."

The treasurer of Davidlson College admitted that his plan plan "might have to periodi­

,, cally mise costs for all stu­dents in order to catch up.

"There will undoubtedly be.

Until Whiltney took over as director of the Institute on a lfull-time basis, Dr. B.alph C. Heath, professor of marketing at the College, had headed the Institute since its organi­zation in 1959.

"The ll'apid growth that merited the selecti<m of a fulil­time dilrector," Whltney said, "has come about as a result of the outstanding work, and planning of Professor Heath."

The seminar which runs from Feb. 22 to May 11 is an effor.t •to "provide a pro­gram of continuilllg education in ma.n1agement and executive development for the business and indus1lrial communilty of

North Carolina," Whitney said. "The Institute is dedicated

to a :program of corutinuing education," he re-emphasized. "These ,programs consist of three-da-Y workshops, semi­:na-r.s of vary:im:g lengths, and a special lecture and symposium type of instruction."

Beginning February 22, ap­proximately rthlrty students wi:ll meet one da:y a week •through May 11. A second group of about the same size wilil. begin February 23 and continue through May 11.

The groups will begin with an early mornirig breakfast at 7:30 on February 22 and 23. Both groups graduate May 11, when they will receive a cer­tificate signifying completion of the Semi.noail".

The Management SeminaT consists of a series of vis~ting professo.rs, who will speak on such topics .a-s "The Frontiers

· of Management," "The En­terprise System and Business Economics," "The Marketing Process," "The Fin,ancilal Pro­cess," "Capital F.ormart:ion fo.r tile &naY Business," and "De­veloping Organization Team­wurk."

(Continued on page 5)

Future gradurates of the Col­lege's School of Law IWIIlil re­ceive the J.D. instead of the LL.B. degree.

The c!Hmge,, effective with this spring's commencement, was announced Saturday by Law School Dean Carroll W. Weathers. The J.D. Sbands for jurlis doctor •and the LL.B. for bachelor Olf laws.

lmportllllt Change

"The ch;ange will mean our graduates will receive a pro­fessiona:l doctonrte in law," -Dean Weathers sa:id. "The J.iQ. is to lthe law sclwol gra­duate what the M.D. is 1o !the medical school graduate or the D.D.S. Ito the dental school gl"aduate."

Weathers said there are at least 67 accredited law schools in rt:bis country JJOW cOIIlfe-rtiag · rthe J.D. a-s the first pro~ sionai degree in law. He also said that about 50 law schools have made the switch from LL.B. to the J.D. during. the past five years and that the number is lincreasing. -

The change also has been recommended by the Ameri:. can Bar Assoclation'.s Section of Legal Education and Ad· mission to the Bar, a study committee of the Assocli:atiou of AmeriC8'11. Law Schools arui the Ameriaan La.w Student As­sociation.

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY CHINESE EXPERT . • . Dr. Han Snyin makes a gesture that approaches a shrug daring her lecture Thursday even­ing i.n DeTamble Auditorium. While discussing the political tempo of China, Dr. Suyin employed the term cultural revo­lution and offered other hints that her political orientation was rather left.

Work to get the degree name s ~!:!edo~e:fhla::~ Dr. uym· Interprets and facullty. The ~aw school's' Student Bar Alssociation made -: A ' p s d the nam~ _ _change one of' itS . . Sl• a s . ::-.·resent t-an main projects· laSt year.

Larry Pitl!s, a second year law stu.dems from Newrton who was •a member of the Student Bar Assoaialtion's committee to study the degree chmge, salid that there were two main reasons for wa111.ting to change from the LL.B. to the J.D.

More Salary

First of alll he ·said, the hold­er· of the J.D. would be en­tiltled .to preferentiail treatment in ·salary and rank over the holder of the LL.B. degree among certain of the govern­menta[ agencies. Secondly, in some areas of teaching, the !~elder 'of 1U1e J.D. is paid more and has greater latitude of advancement.

Pitts gave other reasons why the student committee felt the degtree should be changed. The J.D. will place the graduates of law schools on an equarr level with the g-raduates of medical and den­tal schools who recedve pro­fessional doctomrtes.

It would en.h:aJJice the profes­sionaJ stature of the holders of lthe degree, Pitts said. The receipt of a second bachelor's degree by [aw school gradru­ates tends to ·impair the im­age of the legal profesSiion,

<Continued oo ?!age 5)

By LAURA FORD STAFF WRITER

"W' are fiacing a new ~· a new epochone of world re· voluti.on," acoord.illg tu the Chinese novatist and C!I'i.tic Dr. Han Suyin.

Spealcing on campll','l il.ast Thursday on 'The Current Re. volt lin China," Dr. Han pre­sented her justification, based on first-band observations, of China's adbption of Marxist dogma.

The first step in presenting this justilicla.tion was .estalblish­.ing the premise ~that whiat Westernens reg!Md as historical "fact" is often invalid. "By me, history is regarded as the most inexact and prejudicial non-science; it must be per­petuali!y challenged . . . All over the world today history is being reWTitten."

Control Others

The specific area of hilS'tory referred to was Asia, with its rising tide of post-World War II nation.a];jsm. The ideology being chaNenged is the nine­teenth century view that "the masters· of yesterday - the Western rU!lers - should con. trol others.

In regard to the recent po­liticall upheavals in the Far East, Dr. Han reminded. her audience tllat similar revolts and civil wa.rs have occurred in the United States in 1776 and 1861. "Sometimes the Westernerts .forget that these things happened to them," she said.

Dr. Hian then proceeded to briefly outlfrne the history of China as it has re511lted in recent dijsturbances.

The period between 1911 and 1923 was one of decay. The beginning of modern Chi!na is dated from 1919, when young Chinese inltell:lectuals were dlis­Hlusioned by the terms of the Peace of Versaill!les and the failure of the League of Na­tions. Dr. Han qu,oted the Chmnese emperor of that time as saying, "We have nothing to gain from· the West - they do not learn from history, and we will look smewhere else."

Party Formed

Professor Predicts 'Lean'·Years

In 1921, the Communist Youth Barty was formed, and from then Uilti!l. 1949 chaos and =sac:res l'aV'aged the coun­try. The regime of Chii.ang Kaishek waiS too wealc to last, and the peop-le were prepared to turn to Mao Tse Tung when he led the 1950 revolution. Dr. Han pointed out that the $6 billion given to Chiang in 1947 played directly into tile hands of the COmmunists, since na­tlionalist forces were deserting by the tens of thoUlSoands. Thus, Communist troops were ''beau-­tifully equipped with Amen­can weapons."

By RALPH S~PSON ASSOCIATE EDITOR

A young Wake Forest pro­lfessor predicted Thursday night that the College would go through a period of "many lean years" in its recruitment of "good graduate students."

Before the poliitical scien­tist had finished his statement, however, a chem.lstry. profes­sor chlarged black tbat his de­partment is 8ilready getting graduate students as good as those at either Duke or the University of North Cardlina.

Thiis consideretion of the quality of the graduate stu· dent was part · of Poteat House's discusslion on "Wake Forest - University: Hell.p or Hindrance?"

FOUil." professors, represent­ing four departm.enlts, partici­pated ill the two· hour discus­sion, wldch was 13Jttended by about 25 men.

The professors were Dr. Judson Alllen, talslsistant profes· sor of English; Dr. Pau~ Gross, associate professor of c:hemisljry; Dr; Xelstb Pricbard.

associate professoa:- of educa­tion; and Dr. Doruald Schoon­maker, assistant professor of political science.

Gross· w-as lthe most empha­tic professor in deferuse of the univei1Sity-gr<aduate program idea.

Gross ·said that . after the College "makes the assump­tion that it wants to move to­ward university status in the fUJ!dest sense, the quickest wa:y ois 1x> go lllh.e6d 'and sa-y it."

He was replying to a state­ment made by Allen that the .recem name change to univer­sity was "premature."

Allen 'Said ail.though the Col­lege ds in 1a sense a university with its dlifferent schools, when it "compares itself w.ith a real university it is a fair distance away."

SchoonJIIIaker said the de­bate !used to be "whether Wake Forest cot.ild be a strong liiberal arts college or a uni­versity.

"Now," he said, "thds isn't a live question of debate."

The political science profes­.sor said that questions of dis-

cru;sion now lincdude increase in tuition, a static or increas­ilng studEl!llt-fa<:ulty ratio, largetl" C!La!sses, and the possi­bility of graduate students teaching.

"Will these things happen at Wake Forest?" he asked.

Another p r o b 1 e m that Schoonmaker mentioned was that of enlarging the staff.

"Either you have to hl.re new staff members or arrange for J'a•rger courses and grn.­duate student instructors," he explained.

Increased faculty, he con­tinued, "cost more·money."

The four professors •allso dis­cussed the relationship be­tween the undergraduate stu­dent and the gradwate student.

Prichard predicted a strain lbevween the ltwo groups of Sbu­dems, and what each group d·s •aUowed to do.

The ~aw -students on any Saturdray afternoon have their bottles out in pl.adn .sight:" Prichard said, referring to ex­isting diiScrepanaies in the regulations.

"And chapel, too," the Po-

te-at housemaster continued. Allen was more worried

about curriculum. It distresses me," he said,

"when we think about the B. A., M. A., Ph. D. There ought to be some more sign of creative openness to new ideas.

"Else we'll be another To­bacco University iike the one down the road," Allen said, referring to Duke.

Mien sadd he "would rath­er h-ave some one come out (of Wake Forest) good in one thing than well-rounded in no­thing."

One question that was re­lated to much of the dilscussion but primarily that part deal­mg with money !W'as lthe Col­lege-Convention controversy.

The professors &aid broader bases of ffinlancial suppont were needed but prill'ate foundations were holding off until the Col­lege took advantages of fede­ral grants.

SeveraQ of the men predict­ed it would be five years be­fore any kind of separation

took pl\'31Ce. Prichard insisted that there

were "fewer strings attached to federal money than there are on Baptist money."

Gross said large amounts of other money are 'all'ailable to the College, citling foundations and lfederail. money, and that these monies would more than compensa.te for the $375,000 received yearly from the Bap­tist State Convention.

He also recalled several in­stances where the College has previolllSly accepted federal money, in:clu.din:g N atlional Science gll'!an~. IIJld federal loans to build dormitol"ies•.

The Poteat House discus­sions have been heil.d weekly, and next week'.s disctiiSsion, accordling to chairman Tim Shouse, freshman of W.inston­SaJ.em, will de8il with "sex and the college male."

Participants will include Bowman-Gray School of Medi­cine, L. H. iHoJ.lingsowonth, chaplai,n, of the Coll.ege, and Edga;r Christman assisotfant chapla'ln and director of the Ba,ptilst student UciOlll.

Concerruing the polliticall. cli· mate of ·China today, Dr. Han insisted tbalt the country is not Communist-oriented. • 'China i's not a1 Communist state - it is tradition8'1. state, which will last at least a century," she said. Her per­sonal eV'aJl.lllatiOIIl was, "All 1 am aware of has been change, change, and more change."

Mao Practical

Mao Tse Tung was charac­terized as "a very pl'aoti-cal man." The speaker emphasiz­ed that there lils "deep prag­matic realism" in wh~t iiS be­ing done in China today.

Looking to the future, Han Suyin predicted lthat the Chi­nese Revolution w.ili be over by the end of thiS y~r. slle also stated that, Within eight­een yeaxs, the <hmmunist re­·Wme will be tsel:f-sufficient enough Ito !feed all of .its people.

Interest Reassuring, Pres. Tribble Says B~ HENRY BOSTIC, JR.

MANAGING EDITOR

The College's president said Tuesdta'Y night that the Men's Reslidence Counchl "can fully expect the administration .to support the MRC program wlith funds" next year.

President Harold W. Tribble made the statement after he had attended a Kitchin House buffet supper. The buffet was held so tblat Kitchin House could present its> proceeds from the sale of bumper stick.. ers this fall to the stadiium fund.

Bert Bennett, local business. man and chadrman of the sta­dium fund committee, accept­ed the $50 ddllar donation.

The progress of the MRC is "very encouraging indeed," Tribble sadd, "when you con­sider that they had to start allmost from scratch."

Real Test

According to the president, the "real test'' as far as the admini-stration was concerned was the responsiibility of the men. "There were two at­tempts before this," said Trib_ ble. "The College gave them assi.'"tance, but the men did not show respomibility nor dlid they follow up the pro­gram."

"But this time," he said, "the men had the enthusiasm, got lliings started, and are foiLlowing up the start with responsibility and enthu­siasm.''

"The admli7listratl!on is now willing to do more," Tribble emphaslized. "The men hiave demonstrat~d ~terest and a readiness to _persist."

The MRC i::a.ti expect money from the administration, he said, "but I do not knGW in wh•at amount yet. We willllirst have to have a conference to see what is needed."

Earlier in the evendng both Tribble and Bennett had given progress reports about the new stadium's progress.

BSU

WF-Baptist Relations Probed

B'y HENRY BOSTIC A Baptist layman -and ~aw­

yer said Friday nii.ght that a separation between Wake Fo­rest and the Baptist State Con. ve:ntion could possibly jeopar­dize the money th!at the Col­lege gets from the Reynolds Foundation.

Lester Marlin, Jr., of Mocks­ville, told students and faculty at the Friday night Baptist student Union Supper Forum that because of certafin "con­tract stipulatioiiiS," the Col­lege "I1lilllS the risk of losing the Reynolds Foundation money'' if it separates from the Convention.

Martin Wa!S a member of a panel discu~ion which at­tempted to "cl·arify mi-scon­ceptioiiiS" and inform students and facullty about the present relationship between the Col­lege and Convention. It was oallso intended to .show that Baptists 18re 'IV'illing to serious­ly discuss possible moddf~ca­tions of the realationship.

But a prominent Baptist minister said he feat that "a complete separation would be easier th•an another form of change in the relationship."

The Reverend H. L. Fergu­son , pastor of the Thomasboro Baptilst Church in Charlotte a.nd a member of the General Board of the Baptist State Convention, staid there wouJ.d be "more problems with a modified relatiOl!JSMp than with separation."

Martin said that the 1946 contract m>ade between the Trustees of the College and the Reynolds Foundation trus. tees contains cerflain clauses which seem to name the Con­vention as ,a. party of the con­tract.

Specif.ical1y he said there are two such clauses. In the first place, Mla·rtin said, the

(Continued on Page 5)

Bennett said that there had been about $1.4 million rtafised for the new s!ladium and the CoE.ege has now the right to borrow the remainder.

"But ibor.rowin.g is not as easy as it seems. It seeiiiS like anything e!llW has a hole in fit a.!l(YWay," he quipped.

"We have no coume but to move on," Bennett stressed. "Everyone wmts the sta· d.ium."

However he cautioned that after the stadium is bUilt the College will have to fiilll the 30,000 seats. "l think," said Bennett, "that this :is when the people of Forsyth County and Northwestern North Caro­lina will reailily support Wake FIOrest and fill that stadium."

Bennett added that he thought the stadium will "shortly" be a realicy.

Things Humming

About the stadium Tribble said, "Things are really hum­ming now!"

"We are on our way to get­ting the stadium," he contin­ued. "We are going to surprise those who think tbat there will never be a stadium at Wake Forest College.

'We -are making definie pro­gress," Tribble pointed out. "I talked with the people who might build the stadium yes­terday, a;s· a matter of flact."

TI1ibble -a-lso had some com. plim.entary wards for the job that Bennett has done as chiair. man of the stadium fund drlive. "We've got a winner in Bennett," Tribble exclaim­ed.

He Is a "magnificent lead· er," he said, '!.and -has given inspired aeadership and whole_ hearted effort to tbe stadium campaign."

"We at Wake Forest are deeply grateful for what you have done \for the College," Tribble said to Bennett. "We feel that you are a part of our program now."

Bobby Ferrell, president of Kitchin House and a sopho­more of Greensboro, present­ed the $50 check to Bennett. While . pre.<;enting it he said, ••Although :ilt is small we tl'li:ed."

At thiJS remark Jete Walker, junior of Morganton and mas­ter of ceremonies for the event joked, '"I'h:is may well be the widow's mite."

Interest Shown

President Tribble had this to say about the donation: "We appreciate what you are doling. We don't expect the students to give a lot of money but what you can give in in­terest and dedication will in­spire beyond money. It will make the people outside the College see the interest in the stadium and t;his will help."

In addition to Bennett and Tribble, others attending the buffet dncoluded Coach Bob Lord, who represented the footbaJl.l team in Coach Bill Tate's absence; Dean Thomas Elmore; Dr. Keith Pritchard, housemaster of Poteoat House; imd Dr. Donialld: Schoonmaker, housemaster of Kitchin.

About 40 K.itchdn House men attended the buffet which was catered by A.R.A. Slater.

Serendipities Will Be Brought Here By Challenge '67

The Serendipity Singel'IS will present a concert in Wait Chapel March 3 ~ an enter­tainment-extra to Chalilenge '67.

The Righteous Brothel'IS, an· other well-known American enterta.inment group, were orl.giDally contracted for the appearance, but have failed to fU!lf'dH the requirements for the appearance.

The Serendipity Singers have made numerous televi­sioo 1appea:rances in the last year that have p~aced them at the top of the list of favorite entertainment groups lin Amer­ican colleges and universit:ies.

Billboard Mlagazine ha>S re­peatedly hailed them a.s "one of America's Hottest Cdllege .Concert Attra•ctions."

TheiT conceilt will be open to Wake students, townspeople and Cha1lege deleg;;~tes.

PAGE ~0 . M_Gmday, Feb. 20, 1967 OLD GOW AND BLACK

the K & W cafeterias INVITE YOU TO DINE Wim THEM TODAY OR ANY DAY AT YOUR CONVENIENCE - AT ANY ONE OF THEIR FIVE LOCATIONS

Folk Singer To Perform Feb. 20-24

Chapel Audience Comes Alive To Sound Of Dixieland Jazz·

Excellent Food, Service, and Satisfaction

WINSTON .SALEM ~2 North Cherry Street

l''way Plaza Shopping Center XnoUwood at Thruway

WGD POINT 110 East High Street

GREENSBORO Friend]y Shopping Center

GOUR.ME.T The word .. Gourmet"' in our name meau exactly that...;....Courmet Fooclt. More than I 00 vaiietiea . of imported aDd · clom•tic chee.a; tantalizing· reu.heo; ealaclt with·

lbat critp &:ah look ud taite; c:anthdly aelec:ted c Q 1 d cull: genuine K~her foocLi: · pleuina p~; 6incY. delicacia aplenty aad the bat iri pieli and c&k.-, of.cOUfM,

The Magnoll-a Room will be coove<rted 1x> a night spot this week wi.1Jh rthe presentati<m of a Greenw.i:ch Village folk si.ng­er e-ach everuing.

Jake Holmes, who has been featured at the Bitter End in New York, willl present two shows each evening a·s a p3/IIt of hils tour of colllege and uni-ver~ty oaDruPuses. .

Ho'lmes made his first ap­peat"ance at the Bitter End a few mOILths .a,go, and just t"e­centt1y signed with Capital re­cords as !both write!' and re­cording ail'tist. The sialger vn-~tes ·his OWill material, which ll'anges from simple folk songs to psyclledelic, and oHers a il"UUlllJng commentary on topics of ilnterest between Dl!lm'berS.

The perforiiiJances are scl!edrt.ded for 5:30 p, m. and 9:45 p. m. At the larl:e evening showilng soft drlnk:s all1d snacks may be ordered. T.he Small Socials Committee, which has assumed chial'ge of tbe per­foa:tmmceS, will. cbrurge an ad­missioo fee of 25 cents per person. T.he commitrtee plans to il'eawange the room in oo effort to establish a night-club aJtmosphere.

By J. D. WILSON STAFF WRITER

The Dukes of Dbdleland made Wad.t Chape!l swUng last Monday lllight When 1Jh.ey made 1Jhelr Chllege Union .appear­ance 'before appro:xdma'llely 1,500 !llsbeners.

Tille audience dlildn't just listen. They couldn't. They tapped theilr feet, clapped thelr haru:ls, snta.pped their fmgers, and! noddeld: 1Jheir heads to the lively rlhythm of tbe poptilv jazz group.

Generous Applanse Mlost of the mUISII.c was ar­

ranged so that each member of the band /had a solG in eaCih song, and for each of tlhese solos and for the ~up as 14 whole •the aUidlrenc~ was quite generous with its ap. plause.

The g!l'Oup oaiginateld in New Orleans, so New Orleans was the Ub.eme il'or many of tlheir songs.

They played Bourbon street music, jazz soul mmsic, jazz tirom BroadWay and jazz from movies.

Favorite Songs Am'On:g 1Jhe autlliooce's fav­

orites, judgling from the ap­plause, were "Sweet Georgia Brown," "St. J.ames Infilrm­

acy," "Marne," and, of course, "Wheal the Saints Go March­ing In." .Restaurant

AND

Delicatessen

Holmes ihas appe!M"ed iln summer stock in such shows as "Gollden Boy" and "Little Mai!'Y Sunshine" -and has com­pleted rut extensive musical education 1at Hofsflra, Jul1iard, and Ben;ruing1ton College for Women.

He ha!S previously worked with a comedy duo and has released an aLbum "I'd Rathe!' Be Rich than Ethnic." Holmes has aJ:so wol"ked with a com­edy rteam 1al!ld a singing trio called "The Thorns."

JAKE HOLMES • rising folk singer, will be featured in the Magnolia Room every night this week, sponsored by the CU Small Socials Committee. He will perform twice nightly, at 5:30 p. m. and 9:45 p. m.

Frank Alssunto, leader of the Dukes, add€1d the ll'lig!ht club touch to many of the songs wL1Jh lhlis singing.

Lower Mall Thruway Shoj,ping Ceat•

\t~jot"e$1

Rifle Coach Enlists Aid

Of Marksmen For Meet

Besi:dles AS'sunto, on the trumpet, ·there are five o-ther members of the band piaylilng cla.rtinet, piano, drullllS bass and tronibooo. '

A£ter Ub.eir JSuccessful jazz concert they fullilleld their acceptance of an invitation to Kitclhdn Howse where tlhey drank coffee and ate Valen­tine cake.

LAUNDRY and

DRY CLEAN-ING . "On The Campus"

GIRLS-- JOHNSON DORM BOYS- TAYLOR 11011 MR. lOB BEAMER, Muac•

ROBERT'S MiEN'S & BOYS'

WASH.I.NGTON··s ~BIRTHDAY·, ) * * * F"EE3~U.A..RY 2.2.nc:l 17:32 \* * * (

SALE STARTS WED., FEB. 22

AT BOTH STO~RES FOR MEN AN:D BOYS

One Group - Limit 2 Items Per Customer

Wake Forest is lookdng for students to participate in var­sity !intercollegiate mifle shoot­ilng compebition.

Sgt. Maj. 'Ilhomas Shaffer, coach of the ROTC rifle team, said any studenJt is cligiD:Jle to try out for tlhe team.

"This is IllOt an ROTC team," Shaffer sadd, "so any student with i.nldoor or NRA gall-ery shooting experience ils encouraged to try out. lin liact, any student, gi:r Is incluXiled, a-re needed."

Shaffer .said several schools !Who i{:ompete in :riflery have -girls who shoat for them. ·He added rt:hrut since rifle shooti!ilg is not .. consi'dered'' ·an· ACC nli:nor sport, i'reshmen 'lare

Sport Shirts - Swim Trunks Belts - Ties - Shorts 22c

One Group - Limit 2 Items Per Customer

Sport Shirts - Pants -- Swim Wear $1.22 Shorts-Hats-Ladies & Men's Bowling Shirts

One Group - Limit 2 Items Per Customer

Jackets - Sport Shirts - Pants $2.22 Ladies & Men's Bowling Shirts . '

Orie Group - Limit 2 Items Per Customer

Sweaters - Jackets - Pants $3.22 Sport Coats - Hats

One Group - Limit 2 Items Per Customer

Sport Coats - Pants - Sweaters $4.22 Hats - Shoes - Rain Boots

One Group - Limit 2 Items Per Customer

$10.22 Suits - Sport Coata

NO ALTERATIONS (THIS SALE ONLY)

ALL SALES FINAL All Merchandise From Our Regular Stock--Quantities Are Limited!

SORRY I I.

•cHARGES THIS SALE

ONLY

MEN'S i.ll'S aol BOYS'

NO LAY-AWAYS

NO iPH·Oii'E ORDERS

Downtown: 110 W. 5th St. Open Friday 'Til 9 Northside Shopping Center: Open Nights 'Til 9, Sat. 'TU 6

eligible. On thle subject of ca:-ack

slhots, 1Jhe Wake Forest Col-. lege ROTC R&fle Team fin­isheicl: finst and second in the ROTC secotlon:al division of a National R.i£IJe Aslsoctiation In­belrcollegiate Ri!le Match helld Feb. 3-4 at N. C. State Ullli­versity in Ra~eigh.

'l1he team filllished second in the ovet"-all lntevcoUegiate competition.

Sgt. Major T.lromas S!haf­fer, rifle team coacll, -said Wake Forest bea,t six teams in the competition. The only team to beat the l)eacons

. was ~- C. State, the first­place wimlet" in 1lhie illter­collegiate· .competitioo.

The l)eacons sthot an iboth individual and team oompe­tlitkln to win tlheir Jwnors. Jim Knight, jund.l>r flrom Wi:n­·ston-sa1em, was t/bJe high i!lldi­vidual ·sh'OOter for the sclhool. He filreki a 258 out of a possi­ble 300 for second place in 1Jhe ROTC i.nldividual standimgs and tlhir'd place ovet"ail.

David Meech,iireshman from Statesville, was high team scorer with a 262 mrurk.

Each member of the team woo a gold medal fO'l' the ROTC division win anld a sil­ver medal in tlhe !intercollegi­ate competitioo;

They ilnrformally discus.seid their careers, how they got oogeth:e\r, Wlhy they have play­ed performance after perfurm­·ance far ov<er ten yea-rs and some .of 1JhJe talents of their COilltemporardes.

School Of Arts To Be Featured In Dance Recital

Milss .Pauline Koner, tenclh­er of m'Odle= dance at -1Jhe North Carolina Schooll of ·th& Al!'ts, anld her stuldents will

"presoot "An ~g;,-of Mod-'·ffi.ii;·'Ui1Dde" ileb!rUfu& w 'lat 8:15 p. m. in the auditorium of ilie Main Hall at -the School of the Arts.

Eig!hteen students wdll par­ticipate :in 1Jhe recital which will be gdven in three parts, emphasi2ling CII'aft, art and perfurmance of molde-rn dance. Miss Koner will. repeat por­tions of /her demonstration of modern dance techniques wlhich she gave at 1Jhe school laiSt spving.

Mi!ss Koner was leaiding guest artist for the Jose Limon Dance Company for almost 15 years.

The recital will be open to the public Wlithout ch3JI'ge.

HAND-SEWN*

Aft tlT®

IIW'8 TINt! Sl/01!8

Black & Brown 17.00

WTauel• - the new fashion touch In lo ~ ear th~m here, there, everywhere. a ~rs.

moccasin construction makes them I'Ghtnu,nde comfortable afoot. 19 an

QUALITY i VALUE

Sherwood Plaza . STORE uouRs DAILY - 10 'tn 9 P. m.

Shopping Center SA.T. - 9 'til: 6 p. m. Robin Hood at Peace Haven Road

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY '

A ONE-MAN BAND • • • or so it appeared at times, was Barrett Deems, the fantastic drUmmer for the Dukes of Dixieland, who kept the beat goi.Jlg . and the feet tapping­and eventually, the hands clapping. The jazz band appeared Monday night in a concert sponsored by CoUege Union.

Mtai being askeld by a /house member what it takes to be a -successfll'l jazz artist, ASISunto replied, "It's true that practice helps increase the playing ability of a pe<l"SSOll

interested dn jazz, 'but I .think that to be• ·a truly great jazz artist you /have to be born Wlith the tan.ent."

"Wihat does it feel like to play pOCfurmance after per­formance?" "askeld another pel:' SOD..

The d'l"ummer, B<mTett Deems, replied, "Wd, I'll

tell you. :Rretty IS'OOil you get used -to it. Sometimes when I'm up on a stagJe perform· ing I may forget where I am and think that I'm oSitllin·g in my living room watching tcleVIision wi1Jh my dog."

The Dukes of Dixielamd dO have qudte a few performanc­es beAlind 1Jhem-on television, in famous llligt,t clubs, and at many colileges.

Adtl one more successful performance - last Monday • night, Wait Chapel, Wake Forest College.

Cone Workers Strike

Seeks Student Support By LINDA CARTER

STAFF WRITER

Placrurds !l'ea!ddng "I Sup­port Cone W.orkers' RJiglhts" h>av<e become common sights on several North Cardlina college campuses_rece.ntly, but

.:w:J.~~':F'Prit~ -s~ts· ~e. not 1·~~e-a..~~~ aifr.y.~.u.:J.~ ~ l ~:_-,ij •• :'J .

The slogan repreLSoots stu­dent response to an open invitation from 1Jhe TextJiie Workers' Unioo of America to ,support workers lin seven Cone mdllis ·:illl the Greensboro anea .in a protest -agaim;t "un­fadr labor practices."

Active Colleges

At Duke Unlive-rsity, tllle Undvel\Sity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and at Greens­boro, and at Guli1ford College, students have been diiS'tribut­ing informatioo about labor problems and s:pGnsoo:tiln'g meet­ings with textile workers, union leaders, and Cone man­agement.

Approximately 100 repre­sentatives !from the four schools marched in picket lines !during 1Jhe !I'ecent tlh-ree­day strike. Some of these stu­dents were anrested. Most of 1Jhem are pneparhlg to sup­por.t the textile worlrers in any futUTe demOilStrabions. Al­though the strike:.s haw been halted tempovarily as lllllliOO leaders -and Cone officials begin ruego<hlations, 1Jhere is a widlespreakf feeling among tlhe employees that mlore ac­tivity may be requ!Ureld before lihei:r demands -are met.

No Names

When quesmooed, student organdzers were DIOt certain whethie<r any Wake- 111orest stu­clients had participated. Some thoug-ht they Tecalled .seeing people from Walre Forest at some meetings or demonstra­tions, but lllo spectilic names coulid be cited. ·

These leaders stressed that 1Jhe request fo-r suppoll't still stands and said tlh·at if any !inrerest in the mowment is exproo.red at ·the College the -union -woutld •be ·glad to send representatives to the -campus to discuss the ilSsues. 1l -any-

one flben wanteid' to particl.· pate in fututre· denwnstra- • tions union m'eril~s would provide tr an:sport~tlOD:.

On the lfour campuses where •Students lhav<e supported 1Jhe nmvement, tm:ion. orglU)izers !have not attempted tJo .. din!ct

• tbeir .. ,participation. T\hey .. vis­..ited the: schOOls .at the re..

quest 'Of ·interested groups ami provilded mformation about the demands and proposals of the Cone. workers.

. Moral Issue

What prompts 1Jhis interest in textlile- :workers' l!'lig1hts oo tlhe paii't ·of college -stu~nts! 'Dhey an.Swer tlw question 'by saywg they feell that college LStud!ealts are ru>t :l>so'labed, but are · ~ 'reaJ. members of the community" and as such have a "responsibiliity to act as ooncerneldl citizens ... Some stu _I dent participooiis call the workers' dJemamkils a "moral issue" and cOIIl!Sider thel:r re­quests "moderate."

These l'equ:ests include a clheck-off, a wage increase. and an improved pension pro­gram. Clbeck-off is a com­mQI1 practice by wlbich union .. dues are automa·tic~ witlh­lbe1Jd from employees' check.s. Uruion membel1S in the Cone mills have VlOted in favor of ISUOO a system.

Why is the unlion .so eager for studte!lt support and so respoiiiSive to tlhei!r interest? Their explanation .Is ·tal:at "tlhis ils a case of poor peopl'e fight­ing a ric!h· -and poweritil. com-' l)ain'Y that is a!ble to put severe economdc pressure on them. They need public support in order to succeed."

Applaud Students

How do the t~tlie w01rkers themselves .feel about stuldent participati:Oin? 'lbiB questioo was asked by a union leade-r .in an mter-plant meetdng of union membiea'>s /held . February 12 in Haw River after a week Qf demOil!Stratlons ·and strikes. 'Dhe :response was. resounding applause from •the workers.

"The only tJil,mg · we can say about the stuldents'' 011e man saJd, "ia to aak·lfor more1 of them."

IF YOU ARE PLA.ING -A

Big Party "CITY BEVERAGE"

Is The Place For The Best Prices On All Of Your Favorite Brands

Of "Ice-Cold Beverages" 908 BURKE ST.

PA 22774 DELIVERY SERVICE PA 51t81

_I

NEED tD the ausl1

14 The

men n finally night. ~ night ' deferre qualifie fr.atern:l

The pledged

ALPB men: ~ vern, :E

DEL 'I men:· '1 Head, 1 of Bur of But shaw, Fla.; E boro; :E Br3lllc!h of Shell of Mou: mores: lotte; Hill, v Charlot Kensin.!

KAPJ David Lam-y Garth·:

·c!JkpB Fred

-James ::natm:y:' -:;son;.sj s "Ville'· ' S~bu:

·son, G Hender Wilmin ua:ro. , mores: £reesbo myer,

. KAPI Ben A~ Tomm3 Tom 4

Ga.; S lotte, < !ham, Charlot of Ne James Gilbert S. C.; ing, 0 Con col" Fairm< WinstoJ Young, more: lotte.

·LAM Freshn Hendel Hunter

.of As1l Salem, Oharlol Silver Sliewar ton E May C rry P< IDbbei­Wooidy Ohio; ton, 1i Mlingl of M1 AShmo and H Sophoi of Ra Sallsb1 ner, o

PI ll meDJ: of Bt of Wt La Wire LilyqUJ Liles, Smith, ,

tlive azz"

' BY DAUGHTRY '

at times, was the Dukes of feet tappiDg­band appeared

•Uege Union.

tty IS'OOIJ1 you get Sometimes when

stage perform· rget where I am at I'm .sitflin.g in ll'IOOm watching

:b my dog." . of Dixieland dO few pel"formanc­m-on television, ligbt clubs, and eges. more successful - last Monday •

Chapel, Wake !e.

e [)rt Lnllfid' to partied.• tmre· demDDStra-• members would ;port~tiOD:. r campuses where e supported tate m..'on orgaJ)izers emptied to .. direct ~.ation. They. vis· ools -at the re­·ested groups ami formation about and propo.sals of '

ork'eire.

al Issue

npts this interest ~rkers' l!'liglhts oD college ·Stu~nts? tlrls questli-on ·by

feell that college rrot i>sdlabed but

nembers of' the and as sueh have i>i.lJi.ty to act as izens.'' Some stu-1

ip 31Ilts call the mamfu; a "moral :OD!Sider theix re­erate." Lu:ests mclude a

wage increase, ()ved ·peminn pro-1!:-aff is a com­~ by w!hdeh UnWn .. 11Dma•tically with· nployees' chects. .em m the ecoe 110ted ·in favor of em. e Ulllion .so eager support and so

o their ~est? ation is ·llhat "tlhis pcor people fight-

1 nd powel1ful com­a:ble Ito put severe >e~SSure on them. ~ublic .support Jn cceed."

1d Students

e t~tlie w01rkers eel about stuldent ? 'Ibis questioo •Y a undon ileader plant meeting of :a>s !held · February iver after a week 1tions and slirlkes. e was. reooood:ing •m •the workers. r tliimg · we can he stuklents'' one s tn a5k ·for more 1

, :Prices Branda :es"

PA 51CII1

· 1 -PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY NEED MORE •• be said? The sign ou the main register ID ·the College Bookstore, reinforced b,. the price above H, SUS H aU.

-~Fraterni~ies Pledge 141 .New Members

The night tlhiat many &esh­men men were waiting fur finally came last Wednesday IDigbt. That night was pledge night wbich of.fdeially ended deferred ru.sh and allowed qualified men to pledge a fmtem!ty.

The following 141 boys pledged fraternities:

ALPHA SIGMA Pm-Fresh­men: Jim Williams, of Mal­vern, Pa. and Al Fritsch.

DELTA SIGMA Pm-Fresh­men:· Ted Blackburn, of Glen Head, N. Y.; Fl()yd Williams, of Burlington; Roger Main, of Burlington; Barry Hack-6haw, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Rick Joslin, of Greens­boro; Pat Bames, of W. Lomg Branclb, N. J.; Bob Callahan, of Shelby; Bruce Jubanowsky, of Mountainsilde, N. J.; Sopho­mores: Alan Crusan, of Char­lotte; Jim Butts, of South Hill, Va.; Sanx:Iy Sanlders, of Charlotte; Dave Wood, of Kensington, Md.

KAPPA ALPBA-FiresbmC!!l: David Alden, of Greensboro; LaNY Bal!low, of Mocganton; Garth ·BloX'Om, of GTeenvllle;

· Olip Bone, of Orlando, Fla.; Fred Coolre, of Salisbury;

· JaJiles Carlton, of Salisbury; ~~Dam1Y·' Edwai:dW· 0£ "'Heiilder­. ..,son:·s'steve:··'~·,·~oPD'an· "Ville;- V:a.; · ~De~- ·o.i;ahaDi,· ·of Salisbury; Cole Kelly, of Jack­

. son, Ga.;· Woody Phillips, of Henders<m; Steve Taylor, of Wllmington; and Gary Wil· liard, of Yadkinville. Soplbo­mores: Bin Brown, of Mlllr­freesboro, arnd Ran~y Dod'fer­myer, of Dunn.

. KAPPA SIGMA-Freshmen: Ben Aycock, of Wal!Je Forest; Tommy Bonne, of Wilson; Tom Campbell, of Atlanta, Ga.; Steve Darnell, <>f Char­lotte, Charles Floyd, of · Chat­!ham, Va.; Jolhn Gl()ver, <>f Charlotte; Larry Habegi?JCX, of New Augusta, Indiana; James Hartz()g, of Lexington; Gilbert Jefforos, of Flb:rence, S. C.; Dan Myer, of Ketter­ing, Ohio; Robert Nbron, of Ocm.cord; Lenwood Rich, of Fairmont; Charles Sams, of Winston-8alem; and Julius Young, of Lexington. Soplho­more: AI McCullock, of Char­lotte. ·LAMBDA em ALPHA -

Freshmen: Tom Ho:rmeT, of Henderlson; Joe Puckett, of Huntersville; Jim Chapman,

Walker, of BUil"lington; Alan Whibe, of Windlester, Va.; and Duke Wilson, of Canal Zone. Sophomore: Jdlm S'pi­vey, of Rockingfuam.

SIGMA CHI - Freshmoo: Frank Beck, of Greensboro; Sbeve Bierly, olf Valley Forge, Pa.; l.Jee Callaway, of Win· ston-Salem; Ron Carler, of Newton; Jim Oross, of Bur­liington; Bill CUrl, d' FrOillt R()yal, Va.; Bob Duirkel, of Ft. Laudertdale, Fla.; Grey Gooldle, of Marlinsviille, V a.; Kar:l Haiger, of Fay-etteville; Ken Hemphill, of 'IIlu>mas­vill.e; Oharles Holland, of Raleigh; Tom Jones, of De­catur, Ga.; Bo Kling, of Lin­colnton; Bruce !Jamb, of Cleveland, Ohio; John May, of Spring Hope; . Jdhn Matson, of Silver Spriilg, Md.; Mike Mulk~y. of Rockingham; Jim Stone, of Raleigh; Bill Stoot, of SouldlE!IIixm, Pa.; Carl Ty­ner, of Gastonda; Dem W3lrd, of Lumberton; and Jim Wells, of Greenville. Jumors: For­rest HolJJilield, of Satisbury and Greg Roach, Had'lionfieilld·, N. J.

SIGMA Pm EPSILON -F1reshmen: Wollliiam Wlalter. Bachovcihln, of Jolmstnwn,

, Pa,.;:~a;s: 'R.iiymond ·Bof£. vorC'herry Hill, .. N. J:;, Eobert A1iexander CaSk~y, r Of ' Mont-gomery, Ala.; Th'ank Damel Cannon, of Seafoo-d, Del.; Denni:s Wayne Goins, of Mt. Airy; ._John Oharles Gmen­baugh, of Han"lington, Del.; Charles Henry Hcldli'E!Il'ne, of Galesburg, ill.; Robert Doug. las ~ater, of Washington, D. of Cinci.Imati., Ohio; Joel Aug­C.; Thomas Max Kettlehake, ust Ludlam, of Merch31Iltville, N. J.; Donalidl Ra:ndolplh Stewart, of OceansMe, N. J.; Wi.lliJam lloyd Taylor, of Higlh Point; Robert Kenneth Weeks Of Norfolk, Va.; 'l11roma~ Joseph Woolley, J:r., of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Jon Mel­vin Wright, of WaJShingtion, D. C.; and George Grove of Hkkory. Sophomores: J~ Christopher Berwind, of Lyn­brook, N. Y. and '1100mas Jackson MilJ!ion, of Klilllgs~ port, Team.

SIGMA PI-F1reshmen: Tom Aquino, of Canastota, N. Y., :F1red Barden, of Rocky Mount; Bam Ohall'low, of South E1alls­lburg, N. Y.; Di:ck Leader, of Wlayne, P-a.; !Mike Lemer, or Firankfurt Maine, Ger.; Har­vey Monis, of Richmond, V13.; Delllris Piinlkleton,. of Rlich­mond, Va.; Wes Seamon, of K8iiiiilapolis; Dave Slaton, of Damascus, Md.; JaC'k strickll­ing, of Skose, Iill.; Jolm Tan­tum, of Robinsville, N. J.t" steve White, of Rl.chmond, V~a.; and Ron White, of Wash­ington, D. C. Sophomores: Pete EJHis, of Lumberton; Jim Pya-on, of Leaiksville and Jdm Warren, of Wake Focest. JUIIl­iors: Jdm Best, of GTee!!Sboro and Jerry Funderburk, of Monroe.

THETA em - Freshmen: Steve F.laxle, of HUDitingt.on, iN'.

Bookstore Reasonable?

Clay Says Pt:iCe Is Right ARMSTRONG OPtiCIANS

By LINDA CARTER and SUSAN BARLOW .

studelllt complaints about l bookstore prices aa-e based ·I

mat!:nly on misconceptions, ac,­cording to Richard T. Clay, maJJ~ager of the College Book­store.

He e:x:pLained that the book­stare :Is owned iby the college ami is II'II1D on a buxiget lllke Bli(Y' other department- •at the scbool. .As manager, he is an­swerable l!o the 'J.1rustees thru the ~s manager· and the PJ:esidoot. Any und!ailrness 1n i prices would lbe "to 1110 ad- . V811ltage to me ~." he sal.cl.

The bookstore is :run on a profJ.t-ma~ basis be said, • but the little profit made is : jwltified beoalllse it goes back · iiDto a ·general college flmd. "I person~ ·tend - to feel it should ibe !Used in some other area where the $bude111ts could see it,'' he added ibuJt felt the college bad a "rregitim·ate right" .as owner to use the profits for aoy pllJllXl~Se.

NG Mark-Up

COMPLE'rE OPTIC&L BEB.VICB "PREBCBIPTION OP'DCIANW'

CONTACT LENSES One ot the Larpst Se1ecUoa ..

Framea ID WlnatoJt.8alem Rec. & ~ flanll• II

122·9146 LOBBY, NISSEN BLDG.

WE INVITE ALL WAKE FOREST STUDENTS TO VISIT

Staley's Open Hearth Restaurant

Clay denied thJaJt .the stu­dents bad aJW real gTounds for complaints. When ques­tioned ·a<bout textbook prices, he said .that they were deter­min~ lby ,the publishers them­.saves, 1and there is never ~ ma!l'lk~ by the bookstore.

BANDS TIED • • • b,. the Bookstore prices. There is nothiug the student can do on cam· pus, except hunt for new perspectives OD

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY poverty. According to Clay, the Bookstore manager, his own bands are tied.

Th_e house that service and quality built; the favorite of Wake Forest students and faculty. We specialize in steaks, short orders, sandwiches

A common student complai!n.t is that they find "little stick­ers" covering lower prices on paper'back ·books. "We've never applied a sticker here yet," CJiay said. He eX1!>1ained that the pubJ.ils.hers pri.nt and use the stiC"kers.

He produced a roM of 700 such sti-ckers recenrt;Iy sC!!lt to bim by one publishing firm to raise the price on books they had already shipped, and said he had refused to do so because it was a "ridiculous" waste of time.

Students often accuse the bookis1Jore of stocking the most expeiiiSive editions of ibookis. Ol!ay maintained that several eilit<ion:s o.f most noru-.required books, usUJallly includin-g . the cheapest, are ordered. He has no control over tihe selection of text .and paral!lel books sold in the downstaws stare. He sells only what is speciiicalily

Coeds Needed •In- ·Nat'l.· Contest

ordered by the professors. Clay admitted that there were pro­blems ;involved but said any interference with a professor's selectdon would be an infringe­ment on "a-cademic freedom.''

On the matter of resale Clay stJa;ted ·tha't it is determined iby tthe same basic policy used at other colleges. Students seem to ·thinik tha.t 'bhe book­store makes its •big:gest profit here, but Ol!a(Y sam lt:.his is really a service to students !because for practrlcal rea50DJS the only ibooks he wants to b~ back are •those that wiilll be used here again.

He agreed that "ridiculous prices" are pam for other book!s, •but said this is because they can only 1be shipped to wiholooalers. "There is noth­ing deader l1:.hJan a dead text­book," he concluded.

Although CIJaiY had a ready defense for book prices, he ad­mitted .that prices on novelties and sUlll;iries are high. "We wa111t to lbe basically a first­class academe 1bookstore," but can't afford to throw out ilhe IIO!l-essential:s ibeoouse that iS where the real pront is made.

.. ~::'.(.~: .. ~ ~·i''''' .

Small Profit

high. "I don't b1ame students for not buying t.bere--I would­n't let my wife shop there.'' He eJQPlained the high prices by saying the boo}Qstore is forced to ibuy' in smail1 quan­tities from loca,l wholesalers and must have some mark-up "ilf ilt ds gomg to be able to survive and provide thts ser­viice. ''

An investliga~on made by ·bWp staff :report;em showed an average dlsc~ncy of five to six cents ·between bookstore pl'li{!es aiid -those at a local supermarket. On at ltea&t one

could be lowered if he could "convtince the powers thaJ!; be" to buy sundries in llaii"ger quan­tities. He said the main prob­lem was lack o.f stomge space.

"We're not perfect,'' con­ceded Clay, "but I really think we have one of the best book­stores anywhere, especially for the size school we have." He believes that if an attempt were made to run the book­store on 13 smaller margin of profilt the quality of the store would be dmpah-ed.

and dinners. 24 HOUR SERVICE

2803 REYNOLDA ROAD PA 3·9103

AL DILLARD, Manager

. .. item there was a mark-up of. r----..;..-_...;. ________ ...;. __________________ _ sixteen c,ents. Wlhelll asked if t!W great" an increase was jus­tified ~ ·agreed to look into the matter to see if 1lhere were some mistake.

Clay suggested thilllt prices

Tax Relief Bill To·Aid Parents

Seoa:tor Abrab!am :RilbicoH .(D-Conn.). iDA:roduced his bill . to give tax rel:ief d:o parents . .w:llitu~ .. whQ _pay .the costs

· 'Of a college edu<:ation. The ;proposal . provides an income tax oredlt of up to $325 on the first $1,500 of tuition, fees,

XL CLEANERS ~e-Stop Dry Cleaning, Shirt Laundry, and

Dry Fold

One-Day Service On All Three! PA 2-1027

Across From Tavern On The Green On Cherry St. The NartionaJ. College Queen

ConU:<st is now underway to select "the nation's most out­standing cOillege girl." Judg­ing is based on academic ac­complli.shment~as -well as at­tvacliveness, charm and per­sonali]t.y. Interested girls

·should conbacit Old Gold and B.lack.

He said -the slll!ldry shop is operated purely as a conven­ieDJce to the students on a low

maTgi:n profit: The bookistore ~------------~----------------------------------.. <rig.inal:ly car.ried only a few items such as nalbs and soit drinks, but at student requests eX1l>anded to the present opem­tion.

He ·admitted tl.be prices aJre

IF YOU LIKE QUALITY, .YOU'LL GO FOR

Paschal Shoe Repair REY.NOLDA MANOR SBOPPING'CENTER

and PARKWAY PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER

STEVE'S Italian; Ristorante

Best in Italian Food SpageHee and Pizza

ALSO AN AMERICAN MENU

Open 11:00 A M.-10:00 P. M.

CLOSED ~UN.DAY 112 Oakwood Drive

(ACROSS FROM THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER)

FEATURING:

THE TAMS

.. ''Laugh H Off"

"Ridin For A Fall"

"Unlovl You"

"I've Been H.urt"

"What Kind Of Fool"

'Concrete Jungle"

.of AShevi'lle; Roy Wright, of Salem, Va.; Jim Hobbs, of Charlotte; Charles Pamlin, of Silver Spring, Md., Gene Sbewart, of Rome, Ga; Den­ton Bumgardner, of Oape May Courthouse, N. J.; Laa-­rry Pons, of Valdese; Carl IDbbelt't;· of Atlanta, Ga:; Woody Meflford, of Cincdninati, Ohio; Paul Belvin, of Ham~ ton, Va.; Rick Hardison, of .Arlingtml, Va.; Bob Clarke of McMurray, Pa.; Randy Aslhmore, of Savannah, Ga.; and Herb Dockery, of Elkin. SophoiilOil'eS: Ru.ffin Branham, of Ralel:gh; Andy Porter, of Salisbury; a!!lkl! Ohuck 'DtJ.r.. ~. of Frankfort, Ky.

PI KAPPA ALPHA.-Fresh­mw: Bry.an B 13 d e n o c k of BUll'l.ington; AI JIOihnson, of Worcester, Mass.; Gray LaW!l"ellce, of Asheville; Kent Lllyqud.st, of Raleigh; Hal Liles, of Burlington; David Smith, of Raleigh; Jdhmly

Y.; Dean Hawlthorne; Rette ..-----------------------..... Ledbetter, af kiliev.i:llle; Scott Reed, of Greensboro; Dave Sbainback, of Bel>wyn, Pa.; David Vanl>elinder, of South Charleston, West. Virginia; Bruce W!aHey, of New Castle, Del..i and Tom Woodruif, of Oha.rleston, West Vh-ginia.

TRIANGLE .IR.ESTAURANT & DRIVE IN

I

SERVING THE BEST _IN ITALIAN DISHES

Home Of The STRATFORD RD. CENTER- DIAL PA 3·7114

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AND THE FABULOUS FIVE Feb. 22 Wednesday

THURSDAY -FRIDAY -

THE TROPICS THE PROPHETS

'

SATURDAY- THE VARIATIONS

WINSTON-sALEM, N. C. MONDAY, FEB. 20, 1967 -------------------

New Law School Degree Is Important To Graduates

The College's School of Law made a significant decision last week when it changed the degree for law school graduates from the LL.B. to the J.D.

Although the change is not peculiar to Wake Forest, it does represent a definite effort to­wards trying to enhance the pro­fessional stature of the law school graduates and towards trying to give due recognition to their aca­demic endeavors. Over 50 law schools in the past five years have changed to the J.D. as re­commended by the American Bar Association, the Association of American Law School and the American Law Student Associa­tion.

Recipients of the J. D., a pro­fessional doctorate, will be placed in the sa,me category as grad­uates of medical and dental schools who also receive profes­sional doctorates. This will not only enhance the holders image in the eyes of the academic

world, but also in the eyes of the general public, many -of which now regard the LL.B. as just another bachelor's degree. The present day law student spends a rigorous three years or more of intensive intellectual and schol­astic work which is comparable to many programs that lead to. research doctorates in other fields. Yet the LL.B. degree is seen in academic circles as equal to or less than a master's degree.

The J.D. also gives the holder advantages in salary and rank in some areas of governmental service and teaching where it is looked on as a higher degree than the LL.B.

It is commendable that the College's board of trustees and law school faculty recognize the inequities which accompany the LL.B. degree. It is even more commendable that they recog­nize the need to accord the law student proper reward for his academic and scholastic endeav­ors.

Middle Ground Should Be Goal Of Bookstore Prices

Things are not what they seem, said someone, a phrase that could certainly be attributed to bookstore manager Richard Clay. A look into Richard's price list this week revealed that he is a little to the left of Ben Franklin and not quite as par­simonious as Stingy Silas Marner.

The bookstore's almanac of sayings read something like "A penny saved is the one you get from a mark-up" or "We shall all buy separately or hang it up because we can't buy in large quantities.

But according to manager Clay, _·_student complaints-are based only --on what they see. If things were· what they seemed, the student would assume that the bookstore is raising prices and making' a windfall. Not so, claims Clay. There is a reason-or at least an excuse-- for everything. Being somewhat reasonable people, we will listen to such tales of woe as those related this week: the need to raise prices because arti­cles cannot be bought in large quantities; the high price of a paperback because the professor selected a particular publisher.

Being somewhat understanding people, we can also sympathize with Clay, whose hands are in­deed tied by the College. But the College, in tying the hands of Clay, has given him enough rope to hang the students, who do not have the alternative of shopping elsewhere. It's a mat­ter of paying the price or fi­nessing the toothpaste.

Since the financial gain from the bookstore goes into the Col­lege's bank balance, it is the College's responsibility to main­tain · prices that are fairly con­sistent with the community scale. Winston-Salem is not exactly a -poverty zone, so' when price dif­ferences run up to sixteen cents on some items, the item becomes a luxury good for the student. Thus the College is capitalizing on the student's inability to shop elsewhere-- a rather unethical way to get more pennies from the student's pocket.

If the College continues its robber baron policy, the students should make plans to take ap­propriate action and try some­thing on their own. Say a little trust busting?

Listening Lab Is Needed The campus 'beasts should be

·submitted to a laboratory for treatment.

Wake Forest should have a listening laboratory where the proverbial music can sooth the savages, or beasts, or whatever other species the campus may harbor.

Students whose pockets are al­most empty and whose familiar sounds lack aesthetic substance would appreciate the opportuni­ties of a record room. Equipped with wall-to-wall albums and comfortable old chairs to slouch in, the room would be an excel­lent place to relax or study. In­stead of dropping a coin in the jukebox, the student could pay a nominal fee for the pleasures of a few· relaxing moments with with his favorite Beethoven sym­phony or get the kinks out of his system with the beats of Dave Brubeck or Hirt's horn.

If there are those in the stu­dent body who will pay two cents per minute to shoot pool, there should surely be those who would pay two cents per album for listening pleasure.

The voice of Wake Forest,

SYLVIA PRIDGEN Editor

RALPH SIMPSON, Associate Editor BILL VERNOR. Sports Editor PAM HAWKINS, Assistant Editor

WFDD, is apparently branching out in every direction, and it certainly wouldn't hurt them to institute such a laboratory for listening enjoyment. Their pre­sent collection of classical rec­ords is certainly a substantial start, and with the fees collected from paying listeners. the station could build up its popular album selection.

If a suitable room could not be found for such use, then perhaps the station might do well to adopt the happy practice of pub­lic libraries which loan records. Students could sign out a record as they might a book for a short period of time. The station could even rent out records for the evening for fraternity record par­ties or dinner music for a ban· quet.

The project would be bene­ficial to both station and student if the voice and the ears of Wake Forest could get together. The station must first ·be tuned in to the need for such a listening room. Then if students would give an ear to the idea, the sta­tion would possibly earn coins-­and friends-with increasing fre­quency.

BILL GORDON Business Manager

HENRY BOSTIC, JR., Managing Editor DAVE ROBERTS, Assoc. Sports Ed. LINDA LEVI, Assistant Editor

ADVERTISING MANAGER: Lucy Holton BUSINESS STAFF: Dick Heidger, BiiJ Lambe, Don Thompson. PHOTOGRAPHERS: John Daughtry, Bill Vernor, Warren Johnson

EDITORIAL STAFF: Linda Levi, Suzanne Bennett, Gray Lawrence, Pam Haw­kins, Becky Ross, Bonnie Wright, Barry Robinson, Cherry Ward, Laura Ford, Doug Stokes, Tom Collins, Linda Carter, Jo Ann Tart, Becky West.

Founded January 15, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black Is published each Monday during the school year except during examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

Mef!lber of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represe~-te-d::-:fc-or--:N:::-a-:t:-lo-n,-al:-:A-:d-ve-r-:cti,-si:-ng by Nahonal Educational Adver!ising Service. Inc. Suhscription rate: $2.50 per year. Second· Class postage paid, Winston-Salem. N. c. Form 3579 should be mailed to Box 7567, Winston· Salem, N. C. 27106. Printed by The Nashville Graphic, Nashvllle, N. C.

~f. r, ~·+·~., .; ... ·.:.

•,

You Can Expect Money Moore Surprises NCEA'·,:-:::· In F~v.oring. State Schools

By CARROLL LEGGETT

North Darolina Governor Da:n K. Moore ihas proved to Tar Heels that be can forgive 8!1ld forget.

Shortly after his election in the fall of 1964, Moore was inviOOcl by the North Carolina Education Association 1(NCEA> toochl!ni convention ;In meeting in Ashe­ville. Moore accepted, and made the trek to the mountams. He llben used abe organization's platform ·to inform the group that be was aware of thei-r concerted elifort to defeat him in 1fue two Democratic primaries which pre­ceeded lh1s victory fn the '64 general election.

'I1hat Moore believed the NCEA had tr.led to use its organizational machinery to defee·t came H a surprise to few. if any, of them. Most of the teachers and public school aldministrators at that gathering were tlhem:seJ.ves weH aware o.f Uhe fact thaJt many ihad lent their time and influence to the eFfort.

* * * Most had supported Sanford-backed

L. Richardson Preyer in the two Demo­cratic primaries, confident that }'Jre.yer would continue tihe aggressive education- . al program whiclh then-Governor Tern' Sa:nford had initiateid. In fact Preyer lhad promised to do just that. Moore, co the other hand, bad been slow to beat tlhe campaign drums £01t education and in some private meetin·gs with county sclbool officials, reportJedlly was "cool" to them and iheslt8!1lt in mak:i.ng specific promJses.

cat!ll\S marked it as a black day on .tlhefr calenda["s. The llleWS meldia anid school officials alike read mto the 111ew Gover­nor's simple -statement a declaration of war and set back, covered their ears, and waited for the bombs. to fall o~ public education in North Carolin,a. . · No bombs feiJ.. Instead, Moore opened the doors of the Executive office to NCEA ofilcials and immEdiately began to confer with ,them concetming tihe fu­tore of TaT Heel education. Officials in the State Department of Public In· struction have shared ftlis confidence 8!1ld worked closely witlh him since he set up ' shop ;in tihle Capitol.

There have been no acts of open or veiled retaliation agad:nst the state's edu· catol's, a'lld during tihe · first two years of his administration Moore. has made a reputation fur himself as a champion of public educa·tdon in the state.

* * * Jtme last week, Moore in lb:is proposal ,

to the 1967 State Legislature proposed substantial pay increa>Ses for teachers during the next bi.ennium (17%> and smaller raises for other s~l per!SOn· nel; free text book.s fur high school stu­dents; resea.rch ftmldS to establish pilot . lGi:ndergaTten projects; ·continuation of ' two experimental programs. tlhe Gover· nor'·s School alllld the Comprehensive Sdhool Improvemen-t experimental pro­grams; and a number of other forward­looking programs.

Moore's proposal for public school ex­penditures totaled almost 20% IIIJ)I'e than that of tlhe laSit biEII!lldum.

WF's First Film Festival: · C01119EQueJlll:ly," NCEA, whose member•

ship includes almost every public school teaclher and aiCiminislirator dn the state, put its head together witlh Preyer's edu­cational advisors and actively champion­~ Preyer in state educatlion cia"cles. On many oce-asions NCEA officials and Preyer campaign workers travelled the state togetlher .meeting privately with school officials to rally the teacher -vote for Preyer.

Moore's public education proposal is still far short of tlhe program most <State • educators would like to see passed by the General Assembly now meeting in Raleigh. Anld Dan Moore is . not yet the darling of tihe more ag~ve pro­ponents of public education in North Carolill!a. Opens With Orson Welles

By BAYES McNEILL Last night, Wake Forest's iiirst film

festival began. Ev&ry night this week through F·riday one of Orson Welles' films will be presented. Students may se~ the motion picture not just as pieces of :fiilm, but as a personal reflecting of a sundering gend.us.

People hesitate to admit 1Jhat 1Jbe motion picture can be Art, and tlhJe over­whelming number of bad films sub­stantiates this idlea. But amid a sea of garbage there sometimes comes a georuius. Inval'iably he will become !Soiled, but a soiled genius is not without great worth.

So being present-ed is not a mere group of filins, but an opportunity for an aesthel# analysis of one of th& ~at film :ritakers. ·A": Who's -Who of·· Great Americ~n DiTectors would h•ave two en­tries: D. W. GI"iliith and Orson Welloo.

In tonight's, Monday's, offering, "'I1he Lady From Sha111·g!hai," on.e can see this decacfu<nre in the lawyer, Bann~ster, a-s well as the current of eWI rU!llning through life in the Well&.s films. Rita Hayworth, tlhen Welles' wue, stars with him a-nid they are ably supported by tihe rest of the caJSt-most notably by Ever• ett Sloan and Glenn Anders. The re­freshingly witty or philosophic or har­ried script was w:rdtten by Welles, as he plays an tnnocEfil;t, skirting a na:sty bit of this subterranean ewl and not com­ing away unscathed. This is vintage, classic Welles, what we may call the declin~ of his first period.

Wednesday we have the cla·ssic Welles, the film generally regall"deid as his second­best, "'I1he Magnificent Ambersons." Based an the novel whiCih won Booth Tarkington the Pulltwr Prize, Welles takes two of his old M>Ercury Theatre group, Joseph Cotten and Agnes More· head, into a lyrical tintypey world of sa'<lnoss, again showing the corruptive power of plutocracy.

On Friday we have the masterpiece, tihe film voted the best film ever made in a recent poll of 115 internatianal film critics, the film Whiclh most Cll'itios use as the model to judge all other sei'lious films: "Citizen Kane." His first anld best film, "Kane" slew critics as if theoy were

Whimsey

Did You Know? By CHERRY WARD

I have frequently heaTd the complaint that nothing ever happens arollllld lbere. · I did some sleuthing and ;found out :tihat things are 'happening. They're just being covered up to avoid scandal. Why, the things I've Wlcovererl are sensational enough to shake Reynolda Hall off its foundatio~.

Did you know that: 1. Jerry Partney Is alive somewlhlere

in South America? 2. The proceeds from tihe book store'

go into Harry Tribble's retirement frmd. 3. Slater is a commie organization set

on wiping us out by germ warfare? . 4. Ed Christman iJS a junkie? (alter­

nate: sells hymna,Is on the Black .Mall"­ket.)

:;. The faculty voted dn a secret meet­ing to move back to the olid country-u-­campus?

6. Nin~ out of ten people did not .re­member Sylvia Pridgen's birthday?

7. 742 has been liquidated? 8. Lucille Aycock used to be a Play­

boy bunny. 9. The editor of The Student iJS "JaJCk­

the-Ripper" in disguise. 10. And doo't let anyboidy tell you Jon

Reinhardt. is any oldler because hls birtlh­day fell on an Asian New Year-

Belshazzar's dininer guests. Unquestion­ably more has been written about it than any other movie.

So there is a week of We'lles, a man too big for classification, a gem among gravel, a craftsman among hacks. A week to dissect gendus.

Tbie alliance was too obvious to go un­observed by tlhe Moore f01rces. And Dan Moore in h!is own quiet way oook DOte of tbe fact and Idled it for later·. refer­ence. He opened that file at the· NCEA meeting in Asheville and Tar Heel edu·

Perfection Not Required

But his efforts have been creditable and in keep witlh, and sometimes ex­ceeding the moderate' temper of 1Jhe moderate candidate North Carolinians elected as their chief executive in 1964.

And more than lilrely, it seems, Dan Moore has blll"ll€!d- the file he pulled for th9t i!ipeeclh in Asheville.

Professors Favor Honor Syste1n, Yet Recogn~e Student Limitations

,, , , . .. . . ,.. :J l';';;: · .• !} :;r7-1 . · .~; .J. r:,.; ·~.-~J.Od:l~/i DJ j :~~s.:·~ .... ,:,··~ .< _; .. .... ·: .. · . . · By UNDA LEVI comment>ed . that. ''As(Jfall!i: am I.qesn: ttell us ~le . plagiarism-more tlliari· · twice,

ASSISTANT EDITOR it Works. It appears that -most !Students Wben I SUSpected it. but wasn't sure (Third In A Series Of Five) take it seriously, when told tlhat some- . enou§h," the Engli!sh prof said.

It is better to have an HonOII' System thing is pled.ge work." "I am aware, however, dn cooversa- • that works reasonably well tlhan no "I have not seen enough evidence of tions with ,students, of 1Jheir impression system at 'all. flagrant dheatilng to . get worried about that there is considerable cheating."

Suclh i1s the opinion of severa!l faculty 4t," a member o£ the Religion Depart- "The system assumes that you will members. ment remarkeid. "I still like the Honor regulate yourselves," the History profes-

The professors mtervliewed believe System." sor commented. "I am ,in fav01r of it." that the system at Wake Forest WOII'ks * * * reasonably well. but face the situation .None of the professors questioned real!ilstically with the knowledge that vlo- proctor during a quiz. They therefore lations do occur. realire tlhat there is "plenty of oppor~

According to a member 'of tJbe Eng- tlllllity" to cheat .i.f the student has tlbe lish Department, "Honoa:' is tSIOmethdng tnclination. that has to be taught. It iJS not mnate, The Religdon professor saM that ilre not ·inborn, and if one is ever going to · has "Iltlt seen too much evidence c.f get a sense of what it is, he will ·have cheating on my quizzes. In that respect to be taught it wati1e still relatively the Honor. System is working-in general, yoWJg. I have seen veory few cases.

"My sympathies lie with the idea of "Ours h:as been a fai.r]y 'succesSiful having an Honor Sys·tem, but 1JII!C doesn't system of honor tlbroughout the yean expect it to work 100% of •the time." I've been here.''

A member of tJhe Histi>ry Department "I haven't been awa.re of viola·tions-

LETTERS ..• Don 't Sla1n Slater

To the Editor: I have always believed the Olld Gold

and Black to be ·the campus n&Wspaper. If suclh iJS the case, Shoulld not it limit . itsellf to reportwng campu.s matters.

Such .is not the case dn the latest 0G&B criticism of ARA Slater. The OG&B has a tight to report on ·.the qua.Jity of food served and in\dleed even the :service because tihese matterls di· rectly involve the 'students. To criticize tlhe wag-e and hour policy of this national corporation is a very dilffarent matter.

The OG&B must always be ·aware of · the distinction between a campus oon­cern anid a concern whose scope ils . beyond that of the college, ami· because of tlhis awareness voluntal"ily limit <itself in its reporting. To do otherwise 1s to be ignorant of one's proper perspective.

Alan T. Bernhardt Class of 1967

Defends Naponick To tihe Editor:

M'ber readi!llg Mil". Rudy Ashton's bas­ketball arlicle in tihle February 13 edi!Jion

· of the Old Gold a!llid Black, I :feel com­paNed ro rise to the defense of Mr. John Naponick of the University of Vir~a, who was so crudlcly der.ogatorlzed In the article.

Mr. Ashton can make a:ll the sndde comments lhe wishes, but I invite lhlm to name one other major college athlete who parlicdpates m footbaU and basket­ball while maintaining a "B'' average in biology at one of tlhe cmmtry'·s :ElDest wrlversities.

M-r. Naponick is on a footbaU p-ant­in-aid, but there WillS· a critical lack of height on tlhe baslretball team. Thus, Mr.

<All letters to the editor must be signed; names will be withheld on request. Spell­Ing and punctuation are the writer's own.)

Naponick offered to !help. H-e certaanly should. IIIOt be criticized tfor tryi-ng by an assbtant sports editor.

Jack Nance Class of 1966 University of Virginda

Old Gold Oversight To the Editor:

Although I am probably prejud:iced because I am president of a ·religious organization, I ca:n not ilrelp but express my thorough disgust wit!h last week's issue of Old Gold a.Ild Black.

· Ln this Issue I noticed the ·sensation­alism liven to tihe Slat&r Cafeteria Ser· wee and a total lack of coverage of what I consider to have been one of the most important eV'ellts anld . discii!Ssi~ of the year. 'l1he issue wlhiich I am re­femn,g to was the BSU Supper Forum held last Friday night.

'l1he prog~ram was on the ,fiopic "Would you believe • • . Ullliversity?!" It brought together some of the most well informed ~'lid some of tihe most cOO.troversial peo­ple w'llo are connected with and mter­ested in the relatliolisbip betwee-n the Baptist State Convention and Walre For· est. . •

I realize Old Gold and Black lis very limited in thie material iit iJS able to print each week, but I ido feel tihe omission of this story Mmdted the .amount of stUdents w!lw were exposed to wlhat the supper forum was about. Students llii'E! always complaining because they don't understand the relationship bet~n Wake Forest and t1he Baptist Conven­tion, or if they do understa!Jd the irela­tlonship 1ihey wooder !how thils ,relation· ship e«ects the overall program of the college.

Sam Gladding Class of 'ffl

However, he IWticed that a:n Hon01r System "pits two lda!ds of loyalties against each o1Jher-loyalty to your peer group against loyalty to the Honor Sys­tem and professors.

"Tire Honor System workis where peer group loyalty and loyalty to the HOlllOr ' System roughly coilllcide-wtere the stu­dent does ruot <regard tlhe SY'Stem aJS hostile or 1Jhe professor '3IS a jailer.

"Only in this way can the Honor System work.'' ·

One professor, while agr€cing that the pledge system works il'ea.sonably well, doubts that "anotlher segment has any validity at all-student conduct.

"It is not a moml .issue if you drink, but it is a moral issue W1hen yuu sign a pledge anid tlhen break it. It's saying that your word is no good-and this is a moral matter.

"I do not report it when I ·see a beer bottle cooling on tbe porch -of one of the boy's -do.rms, but it .is contrary to the code.''

'I1here is a matter of professor conlduct that concerns some students,. and tlh.at is tihe question of repeating quizzes over sevaral semesters.

* * * One professor readily admitted tlhat t.hls iliad been his practice, classifying it as a case of "pure laziness:"

Accm'ding to this professor, the tSame quizzes a:re no longer given because he realized that 'students kniew ·hi-s policy and £Ues of ·his quizzes were being kept.

U nfortuna.t:ely, this is 1110t tlhe only proof guilty of 1'1epeating quizzes-a sys­tem which encourages an attitude of "pure laziness" on the part of the tStu· dents.

The practice penalizes every .studoot: those who lhave studied and do not per-

1

form as well as th>E student witlh a quiz; the LStudent witih a copy of ·a quiz who ha's stuidied, kiru>WIS tile maternal antd is denied the opportundty to prove it; and llhe student with a copy of a quiz whose laziness, instead of initiative, is en· couraged.

'Ilhe students . may well viola:te tme Honor Code il!l practice anld .spirit, but the professors aa-e not blameliess tlhem­selves. The'it" actions often encourage the very attl:tude that they criticize in the student.

The profESSOO"S; as a wthole, are in favor of ·an Hanor System and beLieve that tJhe Wake -system ds relatively e£foctlve.

They dislike the idea of proctoaing and substitute the. concept of trust. But trust can be carried to an extreme. · Repe.atilllg qUizzes is . fooliiSb.

It fs ~~c;. ·

. / ~:··

'l1wo v and a

(. discuss Viet N! Democt~ 23.

JonR1 lessor a 0>1. HIJI;! or milll two lOCI

The J: RobeJi; salesm-a c~ T.Bro,Yl Ninth C

Bingh NiamOll could b 4s.sue wi district.

1' Moder cussion, 7:30 p .• torium, junior 1l

Bostic Old Gdl

" tical sc Judy

ston-sa: it.be po Ayers, s is men': roll Le~ student schodl WaY, jt retary; junior <:

Miss 1 Democr campus !been Iii versf,ty Chapel <Eeensb Point c lege, an Teacher

B

Beta: '3 ~eclt Scott, :pl 1ina St1 Ill")' 22 8 Hal[, en Being 1

Dr. s degree rlctillttm: D. frorn the fiek

All membe1 this m' ifollowed euss:ion ..-,_.,.-n! ('r

Seasol l!br te diurlng ~reg~: IJ.ing <the Wedn~ F. Ree< Placem• Reed Si per boo

Ally shouild I

the Coil "Jobs .\l

, petitive <test will those w The te.s the maj !Lncludin

"Most lai"ger , added .• dJn. aw~ one can commUJ many rurol a1

Stude! in jobs work a quire ail ''Felbl:<w terview meDJt < ''There cruiters varied 1

The ~ peals ·\1 March 1

Reynold Aa:ltr

Sta The

(

"Ki

Mal

12

~:,:\'

,ols .ck day on ·tlheir ldia allld school the 111ew Gover­t declaration of red thedr ears, nbs'. to fall o'\

Ca!l'Olin•a. . , Moore opened utire office to rediately began tcetm·mg tlhe fu· ~atiGIJ. OfficiaLs t of Public In·

·,

confidence 811ld since he set up '

1cts of open or the state's edu· first two years ~.has made a IS lr champion he state.

in lh:is proposal ' lature proposed s for teachers m (17%l and sctool person·

ligh school stu· establiSih pilot .

:ontinuation of · ms, the Gover­Comprebensive

lelimantal pro­other furward·

lblic school ex-20% more than n. on proposal is ram most !State • see passed by

CJW meeting in is . not yet the 1g~ve pro­,tion in North

been creditabae sometimes ex- ,

;empet" of the 'th Carolinians !CUtiVe in 1964. it seems, Dan

e. he pulled for

ns ~ tlli~ri· twice, t wasn't sure "Of said. :, dn convel"ISa­teir impression

cheating." that you will

History profes-1 favor of it." !hat 8111 Honor ; of loyalties f to your peer ;he Honor Sys-

des where peer to the HOillOr '

wtere the stu­he system IllS

>DIS a jailer. an the Honor

reemg that the a.sonably well, ment has any :onduct. eo if you drink, Nlhen YJOU sign it. It's saying -and this is a

11 I •see a beer t 1)£ Oille of the mtrary to the

>fElSSOr colllduct .ts,, and tlhat is : quizzes over

admitted tffla t , classifying it

;sor, the same en because he ew hl·s policy 're being kept. oot tlhe only auizzes-a sys-.n attitude of 1rt of the stu-

every student: r 1d do not per-ot witJh a quiz; 1f ·a quiz who 1a teiiial and is prove it; a.nd a quiz whose

.ative, is en-

11 viola·te the nld spirit, but ameliess tlhem­encourage the riticize in the

Mhole, are in 1 and belJieve ds relatively

of proctOO'ing of trust. But e:Jttreme. ollsh.

':;·

'l1wo Wake Forest professors and a Boone po'Wcl:an will

~· discuss rllbree -BISPE'Cfs 'af the Viet Niam War at a Young Democm.ts meeting February 23.

Jon Reinhardt, assistant pro­fessor of political scleoce, and Col. Hugh J. Turner, professoll" a:r rnllil:aey science, are the . two local professors.

sent to !the 'l'r'amc Office by iflhe date of the meeting.

African Seminar

An .inlormatlon officer :for the World Ballllk will be guest speaker mxt week foa:o the Afri'Can Studies Seminar. 'llb.e meeting win ibe Thursda:y, Feb. 23, at 7 p. m. in DeTamb'le Auddltorium.

• -HOTO BY DAUGHTRY

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday. Feb. 2!i, 1967 PAGE FIVB

Reynolda Fund Cut By Complete Break

(Ccmtl.nued bill page 1) contl'acts state that the Col­iege will move to Winston­Salem •and willl get the Rey­nolds· funds, but the Trustees will still be appointed and eaected by the Convention.

Secondly, he said, .It referr­ed to the College as an agency of the ConventiGIJ.

The College, Martin said, will run the risk of losing the money 'lllliess 1t works with the trustees of the Reynoilds Foundation and gets some

rthat the !trustees of Duke Ullli­versity were self-perpetuating, Fergu·son had no comment.

There were over 200 stu­dents •and facllilty members IPI"esen.t at the discussion which ranged from concepts of the 'Klingdom of God'' to a definition of "Chrlistran educa­tion."

N.A.King ESSO

• MECHANIC

ON DUTY

"• 24 HOUR SERVICE The po:tiltician is Democrat

Roiber>t; C. Bingham, a Boone salesman, who tried unsuc­cess:fully :In unseat R'el>. J'ames T. Broyhill in North Carolillla's iNiDth Congressioaxal district.

Bingham toured Soll!bh Viet Niam on a "VIP trip," so he could better discw;s the · war issue with voters in the Ninth district.

J·ulian Gnmfell, of the._ In­rternatlonal Baclt tor RecaD.­.struction .and Development in "Wiashi.nigton, will :tectme on Jthe "In:fluenoes on Capital Invellltt­merut in Africa.

The seminar, the only aD.e of its rtype il!l the area s-chools, .iJs an informai program of discussion •and reseaTCh on the political, historical, and eco­nomic aspects af. Africa. Dis­cussion i:s stimulated by lec­tures, panels, movies and de­bates.

LAURELS ••• ·show off their album to rushees during the first week of society rush, continuing into this week. The rushees will continue to narrow down their choices this week in another round of open houses. IDdlvidual room rush by society sisters wiU begin again on Monday and Tuesday, The

formal parties will be conducted Febroar:r 22·24 In tbe · dorm rec rooms, when the rushees will attend in assigned groups. From thereafter, until pledge time on Sunday at 6:00 p. m .. silent period wll1 exist between the rus~ees and pledges.

· sort of written agreement .from them tbat if there ms a separatlion, the CoLlege will not lose the money.

"Personally," he said, "I ha11e to see the two sepa!l"lail:e completely. I wollld hope that the College <lllld the Conven­tion cowld revert to the situa­tion that existed before 1927 when Wake Forest was like a Baptist church - autonomous of the Conventlion, running its own show."

Other members of the panel included moderator Ed Christ­man director of the campus BSU; Dr. H. L. Perry, profes­sor of history; Dr. Dona~d Schoonmaker, assi•stant profes­sor of political soience; Rose Hamrick, a senior of Shelby; and Ralph Simpson, a junior of Charlotte and associate editor of the Old Gold and Black.

1590 West First and Cloverdale

726-1388

Moderator of the panel dis­cussion, which will be held at 7:30 p. m. in DeTamble Audi­torium, will be Heney Bostic, junior d. ljillilalbethtown.

Grenfell is from London, En•gla.nd. He received his l!aw degree from Kmg's College, Cambridge Ullliversity in 1959. He also studied in the United Stlaltes in 1959-60 on. an Insti­tute of, linltJernatianal Educa­tion scholarship.

WFDD-FM Has Increased Capitalist Bostic, managing editor of

Old Gold & BlaC'k, ls a poli­tical scieJliCe major.

J'llld;y White, jtmior of w~ ston-Salem, 1s president of ithe politioal club. Russell . Ayers, senior of Robersonville, is men's viee-president; Car­roll Leggett, second-year law student o:f Buie's .Creek, law schOOil. vice-president; Becky Wa-n, jtmior of Ashebo~o, sec­retarY; and Ralph S1mpson, junior of Charlotte, treasmer.

Power And Its Frequency P'erguson S1lid that !the prob­lem With going back to the pre-1927 slituation would be that the Trustees would be self-perpetlllalting. "The Col­lege is now -an agency of the Convention," he said. "The power of the Convention is the power of Trustee eleotlon."

iMiss White said sbate Young Democrat clubs frQm several campuses lin the state had !been dnvi!ted, including Uni­versilty o:f North Carolina at Cbapel Hill and Green.s.boro, Greensboro College, High Point Colilege, Davidson Col­lege, and Winston-Salem State Teacher's College.

Honorary Lecture

Some pf the posiltions Gren­fe1l held before joinilng the World Bank il!l 1965 include moderllltor of a weekly publlic affairs program for lTV itn London and Deputy Foreign Affairs Editor for The Statist

. Jn 1965-66. Ful'lther information about

·the seminar can be obbained from the committee on African Sbudias, Box 6334, Reynolda Station.

Alpha Kappa Psi

The Gamma Delilla chapter of Ailpha K!appa Psi will begin ilts rush program on Wedtles­day Februaey 22; 1967 with a

·smoker itn ·its chapter '1100lll.

WFDD-FM has entered an advanced stage in its prepa­ration for broadcast operations at an increased power of 36,000 watts. AccoJ,':ding to engineers of the station, the program tests may · beg.in within three week!s, barring deLays due to labor avail­ability.

The station has received aU the equipment necessary for its increased power broad­oastin.g and is in >the process of insta1ling and testing it.

The new tran!Smitter has

Pledge night is scheduled :for

Law Graduates' Degree Changed

Beta Beta Beta will sponsor Wednesday Mareh 1, 1967. ·All 3 )~ by Dr. H. Eldon interested business majors are (Conltinued fi"?m Page 1l Scott, professor at North Oa!l'O- U!l."ged to 1:ome Ito the smoker. he said. To the genera:! public 1in:a State University, Febr:u- a bacheJor's degree is a bac-Cir.Y 22 at 6:30p.m. in Winston Medical Lecture helor's degree and not on the Hal/1, entitled "Are Insecticides Dr. Lean O.l Jacobson, dean same ,gcaie as one that has Being Used Safely?" of the Division of Biologieal doctor in it.

Dr. Scott received ~ BA 5

· Sciences at .the Universilty vd' · The committee chairman degree from the Ontario g- Chioago, will speak at the s·aid that the fact that the ll"..culllttmal College and his Ph .. · Bowllllalll Gr,ay Schoof of Medii- American Bar Assocfatioo., the D. from Cornell University in cine, February 20-21 in con- Association of Amer.ican Law the field of Entomology. ·J·un .... •-n with the Richard J. Schools and the American Law All full 'IUid provisional ..,....., members are ul'lg-ed to attend~- . ·Reynolds :· Lectureship. . ~- Student Association had re-this meetla!lg which wm be ·. gram,. · - · - , '. 1 . commended ' the .cha.n.ge was ifollowed ·by an informal' dis:.. ''He will speak ~ ·:~ntr61 of a!Jso another reason that~ cussiOn In the f8JCIUihty _lot,mge. R~ Celli Formation on. Feb- •. law stude~ts f31~ored the name r,,.~ .. , !T~iftt ~LOm-r:JeJ"liHgs!q · 9~ 20 :{itl;l7:$!lp.I mil l!llltheP. cfM!lfg,J'(-!1,.::>!!1., · 0

Seasolila:a. !IIJSslstants are h!Ted for temporaxy e~loyment during the summer to assist !the regtlla;r workforce in hand­Ung the mail, it rwas reported Wednesday by ColGIJel John F. Reed, head of the Coln.ege_ Placement Office. Employees, Reed said, will receive $2.44 per hour.

MaD:Jobs .. · . - r medical center amphitheater. Another ·w.w student noted . J.a<eobson, .best ik.nown for his thaJt the work for the BB.L.

ADy student interested 'shound obtain Form 5000 from the College Placemeat Qf,fice. "Jobs will. ibe given on a oom-

1 petitive basis," Reed said .. A <best will•be given to deten:mne those who are most qualified. The test is-given in most of the major cities in the U. S .. mcludin:g Wdnston-Salem.

"Most of the jobs are in the lia~ger . communities," R~ added. "There is not much use liin awlyi:og for a job unless one can move to a fairly i:arge community. There won't be DlilliiY jobs in· rthe smaller rtm1al areas."

Students who are interested in jobs other than post office work are enoowraged to in­quire a1t the Placement--Office. "Fe!bruary is the ibiggest · in­terview month at the P.Lace­men.t Office," Reed· noted. "There wil!l be albout 125 re­cruiters on oampus from many varied businesses."

Traffic Board

The Traffic Board .of Ap­

studies on bone maiTOw and was more than that ·reqlllired · the p~txitll~tion of r~ . blood for •the Master's degree. eelils, lS widely recogmzed as The doctorate in l!aw is the a clinician, ~eacher, re~- oldest known liDivellsdty de-~ and medioall school a - gree. It waiS awarded by the J.Strator Itali . . u· f B 1 He h~lds the B. s. degree an .um':ersl• 1es o , o ogna from North Dakota State U.ni- •and PlSa .m the 1100 s: Gra-versity :and the iM. D. degree duatesAfof. law dsch

8oo!sh 1An E~­

from the Ullliyel'ISity of Chi- rope, nca a~ out men-go ca receive this degree.

~h~ lecturesmp series, spon- At ·a , recent meeting of the sored by the z. Smith Rey- College rs Board of TrtliStees, ;nolds Folll!ldation, each year the law school facllil.ty was hrilllgs foUr nationally promi- authorized to make the change neillt physicians and or medi- when it deemed wise. Wea-cal scientists to the medical thers said that •the change will school as lecturers. not be retroactive.

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been installed at the tower · wollild fealture more easy-list­facillity at 50 Miller Street. €llin:g music Ql1 "Deaoonlight; and ·according. to il\IIr. Louis_ Serenade." Kanoy, chief engineer, preli~, .· WFDD-FM is al.so investiga. minary tests ba•ve already : .1_!ing the possibility of broad­been mad:e. The antenna has --:- eas!Jing varsity bli!SebaJil games been assembled, and is ready : again this year as has been to be mounted -atop the 150· · done in the past. Usuall!ly the foot tower. sl!ation has broadcast home

At present Southern Bell games ·and "Big-Four" road Telephone and Telegraph games.

Stagnating Board "I'm afraid that with Trus­

tees electing Trustees," Fergu­son oCOI!otin:ued, "the bolaro will become sta.gnant and the srcibool 'will suffer."·

Willen someone menltioned engineers are testing broad- -----------------------­

Wouldn't it be groat to earn big money while you're still !in school? M&ybe you can. We're interviewing students age 21 and over. And we're hlring. Picking people who aren't afraid to work, when they know that the harder they work, tihe moo-e money they'll make.

cast lines from the station to lthe· tra-nsmitbeir. The !two 1lin.es are required because of stereo broadcast operations antici­pated to begin at the begin­ning of the summer.

The original pilarus for stereo operations to begin Slimlliltane­ously . with power increase have been re~ed because of dclays lin prodwCtion of neces­<Sary equipment by the manu­facturers.

Whitney Named Director Of Management Institute

(Continued from page ll is cxoe, being provided The Intstitu;te also offers throughout tbe country,'' Wlhit­

eveni.zig progrrams for man- ney stated. "Its suooess de­agement development and Pends upon the individual's self-improvemerut, Whitney re- desire to oacquire tools with ported. Dr. Jullian C. Bu:r- wbich to advance in his chosen roughs, Jr., Associate Profes- field."

The hours are up to you. You can work part time and earn While you learn. On-the-job training under p~ssional supervision willie you're working for a big, internationally· known company. For all the facts, write for an appoint­ment. There's no obligation.

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The new frequency for WFDD-FM will be 88.5. The station now operates· at an 88.1 frequency with ·a· power output of 50 watts. The changes in power wiU not affect the AM power or fre­quency. WFDD-AM wilt still operate at a frequency of, 650 with the :rapge being li~ted

sor of Speech oat Wake Forest, lr-••••••••••-~;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .Win teach classes in "Building Effective CommunicatiGIJs";

·.Robert W. Glenn .of Greens­''boro will handle "Supervisory Cost MlanagemenJt"; and Jud­

. son D. DeRamus, COnsulting

to the dormitories. , 'l'lu> .Qa.mollh-, station has b~U' ~c~~ilig_graduaLiy the DUmber 'of :broadcast hOUl~S· of the stat'i~ indudi.ng Th!j!lks­ghning vacati'On and semester break for the -first time this year. The eventua~ result will be broadcasting every day, 365 days •a year.

Broadcast hours per day will a11so be increased consummate with the power increase. The station. will sdgn on at 2 p. m. instead of 5 p. m. as it does now. The WFDD-FM broad­cast day ends at 12 p. m.

The station ,j,s <al'SO consider· ing lengthening broadcasting time until one a. m. every mOl"llldng, but .no definite plalllS have yet been made. The time

-·ASSociate· of the Maoogement q Institute, will instruot• students ni;n "P~e/1 Aspects of Su­JJ>f:~~· :·_ ..... ,_ :t...:;·Cla&Ses cmeet ,.w,n, mghtts a:. -.-week· for.· lten weeks. About

eighty students have emolled. "Many colleges :3illd uni­

, versities provide similar op­;: pol'tunities in the field of con­. tin.il:ing education as a contri-

bution to the coanmwrity," Wihitlley said of the Ma.nage­

. ment Ilwtid;ute. "It offers a chanoce for the

. adult population to keep a'breast of new trends and technology in business m811l­agemenrt and executive devel­opmenrt," he continued. "This effont at Wa~e Forest is de­signed to support the growth of new industry tbrougbou.t North Carolill'a.

"There is a general plllfltern of adullt education, of which this

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The story is told of an ef­ficiency expert who paid a viosit to one of the stalte's lar­gest business concerns.

The man ~remained at the of­fice for several days prowling around, observing the em­ployees alt work. One after­noon while chatting with the president of the company he mentioned, "Th·at man over there with the green tie, Wal­lace or Wally I "vcl!ieve his name is, he's a Wake Forest man isn't he?"

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The president, an old Dea­con himself, glowed. "Isn't that something-thiat you should be able to tell tha•t after being around him just a few shoot days," he said. "I guess you can spot them ·a mile away."

"Well, no," the man con­fessed. "Actually I saw his class ring yesterday while he was picking his nose." •

• •

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Underneath the humor an.:l exaggera•tion of this popular anecdote• lies a serious prob­lem. Is there anYJthing, any­thing at all, thia t delineates the fictional Wally Wake Fol!'­est from any of the thousands of other graduates in North Carolina and elsewhere?

Does the administr!lltion hold a·Il'Y intension of molding a unique species of college grad-

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uate lthat can: ll'ecognized any othCJr way than ·by a size 10 silver and •N.ack onyx ring?

The answer to both ques­tions is a painful no.

Wake Forest is merely mass liberal education on the small cohlege level. Conceiva•bly, its" sheepskin couild' ll'ead "The Univel'sity of NOII'th CaroNna at W!ionston-Sa'lem" and few giladuate schools or ibusi.ness employea'!S would e.ver know the difference.

The point of all bhis simp!y is there •aJre dozens of other instiltutions in this country where we could receive the e:~raot same education, for the ugly fact remai·ns, there is ·nothing UDJique aboUJt this cam­pus or its eduCiational methods.

Wake Forest suffers from that common malady knOIWn as "C<lnformity" whi·ch is nUII"­rtured by an equailly welll­known brand of "dyed-in-the­wool conservatis·m."

Wlhether the :llacu1ty 1s in­fluenced 1by our homogen­ous Nco-Georgian en'V'ixorunenrt; (sometimes called "creeping Wlhlliamsburg" l I am not sure but they ail!! teach alike - one mid ,term exam, perhlaps two; a final e:~mm whlch a:hways counts precisely one third of your fina.l grade; a term paper and or book reports on atro­ciously priced paper backs, all computed and scaled wilth bald simplicity Ito the "Old Wlake Forest" gradion.g sys­tem: 100-95, A and so forth.

Ninety percent of all courses consist of !!lathing but steeping 1the student with the prof's own persona'! notes, causing Wally Wake Forest to leave the to­bacco city wilth nothing more than spiral notebooks iuill of theory. There is a collSipiciouos lack, especilally for a small college, of seminar type class­es. Each of his semesters is exactly like the one before, a mere chUII'ning of bow-s to­ward graduation with no senior thesis project to show for his :foUII' year tenure.

In short, Wally has received litrnle IIIOII'e than. a series of first rote correspondent cour-res.

(To Be Continued)

HOUSE NEWS Kitchin House

Kitchin House had three very successful activities this past week. On Monday night after thefu" cC\Ilocert, members of the Dukes of Dixieland vis­ited the lounge and talked casually with housemen about their group ai!ld dixiJetl:and mUlSiC.

Tuesday llligh.t, Kitchin held its second dinner in the lounge.

••••••••••••••••••••• . . Society

News DEACS. • • who are GREEKS · By LIZ WAI'I'T

••••••••••••••••••••• 4

Society RUSh ils ~bout over now and so far everytobdng seems to be running smooth­ly. 'Ilhe axldlitional smokers added by tlhe Inter-Society Coll!llcil have SCII'Ved tiheir pU!I'pOSJe well. These ~Smolrer·s were included dn the sched· · ule to !help societies in their selection of pledges and were used by the rushees in place of formal committmenbs. By !her mere presence at a smoker or ope!ll house, a ·rushee dilldic•ates hell' mterest in that particulall' society.

The Inter-society Council went to gl!'ea.t lengths tlhds year to alleviate some of the pl'le!SisUil'e and tensi~n that de­velops during Rwsih and tihe efiforts have paid off. There have probably been fewer violations of Rush ru'les this y-ear tlhan ever be£01re. Per­haps this i:s hecaUJSe socie­ties are no I:onger under tlhe pressure of a "temporary existence" threat or maybe it is the result of the new Investigating Commitltee set up by tlhe Inter-Society Coun­cil.

By DOUG STOKES

Present Rush Rules Are Enough Everyone agrees that rush

is one of tlh.e necessa['y :func­tions of a .frat.ernilty. However, when to rush is increasiiiJgly bhe topic of IFC conoorn. The widespread violation of defer­red ll"Ush ru'les (dirty rush) has gtiven riJse to .some very dark eloukts of discontent whiclh now appear to be gathering on the £ratJell1lity ihorizon. This ' discontent with existin'g conditions has been voiced in a 1lhreefold propos­al admed at putting more and bigger tooth in our deferred rush rules.

The proposal reads as fol­~OVVIS:

I. Three graduatiolllS Of· pun­ishment. A. First offeonse­

!lose sllllOker B. Second offense:­

lose combo party c. Third offense­

probation for :fraternity II. Raise !fine from $50.00 to

$100.00 •and subtract !Jhis from tlh.e $500.00 ruSh bud­gcl.

IlL Place freshmen on pro­lbation •( ca!ll't pledge If or one S~emester) fur participating lin premature ruslh.

Voiced Opinions

rush privileges, the total ef­fectiveness of fraternity 't'UISh might vexy well ·be crusihed. No ollie wants this. On tllie othier !nand, I!IO one can deony that our existing deferred rll!sh organization has not been .suf:fliclent to deliell' large scale and flagrant rUJSh vilo­lation. l:nrl<eed, :if we are to preveolllt unscrupulous frateTilli­ties from using de£erred rush as an opportunity to gain 1llllfair advantage lin rush, some chan·ges mUISt be made.

This proposal, howevar, is not tlh.e answer to our pro­blems. Stringent pundshment has seldom proved t'O be a sufficient method fo()[' deoteor­mg people from the violation of the law a!lld , I think it will not prove sufficient lbere. Foc it is implicit to thoe ildea of forming newer allld hall'sih­er ~rules ·tlll·at the old rules were not adequate. This just isn't true. The old rules are strong enough to serve thei:r purpose.

It is true, however, bhat to make any code of rules such as ·tlhese work, there must be effective enforcemelllt. 11he fra­ternities have botlh failed to obey the rules aful failed to emmce the punis.Iunent of discovereld odlfe'!lders.

The problem is quite <>im-

pie wlhen one realizes that DIO code of rulies will do for us what we won't do for our­selves. I falil to see bow new laws, not enforced, wdH be 1

betle!r tJba!ll old laws, not en­furced. On the other hand, if we enforce the. rules we have now VV!itlh. a renewed vigor, we can easily soolve the probl~m of deferreldl rush witlhout the ldama~ effects of 1lhe harsher rules.

I do not know if the pro­posed rules will1 pass in the IFC this time. But if tlhe Uag­rant v.iolation of ll"U'sh ruJ.es and the poor fraternity sup­port for enforcing the viiola­tion penalties conitlnue, meas­ures towBII'Id hall'sher ru'les will undoubtedll' be taken.

Now lis tlhe time to take stock of ourselves and our '' 1 sy!jtem. Now is the time to · place primary importance upon making oul' system strong. We can not I do this if we will not respect and enforce our own ll"ules. Nor can we ihope to improve bhe situation by ad(ldng more regulations to 1lhe moumains of rules in existenee. We mUISt rather improve our situation and draw our streng·th from a respect Jlor anld aidherence to our existing codes.

The Investigating Commit­tee consists cl th.rlee society members elected by tihe Inter­Society Counc:il. This commit­tee gathers informatioo about any reported violation of RuSh

ti-ules anid poosents its .find­ings to the Inter-Society CoUJil­eil. The Council then acts as tare jury at the triarr. The severest penalty 1loir violation of Rusih rules is !deferred pledgmg and social proba­tion. No social aotivity would mean the virtuai death of a society, so it's wiSie to follow tlh.e rules.

Althouglh this proposal is presently before the house for colliSilderation, significant opumon has ~Y been voiced.

Pete Clark, se<IIIiolr IFC re­presentative from Pi K:appa Alpha summed up ODJe side of the question rabher well. In esSience, Clark sa.i.d that In enforcing ~;uc!h new and strinJglent rules, and in placing the focus of bhe penalties on -rush itsellf, the IFC would be severely hampering an of­felllding i!Waternity's rush cap­ability. Injuring a fraternity in. rush is oocessarily to lin­jU!!'e t!he fraternity system as a whole. This WIOuld be U!ll­

wise at a timJe wlhen our total strengtlh. is of great im­portance.

Fraternity News

Cameo Sarulde Hunt, sophomore of

Cincin:!llatti, Ohio, was pimled dull'ing Thanksgivting to Jim Carstens, 'sophomore Kappa S'igma of Cornell Uindversity.

The society serenadeldi bheir sweetlheart, Bill Rucker, on . Va!lentine's Day.

Laurels Susan Vaught, junior of

Jacksonville, Fla., was re­cently pi:Jmed by Julian Rain­water of New York, N. Y.

Strings Lin!da McGeary, sophomore

of Hyattsvrne, Md., ds pinned to J.im Bland, a gll"aduate student ·at tlhe Univensity of Maryla!lld. Bland is a Phi Delta Theta at Marylanid.

Pete Schuitz, juni:or repre­sentative from Sigma Pi fra­teT:nity, suggeste!d that ihe was lin favor of th~ proposeijl in­crease in mi<;j;ness. Whe!ll a fraternity pmctfees dirty rush it is activelly damaging the rush chances of tJhe otiher Dine houses on campus. Therefore,

Kappa Alpha

Brotheor Dan Shive, senior of Monl!'oe recently became engaged to Becky RUIShing of the University of Nonth Caro­liiDa at Greens}:loro.

Diane Williams, wife of Bro~ .ther Bob Williams, recently gave birth to a baby gb-1, Olxi&tine Noel. ·

Theta Chi

Brother Glenn Van der Ploog was recently pinned to Kiall'ell Sc~ture, a secretary for Thomas Cons of Wayne, New Jersey.

The fohlowing .brothers were recently initiated: William A. K. Garnett, sophomore of Mal­vern, Pa.; Franklin Richard Hood, .sophomore of Flails Ohurch, Va.; Edward 0. Paul-

The dill'ller was ·attended by nr: T.ribble, De~;m Elmor~. _B~ B~ett. who ia cbairmam ·of 'the ~liadium-.. ai-Ive;"toach; Lord of ~he football coachmg -staff and albout 40 hou,semen. The house heard a progress repont on the •stadium drive by Bennett and Tribble, and the house presented the drive Wlith the money raised from the sale of bu!lllPer stickers during !the foollblaU season.

the rules .should be so stll"ict ey ill, sophomore of South >·wru dU&~ break .. ,Chat,~~$00-·~'f::[.4V .

bi:eak''"1ihe: ~~clia~< Pl~ti,_l'; , . e~. should be pun- of Fayettevi'lfe; ·R': :Sa1"l"y· Stro­

rehed in their rush program, siilider, sophomore of Mo\llllt because that ·is where they Jackson, Va: are lhurtin·g tlhe other houses. The amnual Sword <and Ser-

Twin Citian Gives Theatre Artifacts

Mns. James D. Rumph, of W:instO!Il-Salem, lltas giv-en the Wake F-EJ«"est College Theatre a coll~~tion of play pro­grams, most of them dating from the 1920'-s. She lhas also d0111ated ·a ~arge book pub­lished in 1888 titled • 'The Stage and Its Stars, Past and Present." The book con­tains steel engravings of act-

Best Answer?

Sclhultz ~ntinueld that he is not certain that the pro­posed measure is the best answer to the situation, but he is sure that some action must be taken in 1lhe .race of inc,reasing l'UISih vioJ:atJions.

These ideas all'e wildely di­vergent, but both contam a large amoUlllt of trutlh. I must aglree with Olark that damag­ling one fraternity in ru.sh is disabling one of the vital D!l'gam of the frat<Jornity sys­tem. This cannot be !helpful to the frat&nity system as a whole or to any member fraternity in particular.

ors anid actres~Se~S from that Furth&, if two or tlhree time. fraternities l()se theLr basic

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pent dinner and dance was held las.t Saturday night at the Parkway Chalet. The Mel­ody Men provided the music for the formal occasion.

Pi Kappa Alpha

The frata-nity had their big rush party laSlt week-end at the Traveil Host motel with tlhe Impacts providing tlhe en­tertainment. Also the fraterni­ty h<ad an open house Saturday night for lthe rushees.

Al Viehman, senior of In­man, S. C., recently pinned Jade Norris, a senior coed of Gastonia.

Bob Jacobsen, sop.homore of HoBywood, Fla., pinned Karen Bostick, sophomore of Pfeiffer College,

Officers elected for ne:x;t year are p.resident-Ed Plalrker, jun­ior of Raleigh; vice-president -Dan Byrum, sophomore of Raleigh; treasureT - R1amsay Breazeale, sophom0ore of Ashe­ville; ·and pledge~master-Bo Williams, junior of Miami, Fla.

Alpha Sigma Phi

Laurance Nagin, junior of RockaWlay Beach, N. Y., !l'e­cently pledged the fraternity.

Steve Kirstead's 21 poin;ts placed <the Alpha Sigs to a

48-47 basketiball triliillPh ove1" Theta Chi last Tues&l~r.

Sigma Pi

Rusty Thomlinson, junior of St. Louis, Mo., ll'ecently pinned 1lJiz Waitt, junior of AblaJllta, Ga.

Spring rush was concluded with a combo party featm-ing the Fabulous Five at Graylyn.

Tal Jobe, senior of Me­bane, lavaliered Martha Sue Naylor of Sanlford, a sopho­more at the Woman's College at Gl"ee!!Sboro.

Gearl Gore, sophomore of Lumberton, lawliered Hilda Brisson of UNC-G.

Sigma Ph! Epsilon

Brother Vinoce Howard · pin­ned ,Susan Shore, of S!W.em, during the Christmas break. Brother Phil McGee recen~ :liavaliered · .. DlanJa- ~Marie ,Mc­Cormick, of <the."Univex:sity. -of Ma~r;vJi!ldld. Brother Frank Pas­cha!l is ~avaliered to Noel Carol Burnett, sophomore of East CarolinJa.. Brother Don Philli!Ps lavailiered Donna Lee Hast­ings, sophomore of Averett College.

New brothers ll'ecem.tly i¢­tiated .atre Thomas Peter Mohr, sophomore of Springfield, Pa.; Jonas LeMoyne Bliank, Jr., of Redlands, Calli.; Bruce A. Humphries, of Ft. Wlashing­ton, Pa.; Joll!ll Hopper, sopho­more of Madison, N.J.; Larry Johnson, sophomore of Lexing­ton; Jim Hood, sophomore of Huntersville; John Picklesim­er, sophomore of Verona, N. J.; and D..Wght Gentry, sopho­more of Hy>attsville, Md.

Lambda Chi Alpha

The fOil:lowing men were re­cently illlitia~ted: Dave Dia­mont, junior of pilot Mountain; George Spencer, junior o.f Con­OOI!'d; Don Tate, sophomore of Gastonia; R•a!lldy Grant, soph­omore of Kiann:apolis; Jim Ma<l'ltin, sophomore of VirgiiDa Beach, Va.; Glenn Karr, soph­omore of Th-enton, N. J.; and Jadt Jad~son. junior of Shelby.

Brother Tim Stouffer, sen­ior of Roanoke, V'a., is en­gaged to Kay Akers, sopho­more coed, also of Roanoke.

Brother George Spencer, jun­ior of Coil.cord, was recently lavaliered to Susan MushaU. of Winston-Salem.

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HoWiard · pin­~. of S!W.em, ltmas break. Gee recen<f;l;y :Marie ,Mc­

t1nivex:sity. -of r Frank Pas­to Noel Carol :lre of East Don Phillips

. Lee Hast-of Averett

recently 1¢­,g Peter Mohr, in.gfield, P·a. ; llaillk, Jr., of

Bruce A. 't. Wlashing­•pper. sopho­N.J.; Larry re of Lexing­:ophomcxre of 11 Picklesim­. Verona, N. emtry, sop:ijo­lle, Md.

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De.aCOri.' Road Trip Is Disastrous OLD .~LD _AND _BLAC,~. M~ay,_~eb~ _zo, 1~7, .. :':':AGE 8~;

Pike Gains· Playoffs With Overtime Win

' '. ' ' ~ . ~ ' ~ ....

KETNER'S CAFETERIA

,. '

. Cavalier Victory Drops , Wake To Sixth In ACC

Track Team .Strides To Improvement

Swimmers Beaten Twice, ACC Tourney Thursday ~---------------

By DAVE ROBER'IS ASIOCIATII: SPORTS EDITOR

Paul l,m)g's bot .shoo&g r. failed to offset munerous sec­

ond-hal! .ba~-handling errors b Charlottesville Thursday :night, and lthe Deacs lost to last~ace Vir.gf.nlia, 81-67. .

The vfotory gave the Caw­Hers a 4Jwo and 10 record and pulled them out of the cellar. toward whlcll the Deaeons seem to ·be· heading. Wlake Forest bas iost five consecu­tive AOC games to drop into sixth place with a four and six record.

Three of rflhe losses oame on last week's road swing. First the Clemson Tigers won a 70-68 tlmlliler on a disputed bas­ket W'hioh some Wake par­:l!isans lbelieve was made ~­ter the clock had run out, Then on Monday, the Deacs lost their second game O!f the yeax to South Carolin:a, _83 to 66.

Art Virginia the Deacs seem­ed to be on the right track

1• in the first half, which they led, 46-39. The early mimltes were close but the Deacs be­gin to pull away on the ~Strength of Long's 20-poii!Jt first haLf · performance.

Deacs Lose Ban

In the second half, hawever, -the CavaJders man:agecl to catch -up on a pa!ir of free throws by Buddy Reams with aibout ten minutes remainllllg. The Deacs had lblown a golden oppo1'tu.nd!ty to put ith.e game &Wiay when they turned the bal!l over five conSecutive :tllmes while hoJding a nine­point lead.

'.r.he Deacs were s1mt out from the fkx>r for ebout elgh11 ~ as the Cavaliers eked out a slim lead. Long began biilOOg again and closed the ·gap to within one poi.nlt with_ e minute left, but Newton Scott lost tihe ball to boot away the chance to go ahead.

The Deacs rwere within four potn<ts Wlith 43 seconds left, but Jerry MQllltgomery missed the second of two .free throw at­tempts and UH!reafte!r W-ake was UII!able ilx> do anything ex­cept commit fouls. Vir'ginia scored ten points in the final 43 seconds to make the final score look i!llke a :nmaJWay. . Long :fl.nlshed wilth 29 points

and high-scoring honors far the"-gattte/.Jim'Connel]y: led ·the

· Oa~.M.~i.ntJrras.i~"'. -,b;_r-n·(~:-~

. . . BUrts Morale

The Cll.emsan encoUDJter, on the heels of Ill two-<,POi.nit loss to Carolina in owrtime, must have had a· crushing effect on the ah"eady waning Dea-con morale. The Deacs outshot the Tigers 50 per cent to 40 but were badJy outrebounded 49- · 34 and trailed for most of the game.

LaJte in the second haaf, lthe Deacs trailJed by 59-51, but Long's soorlng spree pulled them back into the lead at 64-63. With aboUJt a haJl.f min­ute left the score was tied at 68-all, and Clemson held the baLI for the final shot. Dt was taken -and missed with six seconds left, and a rebound shot also missed. But Ken Gardner picked the ball up off the floor and tossed it in as the buzzer sounded.

Apparently, however, the buzzer sounded two or three seco.nds after the clock had run out. "We should stf}l be p)ayi.nlg," Coach Jack McClos­key said in the dressing room.

Criticizes Officials

McCloskey also had other criticisms of the same's of­ficials. He said the Deacs made four great plays in the

Volleyball Begins Women's wlleY'baR compet­

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closing mi.n.utes, a.nd that a ,PeDalty WilliS called on every

· one of them. · The . South Crurolina game

-was like a COilltinullltion of the earlier encounrer in Wimton­siuem, won by the Gamecocks 77-00. Even the vi-ctory m811"11§in was -the same.·

W<ake took an early Jead, but with the score 14-12 in favor of So\Jth Carolina, the Gamecocks scored twelve consecutive pomts rto .break 'open the ~me at an unusually early stage. The halftime score was 41-23, and the Deacs could trim only one polart oft tthe lead aWlough they shot 65.5 per cent in the second half.

South Carolina's zone de­fense a.nd Strong frornt line agaln spelled doom for the DeaoCOIIS, who had l9 fewer ~ tban the Gamecocks and trailed 43-29 in rebounds. In addition, South Cafiilina oom­miltted oozy ten personail fouls and the Deacs had .only_ nine free throw oppcnitunities, hit­ting eight.

Scott Gets 17

Long was the leading scorer . witb 25 IPOinlts, two fewer than

his game-leading tolial at Clemson. Scott was the only other Deacon in dowble figures w<irth 17 pomts. He scored his ~areer ~ O!f 22 on ~ field goals aga.inlst Clemson. At ·the other end of the spectrum, Montgomery did not score a field goal in 12 Jtries in tJhe two games, but he recovered ro score 12 points against Virginia.

By RUDY ASHTON ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

The Wake Forest Track team jour.neyed to V. M. I. ilia-st Tuesday for a tri-meet with ·V. M. I. ·and East Caro­•ll.na College. It w.as the seccmd indoor traok meet of the sea­son for the Deacons. ·

.Mthough ·the- Deacons came in third, CoaDb Keith Hatrua­tOill Will'S ~eased-with the over­.alll improvemelllt his team had .made since the prewous meet the week before. When ooe 100nsidero ·that iboth opposition teams had ·begun practice a few months earlier tban Wake, the results were even more eDJCO=.ging.

John Hodsdon le;d ·the Dea­cons by wi:Imlllg the mile in 4:23 and tilen came back less than 45 minutes later .to win rthe 1:Wlo-mide in 9:41.5 .. The V. M. I. distance runn~ were favored in both !rlaces.

Otib.er scorers for Wake were J•ulian Rainwatetr, second tn the pole w.ult and thiTd ln the ibroad jump, AI Viehman., sec­ond in the 600, Jim Hope, tlhiTd in the !two mile, and Tom F.iitch, third iJn the bigh jump.

.ln the :llreshmran division, David Ka.hile woo the shot put, with a heave O!f 43 feet, John Da.nlforth was second in the 600, amd Jim Kyle was ,tmrd i!n the triple jump.

Last Saturday the Deacons ran in rt:he Big Six meet at Chapel Hill and journey back for <the AOC Meet this week­end.

WAKE'S NEWTON SCOTT gathers in a rebound against t.he Virginia Cavaliers. Scott's 11 points and seven rebounds couldn't help overcome UVA's second half surge that bnried Wake, 81-67.

By BOBBY HATHAWAY SPORTS WRITER

Heading iDto -the last two weeks of rthe season, the Wake Forest swimming team travel­led to Clemson ·and Columbia ilast weekend and aJbsorbed .wro more bea!l.l.ngs at lthe bands of tbedr ACC foes.

Actually, the meet agai.n5t Olemson Jam Friday was clo­rer than. tb.e 57-47 score in­dicates. Goilng into the last event, ithe 400-yard. freemyle reLay, the Deacons were only three poinlts behind the Tigers and .seemed -to have a chance to finally s.mash a jinx which had ibeen ,pla!gwing <them since the ACC was formed; W..ake Forest varsity swimming teams ib.ave nevetr won in the Olemoon pool •

Sedgley Wins Two

Rick Sedlgley of West Orange, N. J. was a double­winner for the Deacons. Sed­gley oaptuxed fimt6 in the 160-yaro indiv:iduall. medley and the 200-)'!al"d butterfly. Other :winners fur Wake Forest were Milt Ackerman in the 200-yard freestyle, F.rank StelliJng in the 60-yard freestyle, and Vince iHoward in the 200-ya.rd back­stroke.

'llhe meet wilth So!lt:h Caro­llilla the fol>lowing day proved to 1be a disaster, the Game­-coclm I1"UIUlin:g away :in .a 63-39 rout. Aekerman, first in the 200 and the 500-y..ard free­styles, was the ooly winner for the Dea<!OllS.

Th1li."Sday the Wake Forest swimmetrs return to O>lumbia for the three-day ACC cham­pionships. Coach Leo Ellison forecasts that North Carolina S!Ja,te, the Ullliversity of INoiJbh Carolina, Maryland, Land Sou11h Ca:rolina will take the top four posiltiOIIIS m the tournament, blit will not venture to pxediet tbow .his OWll! Deacons will llaa:-e.

Sets Record·

I.Jas.t Thursday the freshmen fought ifrom ·behind to nip Rey­nolds High School 50-45. Lead­ing the fro;sh. was Bruce LamJb, who br&te his Wake Forest freshman record by <two sec-

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By DON SMITH INTRAMURAL EDITOR

In Independelllt Lea~es, two .-----------., of the strongest non-fraternity teams in several yean;, the Defenders . and PEK took champiolloShlps in ~heir respec­tive divisions. The Defenders feature L3JITy Graham and Ken Moser, while PEK is headed by Butch Henry, John Snow, J.im Arrmgton, and Steve Wrenn.

• • • RICK SEDGLEY • • •

onds ;tin, tbe 100-Y'Srd freestyle, with a ·time of :50.4 !Jamb also took fust place in the 200-~ freesty[e.

Wake Forest had two other double w'iimers besddes Lamb. Mike Neal captured firsts in the 200-yard lndividwaJ. medley and the 100-yard backstroke while Bob l>whkel won the 100-Y'aird butt.er.fry and ~ 400-ym-d freestyle.

A 'l"esurgent Pi Kappa Alpha basketball team, led by three quick baskets by player-coach Pete Clark, upended a decep­tively strODJg Lambda Chi five to gain a playoff with the KA's for ~ Wterruity champion­ship. Cla.J:lk came off the bench in oventime to hit three long baskets - al1l from at least 25 feet out- to seal a 78-77 vic­tory. The wilmi!llg shot came with oob' one second remain­big.

Lambda Chi, paced by Bill Cobb's 31 poilllts, nearLy upset the Pikas, bult a stJrong first half by Ed Parker and David Pugh, with 17 and 27 points re­speatively, enabled the Pika's to xemain m a tie for first.

The KA's, led by sharp sbooti!ng Charlie Parker, over­came a two""ilOinlt halftime de­ficit rto defeat the Sigma Pi's 59-56. Bob "Brenner and Jim Clack also hit for doll!ble fig­ures, uppiu,g KA sp.i.rit for the showdown w~th the Pika's.

other Action

In other F\"atemi!ty League a-ction the A!Lpha Sig's topped Theta Chi, Sig Ep slipped by Delta Sig, allld Kawa Sig beat Sigma Chi.

The champions in Dorms Leagues no. 1 and 2 are the Saints, a.nd the Journeymen, respectively. Both scored con­vincing victories in their fi­nales.

Flraterruty League B One is kmotted in a tie for first be­lbween the PER's and the Rebels. Frat B Two features the Roses in first place.

Tourney Begins Tournament play begins this

week fur the All Campus Championship. The KA-PiKA game will be the fea!l.ure match prior to the finals. The KA's lost to the Pikas in the only meemmg between the two GTeek rivals, but have a de­cisive edge in rebounding over tthe smal!ler Pika's. Mack Gad­dy, Brenner, and Clack will carry the load fcxr the Secesh of KA, and Pugh, Parker, wd Tom Bell will share offensive duties for the hot shooting Pi Kappa Alpha team.

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PAGE EIGHT Monday, Feb. 20, 1987 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Deacs Play Blue Devils And 'Pack

By BILL UP"roN SPORTS WRITER

The Wake Forest oagers face two important ACC contests rthis week when they take on the Blue Devils of Duke at Durham Tuesday night and the North Carolma Sta~e Wolf­pack in a regionally televised -game at the Winston-Salem Coliseum Saturoay ao!ite-rnoon.

Duke, having it's customary fine season, holds second place m the conferenee and has credit for .a 78-73 victory over the Deacs in -a 11011-conferenee game played at Greensboro, December 30.

Bob Verga leads the con­ference in scoring (454 polnts: 25.2 average) and is the key of the Duke offense. He tallied 25 points the l:a:st time the two teams met. Along w~th Verga · in the backcourt are Dave GQlden, Stu Mc~aig, and Ron Wlendeliin, an talented per­fanners.

Mike Lewis, averaging 16.4 points per game and 12.1 re­bounds, is a well-rounded cen­ter who can hurt oppooents both offensively and defen­sively, Bob Riedy U3.0 ppg. l and Tim Kiolod:z.iej (9.51 com­plete a strong fron.tcourt. Joe Kennedy and Jim Liccardo provide strong support at the forward slots.

NICK TRIFUNO""'CH of North Carolina State uill display his slick ball-handling ability in Memorial Coliseum as the 'Pack takes on the Deacons in a TV contest.

The Blue Devils will have the home-court advantage plus the shooting of Verga and the cebounding of Lewis, but the

Deacons should make a hai'd scrap of it ail the way, and with a few breaks could sur­prise the Devils, as they did laSit yeta-r in Wlinstcn-Sa~em.

Saturday's game will pit the Deacs a•gain.st a State squad wh~ch hlals greatly improved since ilts re.s<JIUDding defeat at the hai!!ds of Wake tn Raleigh last December 3, 87-67.

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guarrds. They team with either Bob McLea,n or Paul Hudson (6-lll -at centerr, and wi.th Bill Kretzer, Bill Mavredes, and lettewman Jerry Moore at for­wa:rds.

Although fa1rly strong at every .startil!lg position, State's main problem i,s a lack of depth and experience. Foul 1rouble for a stlarter spells real trouble.

Norman Sloan's crew has managed to win ooly one a! ten CO!n.ference games, but has gained more poise since ilts ltast meeting with the Deacons. Wake should win, but it should be by no means the runaway it was the last time.

GoH Meeting There vrill be a meeting of

all freshmen interested in try­ing out for the freshmen Iteam Wiednesday, Feb. 22 M 7 p. m. in room 209 in the gym.DJas­ium.

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By GRIGG STUDIO Wake Forest College- -Phone ·,723-4640

Grid Slate Features Seven Night Games

Two F'riday night g1ames and five on Saiturday night are included in Wlake Forest's 1967 foa!Jball schedulle a.Dlii.OUilCed toda:y tby Athletic Director Gene Hooks.

The 10~game slate includes tillts with all seven ACC op­l[lOnen.ts p1us Houston, Mem­phis State and Tu:1sa. Houston and TuilJSia are newcomers to the scheduile, mpl:acinlg Au­•bttrn aLDd Flortida State.

Ald games will be pLayed under the ligbots with the ex­ception of the Clemson, Nor.th Carolina a.nd 1'llWa contests. Friday i!light contests are sl:aoted with Houston in the Asbrodome on Sept. 29 and wiJth Maryolood here on Nov. 17.

as ;part of a day-«JJi:ght dooble­haader in IN'. C. State's Cai­ter Stadium. StaJte will host North Carolina in the after­LlliOOil .game with the Deacons and BLue Devils mee!ling at 7:30 p. m.

The opeating ~arne will be l!.he fn-&t of two night contests for the Deacs in the new 41,-000-seat sbdium art; RaJ.ei,gh smce Wake Forest and State will meet there on Ocrt. 21.

"We ihave enjoyed good suc­cess with night games at home :in the past, a.nd we'ce hoping !l'oT even greater &U/Ccess by planning all three of our home games under the lights tlhis .se~ason," Hooks said. "We have discu~ed this with a great many Wilnston-Salem mer­<:b.a.nlts and Wake Forest alum-

On:l:y three gtames are scbed- llli, and the reaction is over­ulled for Bowman Gray Sta- wh.elmingly in :fla·vor a! pl:aying dium in Wlinston-Sailem, and night games." a'l!l will ·be played at night. Hooks added that it is hoped They !include Virginia on Oct. the DeaCODLS will have their 7, South Carolina on Nov. 4 new stadium ll"eady for the and MM"yland on Nov. 17. The 1968 season. South Oarolina game will serve as homecoming. The 1967 Deaes wil1l be pllay-

i.ng theic fourth season under Duke, o.ff fue W·ake Forest Coach Bill Tate.· Last year's

schedule aast :fla.hl fO!I' Lllhe first olub finished witll a 3-7 overall time since 1943, returns th£s TeCOI!'d and a 2-4 ACC maTk. yea.r and will furnish tthe op- Ta-te's three-YeJaX' record position im the opener on Seu;lt. stands ·aJt 11 wins and 19 de-16. This ga-me wild be pla:yed feaJts.

1967 WAKE FOREST FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Date Opponent & Site Time Sept. 16 (Sat.J *Duke at Ra!eigh, N. C ............... 7:30p.m. EST Sept. 23 (Sat.) *Clemson at Clemson, S. c ......... 2:00p.m. EST Sept. 29 (Fri.) Houston at Houston, Texas ........ 7:30p.m. CST Oct. 7 <Sat.) *Virginia at Wi.nlston-Salem ........ 7:30p.m. EST Oct. 14 <Sat.J Memphis Stare at Memphis ........ 7:30p.m. CST Oct. 21 <Sat.) *N. C. State at Ralieigh ................ 1:30 p.m. EST Oct. 28 CSat.l *North Carol:ina at Chapel Hill .... 1:30 p.m. EST Nov. 4 (Slat.) *Soutfb Carolina at Wilntston-Salem

(H-Coming) 7:30p.m. EST Nov. 11 (Sat.) Tulsa at Tulsa, Okla ....................... 1:30 p.m. CST Nov. 17 (Fri.) *Maryland at Wiruston.Salem ...... 7:30 p. m. EST *Denotes Atlantic Coast Conference Games

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By Hayes Hofler ~" .

It. Occurs To Me • • • By HAYES HOFLER I& Occurs To Me • • •

. . . that head eaa<:h Bill Tate wi1l1 be more cautious tllts sooson in !pl'OClaimin.g his football squad firt. for a run. 111 t the ACC first division. Llast yeall."'s 3-7 record was ·a dis­timet disappomtmeDJt to m·any Deacon supporters, and if several. freshman pl!ayers &>n't apply thefu- competitive spir~t to more <academic pucsuilts, much of the same can be ex­pected for. the '67 season. Over a thlrd of the players on the tfirosh squad, which went un­defeated !this y~. fell short of ·the 1.6 .s>chollastiJc average required by the NCAA to re­main eligible for mter-coilleg- · iate oompetiltion.

. . . tllat amon•g those who were found lacking academi­cally a•re some of the top 'Line­men aoo back:s on ifJh.e team. Thiree of the six players cho- · sen to the alil-5tate tfireshman squad 1al['e among those who have one semester and ;two summer session~ to make 1.llP the QPR deficit.

. . . that coach Jim Leigh­ton, head of lthe athleltes' tu­tormg program ·and one of the more dedicated -coaches at the CoLlege, ils al:so an elternall op­timist. Queried as to how

JIM LEIGHTON

maey lfireshmen he thou-ght would meet the 1.6 avet'lage •bY ne:x;t fall, Leighton replied, "there is no student on tire :fireslunan team who doesn't stand a chance of coming back ne:lGt semester."

• • • . that this was more thlan coach Bob Lord had to say albout the sitwaLtion. Asked if ~t was unusual to have this

WAKE'S PAUL LONG shows the &booting form that lias led him to membership in the Deacon's 1000-point club. His total of 1025 points in his two-year career places bim in Dinth position on the all-time scorer Ust.

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many.lfresbmen faiil to make tlhe necessary aveNJge their first \Semester, coach J.prd replied .h..e thought he'd ''bet­~ Jet the boss answer that." The boss (Tate) was out of town. and unavailiilble for • comme.M tat press-time.

• . • • rt..hat· desp~te all this, , there ace some potential

Rhodes Scholars.on the squad. According to· .Leighton, Ken HemphiJ.ll, Gal['y WilliBil'd (both .all-staJte· selections), Joe Dob­ner, .a·nd ·Ronny Carter aLl made •a 3.0 or better and have • draw.n praise from their pro­fessOil"s.

. . • ihM the way !It came aoross on Cba·nnel 2; the Caro­llina-W.ake game was a con­spinacy to malntam Carolina's no. 2 national ll'lUlking and provide .g.ratificaJtlon for the reporters and photographers

. who battl~ the snow '\Stolm to cover ·me game for' Sports Illustrated. The reporters got wbat th'ey came to see, a .Car­olina victory, as Deacon. scor­ing ace ·Paul LOng seemed to be called ·for a foul : eve!l"Y time he ·blinked his eyes.

• . . . that Loog's 25-point • output aga.illlst South Caro­lina last weeat provided him with , a llirbble...;pwblicized dis­tinction. It brooght his season sc«ing total ~ 402 which, combined with the 623 points he potm'ed through last year, is enough to gain him adntit­tance to W<ake's 1000-Pomt Club. His 1025 points puts him in nin-th place among Deacon all-time scorers, and if he continues at his present pace he could replace Ronn:y Watts for· the number seven spot. Watts, now a member of the Boston: Celtics, contributed 1069 points in his tbree Valt"­sity seasons. This is all the more remarkable when it is considered !that transfer Long has had on)(y two ye8ll'IS to compile his total, while the others have hlad at least t.m-ee years. ·

. . . • that if over-all re­cords l!m'e consulted, Wake Forest rates number 4 among ~e Big Four in basketbaM. AgWnst Ca!roUna, Wake has won 35, \lost 7'7. The DeaCOllls are 37-88 agains.t Duke and 49-73 against State.:

• • • • that Ken ·Erickson, !the Deacon quarf;ea'lback who showed tremendous potential as a sophomore last fall, may &d :himself playiai.g ·a back­up · role as a jl.lillior. Reliable ~es. sllY .. ~ lf~ ~ wm · McCook :jlmior · i:OYege m Nebraska, is Ia quasrterba~ who "eaa:~ do everything."

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