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.. ' .. _ Honored Witl_l 'Queen' Title At Dixie .Classics Page Eight VOLUME. XLIV 2. Non-Frat Considered ,\ Aid Will Be Solicited . ' Nominate 10 For Offices * '. ' \ ,nl * · Forest College, Wfuston-Salem, North CaroUna, Monday, January 12, 1959 * Student Rebukes Art Critic, Gives 'Madonna;· Praise Page Four · · NUMBER 13 Choir $100 Increase In Tuition W IllA.ppear · ; . . . . .. This Week Is v-oted For . Next year Chapel Schedule Has Talk, Music In Ep.glish Department Barn To ·Have Friday TRYING A TWOSOME iS ioerg Demus, usually 0: solo pianist, who will appear on the campus In a. duet capacity Tuesday with Paul Badura-Skoda. Both men, well-known for their solo parts, have this year teamfld up as a duo for a five-stop tour. Dormitory RooDIRent Increased Prof· Assigned As Counselor Taylor Dormitm:y has been assigned a faculty counsel{lr by the dean's office. Prof. &ank Meadows, instructor in the depart- ment of modern languages, will live in the dormitory lodge and "perform the same sort of duties" as- Prof. Jerry Hall exercises in Davis Dormitory. Hall was appointed in Novenibe'r to "be a counselor and render any personal assistance he can to students." When he was appointed Acting Dean E. G. Wilson said he would be "not a pmctor'' but he "will .be expected to use his in- fluence on the side of law an.d order." Meadows, who came to the Wake Forest faculty this year, is an instructor of Spanish. B:e received his B. A. and M. A. degrees from Emory University. •Hall was originally appointed to serve both Taylor and Davis Dor- mitories, but he win· give np his . duties in Taylor to Meadows .

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Page 1: nl - WakeSpace Scholarship · PDF fileTuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y Disher ... Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as ... mistry

.. '

.. _ Pinyo~ Honored

Witl_l 'Queen' Title At Dixie .Classics

Page Eight

VOLUME. XLIV

2. Non-Frat TV{.O~es Considered

,\

-l:ndepende~ts' Aid Will Be Solicited

. '

~u's Nominate 10 For Offices

*

'. ' \

,nl *

· Wak~ Forest College, Wfuston-Salem, North CaroUna, Monday, January 12, 1959 *

Student Rebukes Art Critic, Gives 'Madonna;· Praise

Page Four · ·

NUMBER 13

c~, Choir $100 Increase In Tuition W IllA.ppear · ; . . . . ..

This Week Is v-oted For . Next year Chapel Schedule Has Talk, Music

In Ep.glish Department

Barn To ·Have Dane~ Friday

TRYING A TWOSOME iS ioerg Demus, usually 0: solo pianist, who will appear on the campus In a. duet capacity Tuesday with Paul Badura-Skoda. Both men, well-known for their solo parts, have this year teamfld up as a duo for a five-stop tour.

Dormitory RooDIRent Increased

Prof· Assigned As Counselor

Taylor Dormitm:y has been assigned a faculty counsel{lr by the dean's office. Prof. &ank Meadows, instructor in the depart­ment of modern languages, will live in the dormitory lodge and "perform the same sort of duties" as- Prof. Jerry Hall exercises in Davis Dormitory.

Hall was appointed in Novenibe'r to "be a counselor and render any personal assistance he can to students." When he was appointed Acting Dean E. G. Wilson said he would be "not a pmctor'' but he "will .be expected to use his in­fluence on the side of law an.d order."

Meadows, who came to the Wake Forest faculty this year, is an instructor of Spanish. B:e received his B. A. and M. A. degrees from Emory University.

•Hall was originally appointed to serve both Taylor and Davis Dor­mitories, but he win· give np his . duties in Taylor to Meadows .

Page 2: nl - WakeSpace Scholarship · PDF fileTuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y Disher ... Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as ... mistry

PAGE TWO Monday, Jan. 12,, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

'Deacs Who Are Greeks YDC Group. Cullom Organization WillGather Will Hear Dr. Angell

FOR .DESIGNED HAIRCUTS -Pin curl permanents OJ:. conventional- perma~ents. False J:aalr (pony tails, chignons, buns, etc,) Free consultation on BllJ' beauty problem. Choo.se .the :firiest beau~y shop in t.own..

\ . ~

THE . ·.HAIRDESIGNERS - . By BUDDY McCORKLE

Alpha Sigma Phi Mrs. Clyde Capel has been selected as the Alpha Sigma Phi

Swe-etheart.

On Tuesday· Dr. J .. w.·Angen, professor in . the College religion departme~t,

will discuss "The Protestant Doe­

urer; David Snider, mi.ssions chair­man; Dallas Stallings; reporter; Glenn Langdon, athletic chairman; Frank Glenn, chorister and Sidney

416 N. Spruce St. Open EvenlDgs - 'Phone P A'4Ull · · ·

A basketball game between the brothers and the pledges was won by the pledges.

Wesley Bailey, Winston-Salem ·trine of the Ministry'' at the reg­attorney, will be guest speaker ular weekly meeting of the Cullom Tuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y

Disher, pianist. - Phelps· ShOe. Shop A ping7pong table thas been built for the recreation room.

Delta Sigma Phi James Eagle was married to

Pat Lomax of Spencer during the holidays. Joe Fielis ihas pinned Margie Klinshmv of Glassboro State .COllege, N. J. Also pinned was Howard Bunn to coed Janelle Smith.

Coed Peggy- Cryner recently was chosen runner-up for fra­ternity- state sweetheart aJt the Carnation Ball in Charlotte.

Lambda Chi Alpha All brothers and pledges are

growing beards ior the 50th anni­versary of Lambda Chi Alpha, to be <:elebrated :March 22.

Brother Jack Karcher pinned B<lnnie Bloomer during the Christ­ MRS. CLYDE CAPEL

Wake Forest Young Democrats night. · Club. He is president of the Wil- The meeting will be held in sonian YDC, the Forsyth County Room 104 Wingate Hallea.t 7 p. rn. organi,zation for young Democrats. Bob Hale-Cooper will serve f()r

Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as president ·of the Wake Forest School of La.w. He organization. He was elected to also received the B. S. degree from the office at a recent meeting of Wake Forest. , 1lhe conferen~. He will serve· for

· ' Bailey is · a member of the next semester and he ~cceeds North Carolina :&ir Association, Jerry Surratt. · .funior Chamber of Commerce, the Other officers elected at the last Dea<:on Club, Maple Spring~ Me-. meeting to serve next semester thod1st Church,-and the 1s chalrman are David Canady, first vice presi­of the board of directors of th-e dent John Prince, seeond vice local Wesley Foundation. presldent, and Jim Baucom, third

Immediately following tomorrow vice president. night's meeting, pictures of the Don Britt begins his work as College YDC members will be made secretary; Charle~ Tanner, trea.s­to appe~tr in the 1959 Howler. '.lbE meeting will be held in Room 214, Reynolda Hall, at 7:30 p. m.

Officers for · last semester. be-3ides Surratt were Charles Wal­drop, first vi~e president; David Canady, second vice pl'lesident; Bill Hayes, third vice president; Yates Wilkinson, secretary; Don Britt, treasurer; Bob Hale-Cooper, reporter.

Other officers ·were David Pea­cock, chorister; David Snider, mis­sion;; chairman and Jici Morton, athletic co-ordinator.

The conference is op~n -to all ministerial students on campus. Meetings are held e_very Tuesday night in Room 104 of Wingate Hall.

"'N THE THRUWAY"

AJm

MS W. 4TH STREET

A Se~ce For Particul•i P~~ple '· P.A-2-2144

Telephone P A 4-6t32 Or P A .C-9887

El Qam Rey RESTAURANT /

. THE REYNOLDS BUILDING 4th & 'Mabt Sta., W'mston-Salem, N. C.

mas holidays. A Lambda Cllii Alpha

Dixie Classics.

• Alpha Sigma choice . • • party was held in Raleigh following the

Radio Station4Js Program Adds New Features

Baptist Church. Makes Sunday

Y olir Plaee For: · Class Changes , PARTIES- DINNERS.- DANCES- BANQUETS

Kappa. Alpha. Dick Avery was married to Ann Cornwell during tthe holidays.

Tommy Carlton became engaged to Mimi Krider. "Preacher" Parker pinned Lucy Ann Phillips.

WFDD, Wake Forest radi-o sta­Kappa. Sigma

Wayne Smith was married to Audrey Kennedy, a senior at Salem College, Dec. 19. Neil Chafin was married to Emily Councilman, a former Wake Forest coed, Dec. 20. · Pi Kappa Alpha

tion, has, added several new ·ser­vices and features to its weekly schedule since. the Ohristmas holi­days.

Ken Ferrell \Vas married to Mona Johnson Dec. 27 at Durham. Joe Parrish pinned Nancy Balley of Lancaster, S. C., and Bruce E<!wards pinned Carol Hagen of Greenville during the holidays.

Recently initiated .into the fraternity were John Boyette, of Wil­~n; George Ritchie of Chatterroy, W. Va.', and Charlie Forte of Huntington, N. Y.

Sigma Chi 'Engaged during the holidays were Tommy Malcome and coed Pat

R()Se, Luther Kimrey and Carolyn Smith of Albemarle, and Carl Munn and Sue Binton. Darrell Dennis. pinned Jean Daniels of Durham, and Carlton Smith pinned Norma Savage.

Sigma. Phi Epsilon .. Tl1e ann!Jal pledge dance was held Saturday night at the American L€gion Building at Rural Hall.

The most recent addition is a United Press International tele­typ-e machine wthich provides the station with local, state, national and international news.

This enables WFDD to offer news coverage comparable to that of most commercial stations, ac­cording to station manager Opie Wells.

Each day Monday through Fri­day, from 7 to 7:15 p. m., a new.;; r-ound-up is scheduled, and sports news is broadeast from 9 to 9:15 p. m. The service will be extended ;n the near futur-e to include news headli_nes s.everal times daily: W ea.­

The chapter entertained children of Watson House Home in Thomasv.ille. After in­formal entertainment in the chap­

. ter room, each br()ther took one of the boys to supper. The boys were then taken to the oosketball game as the guests of the athletic department.

of The Mills ther reports are now being broad­cast three times each evening.

Sigma Pi Miss Betty Newton has been

chosen as the 195~ Sigma Pi Sweetheart. Betty is a student at 'Hampton Roads Business College at Newport News, Va. Miss New­ton is pinned to Fred Black.

Pinned during the holidays were John Braswell to W.oman's College student Marjorie Davis. and Elwood Peele to Linda Walk­er from Burlingtori.

Theta Chi Mike Price has become engaged

to coed Freddie Isenhour of Jack­sonville, Fla. MISS BETTY NEWTON

. . elected Sweetheart • • •

Town And Campus Shop

Removal Sale NOW IN PROGRESS AT

TOWN and CAMPUS

~eductions Up To SOOfo Walch For Our Movement To Our

NEW LOCATION 424 WEST 4TH .STREET

THANK YOU FOR HE-LPING TO MAKE

THIS EXPANSION POSSIBLE

Tcrumand t::Gmpw

ToW1!. .And Campus Shop

Tonight from 7.15 until 7:45 o'clock, the WFDD drama work­shop will present tthe radio mys­tery play, "·Sorry, Wrong Num­ber." This presentation will fea­ture Wake Forest students who are members of .the workshop.

Beginning. with the College haB­ketball game Thursday against tihe University of South Carolina, WFDD will broadcast all home freshman basl~etball games from

.,, the Coliseum. These will be pro­duced by the station's sports di­rector Bob Davis. · Although the station does not

usually operate on Saturdays, Sat­urday games will also be broad­cast. Game time will be 6:25 p. m.

Services from tlie Wake Forest Church on the campus wi11 be broadcast every Sunday at 11 a. rn. beginning Jan. 11.

Prof Will Give Scientific Talk

Dr. W. Conard Fernelius, chair­man of the department of chemis­try at Pennsylvania State Uni­versity, will speak at the College tonight at a. meeting of the cen­tral. North Carolina district of the American Chemical Society.

Dr. Fernelius will speak on, "General '{rends in Stability of Coordination Compounds." He is recognized as an authority on the subject.

The lecture will begin at 8 p. m. in Room 1414A of the science building. It will be open to the public.

The central district is one of five districts in the State. Dr. Harry B. Miller of the College Chemistry de p art men t is its chairman-elect.

The speaker is a native of Utah. He did both undergraduate and post-graduate work at Stan:ford University, where he received the Ph.D degTee in 1928.

Dr. Femelius was at one time associated with the Manhattan Corps of Engineers and was pro­fessor of chemistry at Ohio State University from 1928 until 1942. Also, he was Pl'ofessor of che­mistry at Purdue University and at Syracuse University before ac­cepting his present position at Pennsylvania State University jn 1949.

In 1956-57, he was a Guggen­heim ·Fellow at Oxford University.

Dr. Fernelius is a Fellow of the Amel'ican Association' for the Ad­vancement of Science.

HAVE MORE FUN IN COLLEGE.

Learn To Dance

FRED ASTAIRE DANCE STUDIO

620 W. 4th St. Phone P A-50483

The Wake Forest Baptist Church ~================;;=====~===~~ has announced a new ·slate of classes to be taught in its S~nday School during the spring semester. They will begin the second Sunday in February.

The classes are divided accord­ing to freshmen and up,Perclass­men categories. However, anyone -is welcome to participate in any class which appeals t·o hlin. church officials ha. "fe said. '

Glasses will meet at 9:45 each Sunday morning at the designated

FOR A OOIE OR A SlACK IT'S

MORRIS . SERVICE NEXT TO CAROLINA THEATER

BOB HALE-COOPER • . will take office'· • • • Classes designed for freshmen

are listed with -..teachers and lo-places. ~::::::::::::::::::::~====:::;::~:;~::::::::::::::~ '71 lk Dl d cations. "~lve Laws of Life," ~a S rtanne Dr. E. W. H.amrick and Dr. David

Smiley, Eu !full; "How F-ree Am

B C • I?", Norman A. Wiggins and Ed i'V omnanleS Christman, eleva.~d area in cafe­.; r teria, west side; and Uniform Les­

Personel officials of two oom- son Series. M, E. Delgado and panies will visi~ the campus this H. A. (Bones) McKinney. we~k . to interview · job-seeking . · C1asses. ~esignated for upper­semor§. classmen are: "Comparative Reli"

Wednesday United States Army gion," Dr. R. H. Helm, Jr. and Audit Agency representatives will Dr. E. P. Banks, east lounge talk to accounting majors. The Reynolda HaH; Uniform· Lesso~ represen.tatiws are looking for Series, Dr. Robert Dyer and Dr . accountants to work with variows Edwin Wilson,. Balcony Room, other government agencies as 'Y'ell Wait Chapel; Uniform Lesson as their own departipent. . Series, James M. Hayes, .Jr. and

POLO GRILL Anti•.··.Res,tlurant-···

CORl\!ER POLO ROAD .AND CHERRY ST •. EXT.

Friday Atlas Supply Company Weston P~ Hatfield, Wingate Hall. will talk to mathematics or busi- Also, "New Testament," Dr. and ness _administration majors. They Ml'B. D. T. :Murphy, Wingate--Hall; plan to offer jobs in the field of :•competing. Doctrines of Man " selling heating, air-conditioning Dr. R: W. Pritchard and Dr. G. and .Plumbing materials to me-;McLeod Bryan, Wingate Hall;· chamcal contractors and govern-; '~Religion in Human 'SoCiety," Dr! ment agencies and institutions. ! C. W. Alford and Dr. Dan 0. Via,

· · 'Specializing In Steaks -.Fried Chicken - Seafoods

Country Ham , ... HOURS- 6:30-9:00 P. M. 7 DAYS A WEEK

. Placem~nt officia~s h~ve a~ked i Wingate Hall; and UnifOl'm Les­that sem()rs wantmg mterVIews 1 son Series,· Dr. J. C. O'Flaherty come by the offi,l!e on the nl'St: and Dean Carroll Weathers, Win­

WE ALSO SERVE THE BEST

-Sandwich~&· And Short Orders floor of Reyno1da Hall to sign up.· gate Hall.

.~·

l"hy· the smart sWitch is to-, ' .· the ?~59 ·Chevro.let·

ROOMIER BODY BY FISHER: features wider seats and more luggage space. MAGIC-MIRROR :1']NISH: keeps its shine without waxing for up to three years. NEW BIGGER BRAKES: better cooled with deeper drums, up to 66% longer life;·OVERHEAD CURVED WINDSHIELD and bigger windows-all of Safety Plate Glass. SLIMLINE DESIGN: fresh, fine.and fash~onable with a

\

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practical slant. HI-THRIFT 6; up to 10% more miles per gallon. VIM-PACKED VB's: eight to choose f~om, with compression . ratios ranging up to 11.25 to 1. FULL COIL SUSPENSION: further re{ined for a smoother, steadier ride on any kind of road. One short drive and you'll know the smart switch is to · Chevy. Come in and be our guest for a pleasure test firet chance you get.

NOW-PROMPT DELIVERY! Stepped-up shipments have assured you a wide choice of models and colors. We can prom­ise' prompt delivery_;and it's an ideal time to buy!

now-see the wider selection ,of models at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's.!

B D

en Barn have

'llp()k~ HE

the 1

tion One bar, The t.or d

''Sh .xrs. gran the le180 'n

bv1 wishl ly dl and

·~ J fe~'ll ..---., .. ·cl

·-· St,

Sh Leila Fore, ers ed~

Bo ficul1

I matr: quiTE ed.

Mi elem1 high Brit!:

·Kong in l'r

Th stud~ ferre lege a S< Fore: ton,:

Bo studE home year' . J~ we~ Libb~ org&J

-Fe w ·su

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G.W.u .. "Make:

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Page 3: nl - WakeSpace Scholarship · PDF fileTuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y Disher ... Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as ... mistry

,,

Barn . P~oVide_s·. Special Dancing Area,. Lessons

. .. .. '

'• ~ ~·-~· .... -:.: :· ""/-~·:·.' ~ . ·.,·. . - .. '' . . _ ..... _ .. · Changes m ope~t1~n· · pf the . The entire area will remam open

Barn to become . effeetive Tuesday to,. all persons except when the have ree'n ~ced by Bam d~ce area is reserved. annkes~ BUr' Shepherd; ' Food delivery servi~e f:r?m the

· -- . . Barn to the dormitones Will con-Heading the llst of changes .J.S tinue. Deliveries are made twice

the addition of a removable .parti- daily, at 6 p. m. and 10 p. m. tion to halve the upstairs .a:rea. · Future Barn plans include an One section will 'contain the ·snack outside ·recreation area. Shepherd bar, juke .Jx!x, tables and boothS • .sai~ that new facilities should be The other end wiH be specifiea)ly ~vallable by spring. . . for daDces. · Persons or groups Wishmg to

''Shepherd ~ alBO: announced . that sponsor a dance at the Barn have .llrs. ~ris Randolph,. will be. pro- ~e~ a~ked ___ to contact Shepherd gram planner· and · l!lupervi.Sor a.t a e arn. the B8.rn 'aDd· .will ·give. dancing --~-----lesson8 ~hout,. the Week: -

Grad's Poetry To Be Printed

'The· ·danee '''areii) may be rented bv fraterili.tiea and 9thet groupe

. wis~g ~ spon~ a dance; W Elek:. ly d&nees sponsore:c:t by the Barn and 'featuring a live dance· band

. ·~ plaiuied~ A"·nomtna.x adlnlssion Fo' r F~ ... st Tnn· e· feet will be char~. . .LI.

·chine~.e;.Iraqi Student's Talk

A volume of poetry by a 1957 Wake Forest graduate, Tucker R; Littleton, will be publish.ed Jan. 28 by the-Exposition Press of New York. The volume, Shore Songs,

Shlrin Chan of Hong Kong and will include poems written by the

Len K · ·. f I. aq told the Wak 2~-year,old author over a span of

. . . DURHAM briefs. BULLARD , on' duties • • • -(Old Gold pho~ by Grigg.)

To Improve Relations Is ... A·f-m. J Of Legislator

' ' ' - I a ass1r o r . .. . e eight years. Forest chapter of Furture Teach- • . . . ers of America T-hursday abou,t Li~eton 1s a native of Swans- . The Improvement o! student- lefiislatur.e -meeting. He was

BSU Offers­.Work In Missions·.

Ed Christman. Baptist Student Union director, bas announced that the North Carolina BSU or­ganization will put three Stuaents to work in mission fields this sum­meT.

Any Wake Forest studenU! ·in· terested in such· work may .notify him at the BSU office in Wingate Hall, he said. 1

One of the jobs will ·be in Western Europe and the student, either a boy or a.girl, will be in a wo~k camp for three m<Jnths. Qualifications for the job -include a class standing o~ jumor · or senior, seriousness of .purpose and emotional maturity.

Another job, open only to boys, will be in Jamaica. Duties will iii­

, elude leading Bible sehools, work­ing with young people's groups, and doing general evangelistic work.

The Oregon-Washington area in the United States is the other mission area. Either a boy or girl can get the job there, and the worker will work with leaders of newly forme'd BSU groups and participate in educational pro­grams.

education in their homelands. - boro, where ·he is now a pasto':' of - faculty relationships .is one of active in extra-curricular activi-, . - . h . ed the dif· the Gr~e Baptist Church. Present- ·Howard Bullard's alms _?s he ties at Fayetteville Senior High G - CJ .

f' ~ttf. ~l~~mr as~te' arid the ly he IS ~lso serving· as the head takes office as president of the . School, where he was in the Key erman . ·as~, Ic Y. 0 • 8 Jec ma r of the English depart±nent _ · at sophomore class. Club, was the vice. president of

r, matriculation exams that were re- Beaufort· Hi h' Schoo-l· · · · · th N t· 1 'H S · t H s • -quired in the schools they attend·. g • Bullard, . fr~m FayetteVIlle, e a lOna onor OCle y, on .. or ~'ci~ty ed · · · · A magna. cum laude ·graduate, was a:ppomtedt last week 'by president of the Hi~Y Club and W Ch tte d d Chines Littleton was also elected to·· Phi 'Student B'ody President Haryey played baseball. .

ss an a n .e 8 • e Beta Kappa. He is a· 'member of Durham t(t fill the vacancy'Ieft . An accounting major, he is a Will G• PI e~ementary _school bl;lt recelved 1le! various . scholarly . organizatiolm, by Jim McLean's resignation. member of .Kappa Sigma S<Jcial . IV e .- a y hi~h SChOQl educatlOD u~der ~ jnclud~g the American Folklore.. His campus· political affiliation fraternity and' represents that \ · . Bntish ~hool . system m & g Society, the Shakespeare Associa- is with the College Party. gx;oup in the- IFC. He iB a Dr. Kenneth Keeton's German ~ong.· MlSs Kassir went to school -tion of America and the American He said Thursday_ that his member of the· , R.QTC color conversation class and Delta Phi m Ira~. . Association for the Advancement interest in the student-faculty. guard and is' a Pe.tsbing Rifles Alpha, honorary GeTman language

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Jan. 12, 195~ PAGE THREE

SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS JAN. 21-29, 1959 .

.. Morning 9:00 - 12:00 Afternoon 2:00 - 5:00

5th hr. T T S Classes Wed. 8th hr . .:M W F Classes Jan.21

2nd hr. M W F· Cl.:lsses Thurs. Math 1, 3, 4, 11 and Jan. 22 3rd hr. T T S Classes

3rd hr. M W F Classes . Fri~ 1st br. T T S Classefl Jan. 23

English 1 and 2 a.nd Sat. 7th hr. M W F Classes 8th !hr. T T S Classes Jan. 24

1st. hr. M W F Classes Mon. 4th !hr. T T S 'Classes Jan. 26

4th hr. M W F Classes Tues. 7th •hr. T T S Clasaes Jan. 27

2nd hr. T T S Classes Wed. 6th hr. T T S Classes Jan. 28

6t:b, hr. M W F Classes Thurs. 5-th hr. M W F Classes Ja,n. 29

English 1 and 2 examinations Januaxy 24, 9:00·12:00 . Math 1, a,·· 4 and 11 examinations Janu.a.ry' 22,2:00- ll:OO

"No deviation from thls posted schedule will be allowed except by special authorization of the Executive Committee."

REGISTRATION SCHEDULE ... SPRING 1959

Monday, Feb. 2 Tuesday, Feb. 3 *SENIORS 8 :30 ........... _ ............ A - Bel

8:00 .................... Reg. Assts. 9 :00 : ....................... Ben - Bro 8:30 ............................ H - L 9 :30 .......................... Bu - Co 9:00 ............... -............. M - R 10:00 .......................... Coo- De 9:30 ............................ s - z 10:30 .......................... Df. Fo

10:00 ...................... ~ ....... A - C 10:30 ............................ D - G

11:00 .......................... Fp - Gro 1:00 .......................... Ha • He

OTIIER STUDENTS 1 :30 .......................... II! . Hzo 1:00 .......................... Pa- Pf 2:00 ................ : ........... I - Kih 1 :30 .......................... Pg - PI 2:30 .......................... Ki - Lo 2:00 ........................ Rm ..; Sk 2:30 .............. ,............. Sl - Ss 3:o·o ................. : .......... St - T-3:30 ....... - ............... U - Wh

3:00 ........................ Lp - M~ 3:30 ........................ Mas - Mo 4:00 ............................ Mp- 0

4:00 ............................ Wi - Z '

*Only candidates for degrees in Jan:uary, June and AugUB~t will be admitted. Do(trkeeper will hold approved list. The two girls are ~ake Fo-YEst_ of Science, relationships que:stioin was pledge. He is also assistant sec- fraternity, will present a play Fri-

atude~ts, Miss '?han havin'¥ trans. Shore '.Songs is divided into quic~ened by ~ recent ;rnteryra- retary of Kappa Sigma. day. . ._ ______________ ;.._ ___________ .J ferred. froJl!_ Wmgate _Jumor Co~· several sections. They are "Songs termty Council national meet- All dialogue will be in German lege two years .ago. !'f1SS Kassil' IS of Nature and the Sea," ••songs ing in ·Atlanta, Ga. Ge I Will v· •t and a cast of arount ten people ----------------------------""!! a sophomore, · comm~ . to Wake .of Religious Experience. and Bullard was a· representative nera . 1.81 . will participate. "'The . Schnaps 1

Forest _:fTOm a- college m Wa.s:tnllg- Praise," "Songs of Mourning and f.rom the Wake Forest IF-C at. ROTC Department, Ideal" is the tit~e and the one-act ton, D. C~ . . Comfol't." "Songs of Love and the meeting 'and he heard. the · comedy will begm at 8 p.m.

Both girls pointed out .. th~t if a Friendship," and "Songs of subject 'discllBSed several times. Maj. Gen .. Frank S. Bowen Jr., The arena theater in the library student _fails one. course iri their Matters Philosophlcal alftdi _Mis- "This," he says, "is a job for director of the 22nd Army -Corps, will be the site :for the plrly and homelands he must take the.entire cellaneous." The ninety-odd poems student government as well as will visit the .Wake Forest ROTC no admission fee will be charged. year's work over. · _ . vary in length from eight Jines to the JiF1C." . . Department Thursday. A rebellious bus driver is the cen-. Jeannette Qook and 'Libby~Fineh :three--hundred and fifty lines: Told'. Durham .,, •. The 22nd Army Corps has juris- .tral character in the plot. Having

SUMMIT STRE.ET PHARMACY, Inc. Foot Summit Street OverloOking Banes Park Phone PAZ-11«

YOUR PRESCRIPTION OUR FIRST CONSIDERATION w~~ in' eha~~e of ~e program. In the introduction to the . He put· tb'e sa~e id~ jn diction over all ROTC depar:ti- driven his bus f:or 30 years, he L1J)by .. York lS pres1dent .of the ;volume Littleton writes, -"Poetry differen~ w.ords to Durham last . menta in North Carolina, South suddenly decides to run away Three Licensed Pharmacists To Se"e Yo• orgaruzation. is .a way of life. It is the habit of Monday .~ght, when. Durham.· arolina, Tennessee and Geo;rgia, witll the vehicle because his route

lookUig at things and seeJng and .Student . Body VIce ~~- -~th headquarters located in is changed. · . Three Licensed Pharmasists To Serve You !"""------------~1 through the veil of seeming d~t Charles Deane were. mter-. Atlanta, Ga. Ee iS told to continue driving p Der F

· ;reality, sensing the essence of VIewing prospective appomtees. While in Winston-Salem, Maj. straight where he has .been turn- .li."Ompt IVery or Nice Thina-s 'T(). divine troth and beauty hidden in • The two m.en na~wed the Gen:-- Bowen will also visit the ing right for three decades and • ____________ ..;... ____ ..;.. ________ ,

· the bud of a single flower or in f1eld of poss1ble o~1ce-holders United States Army Reserve he cannot force himSelf to make . ----------------------------Wear And Relaxed the entire scope of the universe.'' down to five men ~nd then Armory on· Stadiu'm Drive. the change.

approached them, asking their - His purpose in · visiting the The cast for the play haS not ·Suburb Sh p· • views on the role of-student ROTC department at the College been announced. The conversation

. . an- 0 ping o· 'li·ve ' To. Hav' . e' . government ·. and s t·U d en t is to study the organization of class will have moat of the roles, • VIsit officers. Durham made the final the · department, the physical while the · German :fraternity will

decision, although Deane helped facilities and to observe teaching assist the class members. Gordon

Pan. On Pa .. ne' I' conduct the interviews. . . methods.. W!Uiams is bead of the frate:rnity. . . ·Bullard .... was •ico~pletely sur·

THRUWAY SBQPPING

, cruiTER

WiDII&oD-Salea, N. C.

prised~'' he said; when .the two Eug~e miv~. d(recior of alumni . men talked to bim .. His an.Swem :

activities ·at Wake Forest, will -~ evidently ple~d them, for he at Daytona Beach, Fla., Tuesday ended up with the office. ~hrough T,hursday for District No Programs .Three meetings of the American At present, Bullard MY!!, he Alumni Council. has no prog:rallll'l to presen to - Olive, who edits the alumni the Student Legislature. He is a magazine, will .attend the dl.strict -legislator by virtue of his class 8Iumni ~torl!l workshop· Tuesday office and ·he will take bJ.!· sea.i

:...-----------~ and Wednesday. He will partlcl- in that body at the first meeting ----.....;.-~'--.....;._____ pate in three IJ8.nel sessions Thurs- ·6f ·the spring semester, set !or

day and Friday when the district Feb. 5.

', i930 FACULTY ·DiaVil ' PII()Niil P A li·'lliO

Black Insurance Agency lt'DiBTOJ!II'.SAIBII, N. G.

"lfbea y CMI Jieecl ---- PUll ~t'oa I

Out T... 'l'lloqhw 1a o. DiMitilll"

NOW TWO STORES TO SEKVE YOU

THE UTEST II RECORDS

·REZNICK~s 4.0 ;N. LIBEBTT 8TREEI'

N()RTHSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

POPUUR - CLUSIIii - JIZZ NORTHSIDE OPEN MON.-fRI •. TILL !I P. Jll.

Oat WILDROOT CR~·OILChirlfe!

holds its annual meeting. He will The new officer says he baa

lead, a panel. session Thursday on :n~e~\'~e=r~bee::=n~to~_:a~W.~ak~e2:~~o~res~tj_:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::I:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: fund raising from non-alumni. and -will participate in another panel r--. _______ .....;.. __________ .., on "Auxiliary Enterprises." · Fri· day he will be on a J.)anei aimed:a.t ·1 helping new persons in alutnni 1 woJ:k. :

District Three is made up of J southeastern states from Kentucky 1 to Florida.- ·

A PURE~ WHITE MODERN FILTER IIIII ~~ ' '' · · · .·· · · '" ' ,,. ,,,,, IS ONLY THE BEGINNING OF A W/NSIDN ~!(E'~{~i:li.: c:L, ~ ; , ~:,,'; ,>,;; ,; ~ ,,,: : ..• / : CC ;,, ':: 1

L~--~~----~-~--------~ . '·

DEROSE FOR THE BEST

IN

. HAIR STYLING

-924 Burke .PA 41197

~Remember· Us 'For The·· Finest l1i -Haircuts

·OPEN 5 DAYS A WEEK 9 A. :M. -9 -P. I.

9 A. M. - 6 pI M. - SITS.

LeVAN BROTHERS. BARBER SHOP

C()RNER- POLO AND CHERRY STS.

NEAREST ~A.BBER SHOP TO CAMPUS

/

It's what's gP- front that counts Winston puts it&

{t=ILTEA-BJ..END I up front ... fine, flavorful

toba~cos, specially proce$sed for filter smoking

R.J.REYHOtD~

TOB.I\CCO CO,

WINSTON•S.I\LEM,N.~

VVINSTON TASTES GOOD LIKE A CIOAR~ 'QH()l/UJI

---·-·-· .:. · .... - •

Page 4: nl - WakeSpace Scholarship · PDF fileTuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y Disher ... Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as ... mistry

®lb ~nl~ nub ~lark WINSTON-SALEM; N. C., MONDAY, .JANUARY 12, 1959

'

Money, Money, Money The new raise in tuition and gen­

eral fees, not to mention rent on some rooms, is regrettable. No stude~t likes to pay more than he is paying for any­thin:g. Yet all students continually want more and better service from the various parts of the College. Efforts this year to get lights to the Barn, telephone service in the men's dormi­tories and other things have ended in the treasurer's office and the an­swer is that there is not enough money · for everything. The situation is sim­ple: you want more; you pay more.

The increase has one feature that takes away part of the sting. Like federal income tax, it aims at those that can pay and soft pedals on those that can't. A $50,000 scholarship fund accompanies the tuition hike. And this is as it should be. Wake Forest was once known and still should be known as a poor boy's school. In recent years, its inadequate scholarship has lent a touch of irony to the idea. This at­tempt to pad the .student grants pro­gram may take away. some of the irony. .

So our verdict is: the increase, thou'gh regrettable, is fair. Fair except for one instance. And that is the rent on the married students' apartments. The cost goes up next year from $50

per month to $60, per month. We don't know anything about the cost of apartments in town. It may he that. $60 is still cheap, but that's not the point we're making. A student want­ing to live in one of the fifty apart­ments next year will also have to pay the tuition increase. That means he'll have to pay about $190 more next year than he pays this year, and m~ny married students have trouble paymg this .year's rates. ·

College Treasurer Worth Copeland says.that rent on the apartments. was not raised in 1957 when dormitory rent was increased. The dormitory raise he says, was partly to cover the cost 'of maid service. This maid ser­vice bas since proved to be almost: completely unsatisfactory. The coeds pay as much as the men, yet th~y make their own beds ;md sweep their own floors. The men say they had much rather do the same than con­tinue under the present setup.

Why not drastically curtail the un­wanted maid service in ·the · m.en's dormitories and apply the money to other dormitory operating expenses and ihe maintenance costs of the married students' apartme~ts? We doubt the men would squawk too much at being deprived of maid ser­vice.

White Cards~ Cuts That end-of-semester time is here

again and the dean's o:frfice is tryin•g to straighten out the chapel cut rec­ord . .1\-Iany students last week opened their mail boxes to find little white cards and the words, "You have -chapel cuts. Please come by the dean's office." All of the cards went to stu­dents who had already over-cut.

It is a student's own business to keep up with how many chapel cuts he has. That cannot be denied. But several years ago the people in charge of cuts instituted a kind service for absent-minded students. They sent cards to students who had almost, but

not quite, over-cut, and they sent them immediately after that last free cut was taken. Some students this year, we' 'understand, expected to receive cards and depended on that to keep them within the limit.

They didn't gEJt the cards and they over-cut, only to find it out last week.

If the 'dean's office should see fit tp reinstate the old system, it would be· welcome. If not, the officials should make a'public announcement that they are not issuing the cards next semester so any misunderstanding would be avoided. The present system is like the oid adage of locking the barn door after the horse has run away.

Independent Lounges Durham and Deane are trying to

break a Wake Forest tradition: · they are going to fulfill their platform pro­mises and begin a campaign for inde­pendent lounges.

The loun•ges are almost a nec~ssity. Independent men have nowhere tore­lax-nowhere, unless they happen to find East Lounge when some group

· has not reserved it or unless they can find some good friends who happen to belong to a fraternity. c

Some independent men have at­tempted to solve their problem by bringing in extra furniture which is more conducive to relaxation than hard-back chairs, but the College doesn't encourage this cluttering up the rooms with furniture which hasn't been stamped with the Wake Forest seal.

The problem of no space for inde­pendent men is unique at Wake Forest as a larger e;ollege. And yet, even the most mentally myopic student here

. can realize the lack of money and dif­nculty the College is undergoing now. The College has at least given the rooms in Taylor and Davis Dormi-tories for use as lounges. ·

Whether independents really want the lounges or not will be answered as soon as efforts to collect pledges of monetary support begin. It would probably be excessive enthusiasm to suppose that all the m.oney needed to

HANNAH MILLER Editor

furnish the rooms in an atractive man­ner will be collected in one year. No doubt the project will be one which will stretch over a few years' period.

If the project does not smother next year, with Deane and Durham 'gone, it will be another indication that inde­pendents do want the lounges.

The important and most determin· ing factor now in the future ·of the project is, of course, the amount· of money and support the project gets this year. According to Durham, "crew captains" will circulate through the four men's dormitories in an effort to secure pledges. '

Obviously, although the rooms will 1

be located in the basements of Taylor and Davis, students in Kitchen and Poteat·will eventually find themselves in either of the two dormitories with lounges. It has been the pattern for upperclassmen to live on the west side of the campus, and sophomores and freshmen therefore 'can enjoy the lounges for at least two years .

It might be well if a standard dona­tion toward getting the lounges wa8" set. If the cost of the lounges win re­quire an average of two dollars from every independent, for exam.ple, giv­ing can be gauged to that figure.

VVe encourage every independent to think about his responSibility-if not to himself, to other independents -and pledge. what he cap. a:fford.

SOB DEMSEY Busineaa Manager

FO'Ullded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper ()f Wake Forest College, Old Gold and B~k 18 pulilished each MondaY' during the school :rear exce}lt during exa.miDation and hoHday periods as direeted by the Wake Forest Publicati<>ns Board.

.JOHN .ALFORD, Managing Editor

BOB YARBROUGH, Circulation Manager DAN CHURCH, Assistant Editor RAY ROLLINS, Assistant Editor

EDITORIAL STAFF: J. D. Alexander, Sam Allen, Broce Ayscue, Jfle Chandler, Max Deal. Frank Glenn, Ann Griffin, Kelly Griffith, Roberta House, Charlie Johnson, Janet Lemons. Sarah Murphy, Don Schoonmaker, Lynn Smathers, Fred Wardlaw. '

·BUSINESS STAFF: Beebe Davis, Cs.mille Johnston, Chuck Jones. Janet Lemons, Ann Ringley, Doris Smith, Jim Thomas, Charles Waldrop, Anne Watkins, Dan Webster.

Member of the A...~ocia.ted Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by Na­tional Advertising Service, Inc. Subscriptic>n rate: $2.50 per year. Second-Class mail pri­vileges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C.

Offices Telephone PArk 5-9711

Exteufon 215

in Reynolda. Hall 225-556

Winston-Salem. N. C.

P. 0. Box 7567 Reynolda. BraDeh

I

· Beh.ind Closed Doors • I

!

Letters

I .

'.

- ~ . . ' .. ·- . . " .. ,""' ~ .,

....

d~ ·.

·' CMIC FORIIES .,. -.-; ..

(All letters to the editor must be signed'; names will be with­held on request. The right to edit letters is rese"ed. Letters . do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the ettltors.)

t. ': . . .·.,<', ·-'

·B;, B.OY.H:UGHES. ·

By ROY HUGHES ·What sort of sadistic humor cfo

students have? Everyon& Sli.e.,,,r ·:o collapse with laughter whe:~ 'som~­one. else\ falls on the ice anu :in-1 jares, ihl~ . dignity. Thia pro:in:pte an old st<>i-y which has ·ofter:~, beeD told about Dr. · · S:Peaa.

-1It ·seems once on the

· calnpus Clliey a ib i g Rntrwf8ll that

.al' usual, walk in tbe po.st

. was icy and' pack~ d.· Dr.· Speas ' HUGHES came ·rushing : out and :.p.mmp~ fell. Looking. hastily ,around, to see If there were MY' 1 spectato~ tO this ·iinusual sigiht, he was h~

'' .....

· to mutter, "Get rip, Bill, you damll fool, before som~bOdy sees. you.;.~·

---After numerous greetings arid .

. questions about th-e holiday one · nian was··overh'eard saying, "I had \ to come back to school to get som~ . \ r~t and l<>se some weighli." ·

"You mean ·•sober up•, don't you?" was the' reply.

Where, oh where wiii the maida go if the indepeooent nwri can buy enough fumiture . to . fill up - tlhe . lounges, Probabl~ the College ha.is a room set aside for them, too.

Have you talked with the Man Upstairs? If you weren't in chapel Thursday, you won't get:it. ·.-

"Well, I'll be an ~... he muttered ~ -he rose to depart. ·

"WUly didn't you say so," roared Dr. Tribble, ·"we need anotl!.er dean."· {Just foqling-honest!) ... ..

... 1'!~,".· ., - (; .

Writer Opposes Change In Party's Terminology

To the Editor: I should like to question Mr.

Dave Rickard's suggested changE in terminology in regard to the College-sponsored Christmas par­ty. I would suggest that if the situation does not fit the termino­logy, then perhaps the situation should be changed rather than the terminology. I had. been under the impression. that ·the purpose of the .Christmas party was to provide some sort of ·christmas festivity for some of those chil-. dren in this area who would not normally have much.

Now, I don't hold any g:z-Udge against children wh<> are economi­cally well-off, but these children will have other Christmas parties· and many other presents. I, for one, would rather feel that I had had a share, even though small, in helping children have a 1 joyful Christmas who might not

1.- have one· otherwise. If Mr. Rickard and the Salva-

. tion Army Boys' Club find it' "impossible to detennine what an underprivileged child is'' perhaps there are those in town who dD not find it quite· so difficult. I

. suspect that every minister , in Winston-Salem knows ·of at least one child who would appreciate the Christmas party much more than one who comes to just another party py means of signing his name on a list. I'm sure the welfare office must know of several.

Maybe there are other sources of finding children who really are underprivileged, and maybe there are not; but in any case, let's not abandon the idea of helping children for one of merely giving a party.

· Joel Stegall Sophomo:re Cla.§s

Senior Defends King's "Madonna Of The Storm" To the Editor:

Several weeks ago when I -entered the Ohapel, I had the very pleasant and rare e:li.'J)erien~e of viewin!f a beautiful and mas-

Magazine Prints Shirley's Article

Franklin R. .'Shirley, debate coach and assistant professor of speeeh at Wake F.ore.st, is the author of an article appearing in the December issue of the Quar­terly Journal of Speech which is published by· the Speech Associa~ tion of America.

The a'rticle is one of a series the journal is publishing about the iniluence of llteraxy societies in · colleges across the nation.

terful work of art. 1 am referring to the "Madonna of the Storm" by Mr. Joseph King. I experienced. a very real sense of admiration

. and ap.:preciation for an a'rtist who has the courage and skill to ~reate a. real work of beauty. and meaning .such as this even though · his methods are contrary to the "modern" t~end of lint>leum designs, finger paintingS by mon­keys (which ·sell for $1,800.00), thunderbolts, characters who have a single eye in their foreheads and noses on the sides of their heads,, white circles on a black background which are turned out by ·the lll!Odern Bohemians with their six-inch brushes. ·

II). the la.test issue of the "illus­trious voice" of this campus, The Student, I read that . the editor considered his paJnting as "irre­ligious, 5ickly sweet, schmaltzy" along with divers and sundry other adjectives which were used to de­scribe art of the campus. I am definitely a layman on the subject of art,, as I suspect the edit<>r of The Student,is, hut do know that an artist is supposed tD convey an impression and meaning of life to the viewer of his work. When this editor shows me such a character as I have described above (smgle eye and a nose on the side of his face) out for an afternoon ·walk, then and only then will I how to hi~ ability as a judge of . art. Ma7

-

· We wonder how many people I suggest to this editor ·and the would go to the eampus movies other self-style critics ,()f 'art, 'if they knew they. would not get drama, school policy· lllld what-. :-to .. ~~~~'T~e S_p_id_.e_r_.~e~~·:.?>·''"-·

·· ha_ve-you on this campus :a~ article·· The coeds finally met the Salem published ;,:ecently in the Phi Beta girls in an <>ld-msihioned, • hair-Kappa American Schola~ wri~n by Mrs. M~rris Freedman. ?fir. · pulling volleyba:ll game. The coeds Freedman says, "There is no more· won and ev-er.yorie feels good about self-righteously, high - ·mindedly the ill will that was· created with closed · a mind than that o:f the a reason. modern no:ttconfornlist." ·He goes on to say that· nonconfoim.isn is getting to be more orthodox than conformisn, expecially among the intellectuals in college 'communi­ties and ·"if nonccmfQrmity ·is to have its ·rightful say· in .American c •

life .•. it must, stop making a fetish of itself.'' Just once before I graduate 1 would like to see one

· of these· "critics" say simply that he enjoyed the subject Orf his as­signment insteaa of taking ibis title seriously and :feeling tba.t it is

1

necessary to criticize. The stan~-. ard form presen~ly and incessant­

ly found in our campus publica· tions is "So and so did a good job, but ••. yak, yak, yak."

I wish to publically thank Mr. King and those respc)nslble for displaying this painting, expeclal­.ly at the ·holiday season. when it was so appropriate. I'm sure those Wake Foorest students whD still dwell in the "dark ages of Tealicy" enjoyed a work of thiB c~ibre.

Bob_Jones: Senior Class

How to . recognize the freshmen. Freshrnan: · Tastes food, then

use-s salt. . . · · · · · Upperclassman: Reaches for salt,

eats fast, swallows liard, reaches ·:for water •..

!.''

F;: .Walks only o~ paved paths, U.: Blazes own trail.

F.: Covers hi.:i ·books. c U.: ·Shares ·neighbor's book dur-

ing quizzes. ·. c' -

F,:: Takes notes ·in cla~. - · U.: c"Look ,what I drew toda.y."

F.:cKnows .M~a Mater. U.:· Moves his mouth.

F.: Eats breakfast • U.: Smokes a dgar.ette,

F.: Writes home everyo third day. U.: Writes for money every third

day_ . · · · . Stolen to fill' space

"I shall n~w illustrate what I lhave on my mind," said the p:ro• fessor •. as he erased· the board.

By JOHN ALFORD ·A sensible girl isn't so sensible"

as she looks becalllle a. sensible girl has more sense 'tlhan to go around looking sensible •. Committee Of One

-It has been said that a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. Well,. we n~ed not worry aboat this quotation, he­cause Wake Forest has no little minds. n<Jr does it have any kind of consistency, let alone 'a foolish consistency.

Consider the heap, the monster or whatever you want to call that architectural masterpiece, the li­brary. There are rules everyone. has to follow-almost eve~ne. StUdents are urged to :keep quiet """':and they should-so that their conservation will ·not interfere with the guided tours that daily thundel' tbrough. It would be em­barrassing if some visitors, such as Mr. and Mrs. Magnus Stentor, (and their galaxy of childr-en) llad to :reconsider some othe:r place than the library for their family reunion. Oh miserable blot; on the tourist traffic of the library that studenu should whisper! .

Snack Shop . Considex the second inconsis.

tency-that prominent sign in ·the

· snack .shop which includes the . words "line to. the left." .At least some students o:f the College . refu5e to be dominated hy . mere '-.. ;words. r:I'hey make a :practical application of what the:v learn in bioloror-surnval of the :fittest­and fight. their way to the front to victory and food.

Room Contracts .Consider the room cont:z.acts.

Some students violated tlJem by returning to school. tw~ days early. These contract breakers were called in to. confess then- • crime before the Director o£ :Resi­dences. It. was determined that since they came .back two days early, they owed' the college two dollars ;rent. Of course those of us w:ho did not come back early are happy to hear this. Atter all, these studenu, beeause of .the change in Christmas holidays. lost a day. Therefore, the College owes ·everyone of us a dollar. I can't wait to get my dollar baclc. I'm going to. buy stack privileges in c

. the library. ·

So who makes· you read this . column anyway? I can't llielp it if.

I have failed to make you laugh. I :have a naturally nasty diapo­sition and a weird sense o£ !humor iha.t defies understanding. If you c

have.anY' jokes to liven up things, bring them to the Old Gold office. Eve'Di if I can't print them, bring them up: the staff likes to read them. ·

A Wake Forest •student gave a new twist to ;the old St. Bernard with :the bottle rescue story. He w.ent to the dog instead of the dog's coming to him. The canine was lying. outside the side door of the library in the freezing snow •. Scared he would :freeze, 'a student caried him off to a warmer •.;;pot.

I

One student in English 41 is now under the shadow of an end-of-· semester "F."

:After reading 'the section of Faulkner's Sound and Fury which is seen hrough c .the ey~s of an idiot, the student ;asked, "Ia thiS

. re&~lly the ~aY' @on idiot thinks 2"' Dr. John Broderick answered;

«Well, only an idiot would . know that, and· since -you address the question to me • • ." . .

. '

•'

I 'I

Page 5: nl - WakeSpace Scholarship · PDF fileTuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y Disher ... Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as ... mistry

' ;

' ..

. Gus B,u.rn8 __ · · ,, ' At '~IE:uropean ~dvent~re~~ l\\1\\\';'\1 \~\i'\\ \\\',i' 1\'\Y 'I\_ I 1,

\\\\\\., .. ,\ ,,\\ \ I · I I

OLD GOLD AND BLACK ' . P,AGE FIV'B Monday, Jan.. 12, 1959

I

----""' BafuiS In'Trouhle, LaCk~ Stdilerit Support

.Audience, )

Stage· Must Move Law-. Stude·nts Included I

In Increase ·In Charges Tlie Barn is in trouble. At a the Student Union support it.

'meeting of, the Interfraternity. We have enougb half-function­Council last 'Tuesday night, the ing organizations as _it is. Let's representatives ·from each fra- don't add the Student Union to ternity -\\re're. asked to "feel out" the list. their indiVidual chapters· to .s~ But· unless we support. the if the ehapters :Wouid be ·in- Student Union in its efforts tt!l~B11:ed iii ~ntiilifthe Barn fo~ now, .it ,will never have the op­fn1'iv .. Lte .. par#es,:It was .. p~Op08ed portunity to expand, It will die, that a partiiion .. be bullt'in or~r- · aa its critics ·have· predicted, to assure that the·,.parties would_ before' it has bad a e!hanee to, be priva~. This propos~l eame prove itself. And W.ak~ Forest as a surprise to"nia~y; ·There ~ · : ·will. on~ !'gain ~v~ a vacuum be , only one expJaDation for tlJ.ia :in ItS BOCl8) acitvitteS, • action, that being tha.t .~ Barn.,. ·is not present}y . operaitirig suo­qessfully_. . In :$hart, n9 ·: o~e . i~ supportirig'ii:. It is losing'money~

, Shameful. Sit~atlon . : This is:. a;: sha.meful' situation;_ And it .makes ihypoerites out .'of

:YDC Officer's ::.lns·tallation- Is

many of. us. Last year when·we ' S- * S f d were_ denie!':.~he .ri~ht to·da~ce, e~ a ur ay '

·on campus we reg1stered qwte · •· ·- . a protest.' In fact some members· . . . Bob.. Satterfield, third year :law of: the Baptist. Ohure.h, rea:liz~, student at thit Colle'ge, will as­our- plight and . decided.·-to ~o ''sume·.·ihis duties. Saturday as something about it. A lot of/ ··seei-¢;ai-y;·of .-the Young Demo­money was spent and DJallY peo- .crats' (Jlubs of North Carolina. ple worked long hours to bring His installation will, take place 'bout': a pla~e· where Wake, F~l"", ~-at 'Pfeiffer College in Misenhei­eat studenrt~ could go and !'e~x. · • <mer ;f where tJhe other newly-11 feel sure that 1these peopl~ are elected state officers will also disappobited With Clhe -response · be installed. that the Bar~ has .~eive,d. . Gov. Luther H. Hodges and

But this thing · 'goes . de-eper • several membeys of the state than· merely. wheth-er the Bern General Assembly are expected succeeds. or not. ~-!!'he .. Student 'to-' attend the meeting. • Union. has placed its ata.mp of. ~ders for dis~ssion groups ap~roval on th~, · ~rn. · It !fa& will include ·Dick Murphy, na- ·,

·instrumental in· . ·1ts · found1ng. -tiona] 'YDC executive secl;'etary, In short i:t is one of the ,pri_ze State Couunissioner' of Agl-icul­accomplishments of· our· newl!' ture L. ·y, Ballentine and Wood-· founded .. Student. lJ.nion. Yet_ l~ row Jones, chairman of. the atate is failing. Does. the r~AD; for ·Democratic Executive Committee. ita failure .lie 7with the_ ~ea:~~ :-Other officers to be installed of our Umoft.. +':lo, it Ues._ra b. 'des Satterfield areasfo1lows: ther with the members, of the es1 . student- body. The Barn is suf- Art Vann of Durham~ P~l-

The audience at the·next·pro- tiny" -wlU' be Jimmy Herring: duction; of the College Thea.tet- and Angela Johnson; -~n ~ed­will have to move around to see time Story" .tan llensley and the program of three plays. Sberon Dailey. Ail members

Feb. 10~14 the theater wlll have roles in "StiU Life.'' In use the proscenium ,type. . pro- · addition to those in the casts of duction for -the second time in ~he other two pl.a.ys, Lela Faye ·. its three ye •. rs Oft. the Winaton· Coltraine, Mary Anne Copen- · -Salem campus when the acton• haver and Kelly Johnson will wo~kshop presents "EuropeaD . appear in the Noel Coward Adventure." piece. -

rrhe audience will view the Direetor and scene d«~!Jigner first of :the tbree-pla.y' aeries, tor the show will' be James "'Man of Destiny'' by George Walton; dlreetor of .the College Bernard : Shaw on · the proacen- , Theatei; · · · TechDal , directors ium stage· •"rather. ·. thm .. , ·the: .. are''· Dinah Gattis and Rozella usual arena theater._ . Jewell. The special supervisor

.A:Aer.wa,rd ;tqe · ~~n" 9'0a,se7"· .·tor,;~he theater is Karen: Walk· play, ''Bedtime Story," will be ' · · · . enacted in the arena: The :final ·PJrformance requires . switch­mg baek to the proscenium stage for ".Still Lite" by Noel Coward.

· PnllletDlum The proscenium stage allows

the use of .arohes, murals and perspectives that were not pos­sible in' the arena theater. The College Theater first useil the ·

. pToscenium :for the ' open!ng · production ()f the current. sea· son, ''All My So:na" by Arthur Miller. ~ ·

The ailtdienee will sit on risers that. come within three feet' of the stage. The stage itself will be raised· only ldx inches.

The ·first play is based on an early bit of intrigue in the life of Napoleon .. The eomedy .. by ()'Casey deals with wedding. nighi_manners. The aet for this play . will follow · the , , usual pattern of· fnnrlture and light arrangement to produce its

· special -effect. A. restaurant in a train ata.

tion near London 1s the set for the Coward play.

"European Adventure" is the 'third major production of the (Continued from page 1) theater this · year. , ''Ladies in level."

money will be taken from the convention's regular gifts to the college. Part ot the money is from Christian Education Day offerings made in Baptip churches of the. state.

Retirement'' wll.'l the last, -pro- Another m a j or :fee· raise duction gtven by. the theater. r.t concerns the students in the was· the 't>nly student directed. Wake Forest School of. Law. play to ~ , presen~d this year. _ They must .pay $550 tuition

. Dinah Gattis, senior .from Bur· · and general fee, $80 more than · the $470 ~~ey now pay.

lington, was ··dlrector. At the -same time, the law

Other fee raises were in eve­ning school, where each credit hour will next year coat a stu· dent $18.50 instead ot ,.11. Summer .school expenses will remain the sam e·. GraduatioD fees will be $10 rather than $7.50.

"European Adventure", in- students come in for a .share CYt volvea new light and sound. set- the scholarship money. An un-ups, sound proo:f booths'' ·with . specified amount of it will go eomplete visibility of the stage, and a new intereommunica~io~ -

.- telephone s y stem enablihg crews -to talk to each other, without disturbing rehe~rsals •

to set up a scholarship and loan ·})rogram f-or law students. · The $50,000 s c h o 1 a r ship The increase is the second

major one- since the move to the

S d WinstonJSalem eampus. In 1957 F;_ive tipen_ s a $90 rise in tuition and general fee brought expenses from $380

T' B G • to $450. 'A- $10 room rent in­~ o. e, . _z.ve, n -crease was also instituted then. . . In other action, the trusteea

By. T T.- · '• · •t -appointed a committee to study v-nzversz y a request <>f the convention that . , ' · the College change its charter.

. Boston University h~s an- The proposed change. would gl.v• ,nouneed a fellowship program the ~onvention a powerful role for o-ne 'year of graduate s-tudy in future charter changes. in · ·.broadca:sting, journalism, Dr. BroadlUI E. Jones of Ra.-ni.otiori :pictures or P!Jblic rela- leigh is the committee ehairo .tions~ ,- man. He was· head of a. trustee

Five feilowships of - $1,200 group that met with the con. each plus tuition will be award-, vention's Committee of 17 prlol' ed to. master of .science candi- to .the .1958 con-rention. dates. Each - fellow will ~rry Other membera are Dr. Paul adVanced courses which can be Johnson of Winston-<Salem and applied toward meeting the ~- Guy Carswell, Charlotte at-quiremtmts for & M. S. degree m torney. The men woere eltoseDJ either, of these fields. . to "study the matter~• but were

In addition the felloW' will not given a specific time to re-- assist ·iii two weekly lectures port back to the trustees.

and will be ~nsible for dis- 'Several standing. committees eussions, testing, reports and were appointed at the meeting.

· paJ>ers. He will take leas than whicJr·--wa!l held on the College a full -course load during the campus. • Twenty-three trusteee

·academic year. were present. Areas available fo~ work are ______ __;;._.,...

Prospective Profs Will Meet Tuesday

fering from 'lack of ,,s):lpport. • · den:t; ~ McE~roy, Umvers1t~ ~' . · , People OpMsed · --. of- N.orth ;Carohna, treas~r •. _

· • - ' · · ,.. · :DelOres Childers, Mount Holly, ~ Thls see~ rather strange. national committeewoman, an d There were, and still are, ~me : ·Ha Harrison Raeford nation-

.people-·who·-.are v.ehemently-·op-1 reymmittee~n ,' -

"European Adventure" will be the first venture of the newly organized actors• workshop. All part!\ in. the three pla19 will be taken by members of the work­shop. Ltjads in "Man of Des-

TWO MEMBERS of the, Coll~ge Theater ·use serewdriver a.n.d bam mer to build a door frame 'for the theater's for;t~eoming prodnetion or

_ "Eiiropeaa Adventure," -• series of three one-act plays which use both the arena and proseenium type stage. (Old Gold photo by Grigg.)

Introduction· to Communication, , Major Economics <>f the World, Human Behavior, History and :Survey o~ Co~~unieation and ~olitics and Govemment in the - - All.-students who are thinking United States.· of · getting a ' school teacher's

:Students wanting to . apiJly certificate have -been asked to should write to Melvin Brod- meet in the auditorium of the shaug, Dean, BostoD University science building at 7 p. m.

posed to the ,Student Union .. It 8 co . · . . would seem :that· those'who favor, . Eleven Vlce presidents will be p, · ~- - Fl l. b ' .j;, · - , -thi J:tpi9n .. joylil ,.l'!Llly .-;_~ it~· · .i:~§~ll~d. 'Th.~~~~~-~Eyelyn ~ran- · ()8 ~ TIJQ ft v·e e ra 11'eS, '· c -

etippol:t ··w~en if.-'is trYing to c1s of Hurdlem Hill, ~J.;s. ~om _ , establish itself. In short why East of FranlHmton, Mrs. ~ch- W4. . , k -p t ' B • th don't the independt:mts, the men .. ard Que~ n of Waynes~ille, - (l· . e .L' ores S lr who atand 'to benefit most from Charles 'Kivett of Greensbo.ro,

· · Jim Hunt of North Carolma i Sta.te College, Frank McGougan, The message that 1959 is the

ReJI•gion week . Tabor City, and Jack Kirkaey of, 125th. anniversary of Wake -Morganton. Forest College has gone out to

'Events- Lieted. Stephenson Invites ~;::~s in every state in the

(Continued from- page .'1) '- Student Cpmplaints -: •- · · l'h:e message is embod~~d in a Chapel will be held Tuesday, - -(Continued ffom page 1) special postage ~ancellahcn now

. Wednesday -and rrhursday dur- on similar organiz~tions a.t the_ i~ use i~ th~ \-V'inston-Salern "ing that. week, with the th~rd University of Nebraska. Walton postal system,. . period class on ·Wednesday being originally worked with Shepherd The spec 1 a I cancellatHJn, omitted. The . Tuesd!J.y c4apel in making an outline :for the which was p:ut into use Jan. 1, service the-'-following1 week 'will commit;tees. · . is a rectangular . engraving also be omitted.:.· . Russ Stephenson, mediator 'bearing the inscription: "Wake

Student and faculty commit- betWeen the athletic department Forest College, 125th Anniver-tees hive been planning tlie ~- and students, pointed out th,at sary, 1834-1959." The city's ligion in Life event since. tJ:le aity students with , questions· three cancellation~ machines •. in-beginning of· the semester. Dr. ·• about student-athletic relations eluding. the one_ -~t Reynolda ~Philip Hamri~ .of the chemistry or, complaints involving -the :Station on the campus, have the department- is· chairman. ·of_ ~he athletic department should: see- ' · steering committee. ,Mem~rs .~re .: 'him. ' St~phenson-~ was appPinted Dr. J. Allen Easley; College chap- ·to his post· at the· .last meeting lain; Dr. J.'Glenn Blackburn, paa- of the legislature. One of his tor of the Wake For.est Baptist duti-es is to bring· complaints Church; acting dean E. G. Wilson ·before_ the -·Legislature when and Dr. Ivey Gentry of the ptath-' such action is necessacy. ematics department. , _ . Lewis Morgan proposed -that

WA'I<E 'f<?'RE6T COLLEGE· \~~"hi ANNIV~ARY

-_18~4-'-1~59

Dr., 'Elton t. Cocke of the a "camiva.l" like one in his high. , biology department, Dr', E. P.· school be considered: as an

Banks of the. sociology depart- · ' annual activity at Wake Forest. ment and students Harvey Dur- No vote was taken. '

·special dies -p~rchased by the College.

Requested . Mark

ham, Oharles Deane, Judy Free­man, MarY' Louise Brown, Earl .Shaw and Sam Harvey. ,

The committee baa described ,the week as "an annUal and spe-1cial effort to. confront the col­~ege community with the rele­vance and the meaning of_, the Christian faith." ·

I

Get WILDROOT ' CREAM·OIL Charli~!

'i

Durham To Name 'Lounge' Captains

(Continued f.rnm page 1) Durham said the area captains

will be appointed before the. spring semester but Will · not begin their work until then.

Necessary furnishings will in! elude television sets, bridge :tables and lounge chairs. '

Both the College and· United · political parties last spring pledged to wor~ toward- seeuring independent · lounges. Durham (CP) and Deane (UP) both con­sider their-work an effort toward this goal.

-------LANGUAGE PROFS

Twelve faculty mem~rs of the modern language :a.nd English

-departm-ents attended a meeting · of the Modern Languarge Asso­ciation in NeW York during the' Ohristmas holidays. ·

Postal. ,officials have . noted that since the ·new cancellation has been.put"in.tO· use, hundreds. ()f cardS anci letters have been received here requesting th-e cancellation. Cards, letters, and stamp covers received represent

'collectors in every State. 'The special cancellati<>n ·was

REYNOLDA GRILL Home Of Piza Pie

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Attending were Dr. Harold Parcell, Dr. Richard L. Shoe­maker, Dr. Henry L. Snuggs, Prof. Charles W. Faust, Prof. Justus C. Drake, Dr, Robert R. Howren, Dr. John C. Broderick, Dr. William 0. Harris, Prof. H. •Conrad Warlick, Dr. Edwin G. Wilson, Dr. E. E. Folk and Dr. Elizabeth Phillips,

KEIGER PRINTING COMPAIY

Justa little lilt ~ of Wllcfro~t ~ • ~

and ••• WOWI

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WINSTOH·SALEM DRIVE·IH. "The Deacons Favorite Drive-In"

Biggest Comedy Of The Year

HOUSE BOAT -··-with_;_ _

Cary Grant and Sophia Loren· Also THE SHEEP~AN ~th Glenn Ford

suggested by James 'B. -pook, assistant hursar, who is now on. a: leave of absen~. He is con­tinuing studies in business ad..,. ministration ·at Harvard Uni­versity. The: suggP.stion- was T."'l'd= in a Jr-tte;: to college' officials. A ·request was then made by Colle.~e officials and by Graves Wi~son, assistant Superintendent of Mails in Winston-Salem.

Granted Approval - - The Post Office Department ·;n Washingto'1 gTanted approval, stipulating that the College pay costs o;f the special dies.

The' customary circular post­mark bearing the name of the city and the state and the date will appear to :the left of the message, which is enclosed in a rectangle. All piece's of mail going through ·the cancellation

. machines will bear the W-ake Forest Anniversary message. ·

The cancellation will be in use through June 30.

The College was bom in 1834, originally chartered as Wake Forest Institute. It was rechar­tered four years later as Wake Fc.rest College.

. M1sicaJiy, _See Us ORCHESTRA AND BAND

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School of Public Relations and Tuesday. ,

S · d T' . "_ .:·:e~-·· .. · Communications, · 640 Common· Prof. J. -L. Memory Jr., ch&ir--tu V ... a ,r- · eaJ.th A ·, 13' to · ·15 M s · ·.man· of- the . education depart.- -. . . . ~ ., ___ .;.a-7~.:: iequirem::~-· ~r n ap;lica:i~~- ment,. specified that freshmen,

A O.lr. · ' d are a bachelor's deg-ree from an sophomores, jnniors and seniora re IJ.ere accredited institution and a are included, except those stu-' background ·iii the ·field to dents who have already taken In -Summer which he is' applying. student teaching.

Potential historians, sociolo­gists, poets and other liberal_ arts students can combine sum­mer study with . vacation travel 'abroad by enrolling in a British or Austrian. su~mer, school pro­gram ..

-Applications of American stu­dents are now being accepted by' the Institute of International Education.

The British University Sum­mer Schools offer six week courses in various subjects, Stu· dents at Stratford-upon-A von will study Shakespeare and Elizabethan drama; in London . students will be offered Litera­ture, Art and Soc'ial Change in 19th Century England or 'As-

. pects of English Law a_nd Juris­prudence; at Oxford,· students will cover English History, Literature and the Arts from 1870 ~ the present. Edinburgh School ' will offer cour.lies ·in European Irihetitance. ' ,

'Summer school fees, including­full board, residence and tui~ tion, range between · $2~6 and $238. A few scholarships ,are _ available. · · _ · :.

Fountain Favorites Fo~ ~Eds

~~p~ , BAR. .,

e Northside Shopping Center e South Stratford Rd.

· Tem,re -Jewelers Dia1118U& e Watehee e Gifts

waw. ~ 1eweb:y Repair ~lolist to Se"e You 115 S. Hawthorne Ed. Across Prom Ardmore

Past Ofiioe-Ph. PA 5-2902

On Othe:r Campuses .• ·I University of North

Carolina ' 'fhe University of-North Car­

oiina has recently been giving ·attention· to a question on its job application fo1·ms which asks if applicants have ever been Communist par_ty mem­bers.

Consolidated University Pres­ident William C. Friday an­nounced Dei:." 17 that he bad -approved a recommendation by University Chancellor William B. Aycock to eliminate the ques­tion- from. t h e application · blanks. _

Last week University officials said ·no usefui purpose was ever served by the- question. ·

- The question is now officially _ off the blankB, since the trus~ t~es voted in 1949 -to 'leave such matters up to the administra-tion. ' _

A -report to ·the trustees is -due today, however, on develop­ments concerning the decision. President Friday will make the report • · · 'Since .1949, the question had

•required job applicants at the Chapel Hill institution to state­Whether they had eYer had any connection ·with communism. The question was not on the 'forms at the other consolidated university units-lWoman's Col.; lege in Freensboro. and North Carolina State College in Ra­leigh. ;

W. D. Carmichael Jr., vice president of the University, said the question put a rope around the campus "that any liar could step over."

New application blanks are being printed for an three branches of the university.

Duke University Walter Reuther, in speaking

to Duke students last week,

said America h:~s underrated Russia in, fighting for men's minds in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The United States is moving away from peace and leading toward a· conflict with "guided missiles in the hands of misguided men, he pointed out.

America's industries must mobilize abundance, he said. Management and labor must co­operate in order to bring abOut •full employment and full pro­duction, he feels.

"Economic power must be built up. It is strange that a country supposedly sound can­not employ more people in

· peace- as in war." he continued, "Education must be mcreased,"

!Reuther · said; . "Floor. sweepers in GM· plants receive more pay than : 55 per · cent of aU teachers."

Civil · rightr~ w & s called ''America's Ac!lilles ·heel" by Reuther. More work must be done to lessen the gap between moral promises ·and mo'ral prac. tices,, he . emp~asized.

Orders Frepared to Take Out

New Asia kastauranL Jnc •

Our Chinese Family Dinners Are The Talk Of The Town

LUNCH ............... ·--·· 65c DINNER .............. __ . 95c

W. D. larn, Manager 'Phone PA 4~1356 315 W. 5th St.

It takes a heap of to success offset a poor

?I~! With the help of Twin City Cleaners a large wardrobe isn't necessary to be well -groomed. In fact, this ex­cellent clothes-care prolongs clothes-life, and s a v e s money.

Phone Dial P,A Z.710G

612 West ~ St.

,-'

Page 6: nl - WakeSpace Scholarship · PDF fileTuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y Disher ... Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as ... mistry

PAGE SIX Hoaday, Jan. 12, 1959 ·oLil GOLD AND .BLACK

. G. 0 'Flaherty Barbara· Massey· 1ven ,., lk G . . . _,_a oes A Suspended Sentence TO Press

National Photo Contest Begins

A national photography contest for college students has been an­nounced, beginning now and i·un­ning through March 15.

The contest ia designed to en­courage on-campua photography and is jointly aponaored by Kappa Alpha Hu, · honora17 photojournal­ism :fraternity, the Natlonal Press PhotographerS' Association, the Encyclopedia B r i t a n n i c a, the the .American Assoel&tiGn ·of Col­lege Unions and Life Magazine.

Prize!! are offered in several categories of p}fotography, Includ­ing' news. feature, sports, pic­torial, pornait or characteT and picture story. Also a plaque and traveling trophy will be. awarded for the single picture or set of pictures which best portray a phase of colleg-e 'life. · · Heading the Jist of prizes is an all-expense week at Life M<~ga­zine. Also, first place winners in each 'category will receive sets of Encyclopedia Britannica.

. All second place winners will be awarded plaque'!; . contributed by Kappa Alpha Mu. Third place winner in all divisioru; will re­ceive a two-volume Britannica World Language·Dictiona.ry, which gives word equivalents in seven languages.

Contest rules and entry :forms are available from Vi Edom,

·National KAM Secretary, 18 Walter Williams Hall, Columbia, :Hissou:ri.

ANNOUNCING· BILL LAWING IS PROUD TO ANN_OUNCETHE

OPEINING OF THE NEW MODERN,LY EQUIPPED

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OPEN NIGHTLY TILL 9 P •. H. . . BABY ~~S

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JEWELS BY TRIFAIII fiNDERWODD ·JEWELERS, 'iiiC.

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THE .COLLEGE. -INN 'RESTAURANT-: ' •• .J ••• ,,: I ~~ ·: • ·.. . ~

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AMMON'S ESSO · -·servicenter Welcome ~.Wake forest ·~Students

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ROAD SERVIC-E TIRES • ACCESSORIES .. BA TTERiiES.

EJ!gllsh: WEIRDLY. SHAPED ASH TRAY

Thlnldlsh lnanslatlon: In modern circles, the plain round ash tray is considered square-no butts about it. Today's ash trays resemble any­tWng from' a M:ing vase to a coach, and four -the only word for them is deceptacle! To the discriminat· ing smoker (anyone who enjoys the honest taste of a Lucky Strike), we offer this fashion note: 25-lb. ash trays are very big this year.' ·::, --MAKE '2&

Start talking 'our llinguage-we've got ·hundreds of checks just itching to go! We're paying $25 each for the Tbinklish

1 words judged best! Tbinklish is easy: it's

1 a new word from two words-like those on this page. Send yours to Lucky Strike, Box67A, Mt. Vemon, N.Y. Enclose name, address, college and class.

Get the, genuine article

Get the honest taste of a LUCKY STRI,KE

. ' e':o j . Y'~--- ~-------- .. &;\L? .. Produd Of ~~rh~-: J~u our middlt name

• •

Page 7: nl - WakeSpace Scholarship · PDF fileTuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y Disher ... Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as ... mistry

-co.·

' ..

·Gibson Sets OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Jan. 12, 1959 PAGE SE~Bii

· Deacon' Dope\ . . '

Deacon basketball coach Bones McKinney week's contest with the Blue Devils of.Duke

IIJ'r.": ........... :+··· tlie biggest "must" game in his seven years ... v •• .., .......... · at Wake Forest. The lo8s of that match

a deep Slhadow . over Deaco~ Ca.ge prospeoa f~r th~ nlr-lt le&ilon.

Wake Forest-and Duke were rated abnoat eYen before the cOJrtMt. sbared_a tie ·for·~l?ilrth place in'the Atlantic C<ias~ Comerence.

Kn~lltswrit,ers ~ized up the ga~ as a· test o1·experience vs. season­. They gav~ th_e Deacons a -sliglllt edge O'V'e~ the aophom.ore-trtudded

Devils. · · · ·

E~t in a thrilling come~ that was decided with only two second• playing time· remaining: Wake came -ou\ on the bo'btom.

. · . .As ·a result ··students have been howlli;lg, raVing, condemning and Cl7ing. as if Monday's defeat were going to keep them :from. grad-

Wa.have heard students blammg eaeh of the 1ndividual !lill:~.YE!r!l, the -team as a whole and even ·:Bones. . . -.. . ~ .

It -seems strange tib:at such noted basketball "theorists eould nat on the cause of the defeat. Tll~ it would be easier for Coach

:HcKinney to dellide whkh of these venerable :Prognostlca~ors to add to his Staff. · -' · >ll ~ -~ , oi

, • En~ollme~t Loss One Student ~s ovel'lheard to say tba' it looked to him u jf the

basketball team, like the football team, would follow up .good pre­season and early season indit;ations with a lamentable record. Tb13! Sa.ni.e student later remarked that Wake Forest would eoon be un­able to induce anyone to enroll here unle~s the athletic teams t1tarted wblning; .~

lt seems evident,-however, that there will alw&y& be a few non­conformists in high schools across. the country who are intereBted :iJi going to college for an 'education :ra~her than to watcb an athletic tea.m... -

'Wake .. Forest stu'dents should realize . that their school ill tbe smallest in. the A~lantic Coast Conference and :that olll' athletic department has a smaller budget than ~ny other. Big Four institution.

'lbe Deacons. are outclassed in ·the AOC, and the ®gical ~flap :for the ~ollege to take, if it wants a winning team, is to withdraw from this conference .and take on less formid4i.ble opposition. 'I'hle step, of ~ourse, would 'never meet with the approtal of .tihe alumni or lthe majority of the stu,dents. . . ·

Instead, the Athletic Department, :witb the help of tbe. alunmi, will probably go overboard try!ng to build up athletic prowess. We· mentioned once before 'the dangers of such ·action. One need· only look sou;tih toward Auburn for e'VideDce.

f. US~~.Gets. :. NCAA Probation .The University of Southern Call:fornia has won more NC.AA cham­

pio-nsihips than any other school iJ;l. the nation. usc, always oonsider-' ed a tough' opponent in any. sport, was banded a tW<>-year probation · by the ;NCAA just last week. The infraction w.as a ,piece of illegal

· that .took place two years ago, but the offi.cials .lbad to waif until Southern .Cal got <bbrough serving one probationary sen­tence before they could impose another.

Even in this same state there are examples. North ·Carolina State 'LoOJILeg;e. w.on,the Ace. football crown in the 1957 season but could not

l're·ore:se11t the conferenee in the Orange Bowl because of NCAA pro-·

. , Pie . Wolfpack drew the sentence as a result of the illegal rectuit­~ing ~ta basketball.pla~er. Yet t;he mo~t formidable weapon in this year's -~dition of .. State's always powerful cage. attack is little (5-9)

. Pu_cillo ;who came to. Raleigh without .a sobolarship. : . I , ' . . .. . . . . 'Pucillo never stacl:ed a ·game :in his high school basketball career.

'Yet he 'i;; considered State's most promising All~'Amerka candida.W. ~ J>erhaps this is just. $Roilier case of· .a remarkable coincideD~. True, it isn't .9ften that one finds· such a player. But it would still be better for 'the school to count · on· accidents like Pucillo than to

to the da-ngers of "Creeping Tat~mism" · and find all aCl!Lde:tnic · prestige' sacrif\ced for. the sake of atblet~c P.rowess.

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Slate·Of 10, Grid Games ) A full slate of seven Atlantic Coa.st .Conference games plus' contests with Florida State. Vir­ginia. Tech and Tulane comprise the 1959 Wake Forest football schedule which has been announ­ced by Athletic Director · Bill Gibson. Tula~e of the

Oonfere~· is the only real new­comer to the card siiice It /.will be the first meeting in history be­tween football teams of the two schoois. The contest will be pla.y­ed in New Orleans on Oct. a. and will· mark the third· str~ght· year ' the Deacons ha~e played Southeastern Conference foe .

Virginia RetUrns Virginia is . returning to the

schedule ~r a one-year abs~ee. Wake Forest played the Cavaliers for three conseCutive seasons· from 195'5 through 1957. ·.

The three non-conference eon­tests will launch the season with the seven league scraps :following in succession. The Deacs will h'ave an open date on Nov .. 7 bet~ween·l the ·· gamea with Virglnia llrilt Duke.

Four At Home Four contests, one more than

last fall, will be played at home in Bowman Gray 'Stadium. These games will be with Virginia Tech, North Carolina, Virginia and South CaroU:Qa. Homecoming wiH he . observed tn the initial home scrap with Y.PI on Sept. 26, while the South Carolina contest will be played op Thanksgiving Day, · Nov. 26.

The Deacons will 'open the· season Sept. · 19 ~ against Florida State in Tallahassee. It wtll mark the third meeting with the Semi­noles in four years With all the tilts being played· in Tallahassee. Deacou eapbin OLIN BROADW.AY

Deacs Journey After meeting V:PI at home .on B' d U: 'T'. •tl

Sept. 26 and Tule.ne . in . New roa . Wa"' c.~ . • a_ s ~ l . es Orleans on Oct. 3, the De_aca will "J journey to College Pa.rk, Md.. on Oct. 10 to meet . the Maryland A~ r t . D • J . t Terps in. the first conferene~ tJ· c.~t....t.an ·U:f.·n. rreszuen· game. The lone nigllt game on \he r 7 slate com-es· hp against North Carolina State at·Raleigh on Oct. By RAY ROLLINS year he was a regular starter and 17. Perhaps one of the best-kno'l'o'll the second leading · soorer. He

The successive home games personalities oh the Wake Forest finished the season with 279 with North Carolina on Oct. 24 campus is Olin Broadway,-Raleigh points and.a 12.1 average. He was and Virginia Oct. 31 follow before senior who is active not only in the number two rebounder with the ()pen date on Nov. 7. The basketball but in other college 7.0 average. As a freshman he Dea~s. play Duke at Durham Nov. activities. . scored 207 points. He is noted for 14 and . Clemson's defending AOC Br~adway ·is captain of the his one-handed jump shot. champions at Clemson on Nov. 21. basketball ·team an honor added Three Sports It will be the third straight year l t "' t 1• 1·. t f a Before he came to Wake Forest the De~ have played at Clem- ~~ hyearts 0

\ ~~g 1~hl 0t' · ceo: in 1955, he attended Hargrave son. The finale is with South pt~ m~n ' 0 a e H: a i Military Academy at Chatham, Ca;olina on Nov. 2.6. . ' I 0 erwlse. · . 'Va.,· where he played three sports:

· . · In Wake Forest basketball, last basketball, basehall, and football. Ee was also selected as class valedictorian .

Brpadway began a series of pres.idents . as 'a :-freshman at

Henderson High School He ser·v- · ed as president of both his fresh­man and .sophomore clas~es. At Henderson he also played football and baseball. .,

Last year; Broadway served as Wake . Forest junior class presi­dent. He is riow:'president.,of the

. senior class, president of the 'Monogram. Club, president · . of Omicion Delta Kappa, honorary leadership· fraternity. He is a member o:fthe Student Legislature by virtue of his ·class presidential post. He is also a ·member\of Delta Sigma Ph.i fraternity.

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CAPT,AIN OLIN BROADWAY goes in for a layup in Monday night•.s conference clash with Duke University. Duke's. JOHN FRYE tries to block the shop as JERRY ROBERTSON looks· on. The Blue Devils wori the game in the· final two seconds. 58-57. (Old Gold photo by Grigg.)

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way still find3 ~me f(}r occasional golf, -except during basketball ilea­son ..

He i! a math major, with an in­tel-est in tea~hing math and coach­ing. The career will have to wait, however, while he serves a stint in the United 'States Army. He is a second lieutenant in the ROTC and he plans to enter the Army shortly after graduation in June.

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ball ga.mes with tile University of South. Carolina Wednesday night ana North . Carolina State Saturday night 'Will be issued through Wednesday, the Athletic Department has a.n­JJounced.

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Page 8: nl - WakeSpace Scholarship · PDF fileTuesday night a.t a meeting of the Ministerial Conference T u e s d a y Disher ... Bailey is a 1955 gradttate of the the first time as ... mistry

P.AGE EIGHT Monday, Jan.12, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Deacons To Meet USC Six-th Win­~~ Sought

By J. D. ALEXANDER

... . .

i

--.·wake Drops· Gaines ·:1o Duke, TQ,.·Heels

- By J. D. ALEXANDER the ·basket and' they could have ' With two seconds to play, guard rebounded us to death," the coach John Frye twisted past his guard added. Wrapping. up his expla-' and dropped in a layup to give nation Coach McKinney ~d.,: "I ··Duke University a 58-57· victory ~bought a great deal about play­

- · over- Wa]<;e Forest last '·Monday mg Carolina this type of game night i~ Memori~l Coliseum. Duke and I ca~e _to the conclusion that called tm1e out with 13 seconds to 'it was entirely hono-rable. · .play after the Deacons had forged · Coach Frank McGuire said. the into the lead on. a free throw by Deacons· did the right thing when

_, forward Dickie Odom. . they adopted the . possession-type

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. I ' . Coa~h Horace McKinney will be trying-: to shake his Deacon cage team out of a mid-season slump as he; sends it into battle against the <iamecocks of the University of South Carolina Wednesday iri Memorial Coliseum. The Deacs, in a slump which saw them lose fom· out of the last five games, will be trying- for their sixth win in 13 starts.

'When pla;r ~·e.sumed at mid- play f?r the Carolma ·game. "If I court, Frye qr1bbled · in, twisted WE~re _l:P. Bones' shoes," McGuire ·around his Deacon detendel' and said, "I would 'have ordered my ]aid home the winning two- ,team to play the .same type of

RESJAURANT

Wake • Forest's basketball future looks bright, according to Coach McKinnev. "We have a good chance to finish fourth," the coach added, "but we'll have to come off the floor to do it.i•

p'ointer. game." ·

Carr,oll Youngkin,• a sophomore ····~Piiii)iiiNiiiiiit center, -tossed in seven field . goals for 14 points . and captured tO· rebounds in the top effort for Duke. :£?oug Kistler and Frye had 13 and 12 points respectively for the Blue Devils.

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McKinney, speaking of his per· sonnel, said, "Jerry Steele will -see a lot of action against South Carolina; he has shown marked improvement in practice and con'.. ference ·competition." ·

Dave Budd was the big ·threat for the Deacons with siX field goals and four out of 10 free throws 'for 16 points. _.George Ri~chie had 14 · pointSJ. Captain Olm Broadway, . hitting with his outside jump shot scored. nme

points. i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::~::::::~~==:::::::; . After the final buzzer sounded, there was more than just a slight trace 6f dejection ori Coach Bones McKinney's face. McKinney was as dejected over the .last 15 seconds' play as Duke coach Hal

Bouncing Back 'South Carolina, bouncing back

after a seven game losing streak, should be out for blood despite a heavy weekend schedule. The Gamecock's schedule calls for .games on Friday, Saturday and 1\fonday nights, allowing. them only. one day's ;rest before the trip,_ to Deaconland.

Bradley was- elated. When asked how ·much the de­

feat hurt; the Deacon mentor re­plied. "ln the seven years. I've b~n kt W~ake Forest, I say this was the biggest 'must' game .we had."

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Flowers Cut Daily from 1 qur .. Own Greeilhouses· So1.1th Carolina is" 1ed :by guards Ray· Pericola, Dickie Prater, and forward Mike Callah;m. After a poor sta:rt, South Carolina began to bounce back when grinners Pericola and Callahan started hitting with regularity.

WAKE FOREST'S 'DAVE BUDD ~ttempts a shot and is fouled by Duke's LARRY BATEMAN in Monday night's game with the Blue Devils. Looko~ng on is' Deacon eaptain OLIN BROADW,AY. ·coach Bones McKinney's . cagenien were .defeated in a contest that 'was decided on a fi.eld by iohn Frye with only two seconds remaining. The fi_nal seore was Wake Forest 57, Duke 58. (Old Gold Photo

Wake's · ability to stay ahead throughout most of the contest

considered 1 the rebounding statis-. was remarkable when an observer!:~===========~:;:===~;=~=;~===-=~ tics. The Deacon lead at one time ' · • ·

Baby Deites Beat Duke. Mural Action·· ~~:~?';~-t':~.'"::~ WHER. by Grigg.) ·

The Gamecocks broke . their seven-game . losing streak' last Monday night by trouncing Clem­son College, 83-69. Coach Walt Hambrick says he thinks the win gave his team a shot in the ann.

State Visits After South Carolina, the Deacs

run into nationally ranked N. C. State. Coach Everett Case will pay a return visit to Memorial Coliseum as his Wolfpack does battle against Wake Forest. ·The Wolfpack holds- down the

number one spot in the Atlantic Coast Conference along with the University of North Carolina; This distinction plus their lofty national ranking should give the Deacons added incentive 1n their quest for an upset.

Deacon cage mentor Bone.s McKinney plans to use•' hls big men. in thls game. This means that· both Jerry Steele and Dave Budd will be under the boa-rds for Wake Forest.

.·• .,. -. ',' . •' '• -~

· 7 - J c complete command of the back-

D . d. B T b' n a~·e Games! boa,rds. The Blue_ Devils led in CAN I GET. ONE DAY.LAU:NDRY: ANti-.:. owne y ar Ba Ies ~ . that dep_:~t~~i~~~~m DRY CLEANING SERVICE1'

Ent r F l (I1j BY.lO,-OUT BY:5)· .. . . e S lUQ S Wake. Forest invaded Woollen . . , . .

The Baby Deacs evened up with tosses. . Gymnasium last Thursd~y night SrAR ~-ZW''S o . . -· .. the Duke University and Univer- Mewhort ·Scores A schedule of intramural acti- to take on the nationally raztked . · f Co -sity of North Carolina freshman Buzz Mewhort took the scoring vities for this week has been out- Tar Heels of-· the University of . - . . - . urse teams this week, beating Duke, honors with 26 points. Len Chap- 'lined. by the athletic department Nor~h C1arolina. Dhespite the Dea- 939 BURKE ST. 77-60, and losing to Carolina, 64- pell Jed the Deaclets with 23 and mcludes water polo, table ten- cons s owing t e proceedings 60. followed by Gene Compton with nis, ~andball: basketball and a down to a slow walk, . the boys in

The Deaclets took the lead 15. Bill Packer and Dave Wiede- councrl meetmg of intramural blu~ walked off with a 44-34 vic-early in the first half of the Duke man had 13 and 11 respectively. m-anagers. tory. game and began to move steadily Thursday night, however, it Water polo h(!ads the list with "We played it _just as we had out 1n front. By half-time they was a different story. The Baby a meet today between Kappa Al- planned it," Coach Bones · McKin­held a 43-32 lead. Deacs started off fast, but were pha and Sigma Chi at 8:15 p. m. ney of the Deac.s said, "and we

I~ the second half, they kept at overpowered in the second half. On Tuesday at 8 p. m., Kappa AI- had our opportunities, but we least 10 points out in front, slow~ The fre.sbmen led the Tar Babies pha will meet the winner of Mon- couldn't capitalize on them.'' ly building to the final 17-point 26~21 at the midway mark. day's game. No games are sched- With 9:40 remaining in-· the edge. The game was :won from The great. scoring and rebound- uled for Wednesday night, ·when game and the Tar Heels leading the free throw line. The Baby ing of Ken McComb led Carolina the Wake Forest basketball team by five points (27-22), Twig Deacs made 27 of 38 charity in their comeback. McComb had meet~ the Universi_ty Of South Wiggins had a one-and-one ilitua-

23 points for the evening. Don Carolina in a varsity basketball tion at the free throw line. If he 'Walsh also was a standout for the game. had made both shots, ·the Deacs Carolina frosh. _on Thursda·y, Pi Kappa Alpha would have been only three points

High scoring honors for the ;vdl meet Tuesday's water polo behind and it might have been a Deaclet.s went to Tommy McC~y ',yinner for the concluding match dif.fe1-ent story from that point on. with 20 points. of the wee!c. "That was the l opportunitY. we

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Thi W k' G Table tennis and handball finals were looking· for,"· moaned -Me-. , 5

. 8 ee 11 . ame5 will be played this week at the Kinney. "All we 'II'Rnted to do'was

Exams.-Prompt ~ eam, -2 . -lO ' This week. the fl'OSh Will play discretion of the' various clubs. to get close or get a :lead 'in the ~outh ·ca:olina and State College Final basketball games of the second period."

''Steele can handle John Rich­~er, State's high-scoring center; Jerry has earneil his place among the big men" the coach said.

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· The Wake Forest :wrestling team m prelimmary games ~edn~day semester include two games daily, Realizing that the fans attend eac fiDnerS held its first home· meet. in Rey- and Saturday. This wlll be the Monday through Thursday. a basketball game expecting a . . . nolds'-Gymnasium laf!t Friday night. fir.;;t meeting with 'the Biddies a.nd . fast-moving, . highly .. competitive

T D 1\,1

T)l~ inexperienced,Deacon matmen the second with the Wolflets. Postal officials ire, ~atching ~a~e; Co::wl;l Bones McKinney ex- ~::=::;::=======================:::~ 0 rop lf. eet came out on the bottom of a 25-10 In the latter game the Baby their heads over a drop-off in plamed b1s possession-type tactics i , score as they were defeated by the Deacs will be out to get revenge mail volume in some spots during in this way: "1 had to do it, we · . _Tlie Wake Forest indoor track Uhiversity of . North Carolina. for a 62-61 defeat earlier in the the recent holiday. season. Decline wanted to win and we wouldn't p· ' tte-~r-5-0·--. n., 's. ··str ' tfo-rd t

... _ !led 1

Th t gtb d . season. The Deaclets now have a in volume as extensive- as 20 per ha"e had a chance '-y'. stauing earn -.'-"s cance Its pans to e s ren an expenence of · • " ,. t d h E

· S ,_.... c 1.

1 4~'i reeol'd. cent from last year's mail loa.d w1'th ,1them and plaving our regu•--

:a ten t e vemng tar Games in .:..e· aroma· grapp ers proved-too ,. ..... Washington, D. C. According to much for the out-weighed and out- Both games this week will be has been reported by .a few post game." 'Coach Bill Jordan, the plans were manned Deacon team. , carried over WFDD. ofdices. "They had tbeil' big men under Ph, • ··r,ID· ' ,,. ·-•dropped' -because the meet was Captain Jim Mo!'ton spoke for ~cheduled In the middle of exams. the entire Deacon team as he said, wake Forest Coed

"W-e would have liked to have "We. were in good shape physical- y participated in the games." Jordan ry. but we need to learn how and . our Prescripfton ..... ialists said, "but all the boys had schedul- what to do under actual competi- p,·ny\l'lt,un Rez·:gn· s Over C'aSDl·c vpvv ed exams." tion. If the present enthu.siasm V f,i ~

Jordan plans to take his team and desire to win continues, we to Lexington, Va., to participate will hav-e an excellent chance to By ELWOOD PEELE came in late and the committee in -the Virginia Military Institute win several meets." - This year, for the second time had to select a winner due to lack Relay3 Feb. 7. The Relays have Coach Peters stressed the vast of time. become increasingly popular, and a improvement that his team has in a row, a Wake Forest coed was· Connie was infonned that she record 500 participants performed shown since early drills. "The out- again selected "Queen of the Dixie had won by telep-hone. She said in 1958. Both varsity and freshmen standing feature of :the team at Classic." This time the honor went she could not have been more teams are expected to make the this point is its desire and compe- to Connie Pinyoun, Raleigh :fresih- surprised. ' trip. titiveness," the coach added. man. At the Classic she had· "no real

The Atlantic Coast Conference It is interesting to note :that it Connie was chosen by the bas- duties, just a lot of fun." She

er with his trophy. she received a kiss "just on the cheek, very inno­cent." .

Connie describes her "cutest" incident as ,having Gov. Luther Hodges kiss her on the eheek for photographs: It seems they could never get it right.

Her escort for the event was Jim Spence of Greensboro, who attends N~rth. carolina State Col-lege. ·

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will be well represented at VMI, was the first time in the ihistory ketball team during Thanksgiving threw up the :first ball at the be­with all ACC schools appearing of the college that Wake Forest to represent it in the contest. Her ginning of the Wake Forest-Gin­except South Carolina. Schools wrestled a complete fr~shmen team. picture was sent to Raleigh, where cinatti game. Also on the last day along the Atlantic seaboard ex- The next home match. for the a special committee chose her as she gave out the trophies to Wake tending from the Naval Academy Deacon.;:; will be Friday night at· queen. Usually the pictures are Forest and Yale. to Clemson College are expected to 7:00 against the Citadel. sent west, but this year one picture As she awarded e_ach Wake play-

·Connie ihappily says that being queen was "the nicest Christmas pres!l'nt" she could possibly have

P,hone P A-3·4368 141 8tratfcml Rd. s. w. enter the indoor meet. •

Coach Jordan iha;; asked all men interested in participating in the indoor season to contact him in Room 314 of the gymnasium.

"In order for a man to be physi­cally fit to compete in :the VMI Relays, he s:hould work out for about a month," th(', coach added.

Out of successful tests with Uncle Sam's tape recorder-carry­ing satellite may .some day come communications relay stations in outer space.

WATER SHOW PLANNED

The Martimers Club wlll meet Tuesday Dight to make plans f-or a water show, which ~ill include selecting. a theme and setting a date for the show.

The annual show features diving exhilbitions, water liallet, and synchroil.ized swimming. Also tomorrow night, a group picture will be made.

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