~uits. · 2018. 3. 20. · it," but pl81ce theia:' emphasis on the steadiily mc:reasing...

8
Frosh Are Brighter Various Criteria Considered By CAROL CLAXON ASSISTANT EDITOR Figures show that Wake Far- est freshmen all"e getting bright- er every yea.r. Poor studentlSl are getting iless poor-there are ondy 72 freshmen oo proba.tiOIII this spring as compared wtlh 110 students d.n. 1964. B.right stu- dents l!lre getting . - there were 43 freshmen · willh College Board scores of 1300 or higher In the fall CYl 19M, as .compared with 7 in 1960. Filgtm-es show--but are figure$ an a.acwra-be indilc:aflion of the number of e:mceptiolllal students at Wake Forest? Any attempt to answer tltis queSJtion obvious- ly involves a definition of the "exceptional stduent." there are at Wake Forest 1iarl more strong "B" students and more "A" based on high JCOlll- peteDICe ·than there ai"e tional students with what iSI caided "intellectual This lS to be expeeto!d - to hope fC11' a time when every stu-· dent in a has a bur,nlng desire for knov{[email protected] would·. be to hope for a long time; But one may ·wiSh for more of this ·type of· st>udent--<and do f;omething abowt it. Creative Mbuls Fh'st one must find the !l'eia- sons for olbe seeming dearth of creative min.dis at the College, -and many are offered. ties instead of academic pur- It cannot be denied 1hat what Dr. Folk .calls "an intellectual renaissance" can - and must come from with!D !the college. Imparting bigger and better br:ains wiill not be enough ·to change what is, essentlally', an whfd1. pervades t2le en- t.iire Attitude May Spread However, .the more students there are who have this atti- tude wben they enter Wake Forest, :the more quiclcly it will spread. How 1hen, c.an Wake l!'orest compeote with the besll schools of ·the country for the best young mdnds of the coun· try? 'An Inspector Calls' To Begin Thursday I A socially CQaJSC.lous play, described as both mystery and allegory, will be presented ,at 8:15 p. m. Mar. 4-6 and 11-13 in the Arena T.beater. .. Netther the play, J. B. Priestley's "An JJns,peetor Calls,'!'nor'' the prodructfon., which will be impressionistic and are normal fare at the College Theater, according m-:.Tmes' H. W.alton ot the Speech Department, director of the play. The. College Theater is producing Priestley's play, which cen.· ters MOund a respectable Eo,glish fam.l]y's to an in- vestigation following a young girl's SiliCide, says Wal- ton, the playwright "has drawn intereSrmg char.actens and an interesting situation." Since, acoording to Walton, the situation is not a realistic one, it iJS betng placed in a sUNealistic setting. Scrim Sei The scrim, a fine cloth curtail!l v,ilich h&s in the past en- circled the 'll.udience, will be moved in front of the audience to give the action on stage a gramy effect similar to that of the motion picture, "Tom Jones," .says :Walton. The characters of the play are Arthur Birling, a BritilSh fac. tory ownet", played by Leland Cox; his wif,e, played by Gail Puzak; his !Son, played by Jim Eatman; his d·aughter, played by Sllfsm Irby; his daughter's played by Alex Speer; the maid, played by Joyce Wilsie; and the Lnspector, played by Denarls Sayers. Since a row of JSeais have been removed for the scrim's benefit, the capacity of the :theater has been reduced to 12.0. "If you are t.biinking of peo- Ple who can compete for Wood- row Willson fe1lowshlps ailliC1 for Rhodes reholarsbdps," says Dr. Thomas E. Mulden, assiSta.Dll professor of history, then Wake Forest now has "more people who all"e .candlidates for national honors in ltheir own fields" thalli when he first came to the Col- lege. Dr. D. A. Brown, Associate Professoir' of Engl],ish, consider& the l·ack of initiative a chaJract- erisbic of this genell'ation. Al- though he emphasizes that her in.tend.s no disparagement of our presoo.t student body aDd has no desire to return to the "good old days," !he points out tha·t at various periods in Wake F'orest's history, e. g. the 40's, ·the College has had a i!.arger proportion of elCice<ptional stu- dents than bas now. To a 1arge extent, at the pre- sent time, ·the prize goes to the college whicll oCallll put up the money. •'Buying brains" is a ilarge-S!Cale operation, a!!ld W'llke Forest, whose a;oademio scholarship amounts to $1200, and must be !renewed yearly as coiiliPared with !the four-year <Oontinued on page Sl Students have been advised to make resel"V'a.tion!s by callilng the Box Office, Ext. 265, which will be open claily !rom 12 noon to 9:30p.m. THE CURTAIN RISES Thursday llig"ht on <left to right) Leland Cox, Dennis Sayers, -PHOTO BY WILSHIN Gail Puzak and Susan lrby, as they tackle J. B. Priestley's play "An Inspector Calls.'' If the exceptional student is "one wh<> not ocly makes top grades, ·but one who sh<>ws ini- tiative in creative efforts," Dr. John A. Carter, assls!JaDt pro- fessor of English, believes at Wake Forest there is "more high aeademic perfOII'mance 1hall1 Carlelr says tbiat in the four yea;rs he has seen no .increMe m students with "in- tellectuall. cUII.'iosity." Dr. E. E. Folk, Plrofessor of English, who .also !Pinpoints the 40's as a ·time of m:tellectu:a! flowedng at Wake Forest, be.. lieves that 1lhe ,change has largely one of attitude-many students :110 longer JCome to col- lege "•to get .somet::h.Wig out it," but pl81Ce theia:' emphasis on the steadiily mc:reasing num- be<r of extra-curricW.ar a.ctivi- lb n lb nub iS lnr k * * * Pacemaker Award Winner 1963·64 * * * One thmg seems olbViious: Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, March 1, 1965 NUMBER 19 VOLUME L Miriam Makeba African Is Feature Of CU's Concert Debaters Add Wins Sanford Cites Achievements By SYLVIA PRIDGEN FEATURE EDITOR Miriam Makeba, a young South African mbeswoman turn- ed folksinger, will lbe featuxed /by the College Union Monday, March 1 a.t 3:15 p. tn. Her concert, which will be held in Wait Chapel, will in- clude such a variety of songs las Afric!!'ll folk tunes, Yiddish !reWaiDS, Xosa Clitck songs, and jazz beats. Since reserve tickets have been sold! off camptts, students and faJculty must pick u,p their free ·tickets for sea.t reserva- tions at the Information Desk. Upon ;presentation of the lD cat'd, the student may get his ticket, which will be available at :the Infoo:mation Desk Monrl!ay until 5 p. m. and lat >the door Monday evening ibefore the coneert. Miss Makeba's ·amazing ver- satility has reaped fantastic success .in oconcert appearances throughout the country_ She was brought to the Un.ited States by Harry Belafonte and Steve Allen, wh(} 1are credited with di'scoverilllg her unusuail natw:'al talent. With Belafonte She ibegan an ru>socda.tion with Halrry Belafonte as fea- tllil'ed singer on his concerll tours. She ha's 'l!lso made ap- peaa-all}ces w.ith the Chad Mitch- ell Tr.i<> when >they made a spe- iclal .tou.r of co1lege campuses in ·the fall of 1961. Some of the. hlghli.ghts of Miriam's career have been two at the United Na- Jtions, singing for President Kennedy's 1962 Birthday party dn Madison SqUJare Garden and her own -concerts at Ca:rnegie By BEVERLY BURROUGHS STAFF WRITER After :traveling the eastern debate circuit, Wake Forest de- fbaters returned -last week to add more trophies to am already im- pressive collection. Varsity debaters Peggy Wil- son ,anrl Neal Tate, arguing the National topilc: The Federal Government Should Establish a National Program of Public: Former Gov. Sees Race Improvement MIRIAM MAKEBA • • • performs tonight • • • Works for the Unemployed, de- feated George Wa.slli.ngtCin Uni- versity with a 7-1 record to win first plruce f<>r Wake Forest at the annual University of Rich- m<>nd rou:rnoament. The novice team of Leslie Gayner and Steve Hurs.ch tied for third plaJCe in the tourna- ment with a 4-2 record. 4-4 Record At Dartm<>uth University Feb- ruar-y 18-20, varsity debaters Jerry Partner and Ken Godwin compiled a 4-4 record for the College. Wake Forest won :the annual Atlantic Coast. Conference De- lbate Tournament at Clemson Februacy 12-13, an:d was award- Hall in 1963 iamd at Philharmoni,c ed the "Uncle's Trophy" for the Hall in 1964. best all-around performance. The fascinating artisan has In addition :to the over-all been featulred Jn television ap- team vktory at Clemson, Ken pearances, has done extensive Godwin and Jerry Partney, var- work dn radio broad:cas.ting, and I sity affirmative, tied for first hatS four ail:bums recorded. place. Varsity negative debaters Newsweek praises Miss :Make- Peggy Wilson and Irwln Cof- ba for her outstanding talent- field also won first plll!ce. "She sang with the delicate In a sel!"ies of public debates phramng of Ella . . . Sii>Onsored by the University of the brassy showman.shtp of Ethel Pittsburg February 8-13, de- MermaiiJ. and the Jntimate baters Joe Cabezaz and Neal wannth of Fvank Sinatra .. Tate compiled a record of 9-3 The first South African of · any to be the :fi:rs:t team to defea.1l •race .t<> reach mternational pop- the University of Pittsburg :in music stardom." ten years. By ALBERT HUNT ASSOCIATE EDITOR The days of the politician "abusing the Negro" Jn the South are over, former gover. nor Terry Sanford in am interview here following his c:hapel speech. "The trend in the future is towards the Negro becom- ing less and letSs of a political issue," Sanford said, but noted that "total school dese.gration in this ,area will have to come in time." Sanford established a good- will council allld other similar organizations to further racial communicationJS in this state during his term of office a111d was considered a "moderate· Southerner" on such issues. He said interuse racial hos- tilities in the South were on the decline and the whole sit- untion i!s "improvimg consider- ably." Educational Governor Saillford, who has often been called the "educational gover- nor" due to his wide range of educational inmovations, said he couldn't single out a111y one nchievement which gave him the most satitSfaction. "We attempted to instill a we!l.rounded prog;ram a111d not neglect any segment," he .said. "I will say, however, I .think we establlilhed that education should be the number one order of the state." He jokingly added that per- haps his mOlslt significant ac- complishmemt was "bringin,g Lambert (his admillis·trative NC Education Was Governor's Concern HONORABLE TERRY SANFORD outlined achievements in education =istamt Tom Lambert c:uuc to the College to his fu.rmer boss speak) goverr.n1ent.'' who i reqt!jrements for new ears, the henr b1cathalyzer test for drunk into drivers and certailll traffic reforms-hi's administra- tic;r. had hoped for more suc- ced in this area. lll a more serious vein, the Conner governor said he got satisfactio!l out of something almost evory day during hils term. "I can't remember any bad d<ty:>," he said, "although there must have been a few." 'When asked if there was any p;:rticular area which dis· a.ppolnted him, Sanford :replied. thz.t every govern<>r must wish he could have accomplished n1ore. "Overall I would say I was most di:sappointed that we were tillable to save more lives." S:mf<>rd said although he had r:o l!lpecific plans, he would not rule out the possibility that he run for publil· office again. When asked if he would ilke to serve as governor agaion, S<mford said he would not "want to be governor just for the sake <>f :being governor." He then asked: "DoetS that any sense?" By ALBERT HUNT ASSOCIATE EDITOR Former governor Terry Sanford outlined his ad- ministration's ec1ucational achievements to a Wake Forest chapel audience last Thursday. He said the primary purpose of his administration was to develop human resources in the state by aiding people in doing things "they couldn't do as well by themselves." This was done, Sanford said, to enable the citizens of this state to "lead fuller lives and make North Carolina a better and more civilized plnce to live." Sanford served as governor frGm 1961 to last month when he wa.s by Da:n K. Moore. The f01mer governor .said that the first order of bwsi- nes::: of his administration was to take an inventory of the state's weaknesses. In the field of educati<>n, listed several areas which fell into this eategoo-y. Weaknesses Listed c-hildren could be kept in school 1a.nd a program for the men- tally retarded, Sanford said. Sanford also discussed other programs initiated during his administrration: -The North Caa-olina Ad- vancement School which stu-. ddes why average and above- average students faN behind m school. -.The LeaTlling Institute of N ort.l:t Carolina which engages :in extensive edu.cational re- sear:ch. He cited the following: I -A program designed to pro- -On1y one-hailf of students I motivation for starting in first grade in North ll.chUdren m the first three CaTolina went on to l!"eceive grades. high school diplomas. ' -The North Carolina School -25 percent of the top stu- of Arts, which will open in dents L'1 the state did not finish Wi!ISton-Salem next fall, to pro- college. vide :training for artistically -The lack of any real pro-. taQented high school students gram to challenge the talented l arui graduates. student. Sanford said he was some- -The lack of motivation what surprised that the arts shown ·by Negro students be- school, cynically referred :to by cause they could see no future. its opponents as "the toe-dane- -Many students were not ing school," was approved by :to read properly in the the 1963 General Assembly but early grades. added that is was essential to "This .gave us a pretty stag- provide such a school for the gering list of weaknesses," he •aesthetically inclined individ- He noted that although great il!lyrovements were made iln hi&llway safety- pointing to &uch legislntion as the com· pulsory drivers education for irdividuals under 18, seat belt The reporter am;wered, "I thil>J;: so." eaid. uals. "We decided to first On-Job-Training to upgrade :the whole school CU Brings Variety "Well I am glad it does to Y(·U," Sanford added, "be- ·cause it sure doesn't to me." system ... we were determined He said the area of ra<:ial within the next 10 or 12 years . relations was directly tied in to make North c.arolina the\ with edUJcation and noted that best school system m the coun- I the prima·ry focus of his good- try." · will 'council has been on job Program Is Superior A Broadway and London •comedy hit and a pianist who has sold more than 10 million al- bums will be brought to Wake Forest by the College Union during the third week in March. A perform.ance of "Beyond the Fringe," a series of satirical sketches by four young English- men, will be presented Tuesday, March 16. Roger Williams and :the Dut- ton Ensemble will give a con- cert Saturday, March 20. Students Free Both will be at 8:15 p. Jil, ln Wait Chapel. There will be an admission charge for the public. Broadway producer Alexander H. Cohen, and ran for two years in New York. Now, with a cast of 14, it is making a college tour. Comic Show While on Broadway, the Wall Sbreet Jouxnal called the re- vue "the best of the season's comic entertainment." Pianist Roger Williams be- came nationally known 10 years ago with hi:s three-million re- seller, "Autwnn Leaves," 8iild has averaged one million album sales every year since. The Dutton Ensemble, which will appear with him, includes the Dutton Percussion l'rio- th!ree artists who play a total of 48 instruments. Self-Study Completed For SACS The faculty has received .copies of the self.-study conduct- ed this past year hy the College. After final approval at the March 15 faculty meeting, :the self..ostudy will be forwarded to ;the Southern Association of Col- leges and Schools. This faculty -committee in charge of the report will meet Mareh 4-9 ·to discuss .and an- swer any questions regarding the study. Extent Of Concern training and encouragement of education for Negroes. This took care of most stu- Sanford also said that North dents, Sanford said, but em- Carolina has made more pro- phasized that this was not the gress in this area than any extent of his concern. other state in this area. He explained here was par- \ "Everything we've attempted ticular interest in developing to do in the state," he said, a program for gifted children "even if building to and this resulted in programs bring in new industry to ere- in various schools to meet this ate new jobs, has been designed demand. to develop human abilities, to Thlis problem was further met save our human resources, to by the creation of the Gover- make the opportunities of every- nor's School at nearby Salem body greater aJJd to generally Ccillege which is a nine week help people. ·summer session for gifted North "I think that's what govern- Carolina high school students. ment is all he added. Sanford said this school was former governor was 20 1created not only to challenge minutes late for his speaking these students but also to help engagement. He explained the the state learn what teaching windy weather conditions had methods were successful in sti- hindered the dJrive from his mulating the gifted child. residence in Raleigh. He noted that efforts were After his talk, Sanford met RUSH WAS RINGING through the coed so- ciety system last week, and Laurel sisters Jeanne Puder (right) and Patty Barrick (left) entertain rushees Pat Brown and -PHOTO BY WILSHIN Janice Crosswhite (center, 1 to r) during their formal party on Thursday. Bids went out on Sunday and new pledges will be initiated following a short pledge period. "Beyond the Fringe" was Cll'eated for the 1960 Edinburgh music and theatre festival by Alan Bennett and Dudley Moore of Oxford University; Dr. Jona- than Mille«", a physician; and Peter Cooke of Cambridge. At Edinburgh, the show ran for about an hour. It was brought to America by His program will vary from quiet mood music to "jumping jive" and will include such se- lections as "Dear Heart," "Misty," "Till," "Alley Cat,'' "Near You" and "People.'' In a to each member, Edwin D. Wilson, dean. of .the College, said they were "requested to :recognize the con- fidential character of the re- port and not discuss its con- tents with anyone other than faculty personnel or allow it to fall into the hauds of unautho- rized persons." .also made to assist the unde«"- with President Tribble for about J;Jriviliged a half hour and attended a This Jncluded research into luncheon with several mem- poverty stricken neighborhoods bers of the Young Democrats to learn how disadvantaged 1 Club and ·a few professors.

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Page 1: ~uits. · 2018. 3. 20. · it," but pl81Ce theia:' emphasis on the steadiily mc:reasing num be

Frosh Are Brighter Various Criteria Considered

By CAROL CLAXON ASSISTANT EDITOR

Figures show that Wake Far­est freshmen all"e getting bright­er every yea.r. Poor studentlSl are getting iless poor-there are ondy 72 freshmen oo proba.tiOIII this spring as compared wtlh 110 students d.n. 1964. B.right stu­dents l!lre getting . brigh~ -there were 43 freshmen · willh College Board scores of 1300 or higher In the fall CYl 19M, as .compared with 7 in 1960.

Filgtm-es show--but are figure$ an a.acwra-be indilc:aflion of the number of e:mceptiolllal students at Wake Forest? Any attempt

'· to answer tltis queSJtion obvious­ly involves a definition of the "exceptional stduent."

there are at Wake Forest 1iarl more strong "B" students and more "A" based on high JCOlll­

peteDICe ·than there ai"e ex~eep-· tional students with what iSI caided "intellectual ~CUriosity."

This lS to be expeeto!d - to hope fC11' a time when every stu-· dent in a .eolleg_~ has a bur,nlng desire for knov{[email protected] would·. be to hope for a 1~, long time;

But one may ·wiSh for more of this ·type of· st>udent--<and do f;omething abowt it.

Creative Mbuls

Fh'st one must find the !l'eia­sons for olbe seeming dearth of creative min.dis at the College, -and many are offered.

ties instead of academic pur­~uits.

It cannot be denied 1hat what Dr. Folk .calls "an intellectual renaissance" can - and must come from with!D !the college. Imparting bigger and better br:ains wiill not be enough ·to change what is, essentlally', an a~e whfd1. pervades t2le en­t.iire shlde-n~ ~body.

Attitude May Spread

However, .the more students there are who have this atti­tude wben they enter Wake Forest, :the more quiclcly it will spread. How 1hen, c.an Wake l!'orest compeote with the besll schools of ·the country for the best young mdnds of the coun· try?

'An Inspector Calls' To Begin Thursday I

A socially CQaJSC.lous play, described as both mystery and allegory, will be presented ,at 8:15 p. m. Mar. 4-6 and 11-13 in

the Arena T.beater. .. Netther the play, J. B. Priestley's "An JJns,peetor Calls,'!'nor''

the prodructfon., which will be impressionistic and ex~Em.tal; are normal fare at the College Theater, according m-:.Tmes' H. W.alton ot the Speech Department, director of the play.

The. College Theater is producing Priestley's play, which cen.· ters MOund a respectable Eo,glish fam.l]y's ~otion to an in­vestigation following a young girl's SiliCide, ~use. says Wal­ton, the playwright "has drawn intereSrmg char.actens and an interesting situation."

Since, acoording to Walton, the situation is not a realistic one, it iJS betng placed in a sUNealistic setting.

Scrim Sei The scrim, a fine cloth curtail!l v,ilich h&s in the past en­

circled the 'll.udience, will be moved in front of the audience to give the action on stage a gramy effect similar to that of the motion picture, "Tom Jones," .says :Walton.

The characters of the play are Arthur Birling, a BritilSh fac. tory ownet", played by Leland Cox; his wif,e, played by Gail Puzak; his !Son, played by Jim Eatman; his d·aughter, played by Sllfsm Irby; his daughter's fianc~. played by Alex Speer; the maid, played by Joyce Wilsie; and the Lnspector, played by Denarls Sayers.

Since a row of JSeais have been removed for the scrim's benefit, the capacity of the :theater has been reduced to 12.0.

"If you are t.biinking of peo­Ple who can compete for Wood­row Willson fe1lowshlps ailliC1 for Rhodes reholarsbdps," says Dr. Thomas E. Mulden, assiSta.Dll professor of history, then Wake Forest now has "more people who all"e .candlidates for national honors in ltheir own fields" thalli when he first came to the Col­lege.

Dr. D. A. Brown, Associate Professoir' of Engl],ish, consider& the l·ack of initiative a chaJract­erisbic of this genell'ation. Al­though he emphasizes that her in.tend.s no disparagement of our presoo.t student body aDd has no desire to return to the "good old days," !he points out tha·t at various periods in Wake F'orest's history, e. g. the 40's, ·the College has had a i!.arger proportion of elCice<ptional stu­dents than ~t bas now.

To a 1arge extent, at the pre­sent time, ·the prize goes to the college whicll oCallll put up the money. •'Buying brains" is a ilarge-S!Cale operation, a!!ld W'llke Forest, whose :~Jaa'gest a;oademio scholarship amounts to $1200, and must be !renewed yearly as coiiliPared with !the four-year

<Oontinued on page Sl

Students have been advised to make resel"V'a.tion!s by callilng the Box Office, Ext. 265, which will be open claily !rom 12 noon to 9:30p.m.

THE CURTAIN RISES Thursday llig"ht on <left to right) Leland Cox, Dennis Sayers,

-PHOTO BY WILSHIN Gail Puzak and Susan lrby, as they tackle J. B. Priestley's play "An Inspector Calls.''

If the exceptional student is "one wh<> not ocly makes top grades, ·but one who sh<>ws ini­tiative in creative efforts," Dr. John A. Carter, assls!JaDt pro­fessor of English, believes tba~ at Wake Forest there is "more high aeademic perfOII'mance 1hall1 ~tive.'' Carlelr says tbiat in the four yea;rs he has seen no .increMe m students with "in­tellectuall. cUII.'iosity."

Dr. E. E. Folk, Plrofessor of English, who .also !Pinpoints the 40's as a ·time of m:tellectu:a! flowedng at Wake Forest, be.. lieves that 1lhe ,change has b~ largely one of attitude-many students :110 longer JCome to col­lege "•to get .somet::h.Wig out ~ it," but pl81Ce theia:' emphasis on the steadiily mc:reasing num­be<r of extra-curricW.ar a.ctivi-

lb n lb nub iS lnr k * * * Pacemaker Award Winner 1963·64 * * * One thmg seems olbViious:

Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, March 1, 1965 NUMBER 19 VOLUME L

Miriam Makeba

African ~.,olksinger Is Feature Of CU's Concert

Debaters Add Wins

Sanford Cites Achievements By SYLVIA PRIDGEN

FEATURE EDITOR

Miriam Makeba, a young South African mbeswoman turn­ed folksinger, will lbe featuxed /by the College Union Monday, March 1 a.t 3:15 p. tn.

Her concert, which will be held in Wait Chapel, will in­clude such a variety of songs las Afric!!'ll folk tunes, Yiddish !reWaiDS, Xosa Clitck songs, and jazz beats.

Since reserve tickets have been sold! off camptts, students and faJculty must pick u,p their free ·tickets for sea.t reserva­tions at the Information Desk. Upon ;presentation of the lD cat'd, the student may get his ~reselrve ticket, which will be available at :the Infoo:mation Desk Monrl!ay until 5 p. m. and lat >the door Monday evening ibefore the coneert.

Miss Makeba's ·amazing ver­satility has reaped fantastic success .in oconcert appearances throughout the country_ She was brought to the Un.ited States by Harry Belafonte and Steve • Allen, wh(} 1are credited with di'scoverilllg her unusuail natw:'al talent.

With Belafonte

She ibegan an ru>socda.tion with Halrry Belafonte as fea­tllil'ed singer on his concerll tours. She ha's 'l!lso made ap­peaa-all}ces w.ith the Chad Mitch­ell Tr.i<> when >they made a spe­iclal .tou.r of co1lege campuses in ·the fall of 1961.

Some of the. hlghli.ghts of Miriam's career have been two ·a~:ppearanrces at the United Na­Jtions, singing for President Kennedy's 1962 Birthday party dn Madison SqUJare Garden and her own -concerts at Ca:rnegie

By BEVERLY BURROUGHS STAFF WRITER

After :traveling the eastern debate circuit, Wake Forest de­fbaters returned -last week to add more trophies to am already im­pressive collection.

Varsity debaters Peggy Wil­son ,anrl Neal Tate, arguing the National topilc: The Federal Government Should Establish a National Program of Public:

Former Gov. Sees Race Improvement

MIRIAM MAKEBA • • • performs tonight • • •

Works for the Unemployed, de­feated George Wa.slli.ngtCin Uni­versity with a 7-1 record to win first plruce f<>r Wake Forest at the annual University of Rich­m<>nd rou:rnoament.

The novice team of Leslie Gayner and Steve Hurs.ch tied for third plaJCe in the tourna­ment with a 4-2 record.

4-4 Record

At Dartm<>uth University Feb­ruar-y 18-20, varsity debaters Jerry Partner and Ken Godwin compiled a 4-4 record for the College.

Wake Forest won :the annual Atlantic Coast. Conference De­lbate Tournament at Clemson Februacy 12-13, an:d was award­

Hall in 1963 iamd at Philharmoni,c ed the "Uncle's Trophy" for the Hall in 1964. best all-around performance.

The fascinating artisan has In addition :to the over-all been featulred Jn television ap- team vktory at Clemson, Ken pearances, has done extensive Godwin and Jerry Partney, var­work dn radio broad:cas.ting, and I sity affirmative, tied for first hatS four ail:bums recorded. place. Varsity negative debaters

Newsweek praises Miss :Make- Peggy Wilson and Irwln Cof­ba for her outstanding talent- field also won first plll!ce. "She sang with the delicate In a sel!"ies of public debates phramng of Ella F~tzgerald . . . Sii>Onsored by the University of the brassy showman.shtp of Ethel Pittsburg February 8-13, de­MermaiiJ. and the Jntimate baters Joe Cabezaz and Neal wannth of Fvank Sinatra .. Tate compiled a record of 9-3 The first South African of · any to be the :fi:rs:t team to defea.1l •race .t<> reach mternational pop- the University of Pittsburg :in music stardom." ten years.

By ALBERT HUNT ASSOCIATE EDITOR

The days of the politician "abusing the Negro" Jn the South are over, former gover. nor Terry Sanford ~:>aid in am interview here following his c:hapel speech.

"The trend in the future is towards the Negro becom­ing less and letSs of a political issue," Sanford said, but noted that "total school dese.gration in this ,area will have to come in time."

Sanford established a good­will council allld other similar organizations to further racial communicationJS in this state during his term of office a111d was considered a "moderate· Southerner" on such issues.

He said interuse racial hos­tilities in the South were on the decline and the whole sit­untion i!s "improvimg consider­ably."

Educational Governor

Saillford, who has often been called the "educational gover­nor" due to his wide range of educational inmovations, said he couldn't single out a111y one nchievement which gave him the most satitSfaction.

"We attempted to instill a we!l.rounded prog;ram a111d not neglect any segment," he .said.

"I will say, however, I .think we establlilhed that education should be the number one order of the state."

He jokingly added that per­haps his mOlslt significant ac­complishmemt was "bringin,g Lambert (his admillis·trative

NC Education Was Governor's Concern

HONORABLE TERRY SANFORD outlined achievements in education

=istamt Tom Lambert c:uuc to the College to his fu.rmer boss speak) goverr.n1ent.''

who i reqt!jrements for new ears, the henr b1cathalyzer test for drunk into drivers and certailll traffic

co~u·t reforms-hi's administra­tic;r. had hoped for more suc­ced in this area.

lll a more serious vein, the Conner governor said he got satisfactio!l out of something almost evory day during hils term.

"I can't remember any bad d<ty:>," he said, "although there must have been a few."

'When asked if there was any p;:rticular area which dis· a.ppolnted him, Sanford :replied. thz.t every govern<>r must wish he could have accomplished n1ore.

"Overall I would say I was most di:sappointed that we were tillable to save more lives."

S:mf<>rd said although he had r:o l!lpecific plans, he would not rule out the possibility that he m~y run for publil· office again.

When asked if he would ilke to serve as governor agaion, S<mford said he would not "want to be governor just for the sake <>f :being governor."

He then asked: "DoetS that m~.kc any sense?"

By ALBERT HUNT ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Former governor Terry Sanford outlined his ad­ministration's ec1ucational achievements to a Wake Forest chapel audience last Thursday.

He said the primary purpose of his administration was to develop human resources in the state by aiding people in doing things "they couldn't do as well by themselves."

This was done, Sanford said, to enable the citizens of this state to "lead fuller lives and make North Carolina a better and more civilized plnce to live."

Sanford served as governor frGm 1961 to last month when he wa.s su~ceedcd by Da:n K. Moore.

The f01mer governor .said that the first order of bwsi­nes::: of his administration was to take an inventory of the state's weaknesses.

In the field of educati<>n, listed several areas which fell into this eategoo-y.

Weaknesses Listed

c-hildren could be kept in school 1a.nd a program for the men­tally retarded, Sanford said.

Sanford also discussed other programs initiated during his administrration:

-The North Caa-olina Ad­vancement School which stu-. ddes why average and above­average students faN behind m school.

-.The LeaTlling Institute of N ort.l:t Carolina which engages :in extensive edu.cational re­sear:ch.

He cited the following: I -A program designed to pro­-On1y one-hailf of students I vi~e grea~er motivation for

starting in first grade in North ll.chUdren m the first three CaTolina went on to l!"eceive grades. high school diplomas. ' -The North Carolina School

-25 percent of the top stu- of Arts, which will open in dents L'1 the state did not finish Wi!ISton-Salem next fall, to pro­college. vide :training for artistically

-The lack of any real pro-. taQented high school students gram to challenge the talented l arui graduates. student. Sanford said he was some-

-The lack of motivation what surprised that the arts shown ·by Negro students be- school, cynically referred :to by cause they could see no future. its opponents as "the toe-dane­

-Many students were not ing school," was approved by ~earning :to read properly in the the 1963 General Assembly but early grades. added that is was essential to

"This .gave us a pretty stag- provide such a school for the gering list of weaknesses," he •aesthetically inclined individ-

He noted that although great il!lyrovements were made iln hi&llway safety- pointing to &uch legislntion as the com· pulsory drivers education for irdividuals under 18, seat belt

The reporter am;wered, "I thil>J;: so."

eaid. uals. "We decided to first attemp~ On-Job-Training

to upgrade :the whole school

CU Brings Variety "Well I am glad it does to

Y(·U," Sanford added, "be­·cause it sure doesn't to me."

system ... we were determined He said the area of ra<:ial within the next 10 or 12 years . relations was directly tied in to make North c.arolina the\ with edUJcation and noted that best school system m the coun- I the prima·ry focus of his good­try." · will 'council has been on job Program Is Superior

A Broadway and London •comedy hit and a pianist who has sold more than 10 million al­bums will be brought to Wake Forest by the College Union during the third week in March.

A perform.ance of "Beyond the Fringe," a series of satirical sketches by four young English­men, will be presented Tuesday, March 16.

Roger Williams and :the Dut­ton Ensemble will give a con­cert Saturday, March 20.

Students Free Both will be at 8:15 p. Jil, ln

Wait Chapel. There will be an admission charge for the public.

Broadway producer Alexander H. Cohen, and ran for two years in New York. Now, with a cast of 14, it is making a college tour.

Comic Show

While on Broadway, the Wall Sbreet Jouxnal called the re­vue "the best of the season's comic entertainment."

Pianist Roger Williams be­came nationally known 10 years ago with hi:s three-million re­~rd seller, "Autwnn Leaves," 8iild has averaged one million album sales every year since.

The Dutton Ensemble, which will appear with him, includes the Dutton Percussion l'rio­th!ree artists who play a total of 48 instruments.

Self-Study Completed For SACS

The faculty has received .copies of the self.-study conduct­ed this past year hy the College.

After final approval at the March 15 faculty meeting, :the self..ostudy will be forwarded to ;the Southern Association of Col­leges and Schools.

This faculty -committee in charge of the report will meet Mareh 4-9 ·to discuss .and an­swer any questions regarding the study.

Extent Of Concern training and encouragement of education for Negroes.

This took care of most stu- Sanford also said that North dents, Sanford said, but em- Carolina has made more pro­phasized that this was not the gress in this area than any extent of his concern. other state in this area.

He explained here was par- \ "Everything we've attempted ticular interest in developing to do in the state," he said, a program for gifted children "even if building ~roads to and this resulted in programs bring in new industry to ere­in various schools to meet this ate new jobs, has been designed demand. to develop human abilities, to

Thlis problem was further met save our human resources, to by the creation of the Gover- make the opportunities of every­nor's School at nearby Salem body greater aJJd to generally Ccillege which is a nine week help people. ·summer session for gifted North "I think that's what govern­Carolina high school students. ment is all ~bout," he added.

Sanford said this school was Th~ former governor was 20 1created not only to challenge minutes late for his speaking these students but also to help engagement. He explained the the state learn what teaching windy weather conditions had methods were successful in sti- hindered the dJrive from his mulating the gifted child. residence in Raleigh.

He noted that efforts were After his talk, Sanford met

RUSH WAS RINGING through the coed so­ciety system last week, and Laurel sisters Jeanne Puder (right) and Patty Barrick (left) entertain rushees Pat Brown and

-PHOTO BY WILSHIN Janice Crosswhite (center, 1 to r) during their formal party on Thursday. Bids went out on Sunday and new pledges will be initiated following a short pledge period.

"Beyond the Fringe" was Cll'eated for the 1960 Edinburgh music and theatre festival by Alan Bennett and Dudley Moore of Oxford University; Dr. Jona­than Mille«", a physician; and Peter Cooke of Cambridge. At Edinburgh, the show ran for about an hour.

It was brought to America by

His program will vary from quiet mood music to "jumping jive" and will include such se­lections as "Dear Heart," "Misty," "Till," "Alley Cat,'' "Near You" and "People.''

In a ~etter to each fa~ulty member, Edwin D. Wilson, dean. of .the College, said they were "requested to :recognize the con­fidential character of the re­port and not discuss its con­tents with anyone other than faculty personnel or allow it to fall into the hauds of unautho­rized persons."

.also made to assist the unde«"- with President Tribble for about J;Jriviliged ~udents. a half hour and attended a

This Jncluded research into luncheon with several mem­poverty stricken neighborhoods bers of the Young Democrats to learn how disadvantaged 1 Club and ·a few professors.

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PAGE TWO Monday,March1,1965 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Dean Wilson 1 Burton's Hamlet Portrayal Coedits Book To Be Heard Over WFDD

Two Vie ForBSU

Musicians Master Program

New Israel Quartet Deserves Praise Dr. Edwin G. Wilson, dean

and professor of English at . Wake Forest, is the co-editor of a book dealing with a cer­tain group of Emgl~sh Romr ntic poets,

The book, titled "Kcats, Shel­ley, Bryon, Hunt <'.nd Their Cil'clcs," was published by the University of Nebraska Pres:;. It has 323 pages. The other co. ·editor is Dr. David B. Green, , an Engl.iJsh professor at Boston University.

· The book is a compilation of articles llllld books written about the four poets from 1950 until 1962. It is an international bib­

; liography and Wilson nnd Grecn 'had the help of correspondents , in .a number of foreign coun­. tries in makiJllg the list.

Since 1956 Wilson and Green huvc been the official biblio­grapherrs of the Keats-Shelley Journal which ts sponsored by the Keats-Shelley Association of America. Once ~ year the jourrual, which iis published at Harvard University, carries a list of works published about John Keats, Percy Bysshe

. Shelley, George Gordon Byron, Leigh Hunt and persons close.

· ly •associated with them. Wilson said he and Green

felt the lists previously carried in the jollt1ll•al should be pub­.lisl.ted i:n book form. In looking

Photos By Radford

Alpha Kappa Psi Announces iVew Officers For '65

The Gamma Delta chapter of Alpha Kappa Phi business fra­ltemtity recently elected officers for the spring and fall semester of 1965.

Jerry Gill, junior of Laurin­burg and a marketing major, W11S elected president. David Wakefield, junior of Ander­son, S. C., and economics major, was elected vice-presi­dent. Executive vice-president is Fred Hun, junior of Fuquay, and the treasurer is Douglas Aycock, junior of Goldsboro, a ma!Il.agement major. The sec­retary is Rusty Walker, junior of Asheboro, a mrurketing ma­jor.

By WILLIAM RAY STAFF WRITER

WFDD-FM, Wake Forest Ra- fated Hamlet, the play stars dio, will present Hamlet by Ht<.me Cronyn as Poloniws, Al-William · Shakespeare on Wed- fred Drake a!S Claudius, Eileen The strilllg quartet, both as a nesday at 7 p. m. Herlie as Gertrude, William Sandra Parker, junior of musical form and medium, is

President Tllis version of Hamlet was Redfield as GulldeDJStet'll1., ·and GreeillSboro, ·and Joey Overby, seldom heard simply becaooe

p1<xl.uced in 1964 to celebrate Linda ilVLarsh as OpheHa. junior of Smithfield, are the it is hard to listen to-but lis-the four-hundredth anniversary nomilllees for the 1965-66 Bap. tee the subscribers to Wake of the author's birth, and the Ambitious Role ' tist Student Unicm Presidency. Forest's Ch·amber Music So-catst assembled is one ·of the Playing the role of Hamlet The candidates will be voted ciety did Wednesday night, most distinguished ever to seems to be every actor's life- on at a supper meeting Friday, when the New Js.r:ael String gt·ace the Broadway rstage. lorug ambition. Richard Bur. 5 P· m. in 105 Wingate Hall. Quartet performed at 8:15 in Richard Burton, who last play- bage created the role in the The chair will entertaial addi- DeTamble Auditorium. cd the title role at tlte London Globe Theatre in Lond0111; when tiona! lllominations from the Traditional quartet arrange­Old Vic in 1954, is recreating the play premiered in 1602, but floor for the office of presi- mcnt calls for firtst and sec­the part of Hamlet, and Sir Thomas Betterton was the finst dent, but other rnembens of ond violins, viola, and violin ·Jolm Gielgud is directing the o{ the great Hamlets. He played the executive committee will cello. The trad.iticmal task of production. the part for over 50 years, and be elected at a special meet- those instrumentalists is over-

Along with Burton ·as the m.1

his last recorded performaJilce ing March 15· coming the tendency to p1ay was in 1709 at Haymarket Forbes To Speak like four soloiJSlts illlstead of

Snmuel Grofe and his Grand Ca:nycm, they painted with the sw:e brush of their technique.

By compariJSOn, wnforttmate­ly, their rendition of Beetho­ve..'ll.'s C Sharp Minor Quartet (Opus 131) rseemed pale •and uninspired-accurate almost to the point of pedantry •and brok­en only by the bright, bi'ief spontallleity of a Presto move­ment.

Encore Called

Theater at the age of 70. one ell!Semble- a temptation at the international aspect of Since that first memorable Speaker for the dinner wil! the New Israel players resisted I be f -PHOTO av WtLSHIN

TUNE UP TIME-Mem rs o the New Israel String Quartet the book, Wilson said there performance such giants of the be James Forbes, Jr., a Negro rather. consistently throughout

A shamelessly appreci·ative audience called the New Israel back for more. It was pure pleasure and not pedantry that ~Shone through the two move­moots of Mozart with whiC'h it was ·answered.

t · t t · R · "compare notes" for last Wednesday's concert. was grea m erets m ussia stc:ge as David Garrick, John pcustor from Wilmington. The their very difficult program. i1_I Byron because: he is con- Barrymore, Sir Jobin Gielgud, pl'Ogram is Mtitled "Conversa- ern idiom, the New Israel's n·ecdle the fantastically in-

The first-from the G Major Quartet-was the evening'LS one .and only piece for four vir­tuosi, a light ·and ..silllging testa­ment to the artistry of roloistB rather than the di.scipliro.e of

ISidered a revoluhO!Ilary there. Sir Alec Guiness Sir Laurence tion With A Negro." .Slight Tone Harshness technical command easily mas- tricate rytlunns of their spid-Japan is one of the countries Olivier, Peter ' O'Toole Sir A native North Carol.illl.ian tered the wild bea!St in the ex- er web of sound. The move-most interested in Keats, "per- Michael Redgrave and M~urice and gl'aduate of Union Theolo. Begi.ruting with Hadyn's pris- citing diJSsonalllces of Partes's mcnt-without-progression of their hap.s because of his ISensitivi- Evans have played the ill- gical Seminary in New York, ti!nc four-movement Quartet in ghostly, ghastly work. tone-pictures, renililiscent of ty," and .~dia i:s interested 1n fated prince. Evam .starred in he is pastor of the Holy Trini- F Major (Opus 3, No. 5), the Ghostly enough it WaJS, in ::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ el1!Semble.

S~elle~, pe~haps becaUJse of the last Broadway production ty Penecostal Church iln! Wil- quartet'IS sound was marked by fact, to chill the very heart of l

t"'s philosophic approach." in 1945 before thirs one, and mington. the slight harshness of tone so Boris ~arloff: ghastly enough Cecil Yang, now an Em?lish th: pe:rormalllce equaled Sir! ,While a student in NewYork, characteristic of opening num- for the sound track of amy

p:ofessor at Syrac~e Un_Iv~r- Gte~d s record . run ·at the he participated in the Student bcrs. It was a harshuless that Shock Theater. stty, was the official b1hli0- Emp.rre Theatre nmeteem years Interraci·al Mini'stry, "or on~ was deliberate, however, iiil the Like the pieces of ·a cracked

h f ~· " "Tehilm" ("Pisalms"l Quarte1 k f grap er or the Keats-shelley earher. 'SUlllmer serving as millll:ster of vaLse, the wor 's our move-Journal for ~950 until 1952 and WFDD-FM can be heard at music in an all-white church of Oedoen Par:tos with which ments spread themselves out Carl. Woodrmg, now ~n th~ 8~.1 on FM . through~ut ti:-e und has beem· the leader of the program continued. in patternless, atonal abam.don.

Eng~sh <Staff at Colu~b1a Uru. c;.ty, alt~o~h Its AM signal IS various retreats aJlld confer- p;A;;;th;o;m;e;;in;;;its-;s;;tri'c•tly;jjji;m;;od;;-~Th;;e;;p;l;a;y;er.;:s;;wo;.;v;e;;Wl;.;th;;;a;;fin~e vers1ty, from 1952 until 1955. campus-limited. ences. i I Miss Parker is .a Latin and English major, President of tlle North Carolina Young Women's A.slsociation, and local missions chairmam. for the BSU. She is also vice-president of Eta Sigma Phi, an honorary Lati.n society, a member of Les Soeur women's .society, and cooirman of the Women's Ad­visory Council.

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USAF Interview For OTS Today

Tbe ·USAF Officer Selection Team will vi:sit Wake Forest to talk with •seniors aJlld jun. iors, both male ·and coed, about an Officer's Commission in the OTS Program .

Intere!sted students can see team members in Reynolda HC~.ll Lounge today, £rom 1 Ullltil 5 p. m., amd Tuesday from 8 a. m. until 1 p, m.

Sun, Fun, Snowy Slopes The written test for this 'Pl'O­grum will be given in Room 105 of the Library, March 5 be­ginning at 8 ·a. m. Additional information may be obtaialed from MSgt. C. H. BULWil, tele­

BlDwing Rock Ski Lodge tation, lodging and ski rental, hosted the College Union's was made available to stu­first ski weekend last Satur- dents by the College Union day and Sunday, although for .a cost of $18. phone 723-7014. temper at u res ran much .---- ------------------warmer than normal for Feb. The lodge, (above), was !head­quarters for a group of eighty students who rented skis, poles and boots and went out to try their luck.

Snow-making machines were responsible for the sparse layer of snow which covered the beginner and intermedi­ate slopes-enough, however, to make the going rough for the less nimble.

Skiers glided to the tops of the slopes by means of a two-rope lift (left)-often the easier half of the journey. When the slopes closed at sunset, students limped inside for supper and a combo party featuring the "R-Dells." The weekend, including transpor-

A.R.A. Slater School And College Services

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In The Cafeteria

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Page 3: ~uits. · 2018. 3. 20. · it," but pl81Ce theia:' emphasis on the steadiily mc:reasing num be

Career inter-

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Coed To Study This Summer Try-outs s~~: Dr. Ben!amin Mays

.In An Ancient . German Castle Students Will Raczal Brotherhood

OLD OOLD AND BLACK Monday, March 1,1965 PAGE THREE

COIN..OP DRY CLEANING

AI' s ci.EA'N'ERS-iAUNDRY By SUSIE MEMORY

STAFF WRITER -:, ~~eg·e ~~~ ~~t~~ac::·p~ Direct Plays Is Attainable Today

Try-outs for four student­vide a more en.riching and directed one-act plays will be creative experience for stu-

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For Suzanne Trevathan;· sen­ior of Springfield, va., it's a dream come true. She will fly from New York to Stuttgart, Germany, on June 17 oand will returo ·to the United States on September 2. During her ten weem in Europe, she will

, ,spend half her time\Sltudying at Schiller College in the Neckar valley ami half her time tmvel­lng. '

"It sounds jUJSt wonderful!" ex­claimed Miss Trevathan. "'.11he applic·ation was just rus LSimple <SS it could be." She applied ·about two weeks .ago •and was 1110tified of her acceptance the following week.

Familiar Experience

Schiller College is ·a ISIIllall coeducational liberal •al'ts school established by ·a group of Ger·

ANCIENT TOWER of castle now serves as pari of wo­men's dormitory.

man .s·chola!lS, most of whom have taught illl American uni­Ve~A'Sities. The courses taught there are designed especially for English..speaking students. By adoptilllg the American ·aca­demic system of courtse work,

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dal.ts living abroad, without held from 4:00-7:00 p. m. today causlalg them to lQSe valuable in the College Theater. time adjusting to a strange The plays, which will be di· academic system. rected by members of the di·

At the end of •a student's recting class, will be presented course of study, bis grades are Mar. 18-19. sent to his·· eollege ·to enable "The Happy Journey to him to get full credit for his Trenton and Camden,'' by study abroad. The cost? Only Thornton Wilder, directed by $580 for ooe summer colll'Se, Karen Gill, senior of Greens­lnclud:l:ng !l"'UUIld-trip .travel from boro, has roles for two women the Ulllited States to· Europe, and three men. IllS well as tuition, room, board, Dona Westray, junior of aald travel expenses for excur- Louisville, Ky., will direct sions during the summer course. "The Farce of the Worthy

Castle Campus

MiSoS TreV'athan, ·a German

I major, had plaml(!d to travel to Europe this sUllllliler· when Dr. JameiS C. O'Flaherty, head of ·the Germ-an Department, in­

' te·ested her in the summer course at Schiller. One of the things that ·a.ttraced her moot was the unique campus. The Colleg.e o c c u p i e s Kleininger­sheim Castle, the main part of which was built in 1580; some of the wallis· ·and fortifica. tions on the gxounds date back as far ais the twelf:t:h century. Inside the CQllege has been remodelled to accommodate ·the needs of modem living.

!Miss 'Thevathan is ·also ex. cited about the opportumities for ·travel in the area. Only a

~ .· ......

Master Pierre Pathelin," a 15th century French work, which calls for one woman and four men.

Tennessee Willia:mJS' "Some­thing Unspoken," with parts for two women, will be di­rected by Jim Eatman, junior of Greenville.

Four >m€111 are ·needed for Wolf Malllkowitz' "The Bespoke Overcoat," directed by Susan Irby, jUJD.ior of New York, N.Y.

half hour'os drive from Stutt· gart, Schiller is also close to the Black Forest, to Str.ass­bourg, to Mualich, to Rothen­burg, and to the Bavarian and Swiss Alps.

Surely .1\fiss Trevatban ils in for oa moot lively and LS'timulat­ing summer.

FAVORITE SPOT on the campus is the castle's inner court. President of Schiller, Dr. Leibrecht, (above left) is explaining the old coat of arms to several students.

By RALPH SIMPSON STAFF WRITER

North Carolillla voters may elect •a Negro sen-ator, or even a Negro governor, within tile next 25 years.

This was the prediction :;}:f Dr. Benjamin E. Mays, presi­dent of Morehouse College, At­lanta, Ga., and moted world md national leader in human rcla.tions, who spoke in Cba.pel Tuesday.

The Negro educator said the climate for true brotherhood is now -abolllt "ripe," for after 340 yea.rs, he said "we are now ill1 a better 'POSition to build true brotherhood acrOSIS racial lines in the United States."

Pointing out the efforts of this brotherhood, Mays made other predictions for the fu. ture.

Christian Churches

In religion "·there will be neither white churci·.es nor Negro churches, but Christian churches, in which all races will worship . together," Mays said.

Negroes will be elected to political offices by large white votes, just as whites have been elected by large Negro votes.

That a Negro family moves into a white neighborhood will not cause the whites to l~ave, &9 it now does; housing will not be as it now is.

Instead of questiominlg a pros­pective employee ·about race, the future employer will ask "is the man competent? Can he do the job?"

There will be no segregated schoolls when we achieve bro­therhood, according to Mays. "Th~ color bar in. schools, col­leges, and universities will be abolished," he added.

It will no longer be news when a Negro girl and a white man fall in love and marry. And, Mays pointed out, their children won't be socially ob­stracized.

"Interracial brotherhood ca111 exilst only among human be­ings, and for 246 years, from 1619 until 1865, Negroes were not human beings, they were property," Mays said.

Free South 'Til '54

Mays ·added that "shortly af­ter. the Reconstruction, when the Union withdrew their sold­iers, the South was free, until 1954."

From 1865 until 1964 brother· hood waLs still impossible, be­cause segregation existed, and according ·to Mays, this is an­other form of slavery.

The beginnimg of the end of this slavery came in1935, when a Negro, in the famed Murray Calse, sued the University of Mar,1land Law School for ac­ceptance. Because of a court order, the Negro was finally admitted.

"Great changes have taken

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I What Makes 'Em Vacate ~ ~ 1m

By SYLVIA PRIDGEN FEATURE EDITOR

I have a disturbing question, The ·aaLSwer I don't know: On week-ends-at Wake For­

est-Where do all the people go?

According to Dr. Tribble A college's reputation Is enhanced if few stude!llts

take' Frequent week~ vacations.

But from Monday to Friday We have 3000 kids on roll And by Saturday afternoon There's no ooe here to poll.

On Tuesday people swarm ·around

T'.ae Sla·ter line h·a:s .no end But S;mday mom I roam about And cannot fiald a friend.

By Fliday night to home my friends

Have made a hasty retreat To Dook, ·tO State, to UNC Some other friends to meet.

"I have to ge:t away

From the >:>ressure of it all! " "On weekends if we go some­

where We'll have ·a blas~a ball!"

Why do they all go .away? Why do they :not stay here? !My question plagued me till

I raced To interrogate a seer.

The LSeer's lll!ame was Barry The President of CU The -answer he gave know­

ingly, "There's nothing here to do."

"On Friday they may have a quiz

And afterward woo.t to play If there's nothing here for

them to do There's no reason here to

stay."

"We'll be ·a suitcase college, You'll have to face it, son, Als long as students have to

go Elsewhere to find .their fun."

"We need a College U!lllon, Yes, yes, indeed we do,

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But until then, Sir Barry, What d'ya suggest we do?"

"Why don't you a.sk the stu­dents?

Yes, I think that would be best,

Ask t.'lem why they dash away

Jmst put them to the test."

So now I must aJSk of you A question that doth me

grieve: On weekends, at Wake For­

est, Why do you all leave?

The questiOI!l is now yours, my friend,

The problem you must face Can you give ·to me an ·an:

LSwer now? Don't close that darn suit­

case!

(Ed. Note: Think about the problem. Students will be questioned for opinions and suggestions at a later date, with a follow-up story to report any significant dis­coveries.)

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DR. BEN.JAMIN MAYS . . racial lines will fall • •

place illl America and the South si:nce 1935," Mays ~&aid in an interview after chapel, point­ing out the court actions, pick­eting, demonstrations, and boy­cotting.

And, he added, virtually ali these changes have come about bcx:ause of legal coerciolll.

"The sad fact of hiistory is, whatever method is UJSed to change a deeply entrenched \l'l."'ng, you may get what M·al­colm X got," he said referring to the recent death of the Black Nationalist leader.

Mays made the fact clear, ho\ovever, that he did not ·advo­ca,te the methods used by Mal­colm X. He said "I wish I could believe that the people who assaLsilll•ated Malcolm X becawse of h1s ·advocacy of violence and hatred for the white m·an could feel better towards Martin Lu­ther King's non-violent ap­:proach."

The Supreme Court Decision of 1954 was just another step in abolish.iJ!lg segregation, Mayo; pointed out in hilS chapel ad­

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May;s said "the final step I~~::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:;:; did not come until 1964, when I: Congress passed the Civil Rights Bill."

Club ·Conducts Business Unit

Delta Kappa Nu BusineSJS Wo-~ men'.s Club will sponsor a por. sonal finance course beginning on Wednesday March 16-17 at 7 p.m.

Enrollment will be limited to 75 students, for the Club felt that a group larger than this would eliminate the diiscU!Ssic:m. which is vital to the succeSJS Gf the comse.

The course will be taught in seven Wednesday sessiorus from 7 to 8:30 p. m., with a five minute break at 7:4!7. These sessions will be led by busi­ness men and women with ex­perience in the fields ·under discussion.

InstructiJng the varioll!S cours­es will be insurance-Sam P. Stuart of Pilot Life Insurance Co.; taxation-Dr. Paul Tylton, professor of accounting, Wake Forest College; credit buying­Bruce Strickland, DUlll & Brad­street; bank facilities and uses, E~ Scott, First Union National Bank.

Housing expenditures -John Flint, Piedm()lllt Federal Build­ing and Loan Assoc; invest­ments-James K. Norfleet Har-ris-Upham & Co. '

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* * * Wake College * * * WINSTON-SALEJ\-1, N. C., lUONDAY, MARCH 1, 1965

Self-Evaluation Study Must Dispel Intellectual Lethargy

The freshman eompiaint that many of their classes are un­stimulating and the contention of some }lrofessors that their students lack "intellectual curios­ity" has implications: something is obviously wrong, and those who are aware of the situation are too busy passing the buck to do something about it.

Both students and professors share tbe responsibility of cor­recting the evil of "creeping in­tellectual lethargy." Students must offer criticisms of the sys­tem and positive suggestions for improvement. Professors must redognize that all is not well with the classroom world and that exhorting students to have more "intellectual curiosity" is attacking the symptom rather than the disease.

It is true that "intellectual curiosity" cannot be manu­factured; however, it can be squelched or nurtured by an academic system.

Wake Forest is now engaged in a process of self-evaluation.

Plans for the future which emerge from this study will largely determine the course of vVake Forest for the next ten years.

These plans could be imagina­tive and creative- they could include a revised and less rigid system of grading; more semin­ars; a re-vamping of the fresh­man English course to include tutoring sessions with a profes­sor, graduate student, or English major; a re-arrangement of the required courses into a few "core" areas, which would en­able the student to pursue a more cohesive and intensive course of study, instead of fly­ing off into six different di­rections.

Such creative educational thinking would require a cer­tain amount of daring on the part of professors and the ad­ministration, but it could result in a new quality of aliveness in the pursuit of knowledge at Wake Forest--and, incidentally, make Wake Forest a bigger spot on the collegiate map.

Letters To The Editor Are Quite A Stationery Problem

Twelve Wake Forest students received an editorial reply to their letter attacking the Win­ston-Salem Journal's editorial comment on the University of North Carolina free speech rally Feb. 20. If the students had onlv replied with another letter, per­haps the Journal would have answered with a new editorial.

It is quite unusual for a paper to wt·ite an editorial on a letter to the editor- but just think what the consequences would be if this were to become the usual thing.

Editorials would have to be carefully written, or the editor ·could expect to have to defend his position against the attacks ·Of an irate reader.

Aspiring journalists co u 1 d ·write fiery letters so o'bviously surpassing the editorials in qua-

lity that they would promptly be snatched up by the best papers m the counh-y.

Editors \Vould no longer be compelled from lack of subject matter to write editorials on in­consequential affairs. They could keep up a dialogue with a letter­writer on a matter of moment­ous importance for weeks on encl.

Perha11s an entirely new type of publication would be develop­ed, including only editorials and letters to the editor.

The country ·would be divided into two camps: editors and let­ters-to-the-editor writers.

Then would come a Letter­Ban Law, forbidding the print­ing of letters opposing the edi­tors' viewpoints, there would be a Free Speech protest rally, and ..•

Why A Malcolm X? The slaying of Black Nation­

alist leader Malcolm X last week and the subsequent bombings, threats and talk of revenge, are totally alien to a society where law and order are supposed to reign.

Although we abhor and dis­approve of the fanaticism preached by Malcolm X, it is well to remember the words of John Donne: "The death of any man diminishes us alL"

The subject of the Black Na­t~:malists and their leaders was discussed on this campus sev­et·al weeks ago by noted Negro historian Dr. John Franklin. It was his contention that these movements and men were in reality insignificant and their influence was a figment of the imagination of the press.

While we would agree with Dr. Franklin that in numbers, the vast majority of Negroes have followed the non-violent methods of Dr. Martin Luther King and Roy Wilkins, it may be suggested that size alone does not necessarily determine the impact an individual or group may have upon society.

But irregardless of the esti­mated strength of these groups, one must ask why any Negro would follow such misdirected philosophies.

To answer such a question, we must wonder what the end

LINEI'A CRAVEN 6

Editor

ALBERT HUNT, Assooiate Editor STEVE BURNS, Assistant Editor CAROL CLAXON, Assistant Editor SHER.RY PRYOR, Managing Editor

result would have been if Malcolm X's grandmother had not been raped by a white man . • • his family's home had not been burned down by white men . . . his father had not been killed, most probably 'by a group of white segregationists ... ?

The answer to such questions is not completely clear, but un­doubtedly the white man must assume partial responsibility for fostering an environment where such hatred could exist.

But, as Dr. Franklin also pointed out, the overwhelming majority of Negroes are essen­tially too conservative to accept such radical doctrines. Many so­ciologists have contended, how­ever. that without the progress of the civil rights ·movement in recent years, the extremists may have captured the Negroes by default.

The point here is that we all should try and examine the rea­sons for even the modest success of fanatical groups and then seek to enact possible solutions to the problems.

It is time for the politicians to stop playing the game of "I can hand out more than you can" in many of the underpriviliged ghettos in this country and start coming to grips with the real problems.

If this is not done, the life and death of Malcolm X mav become an oft-repeated event .•

CARL GASKIN Business Manager

SYLVIA PRIDGEN, Feature Editor BOB LIPPER, Sports Editor RICHARD MILLS, Assoc. Sports Editor LLOYD IDSE, Circulation Manager

Fooniled January 15, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wal<t Forest College, Old Gold and Black is publlshed each Monday during the school year ereept during examination and bOUday periods as directed by the Wake Forest PubllcatioiUI Board.

lllambe:r of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for National Advertising by Rlltfonal .'\dvert1sing Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Secood·class postage paid Winston-Salem, N. C. Form 3579 should be maUed to Box '1567, Winston-Salem, N. c. :2'1106. Printed by The Nashville Graphic, Nashville. N. C.

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COMMENT By Gerard Davidson Last week I devoted my at­

tention in this column to a dis­cussion of three general cate­gories into which college pro­fessors may often be placed. Briefly, these three were: the professors who have passed their prime, those who are "on the malce," and the student-oriented type. I tried to explain that the .student-oriented professor is the man who best understands his relationship and obligation to his profession and to the stu­dent.

It has occurred to me that perhaps I cast too much blame on the professors for what I consider a break-down in per­sonal communications between student and professor. I meant in no way to exonerate the stu­dent for his part of the blame. For this reason, I will now at­tempt to present three cate­gories of student types which. closely parallel the categories of professo1's I spoke of last week.

The first of these categories

I have labled the perpetual "C" average students. These are the students who are most often characterized by a definite un­.involvement, 'a lack of rreal per­sonal motivation, and a deep aversion to intellectual research. The perpetual "C" average stu­dent usually manages to main­tain their 1.0 average for four years in order to get his degree .

Too often, 11owever, this type person will be nothing more than average for the rest of his life, basically because of that same lack of motivation and personal apathy. This is the stu­dent who never seeks to estab­lish a rapport between himself and the professor. He never questions the authority in order to pur-sue knowledge beyond the classroom. Without some ex­pression of desire on the part of a student, the professor can hardly be expected to establish a working relationship.

The second category which I have set up is one which in­cludes a group of students who

Dya Get The Picture?

Whimsey By DONIA WHITELEY

Being a yearbook editor is really a highly varied job. Sometimes it makes one feel like an explorer charting unknown wilds. Sometimes it makes one feel like a mountain climber scaling lofty peaks. Most of the time, though, it makes one feel like a photographer's assistant.

Ten minutes and twenty thou­sand words later, they jovially concluded that it was impossible to get to North Main Street from where we were, at rush hour.

are generally unknown to their fellow students. These are the people who attend college for four years and the first time anyone realized they have been there is when their names ap­pear in the Phi Beta Ka,ppa listing.

This unknown student has not been involved in what I con­sider a vital part of a college experience. He has never be­come a part of the activities which take place outside the classroom. This is the student who has devoted himself to a narrow pursuit of knowledge. In doing so, he has perhaps created a workable relation­ship with his professors, but frle has failed in a similar re­lationship to his fellow students and the whole of college life. I question whether this unlmown. student is properly prepared to enter active society.

True Student The third and final category

is what I call the true student. He is an admixture of the first two categories in that he com­bines the interested pursuit of academic excellence with an active involvement in the cam­pus 'society. He learns the basic social relationships between men through his involvement in campus life. At the same time realizing the value of knowledge and intellectual pursuit, the true student actively seeks a rapport of understanding and personal communication with his profes­sors.

From the observations above, it must be concluded that, just as the :student searches for an ideal, student-oriented profes­sor, the professor must also search for the true student.

Letters No Suckers For Students To the Editor:

It seems strange indeed that a student publication so vitally intetres.ted in the Honor System wouild not be qttick- to recognize Qiny lltudeni; effoti! .. to improve the sy~Stem. likeneO!· by the Oldi Gold to that of the Air Faree Ac-ademy.

m ·the avlli:ole "Carlyle Talks to Last Session" (of what??) no mention was made of the grea1j amoun·t of work and preparation that went into the Honor Council. Conference or the purpose of accomplishments of the Con­ference; bwt lin!Stead only sc.a;t­tered excerpts of Mr. Carlyle's ~Speech wea:e cited!.

rl'he Honor Council ConferelliCe was the fi!rs.t of its kind to be held in 1fue South. The jpurpose af the Conference W·as for the rune ,colleges represented to dis­ocuss Honor Councfl structwre, (procedw-e, and student sU!Pport and res.ponsibillity,

The solution to why the Honor System does not work at Wake Forest aiS gi.ve«lt .in last week's ed!itoriaJ. "That Thing CaHed Honor" w.as the [ack of "tangi­ble pu.nishment or ll."eward for those who disobey or obey!'

The question is-how old are Wake Forest College stu.deots? A:re we age .fli.ve? And must we lbe ·given a sucker or a gold star everytime we abey a rule whiich is assumed to be inherent in every WF student's personal sense of value anidi respons.ibill.­ty?

The HOJJ.O!l" System is not per­fect, rbut ilhe Honor Council is seelcimig al()ng with the entire Student B<Xly to uphold this long-standing tradition of the College, bcliev&ng that it is Pco Humanitat:e_

Perhaps Wake Forest students, would like to ~bandon ;the Honor System and adopt the proctor system, under which the indivi­dual's word is lallways open to question.

The Honor Council, 1964-65 Butch Lennon, Chairman Karthy Cain, Secretary

Rush System Sell-Defeating To the Editor:

To many people the exis­tence of a double standard is not only ;r-epugnant but also nonintelleotllal. Yet, within our own acl!ldemi!c corrununity I h:ave found .an example of a double standao:d which I feel is quite unjust. I wrilte with re­ference to the ir'USh system used by the ICOed societies. In a re­cent article about rt:he societies' ru:sh in the Old Gold and Black, I read 1lhat ;the societies were not ,aillowed to conduct a selec­tive rush, even though many of the •coeds w-anted to have such a rush.

I feel that it is uniiailr ito force the societies to com.duct a non­selective rtlS'h while the fMter­nirties which represent the men students alre allowed to conduct a selective rush. Why this dif­ference? Is there a logical basis for granting this privilege to one and n.ot the other? I cannot reason thusly.

Thls is nothing more than a situation in which the coed is denied a privilege and freedom in out' -acaden>.Jic community which lis grru1ted to her in every area of life-the privilege anq freedom to choose those with whom she wishes to associate.

(All letters Co the editor must be · signed; namt>s will be withheld on request. Sllelling and punctu­ati~tn are the writers' own.)

All too often litUe is said a.bout the personal llreedoms of the

:student. Are these to be .neglect­ed or forgotten? In my opinion, i()raiinJg the societies to conduct a rush which they feel defeats their very purpose for existiDg is an example of apparent un­·concer.n for 11he pe£1\So:miu free­-doms of the studlent.

Tommy Grogg ClaJSIS of 'ii5

Bones Hung­Wrong Done Ilear Editor:

Often I make mental notes -to myself that I wiD write a letter 't() .the Editor lalbout something that riles me. r have never writ­ten one Ulllfli:l now, but compos­ing ·them gets rid of some of my hosti1i.ty. This tune, however, I must say what I feel because I am buxning about our "Bones" being up in ;that tree. How quick 'tile Wake Fores-t student body is to kick a man when ihe is down, or a team when it des­perately needs theix swpport. Ill seems to me thaJt they wouild be haVlin.g pep rallies under those Magnolias to try ito put some Life into an iaJlready demaraliz­ed team and 10oadl, ralther -~ •'hanging" then just itwo weekS l:lefore the ;tournament. It a(P­

peam Wake Forest students can. only il.evel their support Ito Wil.n­ners (whicll they have had for !Jhe past five years.)

I believe they iaJso "hung" th.eh- Plresident .a few years ago when lh.e WiaS dbWiil and needed their suppor1;.

One of our spol'lts Wlriters CLea>Se on Sports by Jerry Me­Lease) is a!lso tolling ·the bell vv1ih a "Bones. McKinney has all­ways been :a great coa~ch, but" -type article. Jerry :is even pre­<iilioting doom and gloom for ne~ yfrar, and so ii!s ;the Editor of the Wake Forest student newspa:per.

I would like :to see a little more support and: a little less !!Iiticism llrom ••,town" and ' 'gown" in the Wlay of pep from the students and help for the De<lJcon Olub from more DeaJC s:uppor,ter.s.

The ship may be smiting this )"ear, but I predict .the Coach an.d team will not desert-but the students will. no doubt grab fill. ,fue life boats, ;p>addle around tlllde.r the magnolias, and thi.nki C>f who is down now ·that they can kick, burn, or hang.

Bones being hung in the :tree r-eminds me of one of my fav­()rite gospel 'b.yms which begins something like thi:r-

"Zacha.riah, come down outen. that tree, hallelujah

.Zachariah, come down outen that tree-

Oh, my Lord, Oh my Lord, what shall I do?"

I'm far taking Bones "outen" tllat rtree, and having a few b.allelujahs in Raleigh, win or lose.

Sinceirely, Mrs. Dixie Proctor

P: S, I know that Za<cchaeus \Vas the man in the B.i!ble who c-limbed the tree to see Jesus •a.n.d not Zachariah, so Bible stu­id.'en.ts please don't write :to cor­tl'~ct me, ibacause that's the way rthe song goes:.

Speaking Is A Criterion To the Editor:

''A professor's speaking abi­lity, for example, is not a cri· terion for judging his capability as a professor, Robertson be­lieves."

I remember fondly the day when my most erstwhile fresh­man photographer came up and told me he would be glad to print the pictures I had been waiting for, and that all I had to do was drive him downtown to get some chemicals and sup­plies for the darkroom.

But when photographs are at stake, one doesn't take no for an answer. Off we went again, with my friend giving me rather insecure directions. Cars were everywhere. Trucks were evecywhere. One-Way streets were everywhere. North Main Street was nowhere. In one last grand coup, I barreled down a street that looked like a sure bet, only to ·find myself going the wrong way on a one-way street - at rush hour.

Er In

. Is A Baptist The House? • •

The above paragraph, which appeared in last week's OLD GOLD & BLACK, is so ridicu­lo.us that I feel certam there must have been some misinter­pretation of the intended mean­mg. Of course a professor's speaking ability i!s a criterion f()r judging his capability as a pro-fessor. A professor does not exist in a vacuum - all the course content and organiza­tional ability in the world is useless unless it can be com• municated.

Rush Hour - Ha!

It was rush hour, but a good batch of pictures is worth any anguish, I told myself. I bor­rowed a car and off we went, little reaDJzing lthat neither of us had the .slightest idea where we were going. Finally, after many frustrating attempts to get to North Main Street, we stopped and asked two gentle­men on the corner how to get there.

Invitation Orders Orders for graduation in­

vitations and announcements will be taken today through Friday and March 8-12, 1-6 p. m., at the Information Desk in Reynolda Hall.

Seniors are reminded that these two weeks are the only times the invitations and an­nouncements will be sold. They are urged to plaee their orders during one of these afternoons.

Payment in fall Is required at the time orders o.re placed.

No Admittance

But North Main Street ap. peared, miracle as it was, and 1lhe photo supply store actually was there, open, still in busi­ness. I considered it small mat­ter that I had to park six blocks from the place in a pri­vate lot marked "Absolutely No Admittance."

Finding our way back to Cherry Street wasn't exactly a picnic, either. I kept getting on those funny little northeast Winston streets that curve around factories, turn into dirt roads, and finally disappear into great open fields. We were totally lost in .the general v.i:cini­rty of "lOlh Street," if you know where that is.

Finally, after a complete tour of the Twin City's factory dis­trict, we were blessed with ithe singular and quite accident­al discovery of Cherry Street. My friend sat clutching his box of fiber and rfilm and develop­ing paper contentedly; it doesn't take much to please a photo­grapher.

By JERRY ATTKISSON OG&B RALEIGH BUREAU

Now that ·tlJ.e ·annual College. Conventi001 feud has !Simmered dt>\\-'11, I ooe that the Biblical Recorder has turned ilts reveal­ir.g light upo-n another "gnash­ing of teeth and -tearing of sn,·kcloth" type issue-the re­l;:.tiol!lShiP of Church ood State.

More specifically, oux state­wide Baptist publication has conducted a survey to deter­mine the denominational ~ffi­liation of. the members of the 1965 General Assembly oof North Carolina. The study re­vealed ·the following about the 120 Represent&tives and 50 &-nr.tors. Bouse

42 32 22

6 6 2 2 8

Methodist Baptist Presbyterian Episcopal Christian Lutheran Moravian Other

Senate 18

9 16

5

2 Too Many Methodis~

No doubt, these results con­firm what many .skeptical Bap. tils:t observers of the General Assembly have suspected all along-there are too many Me­th.oclists and not enough Bap­tists in th~ legislature.

Normally, I would tend to s)·.;;.re these .sentiments C•f our goOO. Baptist brethi"en- espe­cially wl!eo tho legi!slature starts CO!IJ~:erning itself with liquor by the drink and e-ther such nonscDJSe. On this ocr.-t.­sion, I wish to proclaim, how­eve'', that all is not lost to the Methodilsts.

I base my cO!IJ.tention on a little cold Baptist logic: WJ:ere­a.s, a full one third of ·all the Bapti!sts m th.e legislature also received tceir "higher" educa­tion at Wake Forest or at our Law School; and, whereas, any fool knows that such a double ci.ooe of B::~ptists inrums a poli­tician more valu::.ble than al!ly two Methodists, I resolve that due to the q11allty of our mem­bers we jUJSt about offset the quantitative SU(pC!riority of the Metl,odists.

The valillii;\' of this proposi­ticn rests 11p~n a premise that I believe you will all ;readily see. To whit: what bettr..1· train­ing can one receive illl the politician's art of compromise than to b~ !Subjected to the traumatic c:xperience of being both a North Carolina Baptist 1lllld -a Wak~ Forest Student.

Where is an illldiviC.ual called <Continued on page 5)

A scholar may not need to speak at all, but a professor must, and his ability to do so will obviously have an effect on how well he is able to impart information and inspire his stlldents. A professor who is boring or dull, no matter how well-organized, will not stimu­late the majority of his students in.to thought. If the students are never interested enough to in­vestigate the content of the c()urse, it matters little what tll.e content is.

And lest any reader of this letter think that a speech teach­er- has a vested interest in em­phasizing the value of speech, I ask on1y that you consider the pt'ofessors you have known -or- the clergymen --'- and decide why so few have been inspira­tional - memorable - stimu­lating.

James Walton Instructor In Speech

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saJd about of the

be .neglect­my opinion,

to conduct feel defeats for existing

a.P:!>arent un­~~;;Oill!.al . free-

Grogg ·~s

ung-

Is

need to professor to do so effect on

impart his

Challenge ·Announces Speaker

Opinions Expressed

Complacency Representative Outlook Of Freshman Class

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday,March1,1965 PAGE FIVE

Attention SENIOR & GRADUATE MEN Students -U. S. Citizens needing nominal fimmeial help to complete their education t11is academic year-and then commence work-consigners required. Send transcript and full details of your plans and requirements to

STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC. 610-612 Endicott Bldg., St. Paul 1, Minn.-A non-profit corp.

By HENRY BOSTIC JR. STAFF WRITER

d t b d t d ~ ........................................... .. By JOHN WUERTENBERGER jlhe members of any class that 1 tha~ they ha ~o _u ge e

• Chalilenge '65 aJ!Ulounced last week that James Farmer, Na­tional Director of the 'Congress of Racial Equality, will give a major address at the conven­tion-symposium to be held on campus March 11, 12, and 13.

sTAFF WRITER Wake Forest will become a the1r time more w1sely ln order university, not merely in name to be able to take part more

The class of 1968 has been but in spirit as well. often.

Discrimination Noted declaimed the most outstanding But they feel that more am­body of freshmen to enter Wake bition on the part of the whole

, 1Fo_rest Colleg~. Expected to at- student body will be needed in Fraternities answer some of tam academ1c excellence, the addition to the money usually the needs of some boys (and class began a four year cru- cited as the only obstacle. most girls, indirectly), and the sade with a first s~m:ster tally "Areas of academic training College Union lecture and film of 81 on the Deans list. should be extended even though series benefit the entire student

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national petsonalities who will participate in the symposium which will focus its attention on •the "Emerging World of the American Negro" in politics, the ghetto, the church, educa· ticm, communications, employ­ment, elections, and the judicial

I Now it is time to consider we are a liberal arts college," body. how successfully Wake Forest 1lsserted one freshman. He 1 Freshmen notice an unfair '1

·has met the needs and fulfilled commended the Challenge Sym- discrimination in that fraterni~y I (A4)ross From Sears) l.the hopes of this freshman posium for attempting to pro- men are allowed to dance In ~~!,~~~~!,~~~~~~!,!,~~~~~!,~~~~~~!,~~~~~~~~~~~~!,~~~~~!:!_~~~~

l cl~~ving chosen Wake Forest ~!!~s a:,~~~en!:~1d0 o::n!: ~:;rln~::~d~~~=t~~v:nn~~~~ sytstem.

A native of Texas and a grad­mute of Wilson College and Ho­ward University, Farmer has risen to national prominence in the past few years as a result of the active role which he and his. organization, CORE, have. played in the Civil Rights Revo­lution.

.JAMES FARMER • • • to speak in Challenge symposium

for its size and pleasant ap- be unavailable at a small col- Jar diversion. pearance, many freshmen are lege. Perhaps the main criticism proud to ibe a part of the big Coeds suggest that a curri- of social and nonacademic areas Deacon family, to honor its culum .for elementary school o.f campus life is that there is traditions of friendliness and teachers lbe added. Others be- so little :for Independent fresh­unity, and to attend. chapel wail the lack of courses in men to do. They see a need :for with tihe lmowledge th:at the en- home economics. and the small something not specifically de­tire student body is there as- amount of interest in arl, mu- vised to accomodate freshmen sembled. sic, and drama. but which would in its broad·

Some students feel that this These students recognize that ness accomplish that. "big happy family" idea, in- Wak F t · · tend d n1 t :f 1 th t stead of leading to united ambi- e ores IS m e o Y o I Although freshmen ee a

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Room 403 Nissen Bldg. Winston-Salem

Phone 0£1. 722-9746 ln an effort to attain racial 'equality in the United States, CORE under the direction of Fa!l'lller has ~ssfully ap­plied the techniques of non­violence and passive resistance. He pioneered such successful tactics as "Freedom Rides," sit­liDs, stand-dns, and, more re-.

N. C. State Fire Scare Had AWake Forest Counterpart

be a liberal arts college but our College Union is a fairly tions, has degenerated into a they rerna!l"k, "we have to good one they wish that it were complacent attitude, a willing- take physi1c<rl edu.caltion; why a differe'nt kind of organization. ness to remain isolated on this shouldn't we have some home Many students recognize a --------------------------~ campus outside the mainstream economics?" need for a place other than the c Ph I of life and thought. Those courses and needed snackshop or even the coffee ox armacy nc

Neither apathetic nor ambi- money would not make Wake house for informal gathering, 1 • By RUSSELL BRANTLEY lieved to have been the work tious describes the atmosphere Forest the college or the uni-~ such as a game or TV room

h d of an arsonist. Two of the fires of that isolated community, in versity its fres_hm_ en want it to. where students could meet and cently, in jail-ins.

Farmer was one nf the group that founded CORk: in 1942. He was its first National Chair­

Wake Forest College has a b 'ld 1i: • e destroyed major college Ul - which freshmen .are :vmg .or be. The remammg obstacle JS . ml·x anyt

1·me. its counterpart to tbe fire scare · d d tr d the Lh r· st tim c 1 y JS.

ings and a th1r es oye e rr e. omp acenc the atmoshere, which freshmen Freshmen would like to see which currently has N · C. State 1 th d hi h t th public high schoo . e wor w c comes o e admit they may not improve the College Union pla.v an even College in a dither. · ds f most :freshmen "

The first fire occurred May mm 0 • as much as they discuss. larger role in campus affairs. 5, 1933. It destroyed the main Freshmen are as hopeful as Academic Atmosphere One coed wish~ that. some college !building which bad been I boys would cons1der dating to built back between 1835 and kept in the library on the new Aliliough Baptist Hollow the lectures and films a plea-

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man and became its National Much of the concer:n now 'Director in 1961. Prior to that present at State occup1ed the time he worked for the Fellow- minds of students and towns­ship of Reconciliation, the Na- people in th~ village of Wake tional Association for the Ad- Forest back m 1933 and 1934. vancement of Colored Peop~e, During . a ~eriod. 14 month_s at and several labor unions, m- least S!!X fires oc~urred. ather­eluding United Auto Workers on the campus or m town, and · D tr 1·t at least some of them are be­In e o .

1837. The building was named CanJIPUS and a ISillall replica of students may· not be as ambi- sant expariellice rather than Wait Chapel in honor of the the 1bell, made from its re- tious as some would wish, most one to attract ridicule. "I came college's first president, Samuel mains, is used as a paperweight freshmen have been pleased to college to get away from ~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Wait. It housed administrative on the desk of President Harold with a prevailing academic that immature attitude,,. she .-; offices and its wings were used W. Tribble. atmosphere. said. as dormitories. Loss Of Portraits However, several freshmen

Must Meet Expectations The late Dr. George W. Pas- There was a lapse of nine express a disappointment in the ~ c t. E'-F.r. rt chal, who wrote a three-volume months and then Wingate Me- intellectual atmo/sphere, com- Of course there is the ever Graues, rea zve 'J J 0 s history of Wake Forest, had morial Hall was destroyed by plaining that any such atmo- present sentiment in the girl's

this to say about the first fire: fire on Feb. 14, 1934. This sphere is :falsified by the pres- dorms that if you can't come

. 71/Tark Exce•nt:onal Student Paschal's Description building was named in honor SUl'e to make grades. to college and expect to at-1P'~4 r c- of another president, Washing- This grade pressure is of tend some formal dances (not

., · nil' It "'started in the front of the ton M. Wingate. It housed both special concern to boys but only fraternity formals), it is (Continued from Page 1l bulle-tin has not been Slg l- d h d . 1 d I d d ·t th t th I

f th 1 t 12 second story an a mvo ve classrooms and an assembly most coe s a m1 a ey a "pretty disgusting state of

1

M~rehea"·•" · and the An";er B. cantly changed or e as f th 1 '1 f d v' """ """ the staircase and much o e hall. Dr. Paschal says the most strugg e primarl Y or gra es affairs.''

Duke S!Cholarshi;ps, is left far years. first and second stories when "regrettable loss" was the large rather than knowledge, except From orientation week when 1

behl.~d <n the race. All rthis is not .to say that thi ti · t f ·t 1 •• ~· uld b t discovered. From s por on number of portraits that hung m one or wo avon e courses. students met informally in pro-

And since Wake Forest bases bright students sho 1

e a- only what wa:s in the firepl'oo:f on the walls of the building. Others complain that a stu- fessors' homes, through first] l·ts scholarships on need, the tracted to a pie-in-the-sky ·Col- .., I

· cted b ger vault and safes was save_d, bu~ Soon after that a fire was dent is compelled to take too semester examinations, to sec-bright students whose father lS lege 1constru y over-ea a1 able to pay for his ,college e~u- admissions offi-ce:rs and writers this included t~e _es~ntl re- started in Hunter Dormitory but many courses to _be abl~ to ex- ond semester tel'm papers has cation, must forego the ;prestige of bulletins. It means, rather, cords of the Institution from damage was light. A short time plore any one thmg which may come the fated class of 1968.

1 of ·a scholarship if he wishes that the ·admissions office should its earliest days. The most ser- later a wooden structure on the interest him personally. Rather Just how deserving it is of the to come to Wake Forest. /have the money, people, and ious loss was the correspondence Durham Road known as the than allowing a student to attention it has commanded will!

This is, it seems, •as it should cooperation of students, profes- of the presidents which was o_f "Golf House" was destroyed by quench a thirst for knowledge, not be known until the class be. There are too many stu- sors, and a[umni to fulfill Star- much historical and biographl- fire. Other fires started in two the situation squelches it. has graduated. dents who reailly 111eed financial ling's desire "to make sure that 1c.ail. int€!I'est. The oocupants dwelJl.iDgs but Dr. Paschal says Freshmen lfind their basic How seriously members of aid to spend limited resou:rees the really bright students have were able to save nearly all "one was ineffective and the required courses difficult the class accept their responsi·

, on those who do not. a!\ opportunity to evaluate us; of their belon~s. Iz:. the_ glare other was found in time... enough but verY' ~eldom s~u- bility to help Wake Forest live And there is the equally honestly.'' of the great f1re which lighted The last fire, Dr. Paschal lating. They _credit _exc~ptio~al up to their expectations will

weighty argument that a stu- up all the campus, throngs of wrote, "was on the first floor professors with. enliverung m- determine the quality of the dent should !choose his college d. students, members of the fac- of the Alumni Building and troductory courses. class and of the college. Both

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~!b~~b~h~~k~=~~=~==~~~=~~~~~~~~en~w~ts~~=n~-~~~-j~~o~t~~~:~~~~~~~~-~-~-----.·~-~-~~!_!~~.~~~~~~~~~~~-~-~-~-~-~~~~~-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~.~~~,~~~~~.~~~~~~~c~~~~~-~i~L~~~n~~~~~~!~~z!~~~~~~3~~~~~~~ Howev~r, sin:ce Wake Forest · '0 • the greatest emotion was arous- fore midnight and was found vities m which to partie1pate. {y&'2E;>.Wm.,: .... ;g;::,"'""'·'~"···~ .. -- · _ ....... '<.·,~ ... , .. ~~ .... ,.~,- -·-·- ·-···---- · · .. · \i1 'cwmot ·and is unwilling to "buy (Continued froon page 4) ed by the _loss of the_ bell, the and put out at once.'' Several freshmen voiced regret [} /P~"'\ [~ fbr:adns," !its academic excellence upon mol'o often to judiciously molten rums of wh1ch were M _,r ·o·., ri! is its only drawing power to con1promisc between what is found in the ash~ the next INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ID CARD f1 fi;f ~,' ~ [t the exception:arl student. expected of him as a "true" day. Many thought it bad the I for discounts in USA ~,; tf~ . \, ~ r~

Assuming wt Wake Forest North ~-olina Baptist and sweetest and at the same time and 28 countries. STUDENT SHIPS to Europe, r~ <1~ l \t.' f VaShl•On 1TJ:Orld \~ does have something to offer what is expected of him in- the strongest and most com- CHARTER FLIGHTS within Europe. * Iii\}~ ~' \: . .L' 4 W 4 i1i to the bright high school sen- tellectually ailld socially if he manding tone C1f all the bells in Write: DepL CP · · [~ . ''\.'t'·~:.\ '.::-\:· .. ;t.,J) l~ iors, ·are its merits being satis- is to be a "true" student at the world." U. S. National Student Association l<l ·. · ~~\; ;_:;;.._~' SECOND FLOOR '-~ !~~i~~Sresented at the pre- Wake Forest. Portions of that bell now are 265 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y. 10016 }! ,/ '\.~_..~ l~ !;~~~~:;;~ ~~~~~~~:;~:;==~====~====D==R=Y=s=~==~R=E=~====o====~ ~ ~

:,""~.!" ,.:::;";:.,~ ,!:~ Ray' 5 (LEANEiS.LA.UND'RY For The Best In Shoe RLepair 13~1-~ L.-:.·J ;~ . letters and ;calls~ represen- PARKWAY PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER Bv Ballerina Bootery eave ~.,/ ... ·'. " n. llatives of other coJ/leges. J . ;:<-

ShoeS At ~_,;~',:.~~.:-.~-~ rj EBvellry gif.rtlh drBealml'~ of baeindgth"atht,es t1 Weekend Invitations

He may ibe invited to a week­end at another college-oat the college'•s expense, as Michigan State invites NC~Jtianal Merit Semi-Finailists rto iitS' campus. . He may receive . attractive literature aimed at giving him a pi-cture of the atmosphere and a;ttitudes on Jai ;pal't1cular .col­lege campus.

From Wake Forest, he hears nothing.

This is not ·an oversight on the part of the APmisflions Of­fice-William G. Stamling, Di.., !t'e,ctor of Admissions, bas ex­pressed 1lhe desire to "SIP~ some money in aibsolutely posi­tive individ'Uial recruiting."

If more money and time were available, 1a program could be ,UUtilated ~through wbich stu­dents and ·alumni could make significant .contributions toward presenting prosPective students with a clearer ·and more at­tractive pictU!t'e of Wake Fores1l :than is painted by ithe College catalogue.

The catailogue itself could be

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Attractive Bulletin TUlane has an attractive

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Wake Forest has a bulletin Wll'itten in dry !Prose, which, it is hoped, does not catch. the ·atmosrphel'e of the cohlege, smce it makes it sound unspeakably dreary. • trhe fO'I1llrat of the college

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DEACS ••• who are GREEKS

By Bill Joyner STAFF WRITER

JOYNER Pillars In A Fraternity It becomes immediately obvious to anyone reaSOOlab]y .fami­

liar with the basic se~up of a fraternity tha1: it is not a self. rum.ning organization. Of course the bulk of the groundwork· for the year's ISWldry activities is !Shouldered by the officers which the fratemity selects.

And yet, the fraternities must inevitably turn, at one time or another, ·to someone for words of advice and e:ncouragemen1:. These people are in ·an advisory capacity becaU1Se they want to be ·and oftentimes prove invaluable with their very presence.

At timeiS, the fratel11lity's facu:lty advisor can fill this role to its fullest extent, but there will always remain a thin line of cautioo between students ·and faculty. Don't get me wrong, this is the only attitude ·that is feasible Ln. ·an academic institution particularly one of this size. '

Like A Coach We can compare thiJS e!l!Sily to the successful coach and his

athletes. The closer a c-oach approaches to the s-tatus of "one of the guy5," the m{)re important will disciplinary potential be­come. There is of course a line between respect ·and comrade­ship, but it is a fine one and .should be prese-rved.

Therefore can we say that for the fraternity to turn to the faculty advisor in moments of embaraJsSing delinquency often puts both parties in a frustrating position. This is gocx:I, and fair, and ju:st, and is not the point at which I am stumbling.

To whom them, do these fraternal group<s turn when the pro­verbial heat is really on. There exists iJn. and around our collegi­ate society a rare and wonderful creature. He is known as an alumni advisor and although college is through with him, he is far from through with it.

Having succeS\Sfully established himself amidst the claws of today's complex existence knOVIIll· as ·a society 1(Webster defines this word as "companionship or association with one'·s felloW\9," oo he must have had some other word in mind), our alll1ll!lli advisor still stays in touch. It iJS to thi:s touch that we give a tip of the journ3listic hat.

Willing To Help These men are willing in their leisure time, which is indeed

rare in a nation whose motto is "Hurry up so we will have time to hurry," to help out a group which at one time wats a r--------------------------'1 very integral part of their lives. For th]s reason we shall explore these ten ·gentlemen a little more closely to find out what makes

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them tick and for what fraternity they are keeping time. Dr. Clarke W. Garrett, a 1959 graduate of 'Wake Forest, is

the man to whom the Sigma Chi's turn for advice. GmTett is currently A.Sisistant Professor of History at Wake Forest and has been their advisor for over a year.

Edgar D. Chri!stman is the advisor of the Lambda Chi's. He has found time out from his various religious efforts at Wake Fore<st to lend his leadership to .this fraternity and they are in· debted to him.

Davidson Grad The Sig Ep's are proud to have had for five years Dr. Ren­

saleer Tilda as their advisor-a 1952 graduate of Davidson dol· lege. It is nnusual to find a graduate of another coUege acting in aill advis-ory capacity. Steve Burnett elaborated upon Dr. Tilda's enthu:siastic support of the Si!!: Ep group:

''He approve's the decisiO!!llS of the Treasurer, sets up the alumni dance year, and makes awards to outs-tanding nndergraduates.

Dr. Tilda has a lSincere interest i111 the fraternity and i.s pre. sent at most meetings arnd functions. Needless to say, he has helped u:s individually in ·all Mpects of academic and social life," Burnett said.

Otis Sizemore, a:n active member of the Winston-Salem Chamber of Commerce, has found time to .serve as Theta Chi advisor for five years. Sizemore is a drug 1Salet5'Ill·an and a 1958 graduate of Wake Forest.

Sigma Pi points to Dr. James Cleary as their ·alumni leader. He is a 1955 Wake Forest graduate and also a graduate of !Jhe Bowman Gray School of Medicine. While pl'acticing medicine, Dr. Cleary has ®till found time to help the Pi's in ·any way.

Kappa Alpha is enjoying a new ·advisor this year in Dr. Wagstaff of the Economics department. Dr. Wagstaff i!s a Randolph-Macon graduate and is doing an excellent job.

A second-year man, Hall Painter is the colorful PiKa ad­vilsor. He is currently employed by the Container Corporation here l:n Winston and is a .1963 ·graduate of ·Wake Forest. His steading influence has been most .appreciated by the brothere.

Douglas Parish, Wake Forest, claJSS of '59 is the new Delta Sig advisor. He is a local lawyer and has been particularly imter· ested in bringing the alumni and the fraternity closer together. So far his re'sults have been excellent.

Alpha Sigma Phi has been v&y plerused with the work of their advisor, Dr. E. A. Raspberry. Dr. Raspberry is a Wilson, N. C., physician and has done a wonderful job of strengthening alumni relations.

Carl Dull Kappa Sigma's advisor pretty well typlifies what I have been

trying to say about all of these men. I can use him as an illus­tration easiest simply because I have been closer to the !Situa­tion of which he is the advisor. He is Carl Dull, vice president of Security Life and Trust here in Winston.

Dull was Delta Omega's first "Man of the Year," in 1938, the year iin which he graduated from Wake Forest. He has been the Kappa Sig advisor f{)r five years. I talked with him about his reasoiliS for staying in close touch with Wake Forest through a fraternity, and the reasons that he gave me are ISincere and interesting.

"Of course I have always been imterested in fraternities in general," Dull <said, "and Kappa Sigma in particular. I do feel and always have felt that the fraternity system offers a boy a chance to participate in a side of college life that he otherwise might not experience.

"I'm <IJ.Ot saying that life in college without fraternities is in any way inferior, far from it," Dull continued. "But I have cer­tainly enjoyed my work in and with a fraternity and I certainly hope I have made a contribution to its set up."

Certainly Dull's efforts and the efforls of the other nine men have indeed been of a contributing nature. A vote of confidence and a word of appreciation, then, for these leaders.

Fraternity News Delta Sigma Phi

Initiated over the weekend were Tom Driskill of Charlotte, Courtney Garton of Richmond, Va., Andy Harper of Hialeah, Fla., Harvey Huffstetler of Newport News, Va., Jim Solo­mon of Arlington, Va., Roy Blnnk of District Heights, Md., and Ralph Lake of Greensboro.

Sigma Phi Epsilon A party was held lnst week­

end at the Polo, featuring Lit­tle David and the Wonderers.

Pi Kappa Alpha A party featuring ·the Cata­

l!Ilia's was held at ·the Town House Motel last Saturday night.

Recently initiated were Val Valen·tine ot Raleigh and Ron. nie Dennis of High Point. Aloo Rob Knapp, freshman of Bos­toal, Mass., has been pledged.

Delta Sigma Pi A smoker was held in the

hoUISe last Wed., followed by a dinner <<tlld 'a speech by Dr. Gaines M. Robers, Dean of .the School of Business. I

Alpha Sigma Phi Lloyd Hise of Spruce Plmes,

Jon Rosborough of New!>urgh, N: Y., and Mike Malavaslr:: of

I L1ttle Falls, N. Y., were re-·-------------------------------------------------!icently initiated.

A rush party was held Sntur­dny in Reynolda Bam. Music was provided by the Five Sa tans.

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Page 7: ~uits. · 2018. 3. 20. · it," but pl81Ce theia:' emphasis on the steadiily mc:reasing num be

lTheMillstreaml Metamorphosis Of A Melody

PART III By RICHARD MILLS

.ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

A song starts with an idea; then comes a word, • then a phrase, and finally the completed. lyrics.

Place the words and a lot o.f hard work into a ·beautiful· refrain and out comes a melody with meaning.

Billed as a certain starter, who "cpuld very weH hold the key to the success of tf:lis ye-ar's club" Ronny Watts jumped into his junior year with enthusiasm. He had made the dean's list; he had worked hard that summer at Red Auer­

'·bach's basketball camp; he had newfound friends at Wake Forest ·and in Winston-Salem; he had a 'brand-new Chevrolet convertible. · ·

,.. Ronny's sophomore year could be termed a sue­, cess. He had scored at a 6.8 clip, most of his points in a fast finish. There were 157 rebounds to his credit and he had been 59 for 95 at the foul line. Ronny de·cided there was room for improve­ment in his free throw accuracy so he set out im-

mediately to work on it. At Auerbach's rookie

camp Ronny had seen the pros iron out their free throw deficiencies and he tried many of their styles, but it would be a while before he would find the right one.

As Ronny analyzed his faults he found another pro:blem. "In my sopho­more year. I would get emotionally p o o p e d. I knew I had to relax more emotionally in a game. When I could do that I knew confi­dence would come and that is the most import­and thing of all." Ronny

RONNY WA'ITS had taught children the ••• in the swing • • • game that summer and

;f;his had helped him in his quest for self-assurance. "When you tell a kid what to do, you've got to be alble to show him."

BECOMING PRO-FICIENT

Watts' repertoire had also increased from the simple follow and dunk shots to a driving layup, a hook, and a satisfactory jump shot. Working that summer at the forward spot as a corner man

l· had helped. "I had my chance to practice what I had le·arned

in a Celtic scrimmage. I was really up for Hav­licek (John, now a star forward). I blocked his first shot and scored on him. Then I fouled him the next time he went up and from then on, it was a case of finding out how much I didn't know about the game. And when I was dragging, Havlicek just kept going."

But now Ronny was really a starter, not the guy who comes in for a couple of minutes to give new life. He was the only big man; there would be little relief. This was a stark realization, but Watts faced it as he had faced his trials in the past.

In the opener against Davidson, Watts got nine points. Against State he had 11, 15 in the Purdue game, and in his fourth game he clicked for 19. His rebounding was giving' UNC's Billy Cunning­ham fits in the conference race.

Only once did Watts fall from double figures 'that season. In a demoralizing defeat at the Pales­tra against St. Joseph's, he was held to seven mostly due to foul trou'ble. In spite of the fact that he was a marked man at away games as Wake's only big man, he fouled out only three times that year. He upped his average to 13.8, copped second place •among ACC re'bounders with 12.0, and ninth in field goal accuracy with .481.

A CAPTAIN COURAGEOUS 'I

It had been a long journey from 38 minutes on the bench to Second Team All-ACC, but Ronny was not ready to admit success. His teammates had expressed confidence in him by making him captain for 1965 and he was out to justify them.

A careful plan for his summer .showed no less than five .basketball camps. "I think a player im­proves the most during the summer," said Ronny. And for a player who had played basketball for only four years, two as a starter, his devotion made sense.

Ronny was still not satisfied with the foul shooting'. "When you draw a foul you should say to yourself, 'that's two points.'" 62 per cent (his 1964 percentage) was not a sure two points.

At Kutscher's, a plush Jewish country club­ian in the Catskills, Ronny worked teaching ·bas­ketball as a counselor. Playing should have seemed like work because of the hours he put in, but this was basketball country at its ·best. Kutscher's is in the heart of the "Berscht circuit," where ·anyone who is anyone can be found in the summer.

"I remember watching Wilt Chamberlain one day. I had played against him and knew that he was truly a "super-star." But I had 'been con­centrating on foul shots and there was Wilt miss­ing ten in a row. I wanted to tell him 'Wilt, bend

.. at the knees a. little and soften your touch. It's easy.' But how can you say that to Wilt Chamber­lain." Watts was beginning to think like a basket­ball player.

It was that summer that Watts met and be­came fast friends with the greatest influence in his life. Bill Bradley is a familiar name to any housewife and his legend has inspired players from all over the world. To Watts, who hardly needed inspiration, Bradley was the World Book, Ben Franklin, and Barnum. & Bailey rolle~. into ·one.

"You've got to be willing to pay the price," <Continued on page 8)

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With SI)rling just around the COl"'ler, Jack S11all.1ing.s, Bill :Jor­dan, Jim Leighton, and Jesse Haddock aa'e 1amdousil.y awaiting the opend.n.g of tih.eiir 1965 spring seasons. The baseball, track, te.."lllis, and golf teams look for­ward to fulll. schedluJ.es which will

North Carolina (A), May 7 South Carolina <H>, May 8 Clemson CHJ, N.Ua~ 10 East Carolina <H>, May 12 N.C. State <H>. May 15 East Cardlina (A), May 17 No.l'lth Carolilna: <A>.

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OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, March 1, 1965 PAGE SEVEN

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This yea~··s baseball team has 27 Virgti.nila (H), April 3 USC a well bal1mCed schedule high- Relays (A), A!Pti110 Col. Relays llightedl by the Floridla State <Al, A!Pril 27 Duke CAl, Apr![ Tournament (Mea-. 29-Apr:. 3) 22 UNC (A), May 1 Davidson which was wOn. by the Deacons <H>. May 6 VPI (A), May 14-15 last yecu-. All home games will ACC Championships <A>, May 22

by played at Er:n.ie Shore Field Carolina's A.A.U. Champion- ·--------~ ... ---.-------•• agaiil this· year. . sh.ijps (A). Coach Biilll. J orda£n's Urack

team has the longest season this TENNIS

year, stretching tirom · Miarch 20 March 20 K>alamazoo (H), 1x> May 22. The Deacon's first Maa:ch 23 Michigan State (H), two meets, w:ilth Clemson and March 24 Pfeiffer (H), March 26 Virg;in:i;a, wdll be run here at Amherst <H>. Wake l<,aresb. ·

For those at Wake Forest who April 5 High Pol!ll:t <H> • April enjoy ;temrls, ·the Dewcon tellll1s 6 Virginia '.Dech (HJ, April 8 .team will have three-fourths of Appalachian State (H) • Aprii 9

Eas!i Carolina (A), April 12 ;their maJtches here on campus. Clemson (H), A,prlil14 Duke (A).

We Invite You All To Come In And See The All New

BOB'LEONARD fights Temple's Jim Williams for the rebound in Wake's 89 to 80 victory. Leonard, with 31 points, and Ronn:v Watts, with a career high of 34 points, led in the Deacs win.

The golf team will biave a lot Alprll 15 South Calrolina <H>. of 1!raveiling ¢o do this year. April 17 MaeylJand (H), April They journey to Cape Co:r~, 20 Western Milch.igan (H) April Flori.dia for the Florida lnVl- . . ' tatiMal (.a~ 1 3) and tG the 21 UmversLty of Toledo <H>.

~· - . A(pr.il 22 N.C State (A), April Southern Intercollegiate Golf 24 UNC (H) April 30 VWgi.nia (!"oumnament a.t Athens, Georgila. (H) '

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By DICK PAVLIS STAFF WRITER

Coming llrom behind! wilth 8J flU11l"Y of baskets in the fadii.n:g' minutes, Wake Forest tied Vir­gin]a and then went on tD rally aglai:n. in an overtime period, pefeating the Cavaliers 74 to 72 1ast Monday at Charlott:svilil.e.

Down 66 to 59 with 2:42 re­ma!ining in regulation time, the Deacons stayed oolm. under 'Pl'essure and forged the tie, 67-67.

Ronny W•atts sunk two free throws to cut the margin to 66 ;to 61; then after a Virginia free tlhxow, two quilck ba-skets by Bob LeoDiard and Jim Boshart nall."­rowed the lead to 67 to 65 with 1:50 lellt..

Virgmi.a went linto a stall and) John Anderson committed an obvious foul Ito give the Deacs .another CI'I!Ick at the ball. His

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strategy worked; Teed W:afl.e April 6 Narth Oara1ina (H), missed a one-and-one oppor<tun- April 7 Virg:in!ila. Tech (H), April ity, and though the .cavaliers 9 Mary!ruld (Hl, Aprdl. 10 Vir­caa:>tun!d rthe rebound, they ginia (H), Aprdl 13 N. C. State threw the balll away with 38 sec- <A> April 14 Virgill!i.a Tech (A), onds leflt gi.VIinig the Deacons a. Apr:iil17 Duke (A), April 19 Wesb :final chance to scare. Vilrginia (H), Geoo:"gila Southern

WiLth eight seconds remain·ing, (H) Apvll23 South Carolina <Al, Boshart shot and missed, amd Apr'iil 24 Clemson <Al,April 'a W1atts tand Leonard both missed Duke (H), Aprtil 30 Maryland follow up al!!te.m,p~ A mad <A>. scramble foc ·the ball ensued May 1 Virginia <A>, May 4 during which time the referees ;:::::::::=:::=:.:::::::::::::::::: s:howed good judgment in letting some .apparent body contact go. I REYNOLDA MANOR Bothteamsfrantically stroveforl BARBER SHOP the balil, Anderson grabbed it : and fired in a short jump shot GIS the buzzer sounded enabling 724-7231

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Page 8: ~uits. · 2018. 3. 20. · it," but pl81Ce theia:' emphasis on the steadiily mc:reasing num be

PAGE EIGHT Monday, March 1, 1965 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

JOHN ANDERSON holds up his hand to call a play and steady ibis four teammates. The Deacon guard will have his work cut out for him this Thursday as the Deacs open their quest for pOst-season honors.

Taylor Captures Diving For Wake's Only Medal

By DAVE ROBERTS STAFF WRITER

The Maryland tankmen splash­ed their way to a seven-point il.ead in the first day of .the At­lantic Coast Conference swim­nring meet in Coillege Park, Macyland.

Nm·th Carolina and N.C. State;========================; were second and third re-spe'Ctively with scores of 37 and

The Ter;ps won first place in the 50-yard freestyle and the 400-yard med!ley re1ay, and captured second !Place in the 500-yard freestyle and one-met­er diving to pile up 44 points.

27 points. Drew Taylor of Wake Forest

<captured first pl~ce in the one­meter diving competition, de­feating his neaa:est rival, Bob Livermore of Maryland, by a 33-point margin, 347.45 to 314.15. Results of Taylor's bid to win the three-meter diving event were not available at press time.

A three-way battle between

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(Continued from page 7) one meet; State defeated Care-

.Va. Game Wake to even the score at 67-67. J.ina, Carolina beat Maryland,

Leona,rd gave the Deacons a and Maryland stirred the ra.ce quick lead in the overtime .into a whirlpool by sinking session, but Jerry Sanders hit State. two free throws and his team- A good indieation of the caU­mate Wafle followed with ano- 1bre of talent in the ACC is the ther to give Virginia a 70 to 691 faJCt that North CaTalina swam lead. Watts recovered Wafle's i the fastest freestyle relay in the ernant second !attempt, but ! nation this year. threw the ball away on an at- ! Ron Wirth of N. C. State set tempted fast-break and the Ca-~ a ,conference mark in the 400-valiers took po.sses.,ion with3:28 yard individual medley, and left. HaiTisson Merrlll of North

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Virginia then med to main-~ Carolina broke the reeord he '========================~ tain then· lead by stalling, but set last year in :the 500-yard ;. wth 2:18 remaining Dick My- treestyle.

crs fouled Virgilnia''s Bernie I Aside from Taylor's diving the CAMEL PAWN SHOP, INC. Meyer, who sunk both his shots 1 rest of tJ:e Deacon tankmen giving the Cavaliers a 72 to 69 were left m the wake. Coach. lead-their last of the night. Leo Ellison's squad, reduced by "Money To Loan On Anything Of Value"

422 N. LffiERTY Wafle fouled Watts with 1:53 illness to only five swinuneTs left and in spite of the dcafe!Il- and a diver, could not manage ing' sounds of the tiny bandbox: a SJcoring finish in any other

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FOR THOSE WHO CARE! Davis was shaken up and the subsequent conveTsion of both: a,ttampts by Leonard to put the Derucons in ft-ont 73 to 72.

Virginia then· was unable Picture. if YOu will; e A quiet, rustic setting (eXPOSed beams and all)

to ·get a good shot, finally put- e A touch of WF athletic prowess (visually lti5played) ting up a despe.na.tion attempt e Tables covered with checkered table clothes which resulted in another wild e Candles burning in empty wine bottles covered In wu: scramble for the ball. Boshart e Pleasing music played with taste (Sinatra, sometimes) recovered tit, was fouled a.t the e Real Italian food (delicious pizza) buzzer, ·and hit the Deacs' final e Reasoaable prices podnt giviillg Wake the victory • Friendly service Y4 to 72.

Led by Anderson the Deacs e Local art displayed on the waDs (they're for sale) bad held a 34 to 30 halftime Now doesn't this give you icieas't lead, but the Virginia one-two e Oops! I forgot the swinging doors •••• punch of Jerry Sanders (25 All of this at Vincenzo's 839 Reynolda <VIn-chen-zose) points) kept the Cavaliers in OPEN 4 til Midnight-Sundays Til 10 P. M.

the game constantly piercing '---------------------------------------! the Wake defense. -

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