of .. o··-· --·- to get€¦ · rotc &. &: \ &. ---·----& & &. '...

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. 2, 1953 I. t,, .--.. ... ; ... , ;..::·· /·t ... - ' . ' ·• I '• 'I . I .,. ., .:;wake Gets· First ' Of ,Season · ori::f'rida)/ Morn. VOLl!ME XXXIV ::2 Fresh:men ., ' ' '.· ' . . . - . :Cop ,Offices. In- R.un-offs . ' ' ' . _. ' '. Todd, ·Si:arlh;tg Get -Prexy,. Treasurer . . Jimmy Todd was elected presi- dent and· Bill Starling, tr11asurer of the freshman class in a runoff _,election Tuesday. ·Todd defeated J. L. Dawkim(by a vote of 99· to · 85, "and· Starling ··defeated Kitty Booth 123 to 61. · ·The - complete list of freshman . offi-cers, three . of :which . were · cho,sen Oct. 29 in 'the· regular ' eleetioljs, . are _president, .Todd, Laul"inburg Kappa Sigma pledge; · vice- .Charles .Snipes, Wilmington, Kappa Alpha' pledge; . seeretary, De.e .. Hughes, · Ahoskie coed; treasurer, Starling, .. Smith- . fiei'd· ;Kappa ·pledge; le'gisla- representative, Walter Ward, -Asheville KA pledge. · O'f an eligil:i_le -ass voters, a total . of 184 freshmen cast bal- lots. There was ·a -48 ;per- cent · -. .in :the runoff. In: the ·regular · : · there wai 64 per cent vote. · The Student Council was - in . chafie of -the election vthicn was held in the WFDD .radio station office on · Pub Row. They were ... a-lso 'in charge of counting the _ballots -for both the regular elec.: 'tion and run off . ·.VI- .. o··-·_--·- .... -- " \ ' .... , . * Unmarried Men Subject To Get 'Took' Any Day. Page 6 Wake Forest College, Wake ·Forest, ·North Carolina, ·Monday, November 9, 1953 i\ NUMBER 7 ROTC-Men IFC Will. Present 5 · :Fo,rln --Club - - - . - ,, - . - . - ·of Officers · -Churm President; ·3 More -Get· Posts Frat Trophies Today Kappa: Alpha Gets 3 Awards; Pi Kappa Alpha Takes· One; Kappa Sigma, One The Inter-Fraternity Council will award five trophies t<> three fraternities in chapel this morning, for champion- BY DAN POOLE ships in intramural athletics and scholarship last year . Billy Churm .was presi- ;'Kappa Alpha social fraternity will receive three of. the· dent of the newly-formed ROTC f' h" f t 't 1 h . h' s Cadet Oi'!rieer's · Cllub Th*sday 1ve trop Ies--for the ra erm y eague c aiD:piOns 1p in -a eiection in which all in basketball and volleyball and for the highest scolastie MSIII - and MsiV Reserve Of- average among fraternities' a :ficers Training. Corps men par- L • I 1.440 quality point ratio. ;ticipated. ·sid Cutts was elected egis a tu_ r.e Pi Kappa 'Alpha will receive tk& vice president; Coy Privette, sec- football trophy and Kappa Big- retary; and Ed Brannock, treas- rna, the softball trophy. urer. Okays Plan PiKA Tops Football ·Churm; Dover, N. .k, .senior, de-- ' . · · : ; ' : '.The .PiKA's had a season ieeord feated Fred Hastings, Hunters- of 8-0 in football while KA WOlt ville junior, by a vote of 67 to 19 ·Consi·ders Choi"ce the fraternity· basketball champ- in the run-off for president. Cutts, ionship with· a 7-1 record. Oxford senior, won the vice presi- Of ·Representatives · (I-n football and basketball dency over Gray Davis, a separate fraternity league .ex- junior, by a vote. Privette, The Student Legislature .ap-- isted, the .winner of the indep.end- ·swepsonville junior, wa.s elected proved a -proposal Wednesday to ent league meeting the secretary by a 67-20 vote over have representatives from the league winner for the all-can;ipus D_avis, Ayden juniqr. Bra!l- Bar Al;!sociation, the Phil- c_hampion'ship. _The IFC nock, Mount Airy junior, became omathesian ·Literary Society, 'the -are made only to the outstanding treasurer by a vote of 48 to 39- Euzelian Liter.ary Society, the In- fraternity -teams in each sport, no-t ·over Allen Birmingham; Coraopo- ternational Relations ·club and .tli.e necessarily to the campus ch3MP-. lis, Pa., junior. . Student Legislature to compose a ion.) _ Eighty-seven of the 89 men in committee· to 'appoint delega.tes -Kappa Sig and KA MSlli and MSIV ·.voted ·in the to the- State Student Legislature the - furtherest _among :frateT:nity run-off election. Voting was done which .will be held in the Capitol teams in the one league of fra- on prepared ballots· during the Building in Raleigh Nov. 19-21. ternity and indeJlendent ill regular Military Science class per- Carwile LeRoy, Barbara Geer .softball and volleyball, respeet- are· Snipes, president; Jimmy Todd, · d C d"d t · th ff 1 IO s. " an I a es m e run-o s and Marthelaine Williams were IVe dent; Walter Ward, Student ·Legial.a.ture :repreSentative; :Dee Hughes, aeeTetary. ·Bill Starling, treaa- were selected 'by the ROTC stu- seleeted ·to .contact the organi- For T:hree Y-r. . urer, is absent :from the group. T:he,eleetiona were held Oct. 29, in which Snipes, Ward and Miss dents Wednesday ·from a list zations for their endorsement of PiKA has won the football Hughes won.· Todd and ·Starling won in rianoffs Nov. 3. -Sixty four and 48· per of the eligible drawn up by ·a nominating com- the proposed plan. championship trophy for three . M'. ·-n·_ ' [sic n voters participated in the first electio'na runoffs, respectively. 'Th.e ·Dog? It 'belongs to photo- mittee Thomas. The possibiiity of securing ad- , lT:J. ... ra"pher lrv .• ·a Gr_i ..... who made the _picture. d!.tl"onal for Hunter Dorm . · '"· e .. .... The original list which was in- · _.,.. · · ·· three times m a row. A , ·. ' -M· •. · · ... · troduced to the students by the :vas also in The trophies will be presented - __ ,_, n_ u eet c··.-_- r,.·r··-t:"l··;·c- . -L; - a:· uA_-s·· .p-- __ ,f· a---. __ . C. a- s·--_- _.:,f . _ U. ings for president; Bill Townsend, to secu_re more phones. George "K<ls" ·Weaver and Wes f By· JIELEN ·PUCKETT - · . - ·. Cutts and DaVis for vice presi- Gaddy and Les are m Ledford, respectively, 'by. _Gellel' _ ·Dr •. Clifford ·Bair, Dr. -Paul By BOB SWAIN Her handling of Billie's tran- In a role that cou'ld be very dent; Jim Boyd,- Bobby Culler, of <lhtammg such a Boyce, IFC president. .. Robinson, ·and. Prof. ·Tha.ne Me- Helen 'Paul ·rocked the house sition from· a chorus line floozy easily <lverplayed, he· showed re- 'Jame15 Marlow, Bill Slade, Privette petition. • · The athletic . Donald .ihe with _}ler New -York to a mature woman grasping ·ror straint in portraying -a crude .and and Davis for secretary; and Shel- . awarded .by the Athletic Depart- .-_of_ Wake: Forest ·at 'cent and low .. brpw _carrying-on. in the .basic· principll!s ',underlying selfish man interested only in ton -Bridgers, Johnil,y Johnson, The IS .ment, ·was won the previous y@Olll" the· .first annual Piedmont Arts· he1·. -first .appearance on. the Col-- democracy without sacrificing her m"oney and power. Bob Lee, .Charleg O'Brien, Bran- for_ contactmg the homecommgj· by PiKA and ·wm be held tlUs · Conference ·_ .fn ·lege -Theater·- stage .-in ·_the pre< staunch honesty or becoming Perhaps more could have ·been ·and Birmingham for tresS.: (Continued On Page Four) year KA. _ - • Sa-ttirday; . · s!mtation of Garson KaJ!in's ''Bprn. was .done .quite satisfact-. ·$queezed from -;he part Fouts urer. . . · _,_,__, ··orillr:''····- .- · ---. .,._,,- · , . · Utilized· --a";· <lf ·:tonal ··The· ROTC ·Cade-t· Officer's Ano·ther ·On Probation: _···cultural arts organizatiol1s'·in the ·Miss Paul -saw· ;to it that the. .Foat.• · which he- is _capable. Club wiil ·meet during the first Piedmont area of -North Carolina play did not 'Jag_ while she was _on. ·As the maii With -a brain of Altho.ugh .never boring, ·he did not week of ·'each month. The presi- 1 met at H<Otel R<lbert E. Lee for the .stage •. -It was delightful to who, ran . a _junkyard · into a reach an emotion-al peak which dent will appoint chairmen for ·c . an interchange of· ideas -and watch her· skip through the part $50 million 'fprtu'ne, D. R. Fouts_ could move the audience .to the . includi!lg · OUDCJ _ problems concerning the ·various of Billie .Dawn, wit:h poise, gave a vigorous and right or left. m1htary, policy recreation, soc1al arts. "and . Illeaningful gutty performance. :Fo;\l_ts; Showing . improvement and ways and means at the next Suspends 2 ,, '• .. Re/cognized authoriti!ls 'in · dif- terpretat10n of her role, -which . .stijge, .. IS. over his first role, Jim DeVo-s meeting. _" . fe'rent fields of activity,. includ- made her performance on_e of .the d1tlonal PI,"Oof :that there l8 ·much handled ·the erusading reporter The Officer's Club was estab- - ing 'Dr. Bair 'from ·Wake Forest, feminine on the stage, latent talent among those sur- part very nicely. A lit;tle too lished .this year with the approval - participated in · the program, as- here a t1me. rounded by the :roek casual a lack of SQphisticated, of Dr. C. S. Black, ROTC co- sisting -the ·delegates ·who are .but yet determined, sincerity was ordinator, and with the consent leaders in the movement ·for. fur- . . . his main trouble •. Otherwise, in a of the cadet officers.- The . pur- ther developmen-t of the arts in D' . ll s. :VI k . ZJ":•t . WF· not-too-easy role . beeau!'!e of its _poses and ideals of this club are this area. . . l} flT• - l_Ze ).' :r,a .es ::.:1ft . . : ' ·stooge-like qu'alities, he made the to be identical ·to those of Scab- Panel Discussion best o(his .breakS ·and played them bard ,and.,Blade Sodety, a nation- : Dr. . representing the -Frate_.rltit;y Men See 'Siuht to !!dvantage. wide society. opera phase of arts, par-ticipated -.; He ·w.as most convincing in the · 1 di · · The purpose of Scab-bard and m a pane scuss1on _on __ mus1e · · T -- · --- d - · · soap-box oratory (Kanin•s fault, and drama Saturday afternoon 'By WllllAM ·pA E · tere and the editor's plea for (C , d 0 p Blade is "to raise the standard of which was moderated 'by Larry It snowed Friday , .. . _ OJ1tlnue n · age Four) (Continued On Page F:our} ·Walker, vice president and as- thick . flakes mingled ·With, a 'rhey '!e.flected on thJS _ The Student Council suspended two students from -the College and placed another on _probation in sessions held Oct. 30 and Nov. 2. In the first trial, a student_ was .found guilty of violating Article XIV, Section 15, of ·the Student Body Constitution, which reads: "All shall at all times conduct themselves as becomes students of Forest College while at the College or represent- ing_ the Gollege in any _capacity when sistant general man·ager of radio 'miserably cold rainfall that . had ·though, ·During Religion In Life ·Week • ·wBT-WBTV, Charlotte. begun early Thursday w:ere close? and each returned to _ _ _ ·n:r. :Bair was the founding pres- . An Old ·GQld ·and ·Black-reporter hls - D .. K T ident· of the National Asociation hurrying ·to make the 12: 4 0 A. Flake•. : enny· , n 0 -. lk for "Gpera, past· National Opera M. bus 'to Raleigh discovered this_ f" far from . . . . ·. ,. _: _ e- 1 n_ · .1!10· l. •. . _; :a, , chairman for the Federation ·of fact. He -so impress.ed that m!s e. · pparently . · T-he student was_ placed on bation for the remainder of the semester; among other things, ·ae will be allowed no class cuts . for · the semester. Af!Y violatioll of probation leads to expulsion ·:fr>om the College. If the student vi<lliltes the CoJ:U!titution during -the. re- mainder of h_is Co1Iege career, lr.e will be expelled. The case originated in th& spreading of . rumors by -ta& student, alledging that coeds slipping o-dt of Johnson Donnitloey after ·the 'dOors ·had •been clOSed at .night. -Music Clubs founding director' f he ran back to the office to in- e.v:e r;y B .. DAN PoOLE , . . - . f h" 'f'll . r ts of the whtm s e pou:red forth ·enormous " . ' -t?e ·.Cape Fear Assoc1a- orm : e ow· JOurna 15 ; dollar sized 'flakes. Robert .S. Den11y, . chairman _of -tiQ-2'\ . and .has liirected opera phenomenon. . _ . . ev.en larger than that. the . Youth. of the , groups at WCTC, Sa- -The. Howler _editor satd It was ·SHe . had ·run .the . untlet of '!o:r'ld Dr. lem Colle&:e, Wake Forest College, sleet,. but. 0 G -and B men argued preCipitation. She -beg!: -b G. Xeanue 1Keegan, secretary of T}t. M. -from-_Southwestern sion Soeiety, ·New York; ,and sec- Seminary, Fort Worth, Tex. He retazy-treasurer of the Cali- was conferred .his ·D. D., degree fornia TemJ)erence Federation. by Howard Payne .College, ·Brown- He has helm _of wood. TeX. He has done specW Southwestem · Semipa.ry study in social -science, theology, a. · of before Wo:man's GOv- ernment 9fficia,ls, the- student :c-Onfessed after giving testimony under oath. Later. but before Couneil ·trial, ile wrote .a I'etter of apology to WGA officials .and the girls of Johl$Gn Dorm. WGA pressed charges, lin-d_ '-the stu_dent as aeeused. Auy, _ Win .. that 1t ,was real s:now. Each. new, ing dis-c mf"ted .. 'ltalsy ston-Salem and Asheville. visitor to the on pub row miserabl/ ·: ·. . t•,hW T 0 Speak On youth was asked ·-how he .hked the snow. . · . ' . ram. -.... en. l!re. · "Oh, is that what it is?" one -?een: a of sleet 1n th.;, of them -remarked. · d,ops. . ,- · · 't .. With sly, . As It .Ht -she_ appeared intent . It came rushing down around upon smothering all with a quilt- every street light as though the ing of 'White. . . -ROTC Seniors · $909 ,whole landscape would soon be The reporttir .who fii-st .dis- Eleven MSIV . students of the blanketed. ·But it mel tell as .fast co.vered ·_ price_ ]eft -his ·"Reserve Officers Training Corps as it hit the water-soaked earth. type-wi:lter :an_d :_stood -in front of Jtere :have re-ceived a first payroll . The multitudes of 'flaky. discs the _Book , S,tore. The '<if · $909 covering the period made a faint rustling no-ise--when snow had .fallen .):10 faSt, quickly from Aug. 1 to Oct. 30. The they hit the still-green leaves on and in such size -tha-t the bulleun amount per man for the three- campus trees. .there the proSpect <>f month period -was approximately All the while the campus slept. being bla_nketed. . .$82;80. · ·· The only awake to enjoy ·Whopp:. Of Joy Requisition for the MSIU pay- t\!e season's first frozen precipi- Laughter a1td whooP.S joy roll. has .been to the head- tation were pub ·row workers. fted hr h lth , · · · quarters and .is to arrive ·.For a short time everyone . in si t 9ug · e :falling blank!'it. s_ oon. ·Figured at . approximately the off1' ce stood around the ·door The sounjls, ca!J}e ·from .the .general vicinity Of ·Simmons i:lrom·. :j;4()_ per man for '7;4 students, ignoring the icy biasts that _en- KA's _ apparently the payroll will amount to around overjoyed at the· sight of the des- $3,900, according to Lt. Col.- J. Dl C cending' ·whiteness, w:ere r"tinnmg S. Terrell, professor of military r r,anS anasta, in and out of the 'dorm, pauSing . .and tactics here. Th.e long enough :to' eha:tter and laugh ;, pay.Dlent will cover the period B -•d- D · · 1 .Sept. 16 through o.CJt. 31. rz ge rarty SWiftly, ·exci:ted y. •• with World Alliance ••• ·Members of the .Semor ROTC . As the r-eporter started 'back to . . ,. cliis8es Are. paid 90 -cents' per day A bridge and .canasta 'party his office with SM'W clinging to· the Department of Student Work · his clothes he .glanced back and of_ the Baptist , Sunday School eVEn:Y day· in each month of will be sponsored by 'the Woni!lll'S saw that he' was ·actually. making Board, will be two of _speak- ··scliool. Unexcused class cuts, Government Association Thursday tracks :in the snow. ers on the campus during Re- ·however, cause a man to be pena- night at the Community House The ·green lgrass :had captured ligion :In Life Week, Dec. ·6-10. .lized two days' ·pay. from 7:45 to 11:15 o'clock. This enough ·to:give 'the appearance of Mr. Denny received his B. S. Freshman Chapel Freshman class officers will be in cliarge of tomorrow's freshman chapel, the last of the year. . Officers are Jimmy Todd, presi- ·de¢; S1.1ipes, vice presi- dent; Dee Hughes, secretary; -·Bill .Starling, . treasurer; and . W:a.lter Wara, legislature •. is one ,of the pi;ojects to raiSe white frosting. . degree in from the Uni- money for the .proposed portrait Old Gold's spOrts editor stepped versity of Kentucky, and he re- of Miss Lois Johnson. out of the office ·door to let ·the ceived his Bachelor of Laws de- Tallies, which will be used as flakes land on ·his naval reserve gree there. ·He is a member of the admission, have been sold to ap- uniform. There was awe on his Kentucky Bar Association. He proximately 40 coeds, .eight men face. · . has done special study in business from ,each .of -the fraternities and "It's. he said unbe- law, counseling, public speaking, members of ·the ·faculty. . .. •. "Ii;'s. -:really sno.wing.-''. psycliology and Salesmanship. _ Me_m.!iers Gov- the,d09r!" Dr. Keegan recei-ved h1s B. A. ernnient will act as hostes8es, and The lfrom . Northwestern Col- faculty serVe SPC!r:f;s editor·shut.the . lege, NatchitQches. La., and ·his :psycholqgy and 'journalism. board of directors of 'East· Texas S.ecretary Baptist a A .native""of Kentucky, -Mr. of the executive of LouiSl- Denny -has , held . the position of · and Texas Baptist Conven- student secretary .in Louisiana lions. . State ·university and Baylor Uni- .Dr. Keegan's interests and versity. He 'is now an ·associate in hobbies are ·music, writing, sports, ,the Student ·Department of the preaching .and people. While -he .Baptist· Sun_d_ay School Board, .was college, he .was .a. three- Nashville, Tenn. year letter man on the footb!lll He "has traveled extensively in team; ·a soloist in the glee club, Europe.· His interests and hobbielt and was elected "best all-round" are sports .and g:olf. .student in his junior year. He Mr. subjects for dis- has traveled in Europe, Egypt, cussion groups for college stu- the Holy Land, America, dents includes the :work ·of the Sou-th America and Hawaii. Baptist W.orld Alliance, youth in the world. picture and m.oral issties confronting. Christian youth. Ti- tles ·his 1!\essages incl:u!fe "Mean .Men," which .is the story of the cross; "It's up _to Y.ou,•• a decision -for Christ message; , "Christian.ity. in Europe ·Today;" and ".The Marks of Jesus." A native of Louisiana. Dr. Keegan .has ·been associated with bQth the Southern Con- vention ·!lnd the American Bap- tist Convention. · ·He hill! · ,been pastor of the Temple Baptist Church, Los Angel_es, Calif., First Church, "N La., manuel Baptist Church, Alexan- dria, La., and First Baptist Church, Longv1ew, Tex. S,eminary -President Dr. has served as ac- ting president of the Baptist :Seminary; · president of ·the boa.rd of . directors of the Southern Chil- dren's H'Ome; vic;e president of the American· Baptist Home ·Xis- World Traveler G. KEARNIE IC!EEGAN ••• Student Work Dep't. ••• s-lats L At the second session, two- •• dents plead guilty of cheating .in violation of Article XIV, SeCtkm I, of the Constitution. In :wu-t. the seetion reads: ''No student shall be gailty ·of cheating or attempting -to . cheat on any examination or qui3 .&r -upon other -pledge worl;.•• Upon a ple_a of guilt or a verdieii o_f_ of the section, suspens1on from the College is (Continued 011 Page Four) ;Bar Member To ·Talk Here L. Henry, a membel' the North Carolina Bar AssOai. will speak to . the studea :of the -'Practice Court II elMs at the l,aw School• A:gz:aduate of Wake Forest aact Law School, Henry is a mm.., ber,of the law firm of Varser, Jl,e. Intn-e and Henry in LumbertoD Previously he practiced in ingham. He will speak to the class 'itt connection with the technique .of Appellate Court practice. The talk will begin at a time when all -o:tr the law students are able to tend. Henry's speech is one of a series presented to the class during the semester. .During the spring se- a similar series will bs ·held for the benefit of the stu- dents taking the course in Pmo- tice Court I. a course pertainintr to trial technique.

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Page 1: Of .. o··-· --·- To Get€¦ · ROTC &. &: \ &. ---·----& & &. ' · ~!' .. ' • ~~ · ~ .~ ~ ~ .. . , me . . '

. 2, 1953

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.:;wake Gets· First ' Sno~. Of ,Season · ori::f'rida)/ Morn.

VOLl!ME XXXIV

::2 Fresh:men ., ' ' '.· ' . . . - .

:Cop ,Offices. In- R.un-offs . ' ' ' .

_. ' '.

• Todd, ·Si:arlh;tg Get -Prexy,. Treasurer

. . Jimmy Todd was elected presi­

dent and· Bill Starling, tr11asurer of the freshman class in a runoff

_,election Tuesday. ·Todd defeated J. L. Dawkim(by a vote of 99· to · 85, "and· Starling ··defeated Kitty Booth 123 to 61. ·

·The -complete list of freshman . offi-cers, three . of :which . were · cho,sen Oct. 29 in 'the· regular ' eleetioljs, . are _president, .Todd,

Laul"inburg Kappa Sigma pledge; · vice- ~presid~nt, .Charles .Snipes,

Wilmington, Kappa Alpha' pledge; . seeretary, De.e .. Hughes, · Ahoskie coed; treasurer, Starling, .. Smith-

. fiei'd· ;Kappa .S~g ·pledge; le'gisla­·tur~ representative, Walter Ward, -Asheville KA pledge. ·

O'f an eligil:i_le -ass voters, a total . of 184 freshmen cast bal­lots. There was ·a -48 ;per- cent ·

-. vot~ .in :the runoff. In: the ·regular · : · •H~ctiori, there wai a· 64 per cent

vote. · The Student Council was - in

. chafie of -the election vthicn was held in the WFDD .radio station office on · Pub Row. They were

... a-lso 'in charge of counting the _ballots -for both the regular elec.: 'tion and th~ run off .

·.VI-

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Unmarried Men Subject To Get 'Took' Any Day. Page 6

Wake Forest College, Wake ·Forest, ·North Carolina, ·Monday, November 9, 1953 i\ NUMBER 7

ROTC-Men IFC Will. Present 5 · :Fo,rln --Club

- - - -~· . - ,, - . - . -

·of Officers · -Churm President; ·3 More -Get· Posts

Frat Trophies Today Kappa: Alpha Gets 3 Awards; Pi Kappa Alpha Takes· One; Kappa Sigma, One

The Inter-Fraternity Council will award five trophies t<> three fraternities in chapel this morning, for champion-

BY DAN POOLE ships in intramural athletics and scholarship last year . Billy Churm .was eie~ted presi- ;'Kappa Alpha social fraternity will receive three of. the·

dent of the newly-formed ROTC f' h" f t 't 1 h . h' s Cadet Oi'!rieer's · Cllub Th*sday 1ve trop Ies--for the ra erm y eague c aiD:piOns 1p in -a run~off eiection in which all in basketball and volleyball and for the highest scolastie MSIII -and MsiV Reserve Of- average among fraternities' a :ficers Training. Corps men par- L • I 1.440 quality point ratio. ;ticipated. ·sid Cutts was elected egis a tu_ r.e Pi Kappa 'Alpha will receive tk& vice president; Coy Privette, sec- football trophy and Kappa Big-retary; and Ed Brannock, treas- rna, the softball trophy.

urer. Okays Plan PiKA Tops Football ·Churm; Dover, N . .k, .senior, de-- ' • . · · : ; ' : '.The .PiKA's had a season ieeord

feated Fred Hastings, Hunters- of 8-0 in football while KA WOlt ville junior, by a vote of 67 to 19 ·Consi·ders Choi"ce the fraternity· basketball champ-in the run-off for president. Cutts, ionship with· a 7-1 record. Oxford senior, won the vice presi- Of ·Representatives · (I-n football and basketball dency over Gray Davis, Le?Cin~n a separate fraternity league .ex-junior, by a 49~38 vote. Privette, The Student Legislature .ap-- isted, the .winner of the indep.end-·swepsonville junior, wa.s elected proved a -proposal Wednesday to ent league meeting the fra~ity­secretary by a 67-20 vote over have representatives from the league winner for the all-can;ipus Gr!!~g D_avis, Ayden juniqr. Bra!l- .S~udent Bar Al;!sociation, the Phil- c_hampion'ship. _The IFC a~d!!l nock, Mount Airy junior, became omathesian ·Literary Society, 'the -are made only to the outstanding treasurer by a vote of 48 to 39- Euzelian Liter.ary Society, the In- fraternity -teams in each sport, no-t ·over Allen Birmingham; Coraopo- ternational Relations ·club and .tli.e necessarily to the campus ch3MP-. lis, Pa., junior. . Student Legislature to compose a ion.) .· _

Eighty-seven of the 89 men in committee· to 'appoint delega.tes -Kappa Sig and KA adva~~ MSlli and MSIV ·.voted ·in the to the- State Student Legislature the -furtherest _among :frateT:nity run-off election. Voting was done which .will be held in the Capitol teams in the one league of fra­on prepared ballots· during the Building in Raleigh Nov. 19-21. ternity and indeJlendent te~m,s ill regular Military Science class per- Carwile LeRoy, Barbara Geer .softball and volleyball, respeet-are· Snipes, vi~e president; Jimmy Todd, · d C d"d t · th ff 1 IO s. " an I a es m e run-o s and Marthelaine Williams were IVe Y· dent; Walter Ward, Student ·Legial.a.ture :repreSentative; :Dee Hughes, aeeTetary. ·Bill Starling, treaa- were selected 'by the ROTC stu- seleeted ·to .contact the organi- For T:hree Y-r. .

urer, is absent :from the group. T:he,eleetiona were held Oct. 29, in which Snipes, Ward and Miss dents Wednesday ·from a list zations for their endorsement of PiKA has won the football Hughes won.· Todd and ·Starling won in rianoffs Nov. 3. -Sixty four and 48· per ~ent of the eligible drawn up by ·a nominating com- the proposed plan. championship trophy for three . M'. ·-n·_ ' [sic l~~e-n voters participated in the first electio'na ~ runoffs, respectively. 'Th.e ·Dog? It 'belongs to photo- mittee hea~~!.f·J;t Thomas. The possibiiity of securing ad- :~!~~:ht t:eear:~ho'7a~~ip K~ro:: , lT:J. ... ra"pher lrv .• ·a Gr_i ..... ~. who made the _picture. d!.tl"onal -nh~nes for Hunter Dorm . ·

• '"· • e .. .... The original list which was in- · _.,.. ~ · · ·· three times m a row.

A , ·. ' ~~ -M· •. · · ... · troduced to the students by the :vas also .d~cussed in t~e m.e~.t- The trophies will be presented

- t~e __ ,_, n_ u eet c··.-_-r,.·r··-t:"l··;·c-. -L; - a:· uA_-s·· .p--__ ,f· a---. __ y· . C. a-s·--_-_.:,f ~::::!~a:~fbi~~~~!~e a;;c~:t~ ~~:· ~1~:~1!~: :~;a~~ f~~do;~!~. ~~es~!~ts~a~:wa~!f ;!'!i~:~ . _ U. ings for president; Bill Townsend, to secu_re more phones. ~b~y George "K<ls" ·Weaver and Wes

f By· JIELEN ·PUCKETT - · • . - ·. Cutts and DaVis for vice presi- Gaddy and Les ~r?wder are m Ledford, respectively, 'by. _Gellel' _ ·Dr •. Clifford ·Bair, Dr. -Paul By BOB SWAIN Her handling of Billie's tran- In a role that cou'ld be very dent; Jim Boyd,- Bobby Culler, _eha~e of <lhtammg such a Boyce, IFC president.

.. Robinson, ·and. Prof. ·Tha.ne Me- Helen 'Paul ·rocked the house sition from· a chorus line floozy easily <lverplayed, he· showed re- 'Jame15 Marlow, Bill Slade, Privette petition. • · The ov~-al1 athletic . tr~?Phl!, Donald _,repres~nted .ihe .)Iu~ic with _}ler nasal~zed New -York a~- to a mature woman grasping ·ror straint in portraying -a crude .and and Davis for secretary; and Shel- H~~omusc ~ponaora . awarded .by the Athletic Depart-·Dep~:rt~.Ernt .-_of_ Wake: Forest ·at 'cent and low .. brpw _carrying-on. in the .basic· principll!s ',underlying selfish man interested only in ton -Bridgers, Johnil,y Johnson, The Legt~latu:re IS responsl~le .ment, ·was won the previous y@Olll"

the· .first annual Piedmont Arts· he1·. -first .appearance on. the Col-- democracy without sacrificing her m"oney and power. Bob Lee, .Charleg O'Brien, Bran- for_ contactmg the homecommgj· by PiKA and ·wm be held tlUs · Conference ·_ .fn Winston~Saleril ·lege -Theater·- stage .-in ·_the pre< staunch honesty or becoming Perhaps more could have ·been ~ock ·and Birmingham for tresS.: (Continued On Page Four) year ~Y KA. _ - -· • Sa-ttirday; . · s!mtation of Garson KaJ!in's ''Bprn. ·ps·eii~o was .done .quite satisfact-. ·$queezed from -;he part ·~ad Fouts urer. . . ~-;)Delegates----from · the~~'-various :y;esterday:"·;WednesdaY)'~ghk- _,_,__, ··orillr:''····- ·•~- .- · ---. .,._,,- · , . · - · Utilized· --a";· .variatiil~· <lf ·:tonal ··The· ROTC ·Cade-t· Officer's Ano·ther ·On Probation:

_···cultural arts organizatiol1s'·in the ·Miss Paul -saw· ;to it that the. .Foat.• Perf~nlaance ~- · ·qualitie~,.-of· which he- is _capable. Club wiil ·meet during the first Piedmont area of -North Carolina play did not 'Jag_ while she was _on. ·As the maii With -a brain of Altho.ugh .never boring, ·he did not week of ·'each month. The presi- •

1 met at H<Otel R<lbert E. Lee for the .stage •. -It was delightful to g~}d who, ran . a _junkyard · into a reach an emotion-al peak which dent will appoint chairmen for ·c . ~-- an interchange of· ideas -and watch her· skip through the part $50 million 'fprtu'ne, D. R. Fouts_ could move the audience .to the st~l!d~ng c~mmit;tees . includi!lg · OUDCJ '~ _ problems concerning the ·various of Billie .Dawn, wit:h poise, self~· gave a vigorous and cer~ainly right or left. m1htary, policy recreation, soc1al

arts. assuranc~ "and . Illeaningful ~n~_ gutty performance. :Fo;\l_ts; a~other Showing . ~uch improvement and ways and means at the next Suspends 2

,,

'• ..

Re/cognized authoriti!ls 'in · dif- terpretat10n of her role, -which n~~comer ~o . t~e .stijge, .. IS. ad~ over his first role, Jim DeVo-s meeting. _" . fe'rent fields of activity,. includ- made her performance on_e of .the d1tlonal PI,"Oof :that there l8 ·much handled ·the erusading reporter The Officer's Club was estab-

- ing 'Dr. Bair 'from ·Wake Forest, bette~ feminine ~eads on the stage, latent talent among those sur- part very nicely. A lit;tle too lished .this year with the approval - participated in · the program, as- here ~n a l~ng t1me. rounded by the :roek ~all. casual wi~h a lack of SQphisticated, of Dr. C. S. Black, ROTC co-

sisting -the ·delegates ·who are .but yet determined, sincerity was ordinator, and with the consent leaders in the movement ·for. fur- . . . his main trouble •. Otherwise, in a of the cadet officers.- The . pur-ther developmen-t of the arts in D' . ll s. :VI k . ZJ":•t . WF· not-too-easy role . beeau!'!e of its _poses and ideals of this club are this area. '· . . l} flT• -l_Ze ).' :r,a .es ::.:1ft . . : ' ·stooge-like qu'alities, he made the to be identical ·to those of Scab-

Panel Discussion best o(his .breakS ·and played them bard ,and.,Blade Sodety, a nation-: Dr. . B~dr, representing the -Frate_.rltit;y Men See 'Siuht to !!dvantage. wide RO~ ;~~r;;:i::det society. opera phase of arts, par-ticipated -.; ~ He ·w.as most convincing in the · 1 di · · The purpose of Scab-bard and m a pane scuss1on _on __ mus1e · · T -- · --- d - · · soap-box oratory (Kanin•s fault, and drama Saturday afternoon 'By WllllAM ·pA E · tere and the editor's plea for (C , d

0 p Blade is "to raise the standard of

which was moderated 'by Larry It snowed Friday mornin~. ~ig, wa~th. , .. . _ OJ1tlnue n · age Four) (Continued On Page F:our} ·Walker, vice president and as- thick . flakes mingled ·With, a 'rhey '!e.flected on thJS :un~ual _

The Student Council suspended two students from -the College and placed another on _probation in sessions held Oct. 30 and Nov. 2.

In the first trial, a student_ was .found guilty of violating Article XIV, Section 15, of ·the Student Body Constitution, which reads:

"All st~dents shall at all times conduct themselves as becomes students of Wak~ Forest College while at the College or represent­ing_ the Gollege in any _capacity when a~ay."

sistant general man·ager of radio 'miserably cold rainfall that . had ~vent. Fn~alJy,_ ·though, ~e 'do~ ·During Religion In Life ·Week • st;;l-t~on ·wBT-WBTV, Charlotte. begun early Thursday evenin~. w:ere close? and each returned to _ _ _ •

·n:r. :Bair was the founding pres- . An Old ·GQld ·and ·Black-reporter hls type~Iter. • - D . . K T ~ ident· of the National Asociation hurrying ·to make the 12:40 A. Sd•ezo:-~ue Flake•. • : enny· , .· n 0 -. lk for "Gpera, past· National Opera M. bus 'to Raleigh discovered this_ f" ~uht dnatuAr~ -'~as far from ·hem~ . . . . ·. ,. _: _ e-1n_ · .1!10· l. •. . _; :a, ~ , chairman for the Federation ·of fact. He ~as -so impress.ed that m!s e. · pparently . ben~ ~n · ~-:#

T-he student was_ placed on Pr~ bation for the remainder of the semester; among other things, ·ae will be allowed no class cuts . for · the semester. Af!Y violatioll of probation leads to expulsion ·:fr>om the College. If the student vi<lliltes the CoJ:U!titution during -the. re­mainder of h_is Co1Iege career, lr.e will be expelled.

The case originated in th& spreading of -f~lse . rumors by -ta& student, alledging that coeds w~­slipping o-dt of Johnson Donnitloey after ·the 'dOors ·had •been clOSed at .night.

-Music Clubs founding director' f he ran back to the office to in- sa·t?~Ylnhg e.v:e r;y c~ce!vablc B .. DAN PoOLE , . . - . f h" 'f'll • . r ts of the whtm s e pou:red forth ·enormous " . '

-t?e ·.Cape Fear Fe~ttval Assoc1a- orm ~~ : e ow· JOurna 15 ; flalC~. Sil~er dollar sized 'flakes. Robert .S. Den11y, . chairman _of

-tiQ-2'\ . and .has liirected opera phenomenon. . _ . . • Fl~kes ev.en larger than that. the . Youth. Co~mittee of the , groups at wc~c. WCTC, Sa- -The. Howler _editor satd It was ·SHe . had ·run .the . untlet of }~a.P,tlst '!o:r'ld 41lu~n~e, ~nd Dr.

lem Colle&:e, Wake Forest College, sleet,. but. 0 G -and B men argued preCipitation. She -beg!: -b k· G. Xeanue 1Keegan, secretary of

T}t. M. degr~e -from- _Southwestern sion Soeiety, ·New York; ,and sec­Seminary, Fort Worth, Tex. He retazy-treasurer of the Cali­was conferred .his ·D. D., degree fornia TemJ)erence Federation. by Howard Payne .College, ·Brown- He has helm pre!>i~~nt _of .t~e wood. TeX. He has done specW Southwestem · Semipa.ry ~luz:nni study in social -science, theology, ~oefation; a. ;me~be'r · of ~he

'Brou~rht before Wo:man's GOv­ernment ~\~tion 9fficia,ls, the­student :c-Onfessed after giving :fa~ testimony under oath. Later. but before th~ Couneil ·trial, ile wrote .a I'etter of apology to WGA officials .and the girls of Johl$Gn Dorm.

WGA pressed charges, lin-d_ '-the stu_dent pl~ guil~ as aeeused. ?>f~unt Auy, G:re~nsboro, _ Win .. that 1t ,was real s:now. Each. new, ing dis-c mf"ted .. 'ltalsy s~tb

ston-Salem and Asheville. visitor to the offie~ on pub row miserabl/ w~t ·: ·. m.~.,:.h . t•,hW ~ T 0 Speak On youth was asked ·-how he .hked the snow. . · . ' . ram. -.... en. l!re.

· "Oh, is that what it is?" one h~d -?een: a }un~ of sleet 1n th.;, of them -remarked. s~n~n~g pelb~g · d,ops. • .

,- · · 't .. :RI~al_ly, With sly, ;~mpudent . M.e!t~ As It .Ht l~pisJ:l~E!i!S -she_ appeared intent

. It came rushing down around upon smothering all with a quilt­every street light as though the ing of 'White. . .

-ROTC Seniors · Rec.~ive· $909

,whole landscape would soon be The reporttir .who fii-st .dis-Eleven MSIV . students of the blanketed. ·But it mel tell as .fast co.vered · _ ~ature's ~a price_ ]eft -his

·"Reserve Officers Training Corps as it hit the water-soaked earth. type-wi:lter :an_d :_stood -in front of Jtere :have re-ceived a first payroll . The multitudes of 'flaky. discs the 'C.Ql~ege _Book , S,tore. The '<if · $909 covering the period made a faint rustling no-ise--when snow had .fallen .):10 faSt, quickly from Aug. 1 to Oct. 30. The they hit the still-green leaves on and in such size -tha-t the bulleun amount per man for the three- campus trees. bo~rd .there faC:~Ii the proSpect <>f month period -was approximately All the while the campus slept. being bla_nketed. . .$82;80. · ·· The only pers~ns awake to enjoy ·Whopp:. Of Joy

Requisition for the MSIU pay- t\!e season's first frozen precipi- Laughter a1td whooP.S ~f joy roll. has .been .se~t to the head- tation were pub ·row workers. fted hr h lth , · · · quarters and .is e~pected to arrive ·.For a short time everyone . in si t 9ug · e :falling blank!'it. s_ oon. ·Figured at . approximately the off1' ce stood around the ·door The sounjls, ca!J}e ·from .the .general

vicinity Of ·Simmons i:lrom·. :j;4()_ per man for t~e '7;4 students, ignoring the icy biasts that _en- KA's _ a~d PiKA~s, apparently the payroll will amount to around overjoyed at the· sight of the des-$3,900, according to Lt. Col.- J. Dl C cending' ·whiteness, w:ere r"tinnmg S. Terrell, professor of military r r,anS anasta, in and out of the 'dorm, pauSing . sci~n·ce .and tactics here. Th.e long enough :to' eha:tter and laugh ;, pay.Dlent will cover the period B -•d- D · · 1 fro~ .Sept. 16 through o.CJt. 31. rz ge rarty SWiftly, ·exci:ted y. • •• with World Alliance •••

·Members of the .Semor ROTC . As the r-eporter started 'back to . . , . cliis8es Are. paid 90 -cents' per day A bridge and .canasta 'party his office with SM'W clinging to· the Department of Student Work

· his clothes he .glanced back and of_ the Baptist , Sunday School eVEn:Y day· in each month of will be sponsored by 'the Woni!lll'S saw that he' was ·actually. making Board, will be two of ~he _speak-

··scliool. Unexcused class cuts, Government Association Thursday tracks :in the snow. ers on the campus during Re-·however, cause a man to be pena- night at the Community House The ·green lgrass :had captured ligion :In Life Week, Dec. ·6-10. .lized two days' ·pay. from 7:45 to 11:15 o'clock. This enough ·to:give 'the appearance of Mr. Denny received his B. S.

Freshman Chapel Freshman class officers will be

in cliarge of tomorrow's freshman chapel, the last of the year. . Officers are Jimmy Todd, presi­·de¢; C~arl_es- S1.1ipes, vice presi­dent; Dee Hughes, secretary; -·Bill .Starling, . treasurer; and . W:a.lter Wara, legislature repres!lnta~ve •.

is one ,of the pi;ojects to raiSe white frosting. . degree in commerc~ from the Uni-money for the .proposed portrait Old Gold's spOrts editor stepped versity of Kentucky, and he re-of Miss Lois Johnson. out of the office ·door to let ·the ceived his Bachelor of Laws de-

Tallies, which will be used as flakes land on ·his naval reserve gree there. ·He is a member of the admission, have been sold to ap- uniform. There was awe on his Kentucky Bar Association. He proximately 40 coeds, .eight men face. · . has done special study in business from ,each .of -the fraternities and "It's. sno~ing,". he said unbe- law, counseling, public speaking, members of ·the ·faculty. . .. lieyi~ly •. "Ii;'s. -:really sno.wing.-''. psycliology and Salesmanship.

_ Me_m.!iers .0!.-the:\foma~'s Gov- ·-~Hol¥.about_sh,uttiilg the,d09r!" Dr. Keegan recei-ved h1s B. A. ernnient will act as hostes8es, and yel~ed :*e-·.exas_pe~~d ~·!Utor. The a~gree lfrom . Northwestern Col­t~e· faculty :~viii serVe 'd:ri~. SPC!r:f;s editor·shut.the d~or, . lege, NatchitQches. La., and ·his

:psycholqgy and 'journalism. board of directors of 'East· Texas $t~e~t S.ecretary Baptist Colle~e, a~d a mem~':r

A .native""of Kentucky, -Mr. of the executive boar~ of LouiSl­Denny -has , held . the position of · ~na and Texas Baptist Conven­student secretary .in Louisiana lions. . State ·university and Baylor Uni- .Dr. Keegan's interests and versity. He 'is now an ·associate in hobbies are ·music, writing, sports, ,the Student ·Department of the preaching .and people. While -he .Baptist· Sun_d_ay School Board, .was ~n college, he .was .a. three­Nashville, Tenn. year letter man on the footb!lll

He "has traveled extensively in team; ·a soloist in the glee club, Europe.· His interests and hobbielt and was elected "best all-round" are sports .and g:olf. .student in his junior year. He

Mr. Denr~y's subjects for dis- has traveled in Europe, Egypt, cussion groups for college stu- the Holy Land, Cen~ral America, dents includes the :work ·of the Sou-th America and Hawaii. Baptist W.orld Alliance, youth in the world. picture and m.oral issties confronting. Christian youth. Ti­tles o~ ·his 1!\essages incl:u!fe "Mean .Men," which .is the story of the cross; "It's up _to Y.ou,•• a decision -for Christ message;

, "Christian.ity. in Europe ·Today;" and ".The Marks of Jesus."

A native of Louisiana. Dr. Keegan .has ·been associated with bQth the Southern B~Wtist Con­vention · !lnd the American Bap­tist Convention. · ·He hill! · ,been pastor of the Temple Baptist Church, Los Angel_es, Calif., First Church, "N ~tchi:toches, La., Em~ manuel Baptist Church, Alexan­dria, La., and First Baptist Church, Longv1ew, Tex.

S,eminary -President Dr. -~e~g~n has served as ac­

ting president of the C~ifo~~a Baptist :Seminary; · president of ·the boa.rd of . directors of the Southern ·-C!llifo:J;~Ifa )J~ptiSt Chil­dren's H'Ome; vic;e president of the American· Baptist Home ·Xis-

World Traveler

G. KEARNIE IC!EEGAN ••• Student Work Dep't. •••

S~nd s-lats L At the second session, two-••

dents plead guilty of cheating .in violation of Article XIV, SeCtkm I, of the Constitution. In :wu-t. the seetion reads:

''No student shall be gailty ·of cheating or attempting -to . cheat on any examination or qui3 .&r -upon ~Y other -pledge worl;.•• Upon a ple_a of guilt or a verdieii o_f_ guil~r of vi_ola~ing the section, suspens1on from the College is

(Continued 011 Page Four)

;Bar Member To ·Talk Here Oz~ere L. Henry, a membel' -~

the North Carolina Bar AssOai. ~tion, will speak to . the studea :of the -'Practice Court II elMs Tu~~~Y at the l,aw School •

A:gz:aduate of Wake Forest aact ~he Law School, Henry is a mm.., ber,of the law firm of Varser, Jl,e. Intn-e and Henry in LumbertoD Previously he practiced in ~ ingham.

He will speak to the class 'itt connection with the technique .of Appellate Court practice. The talk will begin at a time when all -o:tr the law students are able to a~ tend.

Henry's speech is one of a series presented to the class during the semester. .During the spring se­~ester a similar series will bs ·held for the benefit of the stu­dents taking the course in Pmo­tice Court I. a course pertainintr to trial technique.

Page 2: Of .. o··-· --·- To Get€¦ · ROTC &. &: \ &. ---·----& & &. ' · ~!' .. ' • ~~ · ~ .~ ~ ~ .. . , me . . '

PACE TWO OLD GOLD AND BLACK 1

Editorially Speaking: Writing. Reader:

Joh:pson OJj_ Puhlie School System. C'oed Assails Dr. Wingate :M:. Johnson, acting_ dean

of the Bo.wman Gray School of Medi­·cine of Wake Forest College makes .n strong case in attempting to point out weaknesses in the North Carolina public school system in an editorial ~ppearing in the October issue of the North Caro­lina Medical Journal, of which he is editor. A partial reprint and a commen­tary on his editorial appears in the Oct­ober issue of the ·wake Forest Alumni News.

Dr. Johnson cites a study made recently by Dr. Cecil G. Sheps and others, revealin•g that North Carolina provides 37 freshman medical students between 20 and 24 years of age per 100,000 persons, as compared to the national average of 64 and to an aver­age of 58 in the southeastern. states. North Carolina's neighbors, South Caro­lina and Virginia, have averages of 52 and 58, respectively.

He further supports his argument with a quotation from Dean of the Wake Forest Medical School Dr. C. C. Carpen­ter and Dean Davison, of the Duke Med­ical School, each of whom reached the conclusion independently that "North Carolina cannot increase its number of native sons who will become doctors un­til it improves the standards of hi'gh school and pre-medical education, un­less the standards of medical education are reduced to those of about 50 years ago."

The editorial as~>erts that some of the blame for the conditions in North Caro­lina is due to the de-emphasis by the State Department of Public Instruction on classical and cultural subjects in favat· of vocational or so-called practical ones. It sets forth the belief that much of the provertv of culture in North Caro­lina public schools is due to the great emphasis placed by the teacher train­ing departments of colleges and uni­versities upon methods of instruction while nerrlectinQ' to gjv~ futnre t.PacherR the broad a'nd basic cultural background which they ne~cl for their work.

. Dr. Johnson's editorial, quoted in D · ~ 1

part, states: orm · O'OSStp "It is true that throughout the nation

the trend has been to emphasize how tQ teach rather than what to teach-as witness a recent Saturday Evening Post editorial replying with a strong -affirm­ative to the rhetorical question 'Are Teachers Overtrained 'in Methods but Undertrained in What to Teach?' Ap­parently, however, North Carolina has outdone other states in diluting its edu­cational standards--as judged by the showing made by our hi'gh school grad­uates in competition with those from other states. .

''It may be argued that in this age of specialization, the teacher should con­centrate on the subjects she is to teach, and on .teaching methods. If we are to look upon our teachers as Henry Ford does upon his workmen, each of whom has one definite task to do in making thousands of Ford cars as fast as pos­sible, that is the, logical view. If, how­ever, we consider it as important to mould the character of our children as to pump ideas into their heads, is it not better to give these teachers themselves a broad foundation of real culture to build their o\vn charact~ upon? The so-called classical subJects are not popular now. They are bard, and hence not in favor, these eagy •going days, when discipline of all kinds-especially men­tal discipline-is being laughed out of

. court as old fashioned. But no one can successfully deny that these subjects make for the best kind of culture. and the mental training they require helps to build character. Yet the curriculum as outlined by our State Board of Edu­cation allows very little opportunity for student-teacher to lay a good foundation of culture. And the followers· of any pro­fession-teaching, the ministry, law or medicine-are better prepared for their life work if beneath their professional education is laid the broad foundation of a general cultural education."

(All lettera to· the editor muat be aigned; names will be withheld on requed. Letters do not nec:e•· aarily reflect the policy of the paper or the opinion of the edi· tor.)

To the Editor: . At first, I am sure that you

will not think this little epistle concerns you; you are very wrong; it concerns every one of us that even so much as thinks a slanderous thought about some­one.

You have read, no doubt, that to think an evi.l thought or to have an intent to do something­even if the deed never gets done -is just as wrong, morally, as is the deed itself. I dare say there is not one of us on this campus today who does not have as much curiosity as the prover­bial cat, and who does .not wonder just a little about strange events that go on around him.

All of you have jumped to erroneous conclusions, just as I have; therefore, you 'have no right to blame others for doing something that you yourself would have done under the ·cir­cumstances--which, incidentally, you do.n't always know.

First Stone "Let him among you that is

without sin cast the first stone." Perhaps I'd better start at the

beginning. Not very long ago, several girls heard· a rumor which we believed to be the truth. Be- . ing quite human and having lis- · tened to 'Dragnet" too often, we started 'investigating." Most of the sleuthing was done with open minds, but when circumstantial evidence semed to point to one particular person, we started jumping to ronclusions. Several wholly inelevant incidents were linked to the "ease."

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1953

By Bob Swain:

The Theater--Here, _. . . · •. . . . · .. Languag~ __ ~:rat ·c-·

Elsewhere- Has· lnii"iation The story of Paul-Fouts,' Inc.,

can be found on page one, but "Born Yesterday" has left its im­print on the minds of many who saw it Wednesday and T-hursday nights. It takes its place beside the long list of successful come­dies performed on the stage at Wake Forest in the past. Certain­ly, thos!'! who saw the play. will join in e>..-tending to the cast and crew congratulations for a job well done. . ~

However; ''B·orn Yesterday"· on­ly fulfills one portion of the Col­lege· Theater's policy for major productions during the season. In the recent past, it has become a custom to open the season with a lively comedy, followed in the winter by 'll drama and, of course, in the spring, the annual Mag" olia Festival Shakespearean play •. · In pursuance of this tradition, the College Theater now turns its efforts to the second production. of the year, Tennessee Williams' memory play, "Glass Menagerie." Tryouts for the play will begin Nov. 16 and will last through Nov.

. 20. They will be held in the Alumni Building. The show will

French Profs Attend Meet

Dr. R. L. Shoemaker, Dr. J. E. Parker and Miss Mary McFeetet•s of the French Department repre­sented Wake Forest ·at the semj­a~nual joint meeting of the American Association of Teachers oi French and Teachers ·of Spanish and Pot·tugese held at Duke University recently.

The purpose ox the .association is to further and improve the teaching of French in high schools and colleges of the nation; the North Carolina cl1apter is the fifth largest in the nation.

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~:~~~~~-be preduced early in Rites For 19 Jim DeVos had a bon~· bruise;

last week while he was both -re-. hearsing the play ·and practicing varsity b'asketball. When it was repor.ted to Coach Munay Grea-· son that the ·bruise was the rea­son for ·his limp, the coach scowl­-ed and ··remarked, "Guess that

. stage is too hard."

· A·· total of 688 persons_ saw ."Born Yesterday" last week. That was only 41 short of topping the paid attendance set by "Cy­rano de Bergerac" in the fall of 1949. Had the weather been better Thursday night, there might ha"9:e -been a new record set for attend­ance at College Theater pro­ductions.

Blasts Committee:

Initiation services for 19 new members of Sigll}a Pi Alpha­modern honorary fraternity, were held Thursday night in Phi Hall.

The new members are Charles Cherry, Jimmy Cleary, Callie. Ann Coughlin, June Driver, Sam John­son,. Lorraine Murin, Allene Nash,· Helen Paul, Sarah Riecke, Mrs. Callie Stanley, Frances Tharring­ton, Patsy Pearce, KaY. Arant, Norma Upchurch, Yulan Wash­burn, Lonnie Woolweaver, Betty Mae Tribble, Betty Jo Usher and Buck Taylor.

A Christmas banquet . and a special ·program t1!lling of C.hirst­mas in other · countries is in­cluded in the .plans for the coming year.

Smith· . On Chapel Services By ·BILL WILLIAMS

In a statement to the press Thursday, the sagacious Mr. Bore­garde Smith blasted the Student Chapel Committee for wha·t he termed "an unfavorable breech of a precedent which ·. has for time ·immemorial governed the sele-~tion of our chapel pro-, grams."

In a heate"tl protest of this year's·cbapel programs, Mr. Smith stated, "Both those programs which are intended to be peda­gogical and those chosen simply for entertainment, have been in direct contradiction with all past customs at Wake Forest College, and the sudden change will un~ doubtedly have drastic effects on our student body's scholastic achievement and psychological stability."

Citing specific examples ·Mr. Smith poineed out, "Only last week I had a quiz immediately

following. a certain ·period. The night before this quiz, as is ad· vised by all . our greatest edu­cators, I attended a movie plan­ning to do my reviewing during chapel the next morning. Dis­gustingly enough _the Chapel Com­mittee had obtained an excellent orator who completely distracted my attention from my book, caus­ing me to 'be forced to take the test without preparation •

Psychological Importance To illustrate the psychological

importance of the issue Mr. Smith revealed, "On still another oc­casion I decided that 10 o'clock one Monday was an excellent time to partake of refreshments between two extremely heavy lec­ture periods. In 'order to pursue this endeavor, then, I made a s.._vift journey to town during the next 20 minutes.

. .

Critic Hits Movement" Lighting Reali:;, the fault lay just as

much with the thinking of. these things as in the relating of them to others im,olved in "getting the facts." Howev~, the real damage came as a result of an indiscreet coincidence; the per­sons-innocel)t · victims of this phobia that m()st of us -have-­discovered that they were the subject of many widespread con­ferences behind locked doors; roommates began to tear into each other; longtime friendships Yanished like so much dew before the warm Indian summer sun.

At the Duke meeting, Dr. Allen Hurlbert of the State Department of Public Instruction, spoke en the teaching of modern languages in North Carolina, and Prof. Wilson­Jones of Davidson College made a talk on "Voltaire's Criticism of Medieval Arts."

Patrick Speaks Dr. Clarence H. Patrick, pro­

fessor of sociology at Wake For­est College and now en a leave of absence from the college, spoke at the monthly dinner meeting of the Phi Alpha Delta legal fra-

Later a friend remarked that I had l'eally missed I' .sonie great singing. Being so utterly frus­h·ated to hear a \Vake Forest stu­dent declare that a collegue had missed something by cutting chap­el, I was thrown into an emotional turmoil that ·lasted for several days.

(Continued Front Pnge One)

not DeVos'), but there is little one can do but wav'e the flag when the author throws it in your direction.

A long-standing stahval't of the \Vake Forest theater, Jim Tribbie, came through 'vith his best performance to date. He finally got rid of the sponge i.n his mouth and did a fine piece of work. Usually an actor to take any advanta·ge of a part to secure attention, he played with self-control and ·was a good per-· sonality on the stage. He acted with a sense of humor that was undeniably con­tagious. Tribble exhibited an indication of better things to come.

By the grace of hil? long legs and ne•·er-doffed hat, Bob Jordan kicked th'e funny bone of the collective audience and added much to the humor of the scenes in which_he appeared. Jordan is another actor who has shown advance­ment since his debut here last year. When he licks the timidity that. shows through his acting, he will add much to

· his performance. Glim Holt did the best of. a thankless

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$lb ~olb anb Jilatk FoU1lded January 15, 1916, as the official student newspapet· of Wake Forest College and published weekly during the school year except during examination and_ holi<lay per-. iods as directed by the Wake Forest Publi-cations Board.

-- - --- --~ ·-Editor ............................... Wilfr~d Winatead Bu.sinesa Manager ................ _, Glen Garriaort IIIanaging Editor ···············--·-···-- Dan Poole Sports Editor ·············------- Charles Newman Photographer ··········- .. ··-'·--·-··········· Irvin Grigg Circulation J.\llanager ·····-·-···-···· Anita ;Brooks

Editorial Staff · Busineu Staff

Linda Boothe Don Craver

Durell Bullock Wilbur Early Bc>b Jeffords

Bob Girard Margaret Lovill Ottis King Gayle Privette Margaret Lovill Ann Scruggs

Steve Mahaley Patsy Pearct

Shirley Mudge Circulation Staff William Pate Dot Brooks Tony Wrenn Motsie Burden Bob Pratt ~Iat·ian Cabe Gayle Privette Dorothy Canipe Helen Puckett Callie Ann Coughlin Jack Robinson Caryl Dixon Helga Schnitzer Lou Newsome Bob Simpson Re·ba Oxford .Jimmy Taylor Patsy Pearce 1\iarthelaine Williams Frances Thart·ington Tony Wrenn Blair Tucker

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Servic~, Inc. Subserip-tion rate~$2.50 per year. .. Entered as second class matter January 22; 1916, and re-entered April 5, 1943, at the post office at Wake Forest, North Cat·olina; under the act of.Ma.rc.h 3, 1879.

OFFICES IN THE STUDENT CENTER Telephone 4056 P. 0. Box SSt

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role for 'vhich his lack of maturity was unfortunate. The banality of his per­formance could conceivably not be his fault. Somewhat reserved aCtions and vocal qualities would have aided Sen­ator Hedges.

Betty l\Tae Tribble oozed the social. ·washington which many know to be truly quite sticky. Vern Mitchell, Betty Bryant and the rest of the cast did their parts equally well.

EYerything considered, the entire cast for the show 'vas one of the best, if not the best, yet. It was not as unbal­anced as some have been in the past, particularly in the supporting and minor roles .. As a comparatively small cast can be handled better tlian a large one, and this play has a small speaking cast, it may be assumed that this fact had a lot to do with the relatively good quality of the production.

In general, however, the cast lacked the depth necessary to produce a show that nears perfection by any standard, amateur or professional.

Movement was hampered by what was probably the cluttered acting areas. A few less pieces of furniture would have greatly helped the actors in moving from place to place. Then, too, there was considerable movement without ap­parent motivation throughout the show, but movement of any kind is far better than none at all.

Didion presented a noticeable im­provement over a vast majority of pre­ceeding plays. It . was an exception rather than the rule to miss any of the lineg....;_though a few were·missed- due to the speaking of the actors. Some lines v..-ere lost because of audience reaction.

The set, rich and colorful, provided the . proper tonal background for the actors.

Good lighting seems to be one Of the chief problems confro~ting the Colleg_e Theater. Lighting techniques cannot be learned overnight, for they require study and much experimentation. Some of the problems of this production were work­ed out the second ni'ght, one night too late, though. Effective lighting cannot 15e obtained with insufficient equipment and· haphazard ·methods.

· The overall coordination of the show indicated that the stage manager, Norm· Larson, did an outstanding j()b.

"Born Yesterday," as presented by. the College Theater, was not on a pro­fessional level. That would be too much to ask or eYen supose. Wh.at the local theater ·group should strive for at all times is the quality which many people glibly refer to as professional. When-

. ever they cease to reach for this quality, they shall have defeated their purpose.

Return Of Peace At last, peace has returned to

the dorm; conversations no longer stop short when someone enters the room. There are still stares of curiosity and sneers of disgust in evidence, .but these, too, will pass. Thgse who haYe been wrongfally accused have shown themsBlves to be big enough to forgive and try to forget.

We hsve learned from our mistakes'; !-with God's help­will never talk about anyone again; will never jump to con­clusions; will never pry into someone's business. In short, ex- · perience - though sometimes cruel-is a good teacher. My eyes have been opened. I know who my 1·eal friends are, and I know those who are only f~ir­weather friends. Friendships that cannot stand the test of unfa­vorable public opinion are not real.

I want no praise for what I have done; neither do I expect condemnation. One has to live with himself. If his conscience is· clear and things a1·e squared between him :and God, I don't · think it is .necessary for him to be punished further.

"Judge not, that . ye be not judged."

Name withheld on request

WAC Commissions Open To Graduates

The Department of the Army has established an officer procure­ment program for the Women's Army Corps, Army Reserve, at colleges and universities. All g1:aduating coeds of the College are eligible to apply.

Deadline for applications is Feb. 1, 1954. Coeds who are in­terested should contact either Lt. ·col. J. S. Ten-ell, professor of military science and tactics here, or 1\lrs. ·Jeanne Garrell, secretary of the Reserve Officers Training Corps here.

Requirem!'!nts are graduation from a college or university of accredited standing anct a plrys-ical qualification. Those women who are accepted ~vill be commissioned when they graduate ana will then attend the company offiDer course for a duration of 20 weeks after which they v.ill be detailed for duty.

Pay and allowances including living quarters allowances· and rati'Ons for a second lieutenant

· total $338.58 per month, including medical and dental care.

All applications should be _.ad-­dt·essed to Chief, North Carolina Military District, Attention: DjR­OTC, Box 311, Raleigh, N. C.

ROTC Men Form New. Offic-ers' Club

(Continued From Page One} military education in American colleges and universities; to unite in closer relationship their mili­tary departments; to encourage and foster the essential qualities of good and efficient office1·s; and to promote friendship and good fellowship among the cadet of­ficers."

Lt. Col. J. S. Terrell, professo1· of military science and tadics, stated that all indications point strongly to the installation of the Scabbard and Blade here possibly by the middle of February. He said that four months from the date of the establishment of a local officer's club are required before application for admittance to the Society can be made.

He also said that the establish­ment of Scabbard and Blade here was approved ·by a faculty com­mittee last year.

temity. . Dr. Patrick is now serving as

cbairman of the paroles. commis­~<on by appointment ·of Gov~ Wil­liam B. Umstead. He talked to the ·members on the work and purpose t.•I the commission which was re· cently established by the 1953 Genera! Assembly.

Council Su-spends 2; One ·on Probation -

(Continued From Page One) automatic.

The' case involved similar test papers. Suspen~;ion is for the re­mainder of the semester in which the viola~ion takes place ·and for the semester immediately follow­ing. The students were given 48" hom·s in which to leave ·the Col­lege.

1\!Ir. Smith explained · that ~ feared that in this "revolutionary change" one of the first signs of "a vast 1·adical att'itude in college policy which i~ being brought b~· the removal to Winston-Salem."

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Choir To Sing The 38-voice College Choir led

by Prof. Thane MacDonald, will sing tomorrow afternoon at the first session of the Baptist State Convention which will be held at the First Baptist Church in Greensboro.

The Choil will present the se­!ection "Ipng of Glory" by Chlist­ransen; "Create in Me, 0 God, a Pure Heart" by Brahms; a tra­ditional Southern hymn, "The _. Garden Hymn;" and ·~Jacob's Ladder," arranged by Wilson.

The Choir will travel bv bus and will return to -~wake Forest Tuesday night after having sup­per in Greensboro.

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Less Churches Condemn Dancing Although attitudes va1-y from not,' as to create positiv:e, health­

church to chu.rch, comments from ful programs .of recreation as a denominational officials show part of church life." >

that most major religious bodies Catholic, Epi8 copal

"Each meeting has a recreation : hall in which dances are held. The church believes in good recrea­tion, kept decent, of course.· We discourag_e games in which .reg­ular plajring cards are used be­cause of the possibility of gam­bling.

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incline toward a more flexible · The Roman. C~t~lic and p 1•0 _ view on ballroom dancing. and card playing. New community testant Episcopal· churches, usu-conditions are said to have ally more uniform in -disciplines

than Congregational - t y p e brought about new approaches churches, accept, card playing and and modifications.

"\Ve don't regard .these things as either a means -of salvation or .a means of damnation," said Dr. Douglas Hm·ton, executive secre­tary of the Congregational-Chris• tian Churches." ."It's undoubtedly true that the general attitude is less rigid than it once was.

M.oreover, said Dr. Ralph Stoody, information director of the Methodist Church, "there is much more positive preaching nowadays, and' less. of the nega­tive type. The whole trenq for youth leaders in the church is not so much to say, 'You shalt

Legislatu7e Okays. Committee Setup

(Continued From Page One)

sponsors. They at'e Gene Boyce, student body president and head cheerleader; John Blac"h.·well, stu­dent body vice presid-ent; Pat Al­phin, secretary of the student body; Jim Greene, treasurer of the student body and Baptist Stu­dent Union president; Sonny George, :fiootball captain; Doris · Craven, -Woman's Government Association president; Billy Lyles, Monogram Club pr.esident; Wil­fred Winstead, chairman of the Publications Board; and Lester Martin, president of the Stucl,erit Bar Association.

Those absent from the meeting were Gerald Chandler, Student Party; Eleanor Geer; Campus Party; Joe .Strother, Campus Party; Jim Tribaloe, Campus Party and Faye Tyndall, Campus Party.·

dancing as ordinary recreation. So do the more liberal chm·ches__,. the Unitarians and Universalists.

Ettze]ians Tall~ OfEisenh·ol\--er ·However, strict policies against

dancing and card playing are maintained by. some of the newet·, smaller Protestant churches, such Jc>e Hough and Talmadge Wil­.as Assemblies of Cod, Pentecostal · liains tried to prove that Pres. Hpliness and Churches of Christ. . Dwight Eis,enhower. is· pulling a Some, like the Seventh Day Ad- Hoovercart . in .a.. debate aga· inst ventists, require vows against such activities for· membership.· Kay Arant a~d Ted Fulp in the

·Here are ·comments from Euzelian· Literary Society Monday church· officials on the subject: night. .

Dr. Ruben Nelson, general Williams stated that Eisenhower secretary, American Baptist Con- was ,incaP.able of filling the vention, says: "Baptists have al- ca·padty and meeting the I'espon­ways varied from the extre:Q1ely sibility ilf the office as pr:esident. conservative social life down Ted Fulp countered by argu­through the whole scale. Any ing that the president proved his change in attitude is away from ability as a president of Columbia .the more legalistic viewpoint an~ UIJiversity. and in Europe duri'ng toward greater dependence on in- the war. -dhridual conscience and decision.~' Hougn contended that Eisen-

Morality Of Acts bower was not only pulling the Mooaignor Thomas J. McCatthy cart, but. also handling the reins,

(Roman Catholic) of New York, He stated that the tl'uce in Korea, states: "The essence of Puritan-. which Eisenhower promised and ism is to inflict penance on some- secured, is n:ot worth the paper one else. In ibis way, those that on which it was printed. He said don't like dancmg or card playing that the present farm program· is make it an issue of mol·ality and a weakness o.f the Eisenhower

administration. , · say no one else can dance or play cardo;. The morality of such acts In rebuttal, Miss Arant stated is determined by the use they're that the ·Korean truce is the best put to." means of peace at this time. She

Dr. Norman Saljt, president of added that neither Eisen-hower the Synagogue Council of Amer- nor any other president could con­ica, says: "As for dancing, we trol drought or any feature -o:f 1·egard any norm.al activity, not nature. · In closing she atated

indulged in to exc~ss, 'as· proper. that, "Eisenhower is the. best ex-We don't encourage card playing. ecutive- that we have had in many The average .rabbi thinks it•s an years." awful waste of time." ·wma Jean Akins was accepted

A· ;Mormon· spokesman said: as a new member. ·

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·Veacs Who Are ·Greeks First_lri:Miniatu..:e; Then On The Field

. 1\ • j • •• ' ' . . ' . ' ' . -' ' By Jimmy' Taylor

Alpha Sigma 'Phi efforts ·in a clean-up campaign Alpha" Sigs Camp· Mason and which included the house, b'oth

Joe Taylor journeyed ·northward inside and out, and the yard. · this ·past w:eek end to visit rela- Plans ··have beeln made for tives of Mason. ·During .the week homecoming decorations and coni-. end they spent some time in Phila- mittees appointed~ Homeco_ming delphia and later in New York sponsors have also been chosen. City. ·It '\Vas Taylor's fir.st .trip to the ·metropolis. The Brothers were sorry to lose

· · · . pledge Will Jones, who was ·forc.ed ' The brothers wish to congratu- to leave school .because· of Hlness .. l~te . pledg·e' Bob Burns on his The chapter was visited over recent election as president of his the week end by alumni Carl pledge class. Mangrum, Tom Gi:bson alnd Ken

. Grigg. . · . Kappa Sigma . l The fraternity wishes to an- .

The boys and their dates en- no~nce the inst~llat~on . of '!1ew joyed a ,party at the :fraternity officers: Pat Pr1ce 1s hbranan; hous·e Friday night. lt was a Joe ~~~e, ser~eant-at-ar~1.s: and Halloween dress party with a Be~ Bighead Te'nch, ass1stant combo from Raleiooh providing the seigeant-at-a.rms. . music. · "' A small party was enJoyed by

several of the members and out ~he _fo~tball tea1,11 lengthe~ed of town guests at the home during

the1r ~mmng streak by defeatmg the week end. the P1 Kappa Alpha team, 6-0. A pass by Ed Gresham to Griffin Johnson sparked the winning Sigma Phi ErPsilon touchdown. The Kappa Sigs are The u1nbeaten Sig Ep football now in, second· place in the intra- team defeated the Lambda Chi's m]lral race. . and the PiKA's last week. johnny

. . . . . . '

Dick Beach, ,.drum • m'a.jor; Jimmy Snyder, libr , who distributes ~nd collects. music; Angelo Capparella, Co~lege Band director; Jackie Harris, head majorette; and Prof. Thane McDonald, Music Depat;tment head, discuss formations for forthcoming half-time programs. Formations are worked out first on the minature board; then tried in practice by the Band. (Photo by Irvin Grigg.)

,:Pledge Jimmy Todd from Kinlaw, Dick Whisnant, Johnny Laurinburg defeated J. L. Daw.J Gilleland; Danny Wortman, Wayne kins in the freshman presidential :Weber and George Waring were race r)lnoff. Pledge Bill ·starling outstanding players in the games. of · Smithfield · defeated Kitty · Dr. Emmett· W. Hla.mrick was Booth in the runoff for tJ;easurer. "Professor of the Week" at the College Band:

Si:r; Ep · Dining Hall Thursday ___ ..;::;....._..;... __ night. He was a· guest in the

Lambda Chi AIIPba chapter room · at the fraternity The Lambda Chi house on North ho'use after the meal. .

·Main· Street will undergo a face- Members who have been elected lifting ]?eginning this week. The to offlices in the . Society for .the

Spa~kS Half= Time Show Jl!embers plan to paint the entire Ad Wake Foresters l1ave gone band- balanced • instrumentation and

vanc~ment of Management · 1 outside of the house and to make here are Pete . Mauney, historian, happy t 1is yeal'. For the public, with use of intricate formations

bunny hop and Latin American songs are among those Capparella has usetl. · minor repairs in preparation for J h · R H d · ' this increased interest has been and popular songs, the band has o me ay en ren, -correspond- ·

homecoming. Lambda Chi .is mak- ing secretary; and Tommy _Cole, reflected mainly at the football turn.ed in some interesting half- High Mark ing an all-out effort to' retain recording secretary. ·.games. time programs.

... the homecoming trophy won last Under Director Angelo Cappar- When football season is over, Tl1e band probably hit its high year. _, ella, the College Band now has 65 the group will have performed at mark this season with its half-. Lambd~ Chi had another party Kappa ~lpha members. That, is • a thir~ larger six games. Formations employing time performance at the N. c. tiuring 1;he past week end. The . The chapter .w1sbes to extend than last years ·SIZe. 0¥1th more a ·'.'Dragxet" theme, a donkey, the I State g·ame. Wea1·ing cap lights rr.embers and their dates enjoyed ItS , CO.'llgratulatiOnS to the six and with the drum majors and

PAGE l'IIJIF.S .

GC Varies Curriculum ' ' .

Provides Courses In Style Of Music

•' Variety is the spice of iife, and this year finds the . ·GreensbOI'O College curriculum certainly va­ried. Several new • courses have been introducted by the adminis­tration. The music department is offering Music 441, 442. History

I iology 44 is :Aation Prognui:r& This is a study of the &est~

.. materials and techniques cm:o­:·ently available for moderati~ lnter-gt·oup misunderstandings. 41!' tensions.

and Materials of Salient Musical Styles. Included in this detailed study of important musical styles from the ancient· Greeks to the present day will -be 'the study of actual scores, listening to respec­tive recordings, and the study of tr.an,slated writil~gs of each pe­l'iod in addition to specific ref­erence-s to 1·ecent writings. · A large part of the second semester will deal with theoreti­cal ·materials which are function­ing in the twentieth century. This course will be of speci~l interest only to senior class music students since the prerequisites are all the theoretical and musico­logical which are listed for the first three years of applied music majors. · Another new course is found

in !he departtpent of sociology. SociOlogy 43, 44 gives three hours

I credit each semester or six for the entire year. Sociology 43 is entitled Patterns of Human Be­havior a.nd Relations. This is a general orientation to the field of human relations with special emphasis given to the problem areas of contempo1·ary inter­

Emphasis will be given to. tlia techniques best suited- to the needS of teachers, religious educai:D!:!;,. and social workers. The Jn·e;.. requisite for this course is ninet hours of sociology ·or permissioa.. · of the instrnctor.

Christian Classics in Tnns­lation: a survey conrse in 'Chrisi­tian literatnre (non-Biblical)'~ Reading will be f1·om the aposto!-it:: fathers, the .apologists, Aul..rtlstinl!., Aqninas, the reformers, -ad s~ lected Protestant leaders sincl!.'t the Reformation., This course wiffi. be a supplement· to Church Hi"'"" tory, and types of Protestantism-

Speech 213, Principles ~ Speech Pathology, is a newcomei:' to the curriculum. This will be ~ study of the caustive f.aetors~ remedial measures, .and cl.i:ai:call procedu1·es involved in the mo.."''!J complex speech defects, sueh. as aphasia, stnttering, and spastiel speech. The pre-requisite ial Speech 11, or Uie permission o~ the ~hait·man of the department. Speech Methods is not new but i!;; has not been taught for about~ fifteen years on this campus •. Hl; giv.es three semester hours credi&; and will be a study of m.~twdl.i:l and materials used in teaching;' Speech and Dramatic Arts in h:ig~ schools.

group living. Wide reading and IRC TO MEET WEDNESDAY class discussion will supplement The Inten1ational Relatia.lliiii the lectures. Pre-requisite: Six Club will meet Wednesday eve-­hours of sociology or the per- 11 ninO' at 7 o'clock in Phi H~ mission of the instructor. Soc- thi1:'d floor, Wait Hall.

The Television Show both dancing and refreshments. KA s WhQ ~~r~. r~cently ~elected p ' . d N D majorettes using flami,ng batons,

. Dr. I. ~. Lake was .receJ?-tiYj:l'o~ me~·bershi!l m _'\Yhos 1Vh~ ro-vi es ew egree the band playecl a series of Latin chosen to become an honorary Among Students in American I American songs and went through I member of Lambda Chi Alpha~ .1 Universities. and Colleges. They . , . , , . j several _maneuvers in darkened . ' _. .- I are Carw1Je· · LeRoy Howar<t A new kmd of doctoral deg1 ~e d1rector of the program, wh1ch 1 Riddick Stadium ·- ·- _,go Twiggs

1 .Glen GarrisO!d, ou-. :Re- in humanities designed to broade;n has been in preparation for three .A h . ' ·

''Caught In The Webb" Is Very Interesting-~ I'~ Kappa Alpha velle, Bob. Johnson and Lester the training of college and um- years .. Committee members repre- t ~mecommg Nov.· 21 . the

Plans- are nearly complete for Martin who was a member of the versity instructors in certain sent the · six departments which ba~d will .employ ,~ ~~11 fight the Homecoming week end. The Caroli~a KA chapter before enter- liberal arts field~ is ~eing offered. will participate in the prouoram. theme, playmlf the Wilham Tell week end will begin Friday night ing the Wake Forest Law Sschool. to Stanfor~ Umverstty .graduate Doctoral deoTees will be aw;1·ded Ovet'ture" while toreadors. mata­when the brothers, pledges and In the recent freshman class st"Qdents this fall, acc01:dmg to .an jointly with one of the. depart- dors and a bull go ~hrough their their date&: dress up bowery- fash-~ elections Charles Snipes was annoucement by Prestdent W al- ments by conferring a degre-e of paces. ion ~or a big bowery party at the elected vice president and Walter lc;ce Sterling. Th.e program is a "Ph.D. in Histo1·y and Humani- The band, wl1ich li:Iusic ·Depart- I Rale1gh Countl·y ~lub. \Yard was chosen as the repre- pmnee:; venture m post-graduate ties,' 1 or "Ph.D. in English and ment Head Thane MacDonald con-~1

After the party is over and the sentative to the Student Legis- educ.atwn. It has. been set up fot· ~umaniti.es," etc. The program is s!de1·s "the b.est we've had," prac-girls are escorted home the broth- lature. aT! eJg~t-year penod under a grant 1ntended to guarantee both in- bees three times a week. Two of ers and pledges will p~rform the Other offices to which :mem- of· $2t>O,OOO from The Fun.d for tensive and extensive training on those se-ssions are on the field j t

1·aditional all-night job of set- hers of the ~raternity have bee:n the Advancement of Educatwn. the graduate level. whet·e. intl'icate marching maneu-

·ting up the homecoming de co- i·ecen~ly elected are the presidency The grant will permit at least 1 .Specialized stndy in one ()f the vers are worked out. rations under the direction of and v1ce presidency of the' Society fh·e honors in 'fellowships in hn- six fields will remain almost as Capparella is making plans for Buck Riddle, chairmaw of the for the Advancement of Manage~ manities of $2,000 each to be intensive as ever: Pa1·t of the aim the band to make a tour of North Decoration Committee. ment. The men holding these awarded annually. A distinguished is to tmin colleg·e instructors who Carolina high s<!hools this year.

The week end of parties, foot- posts. are Jack ~ailey and Fred visjting professo~ will ~Is? be ~P-j :Viii be fully qualifie? to do teach- He hopes to raise . money from ball and visiting alumna will be Has!mgs, respec_tJv,ely. . pomted for each of the fn·st fiVe I mg and research m a depart- the tour for new umforms. Other climaxed Saturday nig·ht by the, Tne fratermty s J'!':tramurai years to lead special seminar mental field. But in addition the than the tour the band also will! homecoming dance, sponsored forj f~otbal~ team defe~~ed the Alpha courses of the program. Dr. Henry 1 student will enter specially stage a special Christmas pro­the PiKA's by Bettye J

0 Kiff and S1g~ .'"~ ~d~~sda~T a ... ,.ernoon, 14-2. Alonza Myers, professor of j planned courses intended to 1 gram and spring progTam at the

Bootsy Renfro, escOl'ted by Don- For tne 1mt1al KA touchdown Pa·ul Ehglish at Cornell University, has 1 familia1•ize him with the stream College. . 1

nie Parker and Wes Ledfol·d. Bu~:1s passed to Charles "Co.un- been appointed as visiting pro-' of We~tern thought a.s a whole. j try Early. Amo•ng those .outstand- fessor in humanitie.s for the first!' Implementing this aim will be a he , •. 1·11 onti· 11 t d' · tl'-, · f th · d • · H h b 1 . · 1 - £ " ·• c ue s u Ies In u,. : I?g or e1r erens1ve play were yaar. e as. een a ~":der m .s~':cia, scnes o Western Tra- specialty during the followinO' two!

Sigma Pi lmemen Ed Bar.dy and Billy post-war curl'lculum l'eVISions at d1t1on' conrses d!!voted to read- yeaJ·s of aca·d-e · ·1· '"'o i Th b h H ]d. C Jl d h • · l · · lHIC WOl ,, ne-

e rot ers of Alpha Nu chap- o mg. orne , . an . as a Wl?e back-! mg ~nc . 11;t~rpretat~on of the third of the final ear will be 1

ter were host to many returning The pledge class elected officers ground m philosoph~, hter~ture, world s s1gmf1cant thmkers, f~·om flexihlt>, to be used b; the studetlt I alumni this past week end, includ- Tuesday night. They a1·e B. G. and drama as well as m Enghsl1. I Plato to the modern!', A semmar for allied stud'e 1 1 · I ing Allan Harris, Empot•ia Vir- Cambell, president; Chuck Dog- The program will be admin- series will explore current in tel- dJ'sser·tat1•011

1ss t?fr "t'Ol' ~ 011 115

· · L f t · · · . . 1 . . . · a 1 ac Ol'V com- I g1ma; a ayette Paramore, Wake ge t, VIce president; and Jim 1stered by a committee m charge ect~1al trends a1~d then· 1·elatlon pletion of this dissertation t·ead-Fore.st, now stationed at Fort Bellamy, secretary. ?f the Gra?~ate, Honors P1·ogr~m~ t'o l~b~ral educatiOn and th!! uni- ing facility in .a modern ~nd an I Jackson, S. C.; and Harold Wal- m Humamties, headed by Pto- 'ers1t~. mrcient foreign .lan"'uage and I ters, Chai'lotte. · . R · s · k f.essor John ,V, Dodds of the Eng-~ One year of ~Taduate work in comprehensive exami~ation's will\

The Sigma Pi football team de-~ oy pea S hsh Department. Professor F. 'VIr. the stndent'.s chosen field is a be part of the requireme ts f . feated the Lambda Chi's, 6-0, in Strothmann has _been appointed 1 prerequisite for acceptance, and the degree.

11 01

a ha~d fought gam~ last ~eek. . 1 Dr. Donald F. Roy ~:f the M1ss Sov~a Hamilton, pmned to Sociology Dept. at Duke Univer­

Ben. ~endr1c, was .serena?ed at sity spoke on his experiences in Me1 e~1th Co.~lege Fnday n~ght by indu<=<trial research at the meeting I the Sigma .PI s. The. fraterm.ty p1·e- of the Sociology Club Tuesday , ~ent~d M1ss Hamilton w1th an night. . orch1d as a symbol of her tie to Dr. Rov posing as a worker in the fr~ternity, and that of the a factocy' and a dishwasher in fratermty to her. a . restaurant kitchen ~eeentlv

A. Sigma Pi combo. is being or- made a study of wo~king con·­ganized, ,featuring· Bud Hames on ditions and workers' attitudes, the trUI'npet, Frank Davis on the The results of the research pro~ bass fiddle and· Jim Hall at the vided the program for the Sod-piano. ology Club.

'At the December n:eeting of Theta Chi the club, the program will . con-

The pledges and brothers of I sist of a student panel discussion.!

Theta Chi recently combined their. ~------------~'"'1 • . I

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The Glee Club, under the di­rection of Prof. Than~ McDonald sang tl;e follo,~ing s~lections i~ Chapel recently: a choral invo­cation, "Come, Thou Holy Spirit" by Tochesnokoff; "Agnus Dei," an anthem by Wilson; and a bene­diction response, "Tile Lord Shall Preserve Thy Going Out," by Thane MacDonald.

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PAGE FOUR OLD GOLD AND B~CK MONDAY; NOV~MBER 9, .1953

De•con Club Fou.ndation: ·

Gives $J6,000T OAfhletiCs~i WF Bows, 18-0 :To Tiger Team

King's Passing Helps Clemson Defeat Wake Forest As 3 Deacons Are Hurt

By S~URLEY M~DGE I Bureau. 0 f Internal Revenue the Deacon Club, some is kept· in r. Approximately $3B,OOO w a s where, as a n·oo-profit organi-· the organization's treasury to ta-ke ·~ ·

I D zation, it was declared tax- care ~f transportation costs, the ;- ·. raised last• year by t le eacon treasnlrer's sala~y and other such '· · · Club· Foundation, according to exempt. matters.

Don King, Clemson's sophomore quarterback, lived up to his name as he passed and ran the South Carolina Ti·gers to an 18-0 victory over injury-riddled Wake Forest Oct. 31 in Clemson's Memorial Stadium.

With regulars Lowell Littleton, tackle; Gerald Huth, guard; Billy Churm and Bruce Hillenbrand; halfbacks, left at home and .number one 1

Wake Forest Director James H. Separate From College~ Prospects Weaver, for the primary purpose Th · of supplementing the regular e corporation .-ls entirely When questioned' abeut -the· Ataletic Department budget. ·separated from the College, Coach prospects for this·,.year's Deacon

Weaver went on to say, having Club income, Coach ·Weaver ex~ "In 1937," explains Coach • its own president, secretary and ·plained that the' ·amount cannot

Weaver, "we started trying to a full-time salaried treasurer. be even estimated With any degree. raise some·money·from the alumni There are approximatetv .. 20oo· of certainty, for much depends· on: for athletics." At first the members of the Deacons Club how the season goes. Says Wea-

quarterback Joe Wh1te and full-~ Deacon one with a fumble re­b~ck ~d Cha~ey taken .from t~1e covery-by Joe Dupree, center. fteld m the f1rst -hal~ '_VIth a diS- Three desperation passes failed located shoulder and tnJured knee, ana Wake kicked to their own 21. respectively, the Deacon offense Four plays later King· hit Gaskin 1 · ground out only 151 yards to in the end zone on a 14-yal·d pass. I

l methods·used were hapha:zard and scattered over No1·th Carolina and ver, "If your footbalL team. is therefore generally ineffective. surrounding states as far away as winning, the ·alumni are enthus-There was a. need for organization New York and Florida., iastic. If not, they say, 'Oh what , which, in time, led to the founding the heck.' ,. · of the Deacon Club. Each member is required to

contribute a ,minimum member- This year has not been ·a good' .....

Clemson's 500. The score stood at 12-0. As if six injuries were not ·wake left half Bobby Fredel'ick

enough, Dick Marshall, who had stopped Clemson in the third been g•roomed as a replacement period with an end zone inter­fol· ailing halfback John Parham, ception, but after being shoved pulled a leg muscle in warmup back to their own 37 on the en­di·ills, forcing Parham to play. suing punt, Clemson drove 63

-The group formed not a club, ship fee of $10; many make much year for the Wake Forest foot!:>aY ;.,,, in actuality, but a corporation. The larger contl·ibutions. Through the team, said the Coach; consequent- ::., by-Jaws were drawn up by a Athletic Department, the money ly gate receipts have been small -'),; lawyer and presented to the is- used for many varied purposes. and enthusiasm weak. T{le club-·-':,,

An estimated 75-100 athletes are had hoped to raise about $40,000 ·; .·. given some finanCial aid in their but at present, achievement of : .. schooling. The maximum help that' that goal appears doubtful. ..

40 Pass Tries yal'Cis to make the final score IS-The Deacons took to the air, in 0. Tiger fullback Crimmins Hank­

the absence of a ground attack, to inson and halfback Buck George I complete nine of 40 pass attempts gained 38 of the 63. yards, George j for 93 yards, while Clemson hit on going over from the seven. King, nine of 21 to gain 204 yards via ,Picked tlp four of the 63 on a keep the air route. play ant! passes 21 yards to

High S~hool Cage Clinic. Here Friday

may be given a boy consists of The basketball .season is still paying his complete school ,'ex- ahead, but in.Coach Weaver's esti- · penses, furnishing his books and mation there . would probably be --· $15 a month spending money. about one basketball fan for every

Wake Forest missed one of its Gaskin fct· a first down on the best scoring opportunities in the seven to set up the scoring play. first minute of play when' Jim Last Chance Bland, playing at 1·ight half, re­covered a Tiger fumble on the kickoff and 1·acetl it to Cle1nson's 10. Fom· plays gained a total of

In the final period, vVirke went to the C)emson 22, eight and 39, getting the best chance on the eight with a first down.

two yards. Clemson punted, and ·wake Sonny George tossed two in- ·1

Forest drove back to the Tiger complete passes from his quarter-34 with a first and 10 ·from that back slot before a third was inter­point. Three plays netted three cepted, halting Wake scoring at­yards, and the Deac again punted. tempts. Marietta Perry, Wake Forest sophomore majorette, has been Again Wake held Clemson and ·wake Forest incurred only one selected as a member of "Who's Who in Baton Twirling" in the had the ball in Tiger country as penalty-fi\-e yards for off sides United States. The first Wake Forest coed to receive thi& honer, a result. From the 43 the Deacs with only nine minutes left in the Miss Perry was a majorette her freshman year and for four years moved to the 41 in three plays game. at Edenton High Sch<M>l, in her home town. She is one of 7QO col-and then punted out on the six. King completed all nine of the •

It was the last Deacon chance Clemson passes for 171 yards and I lege majorettes who a.re members oJ the National Baton Twirling until late in the fourth quarte1· carried 10 times fo1· a net of 60 , Association to be sele<:ted for the "Who's Who" list. A bush•eu .. when Clemson led 18-0. ~·ards. Gaskin caught six passes administration m~jor, Miss Perry is a member of the Student

95-Yard Drive for 124 yards to lead in that de- Council, the French Club, the Social Stanclards Committee •f the Stal'ting on the six, Clemson partment. For Wake Fol'est, it Woman's Government and the Delta Kappa Nu Bu'siness Club.

marched 9-l yards in 12 plays to was _the fourth loss against two ~---~----~~------~-~~----------l'ea~h pay dil·t ea1:l:'( in ~he se~ond wins and one tie. The game ·was I B HI"llenbrand •. penod. .Joe Pag-he1, T1ger nght Clemson's second victory as ruce h~lf, ran it over ft·om the 11 after opposed to three losses and ·one~----------.----Kmg had completed passes to tfe. · T B F R t ~cott. Jackson, Pag-liei and Drehet·.\ A comment made early in the.! ops Ig our e urns . as~n;. week by a Clemson player was I . · · Wake stopped Clemson on the. 1·ealized, "We're going to begin ~h~re must be somet~mg to ~l1e mark in punting to lead total

pushing across before long instead I p~sttlon of safe~y that 1s exclus1ve yardage. Vfhite has punted for

Wake and Franklin County high schools will attend a basket­ball clinic which •vill be held in Gore gym Friday.

Sponsored by Phi Epsilon Kappa physical education fraternity, the clinic will include a discussion of r·ules for boys and girls games, two films, scrimmage ·games and an explanation of officiating by an Atlantic Coast Conference official.

The clinic will begin at 2 p. m. with an explanation of l'ules for the girls game by Dorothy .Casey, physical education instructor, to the expected 150 l1igh school c~ches and team members.

Scrimmag;, Games Next, four high school teams

will play scrimmage games to familiarize themselves with tlie l'

latest l'Ules a n rJ regulations govering basketball. Friday night four more teams will scrimmage.

A color film of the Wake Forest -N.C. State game will be shown in the college cafeteria and a ~CAA film wHl be shown at the­gymnasium.

Officiating will be explained by officials which are supplieli to high schools in Wake and Frank­lin counties by PEK.

In addilli.on to this financial help football fan jf a specific count for deserving ·students, tutors are could be made. Many schools al·e frequently provided for boys who trying to build basketball into the get behind in their studies. These popular sport that football has too are paid by the Athletic De- become, but few have succeeded. partment. Still other uses are In the Wake Forest gymnasium, a made of the Deacon Club money. capacity crowd little more than Last year a new · electric score- pays the expenses involved in board was bought for the gym- securing officials and pre-game nasium. Station wagons are furn- advertising. isheu for -the players transport­ation. Of the money collected by

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of stopping inside the other I ,w1th B~·uce Hillenbrand, Deacon 1187 yards_ He ranketl third in

el·ps n· team's 20-yard line" halfback. average yards gained with 38.3 -------· ____ l Despite the fact that injuries yar<1s. age. Ed Stowers~ end, was third BRAZIL: AMERICA FIRST . h~ve kept him fr?m three- games, With a total gain of 277, White I in punt returning with 143 yards • ~- -- -.- ·- ·-- .. ·--·- ·~ Mat Pasr• 16

I Ap P ll . . _ \l:hllenbrand remams the top man tt'o~o~k:_-~s:=e~co~n~d~p~l:a~ce~in~p~a=s~s~in~g~y~a~r~d~-~o~n~1_:1_p~a~s~s~e:s::_. ________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~ n 0 . The most agT~eable forelg:n in total yards _gained on punt re- -I country to BrazJhan students IS turns.

The Uni,·e~·sity of l\Ian-land, I the United States, al ccord0infglt

4o ~~ A recent individual statistics

· newspaper survey t 1ere .,.., the Atlantic Coast Conference's. t d t ll 1 tl U ."t d st' t-- survey revealed that Hillenbrand's

I . . s u en s po eL , 1e m e a es I 161 1 1 · · d c a1m to nat10nal ootball faml!', o·ot ., 0 t f th t l yart return tota IS mne yar s _ d . 1 . 1 ., " per cen o c vo cs. b 1 1 . t t·t-I'emame m secont spot m ast . . eyont us neares compe 1 10n. \Veek·s Associated Press Poll, Italy and SwJ~zerland ued for] The little back ranked third in ~fter a 24-6 win over South Ca!'O-~ se~ond ~~~~e wtt~ 13 per • c~nt net gains by .rushing with .256 lina. Notre Dame continued to ap:ec~. Eight per cent fa\ Ol ed ~:ards. He reta1med the top kick­dominate first place on the Brltam, Fra~ce, Portugal and 1 off returns a\·erage 'with 30.7 strength of a 38-7 victory over Germa~r- SwJ~Z~I~lam!, was ten~- yards but stayed in third place in Navy. ed the most cJvthzed countt·y m that department.

Baylor gave Texas Christian a the world. Hillenbrani:l ied in punt returns, 25-7 beating- to cling i.o third kiclwff returns, and rushing b~-place. Illinois, fourth ranked, MILITARY TRAINING fore injm·ies in the 'Vake Forest-dropped Purdue, 21-0. l\Iichio-aJJ Compul~ory m i!itary t1·aining Carolina game took him out of State replaced West Virg'inia .. in for all college and high school stu- play. :fifth place, by defeating Orego11 dents in India was discussed with- Bod Ondilla kept_ his title in State 34-G, while Georgia Tech out conclusion in the House of pass receiving for the third week climed a 11otch to sixth spot, over- People in New Delhi. Speakers by racking up 177 yards gained powering Vanderbilt, 43-0. generally supported the scheme on 13 caught passes.

West Virginia, with a narrow and said it would make yotmg Quarterback Joe White got 20-19 escape f1·om Penn State, people more disciplined. comfortably over the 1000 yard •vound up in seventh position. Oklahoma swamped Kansas State, 34-0 to make it 38 league contests without a defeat for the Sooners in Big· Seven competition.

The Bruins of UCLA posted a 20-7 victory over California, to rate ninth place. Duke moved back into the upper bracket for the ii1·st time since a 14-13 loss to Army, with a 48-6 steamroller job on Virginia.

Notre Dame, Maryland, \Vest Virginia and Baylor are the only rnajot· undefeated and untied teams Left in the nation.

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LATEST COLLEGE SURVEY SHOWS LUCKIES LEA.D AGAIN

Where's your iingle? It"s easier than you think to make $25 by writing a Lucky Strike jingle like those you see in this ad. Yes, we need jingles -and we pay $25 for every one

·we-use! So send as many as you like to: Happy-Go-Luclty, P;O • ~ox 67, New York 46, N. Y.

" Last year a survey of leading colleges throughout the country showed that smokers in those colleges pre~erred Luckies to any other cigarette •.

This year another nation-wide survey -based on thousands of actual student interviews, and representative of alt.

· students in regular 'colleges-shows that Luckies lead again over all brands, regu­lar or king size ••• and by a wide margin! The No. 1 reason: Luckies taste better~

Smoking enjoyment is all a matter of ~.and the fact of the matter isLuckies: taste better-for 2 reasons. L.S./M.F.T •.

-Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. And Luckies are made better to taste better •. So, Be Happy.:_Go Lucky!

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;!S{ kept· in~­to ta-ke ~ 1ts, the , er such '

11t ·the· Deacon rer ex-cannot degree

mds· on· '' s Wea- ··~· . ; ~~ :!am. 1s ~~~

enthus- .-' ', h what:;,

a good':.~ football '·:: equ(mt- ·' · L small ·: .. te club-:· I· $40,000 ·, :· ent of·. I. is still ·'s esti- · .bly be--· revery

count ols are nto the til has ceeded.

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NOVEMBER 9, '.1953 OLD ·coLD AND BLACK,

S- p·· .. E'·' T. 1· F: --- . T ...... ·.·.. ·. · - s: - a ie rat It e Independents \ _,. Go ··At Title.

\

Cockr~ach Views Cl~mson Jaunt:

'Bradl~y' Goes With Band l:Jeflt' Sigma

. · Ch~, .7 To 2

1. ' '

Basketball Sch~dule: · ·

Wake ._Plays ·22 Ga~es Miss Joe's, Jets, Seminary Win All

By CHARLES NEWMAN "She waded in the water ... " and streetll of that South Car&Iin& He was just a cockroach. His an entirely new song, written on town were filled with ghosts, gob­

little brown· head peered around the spur of the moment and dedi- lins and spooks as the spirit. o.f By WILLIAM PATE a trumpet c-ase and watched the cated to the director of the mass Halloween took the town.

Top positions ·in the two in- goings on. He seemed to enjoy of merrymakers. - Bradley was glad to lea-,e. Sigma Phi Epsilon defeated Sig~ Ghi; 7-2, in a cold drizzling The 1953 Wake Forest hl\sket-

.. 'rain to cop the Fraternity League ball team will play 22 games this· .. touch football ·title Thursday af- year, including 12 conference

dependent intramural touch foo-t- the trip-all 600 miles of it, as he # Meal Of Crumbs Greenville, but the noise on the to . go against the Generals of ball leagues inay be the stakes in journeyed with tlie bamd to the After a hearty evening meal bus did not help his growing Washington and Lee. tl:!is week's scheduled games. Clemson game. of crumbs of French bread, half a headache. The trompone player

Ne:a:t 3 In Raleigh. Undefeated Miss Joe's·. will He was on -the bus as the band string of spaghetti and a lettuce again helped a motorcycle po:JicE-ternoon. : 1 games and two tournaments, the " .. · The SPE's jumped rigq.t into.: _Steel Bowl· Tourname~t _.in Pit~­

'things by scoring the only touch-· burgh, Pa., and the DiXle Class1c .down.of the game on a P!lSS froni tourney in ~leigh. There are George Waring .to. Dickie Harris .>even home games. in· the end zone on the second play The Deacon_s open . the season from scriinmage. against VPI, Dec. l1in Winston-

. Raleigh is' the scene of the have to defend its record a-gainst loaded and left Wake Forest leaf, all prov-ided to Bradley .and man to clear the traffic, and :~~ Dea~ons' ne:ct three en~agements: its nearest competitor, onc~-de- shortly after 12 o'cloek Friday. his cohorts by the Valdese High dixieland band blared in the rear s:ml-professional Peona Cater-, feated McKinney's team. If -'the He, like the band members, was S'chool band,' the little .unknown of the bus. As lips grew tired: of Plllars J?ec. __ 22, · ~io Gr~nde Col- Miss Joe's boys hurdle McKiimey's fre-sh illnd full of energy, and he mascot went t(} the Valdese-Forest playing, the cockroach noticed a lege, _with Its h1gh~scormg Bevo in their Tuesday game. th-ey will seemed enthusiastic during the City football game. Bradley went phenomenon commonly cccuring F:a!lcls De~-· 23, a?d the annual remain on top .of Independent trip to Valdese, the evening's to the game in the warmth of the in mixed groups of homo sapiens:: DIXIe Class1c, runmng from :£?ec. League A standings. destination. ' entrails of a bass horn, for the that humans tend to couple o~

·.. Waring then passed to Harris Salem. They return to Wake For­.· for. the .extra. point. For the re- est. for th~ next three gam~s, . mainder· of the· first half the two agamst DaVJdson, Dec. 4, Mary­: teams seesawed from one end of land, Dec. 5, _and State, Dec. 8.

28 to D~c. 30. . On the same day the strong The little cockJJOach had to mountain air was cold to the. near- especially dming the da.rlrer . The.new ye~r fmds the Deacon> Seminary team will cope with the stay in the bus when the humans naked cockroach. He noticed wlth hours. He first noticed this wherr. m Philadelphia; . Pa., Jan. 2, tu Campus Jets for .the top berth in he was· :forced to travel with left glee, for Bradley was a little too tall young ma.n directly 'below­face a St. Joseph's College five, League B. The two undefeated the bus to refresh themselves a·t prejudiced toward the home team, him placed his tired head on the and then the_ W!'ke Forest group tea-Iris are tied for top position: a drive-in near Ashboro. How- that Valdese had little trouble shoulder of the pretty brunette/ . the field to the other. . Dec •. 11 and .12, t}le Wake For-

Several times Sigma Chi ptislted esters Jc;'Urney to Pittsburgh, Pa., · deep into SPE territory only to be to play m the .Steel Bowl Tou:na­. stopped by SPE pass intercep- ment. Th'en they travel to Lexmg-

goes to the b1g c1ty, New York, to Sigma Phi Epsilon defeated Sig- ever, he managed to scavenge a defeating the visiting team, 20-14. beside him. Sleep seemed to come, •neet Seton Hal~. . ma Chi Thursday in a hard fought few; crumbs, which is a meal for a That night Bradley had to sleep easier this way.

tions. ton, Ky., to meet the University North Carolma receives the 7-2 game to take the Fraternity cockroach, from one of the mu- o'n the bus. But with the t•ising Along about the time that the~ next three_ games of the Deacons, League championship. SPE wound sicians toward the rear of the sun, the humans again assembled caravan reached the North Ca.ro--

Second Half Begin• of Kentucky Dec. . 14. Dec. 19 fi~ds the Deacs in Winston-Salem two of which are to be played on up its season undefeatEfd. Sigma bus. to journey on toward South Caro- !ina state line, someone realized:

the Wake Forest home court, and Chi holds a 5-2 season record. Bradley Watches Humans lina. He heard a large young man that the trombone J!layer was Sli• .SPE started-off tbe second half by getting ip_to trouble. A couple

. of penalities plus two good pass . · plays by Sigma Chi shoved the

SPE1s back to their own ten yard line.

5; Regulars, 3 Suhs.Ont

tl:e other to be· played in Rn- End Of Seaaon From his perch in the luggage telling of the home he had slept good at m~ving cars with his· im-leigh. Gore Gym is the scene of .This week is expected to see rack, Bradley, as he was mimed, in. He boasted of a huge room personations had good 1·easons f'aro a cage fete with Carol!na Jan. 9, the end of the touch football sea- watched the humans tell tales of {"twice the length of the bus")' shouting-it was his birthWq-. a-nd Duke Jan. 12. State is host son. Playoffs between the in~ some strange place ca1Ied "the a bar ("we went down and had This was a little confusing bo to the Deacs Jan. 16. lilependent leagues and for the beach," something ca}led a beauty a nightcap"), and maid service Bradley, for the members of his:

Reat Of Schedule campus championship are antici- contest, .and was u~fonned o:n. ("at a qua1·ter' 'till eight, the family were not used t() havinJ!: Sigma ·Chi failed to capitalize on ,their scol'ing opportunity, and possession of the ball went to

. their opponents on downs. Once mol'e the battle .swung from one ·end of the field to the other.

South Carolina is the host to pated on the following Monday. such subJects as speclal ways to/ maid called us on the house many birthday parties--someone; Wake Forest Feb. 5, and Clemson '\Yon, lost standings fot· the ca-tch polar bears. I phone and announced 'breakfast was always getting "rubbed out."' meets the Deacs Feb. 6 at Clem- touch football teams to date are During the first leg of the trip, is served'"). ' Birthday Cake son. The act reverses, ~nd Clem- SPE 7-0, Sigma Chi 5'-2, K-appa Bradley never looked any more Greenville, S. C., came into However, while Bradley Wasi

By CHARLES NEWMAN

In the closing minutes of the game SPE found itself back to its own end zone. Sigma Chi made its only score of the fracas ·by catching SPE Tommy Cole be­hind his own go,a,l line. •

The injury jinx, which has· son comes ·to Wake 'Forest Feb. 9. Sigma 3-2, Kappa Alpha 3-1, Pi- confused than he did when. a view, and B'l'adley, like the other contemplating this fact, a chee-r­followed the Wake F6rest foot- Feb. 11 finds the gold and black KA 2-3, Sigma Pi 1-4, Alpha Sig- group of students started. ac~mg occttpants of the bus, crowded to leade1· had gotten off of the· ball team for several weeks m Chapel Hill to go against Cal'o- ma Phi 0-5, Lambda Chi 0-6. out slogans, s~ng and movie titles the front of the vehicle to watch stopped bus and now returneli now, has brought about the re- iina. College Park, Md., is th~ Miss Joe's 4-0, Mckinney's _and old. saymgs, and an?ther a police car, witl1 the assistance with a small cake. It was promp.tllt" placement of five starting play- scene Feb. 15, as 'Vake 'Forese Team 2-1, PAD 2-3, Phi Delta Phi grou~ trJed · t~ guess the h1dden of a siren-imitating trombone decorated with matches placed iE. ers and the loss of three top journey,;;. there to meet Maryland. 2-2, Athletic S~pporters 1-2, Hac meamng therem. . player, clear a path for the bus-ses a "[)" formation to represent the re~lacements. -George Washington plays on its Shack "Blues" 0-3, Seminary 4-0, Poor _Bradley was nearly .Jol~ed through the morning traffic. He initial of the :nickname of the.

Joe White, Deacon starting home cottrts'· when. the Deacon5 Campus Je-ts A.-0, Redbugs 3-2, from his post when one factlo.n recalled how the voiced wail had honoree. After lighting the "can­quarterback received a dis- meet the Washington, D. c. team Ministerial Conference 1-3, Trail- of human~,beg~n to shout "Found cleared away slow-moving ve- dies," the_ whole group woke UP'

.SPE could not advance, and the ball went to Sigma Chi on downs. As the clock ran out Sigma Chi advanced into SPE territory.

located shoulder in the game Feb. 19. William and Mary plays er Tramps 1-3 and Bond's Boys A _Peanut, whlle the other loudly hicles from the highway. the trombone player and pre-against Clemson. Lowe 11 the 1-ole of host Feb. 20, and 0-5. VOJced "On Top Of Old Smolty." Greenville Refueling sen ted him with the cake: The.

SPE Penalty "Rocky" Littleton got a frac- South Carolina· comes to Wake High scoring and hot and Soon harmony was r~stored, and After I'efue1ing in Greenville, young man overcome his sleepi-tured jaw in the Carolina game Fore,t Feb. 22. The- Southern heavy perfonnan~es from the top the group -below him chorsed Bradley and company were joined ness and his surprise to blow out;

A SPE. penalty put the ball on its own 1:me-yard line and gave Sigma Ohi a chance to make one more play.

and has not seen action- since. Conference champs of 1952 end teams in the sport marked the 14 . by a third bus, the football team. all the candles. Then he dividecl! Bm Churm, who was hurt in the season agairu;t Duke in Dur- games played the past week. Pace SeekS With envy-green eyes, the little the cake w:ith the group, passing:

the. Wake Forest-George Wash- ham Feb. 26. Large Score fellow watched a female bands- pieces as long as the cake lasted. ington pre-season scl'immage, The Campus ·Jets confounded man ntsh to view the new an·ival, Even Bradley got a-·crumb or twa..

Cole compensated for the safe­ty. by 'knocking. down a pass into his end· zone. This ended the

aggravated the thigh injury in. the Ministerial Conference with E PI \\chile almo.st clairvoyaat.ly, her 1 After a short stop at Charlottt!'r t e n 111iam and - ary ganie and I~~ .. ,tg ee s h UT' M z~·· w; k' an astronomical score of 47-0. The xam ans fullback boyfJ•iend appeared a<tl the busses moved on,_ only to S!;ei; has not been ablEi to even suit .., Seminary, though not up to usual · the rear of the team's bus. ·They lo~t ~om_ewhere ~uts1de of Con-

game. . 'In the SPE backfield Waring

and Cole stood out on defense. J. L. Dawkins and Wayne We'ber performed their duties .well in

out for Coach. Tom Rogers. performance managed to pull a A 1 t r . t fl' t i waved, she very wholeheartedlv, cord and go 10 miles back toward ' Soph Ln ACC 7-0 victorv' ove.r the Trailer · -~ ~n ° edimfi~H\ 1e con .Ic s/ he, just waved, then Loth s~t~ Charlotte, a fact that Bradley Knee Trouble Tramps The Tramps later over I?- ml -.lelrmb ant . Jtna fefxatmitlhl~- clown had suspected all along. A State

B H 'll • d ff d · · - twns w1 e pu m o e ac 1s 1 • • 1. f' d th ~-:ruce I e:ntoran su ere · -· , ' came the luckless Bond's Boys, . , p C 11 ~ h b . To the tune of "When The po Iceman con 1nne e eoc.-:-"interna! disarra:ngement of.the Don Kmg, Clem~>on s all-round 1" r. ;.;ear at ace 0 e.,e. T e aslc s · t G M h' I " roach's beliefR directin"' the:

· the S:PE line. ,. · 't ·1· k h b d A~· .,.,. idea of this plan is that the am s 0 • arc mg n, as was . · _ '' "' . knee," says trainer Ernie Me- q.l~r el >ac • as ee!l name .~ ... -. SPE in a triple header demo!- . . . . . rendered by a clarinetist and a dnver m the correct direction .. Kenzie, when Wake Forest went socJated Press Atlantic Coast Con- h•hed Lambd Ch' 21-0 conflict wlll be ehmmated. Fur- drummer at the rear of the bus and the grou11 headed for Wake> In the Sigma Chi line, Jack

McGinley, John Stokoe and Allen Birmingham were standouts i~ their performances.

· t s t · Ral '.-..4. Th Ierence sophomore of ·the week. ' ' . 7 a · 1• • ov_er- thermore, the student can be. W. . . . . ' For·est agains ta e 1!1 e1"""' e K' k h h f h' turned P1KA 13-6, •and parned a!'<sured that 'n most cas he the ake FOiest representatives · l·n;ury n· as been enough to keep In wont e onor or lS out- s· . ch· 7.2 •1' •.· 1 • es t · d Cl • B dl t d At 2:"<: o'clock on Sunda= ·' . . L•t d' "" , . ..t • - , • Igma I, - ' to c mch the Will have no more than two tests en ete em,.on. ra ey 110 e ' . uu ... Hillenbrand on the bench, but ~ an )n., I unnmg- an,l pa,.smg per-. Fraternity League Champion~ hip . . d as he' entered a hotel dining room mormng, a til·ed, sl.eepy caravaJ:£

Some SPE players suffered . minor injuries and Joe Hough,

·,; Sigma Chi player, was taken to

coach Rogers says that there is formanee in the Tige..-'s recent Miss Joe's bleac'hed Hac Shack m ~ ~Jven thay. h d 1

th on a bandsman's hat, that the 1 of music-makers reached Wake: a possibility that he will play ~;arr,e with Wake Forest, as he led "Blues" 34~6 and s· p· t n er. e new sc. e u e, e "eemingly favorite ice cream Forest. Bradley hettrd one of thet

'the infirmary because of injuries. l''emson to a · 18 0 vi· t d ' ' Igma I pu exams wlll be 100 mmutes long • ' h . . again before the season ends. _-' . n . - c ory an Lambda Chi at the bottom of its . , ,· ' served there was "Clemson Ice group. sum up t e feelmg.s of the il . .; first ACC wm. 1 · h . . . Instead of the ple\tOus two c " fl . . b. d w;hole when he said "That'· o.ne-Gerald Huth was not able to K. 19 170_ d . f A _ e~gue Wit a hunuhatJng 21-0 hours. There will be 100 minute ream, a a>ot, not a Ian • . . -~ , . " Next spring, the Inter-Fratern­

"ity Council will award Sigma Phi :Eflsilon with a trophy for the

·. touch fooball championship.

make the Clemson trip because mg, ' poun er 0 n trmmph. · t h . . I Then the Deaco1ts complete tl1p I 11 never forget; but 1t w:m:. of the infection of a leg injury. d~:>r~<on, S. C., played only ha-lf the The Red Bug:;· ·handed the Min- seshsidonl,; d ab t ·. oui

9s tentatnd'e1

3Y with the cockroach· ...:ent to the w01-th ever~· tirip.g incb. of it."'

~·arne, but he ran up a total of . . · • · sc e u e e ween a. m. an 1

. f ' "He'll be able to play before too · .;31 d . d . Istenal Conference its second de- p m The schedule will be sucltl o.tlg"-1VaJted ootball game. 1•--------------t. - " ,.,,. K . h ;,:. yar s runmng an passmg. f t f tl . 1 . - ''" k F . t 1 t d B dl long, says ..... c enz1e,w owent He completed nine of 17 passes e11 o !e week w1t1 a· 6-0 s~ore. that the early classes will have na e o1es_ ~, a!I _ra ey,j on to, say that Huth might be for 171 yards and carrie<l the ball Kapp~ SJ~ma surmount~d P1K~, early morning exams, and the: as ~e l~ft the stadium m n French able to !nake'the Boston game. jO times for 60 yards. ~-0, ~mt ~as edged by Sigma Ch1, late classes will have their exams! horn, saw a tall Dea:o.n end drop I

Dick Marshall, who had been , ~0-1,. in the afternoon. I to the ground. A tr ~me: a-nd a set up to replace the ailing half- _ . I~ T~ree TD 8 Final Games The administration also an-I manager. \ushed to_ h~s s:de, bu-:

1 \ b }} p 1. back John Parham, pulled a leg He figu1ed 1_11 all three touch- Kappa Alpha vanquished Alpha nounccd a new nlling pertaining I h~ only Iatsed to lus knee::., thre>> ' Foot a 0 Icy nms:le in the warmup drills pre- d~wns, com_pletmg fo~r pa3fles for Sigma, 14-2. The Red Bugs for- to students who have missed both hJ.s helmet t_o the ground, cursed, . . ceedmg the Clemson game and 7o yards. In the 95-ya;d march feited to the Campus Jets, and regular and make-up mid-term and then cned.

An offici~! of· the American .-forced Parbam to play despite · for the ~Irst. score, tossmg a 1~- McKinney's Team upped Phi Del- exams. The new ruling follows: Returns To Trumpet Council on Education said Wed- his infirmity. ~:ud aenal to end Ere~er Gaskm ta Phi's won, lost record with a ,A .student who is absent from a Back in G1·eem--ille, Bradley

• nesday that he regards the NCAA Chaney Taken Out f?r the second. and settmg up the forfeit. regularly scheduled mid1:erm ex- sneaked out of the bus while the president's blast at "skullduggery" Ed Chaney, a fullback w'ho fmal score With . a 22-yard pa ~s The sixth and final week of the arnination must .apply for a make- human occupants scattered over in football as a major stride to- plays behind Sonny George, suf- to \:Vake Forest's seven. touch football season ends Wed- up test within one Wel'k after town in search of food. He soon

~Officials Blast ·Need A Haircut?

Try

FAMILY BARBER .SHOP·

ward "sweeping the rascals out of fered a strained left knee in Clemso~ Coa~h Frank .How~rd nesday with nine sc!1eduled the scheduled examination. Ap- scuri·ied back to the safety of his I college football." play at Clemson and had to be lauded Kmg_ lughly, sa~mg we games. plications must he mad with evi- trumpet case, though for the ~-------------.&

The Council, wllich represents carried from the field. can't play hlm all the- tJTae, bu• Monday, PiK,;\. and KA grapple I denee .supportino- the reasons for all the major colleges in the coun- Deane Hillenbrand, y.ounger we have loo~ed good in every on Field I. Sigma Pi en-gages with the student's absence fron; the H 1 h f try, adopted a code last year call- brother of Bruce, who was ~x- l?,"ame whe~ Kl~g wa~.able t~, pia_,- Alpha Sigma Phi on Field II, and examination. Lack of preparation ere 5 YOUf C a nee C ing for a general de-emphasis of pec!ed to be a top repl_acement a.•:~ was directmg the t~:.m. Hac Sh.a_ck "~lues" contact Phi for a test is not an accepta.ble .football. It askei:l the NCAA to -in the line tb:is season, frac- Clemson plays a:eor.,Ia . Tech Delta Phl on Field III. reason for missing it. help piCk the Only

·:· J'lelp police a d'e-emphasis · pro.. tured an elbow during the S~tu;day and the Tl*ers will --he · Tuesday,. 1\icKinncy's Tean1 1.vil1 A student \Vho does not take ~ -gram. George Washington. scrimmag-e P;~nme: much o_f tlteir ho~es on a~tempt to topple Miss Joe's on the mid-tel111 or any make-up ,~~~~i~0ff:f:~ ...

Raymond A. Howes, secretary and has not played at all this Kmg for a- possible upset victory. Field I. T·he Ministe17a1 Confer- exam will be graded zero (0). ~:;; • of a .special committee of 11 col- year. Other SopJu ence ;omhats the Trail~r Tramps If such a situation arises, and ·~ lege presidents which made the "I think we do awfully well Two . ot~er sophomores . who of FJeld II, and Semnary and a student l'eceives a zero for the

recommendations, said he was in our games",'' says McKenzie, turned 10 fwe performances Sat- Campus Jets wrestle over the mid-term exam he may continue heartened by the speech this week "considering that we tape near- urday were 'Vake For_est ·tackle L~·ague B crown. in the course '.and may pass it Qf Dr. A. B. Moore, NCAA presi- ly every ,one of the boys for· Bob . Bartholomew and Nor~h ·Wednesday, Sigma Pi and providing his other term !!l.·ades dent, calling for the end of college some :reason or othe:r." He went Carohna .State quarterback EddJe Kappa Alpna scrap on Field I. and the final , exam marks are football if it can't rid itself of .. on to say fbat tne Deacons use \Vest. Bartholomew, wh.o twice Lambda ~hi struggles agains~ Pi- high enough. The student may "hypocrisy, skull-duggery and from 46 to 52 rolls of ·tape a has been nam_ed .sopho~ote of ~he K~ on Field II, altd Alpha S1gma. pa~s the course with a "D" if his cheating." day. Each l'Oll contains 30 feet week, was cre.dlted With mak,mg P?I tussles with Kappa Sigma on other term marks average 85.81

of -tape. 12 tackles agmn~t Clemson. West F1eld III. per cent, and ·he has not been ex-~ Hopeful Thing "We don't expect any <lf the , comple~ed a 53-Y:;trd pass to half- cesssively absent. He will have to.

"It is a _;.ery hopeful thing to cripples to play against Bos- · ihack B-Ill T·e_er ~·hich set up State_'s Carol~na, 2-1; Clemson and South obt~in .an almo.st perfect graue have the head of the NCAA tak- ton," said Coach Rogers, "ex- t_?uchdown m 1ts 7-19 lo-ss to WI!- Carohna, 1-2; Wake Forest, 1-3;!! in· his class work and final in ing that attitude," Howes said. cept maybe Huth. · ham and Mary. aud N. C. State, 0-3. order to ea1·n a "C~"

·,"If it indicates they're going- into "Bruce ~ay play, .snu Churm ' j'

!this thing energetically, ·that's all might, bef?re the season. is U¥er, Duke, Maryland In ~·••••••••••-• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••.••~ 'to the good." but we can't tell ·yet. Chaney has T• F F" PI F'LAS'H , H H • k i I

In his speech at Talladega, Ala., a very bad knee and probably Dileuke n~nrd. Mal:·slatnd waenct·einto I . • erman IC man • !!' ~oore said the NCAA has "only won't be able to play any more ._, .';;cratched the surface" in diggin·g this year," Rogers said. "White· · I; b • · :I i~P ththe pracbtli~estwh1ich afre. 'h'~~~- will be back be:foTe the sea.son ~o!~~st~!~fe~-~~=~ ~tat:~in~tl:~!~ 1,. . eg1ns lt•terary career' . : ~ng e pu 1c o 6Se ait m is over," he predicted. . · ~ .~. football games of Oct. 31. : • : 1

~. · fOllege foot'!:>all. 1. • 1 • + . Moore has been faculty man- North Caro ma remained m I • e F , d t b t W k F t f tb 11

football. You haYe to go about third place, as Clemson joined: • or a nee o es a ou a e ores oo a games i · ager of athletics at the ,Univer- 1• a d pla ers e 14 '>1 2'> 37 38 f these things in an orderly way. South Carolina in a fourth place ~ n Y , se pages , .- , ... , , o

sity of Alabama. You can't change lllack to white tie. Wake Forest held to fi£th! THE HERMAN HICKMAN READER 1 Howes said Moore's speech coulu N C S ' I ~ or a-rey to white in one season." place and . . tate, to the 1 . lead the way to a vigorous pro- ·

11 Howes said there is no indica- ce ar. I e C t · d rf 1 d b f b 11 . gram of cleaning up unsavory tion that the Council committee of ' State, Maryla·nd and Clemson ·On ains won e U anec otes a out oot a practices. presidents will be reorganized in have finished their first year of I teams Hickman has coached or played against; • . But, the Council offi.cials said, the foreseeable future. ACC competition. North and •

1 players he has known; baseball stories; and +I

"we realize that we can't go into , s th c I' 1 th t · t · 1 H' k "We_ made it clear how we feel," ou .. aroma. mve two games sou ern moun a1n s ones as on y 1c man can this thing now and expect a mira- he sa1d. "Now, it's up to the remammg agamst ACC teams, tell them. I ~le overnight. We're convinced a h ·1 w k h j -ery considerable number of insti- NCAA and the conferences and I w 1 e a ·e Forest as one re- • Plus dozens of dramatic and funny read-aloud ~titions have move<! ·in the right the accreuiting associations. These maming game. : pieces (from Casey at the Bat to R. -r.N. Service's 1 rlirection." • late de\;elopments sount.l very en-j Duke and Maryland have a-o f Tlle Spell of the· Yukon) that tl1e famo•s coach j

com·aging to me. records in Conference play; North 1 Pl'Ojpose«< Code • has popularized on the air or read to his per- 1

·:_ In its proposed' code, 'the Coun- • sonal friends. . II

!il called attention to "pressures, : ______ O_R_D_ER_TODA Y ___ -II. loth extel'nal and· internal," which s d _ t saifl led to an over-emphasis on lu ents To Your Bookstore, or

footbail as a part of collegiate life. . Simon ·and Schuster, Publishers, • . Moore raised this point, too, as- • +

sailing college alumni and parents \V~ Specialize In Haircutting Dept. H-B, 63{) Fifth Avenue, New Yo1·lt 20, N.Y. :

:~:T:f~. as coaches and college .. :::~e m~-·-·_·_-_·_~----~~~~~.:.~-~~:.::==~ .. ~~~~::=-~-e=~~~--~-~-2---~~~--~:~~~:. i I ~u~o~:o!~~:J!tt:n.:b~: t~:~ ALSTON'S BARBER SHOP • Address ................ -------------------------------------- ....................................... t "Jeen accepte~ 100 per cent ·all : City .............. -............................................. Zone ........ State............ t

.. ·l~er the country."·. LOCATED IN WILKINSON BLDG. • ( ) Send C. 0. D. - : ';·=':But, he added, "we didn't ex- . : ( ) Payment enclosed (this wa.y publishers pay postage) · :

, : . any overnight revolution in :,._...;. _______ ....,__...., ____ ~---~---.-. tt •• t •••• Ut•••• •• t ••••t't ttt• •••••••• •• • it • •••••• '· .

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The 1953 AU-College Afl-

America Football Team i6

sponsored by

PHILIP MORRIS and brought to you by

HARRY WISMER

It is the only All-America picked by the fans!

Page 6: Of .. o··-· --·- To Get€¦ · ROTC &. &: \ &. ---·----& & &. ' · ~!' .. ' • ~~ · ~ .~ ~ ~ .. . , me . . '

JVACE Sl'X ·OLD :COLD .ANO···BLACK ;MOJ:lDA Y, 'NOVEMBER -9,.

Dodds Hits IOogpatch Doings To Desc~nd. On Deitco·ils ROTC Plan sADIE HAWKINS t,df:e ~";.w;;rda~ay / ·

.NiJr'!'alJVigh'i. A·lt~rs Quickly· In Girls' Dt)rm Declares Courses

'Intellectually Thin' The most hasie facultr criticism

-of the present Rese1Te Officer's 'Training Corps structm·e in. the .American collcg·e is that .subJects 't:mght under ROTC m·e "intel­Jectually thin" and :we mainly rolH•ei·ned with "dull memurizing -of detailed facts," according to President Harold W. Dorld;; of .Princeton U:1iversity. This criti­·dsm, says Dr. Dodd$, i::; ~ound -and thP defeats in the ROTC .studies ohonld be cOITected.

Dr. Dodds points on t that ·"tol;al war is mon? than a slrietly 'lllilit:H·y proulem. The 'know why' is an essential element of the 'know how' and should be part of ihe equipment of an ROTC gmdu­ate." His remedy calls for a close jr,teQ'I'ation between college and :ROTC courses, a!Hl close1· alliance between academic and military

1 Jlrofessors.

At Princeton, Dr. Dodds says, ihe history department has con­structed a new course in military l!istory which is 1·equired for :ROTC students and also open to civilian students as an elective. .Aceording to Dr. Dodds, both aca­demic and militar:.' profes~on are Jlleased with the re.;ult~.

He al5o :mggest-; a course in :geopolitics. "Officers and ch·ilians alike need fuller knowled.g:e of the -el?onomic as well ns political u"'es ·of manpower and natural re­sources. and of the impact of mili­tary policies upon om· econom~·."

Cure For 'Thinness' "The cme fo1· the scholastic

tbinne's for the ROTC cunicula is not to load on more of the same I ·Etuff; ... colleges . . . should

·lle permitted to compress the ~urses into fewer classroom J:ours and exercises, and to utilize ihe hours thus recaptured to deepen the meaning of the pro­.gram and achieve a more satis­:factory integration with the academic progTam," says Dr. Dodds.

Another criticism, which Dr. :Dodds dismisses as being "without ioundation," is that civilian and 'lllilitary discipline do not mix; :military discipline should wait 11ntil one enters the !'er..,-ice. He :points out that discipline in the :ROTC ha:~ little semblance to ·discipline in actual service duty. "The campus remains distinctly civilian" in spirit and the same is ·troe ·for the officer candidates," JJe concludes.

.FOREST THEATRE· Week of Nov. 9, 1953

M•mday &: Tue~clay

Shows 3:15 • 7:00 • 9:00 Jeabbe CraiD &: Jean Petera

-in-"VICKI"

WedDeaday

Showa 3:15 • 7:00. 9:00 -:Ray Micldeleton &. Lucille Norman

-in-'"'SW££THEARTS ON PARADE"

Thuraday &: Friday Showa 3:15 - 7:00 • 9:00

lGary Cooper &: Barbara Stanwyck -in­

"BLOWING WILD'' \

Saturday Sho- Continuous 1 to 11 P. M.

Robert Mitchum -in-

"'WEST OF THE PECOS" --also--Jon Hall -in-

"WHITE GODDESS"

Sunday Shows 2:00 - 3:45 • 9:00 Hugo Haaa &. Cl- Moore

-in-~HY NEIGHBOR'S WIFE"

---·----BOLlEGIATE THEATRE

Week of Nov. 9, 1953

Monday Shows 3:15 - 7:00 - 9:00

Jose' Ferrer __:_in­

"MOULIN ROUG£"

Tues. - Wed. - Thurs. Shows 3:15 - 7:00. 9:00

'William Holden & David Niven -in-

.. THE MOON IS BLUE"

Friday & Saturday Shows 3:15 - 7:00 • 9:00

Bob Hope & Jane Russell -in-

"SON OF PALEFACE"

Sunday - Monda.y Shows 3:15 - 7:00- 9:00

!:Iizabeth Taylor &. Wm. Powell -in-

"GIRL WHO HAD EVERYTHING."·

"And no tu.•o u'a)'S 4holltlhat, either"

' 'Wberea~ there be inside our ·town limits a passel of gals what ain't married but craves something a"Wful to be, and

'i:»btrea~ these gals' pappies and mammies have been ~houldering the burden of their board and keep for more years than lS tolerable, and

'Wf]£tta5 there be in Dogpatch plenty of youqg men what could marry these gals but acts ornery and. ·won't, and 1

~berea!i we deems m~trimony's joys and being sure of eating regular the birthright of our fair Dogpatch womanhood,

Wt bereflp proclaims anb btcrtes, by right of the po,ver and m01jesty vested in us as Mayor of Dogpatch,

Friday, November 13

lYbtreott a foot~race "Will be held, the unmarri~d gals to chase the un~ · .married men and if they ketch them, the.men by law must marry the gals and no two ways about it, and this decree is

~!' autf)oritp of the law and the statute laid down by our revered first Mayor·ofDogpatch, Hekz;ebiah Hawkins, who had to make it to get his own daughter Sadie off his ln<".nds, she bdng the homeliest gal in all these hills and no two ways about that, either.

l}iben untlet our

Witness: Lois Johnson Dean pf Women

Log 9f Radio Station WFDD Monday

4:00-580 Club 6:00-News

6:00-News G:li}..-Music for Dining 7 :00-Stars on Parade

Suaday "'Jl.

6: 15.:._1\f usic for Dining 7 :00-Stars on Parade 7:15-BSU Program 7 :30-Concert Hall 8 :30-l\!ide\·ening Jamboree 9:00-News 9:05--Deacontown Varieties

1 0 :00--Sports 10:15-Theaters Show

· 7 :15-Serenade in Blue 7:30-Concert Hall 8:30-l\!ide....-ening Jamboree 9:00-News 9 :05-Tune Toppers

10 :00-Sports 10:15-Yogi Serenade 1 0 :3 0-Deaconligh t 12:00-Rendevous with Music 12:30--News

10 :3 0-Religious Music 11 :00--Church Service 12:00-News 12 :05-Piano Portraits 12 :30~oin the Navy 12 :45-U. N. Show

1 :oo.:_Music ·for Relaxation 1 :30-Gai Pari Music Hall 2 :00-Matinee Melodies 4 :00-The Baptist Hour 4 :30--"-Classi.cal Interlude 5 :30-Yes~r Hour

.. '

By HELEN PUCKETT . Sadie Hawkin's Day and . Fri- By HELEN PU~KETT

day the thirteenth-both are on It was just a usual .. r un1·0:f-t:be~ the same day ... So all you Wake mill Wednesday night in Forest males w.hnt ain't married dorm. The coeds had all already had better start runnin' to start studying .so' that right now, ifen you plans to out- \ could go to bed early-'-those run the passel of man-hunting o'clock classes come mighty.··

'coeds who will be on the loose . in . the morning. ·Only; a 'few come Fri<j.ay. . .. yells. and gentle 1slamming

Friday, Nov: 13 has been set :. do.01-s could be 'heard. ' aside as official Sadie Hawkin's Th.en, behold! ·The .sound day at Wake Forest~the purpose masculine ·voices 'blending in being to give all the po' l'il Dea- · sweet strains of "That 'Good conville Sadies a chance to catch Mountain Dew" -rose from themselves a man, and to give ·ground •below. Immediately;' ever~•one a big time. MISS SADIE HAWKINS maddest scramble ever· wttnEiSS«ld'!

Each Daisy Mae wil1 proceed t~ get her a man " took· place-.:,that is, the· m:a.a<ile!ll; to tract down her favorite L'il since· the last serenade. Abner and attach a "he's tooked" ·Books were ·pitched. sign to his manly chest. Then, floor; lights:" went out; that night everyone will pile into went up . .!fr.om'>the rooms, <:nn-u;r .. ,.<i hay-filled trucks for a good old and closets into ·the halls and mountain-style hayride - event- the balcony wilidow poure ually ending up at Dogpatch stream of coeds informally atf;in!d'\i, (-better known .around these parts in red, green· and polka' dot:·night-~ as Lake Mirl.) wear. . . , "''·

The program for the festivities Which Fraterbity · · :1 at Dogpatch calls for ·weiner ·''To heek vri.th studying! Which~ roasting, sack racing and round fraternity .is it?" . 1• ~~ and square dancing. Music will-be "Oh! I know. I hear Bill's sweet ' provided by Lonesome Polecat v~ice." · ~ and his Juke Box. "Gee, it's cold. out here." . .~

The celebration is being spon- "Let ·me see your flashlight a'··· 5ored by the Soc·ial Standards .minute." . · : Committee of the '\Toman's Gov- .''Oh, It is Bill!" ~ ~ .. e1·nment Association of which 'Music came from the. grounctl Pat Alphin is chariman. Margaret again. "At ·.the bar, at the bar, :'i Davison and 1\:Iotsie Burden are where .the.·.Kappa Alph11's are ..• " i Sadie Hawkin's Day chairmen; It was· the 'KA's. · Billie Olive i.s in charge of pub- Then· more music, ''You're my licity; Jean Butler, program; Da- HON. HEKZEBIAH HAWKINS Kappa.•Signia .Sweetheart.'' "And· phne Martin, refreshments; and •.. he .made a law • • • the· Kappa Sigs, too'!"· · , Marietta Perry and Helen Puck- "I .guess you kriow we're here, , ett decorations. . hecause.we love you an:" came a :

M' I T II s- SilJ-gers .. :::~:·ad~r~~ A~~ t~:~s;uli~~s t!~ .~ ar {.Ce a {.8 the balcony .responded· wftn. ·a

To AED Frat . A_ttend Mtet cheer to :::~:~~J:e;~:~. . , Dr. J. E. ~Im·kee, chairman of

the Board of Admissions of the Duke University School of. Med­icine, spoke on medical school ad­mission in an informal address to member!i of Alpha Epsilon Delta pre-meclical fraternity here Tues­day night.

Dr. 1\Ial'kee, who is also profess­or of anatomy at Duke, informed the group. of what is expected of a student who is accepted there. He stressed that character as·well as academic ·rating is ·taken ·into consideration and explained the importance of keeping the patient happy as well as aliye.

Seminary ·Has Social

"You girls help. us sing." And: Five glee club students re- the basses were joined by sopran-1

presented \Vake Forest as mem- oes from· above. J hers of the .State. choir at ,the an- "Tell Me Why," ''They're ·Lay nual State Baptist Stu(lent Con- ing Eggs Now," "I Had A1 vention in Winston-Salem last Dream." · -l week end. The choir, directed by' "More, more," begged the.g.irls. Dee Solomen of N. C. State Col- And a couple. of coeds just could­lege, sang at all the se1-vices of n't resist the urge to Charlesfon the convention. to "Five-Foot Two.'' . ·

Libby Graef, Faye Tyndall, Finally, as all . good . things Alice Revis, Sylvia Keene and must· come. to an end, the boys Corbin Cooper were selected out struck up "Goodnight, Sweet­of approximately 12 applications heart, and began to drift away. sen~ in_by Wake F.orest students. "We're Sorry ·You're Going The -choir was --ol·ganized during A WilY," sang the· coeds earnestly, Student Weelj::· ·at Ridgecrest last as they slo""ly began to clim)> summer. back in the ,windov."S. · · .. · Eighty~eight students from An-d the coeds went back to the Wake Forest were delegates to books,. and back to the. showers,· the Convention, which lasted and back to b!ld .. All was · from Friday to Saturday. A ·bus normal again, until t.he and several cars provided ·trans- the .boys . came to serenade. po1·tatfon for the group.

10 :30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-Rendevos with Music 12:30-Nev;s

12:35-Sign off

Saturday

6 :00-Dinner Music for Sunday 7:00-News

The Seminary~s first soCial of the year was held Thursday night at the Wake Forest Community House. ·Refreshments were served, after which songs were sung an4 a talent show was put on.

RUSSIA: TV IN SIBERIA Students at Tomsk Polytechni­

cal Institute in Siberia are pro­ducing their own teleyision pro-

·grains on a transmitter they built themselves. It took 50 students:: 18 months to do the job. Now they' are putting on reg-ular ney;s, · documentary and variety shows. 12:35-Sign off

Tueeda.y 4:00-580 Club 6:00-Ne,·;s ();15-:Music ior Dining 7:00-Guest Star 7:15--Navy Show 7 :30-Concert Hall 8 :30-In this Universe 9:00-News 9:05--Deacontov;n Varieties 9:45-Chapel Upstairs

1 0 :0 0-Sp orts 10:15-Theaters Show 10 :30-Deaconlignt Serenade 12 :00-Rendevous with !11usic 12:30-News 12:35-Sign off

Wedne,day 4:00-580 Club li:OO-News 6: 15-l\Lusic for Dining 7:00-Stars on Parade 7:15-Seminary Program 7 :30-Concet·t Hall 8:30-Midevening Jamboree 9:00-News 9:05-Deacontown Varieties

10:00-Sports 10:15-Yogi Serenade 10 :30-Deaconlight 12 :00-Rendevous with :!l!usic 12:30-News 12 :35--Sign off

Thuraday 4:00-580 Club 6:00-News 6:15-~fusic for Dining 7 :00-Proudly We Hail 7 :30-Concert Hall 8 :30-In Thi..~ Universe 9:00-News 9 :05-Deacontown Varieties 9 :45-B.SU Program

10:00-Sports News 10 :15-Theaters' Quiz Show 1 0 :3 0-Deaconlignt Serenade 12:00-Re:Jdezvou;; with Music 12:30-News 12:35-Sign off

Friday 4:00-580 Club

RADIO And· REPAIRS

RADIO And T. V. Service·

815 S. :Main St. Phgne 473-1

5 :00-Music Country Style 6:00-News EJ:15--'Musical Scoreboard · 7 :00-Ciassical Interlude 8 :00-Saturday Night Dance 9:00-News 9 :05-Deacontown Varieties 9 :30--Gai Pal'i Music Hall

l 0 :00-Sports 10 :15-Heres to Veterans 10 :30-Deaconlight Serenade 12 :00-Rendevous v:ith Music 12:30--News 12:35--Sign off

Quick Service and Tasty

Food is Reserved for you

-when you meet me

-at-

SHORTY'S

. 7 :15-Broadway in Review 7 :30-Sacred Music 7 :45-Church Service 8 :45-Sacred :M:usic 9 :00-Sunday Serenade

10:00-Caravan of Music 12 :00-Sign off

ATTEN.TION

Singing Practice Set Singing practice Will be held at

the meeting of the German Club Wednesday evening. The meeting will be held in Johnson Building at 7 o'clock.

DRUGS COSMETICS

SUNDRIES STAnONARY

WE SUGGEST THAT .. YOU MAKE YOUR ROOM RESE'RV A TIONS NOW FOR

HOMECO.MING DANCE.WE·EK END

HOTEL SIR WALTER Ral~igh, N. ·C.

G-REY.H·OUND ... Heap Big Bargain ,for Everybody Going Home for Thanksgiving!

Charlotte' ....... · ................... $4.45 Greensboro -·········---····-·-$2;45·1 Winston..Salem ........ _....... 3.05 · Al-bemarle ·-··-····---·--··---~ .3.45~ Asheville .......................... 6.901 Baltimore, Md. • ............... -6.25 ·. Richmond, Va. . ............... 3.55 Danville; Va. .................... 2.65 Washington,. D. C ........... 6.05 FayetteVille -•.... : .. : ............• 1.90 Wilmington ...................... 3.45 Goldsboro ........................ 1. 75 Norfolk, Va. . ................... 4.30 Hickory ........ : ................... 4:so Florence, S. C. _................... 3.90 Lumberton ........................ 2;75 High Point ...................... 2.85 Statesville ........................ 4.05

Plus U. S. Tax

Big EXTRA Savings on. Round-Trip Ticlleta

GREYHOUND TERMINAL White· St. PJ?.~~-~:. 22~-2. . . '

~GR~YHOUND . .