itlll null lark - wake forest university · captain1 junior of wash is elected cap-1-65 basketball...
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![Page 1: itlll null lark - Wake Forest University · Captain1 junior of Wash is elected cap-1-65 basketball by vote of his :re Forest team ' iling down an ~ game, whiCb cest in the At" ~onferen-ce](https://reader036.vdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022063018/5fdc4a4ee086324e234137b3/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
vTitle ~ players hava rn that newsmed that Wake Coach Stallings yers by saying, . o.'t quit. They -·. Sportswriters -areful in sayingj · ~e ACC. Evecy,r
that someone .. No one eve11
l dlid earn the · ~aines they w~' nnot be argued~ •a·ch Stal1inngsj 1omenal year. l; lth us !.ast year~ >lay the same· ey've won witq son if we need>t it, usually it UNC gets theW
ly usua!lly it :U, gs them horrie." ·
:t measured acng run. So don't tailings and his hciving "blown';
In the eleven ts been in ~- · ~t is far out in seven teams.
WATTS
Captain1 junior of Washis elected cap-1-65 basketball by vote of his
:re Forest team ' iling down an ~ game, whiCb cest in the At"~onferen-ce. He lints per game ~
64 reason.
md :k's ;est rts, ust ere
• •
Duke Professor Is Speaker For Fall BSU Retreat
Page Two
VOLUME XLIX
itlll null * I .W~ke Fore5t College, Winston-salem, North Carolina, Monday, May 18, 1964
lark *
Rockefeller Youth Chainnan Speaks To YRC Members
Page -Two
NUMBER 28
€oromunistHasRoughTime OG&BStaff
A . . ·s, d Q . Announced . nsweri~g- . tu ent .uer1es For'64- '65
QP System Is Changed By: LOUIS BISSETTE
S'I'AFF WRITER
A member of the American Commullist party was hostily received by .an audience of Wake Forest students and- Cuban refu ... gees when he spoke :in Wait C~ Wednesday night.
GeorgetMeyers, former chairman of1:the party in Maryland, was hiss'ed and laughed at dur.ing an hour-long question-andanswer session. Members of tlfl" audience who arguoo with him. got standin-g ovations.
Meyers also provoked derisive lalighter .lflll.d argun:e1.ts when he met with several classes :IJf students in the Humanities Butl.dlialg A~di.'tori.um Wednes-., day afternoon. ·
Attends Classes ·
· '.Myers vjsifled Wake Forest at . the invitaJti.on of Dr. Robert G,regory, associate. professor o~ illist.Ory, who arranged for the . visit so his freshmen history studentS could hear and 1;alk to a commuiust. Gregory was 'inocierator at· the question and 'answer session.· .,,.Most .. of_ Meyer's. Oppositi~ r.~t; from Cub_an studen,ts at the ooll.ege and 'a grouRof 11 Cuban .reiugees who live- -in' WinstonSalem. He. aru;,w~- rr..a!ll.Y of the questions by' saylrig he was "not !amiiliar with the. situation."
-JONES PHOTO The audience of.' .about 500
Jdstened passively as Meyers began: his talk by outLillling the .immediate ;progr.am of the Com-munist Party in the United States. He stated that the party ·SUpported a vigorous anti-monopoly campaign in America QP
. poses all forms of discrimina'tjon against minority groups, thus fa~o~ the passag~ of the Civil Rights bill.
GEORGE l\IYERS
~· -However, Meyers added that <· --· prejupice is an evil .which must
be rooted out. of socialist -countries as ;well as the capitalist
· -" ~Ocrety; The PartY favors ·federal
'•
aid to edli:Cation, medicare, the- signing of the test-ban treaty 8nd all other moves designed to .~ :the. cold war, he indicated.
Peaceful ChaDge
.·:;: Meyers told .of the party's . proj~ted program for tbe : peaceful trru;LSition from c.apita-r
l.ism to socialism in the United · States. He stated that socialist
Solutions will have to be used, ~er or- later, to solve the many problems which will arise under the capitalist system in
;fthe United States. He believe=t :f:. ~at the first step in this tran." sition will come, as it has iq ,'};,~.any\ -European Co~tries, · through the nationalization of
major illlllustries. -Folii.owmg the lecture, a- ques
tion and am;wer period bega~
• American C&mmllllist Spokesman . • •
with Gregory asking the au.di· ence to "we t:hls as a question-: ing peruod rather -than as an opportunity to refute what the speaker is saymg." ·
The first question dealt with the Communist party's views Oil! religion in /the United States. Meyere said/that the party ."does not advocate' the overthrow of any. .religion."_ He ac:Wie~Lthat aU anti'-religion cam~gns in' the Soviet Union stem from the close ties .' between :the Orthodox Chui'ch · l8nd ·'lhe tyrannical Czarist government. He describ-ed himself as a "materialist," but added that many denominations are :present in the United States Communli.st party.
' First American
Another student asked whether Meyers was first a communist and then an American. He re~>lied, "I 11\tll an American first." He then said "There is no conflict between · Americanism- arui Communism. There is no Soviet influence in the American Com-munist PartY. ·
Myers commented on the- efforts andi effectiveness of the peace corps, the alliance for progress, and the Rockefeller Foundation in reilievin-g .poverty in South America. He said that
the peace corps is an encouraging sign, bu:t that he diid not feeil: it \vould work. The Allian~e for PrGgreS!', according to Meyers, is already !Jogging down and has no .chance 'for success. ConceJii.;.. 1ng the Rockerfell.er Foundation, MeY'el"S stated that if Rockerfeller· would stop exploiting Sputh America there would b~ -l.:lo ne_ed ~or J~j,s. f~Ji:t!9!l· ,-~ _
The Cuban group QPened ~ with a barrage of question& which appeared to catch Meyers off-gUard and! livened the audience. Meyers was see:ming'Jy. unable to answer validly why n.o one had been shot attempting to enter East Gennany ood Cuba. He said tha-t the situation brought about by the erection of the Berlin Wall was regrettable, but he could see some reasons for it. The Cubans also posed questions ~oncerning the free· dom of the working class in. a communist country and pea-:eful coexistalllce. Meyers saJid he would "let the moderator handle this."
The choatic hour of questions and answers ended with the audience in apparent sympathY with the Cuban refugees and hostile to the Communist spokestnan.
Candidate States Views .,
Preyer Hits Speaker Ban
1·
''·
By ALBERT HUNT . people from speaking. STAFF WRITER
L. 'Richardson Preyer, De.. mJocratic caJlldidate for gover. nor, e~lained his views on
the controversial speaker ban law illl an interview with ·the Old Gold <and Black la:st- Friday.
He ·added that- he felt the adminti.*atorts of the colleges should determine whether an illldividual .could .speak. ·,Preyer said educational imL
provements in the state's schools would receive top priority if he is elected gover1110r.
Preyer wa-s in 'town to attend a rally for him allld his family given by .the People for Preyer Organization in ForslVfu County.
· The former federal judge criticized the ISiband mken by Dr. I. Beve;-ly Lake, 10111e of his opponents in ·the May 30 primary, on the speaker ban law which prohibits COmmu.nislts and individuals who
When •atsked how he planned to fin•ance these prognams, Preyer replied, "We can't raise taxes without stoppilng the economic growth -of the LS!tate, therefore the money \viJl come out of th_e state Su.r:Plus. We hope to have a big surplus _and the question is whlch of the basic needs will be given top priority.
_ have taken the Fifth Amendment from speaking on !State supported campUlses.
"For instance if _you give all state employees a 10% pay raise," Preye.r continued, "then you will mt have enoug'h left over for education."
'·. No Answer
"The question I ha.ve posed tO Dr. Lake ·and he hal9 yet to answer," Preyer said, "is if Rebukes Moore
a Oommtmist discovered the This apparently w~SJ a· r~·cure for cancer would he buttal .to Dan Moore, another allow him. to speak at any Democratic candidate for gov~ of our 12 slia.te 1Suppol1ted in- ern:or, who eaxlier had advo-stiturtionls." Lake has said the cat.ed that the surplus be J:aw is neeessacy andhewould used to giye state employees oppose any modifications. a pay 11aise.
Preyer said he felt if a He said the most pressi!Dg man advtocated the violent educational need ·is to re-overthrow of the United States duce the size of the classets government then he should in the IScllools, 111oting that not be allowed Ito speak, but North Carolina ranks ahead he did not feel any.thing could of only· Mississippi and Ala· be gaiJled by preveDII;iug scicn- bama in this area. "We don't tists>and ··other. ~tributary- wa.rit to be in thls categOI'\Y,"
he said. "This problem is ·particula.rly eviden-t in the fh'lsit three grades."
Preyer said he would support the Johnson adminilstmtion, but stated :that he was e>pposed to the current Civil Rights bill whicll is now bei!llg debated by the Senate.
"However if it is paJS•sed," he added, "I will obey the law •as governor of North Oarolina.' I will not stand in any courthouse doom •as I am lii.Oit a111y d.i.xiecrat. I don't think North Carolina wants that type of a per'ron for their •gove•rnor.
·He said he felt NGrth OaroJina bas• made a gxeat deal of progress in the field of civil rights and pledged his administration, if elected, to continuilllJg these efforts.
The Good Neighbor Council, the lllltercollegiate Council on Human iRights and improve,ments in the job situation were specifically cited by Preyer. .
"I believe it is eSsential to maintain lines of communication -between the white am Negro," he added.
Preyer !l"efused ;to make a :prediction on rthe outcome of ihe primacy .saying that he was not sure . who was his s.tron,ges.t opponent.
·Difficult Race
He said he naturally hoped to win ODJ- .the first primary but felt .with six candidates
. (COntinued on ·,page 5)
Rocky Gaskin, nsmg senior of AtlaDJta, Ga .. has been named business m·anager of the Old Gold and Black by the Publications Board, completilllg the list of editoi1S and bwiness 'managers of the three Wake Forest public.ationJs ..
Last Literature ~peaker Symposium Plans Yale Prof To Lecture Receive Approval
Gaskin, a busineSIS· major. will succeed J:im Sinkway, sen
of Glen Rock, N. .r. Associate Editors
Named as associate ed1tors were Albert Hunt, r:iJsing senior of Devon,. Pa., a!lld Dennis Hoff, rils:ing senior of Flemington, N. .r. A political science major, Hunt has .served as staff writer for the past year and
· plans · to make journWiJs.m a career.
Hoff was associate sports editor ·this year, after working al9 a sports writer for two years. He plans. to follow up his psychology' major after gl'laduation .
Alssistant editors appointed were Rachael Floyd, nsmg junior of Nichols, S. C., ·and Steve Burns, rising· sophomore of OharlQtte. Misls Floyd is returmng !for her second year as assistant editor after ha·ving worked for. Old Gold her f1reshm8111 year. Bw:ns was a staff writer ,fuis year.
Lipper Heads Sports
Cleanth Brooks, literary cr-itic and Yale Univer.sdty profeSISOr, will speak .at 8:15 p, m. Tuesday in the auditorium of the Humanities Building at Wake Forest College,
The publi<c lecture will. conclude the College's second annual Institute of Literature. There were three other speak~ ers during the spring semester.
Brooks, author of a recently published study of American novelist William Faulkner, will speak on "The Alnerican Innocence: As Seen by James, Fitzgerald and Faulkner."
Once Editor
Brooks has been on· the Yale fa·culty since 1947 and became Gray Profess-or of Rhetoric there in 1961. In addition to .teaching at Yale, . he has been on the faculties of Louisiana State Undversity and the Universities of Texas, Michigan and Chicago. He served as managing editor of the "Southern .Rev.iew," a literary periodical, from 1935 to 1941 and 1942.
He has collaborated with Robert Penn Warren, Pulitzer J;'rize winllliing author, on several works includ:ing ''Understanding
Bob Lipper, rising senior of Poetry," a college textbook. New York City, will heed the Prior to the book on Faulkner, spor:tis department. Associate Brooks wrote one titled "The sports editor wi:1l be B,ichard Hidden God," a studiy of FaulkMillls, rising senior of Wash- ner, Warren, Ernest Hemingway, ington, D. C. Both were sportJs T. S. Eliot and William Butler writers 1:hi& year.. Yeats and their relationship to
Leon Spencer, rising senior Christianity . of Raleigh, will return as circulation m-.mager for the third year.
Staton Says. Politicians In Disrepute
Other Speakers
Other speakers in t:he inlstitute were Dr. J. Whitney Oates, Avalon Professor of Humanities at PrincetOn. Uili.vei'Si.tY; Dr. ~r.i(" A, B!l.ackwell, Avalon Professor of Humanities at Cornell University; and D~. Genna.ine Bree, :professor in the Institute for Research. in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin.
CLEANTH BROOKS . . : To Speak Tuesday . • •
WF Students Contribute To PUC Display
Four Wake Fxlrelst students have contributed works Ito the Piedmont University Center's first annual collection of student arrt, which will be on display at Reynolda House this sprin.g.
By ALBERT HUNT STAFF WRITER
A new grading system fOJ; Wake Forest and the rt:emporary establishment of the CHALLENGE symposium was approved by the faculty Monday. · The grading system, which will become effective mth students entering in the summer Gf 1965 will p~ace Wake Forest on a fou~ point system. The College is now on a three point grading) system.
"A" Equals 4 Under :the revised system eacl\
semester hour of A work will
.Winberry I~ Top Speaker
Charles Winberry, senior of Statesville, was presented the first arunuai Speaker of the Year Award Twesday in Chapel by the Wake Forest chapter of Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha, the national honorary forensics fraternity.
According to David Zacks, senior of New Bern and!- president of the local grGup, the award recognized "the one person not of our membership who we feel has rn,ade the most s•gnilicant contribution of the year in and through the area of public speaking."
The four contributors are Gail W.iillberry was cited for his Puzak, risilnig jwli:or of Arling- speaking throughout the state ton, Y.a.; Peter Wong, graduate as a;n active member cf politica1 student of Hong Kong, China; and chw-ch-related affairs, Rufus Getzen, rising senior of Inducted into the socieoty were Ealstover, S. C.; and Jim Hess, Peggy Wilson, rising junior of rising soplromore of Manheim, Baltimore, Md., and Gerald :pa~- - · - - Partney, rising junior of Miami,
The 27 pieces illl the collec- Fla. tion, ranJging in media from Mr. Irving Carlyle, presi&n£ oil and finger painting to sculp- of the boa~ of trustees, and Dr. :ture, were presented by stu- Leon Hollingsworth, chapla:in of dents from eight Center mem- the college, were inducted as ber inlstitutions. , honorary :nembers.
A Democratic national committeeman last night attackedj the "great American SiPOrt o£ seekini · out and crucifying all(
office holder for what he has· done as a dWy elected repre
.,sentative of the people."
Four Professor$ Honored As ODK, . Tassels Tap Seventeen
Willi~ W. Staton., Sanford attorney, addressed the 25th an .. niversary_ banquet of the W.ake; Forest College chapter of Omic~ ron Delta Kappa, national lead-~shlp fraternity. · ·
"In recent years," Staton, said, "politics and politicians :have come into much disrepute, This has, .in my opinion, resulteQ because of a lack of clear thinking on the· part of many responsible citizens, -
· "There is a human tendency to seek a scrarr>egoat when 1hings go w:roog in the machinery of government. All too often we choose politics and politicians as the recipients of our verbal (>rickb.ats."
"Political Debunkers"
Staton then referred to what he cahled the "political debunkers" who attack office hold~ ers "without real justifi~ation or cause.
"Such debunking," he continued, "is not lilrely to promote the respect and trust that politicians must have if we are to solve our dbmestic problems and meet with a· united front the forces of communism and the· other idealogies of the world . . .
"If politics is as rGtten as some say it is, then it got that way because good people ignored it. I say to you that, as intelli.gent men and women, you may ignore politics, but you do so at great risk because politics will not ignore you."
Staton, a Wake Forest trustee, also made :pa.ssin:g reference to the fact that a communist was. speaking. on the campus last night.
"I feel certain that none of our students will :(all into the communist camp because of such ~ speaker," he said, "'and! I am glad we have the academic freedom to allow him to come here."
New Officers'
New officers of the cha:ptell indll!Cted last night are Jerry At~tkisson rising senior of Kinston, :president, andl Neal Tate r.isdng senior of Gastonia, vice president. Charles Winberry of States.. ville iS the r.etirin€ !;>resident .
Omicron Delta· Kappa and Tassels, honorary leadership societies a:t Wake Forest, tapped thirteen students and four facul-' ty members into thcir organiza-tions.,during chapel Ttl2sday.
ODK, national men's honorary, took in five juniors and one senior a111d ·presented honorary memberships to Dr. Robert Gregory, associate profes:sor of history, and Dr. John Sawyer, pro- · fEssor of mathematics.
One Senior
Richard Beale, senior of Bethesda, Md., was recog.nized for outstanding military activity. Juniors honored were Jerry Attkisson of Kinston, scholarship; Barry Dorsey of Shelby, College UDli.on; Daniel Jones of Charlotte, scholarship and honor council; Baxter McRae of Peachland, scholarship; and Neal T.ate of Garstonia, debate.
Tassels Tap
One semor and five juniors were honored by the Tassels, a local society based on scholarship, character, leadership and service.
New inductees: are Tam Stout, senior of .Ar1ington, Va., scholarship; juniors Martha Swain of Fayetteville, honor eouncil; Lineta: Craven of Con~ord, publications; Barbara Dooiel of Henderson; religious activities; Jo DeYoung of Arlington, Va., student government a111d publications; Brenda Hicks of Al::!c J
keek, Md., dramatics ·and Donia· Whitley of Bethseda, Mel., scholarship and publications.
Honorary memberships were given to Dr. Elizabeth Phillips, assistant professor of English, and Dr. Annie Tillett, assistant professor of romance languages.
Formal in-itiation of new members was held in Davis Chapel Thursday night, followed by a banquet at the Robert E. Lee HGtel,
Officers elected to head the society next year are Mar'.ha S w a in, president; B,arbara Dan.iel, vioe president; Jo DeYoung, secretary; and Donia Whitely, treasurer. New ODK iHembers
receive four quality points; of B, three points; of C two points; of D one point; and of F no points. Under rt:he present system no quality pojnts are given folj grades of D or F; three points for each hour of A work; two points for B; and' one point for C ..
Under the new sy&tem a student must achieve 256 quality points and a quality point ratiQ of at 1oo.st 2.0 on all hours attempted, in order to graduate,
The new system will alter some of the :mi:n.irrium requirements for academic eligibility.
-Students who hare attempted 47 or fewer semester hours ·in all colleges attended musll have an overall 1.35 quality point ratio on work attempted a1! Wake Forest. to become eligible to return for the following semester.
-Students having attempted no fewer Jthan 48 and no more than 87 semester hours in an colleges attended, must have an overall 1.65 q.;p.r, on work attempted at Wake Forest.-
Requirements
-Students having attempted no fewer .than 88 and no more than 119 semester hours in ~ colleges attended must have an overall 1.85 q.p.r. on work attempted at Wake Foreslt.
-Students having attempted 120 or more semester hours in aJ.l colleges a~ttended, must have a 1.90 q.p.r. on all work attempted at Wake Forest.
All quality point ratios are calculated by divddmg the total number of qualitY points earned by the total number of semester hourn attempted.
Edwin G. Wilson, Dean of the Cdl.lege, said' the ch~e will improve the relative standing of a student who makes a D as opposed 1o the student who makes an F in a course. Under the present system, . llhere is no quality point distinction between aD and a F.
"The subcommittee which studied the situation, the executive committee aru:l the faculty felt that there should be a dis'tinc'tion between these two grades," Wilson said.
The faculty also decided to pla-ce CHALLENGE on a trial b~~- Tms s~~um, whim is schedn.rled for March 11-,13, 1965, is "devoted to focusing interest and concern on a subject of prime collltempomcy importance to AmeriCGn and world societies." It is headed by Dennils Hoff, rising senior of Flemington, N. J. •and Mickey Taylor, rl.sii!ng senior of Statesville.
The faculty stipulated that the Col'lege will not assu1ne any financial obligation for CHALLENGE and after the initial effort, they will review ti'le possibility of making this a selfperpetuating biennial organization.
155 Students Attend Leader Session Here
One hundred a10d fifty-five students from approximately 50 high schools -across North Carolma attended an Omicron Delta Kappa-T·a!ssels Leadership Conference here this past weekend.
The purpose of the conference was to increase· ·the lcaderfS·hip abilitiets of high school students under the guidance of College student leaders and faculty members.
Saturday morning, Dr. Edwin G. •Wilson, Dean of the College moderated a panel discussion 10n "The Balance Between Ex;tm-Curricular and Academic Activities." The members of rthe panel were: Dr. Jeanne Owen, Dean of Women; Dr. David Hills of the psychology department; Professor James Walton, director of the College theatre; and, Frank Wood, senior of Miami, Fla., and Martha Swain, rising senior of Fayetteville, V'arsity debaters.
Following .the panel discussion, the ·students were given an opportunity to attend a regular classroom lecture.
Dr. Harold W. Tribble, president 10£ the College, welcomed the .studenllls to Wake Forest on behalf of the :liaculty and student body art a noon lunche0111.
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OLD GOLD AND BLACK PAGE TWO Monday, May 18,1964
Four Named 3 Seniors BSU Retreat Planned; Volunteers Awarded Rockefeller Seen As Victor
' .
Duke Prof. Will Speak For Summer Scholarships Youth For Rocky ~eader Is Optimistic The annual Baptist Student
Union fall retreat will be held Sept. 11 to 13 at Camp Ha:nes, a YMCA camp 30 minutes from the Wake Forest Campus.
The 1sponsor of the retreat is the Interdenominational Faith Council, composed of Bapt!sts, Mcthodi!sts, Episcopalians and Presbyterians.
Miler Jim Beatty, d.i.l-cctor of the North Carolina Volunteers, announced in Chapel Thursday that four 'Wake Forest !Students have been 1!1Jamed to participate in the N.C.V. program for this summet.
The theme of the retreat will be "Modem Man in Quest of a Savior." Principal speaker will be Dr. W. D. White, profcossor of religion at Duke University.
Texas Native
W1tite, a native of Tenaha, Texa1s, received his B. A. de-
. ·grce from Baylor University and Ph. D. from the University of Texas, and his M. A. from Princeton University. He ilS presently director of undergraduate studies in the Department of Religion at Duke.
The program will co:qsist of lectures, student-led discussion groups, and worship services. The conclusion \Vill be in the form of a communion service Tuesday mormillg led by Chaplain L. H. Hollingsworth.
One different· aspect of the retreat this year will be dra-
MedStudent Is Elected SA.lJ1A Head
DR. W. D. WHITE . featured speaker •
matic presentations by the students. These plays, along with movies and lectures, will serve to illustrate the different aspects of the main theme of the ·retreat.
Barbara Daniel, ri!si:ng senior of Henderson, is chairman of the !Student committee 'planning the retreat. The committee is composed of two representatives from each denomination.
The C!omplete cost of fue retreat will be $16.50. !Information concerning procedure for participating in the program will be available •at the information desk this week.
Students of all faiths and denominations have been invited.
\ John W. Packer of Clintoa!., a
junior medical student •at the Bowman Gray School of Medi-cine, haJS been elected lllational Beta Gamma president of the Student Ameri-can Medical Association.
Packer, treasurer of the as- Siuma Picks sociation for the past year, 1suc- 0 · ceeds Robert 0. Voy of the 5 711 b University of Oregon School of 1r.1.effl ers Medicine · as president.
Elected ·at the 14th a.IlJiluall Five students, a faculty mcmSAMA convention in Chicago, bcr •and :a Wake Forest alumhe became the fourth North I nus were initiated Tuesday into Carolinian, the second from the the Wake Forest College chapBowman Gray School of Medi- ter of Beta Gamma Sigma, cine, to serve as president the ~cholastic honorary society
They are Cynthia McConnell, junior of Mt. Holly; Marie Moorefield, sQ9homiOre of Lexington; Suzanne Trevathan, jll!llior of Springfield, Va.; and Harvey US5er,y, !Sophomote of Bayboro.
Challenge
Following the announceme111.t, Beatty challenged students to accept the opportunities o.t education and participation in :the "tide of national and world good."
Beatty pointed to two items of "panticular attention'• for the college student toda~---opportunity and challenge.
"The opportunity," he said, "has :to do with educational opportunity' .and the resPQnlsibilities that lie ahead, which mean more will be required of you. The latter deals with the challenge to each member of the present generatiQn to paSIS on fue legacy of freedom."
Beatty urged !Situdents to seize the opportU!nity for educa,tion "to further prepare yourselves to go out ~to a world that 111eeds you and wants you. Here is •the tgrea<test challenge-you mlliSt posess the mental capacity to Un.de:tstand and to inlstitute, you must perpetuate democracy and the free enterprise !system, and you must accept lt'he chaileng~ of a rapidly-changing world, a challenge which involves all the members of the human race.
"You have the oppol'tunity and the challenge," Beatty said, "to ride the crest of lth~ tide to a greater state .and :!ration that contributes more tQ the national •and world good. l£ ·you PU11sue knowledge 'lilld J;lerpetuate democracy •and free enterprise we need not worry about the future of Ametica."
of the ·association which was of the American Association of illane ver.•o foUIIlded in 1950. Collegiate Schools of BUJsiness. 1r.1.• U o
Dr. John A. Oates, presently Lawrence Mull of Morganton an invetSitigator with the Na- and Thomas Marshall of Char- A ... n IT. ld tional Heart Institute, was lotte were the juniors inducted. ' C IJ e elected president in 1954 while Seniors William Maready of ·a student at Bowman Gray. Wilmington, Lawrence Feinberg Dr. Carwile LeRoy, formerly of West Newton, Mass. and of the Unive11sity of North Claude L. Turner of WinstonCarolina School of Medicim.e, Salem also achieved memberand Dr. William Waddell, for- ship. merly of Duke University Paul Hylton, profeSisor of School of Medicine, also are accounting, was elected to ·staff past presidents. membel'tship in recognition of
The Student American A!Sso- schoLarly research. Alumnus J. ciation has an active member- Cecil Jeffords of Winston-Salem ship of 19,000 medical students gained membership on the in 78 of the nation's medical basis of scholastic work achievscltools. Affiliated memberships ed as an undergraduate and in are held by more than 35,000 recognition of h~s post-gradresidents and inte·rns at hun- ua.tion achievements. Jeffords dreds of hospitals throughout is associated with Jeffords Inthe United States and its ter- surance Agency in W'inston-ritories. Salem.
Packer, president of his medi- Initiated as an honorary
Pershing Rifles, honorary military society, held a pre-camp day last Sa·turday for the juniol's who will ·acttend Fort Bragg during the summer. The Cadet;.s left campus at 12:30 p. Ill.. for maneuvers near Colfax, and exercises ended at 9;30 '!;>. m. that lnight. ·
The group was divided into 16 teams, which spent the afternoon taking leade:rtship reaction tests, target detection, and battle drill. All teams received instruction on assembling a mortar al!ld cleaning and care of the M-1 rifle, and were i.lltroduced to an obstacle course.
Three Wake Forest senions have been awarded !Scholarships by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation to support six years of medical education at Bowman Gray School of Medicine.
James L. Self of Raleigh was awarded the Nancy Reynolds Verney Scholarship, which provides a stipend of $3,000 for the fi.rlst year of medical school with the amount increasing arnrnuaHy to $4,800 for the sixth year-a total of $23,400.
Allan B. Harvin of Raleigh received the WaLter R. Reynolds Scholarship and Herbert M. Schiller of WinstonSalem was awarded the Narncy Lybrook Lasater Scholarlship. These ~Seholarships each provide $2,400 per year for a six year period-a total of $14,400.
The •three recipients were among 'eight North Carolina college 1students who were presented Reynolds Scholarships at the .amnual awards banquet at ":Vanglewood Park Man!or House.
Self, •a retsearch assistant in the Rsychology Department, is a member of the Honors Program, president of Kappa Alpha Fraternity and vice president of Omicron Delta Kappa.
Harvin, •a Deaiil'IS List student aiild ,a member of :the Hoo.ors Program, has served as physics research .alssilstant and biology labo.11atory assistant.
Schi1ier, a member of the honor council, is president of the biology honor fraternity.
Theater Features "Ghost Stories"
The Wake Forest College Reader's Theart:er will pr<:sent "Famous Ghost Stories," at 8:15 p. m. Wedl!lesday and Thursday. The program will be under !the direction of Charlotte Tomlinson, rising · senior of Richmond, Va., and Carol Saintsing, rising senior of Wim.ston.Salem.
~articipants will be Sally Ma!ssy, rising junior of WaJShington, D. C., Dona Westray, rising junior from Louisville, Ky., Buddy Holland, rising senior of Alloy, West Va., Jim 1isa:-ael, senior of New Ybrk City, a111d Ed Reynolds, senior exchange student of Nigeria.
By ADRIAN KING ASSOCIATE EDITOR
The national chairman of Youth for Rockefeller for President flatly predicted last week New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller will wiiil the Re-publican nomination in July. And he •advanced· several 'intriguing theories to substantiate his prediction.
Edward (Ed) Mattar presented Rockefeller'IS case Tuesday !lli!ght in •a speech before .the Wiake Forest Young RepublicanJS Club.
Matta:r said Rockefeller's chief opponent, Sen. Barry Goldwater CR-.Axiz.l, will have to win the nomination on the first ballot, "or he's -a dead duck. He will not win the first ballot. Oalifol'11li!a is a must for him, and we (the Rockefeller forces) are going to win out there."
Only Two
He was referring •to the California Republican prim·acy June 2 in which Rockefeller ·and Goldwater are the only two Republicans on the ballot. Writein votes ·are not counted in Oalifornia primaries.
The 25-year-old Maryland businessman said there were only two men i:n the party who deserved fue nomination-Rockefeller 3111d Goldwater-because they were the only two working for it.
"The Prelsidency is such a high office that the nomination should not gto ;to any man by default," Mattar said. He wa·s obviously referring to the other oft-mentioned ca!lldidates who are not •actively campaigni.n:g for the GOP nomiIll3.tion-former Vice Preside111.t Richard M. Nixon, GOvernor William ScNtnton of P.a., . and Ambalssador Henry Cabot Lodge.
"There will be only two organizations at the eonveruti.lon, ours •aJJld GoldW!ater's. The wimler will have to rely on 001e of those .two org•anizations. No one but Gloldwater can work with his organization, and ours is for the Governor only. We will not give it to any one else," he declared.
Largest Bloc
He said Goldwater will g'l to lt'he convention with the largest bloc of votes, ·with
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He is a 1961 graduate of chievements. tion. ·
Captain James B. Allen, along with Cadet Majors Jack McJunkin, Davis, and Womack were the organizors of the precamp maneuvers.
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ROCKEIFELLER BACKER ED MATrAR . • • predicts victory for Rocky • • •
\ . Rockefeller having the second largest number. But when Goldwater .fails to win the nommation on the firtst ballot, his support will begin to. slip ·away and nta!llY of the delega·tes will switch ro :the New York Governor, be said.
il\ifattar's theories on which is based his belief fuat -Rockefeller will win the nomin·ation indicate some hard-nosed !POli· tical calcula,tions and he displayed candor rare for politiciams.
-Rockefeller is fue only Republican candidate who can win the industrial northeast cities, "with fue possible exception of Scranton. But Scranton has waited illoo long, and there's no way he Ca!ll win at this late date."
-Rockefeller bas the cash. "Between Labor Day, when the campaign begins, and November 3, election day, it will cost around $15 million for a campaign. Goldwater does 111ot have that kind of mooey-and with t11e local Republican races,
party members ·will· be reluctant to· ante up money for the national r-ace whetn they need it for their own cam· paignLS •.
No Beggar
"Rockefeller can promilse not to beg for money, and can pay off ;the deficit of the national (GOP> committee. He also will come . to the people al!ld will stumP .. for these loca·l candidates. Delegates will ,have to think long and b:ard · on that score," Mattar . contende\l.
Other negative reasons, but which help· Rockefeller, according to ·Mattar, are:
"-The professionals in the pa·rty do not like Lodge .. He was a lousy campa~gner in 1960. The last election he won was in 1946, and th·alt'LS a long time. Some Oregon papers have referred to him a·s 'the mailorder bride' candidate." -"If we were Ito nominate
Nixon, (President) Lyndon Johnson is so shrewd, the Decoc:rats will nontinate Gov. Pat
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Brown of · California for vice .president. He has all !the quail· fioatilons the Democrats need for a VP nominee, plus, I don't have to recall the 1962 Oalifoi'Illia elections. where Brown walked all over Nixon's face. Can you imagine 1he emba!rralssment Nixon's candidacy could cause us if that were ·the case?"
Little Problem
-"The diV!Orce and ·re-mar· riage issue is a dissapating one," Mattar said. He referred to :a Samuel Lubell pbll con· ducted in Oregon, where Rockefeller is stumpim.g for delegates in that mate's GOP primacy-.
The poll showed Rockefeller had improved ".tremendo~' m Oregon, .and voters were beC!Oming less and less concerned with ms m·arital problemJS. - Mattar vigorously ta!ltacked
Goldwater's "v a scilla tin g 1sllands." He said the "AmeriCaiil people can never be clear where Goldwater ISI1lands. And there's no basis whatever that Goldwater is a 'l1aft Republi-' can. Hils stands on· •all major domestic issues 131'e diametrically opposed to Taft's philb•sophy. · Ta1lt and Rockefeller are much closer." ·
He •attacked the people who surround .the Goldwater candidacy, caiLmg them "right-wing e:!Qtreroists who employ . commtmist-like tactics."
He cited Rockefeller's recbl'd as Governor of New York,. and programs such as }arge-sc8il.e ISitate ·assistance. ro education ·and housing.
"Rockefeller advocated these th.inlgs for New York, not because he iiS a sbcialist, but because he believes in states' rights and lslbates' responsibilities," Mattar explaim.ed.
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Garrity,Sees Exciting,Future M_agazine . ·w··thA 1. AI . ··p Fzlls Posts
1 c tve UlllDl rogran1 For· ,64 '65 By RACIIiEL FLOYD
ASSISTANT EDITOR
Hank Garrity thinks. that Wake Forest has ·an exciting future. Tbalt could mean but very little, except for the !l!aet tbat Garrity, as new head of <SJ.Umni •affairs and development, ha!s a few plans for that future.
· "ThiSI college is on the verge of a illremendous forward step;• he said in a recent illterview. He spoke with e.nthusilasm ("Im ·an extravert," he said, obviK>usly in truth.) of the part he rplanisl to play in that step. Half of hts sentences contained the word "·active," and the other half contained s~onyms of . the word.
Although he mys he is "still devisin!g the master pl'an'' to ilicorporail:e both alllllliili affairs and development, he halso begun specific planning in certain •a!I'eas.
Most Active
"We hope ·to maQte ours one of the most active ·alumni programs Jn ·the Sourtb," he said. A's a beg;lrlning, he plans to set up an alumni club in every area having at least 50 Wrake Forest graduates within 25 miles. Within ·:tihis framework, be h~ to promote the total
· Wake Forest program·- .aJthletics, drama, art, :the eD!tirety of "what the new Wake Forest· is doing."
ALU~ DIRECTOR HENRY GARRrrY
At a meeting of the new staff members: of the Student laiSit night, Editor Jo DeYoung, rising senior of Arlilllgton, Va., announced that the mag·azine will seek the widest 'Polssible rr.nge of student Contributors \vith ·the aim of ''presenrting what is best m the culture of .the College."
All types of creative work including fiction, ar.t, poetry, es.Siays, creative photography, and other arcaiS will be consid~red. The mag·azine may· include selectil()ns from LStudent forums on currenrt topics, articleS related to Wake Forest Theatre producti0111s, student literary contributions in foreign languages, and student book reviews.
Review Board Final decisiODJS :lior accept
ance or rejection of al!l article submitted by a IS'tudent will
· be the responsibility of a bOard of reviewers. Only Wake F(}rest studenJts may contribute to the magazine.
The assistant editors of next year's Student will be Ertelle Brewer, ri.sil!lg junior of Belair, Md., poetry; Sherry Cox, rising junior of Hyattsville, Md., art; Ned Dentry, rlJsing • • • sees exciting future for WF. • • •
1 · senior of Monkton, Md., fie-
OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 18,1964 PAGE THREE
Practice Is Key
Student Holds Black Belt By JIM LEWIS
STAFF WRITER
"Mastery of :liorms and techniques by constant prc..ctice ils the key <to 'learning judo,'' -says Mamoru Omori who is now studying English literature in the Wake Forest Graduate School.
A native of .Tapan, Mamoru was the winner of •a coveted BLack Belt at the age of seventeen. Even though winners (}f Black Belts in judo competition in the United States •are !Seldom found, Mamoru insists that his achievement iJS not unusual in J<apan. In his home country all law enforcement officers have perfected judo, which Mamoru describes as a sport.
He began leal1Iling judo at the age of thirteen ·and practiced art; least two hours each day for s1x years. At 17 he began participating in Black Belt competition, and con-
YDC To Meet The Wake Forest chapter of
the Young Democrats 1 Club will hold an inform-al ,meeting at 7 p, m. Tuesday in the East Lounge.
Plans for the ne:~et year, including the club's participation in the ID:ationail. electi.tml.s will be discUSISed. All interested students have been invited to attend.
tinued to participate in the sport for several years.
"There are different levels," Mamoru explained, "of Black Belt winners." Before he wals ·able to reach the finial level, education began consuming too much of his practice .time. He has never again found time to continue the necessary long practice <Sessions. Now, he insists modestly that he i1s "the weakest B}ack Belt anywhere."
Mamoru is a congenial, modest man with. an infectious laugh. His muscular build betrays his contention that he is not in shape for judo. "The sport is not difficult," he says,'' but practice mll'St go along ,band in hand with theory." He observes that .. thiJs iJSI true of every sport which an individual tries to ~rfect. But pure physical strength is not near- · ]y so important as style and technique.
"Judo bad its begimi.ngs long ago when warriors met each other on the battle fields of Japan," Mamoru related. Desiring more personal competition that fighting on h6rise back provided,. the soldiers would challenge each other ro a type wrestling called judo. The victor of the judo match had the right to. decapitate his opponent. Mamoru observed that in Japan and . elsewhere it is regardEd
as a S'[lort, testing the individual's ability to "throw" his aggreslsor.
Mamoru's busy schedule prohibits him from practicing judo, although he· does sometimes teach friends in his dormitory a few of the ~fundamentals. Gee-Yin Kwok of China is one of his most interested students.
Presently Mamoru is enrolled in three English courses: Literary Criticism, Studies in American TralllScendentalism and Age ofDrydcn. In addition, he ils beginning research for his m-aster's thesis, on Willa Catcher. "She is very popular in Japal!l," he said, "but I've found very few American students who have studied her writings extensively."
After graduating from Seinan Gakuin College, Mamoru enrolled in Kyushu Uiniver!Sity where he studied .philology in addition to his work in American literature: In 1951 he was appointed lecturer of English literature at Seinan Gakuin Utnivensity, and was promoted to assistant professor in 1958, a position which · he still holdls. The university is the only Christian senior
college in an area of 25 million people.
One of his colleagues on the staff of the university in recommending Mamoru for a scholarship described him as "a Christran scholar, who ils an expert in English grammar." After. talking to him for only a few minutes, it becomes apparent that Mamoru carefully measures each sentence before speaking.
Beyond Expectations
Describing his visit to America, Mamoru said it ils "beyond my expectatioru." He plans -to remain in Winston-salem until next Jial!l
uary, then he will return to his wife and three children in Fokuoka City via a trip through Europe. Although he does "not necessarily" miss h~ home too much, he says that this is his first trip outside Japan-and his last.
Between now a.nd his departure he will devote the majority (}f his time to completimg his graduate COU!I'SeS • and writing his mas-ter's thesis. But he hopetS to find time ·to teach judo at the Winston-Salem Y.M.C;A, this September.
COLEMAN'S Take Home Junior Gets Tulane Grant
Also on the drawing' board tinue .the "very £ine job" by tioq; and Richard Fallis, tisarc class reunions every ·five former aluiilllli director Rom 'illlgf sophomore of Nalshville, years and an ·annual giving Wetherman. Garrity does hope Term., features. Mickey Taylor, program, the latter in the be- to add articles 10-f n!ational scope risin:g senior of Statesville, will lief thatt "every alum'iu.liS should about educllltion to the maga- serve •as business m:anager, and have the opportunity to con- zine. 1 circulation •and exchange will tribute to ·the financial growth As head of development, be headed by Barbara Mazzei, of his college." In ·addition, Garrity will be responsible for ri;sinlg junior of Jolmston, R. I. each .alumnus will be asked to developing .the to1al !resources Dr. Edgar E. Folk, profesundertake one project each of the College. This will in- sor of English, who ha!SI been ==================--------year for the College. volve supervisiDn of the raising advisor tx> the Old Gold -and
~ ".::' ;'
As for the alumni magazine, of -all funds for the College, Bl:ack for IDJa!tlY years, will adGarrity foreJSees no basic change t81!ld will include dealing with vise the staff. in makeup, but hopes •1'-o con- trusts• and fotmd!ations. ' The Student hopes to pub__________ .;___,-------------- lish five issues of the magazine
Neal. Tate, junior of Gastonia, has been ~onditi<mally awarded ·a fellowship Ito Tuilane University ·aJS a par:t of •a special progoom by which Tulane, with the sponsorship of ·several nationlaJ. foundations, aim1s to produce quality college professors.
Tate, a political science major and a prospective college teacher, is one of ·the four
Chapel Choir Sings 'Requiem' By Fa_ure
next year, two iii the fall semester and three in the spring.
A meeting will be held before exam-s for ·all ·thdse interested in contributing to the Student. The time and place of the meeting will be amounced la<ter.
'juniors selected from Southern Gabriel F<aure's "Requiem," liberal •arrtls colleges to receive sung in Latin, was the feathe grants. tured work of .the spring con-
As a part of the progi>am cert presel!Jted yesterday by the Tate will spend tllis summer . Chapel Choir. in l8ll intensive language pro" Dr. Tbano- McDonald, progra~' at Tul81!le, ·adding the fcssor of music, directed ·the ·second foreign language which choir in the kven-part work is required for .a Ph.D. which follows form of the
He will also receive a $100 Caltholic mass. Juanita Stone honorarium for his senior year, and Richard BraThtley were which ihe will spend here. featured S'oloilsts.
If his grades< are satilsfactory An.othersa~rednumbcr, "Hear next year, Toate will .receive My Prayer," by A.ntonin Dvolful.l tuitiK>n !for a year of study l"ak, was presented illll •an arat Tulane, plus $1500 to $2200 mngement by McDolll8ld by the for ili.ving elq)CDSeis for the Girl's Choir, along with ·a Meyear. An ,additional summer Donald arrangement -of "I Bring will be allowed if needed to You Heartsease," by Eugene complete work for~ Master's Branscombe. degree.
'11ate plans to work for his Springtime Ph.D. somewhere other than To capture rtbe spirit of
, Tulane, perhaps at Princeton, spring, :the choir performed he said. Dvorak's "Song!S' of Nature"-
"MelodieiS Steal Into My Heart," "Vesper Bells Ring," "Golden Sunligh:t," "Slender Young Birch," and "Thirs Day."
The· Singing Deacs quartet, composed of Steve Orr, Melvin Williams, Kay Huggins, and Tim Peterson, sang a spiritual, "King Jesus Is A-L:ilstenin,g."
The Madrigal Singei.'\Sl ·Sang choruses mom the I:talian and Englilsh madrig_al repertory. The first group of Italial!l seselections included "Sing, sing a song for me," "0 eyes 10-f mY belovEd," and "Matona, lovely maiden.'' The Englilsh selecbi.()ll.S were "We shepherds sing," "lin going to my naked bed," and "Fair Phyllisi·saw."
A htinuning chorus performing Gilbert Alcock's "Voix Celestes," and "Onward, Ye Peoples!" concluded the program.
Recital Features Giles' Students
Two WMe Forest !Situdents and a junior high school student will be ·presented in a p~ano ;reciltal .tonight at 8 in the Humanities Building Auditorium by the Departmoo.t ol Music. 1
KriS!ta Merritt, a fourteen year old musidan. fr(}m Winston-salem, will perform Bach's F-rench- Suite in C minor. John Hancock, rophomere of Siler City, will play Schubert's Sonata, A Mayor, Clp 120. Beethoven's SoDJata in C mmor will be presented by Elizabeth Morris, sophomore of Fremont.
The ,tJJiree performers are JStudents of Christopher Giles, assistanJt professor of mmic.
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OG&B Fishes In May Party Boy: Lou Howard· Makes 'Easy Catch'
By TANYA . Pitcher Lou Howard, long
time favorite of his classmates and teammates because of Ms delightful habit o~ getting "fished in" at every turn, ha!l this week bec()me the object of the most delighful "fish" evert devised by a pr.anlcish ::rew.
Lou was !informed by a . tongue-in-cheek Old Gold dele~ gation that he had been selected NORMAN STOCKTON Party Boy for the month of May.
"Do you mean it?" w:as th~ gleeful reacti()([l. _
"Honest injun, Lou," theY! told him. '''You're in! The vote was unanimous."
• 'Then I better start living UP! to my reputation," he exclaimed, grabbing his shades.
Cool Music
"How 'bout a little cool mus-. ic, Lou?" somebody: piped up.
"Yeah, yeah," the fished-in~
"Party Boy" said. He stuck a; candle in an old 7-Up bottle, just for atmosphere. "Gotta preserve the old image, you know," he explained.
With a Wake Forest sweat shirt pulled on over his NORMAN STOCKTON shlrt and a! pile of well-seasoned Playboy Magazines all lined up for his afternoon's diversion, Lou put the fi:nishmg touches on that suave, lady-killing, campussnowing Party Boy role.
Fellow Monogram Clubber& who had been clued in on the. prank dropped by his room during the day, only to find theiii friend propped up amidl Play-, boys and more Playboys, tryingl to cram in a 24-how: pa.r:tying course.
Old Gold photographer reels in Lou Howard in Party Boy pose
"You heard the news," he ·asked modestly of each of them, as. they came and went. GroUiPs of them stood snickering in theJ halls, recalling old days and old fishes that had. won Lou his rodand reel reputation. For instanctl the one that was pulled on him in Gastonia last year at the NCAA regionals, when Deacon pitcher Ed Mandy callEd him ODJ
phone, told him he was a, w York scout, and offered
$28,000 to sign with the Yankees.
!
"I believe," Lou began in his, suavest tones, "that I will opeD! up a charge account at NORMAN STOCKTON'S the firs14 thing in the morning."
"Hey-maybe now ylou can get some shoulder-pads,'' one o:t: his teammates suggested.
"Yes, I suppose I ought to," the would-be Party Boy sighed. "I su,ppose I'll have to have a whole new wardrobe from NORMAN STOCKTON'S. Wake Forest sweat shirts are fine for the weekdays, but I suppose I'll be
·seeing a lot of action weekends now."
Old Gold staffers exited snickering up their editorial sleeves, at the humorous "fish" :they ihiad expertly reelEd lin. There he would be on the morrow-decked out in brand-'Il.ew ·sweaters, shirts, slacks and accessories all from the familiar NORMAN STOCKTON store on Cherryr Street.
Little did they realize who the real fishes would be on the mor-row! /
![Page 4: itlll null lark - Wake Forest University · Captain1 junior of Wash is elected cap-1-65 basketball by vote of his :re Forest team ' iling down an ~ game, whiCb cest in the At" ~onferen-ce](https://reader036.vdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022063018/5fdc4a4ee086324e234137b3/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
1Bltttk An All
College * * * WINSTO\'l-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, MAY 18, 1964
A Coniinunist Talks George Myers, a member of
the American Communist Party who visited the College last Wednesday, seemed at first glance to be singularly unimpressive. He struck many students as lacking in intelligence, unable to answer many pertinent questions, uninformed on communist doctrine and practices, and socialistic in viewpoint rather than communistic.
Certainly his visit did nothing to change the thinking of any student in the direction of Communism, although he may have caused some second thoughts about some of the legislation the United States has utilized to keep Communism in check. Hopefully, the visit might help to chip away at the support of the North Carolina law which forbids Communists from speaking at statesupported institutions, for speakers such as this one do not at all v'alidate the impression of Communists given by proponents of the Gag Law, who seem to think that any exposure to another way of thinking will destroy the college student's faith in the Amer~can way of life.
* * * First impressions, h o w e v e r,
must be tempered with careful thought, for students need to exercise caution in generalizing the visit of one man to the American Com:munist Party as .a whole, let alone the Party abroad. Myers should not lull those who heard him into thinking the Party in the United States is weak and inefficient, for it may well be that this was exactly the impression it was intended that he convey. It is as
much a mistake to underestimate the strength of the party as it is to overestimate the effects of its speakers on students. It is also possible that Myers' coal-miner background and his labor-union position is being utilized by the Party leaders in America to appeal to the working-class and refute the notion that Communism is dominated by intellectuals.
Even more experience with Communists is needed before students can even begin to make informed conclusions about them. It is fortunate that Wake Forest has no inane gag law hanging over her, and that freedom of speech and the right of academic inquiry still prevail on at least some of the College -campuses of North Carolina.
* * * One inexplicable aspect of Myers' visit was the rude and discourteous reception afforded
_ l1im by students, especially in the question-and-answer session Wednesday night. Myers made it quite clear that he was a trade unionist, and not a Marx theorist or an expert on the foreign policy of the Soviet Union. Students and visitors, however, persisted in asking controversial questions about such subjects as the Berlin wall and Cuba. Although an interest in these areas is understandable and desirable, and even though Myers' questiondodging was often galling, rude and discourteous treatment of a guest of the College is inexcusable. Whereas we deplore the totalitarian philosophy of Communism, it must be recognized that international politics is not entirely a black-and-white situation.
Evaluation Study Begins ,, As a member of the .Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, Wake Forest College is subjected to a penetrating self-study every ten years. This intensive evaluation was recently begun by the administration and faculty, and involves much more than just a peak into every corner of the campus.
Every facet that provides growth to Wake Forest as an institution of higher learning will be thoroughly investigated. Progress will and should be found and noted, but at the same time, failures will be uncovered and strongly realized. Questions will be asked, and questions will be answered, but will the most vital and alarming questions be solved? Will the study be as unique a study as Wake Forest demands, or will this study be forgotten after all the reports are made and apolo-gies expressed?
An examination of a college such as Wake Forest needs to be just as concerned with the intangibles of college life as it is w1th the polished product. Often too much emphasis is placed on the physical makeup, while the intellectual side of campus life is pushed aside. Personality integrity is slowly disappe'aring fro.m many college campuses today, and Wake Forest could lose this precious gem of education unless steps are made to keep it.
Some educators today express alann that too many colleges have forgotten the first and fundamental aim of a college-the development of the student. If Wake Forest finds itself guilty of these charges, we should concern ourselves with a renewed emphasis on liberal arts education for every student. All members of the student body
should delight in the works of great philosophers, lessons of history, literature that will outlast our own existence, and the simple majesty of nature. Doctor, lawyer, housewife and business executive can learn and profit by the self-evident relationship of all fields of knowledge. Then, Wake Forest can produce, not leaders of one phase of human enterprise, 'but leaders of humanity.
The old College motto, "For Humanity," should 'be written in red letters across every study sheet during this evaluation progcram. If these words do not reflect the ideas of Wake Forest's present students and faculty, then the reasons for this need to be unveiled and a remedy stated. Most alumni associated with the old campus felt that there was something in this motto which distinguished Wake Forest from other schools. They called it a "sort of spirit," an attitude-something that remained when details and mere facts were forgotten.
If this spirit has drifted away and the spirit of democracy with it, a spirit based on Christian principles of love for humanity, of respect for the inherent worth of every individual, and of charity and tole:rance, ·we must recover them. One of the aims of Wake Forest should be to help its students discover those things that will bring the great. ·est benefit and happiness to themselves and .to society.
The past decade has seen an emphasis on physical structures. May the next decade see a return of the emphasis on the student and his teachers. Let us work to turn out young men and women of leadership and power. No goal is harder to obtain. No goal is more worthy of our efforts.
CHARLES OSOLIN JiM SINKWAY Editor Business Manager
THIS ISSUE EDITED BY LINETA CRAVEN
ADRIAN KING, Assoelate Editor CHARI..m WINBERRY, Senior Editor LINETA CRAVEN, Managing Editor BILL BENTZ, Sports Editor RACHEL FLOYD, J'O DeYOUNG, DONIA WHITELEY, Feature Editor
Assistant Editors DENNIS HOFF, Associate Sports Editor LEON SPENCER, Circulation Manager
l'ounBI ded .January 15, 1911J, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, 014 Gold aD4
h *uckd Is PllbHshed each Monday durJng the school year excW!~urlng examination aD4
o liY periOds aa db'ectec1 b)' the Wake Forest PublicatlOIJS •
¥ember ot the AIJsoclated Collegiate Press. Represented :lOl' National Advertlafq bJ: RatloDal A4YmtbdDg Service, tne. Subscription rate: f2.50 per year. Second·elaSs poetap D&ld. Wlnaton..salem, N. C. Form 3579 should be malled to Box 'lMl, WlDatoD·S&lem. k. C. 1'1'108. P.rlntecl b7 '1'he Naahvtlle Grapldc. NashvW.e, N. C •.
Letters~ (All letters- to &he editor
most be sfgued; names wDl be withheld on req~:~est.) · -.
Distraught Conserv(Jtive To The EditiC>r: ..
As a subsc:ribeT Ito your1 paper ·just II'eCeiving the Colleg~ •PreSs Award as best paper may. I question your Editorial in ~ay 11th ilssue-"Political Conserva.., tism."
You quoted at lengJth. from H. McClosky who you s.tate is a political' scientist. I have never heard of this person· ·amd it •appears before you publish opinions especil!lilly those expressed in ,tlJ.is Editoria1. · you should ad'Vise yollr' readers of . rthe backgroWld of ~e writer.-_
Human Rights In North Carolina
I am !SOmewhat surprised·· that your .award winn.ing paJ>er would: :f!all for such a. tillade · lfrom H. McClosky, who you · said had studied the eoDsel'Va~ .tives- ;where did he study -them?- Who is he studying oc ihas studied under? JS he· · from this .side of ·the Atkmtic or ithe other? PleaJSe enlighten your readers on McClOISky.
If. your reading nw.terial is sca!l'ce -and you have to grab any kind of news release islent out to gullible Editors, than I suggest YIOU discontinue · the Editorial oollllDIIlJ.
New Approach Available? After feedini us with this
til:ade ·about ConservaJtism you then pUISsoy foot at the end of the .article struting - Radical ConserV'all:ism, like radical liberalilsJI;n is .a threat to the American way _of life. · · ....
By PAUL ELLIS STAFF WRITER
1954: The Supreme Court decision in favor of desegregation of public schools.
It began in the South and spread .to engulf the entire nation. Dem()II].St.retions for r-acial equality, even violent bloodlettmg, Lsignaled the beginning of perhapS! the greatest sociological revolution ·of modern times. Lunch-counter sit-ilns, human barricades in the streets, ganglike street brawls-all were expressions of a growing Negro unrest .and desire for freedom.
Demonstrations 1still continue, of course, a00 prejudice and bigotry still runs rampant. Most of the evils· of yesterday remain '~ith us today.. And the black man still yearns for his freedom. With the •season of the LSun rapidly approaching, rememberances of the lO!I!g, hot summer of 1963 become revitalized, and macr1y cannot but fear the course of the succeeding weeks •and month~.
Felin~ Convention
Whimsey By DONIA WBITELBY
FEA.TURI: EDITOR
Male students at Wake Forest, whose room-choosing consists of filling out a drab little c~ stating first and se~ond vrefcrences, have no idea what they are missing. To the womenfoThi exclusively goes the- taxing task of selecting a place where they will be most happy the fol~owing year, of scaring off any serious rivals for the po3ition, and of m~ing sure that all their friends' rooms are reasonably close--right next door or eirectly across the hall will usually suffice.
The entire process can besummed up in five words: scouting, selecting, ISwapp.ilng, scheming, and sigmng.
The first area covers the whole week of room-choosing and means .that at IS.nytime of the day or night any girl or girls are liable to burst :i111to your roo:::n, cast critical eyes into every corner, and make such discriminating comments as, "Hey, you can see the football practice field from here!" or "It's a lousy color but we could use tny old curtains, couldn't we?"
Selecting a number out of the hat is the mystery element, aft~r v/hich begins the grueling process of tryin-g to swap your No. 88 for somebody's No. 66-somebody whotSe lucky roommate just !happened to draw No. 12 or some Utopian !figure like that. Often the No. 88's will settle for a No. 87 - after <Jill, every little bit helps. After thirty some-odd swaps, you might come out with a number !low enough on the totem pole to put you i.."l oome obscure room higher than the basement level.
After all the numbers are drawn, the various· groups get together and try to outwit all the other various groups. The entire affair resembles a huge, catty log-rolling session: a "we'll let you-all have third floOJ.') if you'll pull your girls off first" sort of thing. Then of course there's always the one who iSl being ostracized but doesn't know it-somehow she hasn't caught on to any of the littie hints, and to - make matters. worse she has probably drawn the best number of an· and gets the choicest room on the hall . • .
Last Wednesday, however, two members of the Old Gold and Black staff were witness .to a new .and different expression of this revolution.
lin Raleigh, every thlrd Tuesday of each month durinlg ithe !Sehool year, the Nor:th Oaro• lina Council on Human Rights meets Wlder the auspices of the Governor's office. The Council, yet ;to have its constitution fully ratified by all parlicipat:iJn:g institutions, was established initially as· a union of Negro schools in Norrth Carolina. Since its inception, every accredited college and university in North Carolina has been extended an invitation to join.
Originally, the Negro member-schools appeared to have banded together in lthe interest of formulating a more imtellectual, a sensitive approach to the problem of integration. It appeared that they were ·seeking a substitute for the violence of the movement in the past.
While the direction and soope
Filially .come the signi11g-up fonnalities with such splitsecond choice as, "Should I get a room right next to the laundryroom or directly across from the parlor?"
But after the shedding of many more tears and the rolling of many more logs, ~eople ·seem to settle into place, carefully sharpened ·claws moe clip~ once again, and new frienc!·.shi-p~ are gingerly tried and proved promising,
For soon, the onslaught of final exams will bring tear~ shedding and ·log-rolliilg of quite
- a different kind.
Focus: Constangy
o~ the progr-am appears Ito have . broadened to include •areaJS of humaiil rights other than the race .iJssue, the key concern of the organization remains the design and facilitation of the new .approach.
·It was apparent on enterilng the small lecture room where ;the meeting was to be held that one group of individuals was particularly interested in Human Rights-the •gr:oup which :iiS denied the freedoms guaranteed by the constitutiOill of the United States. Of the 34 college students present, 29 were colored.
The chairman of the Council said, in effect, that North Carolina had more Negro colleges than any state in the nati0111 and that this alone would be reason to supercede violent demonstratioo with an intellectual approach. Digmity ·seemed to be ,the w.atchword. To use the 'natnf.al talent of ·the Negro in effort :to show the £rest of America that is haJS no corner on the market 10f thoug.hrtfu1neSIS, tolerance, or constructive hard work, appea!I'ed as a goal.
Through ·sever·al programs, . the ultimate goals of which are
to bring •about racial har!DDIDY and the coosequent betterment of man, the council stresJSes the point that- citizeD!S other than. Negroes mul<it re-ev.aluate their ideas on integration .and realize that the "rty;pical" Negro simply does- not exist.
If such a re-evaluation does, in fact, occur, then the stereotyped ·al"guments favoring segregartion .must necessarily starve •and wither away, ·and the Negro will have achieved his sought-alfter •<lllld righitful place in American society. Through organizations such as thi.s, the Negro image will be elevated to such an extent :that the American white will be forced to judge the Negro as an individual, not merely as a member of ·a "subservient" race.
Idealistic? Perhaps. But the Quiet Revolution p r o c e e d s
throughout tthe Negro colleges :in conjunciion with many white schools. The ultimate :goal is an ideal, but the :road to the goal becomeiSI increasingly well defined.
Perhaps, then, there is a more mature, intellectual ap. proach. Perhaps this approach
- may even succeed in accomplishi.ng the inevitable integration of divergent societiels comparatively painlessly.
May. I inject tltis .thought-.:. Responsible liberalism, in this country - :flor this coimtry is needed for ·the American way of life. ·
F. 'W. Brown Richmond, Va.
-'
l1npressions Given By 1st Negro Cf)ed
·•
By PAT SMITH STAFF WRITER
When I walked onto the campus of Wake Forest College in the fall of 1962, I was the picture of the typical scared freshman. But for. me it was more than just the ordinary fear of readjusting from one ldnd of scholastic life to another. I had what some would! cons<ider another strike against me-I am a Negy;o.
It woulcli, not have been so bad had I been one of many or even several Negroes to·attend claSlles here. Being only one out of the two colored students at Wake Forest and having the distinction of being the fiirst Negro coed to attend the regular school session placed quite a burden on my shoulders. Since this is a Baptist institution, I also had to my credit (or discredit) the fact that I am a Romanr Catholi:::. However, fighting aga.in!st odds is something which has always appealed: to me, so_ I determined to make the best 'of the situation. , The thing that helped io make
could have ~bed for. There is no denying that, at first, there was another problem of readjustment, a deeper, more serious· one <or at least so I think) than .adjustment to scholastic ilife. In a real sense, my ldfe as a student depended greatly on the success of my relationship With . ~ my roommate and -the otlier girls on my hal!l ami in the dorm. At the start, there was a hesi ... · tancy on both sides, one being reticent in her remarks or ex~ ·pression of opinions for fear of hurting or insulting the •other. But the ·constant association led to freer expression of ideas. Since that time there have been many lively discussioos in :fun-' and in earnest touching on practically any and every. subject under the sun. · As for the .social part of my
life oo campus, I .find it almost the same as if I were· attending a Negro college. Being tight at home dating is not a problem. · Undoubtedly, one of the principle objections of integration is the fear of interracial dating and marriage. I like to. consider myself .as beiilg QPen-minded enough to tolerate it in those
·who might do i.t but narrow.,. minded enough to insist on andl reswict myself entirely to Negro dates. Yet even within an integrated group there are times when I still have a feeling of< being isolatedl-alone in the ,. crowd.
After· The Conflict
lliis task easier was an element~ which .impressed me from the start and continues to exist on campus-the friendliness of the faculty and students. This attitude is one about which I recall reading in the catalog, but did not expect to. extend beyond the color bar .. Let me hasten to add that this attitude was only at general one; there were many times when my smile or greeting was not returllled. But I realized that allY radical change takes time to be accepted, even in general, so I toOk curious glanc.es, side remarlcl, and frosty or even angry looks in stride.
I feel that integration at 'Wake -Forest has beell! a successful venture. However, the situation is far from settled. The recruiting of qualified! Negro athletes was another step in the right direction. The administration -aar pears to.be doing its utmost, but integratioo is riot a matter that can be hurried along and the process is a relatively slow one.
By LEON SPENCER
Guilty as we halVe been, we would like to plead uninvolvement :in the political bickering of the ]aslt tbree yeal'IS for the purpoise of these statements. Thus ·avoiding the unfor.tun:ate :ilncidencels which have disrupt· ed campus affairs, we would like to comment brieflY on the contributions made by the immediarte past president of our student body rto our College.
These rs1iatements, we must point 10ut, are in •answer :to. no one, to no article, to no latter. We feel natural in J!ihe role of paiYing tribute to ·this indivi· duaa.
The fimt time we really met Mr. Constangy, he was !standing before a party caucus tell· ing.- everyone,- "As you . know, I'm pretty much ·m idealist." He received ·a sca,ttering of agreeing laughter, and the party !DOmination for president of his class.
We've never really been able <to dilsagree with the first comment we ever heard him m•ake. He has, we seem to fhink, approached each of hils> many programJS with !the ideai bebi.nd it foremost, yet he has the- ·ad· mll'able knack :to turn it into a practical project.
We've seen hlm stand before two hundred and fifty delegates
from thirty colleges as president of the State Student Legislature and\represent Wake For- . est effectively .and commendably, providing one of the most efficient assembliCIS in ills history.
We saw him a year eaxlier, before the same organimtron, asking for delegate ·Support in biSJ bid for ,the presidency. His longstandimg _campus opponent spoke on hils behalf. It is this momenrt: we 1see when we recall the conflicts before and after. And we realize .fuat a rarity baLS occurred lOll this campus', that two ·SUch outstanding leaders were here at the same rtime, .and \V18lll!ting th~ same .thing.· Na'tul'ally there were conflicts . . .
lt's :all over now, or should be. And we suddenly filnd that when we ·set ourselves· off from these events, it :iiS clear that some good came !Of 1t .• an.
We would be the first to refuse to painlt a faultless picture. Mr. Consl:angy has succeeded, but he has failed, too. We have illot ·always .agreed \vith him. But we cannot comprehend of anyone wbJo bas, in recent years, placed the College ·and the muden1Js first in a more devoted ·and sincere manner, than has this president. To him we pay this simple tribute, and wish :him well.
Gradually, as we became accustomed to 0111e another, I found being a Wake Forest student an-, increas:ingly ple011sant thing, Yet, I did not feel a real part of the total ICaiUPUS jpiCture. As ]\ find out now, thJ..s. fact was due to. my being a day student. Not living on campus bad distinct rusadvantages for me especially when it .came to participating in student activities and making friendS. It is true that I was a1 freshman debater for part of the first semester; I also had some ·friends. But I was disaa::pointed and unhappy that I felt so much like an outsider,- and intruder.
Therefore, at the beginning of my sophomore year, I resolved to do something to remedy the situation. I made application for a room in the dormitory, and luckily I was able to obtain one. This time I was face-to-face with· my biggest problem-living for the most part entirelY among members of another ra:ce. Going to classes with white students is one thing; but to eat, sleep, socialize or otherwise come into close contact with them as an equal was an entirel;r different matter.
Fortunately I was and still am. on a hall with a· group of girls whom I have since fowui to be about as open-minded as I
Now whenever I go about the cainpus, for the most p.art, 1. · feel like a bonaiide member of the student body, The general attitude as I view it now has cha.nged greatily from that which prevailed when I first anived. But even then I was never aware of any violent demonstrati()II].S oil racial prejuddce. .
Aside from the initial teDSJ.on, the only other time that any strain of communication was noticeable to me was during the fil:st violent clashes between whites and Negroes over equa1 rights. However, any diificulties. that I have undergone for the sake 'of integration have onlY served to increase my pride in being associated with Wake Forest College.
OG&B Meet - All students interested in
working on the staff of Old Gold and Black next year. have been requested to meet in Room 226 Reynolda todaY,
. at 4 p. m. Writers for news, features and columDS, sports writers and ·photographers are needed. ..
• . '
•
'i 1,
i i
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:ers·--;o &he editor .. . ;names wW request.)·
rght V(ltive · to your1 paper ' College •PreSs paper may' I itorial in M!ay ical Conserva.,
; 1~ from > you s.tate is 1tist. I bave liLs' person· ·amd ~ you publish lJy :those exEditorial · you
'llX' readers <Xf . f ~he writer.nat surprised·· winning pal>er ;uch <a· ·tiDade 1ky, who you · the Conse!'V'a~ : id he !Situdy ·
he , studying under? Is he· f ·the At'La!ntic E!'a!Se enlighten-McCIOISky.
g material - is have to grab ; release lslent ditors, then I ;continue · the
us with lthis ;ervaJtism you at the end of ;ing- Radic-al e radical libIreat to the
life. · · ;hJs :thought-:. ~lism, in this S COUntry is •merican way
·W. Brown chmond, Va.
n ~d for. There is
at first, there lem of read, more serious· · I think) than 1lastic ilife. In life as a stu~eatly on the rtionship With td . the otlier i in the dorm. · was a hesi.., · ~s. one being narks or ex .. IS for fear of 1g the 'other. ssociation led >n of ideas. !re have been ssions in fun.' !ling on prac!Very. subject
l part of my llild it almost ·ere· attending leing tight at t a problem. · ~ the principle :ration is the L dating ana, consider myO[)en-minded
! it in those but narrow.,.
insist on andj rely to Negro lthin an inte:e are times
a feeling o:f. lone in the,
ation at Wake a successful the situation
. The recruit..; ·egro athletes in the right
nistration -~ bs utmost, but a matter that long and the rely slow one, go about the
most part, l_ · e member of The general
• it now has •m that which first arrived. : never aware mstrations o;f!
litial tension, me that any lication wasas during the hes between •s over equal: JY difficulties . ·gone for the n have only my pride iQ with Wake
Meet tderested in ;taff of old
next year. ted to meet nolda today, t'S for news, IDlDS, sports 1otograpbers
Red· NOt A Theorist ;preyer ~its Legislature's Spe,aker· Ban Students Feel ]Jiyers Uninfor~ed
By LOUIS BISSETTE STAFF WRITER
. ·"U·· George. Myers is representative of the A.merican Communist· Party, then our capitalist system. iJn tl:te U. S. has nothing to fear from within."
This comment was made by a Wake Forest· student after hearing the Wedn~ay night lecture made by Myers -as a visitin!g spokesman for :the U.S. Communist· Party, 'and appeared to- renect the general opinion of the students who at-
. tended. Disappointment waJs express
ed by many •at Myers' inability to satisfactorily explam Marxilst Doctrine. His visit, howeveT, stimulated a great amount of interest among studenJts and few felt 'tnat the time s:Pent in a question ·aiild answer ISEISSilon · with the communi&t was wasted. Myel'S wa-s /sent here by the CQmmunist Party leadership in the U. S. at lthe illlvitation of Dr. Robert Gregory, associa.te pmfessor ' of hilstory. He ~SPCnt two days ·at Wake Forest, giv~ ·a main lecture in Wait
· ctiapel and .appearing befure several histOry claslses. .
Myers is currently a member of lthe National Executive Committee' of the ·American Communist Party and· is desig-. nalted -a CommllllJ.iis.t Party
. spokesman. ~ is , ·also em.: . ployed a writer for- "The Worker," a u: s.-'Oomml,lliist Party publication. ·
(Continued :from page 1J running, it would be very difficult. In order to avoid a !SeCond primary, a candidate must receive a maj-ority of all the vote•s cast in the first primary.
Most 'observers think it W:m boll' down to a three man race bj!tween. Preyer, Moore aiild Lake. Preyer seems to be in -rront now, but indicatioDJS are that there will be a second primary.
The chairman of the rally was Bill Shepherd who was the Demon Deacon while ay Wake Forest and formerly served aLs Deacon Club solicitor.
Ron Enders, senior of WinS/ton-Salem, and Jim Martin,
' senior of Liberty and past president of the college Young Democrats Club also were active in organizing the rally, which waLs attended by approximately 4,000 people.
Preyer spoke to the crowd -and said this election would deteTIDine whether North Carolina- "keePS! .growing, standis still or turn·s ba·ckward. I believe the · people --of this Sltate want to keep growing.
"I think the people of this state want ·a :governor who stands !for things and not ·jUJSt against -things," he continued.
Comments
The 1lormer chairman of the Marylallld Communist party, he wals raised in the coal regions of western Maryland, the son of a rriim.en.' After graduating from hiigh school, · he became
'GEORGE MYERS -JONES PHOTO
Me then proceeded to lilst and eomment on what he felt were the ,important issues of the election.
gets 'once over' treatment - Education. Preyer said this would be first in his administration and finst in his budget. He said he deplored the fact that 122,000 children go to school withiout breakfaSt allld 35,000 don't
' ,. active in the iJ.abor union movement, and later became head ofthe. OIO in Maryland and District of Columbia. He was relieved of !this pos<ition upon his initiation .ilnto the party.
, Myer-s later spent '4 yeam in ' federal prison for violation of
the Smith Act, which forbid!> advocacy of .the <JVerthrow of the U. S. government.
to make headway in the U. S., he answered, "There are les1s than 20,000 in ·the American Communist par.ty. As Ito our im!ability to make headway in America, it is obvious we haven't. The American people generally <reject the idea of SIOcialism." Myem also reported that his party vigorously -suprports the Soviet Union in the Sino-Soviet Lsplit. · ·
I ' '
IM'yers •answered many ques. tions concel'11ling a wide <range of. issues during his 1stay here. When •asked about Soviet ·agricultural problems, he replied, "I have to .admit the •agricultural program in the Soviet Union isn't wOil"'king very well-
1•· the pi-ogram _is. badly bent ·and has to be unproved ...
COncenning the number of members in .the Amerioan Communilst party and its inability
I:n an interview with the Old Gold ·and Black, Myers said that he ihad enjoyed his v,isit here •at Wake Forest very much. "il welcome ·the opportum1ty to come here and exchange ideas wifu the students." he said. "It ils beneficiail for me to gain an understanding of the American •student. Accepted or not, I enjoy answer~ ing questions concerning my beliefs." "After all," he joked, "I come fr(>m .the same town
Lab Plays Take Final C~rtain Call
By CAROL CLAXTON STAFF WRITER
A combination of Amazons, and Russians; a ·convict and ru
· school girl limped and leaped · their way across the College
Theater sta·ge Thw-sday and Friday nights in tile last set of this semesier's laboratory plays.
The evecing got off to a rather drippy start with ·~Fumed Oak," a Noel Coward a;>lay directed by Joyce Wilsie, in which about tile only thing to come off was Ertelle Brewer's .charming snif-
~ :rung. The other members Of the
cast-Wayne James as a mouse of a husband who turns lion, Gail Puzak as his overbearing mate, andi Susa!Jl, Thomas as hi.!i meddlesome mother-in-law--QCcasionally .seemed to be on the point. of escaping_ from their un~ certainty and -conveying thE!
frantic circling in which this women-dominated fanilly was engaged. However, too many missed cues, too much stumllling over lines, and too little intensity where it was needed resulted in a choppy production.
The tempo picked u.p Wii.tlJi "The Warrior's Husband," a~ broad farce which lustily attacked' female supremacy, militarY spending, and anything else its author, Julian Thompson, could present at an Ama:ron court.
One of the most exciting presentations w:as· Nick PateLla, a~ fonneT Mr. North Carolina, i1ll the role of the "delicate" male. Director Pam Clodfelter addledj some other dainty touches which set the l"O!ll[Pi.n:g mood-a tiny monkey, who was obviously making his stage debut, and 81 great many bananas hurled; about the stage-by the Amazons, not the monkey.
· E } d The pa-cE' slowed and the · xpansion S ate _qu~lity .. mcreased wtith "'I'.h.e! · The Bowmail Gray School of Valiant, a play with a standard
•Medicine bas •announced plans television situation of convict for the eJQPansion of its grad-· waiting to die, complete witbi uate program in microbiology. governor's ca!ll and priest's·
Dr. MaDson Meads, dean of counseling-but with a cliramatic tile medical school, said that twist. groaduate instruction leading to The success of the playwright, the Doctor of PhilosophY de- Holworthy Hall, in keeping tile
, gree in 'microbiology would be question, "Is the convict really b offered, effective July 1. valiant?" hanging untill: the end, l Dr. Quentin N. ~. pro- . and the success of the actors in
as Lefty Grove," major league baJseball pitcher. '
The majority of the studen-ts at W:ake Forest College seemed to whole-heartedly ·agree with M&erSI on one point howeverthe Nor.th Carolilll!a Speaker Ban Law. For a1s Myers stated, "lit is ·SIO damned ridiculous."
Confronted with the fact tba.t many students felt he wats• not well enough wormed on Marxist theory, iMyem replied, "I am a tmde unionist not a Marxist theor-ist." He explained that his interes,ts lie in the p:mctical application of socialist solutions to problems found in thils country.
Students seemed to feel that a 1spokesman of the CommUIIli&t party should know, •at minimum, ·as much about' the basic principleS. of his movement as· llis audience, and this did not· appear ·to be Lso with Myers.
Go Rocky! The word late Friday night as
the new staff struggled to complete its work on tile OG&B was that Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York was scorilllg an upset victory in tile Oregon Republican primary.
We cheer Governor Rockefeller on, .along with 'other Republican moderates ·as ,theywe hope-gatller steam to head off Senator Sundust, er . . • Goldwater.
"All that glitters ain't Gold"a·nd that's :tor sure Wii.th tile man fro~ Arizona.
for all of the plays with the exception of director Ro~my Watts'· successful production of "The Valiant." Except for occasional ·stumbles, the four student-di; rectedl plays seemed to get wherever tlley were go:ing.
even have lunch. "As Governor of this IState I will not allow a program -that does not pnovil;le lunch for every student."
-Minimum wage. He •said it is !llecessary to raise the minimum wage from $.85 to $1J.OO. "I my that $34 is not enough for a man working a normal 40 hour week."
-.Jobs. He said North Oarolina had to. try and find 180,000 new jobs and at the same time eliminate state polsitions which were unneeded.
-Rood bond issue. Preyer SJaid the state needed ·a matn who "will fight for the road bond issue. We don't need to refer this to any committee as there are oow 22,000 miles of tmpaved roads in this staJte." He has proposed a new 300 million doLlar bond islsue without new taxes.
"We are a respected state," he said, "amd we want to remain respected and do !!lOt want to become an'Oither Alabama or Missilssippi." After this statement he received a huge ovation from the audience.
He ISaid he feLt North Carolinians wanted a society "ba·sed on law 181tld order, based 1011 respect for this law and erder and respect for every man.
"We have gone far," he contii!lued, "but we will go further yet if we decide to take advantage of these oppovtu:nities. ''
During the COU11Se of the evcnmg, entertainment was provided by sever:ai musical ~oups including the Hunts-men.
ROBIN HOOD ·DRIVE-IN PA 2-6608 Robin Hood Road
Sunday-Wednesday: (Show starts at dark) LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (Color)
Alae Guinness, Peter O'Tole GERINOMO (Color)
Thursday-saturday: FACTS OF LIFE (Color) &b Hope, . Lucille Ball LOOKING IN THE WINDOW
Paul Anker, Ruth Roman
Pa.tronize OG&B Advertisers
OLD GOLD AND BLACK MoDday, May 18, 1964 PAGE FIVE ' Tate, Jones Head Committee
'64 Orientation Set Bancroft Elected Head By s~~~Fv!RI~~:Ns ~e~!d:mf:edori~~~:~ ~?~n~ OfY omtg Republicans
Seveval books to be read dur- dering a large number of this ing the summer, a library or- year'-s. freshmen are on aca-, ientation, and an extension of demic probation and nearly the orientation period from one one-third of the freshma:n class, week to one semester are the is below a •c·· average." main iDDJov-ations in the orien- To supplement this need, intation program in store for coming freshmen will be ·asked incoming freshmen next fall. to have read, before arriving
&ginning on Tuesday, Sept. at Wake Forest, a few books 15, freshmen will be introduced selected by· ·a facutly. committo an orientation program that tee to prepare them for the w.ill stick pretty-much to the critical an·alYISis type of readover-all ·program established ing so vital to every college last year. student. The boo~ will be dils-
Cliff Lowery, student body cussed .in the orientation groups president, e~plained the ex- with the group leaders and aac-· tension of time from the usual demic advisor. five days to one semester as LOwery stated :that the re"an idea the committee is sponse to the orientation comworking on." mittee .group leaders' positions
"Previow;ly freshmen bad so was excellent. "More than 300. much tlrnown at them during people signed up, but 'we will the orientation program tllat have approximately only 50 he was lucky to retain a frac- groups,'' he •said. "We hope tion of all he heard about. to utilize the people not chosen The committee i~S tryi!ll!g to find as group ·leaders to serve as oome way -to spread out the 'Big Brothers', a carryover condensed program for perhaps from las.t year's program, a full semester so that tile headed by Steve Martin, risfreshmaiil will be oriented grad- ing ~Senior • of Elkin. .'Big Broually, and, we hope, 'more thers' will be aSISigned a suite fully. Of course, the meat of in- the men's dormitorieiS· to the program will still be intro- counsel the freshmen in any duced during tile orientation problems thalt they may have week itself.'' in getting adjmted to college
Neal Tate, rising ··senior of life. Gastomia, and Dan Jones, ris- "We hope that this year's ing senior of Charlotte, will he Honor ·Council advisors will be 'co-chairmen of the committee., present or previous Council •The ileed for a co-chairman members," Lowery concluded. WaSI introduced when Tate re- Students chosen. as orientaceived a felloWIS<bip for a sum- tion group leadel"s will be anmer's study at Tulane Uni- nounced sometime this week. veTsity. Jones will be mainly Also, a list for anyone interconcerned with the hoiilOr coun- ested in beilllg a "Big Brother" cil advisors. will be placed at the desk Tues-
Lowery said the committee day.
BUTCH LENNON
President Butch Lenno~. nsllllg senior
from Wilmin~on, has been voted by the incoming Honor Council as its 1964-1965 president. _Lennon was chosen over two holdovers from last year's council, Dan Jones, rising -senior of Charlotte, and Roger Willetts, rising senior of Williamsbuxg, Va.
A dean's list srtudent, Lennon will •serve ·as president of Kappa Sigma fraternity for the coming year and will be a member of the Interfraternity Council. Last year he was the I.F.C. vice-president 13.1lld -served on the College Union's major func.tiolliSl commtttee.
476 • • •
Doctor To Speak' Dr. H. Homton Merritt, dean
of the Faculty of Medicine ·allld vice president in charge of medical affairs at Columbia University College of Physicians amd Surgeons, will deliver the .annual Nathalie Gray Bernard Memorial Lecture at 7:30 p. m. today in the amphitheater of the Bowmam. Gray School of Medicine.
Dr. Merritt, an internationall:y. known neurologist and medical school adminis.trator, will speak on "Pathophysiology alll.d Therapy of Convulsive Disorders."
The Wake Forest V'al1Sity Ba@ and Wake Forest Concert Band will present a Lawn concert at 7 p. m. . Friday iii front · of Wait Chapel. This concert was previou:sly scheduled for Sunday afternoon, M!ay 24.
Treasurer's Note The College treasurer's of·
fice has poste·d a list of aU students who are eligible to receive the 1964 Howler. Each student has been requested to check to see if his name is on the list. If a letter preceeds a student's name, he has an account which must be cleared in the treasurer's office before he can receive his Howler. -
(that's the number of subscriptions we had last year)
851 • • • (that's tlle· number of subscriptions we have this year)
1,250 • • • (that's the number of subscriptions we'll have next year)
WHY?
Jim Bancroft, rising senior of York, Pa., wa,s elected president of the Wake Forest Young Republicans C'lub Last Tuesday night for lthe 1964-65 LSIChool yea~. He succeeds Adrian King, seruor of Kinston.
Bancroft i:s alSIO serving as vice chairnian of the North Carolina Young Republicans College Council. He is a member of Delta Sigma Phi -social haternity.
Jack Brown, rismg !Senior of Timonium, Md., was elected vice president. He is a member of the 1964-65 Student Legislature •and a member 10f Sigma Phi Epsilon social fraternity.
Gail Puzak, rising junior of Arlington, V.a., was elected recordiing secretary to fue club. Sandy Allison, rising junior of Summit, N. J. was elected corresponding secretary.
Bill Hendrickls, rising senior of Beauilort, S. C., WaiSJ elected treasurer. He is a member of Sigma Chi social fra.ternity.
The club heard plans for the creati<m of a campaign com: mittee to work in the fall elections. Bancroft, who has been working with Wyatt A. (Nab) Armfield, GOP candidate for Congress from the Fifth District,· said fue local club has been invited to assist in all
JIM BANCROFT • . . new YRC president , . •
aspects of - the congressional campaign. He said a committee will be selected to organize campus support for Armfield.
The club heard Edward (Ed) Mattar, national chairman of Youth for Rockefeller for President explain why he felt the New York Governor would wiJi the Republican nomilnation and the Genel'al Election in November. There W!liS a queSition and answer period following !his remarks. (See related sbory. paoge 2.J
DOWNTOWN f'~ .NORTHSIDE OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 'Tlll 9
;',. ·. fessor .and chairman . of the conveying this questioo made the . ' Department of - Microbiology, play an effeCtive attempt at
will direct the new program serious drama in an evening whieh will be initiated through · otherwise devoted to the comic.
r:f~l.W."il:..W>.~~~-~:g::::::::~.~m:~":H:..r~
Because the OLD GOLD AND B-LACK is one of the most ou.tstam.diing papers -in the nation (.the last 13 !Semesters have been AU-American ones) . . . that's why circulatilon has groWIIl. by leaps ·and bounds. Won't you enter .a subscription for what the ACP called the :Pacemaker and .the Charlotte Observer C'alled the best college newspaper of
t a $300,000 t r a in in g -grant, A great deal of credit is due to 'f ,. awarded' recently .to lthe medi- Joe Cargo as the convict and f cal school by tile National In- Bill Hopkins as the warden for
'i I_
stitutes of Health. the most believable performances of the evening.
j ~· Dorm Appeals i The BOard of Appeals for
dormitory· damages will meet at 4 p. m. today in Room 230, Reynolda Hall. All students wishing .to appeal dorm damage asses~Smen.ts must register
··. with Mark Reece, Dean of Men, before this meeting.
With only 4,000 dea·thso in service, ·:the Revolu.tionarry War was one of tile least bloody
"ever fought by U. S. armed forces.
For best aU-round presentation, the prize should probably go to "The Marriage Proposal," directed by Felice Proctor. A lively comedy of errors, the Chekhov play laughed loudly at the fierce rivalry between two Russian families, which almost -cost a maiden long overdue for marriage, a husband. Sand!y Al-lison, as the belligerent young; woman, Peter Bugel as her not_, so-sure-he-would-be suitor, and Dan Custer as her mecurial father kept the play going at a fast clip.
Speed seemed to be .the word)
·_Soda Shop Special \
Jumbo Ice Cream Soda
.19 All Week We build it with your favorite ice cream with
whipped cream topping _and a red cherry.
Take Time Out For A Treat!
A. R. A. Slater School and College Services
the year? '
Seniors are invited to subscribe now, even without your next £all's 'addreis·s. We will conrtact you late this summer. Others are invited to subscribe for their parents amd friends. One !Subscription is $2.50; two ·are $4.00, a saving of •a dollar. Fill in the blank below, or sign at .the information desk.
Please enter this subscription for the Old Gold and Black for 1964-65:
.............................. [ ] Check if senior and name do 111ot know next fall's
address. Enter home ................. ~.dfu~~~------·--··------······--···----·--··· .. ·--·address at left.
[ ] Please bill [ ] Payment enclosed Box 7567 Reynolda Station, Winston-salem, N. C.
• WHAT'S YOUR ZIP CODE
15. filled to the brim with everything to make this summer full of sun, flllll and fashion, 2-piece cotton with two zipper front in navy with red and white trim or red with navy an.d white trim, sizes 5-15.
mail and phone orders promptly filled, write Robin' W. Fourth St., Winston-Salem, N. C., PA 3-5596. uuttSJ.ae regular delivery area add 35c poiStage, 3% sales
on all items. mailed to N. C. address. State 2nd color choice.
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PAGE SIX Monday, May 18, 1964 OLD GOLD AND BLACIK ,.
DEACS. • • Who Are GREEKS
. By DANNY KELLUM STAFF WRITER
KELLUM Heaven On A Sand Platter
Grimes Elected PEK President
John Grim~s. rising 100nior of Cooleemee, was ~recently elected president of Phi Epsilon Kiappa, physical eduoation professional fratennity, for next year.
Other officers are ' Floyd Perry, rising senior of ·RoSeland, N. J., vice president;
CONVENIENT M.'VJNGB GUARANTEED BE'1'UU1'8 LIFETIME BECURlTY COMPLETE FINANCING PROGBAM
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BILL PACKER SENIORS: Be Sure To Ask About Yow
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' '
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Foreign Car Service ' 414 BROOKSTOWN AVE.
PAS-7541
The beach is many things to many people. To the nudiJSt its a sun-baked hide. To the albino, its a pigmented hell. But to the fraternity man, its heav~n on a sand platter.
Joe Wright, ri.sling seniOr of i~iijii~=~iijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijijiijiijiijiiii Remember that .the body you sor. Assuming th·at you win, Winston-salem, secretary; Dave ~---;;;;;;;;;;iiiijiiiij-----------~ .. left in Room 40 is the .pride of you have to face what every Todd, rising senior Oif Arlilllg- I Zeta Pi Chi Alpha. His shlnim:g ma~Stermind does in this sttua- ton, va., treasurer; John An- u You Like QuaUty, Yoa'll Ge For personality, soft words, ·and tion-what to do with •the bOdy? derson, rising senior of W•aterdaily Bible readingiS have made Be gentle, but firm. Lug the ford, N. Y., sergeant-at-arms; him an irnspiration to his bro- flesh to a quiet p1ace where he Mike Kelly, rilsing senior of thel'IS and the envy of ·the other may sleep-alone. Kingsport, Temn., hisfurran, and fraternities. A 1 tho u g h poor Now you are ready for fun, Tom Futch, rising junior of George ~ay not be ·~ Gr~k fun, fun! Dash off to your Norfolk, Va., guide. god, he lS a fra~erruty man room, lock door, place chest -----------?nd ~hat makes him close to in frO!Ilt of door, ·and collapse. infallible. Sleep well, for you will need
Poor George ·the reiSt. Let it n~t be forgotten
Crescent Beach, S. C., this weekend.
Don Donadio, ju¢.or of Hampton, Va., pinned Nell Hoyle,
Paschal Shoe Repair REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTa
ancl
PARKWAY PLAZA SHOPPING Cl!:NTEB
~ Mon. & Fri. Nites P111me PA 4-NII
That golden ball that blinds, blll'll.S, •and tans! Breaking blue waves! The soft sands that take down the footprints of each beachcomber-Ah! Fratel1Jtity men fancy ·the beach for the chance to exhibit their hairy chests and bulging mUIScles. No doubt, it'IS "fun in the sun" for all fearless ·girls who accompany the Greeks on a weekend excUI1Sion.
Boistrous pounding, pattering of weejU!IllS •and bare feet migrating down ·the hall mean one thing-the combo is about .to commence playing. Poor George, awakened by the stampede, appears dazed •and a little more rthan surprised to find that you are 1s.till with him. Moved by this feeling, he may even outdo himself and offer ·to take you to the party.
that somewhere out there, the agressor, though stunned temporarily, is dreaming of a new maneuver .to sweep you off your feet ...
Junior coed of Thomasville.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tommy Miller, junior of Lex- i' ington, pimled Betty Foil of. Greensboro College. Purdy Bl'att of Meredith College was pinned
But to the one in 100 lass who rtliilS ·across a "·sack-rat" for an escort, yours will be a mighty miJSsion. You have llllallly battles to fi!ght before tomorrow's' sunrise.
Not Sleepy?
Here's to you, the one in one htmdred! by Lee Weaver.
AI Viehman of Shelby and Billy Davis of Conwey were initiated into the fraternity.
Sigma Chi
On May 9, the follDwing boys were initiated into the chapter: Bob Sumner, freshman of Burlington; Harry Hutchins, sopbo-
Hinkle's Boo·k Store At The
REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTER
Colbplete line of books, school supplies, trifta, gr~ting cards, office supplies, artist supplies, and leather cooda.
PHONE PA 3-4172
Thruway , Shf)pping Center
300 S. Stniford Bet. WIDStoJloSalem. N.C.
~e~~.~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Coonfill, jtmior of Winston- r Salem; Don V10n Cannor, fresh-man of GreeDSboro; Jim Harris,
sophomore of Valdese; Bruce Mr·-. Barbecue Oarter, oophomore of Front Royal, Va.; and Bob Howell, sophomore of Wilmington.
Jim Wall, ~nior of Greensboro, has become engaged to Sara Jo Oates of ~aleigh and Don Metzger, senior of Chatham, N. J., is engaged to Joyce Severin of San Gabriel.
This pa·st weekend the "Sigs"
BAV:E YOU GOTTEN TO KNOW MR. BARBECUE? IF Ill'OT, YOU'RE MISSING OUT ON SOME MIGHTY DELl:CIOUS FOOD! YOU'LL FIND MR. B-ARBECUE OUT ON PETERS CREEK PARKWAY ••• UNDERNEA'l'JI A UNIQUE SIGN AND IN AN AT'I'B.ACI'IVE NEW BUILDING.
celebrated their annual "Sweet- ·-:;::;::::;;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::~ heart Ball" a•t Myrtle Beach, ~ S.C.
6 BARBERS TO SERVE YOU At
WEST 4th STR.EET BARBER SHOP ODe BaH Block We!M el Sears
LAMBERTI BEAUTY SALON FOR THE COEDS AND FACULTY OF
WAKE FOREST COLLEGE.
Now Located In The Beaut.ilul Reynolda Moor Shopping Center, So Close To The Campu.
PHONE PA 2·6193
Don't Forget To Register Each Visit For Free Gifta.
Manor Texaco R·EADY AND EQUIPPED TO SERVE YOU
e Excellent Service
• Superior Texaco Products e · Experienced Staff
• Modern Equipment
• Open 24 Hours A Day
Special Consideration For All College Students
Come in rand say hello to the new owner, Robert E. Seymour.
REGISTER for $1000.00 WORTH of FURNITURE TODA'f
ELLIS CYCLE lZ6 N. MARSHALL ST. XL CLEANERS "Dome of Plua Pie ..
and Spaghetti REYNOLDA GRILL
Specialisln&' In Charcoal Steaks - We Cater to
Small Private Parlle8
THERE'$ NO SECRET to producing· fine phOtoen.eravfqa. You simply take ganerous amounts of exper:lence, sldll and COII8clentfous attitude and combiDe them with the best meehllllleal equipment avatlable today.
PJedmODt Eoiraviu.ir foDows tbJs formula. on every job. Let PJedmout aolve your plate problems for pubJJcatioDa. broetwre.. color-procen ~-
PIBDIIO:NT B!fGBAVING CO. I'.& z.tnz. WIDafDD.Salela. !f. c.
One-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.
INSTANT SERVICE! SERVING WAKE FOREST COUEBE
. HAMBURGERS • • • 15c CHEESEBURGERS 20c FRENCH FRIES •• I 15c DRINKS •••• 12c
lext to Ammens Esso on Reynolda Road
BEST Mill SHAKE II TOWN!
ODELL MAnHEWS MOTORS See The New 64's
PLYM·OUTH -·VALIANT-- FIAT P·A 2-0371 638 W. F ou:rtb St.
CAMEL PAWN SHOP, INC. 422 N. LIBERTY
~ARGAJNS IN OUT-OF-PAWN MERCIIANDJIB
Radios ............................ 9.95 up Wedding Bands .......... 4.95 up Pho~graphs ............ 12.50 up Birthstone Rinn BinocUlars .. .......... .... 14.95 up Ladles' .................... 4.95 up Watcltes ........................ 9.95up Men's ........................ 7.50up Guital.'S ..................... ... 12.50 U;P Cameras ... ................... 3.15 up
Suitcases ...................... 3.95up
STALEY'S Northside Restaurant
Ready to serve you a eomplete variety of foods; speelal1zflle Jn steaks and sl!ort orders.
* * * Use the convenience of our Tele-Tray car hop service. or dine inside Jn a qll{et, cordial atmosphere.
* * * Open 7 days a week f!'Om 8 A. M. until 10 P. M., ~ breakfast, luncheons, and dinners.
LOCATED AT NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CENTER MR. and MRS. CARL WEBSTER, Managers
For an Ice Cream Treat Where All The Town's People Meet and Greet
Kitchen-Fresh Custom-Packed Old Dominion Candies
. {
ALL YOU CAN-EAT!! $1.75 Per Person Monday, ~uesday and Wednesday
Sto9P.M.
• Italian Spaghetti with_ Meatballs, Anchovies, or Mushrooms
or
• PIZZA (your choice) (the way "you" like it)
Venetian ·Lounge Expressway Lanes off Stratford
Reservations-· PA 3-8623
Reynolda MaAor Cafeteria LOCATED AT T·HE REYNOLDA MANOR .SH·OPPING CENTER
' I
Built with yo,u in mind-The world's. best food at prices the college stu-dent can easily afford. Come out and see our new ultra modern facilities.·
Pleasant surroundings! Music while you eat! Private tables! 1E~cellent staff to serve you! Wake Foreatera, this place is for. you. 1
Say hello to the m•agers ••• Lunch, 10:45 to 2:15, Supper, 4:4& to 8:00 SA.M, ERNEST, and JIMMY
. "
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• 'VlCe.i VAGEN
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\
VIEWING the bEACS
By BOB LIPPER 8PORT8 WRITER
''Wait 'Til Next Year'' · · Joe Garagiola, the sportscaster who' also happens to· be Yogi Berra's chief chro:riicler, once commented that "baseball is . a funny game."
At Wake Forest, however, the game is taken in . dead earnestness, and because of this outlook :it is a shame that the Deacons did not win the -·~ACC champioiuihip. To lose the title is heart:breaking, especially for the twelve seniors who 'have played their last college game. These boys :played ·key roles in successful Wake pennant -~:drives of 1962 and 1963, 'but F~te simply was against them this year-Fate and a fine bunch of ballplayers from Chapel Hill.
The Deacs undoubtedly were hurt by the pres- . sure which falls on ~any highly ranked team. In .J~is respect, Wake Forest can be likened to the
·• San Francisco Giants, the perennial favorites of , the national League. Ever since moving from New :York, the Giants built up their team until they
1, :had the finest collection of hitters in baseball. ~Nonetheless, the only pennant they have won ·;since m()vi;ng was in 1962, but it· has ·been the ·toughness of the league and not Giant ineptitude that has prevented them from capturing more flags.
ACC Is Tough On Favorites This year, Wake opened the season with a bang,
· taking ten straight games over such. highly rated 1;_ f.oes as Florida State and Michigan State. Then,
though, the Deacs entered conference play, and the.· ACC is as contemptuous of favorites as the National League. The fact that the Deacons were Number Two in the .nation made no difference to
· the other seven members of the conference. Tense, close victories. replaced the· runaway wins ·of last
. year, and he•artstop'ping defeats forced the anxious Deacs to press even hardel:".
The Deacons' princip.al tormenter was North . Carolina, the only team to defeat Wake twice
:· this season. The Tarheels eked out their key ·• :· victories in chaJrn.pionship style. The first came
on a ninth inning single by Jim Speight, and the second on a masterful shutout hurled by lefty
;,
l .,
· ..
fl
Jerry Davis. ·
Wake Forest, however, was not the only team . to fall two times to Carolina. The Heels also defeated their other six ACC opponents twice,
. thus attaining the first perfect league record in conference history. Thus, the Deacs' plight . was roughly similar to that of the 1954 New York Yankees. That year, the Bronx Bombers won over 100 games only to see Cleveland. capture the pennant with an all-time record 111 victories.
PercentQges Indicate Good y·ea~ Like the 1954 Yank;ees, the Deacons enjoyed a
fine year. In fact, the final 23-7 record is one of the best in Wake Forest history. It was only the eighth time since 1916 tha;t Wake has topped the twenty mark and the third straight year that Jack Stallings' charges have passed that. plateau. In -the ten previous years of ACC play, Wake had an excellent .685 percentage against both conference and non-conference opposition. This year's percentage of .767 easily surpasses that figure. In addition, this season's conference record of 9-4 (.697) also tops the past. ten year won-loss percentage of .629 in ACC games.
So, it wasn't a bad ye1ar after all. Actually, it was a damn good year.· Although Wake didn't take the conference championship, they played championship ball and certainly did not blow t~e title. _The Dea~ons showed their class by winnmg their last five games after having been eliminated from title contention by Carolina. These boys have nothing of ·which to be ashamed for theirs is an enviable record.
In the words of the old Brooklyn Dodger fan, "Wait 'til ~ext year!" ·
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OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 18, 1964 PAGE SEVEN
Beatty Discusses career, Ray Norton ContrOversy
Leighton Has Tennis D """'kmmm:r.:·t1i ;National Pastime? ~<>:,::.:s
On Upswing ~. u e Takes D1ve By BILL BENTZ SPORTS EDITOR
The wake Forest tenms team M In Splashball Melee climbed a notch over their 1963< ~· finish at the conference tournament at Durham !last week .. Coach Leighton's squad continued to improve as they managed a tie for fifth with Virginia. The Deacons amassed severu points, four in singles and three
International track star Jim. Beatty achieved success the hard: 'way. His battle can be likened to the salmon who fought halfway lllp ~e rapids, quit, yvas; washed back, then had I to thrash all the way Ito the top.· Beatty'IS climo to fame was a1 ·choppy, grueling struggle. · ·
Beatty was .a top notch miler and two miler at North Carcilillla. He ran a 4:06 miJ.e and a 9:01 two mile while running fo11 Coach. Dale Ranson's Tarheels. Three times he placed second in NCAA distance events.
After havilng been graduated from UNC in 1956, Beatty and, six other trackmen traveloo to Europe to study the Finnish system of runndng. Beatty, noticed that, although the Finns trained twice as much as h.e had at Carolina, his times were not far over the times of the Europeans. He had no doubt that, with more training, he could! Tllll a sub-four mmute mile.
Still, there were no track; clubs in North Carolina, SO\ Beatty retired witb no . though of running agadn. "I received no encouragem~t to run," Beatty told this :reporter iin an :interview while on Jt:he Wake Fore~ campus last week.. "If I had -continued to run I wouild have been regaroed as some kind of nut. This wasn't the case in. Caliiomia where they had clubs like the Sol.lltb.ern California Striders and Santa Clara'Youtb Village. "I had no opportunitY here, so I quit."
A Decision
Then in 1959 IS! friend called Beatty on the phone and suggested they attend the RussianAmerl.c·an track meet in Philadelphia.
"I hadn't ev:en seen a trac~ meet in one and a half years," said Beatty. "I was wa:y over weighlt ·amd had even ·started smoking a bit. But thlts was the incentive I needed, so I went.
"After the meet my friend said to me, 'You ooul.d have won out there today, Jim.'
"'You knpw, Jack,' I saia, 'I think you're right.' I made UQ my mind right then to start running again!'
Beatty was 25 ·years old, but he was determilned to r.ank with the world's best. With the advice of Ranson, Beatty moved to California to tradn UDder Mike Igloi, Coach of :the Striders, whom Beatty considers "the world's g r e a t e s t distance coach.'' . · It was a blood, sweat, anclj
tears affair for Beart;ty fighting to regain his conditioning peak. But Beatty's months of sacrifice paid off with the American 1500 meter ·record, rth.e American Citizen's 5000 meter and three llli!la records, and the world two mile outdoor .and one mile indoor records.
Now ,and old! professional of 29 years, Beatty is pointing toward 1the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo. I~ is a move demanding assignment than would appear.
Betty will ru!D. in 'invitational meets in California early this summer in preparation fur the i..tritial Olympic trails in early July. Beatty then must r~ach a peak for the Russian-American track meet later in July. He will have 1lo be in top condition for the finail trails in September,
. --VERNOR PHOTO TRACK GREAT Jim Beatty and student body president Cliff Lowery diseuss numing.
and then again for the Olympics and field men in the United in October. There is no margin, States ihelJ) when the Olympics for fadlure in aill.Y of these meets. roll around every four years?
Beatty, while discUISSing the The athletes co1,1ld spend all Olympics, was asked about the of their rt:ime trammg. We would\ most controversial subject of the be on the same level as Russia. 1960 Rome Olympi-cs-Ray Nor- "1, ·like a lot of other track ton. Norton was supposed to men, ha;ve ptissed important sweep the 100 and 200 meter for training by having to travel so the United State~. but was swept much. I feel that some kind of himself. assistance is needed, but not for
"This is just my personal ob- llhe 'individual. We need: fmanciru, servati.on, pure theory," said the help for administration, coa-chsmall, SWiarthy athlete with jet ang, facilities, and the develop:black hair. "I think Dave Sime's :m.ent of clubs and teams. The qualifying for the Olympics was a~thletes don't need more training flhe begilrming of rthe end of Nor- time. ton.· "But it is unfair to cut a
"In 1959 Norton WillS king of person's pay when he has to the world's spl'linters. His con- leave his job to compete in a lfidence waJS high. Then Haey of meet. An employer should be Germany ran a 10-fl.at in 1960 a:ble :to pay rthe athlete, then and a .couple of more bOys wer~ later deduct that money at :incoming UP. Sime ~as training come tax time.Butihave never more consistent!ly: He'~ a natur-:. heard an a·thlete complam about al, im!Pressive, powerful rtllliJ1el1 lack of training time." with confidence. Sime ran a 10.1 What was Beatty's bigges1j for the 100 meters and! Norton thrill in track? "I've had twq started worrying, thinking about big moments in sport. One was the challeng~e. Sime caused hin'l! when I ran a 3.58 mile in Modesconcern. He never stopped wor- ta, Cal., after six months &f r-.,JiDg, his confidence dipped, tra.imng in 1960. and his rwming suffered." "My other big .thrill was hav-
Much ado has been made ing :the luck to run the first inabout rthe fact that American& dl()()r sub-four minute mile. It might be losi!llg their domina- was a first in a day •and age tion .in the sprints. "There is no when records are broken as fast question as to the· fact l!hat no SIS they are made. At least I can other country has the depth ~ say I wa>s the first. And in conthe sprints like we do," says the junction with tills it was done by handsome, affable Beatty. "But , an American. ]JJ.at is what was ·there iSI a lot of competition in bn,portant." the world. We're not' getting any Jim Beatty is 29 years old, slower. When God created hu- very old for a distanc·e runner .. man beings, he didn't just create He has .a long, hard road ahead the :fast . ones to be Americans.. ~f he is to qualify, then win the 6sSi-a o0anm08 09992001 5000 meter !run in Tokyo this
m doubles. North Carolina easily romped
to the title as e~ected. Highlight of the tournament was George Sokol's third straight silngles championJship an unp~ cedented feat in ACC history. He tore through Jdm Busick of Maryland who beat him earlier at College Park.
· Wake's points came through Curt Dixon's first and second round victories, a win by Lindsay Pratt, l)ne by Mike Alcala, and three doubles victories by the team of Tom Williams and l\lca:la.
Dixon's triumph in the second round 'ovel." Barry Cleveland of Mary~and was one of the upsets of the tourney. Cleveland plays the t.JU.rd position on Maryland's powerful undefeated team. Curt's steady game gradually wore cliown Cleveland's power; Dixon
'fLTially won 8-6, 8-6. Dixon succumbed in the third
round to Duke's No. 1 player, ,Jerry Mattson.
The Deacons finished with an 8-6-2 leclger, far better 'than last season's disastrous 3-13. Nin~ of · the ten I)lan squad wlili return. The one J.oss will be Tom Williams of Villanova, Pa. Williams held down the No. 4 spot.
Returning will be Alcala, Dixon, and Pratt, the No. 1, 2,' and 3 men for the Deacons. Also back will be Steve Parsons and John Memory who played Nos. 5 and 6 ·as well •as ·the No. 3 doubles po15ition. other lettermen that will be back next year are Ross Griffith, Rick Hill, and Dick Hattaway. Also, Richard Mills, who salt out the 1964 season, will be in ·the line--up.
Two sophomores will be making a bid for positions next season. They are Charles Van Wagner and Clay Hamrick Thi.8J array makes the Deac N etmen, a certainty to improve !their re-cord. Coach Jim Leighton has been at Wake Forest only two sea•sons, but has brought Wake tennis from rthe bottom of the ACC to a respectable position. 1964 saw the first award of a grant-in-aid for ll:ennis in the history of the school. If Leighton continues his gradual buildup, Wake could make a big jump within the neXJt few years .
To some, Wake's 1964 season was not as outstanding as it might have been. The Deacs1 faill.ed rt:o register a really outstanding win, blowing chances for upsets against Duke and Davidson. But it was easy to observe tha~t the quality of tennis at Wake Forest is on the upswing.
year. But because he is Jim Beaty, he will probably win in, the Olympics, and oust might do it an record time. He deserves no less:
"Sure, a German won the 100 r==========:::=~~;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;========. and an Italian won rthe 200 me-. COIN-oP DRY CLEANING ters at Rome, but we still placed
more men in the sprints thaD! AI' (DlryEACieNaninEg-shirtsRS.•LA·waUshNDryDRFoyld any other country. People don't realize that Germany, for in- s stance, was known for their s,printers before the war.'' THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER ··
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By RICHARD MILLS SPORTS WRITER
Well, you see there are these two -guys playing in the mud .. And one says to the other, "Let's go in and take a nice hot shower and get out of this mud.'' And the other says, "I'd like to, bUI~ I can't cause you're sitting on me."
And you see there are these two baseball teams playing in lthe rain. And one says 1lo the other, "Let's go in and take a nice hot shower and get out of this rain." And the other says, "I'd like to, but I can't cause you're winning."
Last Tuesday, there were these two baJSeball teams, Duke and Wake Forest, playing in a mild mist .a.t Ernie Shore Field. As the Blue Devill.s went down without a hdt in the first inping, the mist became a dirizzle. When the Deacons scored :three in the bottom haJf including a sight-forsore-eyes homer by Train Martin, that drizzle exploded into a' sprinkle.
Crazy Rule
There's .a crazy rule in baseball that when it ~ains the proceedings must hallt. In keeping; wi,th this statute a game must advan-ce to the halfway mark Wh innings) in order for it to become official.
The boys from Durham, havilllg lost fifbeen straight all by themselves, sensed !hat such a detail might save them this day. The game plodded s!owly through the second inning, the only action being the increase in the velocity of the moisture.
Frank Christie, Wake Forest's hurler, smellilng his third victory, rose to the challenge of the precipitation. He mowed down three Dookerts in two miLn.utcs in the third. Bwt his teammates wouldln't cooperate.
W.ally Noell tried to speed up things by tapping a bunt doWn the !third base lillle; however, he placed it too well and it went for a ·single. Billy Scripture then hammd !it up with his eighth home run. The next three Deacl)ns selfishly drilled singles to. center field. Fortunately for Christie, somebody realized what was happenmg and the fire was put out after ll:hree runs ..
Frank Christie went to the mound a determined man in the fourth. He .Uuew six pitches and jogged back to the dugout smiling towar-d' the heavens. Three more Devils had gOille down, but that sprinkle was now a downpour. Umpire Nat Westmoreland wiped <Jff the plate, the ball, the mound, and his forehead indicating that Duke and the water had a chance.
Whalt happened in the home fourth defies description. Let it •suffice to say that Wake would have been content with a ll-il conquest. But Duke pitchers Ambler and Browne served up. a collection of pitches that defield no one. Eleven men came up to the pJ.ate for the Deacs and even when a ball was hit
at someone, Duke infielders Taylor, Fader, and Holloway would strategically boot it.
Get An Out!
The fans, all of whom were sitting i!ll the covered sectionS, got a little worried when smat~ermgs of the torrents that were falling on the field started blowing into their sanctuary. They started clamoring, not for home runs, but for otllts. Why would• n't Wake Forest just get put out?
The fateful time arrived for. the filth inning and Christie sprinted to his post. The umpire glanced skyward at the raging! monsoon and made his historiQ decree, "Play Ball!" Scotty Glacken, better known for his football signal calling, snailed UP to the plate.
Scotty made a last gasp move; but it was ttoo late. With second base floating away, there was no hope that the ump would give in. Scotty tried anyway. He ~apped his spikes. He wiped his hands, he resined his bat. He then stepped despail'ingly in to face Christie. Seven pitches later :iJt was all over and Christie waded to the dugout dodging the cats .and, dogs that fell everywhere. One of :them hit umpire Westmoreland who called the ga~e after exactly 41,-2 innings.
~reshmen Set Records· In Big Four
The Wake Forest freshm-an tra~k team closed' owt its 1964 spring 'track season by setting four freshme:n school records at. the Big Four Freshman meet at Durham on May 6.
Bob McEvoy, who hails from Short Hills, New Jersey, pole vaulted a winning 13' 6" to shatter his own freshman and school record for the third time this year.
Miler Al Viehman unleashed/ a fine fiJtishing kick to win the event an a freshman record of 4:23.8. The slight ath!lete from Shelby, North Carolina, is considered one of the :top prospects in the state for dii.stance laurels for ,the next three ~ears. ·
Winston-Salem's Paul SneU remained undefeated and broke his own freshman record by registering 9:46.6 for the two mile run. Snell, former state high school mile champion, is also .. connted on by Coach Jordan to bolster Wake's diSitance running depth for the next few years.
Cliff Cook skipped the 120 yard high hurdles in a new frosh record of : 15.0. This va:stly improved ath!lete coW.d emerge as one of the conference's best, Coach Jordan feels.
Ne'Mton Scott, the school record holder in the high jump with a 6' 4 1~" leap, placed second to round out Wake's scoring_
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![Page 8: itlll null lark - Wake Forest University · Captain1 junior of Wash is elected cap-1-65 basketball by vote of his :re Forest team ' iling down an ~ game, whiCb cest in the At" ~onferen-ce](https://reader036.vdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022063018/5fdc4a4ee086324e234137b3/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
PAGE EIGHT M~day, May 18, 1964 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Deacons Lose ACC Title; Nationals Are A PosSibility
By KEITH _HUTCHERSON SP:JRTS WRITER
The sizzling-hot Wake Forest Demon Deacon golf team. led by the sensational shooting of Rennie Folkes, Jay Sigel and Dennis MiJ:ne, entered top flight ;golf tournament after golf tournament.
When it came to the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament, the Deacons played their worst golf, as was bound to happen once during the long season, and the Deacs lost the tourney by a total of three strokes.
Golf coach Jesse Haddock said of his highly nationally ranked golf team, "we p.layed our worst and lost by only three strokes." Nevertheless, all is not lost.
Unlike the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in other sports such as basketball, the -conference tournament ~ hardly signified anything_ Accordin!;; to National Collegiate Athletic Association <NCAA) rules, any team which shows up admirally during the entire season an<t produces as great a record as the one Wake Forest compiled may play .in the finals. With that :ray of hope in mind, the Deacons possibly can go to this tournament, to be held in Colorado Springs, Colo. in mid-June, .if the school wishes to send the
golfers. Whether the Deacs' golf team
had won or not, the school would have had to supply the funds to send the Deacons to the nationals. The Dea-cons had a poor showing in the ACC tournament, and that tourney was one of the least noteworthy tournaments in which the Deacs participated. Now it is undecided whether or not the Deacs will go to the nationals. Head golf coach Jesse Haddock said the announcemencb of whether the golf team wa·s to go to the NCAA finaJ.s was to be made as of last Friday. However, as of press time, no announcement had been made as to whether or not the adm..inistration had made an official statement concerning the Deacs.
Haddock said that the team had to play bad sooner or la-ter. It was unfortunate that th~ golfers had to have their bad game at that particular time. The teams which tied for the charnpionshl;p, -the University of South Carolina and Maryland, will go as the conference's representives to :the NCAA.
Must Decide Last season, several team$
who did not have as high a rating as the Dea•cons went to the finals. However, the question as to whether or •not the Deacons
Phi Dells Clinch Flag; Theta Chi Is Likely Foe
Intramural \Softball competition moved towards its final wrapup with eventual champions apparently decided in both the fraternity md independent sections.
In the inde~ndent section, Phi DeLta Phi law fraternity, with a 7-o record, ha'S clinched the flag and will meet the fraternity winm.er for the ·all-campus championship. For •a time, it appeared that the independent l'ace would be very close, blllt Alpha Phi Omega, the Phi Delt's chief opposition, lost :three straight games last week ·to dTop out of eontention.
lin the fraternity league, Theta Chi appears well on its way to taking the crown. Theta Chi is undefeated while :their nearest challenger, Pi Kappa
Alpha, has lost twice. rn.,. a crucial game Last week, Lambda Chi Alpha, mired in a tie for sixth place, defeated the PiKAs J.5-3 to julst about end the latter's chances of copping the title. Last year's champiOill's, Kappa Sigma, nipped Sigma Chi 8-6 in a battle of second division clubs.
The fl'aternity srtandingJs at pres·s time:
Won Lost Theta Chi ........ ............. ... 6 0 PiKA ..... .......................... 5 2 Sig Ep .:........................... 4 2 Kappa Alpha .................. 4 2 Sigma Pi ......... ................ 3 3 Sigma Chi ...................... 3 4 DeLta Sig .......................... 2 4 Kappa Si!g ...................... 2 4 Lambda Chi .............. .... 2 4 Alpha Sig ........................ 1 5
will go this year remains to be !':een. The announcement has to ·be made very shortly.
From this )'ears great team the Deacons will lose three players via the route of graduation. They are Ken Folkes of Concord, Bobby Edgerton of Raleigh, and Bobby Jones of Chatham, N. J. ·
This years squad consisted of two All-Americans, Ken Folkes and Jay Sigel, quite an accomplishment for one school.
Over the eleven· year history of the ACC golf meet, the Deacons have won the event four times and have had seven players to either win the rnedalis: division crown or tie for Lhe wp honor. In 1954 the great Arnold, Palmer won the event. Si-nce that time John Get-ring took the top spot in 1957, Ronny Thomas won it in both 1959 and! 1960, Ker. Folkes took tqp honors in 1962. and J.ay Sigel captured the crown last year. This year, of course, Wake's Dennis Milne tied for the highly coveted trophy.
Up to j;he ACC tourney Wake Forest had played superb golf. In the All-America Intercohlegiate Invitation at Houston, Texas, the Deacons, playing against the nations top teams, came in third behind Oklahoma State and the University of Houston. Both Oklahoma State and Houston are considered, by most people who know their golf, to be the number one and number two teams in the nation.
The Deacons still had many more honors to come. The golfers finished in third! place in the Florida Inv.Ltation at Cape Coral, Fla. In the Southern Collegiate Tournament at Athens, Ga., the Deacons captured '.he first place trophy. Wake Fores~ also won the medalist play b€tween Duke, the _University of North Caxolina and Wake Forest.
The ACC Tournament mtly slightly dampened W:ake Forest's season. In that event they did not give up because they though~ they had the event won. They tried to win with everything they had, but they just had two aver-. a•ge rounds of play. If the De:>.· cons go to the NCAA finals in Colo.. they definitely have a wonderful chance of talcing first place and being the champions of the National Collegiate Athie~ tic Association.
Final Baseball -Stats Record: 23-7 Overall
Player
9-4 ACC (Second Place)
AB R H 2B 3B HR TB RBI SB BB Mike Budd ........................... . 108 30 4{) 8 ~ 8 Bill Scripture ....................... . 108 33 37 9 3 8 Wayne Martin ....................... . 114 i22 .38 8 4 3 Danny Loftin ........................ . 87 ,15 :n 4 1 2 Dave Miller ........................... . 118 28 36 7 0 0 Walt Noell ............................... . 115 25 31 0 1 0 Jim Israel ............................. . 91 •14 21 4 1 2
(Less Than 2.5 Times At Bat Per
Jerry Pardue ....................... . Doni Metzger .......................... .. Frank Christie ........................ . Perry Miller ........................... . Lou Howard .......................... .. Bobby Biddix ...................... . Ge:r:ald Boyles .................... , .. . Dickie Myers ......................... . Joe Kraus ................................ . Jim Prevatte ....................... . Pete Bowie ....... . ............. . Lee May .................................. .
no 4100 55 2 15 1 ·1 0 ll2 3001 44610110 553.12210 1112000 1 o 1 1 o o· 192 2000 1921100
4 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
74 76 63: 39 43 33 33
Game 5
18 \ 6
13 16 2 2 2 2 0 0 0
31 11 23 26 10 21 37 3 17 14 1 7 9 15 17 6 6 16
15 2 13
Played) .
1 0 3 7 1 6 4 0 2 3 0 u 4 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 5 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2
WF TOTALS ...... - ... .. OPPONENTS
982 185 280 47 14 24 ... 1027 127 252 38 8 18
427 360
166 ll4
49 153 11 107
Player Bobby Biddix .......................... -....... . Pete Bowie ...... ...... . ................. . Lou Howard ..................................... . Frank Christie ............................... . Joe KrauJS .............................. . Jerry Pardue ..................... . Perry Miller .................... . Jim Prevatte ................. ..
r;'i~;'k~:: ~:~.; ·:·. ·;·~ .... ::· :: ·:.: :::?::::: .. : :: ::~-:-.. :-::.:::·::::-: .. ~:.::::·:::·::·?·,::·.:::: .. ::·:·:.
PITCHING
G CG IP 8 1 35 3 0 11
RECORDS
BF H 157 39
51 12 400 71 159 28
95 23
11 8 971/3 8 3 39 8 0 20 8 3 '40 1/3 3 0 10 2 0 10 1J3
193 50 40 13 55 16
R ER 14 13
3 3 31 21 14 8 14 11 29 19
6 6 16 15
so Pel'. ~ .370 9 .343
~7 .333 10 .310
9 .305 9 .270
20 .231
4 .364 4 .273 4 .273
10 .227 4 .218 1 .182 1 .143 5 .105 4 .05-:J, 0 .000 1 .000 0 .000
117 .286 177 .245
so BB 23 12 6 3
78 39 27 13 13 17 21 18 6 3 3 2
A PO E 5 51 5 3 73 1
16 186 4 37 32 9 80 57- ·7 66 39 14 14 236 2
8 1 1 2 16 1 7 2 1
35 18 4 23 33 0 4 0 0 3 5 0 2' 23 0
·10 7 0 1 1 0 2 1 0 3 8 1
322 789 50 373 760 62
w L ERA 3 0 3.34 2 0 2.46 9 2 1.94 3 1 1.85 3 1 4.95 3 2 4.24 0 1 5.40 0 0 13.07
• - _ ACC champ, his weapon and his prize
Freshmen Baseball Team Campaign Has Successful
The Wake Forest Freshmai\ Baseball Team has concluded a successful season with a 17-7 record.
After getting off to a poor start by losing four of their first five games, the team then roared. back to build a w.inning streak of nine straight games.
According to Coach Jackia Murdock, the team has done real well. Most of the losses were dose ones as is indicated by the scores of several of :he games- 9-8, 7-5, 3-2 and 5-2, arui could have gooe the other way had not it been for costly errors.
The six losses were at the hands of only three teams and most of these losses occurred early in the season. The 3aby Deacs, forced to wait until April 10 to open their season because of bad weather, were at an immediate disadvantage because their opponents had already played several games.
The Freshmen have beaten Duke, State, VPI, Wingate anq othem, while losing only to Ca'!'olina, Oak Ridlge, and Win-
gate. Carolina is the only team the Dea-cs did not b€at.
The team was paced. in hitting by Frank Mohap of Bethl2-hem, Pa., who batted at a .377 clip. Second in hitting was first basemalll Steve Wrenn. Wrenn was also the leading home run hitter on the team.
The pitching staff has been the main·stay of the team this ~'ear_ It is paced by Cecil Rober-_ son, Pascal Renn, Bill Dillman and John Schroero>el. Coach Mmdock rates ilis 'i>itchers as the best roeshm.an staff among the Big Four freshman teams.
Coach Murdock, in reply to a question as to the varsity prospects of several members. of this team, stated, "They will have to become more aggressive .and mentally tough in order to help the varsity." Murdock added, "Our freshma-n pitching staff will have to carry a big load next year."
Coa-ch Murdock concluded by adding that this group of ball players ~>hould make. Wake Forest an ACC title contender for the next three years.
Two Get Swim Awards Sonny Poston, varsity swim
ming captain for the 1963-1964. season, has won the Outstanding Vars~ty Swimmer Trophy. Freshman counterpart, Rick Sedgley, won the same award for ·;1e freshmen division.
Captain Poston, who hails from L e x i n g t o n , North Caxolina led his teammates tc1 a five and seven season record. and a fifth pla·ce finish in the Atlantic Coast Co.nference Cham!Pionships. Poston set records in: the 100 yard freestyle, 200 yardJ freestyle, and was a member of the record: breaking 400 yard freestyle team and 400 yard
medley relay team. Freshman Co-captam Rick
Sedgley, who hails fmm West Orange, New Jersey, set a barrage of reco-rds in both the freshman and school ranks .. Sedgl!ey's records are in the 100 yard butterfJ.y, :wo yard butterfly, 200 yard indlividual medley. He was also a member of the record breaking :wo yard freestyle relay, 200 yard medley relay, 400 yard freestyle relay and 400 yard medley relay. He• led his teammates to a six andi one season record, the best record ever for a Wake swimming team.
Here's How Wally G~ts Those Extra· Base Hits~
In ACC Tournament
Dennis Milne Is Golf Champion. \ < • - : • • • ~
By KEITH. HUTCHERSON SPORT& WRITER
Wake Forest had, during ilie Atlantic Coast Conferen-ce golf tournament, one of its g&fers take a strange metamorphosis and: develop into the player 't was ailways known he could be
Dennis Milne, the golfer many Wake Foresters had not previously heard of until the ACC· tournament, finally came into ms own .and swept past his opponents to obtain a tie for first place in the medalist diV!ision.
· Milne, who slammed a two round· (36-holes) card of 71-73 for an aggregate total of 144 and an even par of 36 tied with. Vern Novak of the University <~f Maryla·nd for top medalist hcn-ors. . . Milne explained his phenomi
nal metamorphosis and his Late season development by saying tha-t ·he just started playing.better golf during the Southern Intercollegiate Tourn11-ment at A-thens, Ga. in early May.
Going into the ACC tournament, Milne, however, was virtually unheard-of among Wake Forest golf fans. He quickly de:..
. veloped into the big gun as he smashed his sha~ 144 aggregate total and gained 'his tie for the individual Atlantic Coast Con-· ference crown.
Has Experience
Milne has definitely had plenty of golf ex;perience. He has participated in many tournaments in New .Jersey. (Although Milne Jives in Pennsylv:aru:ria, he plays out of New Jersey.) Two years ago he won the, New J i!rsey Junior Amateur Tournament and last year he went 29-holes in the same tournament before fin~ ally losing in the eleventh extra hole to the eventual tournament champion.
Last year Milne participated in the Trenton District Tournament and the Trenton District Best Ball Tournament.
Freak incidents are few and far between for this blond duffer. The P.ennsylvaman has had, in his long golf career, only one hole-in-one. This zenith evenll for most golfers, came at the Old Town Country CJ.ub in one o~ the team's practice sessions.
DENNIS MILNE p_utts for a birdie on eighteenUl hole
us this year.". , For a boy who grew-up in the
old Keystone State, Mihle developed his yen to attend Wake Forest, deep in the heart of tobacco road; from the Wake Forest alumni club in his homE) -town district. It may be only incidental, but the fact still remains -that' Arnold Palmer was a Wake man and from Pennsylvania_ That fact colllld have a lot of influen•ce on a young Pa. golfer.
Milne had been acquainted with another member of the wF golf team, Jay Sigel, before hfl came to Wake Forest. These two aces met each other during their high school playing days. Milne, who hatls from Yardley, Penn., just twenty-six miles north of Jay Sigel's home town of Narberth, met the Wake All-Ameri
both intramurail. ·football and badminton.
This year is the sociology major's fourth in Deaconland. Milne played both his freshnlan and s(;phomore year. He was, however held out of action dur.ing his ju.nior year. He. partici- 1
pated, of course, thds seaso9· anq ; will be eligible for goilf next year. ,
Milne se'ems to have shed any old bad habits that. haver bothered him and now appears to be capable to attain the heights that were and are still being hoped of him.
· Good luck, big boy.
Trackm~n Run . ~ Poorly In Finals
ca in the state high school golf The Wake Forest varsity Eracl!i tournament. All boys in.the state team ter:rlldnated an otherwisE:~ had a-.golf tournament with the fairly successful dual meet se:afinals being held' at the Penn son by turning in a sub-par per.:.. State University course. These formance at the Atlantic Coasfl players formed! teams and the Conference Championships . heJ~ finalists went to Penn State. FotT at the Uillivers.ity of Maryland Oili three years ruhning both Milne May seventh through the ninth. and Sdgel were on the same team A team point aggregate of four 1 and each year they went to the was alii the h31Pless and hurt Penn State finals. . Deacons could muster against •
Milne, who has his own pri- the other A.C.C_ teams.
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Milne's hole-in-one came as follows. He pll!lcedl his ball on the tee and sent the Little sattelite on .its long flight. The ba~ dipped down beautifully onto the green. .Just for the heck oli it ~ placed another ball on
the tee and smashed a drive that, when it end€d its orbited flight, plopped .into the hole and Milne had his first hole-in-one. How .. ever, since this was his second ball, it couldi not be counted an an official hole-in-one, but it was still, in a sen-se, a holein-one. The thrill cou1d not be taken away with any offio.ial red tape.
vate golf M.D., gets his golf Ailing senior miler Dave Turgame clear!'!d-ll!P whenever f>.e ner, a pre-season favorite for tne goes home for· a vacation. Mi- miile title and last year's second lne's father !is a golf pro at the place fiillisher in a school record Trenton Collllltry Club in Tren- of 4:12.5, labored through the ton, N.J. Milne says that when- four lap circuit at 4:26 for fifth ever a minor hitch develops in place. Turner was hampered by his game, such as probleii).S with sickness and a taped back.
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Head golf coach .r esse Hadldock said that Milne has zna,... tured more than any of the other golfers which he has .on the squad, Haddock said that Milne "really came through for us this year." Haddock als:J insert .. ed that he has "meant a lot to
his swing or his putting, his Sam Thios leaped six feet f~ father always seems to have a ·a fourth place finish in the cure for it. . 'high jump. The other plac,iDg
Other sports have attracted was in the mile relay. Wake's Denny's attention, but he has foursome of Rick Hartley, Dick not participated in a111y · major Dunlap, Dave Turner, a111di Pat sport except his first love, golf. Neary did turn in:a conuneOida• ' He has, like so many of the 'ble time of 3:20.9 for. fourth Wake a1lhletes, played illltra- place. ·This time was murals. Milne participated in 1 W~ke Forest record.
ADVERTisEMENT
a new
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SAMS COMPANY ~ . ..
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. -Red Wagon Ban-dits apparel seen on the three culprits. I ·r ~~ •and at John, with dollar -si:gi:Js in his
WAKE FOREST COLLEGE (Hiot Wire)-Car1 Gaiskins, alias Rocky; Troy Stoll.M"d, alias KA Troy; and Charles A. West, -alia.S Jock, were accused yestterckey' of a daring l'!Obbery in the Twin-City.
.Took, Rock and Troy were seen hauling a wagon load of fine clothes out of SAM'S CLOTHING STORE .. These croafty three had induced "the manager, B:on.est John, :to pose in the above. picture to pohJt out to Wake Forest students
the qualitY wearing available at SAM'S, :rea!sonable prices too.
However., when John turned his back, ,the swi£1: three r.an off with a wagon aJll.d $450 worth. Olf clothes. The manager, realizing his folly, b€gan a hot pursuilt, but the little red wagon was out of LSig'ht. Two hours later, winded and dismayed, John returned ·1x>SAM'S to find 131 lo;n:g line of Wake Forest IStudeots ~ting to buy clothes-like .. the ones they had
eyes, ~Served his customers and , 1
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asked tllat they please ·leave their wagons outside in the fu-ture.
(Editor's NDte.-If Joek, Rock • and Troy don't return 1!1le ' ':, clothels to ·SAM'S, we will fire :them and take away their liit-!tle red wagon.)
*534 N. Liberty, 2. doors £rom the Post Office;·· or just, ask: .any of the ·above mentioned · for directions.
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