10
. '. I Writer .Discovers F®.d -Is Big Page Three VOLUME XLY {(l \ ... -, * * ·lark * * . Wake Forest College.. WiiiSton-Salem, )lJortb cu;o1Jna 1 .Monday, December 7, 1959 •D •s . sa... t.t/tt. . zoa .Basketball Outlook In ACC Featured, Teams Previewed -----' Page Eight NtJMBER 11 l{eynOids Makes Gift TO College Dan Jones Writes Berlin ·Is Qrisy · Place Berlin is. bustling with activity Stalinallee. Yet somehow there was just as New York or Philadelphia. a ?epressive air in the monotony of · . . this reconstructed street which Rus- On alnios,t every eorner operas, sia prides so highly. One' can see plays, concerts ami moving .pictures the embers of war. along Unter den are .8dvertised on the large circular Linden, the city's heart, which has colUDUIS. This method of advertis- not risen · from the destruction. ' ing · you tbat you are still was surprised that I was able to in Europe. pass freely thropgh the Brandenburg My first experiences in GermanY Tor into West Berllil without being were in quiet, ·slow-moving towns. questioned or stopped. Also one can This makes BerUn seem very Ameri- travel by way of subway or elevated ••·caniZ:ed and modern. To see all of train, through both sectors. The the new bufldings and buiding ·pro· subway, which is controlled by the jects indicates clearly what a large west, makes an announcement ·be- part of was destroyed in the fore crosslng the sector; however, war. · · . the elevated train, which ·is con" I began t(! ri!alize the great size trolled by 'the east, makes no an- of Berlin when I walked the entire nouncement. Actually the onlY dan· ·of the Stalinallee, Unter den ger is being without of Linden·and the Street of-the' 17th of crossing into .. the· zone-East Ger- June. I was amazed at the ·beauty many.. . . . , Of the marble 'buildings alont . the . . (COntinued . on P.ar;e 4) . : ' • • ,·- ' ' : ' > '• •' ;·- ' " I SerVice Group Holds District Meeting Here For Girls Will Re Constructed To. Top Nixon

1 l{eynOids Makes Gift TO - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu see all of train, through ... to be presented. by .Carolyn McBee's piano solo, Le mas Story. Soloists will ... to provide advancement

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Page 1: 1 l{eynOids Makes Gift TO - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu see all of train, through ... to be presented. by .Carolyn McBee's piano solo, Le mas Story. Soloists will ... to provide advancement

~

. '.

I

Writer .Discovers F®.d P:.;epara~on. -Is Big B~ess

Page Three

VOLUME XLY

{(l \ ... -,

* * ·lark * *

. Wake Forest College .. WiiiSton-Salem, )lJortb cu;o1Jna1 .Monday, December 7, 1959

•D •s •m•t•S•UO~I"l& . sa... t.t/tt. . zoa

~··• uo~tJ•o ·~n

.Basketball Outlook In ACC Featured, Teams Previewed

-----' Page Eight

NtJMBER 11

l{eynOids Makes $1,~50,000 Gift TO College

Dan Jones Writes

Berlin ·Is Qrisy · Place Berlin is. bustling with activity Stalinallee. Yet somehow there was

just as New York or Philadelphia. a ?epressive air in the monotony of · . . this reconstructed street which Rus-

On alnios,t every eorner operas, sia prides so highly. One' can see plays, concerts ami moving .pictures the embers of war. along Unter den are .8dvertised on the large circular Linden, the city's heart, which has colUDUIS. This method of advertis- not risen · from the destruction. ' ing · ~sures you tbat you are still ~ was surprised that I was able to in Europe. pass freely thropgh the Brandenburg

My first experiences in GermanY Tor into West Berllil without being were in quiet, ·slow-moving towns. questioned or stopped. Also one can This makes BerUn seem very Ameri- travel by way of subway or elevated

••·caniZ:ed and modern. To see all of train, through both sectors. The the new bufldings and buiding ·pro· subway, which is controlled by the jects indicates clearly what a large west, makes an announcement ·be­part of the~clty was destroyed in the fore crosslng the sector; however, war. · · . the elevated train, which ·is con"

I began t(! ri!alize the great size trolled by 'the east, makes no an­of Berlin when I walked the entire nouncement. Actually the onlY dan· ~gth ·of the Stalinallee, Unter den ger is being without pa~port of Linden·and the Street of-the' 17th of crossing into .. the· zone-East Ger-June. I was amazed at the ·beauty many.. . . . , Of the marble 'buildings alont . the . . (COntinued . on P.ar;e 4) .

: ' • • • ,·- ' ' : ' • > '• • •' ;·- ' • •

" I

SerVice Group Holds District Meeting Here

])orrn,it~ry For Girls Will Re Constructed

Ken~edy To. Top Nixon

Page 2: 1 l{eynOids Makes Gift TO - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu see all of train, through ... to be presented. by .Carolyn McBee's piano solo, Le mas Story. Soloists will ... to provide advancement

PAGE TWQ. Monday, Dec. 7, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

First In Student Series

Music Rec~tal Set' For· Wednesday The' fi~:st in a series of monthly 2. David Beal, accompanied at the by Henry Pfohl, God Rest Ye Merry

student music recitals will be pre- piano by Nancy Bradshaw, will sing Gentlemen and Good King Wen­sented at 8 p. m. Wednesday in the the recitative "Thus Saith the Lord" ceslas. The ensemble will also sing Lower Audito~:ium of Wingate Hall. from Handel's Messiah. Dickinson's The Shepherds Christ-

The program, to be presented. by .Carolyn McBee's piano solo, Le mas Story. Soloists will be Nancy students of each member of the ap- Polichinelle, by Villa-Lobos, will·fol- Breedlove, soprano; Virginia Roe, plied music faculty, will include low Beal's solo. mezzo soprano and Kenneth Hauser, fo~ soloists,. a trump.et ,solo~t, a . The Divettes, a girls trio com- tenor. . . • , bantone solo1st, a gJrls tr1o, a posed of Vivian Cox, Ruth Pan- Josephme. Jolley ~ then play choral ensemble and a .brass s.extet. coast and Jean Thompson will then V:olse Oubhee, a p1ano solo by

All the vocal selections w1ll be sing He Watching Over Israel by LISzt. Christmas music. Mendelssohn and Go Tell It On the . Final num~r on the program

Jerry Essie will open the pro- Mountain. arranged by Wilson. Will ?e Polonruse No. 4 by Guentzel. gram with a trumpet solo, Petite Beethoven's Sonata in E Major, It Wlll be play~d by the brass sex-Piece Concertante by Balay. Op. 14, No. 1 will be played ·on the tet. .The sextet Is composed of Jerry

Ann Matthews will perform two piano by Sherl<leen Merritt. EssiC. and John Surgener, trwnpet; piano solos, Bach's Invention No. Then the choral ensemble will Bonme Jon~s, French Horn; .Ro?-14 and Brahms Rhapsody, Op. 79;. No. sing two traditional carols arranged ert Boatwng?t, trombone; baVld

McNeely, bantone; and Terry Shan-eyfelt, tuba. ·

Howler Picture Schedule Given

The Howler will talre pictures Wednesday of several groups · on campus. The schedule of groups and locations is as follows:

3 p. m.-Chr.istian Education and Service -Club, front of chapel.

3:15 p. m.-SigJna Chi Fraternity Sing, chapel.

3:30 p. m.-C a n t e r b u r Y' Club, chapel.

3:45 p.m.-Young Women's Auxi­liary, Reynolda Hall.

4 p. m.-Women's Recreation As­sociation, Bostwick B.

4:15 p.m.-Young Democrats Club, Reynolda Hall.

4:30 p. m.- Student Legislature, legislature room.

6:30p.m. -Maple Springs Me­thodist Church.

'Student Parlicipati4)n Will· 6e En .Program I Student participation . will be the presented ·to the winning society program . for the Euzeliari Literary :and it is kept by the society un­Society · meeting at 7 p. m. today til the next Society Day .. i~ Eu H'a.ll. Thre~ "students will be Dr. Changpoh Chee, a member pv~n toptcs ~or tmpromptu· speak- of the sociology department, spoke mg. ~here Wlll be extemp?raneou.s to the Society at the last meeting. speaking. a_nd poetry .. r~admg. The His topic, The Japanese "Dozoku- . ostudents Will give crltlctsms of the I>an," was an explanation of the speeches. · J,apanese fictitious family ·system. . These speeches are in prepara- He spoke of the 'individual behavior

tton for annual Society Day. Socie- stating that the family system w~ ty Day is sponsored by both socie- hased on inhetitance. A discussion ties featuring competi~on ~n d,ebate, was held following the talk. Re­extemporaneous speaking unpromp- freshments were served at the close tu and prepared oratory. A cup is of· the meeting.

'

_A_N C- H Oit OF WINSTON-SALEM

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Speech Points To Proble.m· ,Qj Indian Revolt, Disunity

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India's three revolutions in. the last 12 years have created _prob­lems India has not yet solved, a Concert-Lecture Series speaker told students and faculty · me m be r s Thursday evening.

Dr. Balkrishna Govind Gokhale, visiting professor of history at the University of Washington at Seattle, spoke on the subject "India, the Last Decade."

He said that India's Colorual Re­V()lution in 1947, Democratic Revo­lution in 1950 and Inlfustrial Revolu­tion had presented political as well as economic problems.

Whim India won its independence from Britain in 1947, there were 550 constitutionally sovereign ·"prince­ly" states, Gokhale said. For a time there was a question as to whether these states would unite or remain independent.

Most United Most did finally unite. Besides these sovereign states, he

pointed out, there were 13 regions, or culture units, in India. Each of these regions spoke a different lan­guage, he reported. Each, e:xcept one, was persuaded to adopt com­mon language.

FragJnentation of politics was another problem India faced im­mediately following her gain of independence, he continued. The Communist Party w.as the one large party and there were numerous smaller parties. This situation still exists, Gokhale said.

Threat of Communism has posed an economic problem also, he went on. Communism .said that India had

I

plans on parliamentary democra­cy," he. continued.

Hb said that the Communist re­volution in China was at first re­garded by India with "fascination," but that it "has turned into fear."

<rl>khale said it had been reported that China was getting ahead of India economically. He went on to say, however, that a person could not be sure because of contradictory reports . from China. He believes also that. if India should be behind .China, one reason is that China has used slave lavor under the "euphemistic term of 'corrective labor.' " India, he said, "has not sacrificed human, freedom.''

American aid, he feels, especial-· ly wheat, "has done a lot of good and we are certainly appreciative. Aid has been so vital it has tided us over two or three diMerent crisel!."

FLATI'OP SPECIALIST

Kennedy Gives--a haircut "Designed

with only you in milld." at

W. 4TH ST. BARBER SHOP liz Block West of Sears·

a choice between bread and free- -------------...1 dom. Gokhale said that India felt ------------­that she had to have both bread :--~------~---­and freedom. The average Indian, Gokhale reported, "doesn't get one good meal a day."· To try to allevi­ate this poverty, two plans were in­stituted, one in 1951 and one 1956 to provide advancement in agri­culture, industry and ed~cation, among other things, he said.

Current Problem India is "currently facing the

problem of how to work economic

CAMPUS MOVIE Tammy and the Bachelor will be

the Student Union movie this week­end. Chapter 10 of the Spider's Web will also be playing. ·

FLATTOP SPECIALIST

Gives---a haircut "Designed with only ·you in mind." .

at W. 4TH ST. BARBER SHpP

Yz Block ,West of Sears

NewElGIII SPORTSMAN

C:O.pletely shock-reailtCIIIt a.cl waterproof!..avch o . low, low price, tool ·

New ELGIN STAR LITE

The lady'a watch that's right • cr.tion ••. Shock-resistant, .-.okable ~tool ._ ____ .,..._.....,

ANCHOR FINE JEWELRY, MAIN FLOOR

A Special ·Gift FOr. That · Special·· Someone

HIS AND

HER

AT

·90-wa.;..eatl\pus S~p· :============================~!Th§e~m~ov~i~e will start at 8 p. m. Friday and Saturday. - --- . ___ __;_

KCJDL Q.OSSWORD BLACK LAMA

.BROWN LAMA $19~95

Fo1' lounging, ~laxing and leisute actiuilies of all kinds be comfortabl1) .. in .. stgle" in shoes designed fo1' casual liuing .•. Freeman Town Squires waiting for 1JOU at · $ 19.95

ACROSS 1. Chorus girl 8. Op~oslte of a

see er 18. Part of an

airplane wing 14. Almost remote

way to act 15. Likes blondes

better, for instance

16. Come all the way uE to Kool'e Ment oi_

17. Shape of diamonds or tones

18. These boats take gute

20. This can be constricting

21. Sleepy gas 23. Gin--24. Wrist operation 27. Dig it all-well.

almost all 29. G~ in .. Guys

an Dolls" 31. Take out, but

not on a date 82. Meanwhile,

baekatthe Latin claaa

84. Proboscissed 86. T_hunderbird'u

Papa 86. A kind of walk 88. Little Florida 39. It used to come

before plane 40. This is legal 42. A lot of sailor 44. This is how

Bardot c:omesin 45. _de France 46. Classroom

resting places 4'7. Xools are the

refreshing_

DOWN 1. Li'l Abner's

creator 2. What this IIUJl

is for 8. Genus of olives 4. Kool's Menthof

Magic leaves you more.__.,

5: Cockney way of saying 2 Down

6. Cold hand at bridge?

7. Followed Suet 8. They hang on

to skirts 9. __ 1ittle

teapot LO. Mouthfuls of

frankfurter? 11. Bleach 12. Remembered-

her phone number?

19. Kind of Iron. 22. Them bJJJa

23. Venus' home town

24. Cried in a ladylike way

25. on from wool for your hair

26. Magnetizes men 28. Mr. Autry 80. Kools have a

very___11avor 38. Pop tune of

··the 20's 3'7. Time for a

chang~? Smoke

89. Roscoe..- . 41. It rhymes with

i"!'k 43. Alpha's laSt

name

13

u

17

9

Wheh Yc>utthroat tells you H!s ~rne fur a cha~ge,,

you need a real change ...

YOU N.EEQ THE

No.1.1

10 II

Belcher's, Inc. NISSEN BLDG.

OPEN TIL 9 FRIDAY NIGHT OF·KCDL' o 1959, J~n~WD•wm-To-Corp.

I'

.'''

.l.S3 S>IS30 311 3~l.N3 909 l.IOI,

.... HJ. ....... ~~ 3v• v 1 ::1 .... ,_,., -"""-· 3 >1 v ~a ~ o ::1 03SON WT!Y3.LNI 3 :.i 3 1 310 NV H l. V N , 'ltJ .L ·~.g"#~ 11.1W~3Hl.~ 'rJ08.~90l..HV3d· :>19VW SH3.:13~d 3 l. 0 W ·3 N 0 H 3 1 I V . ~301H 3NI~OH~

tfiMS~ 1(J))f

And Every v·

Nite 'Till Christmas

l•

-,

..

I Ofte:

hours .2 in the line su· is depl;

·Serv] The

from. t anothe1

.-SEVERt! stock ro

PLENTl is taken

', .

FLA'

GiveS.. with

W. 4TE liz B

I

FINE~

Roll-Pl

Zip~ Br

lmp<J R1l

The I Cr

Seet: • I

Pipe Pock~

w Dt;

Page 3: 1 l{eynOids Makes Gift TO - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu see all of train, through ... to be presented. by .Carolyn McBee's piano solo, Le mas Story. Soloists will ... to provide advancement

· ~Cafeteria Is A Complex Big. Business

l•

·,

, • J r '

By GLENN HAMM its place. from which be is served. Often during 'the six-plus' And the, ••May .I help you-you Enough. persons to insure the

hours .a day of. serving time want it on a special?" ~ontinues. preparation of 100 pounds of ham in the College cafeteria the The student,wbo has wa1ted to be for a meal,' or 30 gallons of· green

1. 1 f · •t served has come close to realizing beans, 150 pounds of potatoes, some .m~ snpp :r 0 various 1 ems that something is going on behind 100 dozen eggs per day, or 50 gal· IS uepl~te~. . the scenes. Ions of coffee-$219,000 worth of

·ServiCe 18 halted. Yet .. he probably doesn't suspec~ food in a year. ' The empty "pot" is lifted ,there are more than 130 persons Big Grocery Bill.

from . the steam table and working toward the ."eternal re- Quite a grocery bill for Mrs. Ruby another brought out to take plenishrnent" of that steam table Sheridan, director of food services,

who is in charge of the big business of feeding 2000 people meal after meal. '

To help her in the task are 20 admiPJstrative staff members, · 68 Negro workers, and 45 student em· ployees.

Miss Lorraine Wallace, a grad· uate 'of Woman'.s College, Greens: boro, i~ in charge of meal planning. She. is "food production manager" rather than "d i e t i c i a n." Which means that she provides a well· balanced diet for those who will choose properly, whereas a dieti· cian supervises the choosing.

Food is pw:chased only'from large wholesale '·distributors as an as­surance of quality meats and "name brand'' frozen fruits and vegetables.'

"We buy by content," said Mrs. Sheridan, "Our · aim, like that of most school cafeterias, is not to make a profit but merely to break even.

Increase Necessary The fact· that the cafeteria was

doing less than breaking even made neces,sar_y a price increase this year. "The cafeteria had been operating on prices that were in effect seven' and eight years ago when I was at Duke," Mrs. Sheridan said.

One cause of _operating "in the red" is tnat 'tlle cafeteria operates twelve months a year, although at· best .only three' months are full months due to vacations and holi­days. 1

Cafeteria workers mu.St still be employed at the same rate of pay, work days or holidays.

and glass breakage, maintenance, replacement of silver and worn-out equipment-all of which constitute the high costs of overhead. 1

· All expenses must be met with what the cafeteria takes in at the registers in 55-cent ·specials, 15-cents soup, the nickle coffee, and so on.

Depreciation Fund But the expenses have been dip­

ping into a "depreciation fund" set up for the cafeteria by the College. A certain amount is .set aside from the cafeteria 'inco~e each year for the replacement of broken and worn­out equipment. This step' is neces­sitated by the expensiveness of much of the cafeteria equipment.

For example, the two di.sh-wash­ing machines in the basement of Reynolda Hall cost $10,000; the serving counters and other equip­ment in one cafeteria line alone cost almost $600().

Various departments of the kit­chen and stor'erooms are a mass of expensive, modern equipment. There are sepm·ate large walk-in freezers for frozen foods, fresh fruits and vegetables, dairy 'p r o d u c t s and meats. There is a large storeroom for canned foods. Other storerooms contain equipment and paper sup­plies.

In the kitchen there are electric gadgets for almost every purpose, from an ice cube maker to a bread

About one-third -of the cafeteria budget goes for food. Besides food and·labor, there are the expenses of bookkeeping, heat or air con­ditioning, laundering or Wliforms, garbage collecting service, electri­city,, steam, paper supplies. ·dish

FLATTOP SPECIALIST

David Bowers Gives-a haircut "Designed with only you in mind."

· .at /

I,

W. 4TH ST. BARBER SHOPI Yz Block West of Sears

COOKING. WITH THESE things is no simple operation

NEGRO EMPLOYEES 'of the· College have their own cafeteria in the back of the kitcheD.. They go through their own line, which begins at a door in the rear.

I

For That Spedal .Christmas i Gift ·

DIGBY PIPES By~GBD

REGULAR $3.50

Sale $2.96 FINEST IMPORTED BRIAR

MERSHON LINED GBD's

, Lined with finest outer briar ~

S&.OO Roll-Up Tobacco Pouches-Golden Glow

Plastics, Scotch Plaids ~_!_7" ____ $1.00

Zip Seals-Y2 Size H. F. Welded- Tan, Brown, Bla~k ---~-----------' $2.00

. '

Imported Zip Seal-Pouches with 'Welded Rubber Interio-r ~---------- froin. $3.00 . .

The Finest lmDorted Tobacco Humidor Crockery, Wood, or' Leather Covered

· from$5.00

See the Fine Selection of Pip~ Racks ,

1 .- • I from $1:00

Pipe Knives from ______________ .$1.00 Pocket Pouches from ------------- SOc

We also have several numbers of . Dutch and English Collectors Pipes

A P~!:R.SON WANDERING .around in the dishwashing department might get 'tangled liP in this. The imiforms, laundered by cafeteria-employed personnel, h,ang on several lines in the basement of the cafeteria.

roll shaper. other physical features are a

laundry for the workers' uniforms, with two full-time laundresses; an{! a special, small cafeteria for the workers.

The behind-the-scenes people worlt qu'ietlyll in surroundings of irnm.a­culatf:!IY clean and cold-appearing equipment.

Movement to and fro of supplies by cover:alled men and uniformed women takes on the semblance ()f a factory operation.

Each has a job to do in the complex scheme of providing meals, each part of which goes on some­what independently of_ all other phases. .

The roll maker and the egg frier and the. potato baker-each work.s with pride in the production. Of the 6B colored workers, only 23 are new to the College cafeteria. Many have been here since the move to Win­ston-Salem. Mrs. Sheridan considers the continuity of employment es­sential to pride in the work and subsequent efficient operation of the cafeteria. ·

Those folks up front--Jthe servers with the repetitious,· "May I help you" are representatives of those who hav.e even a more direct hand -from the director tC> the onion slicer-in your 80-cent · special or bowl of soup.

APPOINTMENT SPECIALIST

W. N. Tedder Gives-a haircut "Designed

with only you in mind.·~ at •

W. 4TH ST. BARBER SHOP Yz Block West of Sears

At • menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • m

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Dec. 7, 1959 PAGE THREE

TlllS. IS WHERE those trays finally end up. An employee removes the utensil~ from the plates as the conveyer carries the trays past to the sinks.

open 9 :30 to 5 every week-day

DE LONDRES with ballet bodice and dancing skirt to piroutte into the imelight.

Gobo-lYlue, emerald. fire-red, sizes 5-13.

69.95

From cur collection of holiday dresses for dates and dancing

in junior and misses sizes Rendezvous Room-Second Floor

Spe~ial new HIGH POROSITY dgarette paper

Invisible porous openings blend fresh air with each puff for

a softer, fresher, more flavorful smoke

Salem research. creates a revolutionary new ciga­rette paper that breathes new refreshing softness and finer flavor into the smoke. Now, more than ever, there's Springtime freshness in every puff of a Salem. Smoke refreshed ••• smoke Salem.

-s ·1 NOWMOR£ T!f~NEVEH_ a em ~es your· taste

Page 4: 1 l{eynOids Makes Gift TO - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu see all of train, through ... to be presented. by .Carolyn McBee's piano solo, Le mas Story. Soloists will ... to provide advancement

®lb· <'nlb nub 111lark * * Wake Forest College * •

!

.WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1959

A- W omen"s D.ormit~ry A $750,000 grant by the Z. Smith

Reynolds Foundation "for construc­tion of a girls' dormitory" brought Wake Forest's hopes of expansion into further realization last week.

Plans for construction of new facili­ties can now be made on a solid finan­cial basis.

It was a generous gift. It will serve to alleviate an obviously bad condition of over-crowding. And no member of the Wake Forest "family" can justly be anything less than grateful for this more-than-expected support of the Reynolds benefactors. .

But why the stipulation, "for con­struction of a girls' dormitory?"

Was the grant, in consideration of its subsequent stipulation, a specific stipulation of the Foundation? Or was the terminology of the grant merely in accordance with expansion plans al­ready outlined by the College?

Current plans call for a life sciences building. a dormitory for girls, and a humanities building. All, of course, quite necessary. But what of a fine arts building? It seems the planners are carefully ignoring the necessity of facilities for fine arts.

Under the present circumstances, the College theater is forced into in­adequate quarters originally intended for library use. The College's art pieces are stored in a section of the library, lacking a place for display.

The College band must practice in a crowded basement room in the gym-nasium. ·

Visiting "secular" performers are forced to "desecrate" Wait Chapel in their attempts to provide culture. ·

We recogniz'e there is overcrowd­ing at every turn. But we fail to see how the addition of 200 women stu­dents before provisions are made for them will alleviate the overcrowding.

Classrooms are· crowded. They will he c om e more crowded. Professors share temporary, petitioned "cubby

· holes." There will ·be more "doubling up" of offices.

The number of students nqw un­able to study the stored-away paint­ings, or rehearsing band in cramped quarters will only be added to by stu­dents at an equal disadvantage.

We applaud the proposed expan­sion. We appreciate the support of our benefactors. But we call 'on the planners t() proceed 1 o gi c a II y·-to allow each phase of our "liberal edu­cation" to be furthered with better balance.

-R.R.

Christmas Party The Christmas party for children is

somewhat late this year, because no­body could be found who 'Yould take the responsibility for it. In past years the party has been without any or­ganization ,vhatsoever. A person has volunteered both years to head the committee_ This year, of course, no­body volunteered. Consequently there was almost no party.

When c:ertain groups on campus were contacted and asked to take charge, the excuse was that it should be a campus-wfde affair in which everybody has a hand, to which ·no group's name is attached.

A group of persons was finally found to take charge . of the party. Something which is so important to a number of town children and to the influence ()f the College should not he handled in such a haphazard way. If the party is to become a traditional thing, somebody will have to take re­sponsibility for it, giving it some or­ganization. ·

The appointment of a committee which mig:ht elect each year's c~air­man from ·within itself might be con­sidered by the Student Legislature.

Student Poetry And Politics If you will pick up any issue of The

Student, any year's, you will find some poetry. The same kind of poetry you find in just about every college literary magazine in the country. It is the poetry of students, who are "'alone," who are "desperately trying to find themselves," who are "in love,"

'who are or are not "afraid of death," who parody American materialism. It could be safely said that 99 per •cent of the world's poorest attempts :at philosophy are made by college students. ' Now, it is a situation that nobody ls going to change. But it is interest­ing to note that these same students, who are curious about the hereafter and unknowable, don't have a bean's knowledge of the present and practi­cal. A case in point: a poll of students to find out how they would vote and why in the next presidential election.

Some of them could ansi.ver intelli­gently, but more of them couldn't. The main issues in the forthcoming election seem to be what the candi­date looks like, what his wife looks like, whether he is a nice man or not. A hole in the shoe has been more im­portant than a hole in the head be­cause intelligence never has been a determining factor in politics.

If any group of persons should be immune to political propaganda, it should be those who supposedly have received an education. If anybody is going to vote intelligently-and some­body, so m e w her e, is going to-it should be the college student.

Apparently politicians will receive the serious consideration of many col­lege students only_ when they stand on their platforms declaring "Seule

JOHN ALFORD Editor

je suis," or when they make. a~ occa­sional refel'ence to Paul T1lhch.

Let's get down to earth-!

Cafeteria Tours? What you don't know, they say,

won't hurt you. You .smile as the woman behind the counter places two rolls-with a pair of tongs-on a sau­cer and hands it to you. What you don't know is that the women in the salad department are mixing up your tossed salad with their hands, elbow deep in the stuff. Not that there's any­thing particularly unsanitary about that but the inconsistency is at least amu'sing. Or perhaps it isn't incon­sistent at all; perhaps the women be­hind the counter simply don't have as clean hands as the help in the back. Whatever the case may be, Mrs. Ruby Sheridan has privately suggested that students may find out for themselves what goes on behind thl;l scenes.

It is a welcome suggestion-one we hope will be made public.

Many stu dents never get a peek at how their food is prepared. They may wonder where that tray conveyer goes or what the dishwashing machines look like. 'I'hey are curlous. A tour· would satisfy that curiosity.

Other students are dissatisfied with the food served. If these students were given an op}lortunity to personally in­vestigate the situation~and perhaps such an inv~stigation is not impracti­cal-they might be more sympathetic · ... or less sympathetic. At any rate such a tour could hardly fail to en­courage a friendlier relationship . be-. tween the administration of the cafe- . teria and the student body.

BRENT FILSON Business Manager

Founded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black is published each Monday during the school year except during examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

RAY ROLLINS Ass'ociate Editor

FRANCIS FENDERSON Circulation Manager

JOEL STEGALL Managing Editor

ZENO MARTIN Sports Editor

FRANK LORD Asst. Circulation Manager ·

EDITORIAL STAFF: Barr Ashcraft, Jim Batterson, Sylvia Burroughs, Sherry Dailey, Sid Eagles, Diane Finlayson, Sue Fulkerson, Kelley Griffith, David Hadley, Charles Johns~n. Glenn Hamm, Carolyn McBee, Doc Maddrey, Sarah Murphy, Dwight Pickard, GeDrge Pru­den, Kenneth Quarterman, Dave Rawley, Carolyn Rowe, Don 8-<:hoonmaker, Lynne Smathers, Fred Wardlaw, George WilliamsDn, David Westerfield, Pat Woodward.

BUSINESS ·STAFF: Janet Bullock, Brent McRae. Jim Spillman.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by Na· Uonal Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription. rate: $2.50 per year. Second-Class mail privi­leges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C.

Offices In Reynolda Hall 225-227 Telephone PArk 5-9711 P'. 0. Box 7567

Extension 215 Reynolda Branch WinstDn-Salem, N. C.

. , j •

\

. Cruelty Joke! MAGN-OLIA LEAVES By GEOR~E PRUDEN

.Back . \

and

-CHI~ FORBES

Forth· By "Doc" Maddrey

Beyond the hackneyed realm of ' when such a marriage is attempted, the freshman theme, few of a stu- , the ~ffspring invariaply is confusiDn dent body ever seriouSly categorize of thought and ptlrp!)se. · ·· their views concerning their .aims NDt everything in~ education can in the midst of education. have .a market value. Not every

This situation· and its contingent idea may ·be turned into· a sales problems is unfortunate. technique or a moon rocket. Gr.ant-

An education; contrary to modem ed that a few are, but these .are mail-order course advertisements, most definitely exceptions. The can not be purchased · in 30 easy maxim of science in our day is lessons. An education can not be certainly, '"if it works it is obso-equalled in effectiveness with a cer- let~." tain number of hours-and quality Where therefore, othflr than in points. · ... : .... · ~ • . . the· fertile minds of libel'ally · edu-

Neither can a scllliOl':s "educa- cated men are new concepts to tional ability." be measured by the arise? income of its graduates. ' The purpose of this commentary

Foolish as these -state'ments seem is to beg for consideration of what there are those who fervently prac- education means. to tlie individual

· tice such a doctrine in' their quest in our day. Wake Forest can and for self::.clevelopment .. ; ; should prosper. If we do not let

The recent graduate 'School rumor technical aspects thwart progress, is a case in point. It has been men- th d A d te tl·oned 'that mor· e··. w·-"'~d, ,be ,.,ell- . en we can a vance. gra ua

\lUI. .. , program can and will be as helpful trained. A person who lends his sup- .as the individuals involved deem to port for only this rea,son i_s actu~ k 't considering an · ·api>r'i~e-5choo<l ma e 1

• .. ·. · . with tirltiDn. If we think ·of educa;. Per5onal Thing tion as mere occupational prepara- An edueation .is a personal thing tion, then this view iS- justifiable. -this is as true as to be often for-If we think of .:e<Iucation- as more gotten. Modern communication has than this, then some rec&nsideration weakened the word~ "education to is imperative. the position of meaning merely

Course TakerS trained. Animals can be trained; In each class required by the Col- men should ·be educated.

lege we find the ·~course taker," an It does make a difference what a individual who is in only to get' out person feels about education. For as painlessly as possible. These in· education is an .attitude of seeking dividuals and their attitude are in · development. Her~ at Wake Forest, danger of becoming so much of a in the midst of complacel.lCY of the majority as to undermine ()Ur pre- many, must stan<i out the capacity · sent idealistic systems. of the few. ·

These individuals seek not .an The realization of how little the educatio.n; these seek not knowledge individual. ·-can comprehend except for its own sake, truth for Us own in o r i gin a 1 observation. Where virtue, or understanding merely for therefore are ·the new ideas and its intrinsic values. avenues to be found except in

.These seek merely the easy path. original observation'! The liberal arts college ·was born Thomas· Huxley said, "For every

The other afternoDn ·a student was driving down town to get-:a haircut. On the way down a hill, he realized that his brakes weren't

· going to hold, SQ he aimed the car tDWard a . .service station across the

· street. The car came to a stop m:ter

•,

Letters. (AU letters to the· editor muSt

'be signed; names will be With­held on req~est.)

To the Editor: · For the benefit cf those who, have expressed · interst in 'wh~ is responsible· for the student and faculty seating arrangements at

. the Coliseum I wish to make the following statement ()f fact ·

The responsibility fo:r both the faculty and student seating ar­rangementslies solely in the hands of the Wake, Forest athletic direc­tor who feels\ and rightly so, that he should take into account the recommendations of the Wake Forest College Athletic Council of '\Vhich the Faculty Athletic Council is· a part. .

The present seating ariange- · ments were for:inulated after the · aforem:entiontxt .procedure was car­ried out. · Bill Shepherd · · ·

Cha.irnum, Student · Government ·Committee. On Athletic Seating

Tri.·Beta Frat Initiates 25 · New Members ..

Beta Beta Beta., honorary · bio­logy fraternity rec1=nt1y initiated 25 biDlogy students into its mem· bership. . .

Ten of the novitiates became full members .and'15 beca.me provision-al members. · ·

Full membe:rs who were inducted are Gem Moore, GarDlyn William~. JoAnn Hayes, Bar:bara Hruslinski, GeDrge -~ Gaz:dner, _Duke . Weeks, Charles YarbrDugh, .Hideki Ima­mura, J:ames F.· Grpbani. and Steve Corwin. '

Provisional members who ~re initiated are Tom Blackburn, David · McNeely, AI Hartness, ·Glenda Hartness, Mary Jean Hunt, Judy Ellingham, Don Spoon, Jim Phil­lips, Dot Hills, Eetsy Hopkins:> Nancy Tuttle, ~oh:n''Norman, Blli Davis, Ellaine BaileY. arid' .. Bm-:

'Strum. .- · '

~ll!! i Jii §l!!i!!i~JI!IIllM;{!II!I!!I:!iitli!!

Ben B. Seligman, AFL-CIO Man, .To Give Lecture

t Ben B. Seligman, a representa­

tive of AFL-CIO, will speak at 7:3(} p. m. Wednesday on "'Why UniDnS ?"

The 1ectur:e will be in Room 306 A of Reynolda Hall.

.Seligman is director of education and research for the Retail Clerks' International Association ~f AFL-CIO. . . .

tD be for the thinking man. Our an- man the world I is as fresh as it was- ·

Seligman received his A. B. de­gree from Brooklyn College in 1934 and his M. S. degree from Columbia· University in 1936. Prio:r to. his work .with RCIA, he was· assistant editor for the magazine La'·or and the Nation.

cestors saw this need. There were at the first day, and as full af un-training schools much before the told novelties for him' who has the days of the educational institution. eyes to see tllem." In this state·

The lot of the educated man is to ment we see the usefulness of a synthesize intD life that which he process which encourages an indi- He has .been a college lecturer in ·

-economics and has contributed J.ttic~cs to sev:eral liberal ·maga.. zines. Artides Df ~1is have been printed by a publication of the U.

finds in himself and nature. To him · vidual evaluation of the world such falls the disappointment of realiZ· as the liberal colleges purport to dD. ing how little is · knDwn, much less A simple example is the classic CDmprehended. of one of reviewing five aCCOUnts

With this in mind we can face the of the same accident -no twD · .S. Information Age~J.Cy-. problem squarely. We must main- stories are identical, even if the Seligman's appeaTance will be

sponsored jointly by the School of Business : Administration, · Delta Sigma Phi ;J>usiness fraternity, Alpha Kappa Psi business frater­nity and Delta Kappa. Nu business sorDrity.

tain separation. To seek the mar- observers were quite close together. riage of the basic ideas which Therefore if five good minds~ un-should be offered to the liberal, man inhibited by what they are supposed and the well-formulated J>rocedures to believe and follow, observe a

. of the proven and practical is to problem _critically, th~n ~e person· neglect the one and to; emphasize al development and bDdy of know-the other. And this is what is being ledge stands only to gain. It is

i@!.~~~ done now. The sad state is ~t worth a thought.

Germans Like It

Jones Attends Opera In Berlin (Continued froll!. Page 1)

Berlin has introduced me tD opera. With very little· ·trDq,ble I

· have been able to get' tJcl{ets to many operas in •bDth the·East and -the West sectors of ·Berlin. The· people take great' pride in the_ opera and support it heartily not only with attendance ·but also with their ardent and lengthy applause. A five to ten minute standing ovation is quite normal at the end of each act as well as at :!;he end of the performance. · ·

lem, one of Berlin's most beau~iful My scholarship provides me with a residential districts. I hesitate "tD free lunch (in the Mensa) which use the term campus since a cam- for the most part consists of -soup, pu~ as such does not exist here. • potatoes, or othe:r inexpensive food.

Many students ride the buses The - Brpther·Sister Program from one lecture to another. Usual- which Ulrich was in charge of has ly the lectures· begin 15 minutes given me a very nice sister, Maria late allowing time for. the stu- Senst. I have been in her home dents to check their coats and grab several times for tea and dinner· a beer or coke before class begins. · and I enjoy very .:m:u-ch going to her The students are allowed to visit family's bakery and coffee shop. any lectures they -choose before We discuss my problems at the signing up . about a. month after University as well as the world~s schoDl begins. However, tltere is problems. Maria has always lived no compulsory class. attendance· in West Berlin and therefore she and there are no semester exams. had the opportunity of studying

English. At times we find it neces-Spent Hours Shopp!Dc sary to ·explain complex situatiDns

I have spent houxs shopping and ·in English. · . 'looking 'in the food stores. Most Nov. 1 was a very .significant · German students do aU of their day fDr the Free University. The

cooking and since I'm trYing tiD studentendorf, in '\Vhieh I am liv-

knocking over a sign which read: "Have your brakes checked ·regu­larly."

Overheard in the snack shop be- . tween a boy and a girl, boy yell­ing, "What do you mean ;you got

ITWO parking tickets while you had my car!"

They were eating in the cafeteria. She was struggling with a glazed pork chop. He paused, looked at h~ until she looked UJ> .at him, then as ked, "Do y-ell · · feel like a canni· bal when you eat pork?"

' The quiz had a!· ready been given out and students had be gun to

. gettle down .and write,. when in -burst a tardy member of the class.· After sev· era! p u f f s and pantS he started )Jack out the ~r. but first turned and .assured tb,e class, "Don't worcy, I'll be back." Came the 'reply-"Pity." ·

A prominent member of the 'Wake Forest College family was tellip.g how his' SQn came home one SUn· day nig:!:Jt. and said that they really had had _:fun .. When. the· boy!s ·fa· ther .asked what had been the topic of discussion, -the answer was "Sin."

The. Alfred Deller: Trio, consist~ ing of a' harpsicfuord, a lute, and. a counter-tenor <male voice w.bich

. sings alto ~ange)o~ provided. during .. intermission. several interesting bits of conversation. To wit: , ·

". . . whim is be going. to sing in his natural voice?"

"I think I'll leave: . My profeSsor saw me, so my mission is com-

·plete." _ · . · "What do you· call the fellow who

plays the lute, a lout?"' "I don't know about t}lat, but you

knew, didn't ~a; that . a· modified lute is called an 'umlute' ? "

.- The psydology professor w.as in­:forming his class· about ·erotic ·be­havior. A student on tib.e . front. row began to ~oze. 'When the professor pointed out tliat people who thad

: erDtic tendencies were usually· defi­cient in some respect, ·such as hear­ing; seejng, or the like; the student

.: raised ihis head and eyebrows ana asked innocently, "What was th.lit you_ said?" -.. . .

·The favorite song of the students .·who· stayed on .campUs during ~ . .Thanksgiving·hDli<Jays W'a5' "There*s No Place Like Home :for the :Holi­days."

A few ·nights ago sDme -of the coed student teachers were· ih~lding a prayer meeting for snow, so .they

· wouldn't have to do their teaching the next day. It seems quite ironic that an elected official of ·both the student body and. the Woman's Gov­ernment Association of this ·religious institution broke up the service.

A discussi()n was g~i.rig on in the Old Gold office. last Friday night. A reporter was having her story of the theater scrutinized by the editor. He saw the phrase "eternal tri­angle" describing the basic plot of the play. He wasn't sure that most of the readers knew the · classic terin, eternal triangle .. It was de­cided to conduct a small poll to see if people really did :know what was . meant by the term. One fel­low's reply was, "Sure I know what that is. All I want to knDw is ·how I get in one!"

Several members of . APO were selling. directories in front. of chapel Tuesday and Thursday: with side show barker techriiques. This arous­ed_ someone to remark, "That . briilgs to mind that :verse in the New Testa­ment, 'My Father's house is a house

_....of prayer, but you have made it:a den of thieves.' " .' .

·seven Places Left In Trip .For Germany

Only seven vacancies remained last week in a CDur5e to be ta~t next summer in Germany.

Travel arrangements have been : made for a group of 20, the en­rollm~_nt limit of the' f'Irst "study a.br'oad" cDurse ()f:liered by the Col-

, Iege. . Dr. Kenneth Keeton, assistant

professor of German, is originator of the project. .

Tbe ~lass will spend approximate­ly 10 weeks abr<Jad, with Munich as a "base of OJ>eratlons." The stu· dents will tour a 75-mile radius of Munich by bicycle and bus.

The course in German to be studied, course. 41-a, under Kee­ton's plan, was approved by the faculty fDr inclusion in the CDllege curriculum. Regular college credit

· will be given. . . .

Since we must travel about an hour ·by train to the opera hDuse we often take our supper along or .plan to eat in fue opera house. Amidst golden ornaten~ss is a small snack bar where we like to order roast duck and champagne· between acts. ·

Rapid Grow~ live as a German student, I must ing, :was <Jpefled and with it came .: do the same. Here I shonld like t() a new concept in student living :in

With Munich as a center of operatiDns; the students will spend two hDurs a day in instruction. A ·German student will live With the grDup, all o'f whom will be expect­ed to · speak . solely German m}o:il arrival at their destination.· .

in~rt ·a question for the students Germ9ny .· The German student is who are planning to apply for the · accustomed to. living in a pl'ivate exchange- Can you cook? I llave apartment or with a family. This one specialty which my friends like has .prevented Q.f· :feeling of,_ -to-very _much. It !s: tuna fish (from getherness which • the .·American. Native Gi!rman . lecturers Wlll_

, . '

Berlin .. s bigness is fUrther seen in the size of the· Free :.univ-ersity and its rapid.·growth to~a; present enrollment of over ll,O{j(j- persDns, 500 of which are forei!Wers. The' campus is spread thrDughout Deb· ..... . the cal). of. course) a~?. ~~t~ ~ce ..... ~liege lrilows ...... _..:·'. ·· sp~k ~t:v:ajiou11 cl~ m_ee.tip.g~-· · ;>~ ..

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Page 5: 1 l{eynOids Makes Gift TO - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu see all of train, through ... to be presented. by .Carolyn McBee's piano solo, Le mas Story. Soloists will ... to provide advancement

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Dixie· Classic·· Debates Last · SevenRou:nds ··

(Continued from page 1) but George Washington, with its· 9-5 record, had more .points; ·

· The debaters met F.riday for 'a banquet. and Saturday for break­fast. The banquet fea.tured: after-·­dinner speaking. Bertr.am Ifill of · the· University College of the West Indies won first place.

Debaters totired. Old Salem and the tobacoo factories 'of R. J. Reynolds Company Friday. ·

Two·· debaters from · the West Indies will meet two. debaters from· Wake Forest tonight in a demonstration debate. Ifill and Eric Abrahams will . debate the national de~ate topi~ With Don _Schoonmaker and Susie Jones.· 1

Debate; open to the public, be­gins at 8 p. m. in the law court room.

Wake Forest College travels _next .to the University of Pitt,s­

·. burg to ·participate in a cross examination debate tournament. They will leave the College Thurs­day for. the week-end contest.

West Indies Men

. '

\ . '-

Enjoy Own Debate R k .~ · <eonttnued-:frompate i> . ~ eJeller Is Out

a federation, . and each feels the · •other is unduly. ·stubborn. Their st· · d · F N

friendlY' rivalry on the matter keeps 'I . u . ents ·. . avor 0 • IX. ·on· . them alert in friendly rebuttals.

The two students were at Wake ·· · · · Forest participating in the Dixie <9ontinued frQm Page 1) these tw9 classes, and Nixon Classics Debate Tournament, held All three groups sai!l they be- would get 36.

th Colle Th sd Iieved that Nixon would be the at e ge. W: ay. thr~ Republican . Presidential candi- Kennedy was the·. only Demo-Saturday. · crat who could defeat Nixon.

date. . Johnson or Stevenson would run If Nixon and K-eiUledy ran, even with Nixon.

FLATToP SPECIALIST Kennedy would get .49 votes from If Rockerfeller should be nomi-

· Henry Pennington Gives-a haircut .. Designed . with only you fn mind."

· at W •. 4TH ST. BARBER SHOP

liz' Block West of ·Sears · ;I • '

..

Harry Soatherl•nd Clothes Made To Measure

ALTERATIONS 624 w. 4th PA 22013

:nated, he would be defeated by Kennedy, Johnson or StevensQn.

Old Gold Pon Old ~ld and Bl~ck has asked

several students at random whom they would vote for; and why.

MARCUS HESTER, senior of ·Raleigh, says he would vote for Kennedy because "well, I think :it's· sort of an indefinite reason. I think he can. make responsible decisions. l think he's intelligent enough• I reckori! I just like him."

DON SCHOONMAKER, senior of Huntington, N.Y., would vote for Nixon· "because of his poU.ti­eal experience. I think be knows

. 'what be's doing.'' . $' ·s· R' Ew· ARD. $5 JOYCE HUMPHRIES. senior . . · . , of Roxboro, prefers Eiennedy. "I ·

, . · . . . •. · · . ' F()R RETURNING LOS~ ~IGMA PI • . . !~!/~: t:!~ ~=·s a~fe;!Ju:: .. c: ·., . FRATERNIT.Y .pJN TO JOHN ·THOMPSON.< ·sight," she says.

···-··;-,.FIVE; GEORGE· WASHINGTQNS WiLL- EE .YOuRs! ~ ALFlRED BAKER, s_opho}Ilore· ._ _____________ """" _____ ..,.. __ .;... ___ ...J of Lancaster, s. c., says "l think

Wishing All The Students And Faculty Of Wake ·Forest

A Very

MeJ!ry Christrna~-· And

Happy New .. Year Your P~trortage Is Appreci~ted

ELLIS ASHBURN STATIONER, INC. N. Patterson Ave. PA 30715

·If ere's Wishing. • • .TO ALL AT WAKE FOiRJEST

·A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR·. . .

Thanks To Each And Everyone For MakingThis A Merry Christmas For Me. By Your W onderiul Patronage And Co-operation· Tow a:r d s Our Business.

Bruce Harris

• Manager Of ·

COLLEGE GULF ·Service Station

.. ' .·

Nixon is·.the ·best qualified- man in ·some years to •be ·available in a presidential election. His great

· experience in diplomacy will be of· great benefit in coaning years."

Keep Nixon Out JIMMY .BARNHILL, sopho­

more of Whitakers;. 'likes Ken­nedy. "He appears to be the ·strongest Democratic candidate. It's not. that I'm so whole-hearted­ly in favor of Kennedy but that I want above all to keep 'tricky' Dix Nixon out." . ·

EMMANUElL PEGRAM, sen­ior of Rocky Moh~t; would vote fQr Symington. "He's not a Re­:;>ublican.''·

. ROBER.T MULL, senior of Lake Lure, prefers Stevenson. "I fhink that he has prepared himself for the job, not only with his past. experience, but he has made the immediate preparation of the last two campaigns. He has been held, or seems .to have been held, in esteem by Demo­cratic leaders because twice they . have ehosen him to carry the party standards. I don't .think he will •be nominated, however, be­cause he.has the stigma of ·being a loser."

r. FLATTOP SPECIALIST

M. L. Lawing Gives--a haircut "Designed with only you fn mind."

· at W. 4TH ST. BARBER SHOP .

Yz Block W-est of Sears

For- Nice ~hings To Wear And Relaxed Suburban Shopping

, Visit

Thruway Shopping Center

Open Every Night Till 9 Monday Tlireugli Friday

·Students Note Likeness. r=OL=D::GQ=LD=AND=B=LA=CK==M::o:::nda::::y::· De::c::. ::7· ::195::9 ::::P::A::GE=FIVE~ ·· - · PAY A LITTLE MORE ••• LOOK MUCH BE'M'ER

Of W .. ·est lndi•es· And u. s. For the fines~ quality beauty work .•• for' designed hair ada • for styling and permanent waving to suit you and :your

features, try . i

(Continued .:from Page 1) The occasion p1arlCed .&bra­

hams' first visit to "' tli€ United States, Ifill's second. Both w-ere impressed .more. with the similari­ties than· with .the,differences of th€ United States and the West h1dies. · . .

versity students in the West In­dies wear academic gowns," they said. "No-not all :the time--on ceremonial occasions, such as formal dinners, in ·talks with school officials, at matriculation and graduation--any public cere­mony."

"Oh yes, and to class lectures too." ' . Undergraduates wdar red aca­

demic gowns, gradua-tes wear

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"Our clothing is the same-ivy league," they noted, "We have ;rock and roll~ We speak the same English. We have the same sports. The ·social. outlets are similar." -

black. " FOR FINE FOODS As the .tw~ men circulated

about ·the .campus, they wore Tobes-academic g?wns. "All uni-

Wake Cadets Attend Meet At Greenville

Wake Forest ROTC cadets James R. Nance, Jack T. Pender­gr_aph and Fr-ederick M. Tate rep­resented the · :local · Pershing Rifles unit during the weekend at the Fourth Regimental As­sembly of Pershii\g Rifles.

The assembly was beld at Don­aldson Air Force"Base at Green­ville, S; c. · ,

T.he ca'dets. were chosen at the Pershing Rifles formal smoker. Nov. 17. . _ .. . Fol'ty-five rushees attended the

smoker 'along with memberS of. the honorary. military. fraternity

· and guests of the fraternity.

"Sure, . it's a good idea," Ifill ·defenrl€d. " ... helps crea_te an academic atmosphere."

Ifill remarked ·that· Jamaica is "not in the West Indian family­a thousand miles froin .Trinidad and the smaller islands-liar out to itself. This is the greatest barrier to West Indian federa-

, · tion." . Ab1·ahams reluctantly and par­

tially agreed. · Both feel, however, that the

West Indies are moving toward independence.

The two agreed that living cost of ,the two islands contrast sharp­ly.' "Take a· vacation in the West Indies," they suggested. · "Only ~sts about 57 pounds­~120 by plane, $75 by ·boat.''

"Come to Trinidad," urged Ifill. ·"You can stay a month in Trinidad for what it would cost to stay a week in Jamaica." W~en asked to compare the

. debate emphasis at the Univer-

. sity _College ·with Wake Forest both agreed, "There is no com­parison."

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PAGE SIX Monday, Dec. 7, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

~---~DD--------------------

650 On The Dial MONDAY

5:58 Sign On 6:00 ,News 6:05 Personality Prograriling 7:00 News 7:15 G. I. Record Shop 7:30 March Time 7:45 Navy Swings 8:00 Concert Time

10:00 Sports 10:15 Serenade In Blue 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade 12:00 Sign Off

TUESDAY 5:58 Sign On 6:00 News 6:05 Personality Programing 7:00 News 7: 15 Supper Club 7:45 Lawrence Welk 8:00 Concert Time

THURSDAY 5:58 Sign On 6:00 News 6:05 Personality Programing

' 7:00 News ' 7:15 Weekly Forum 8:0D Concert Time

10:00 Eports 10:15 Pat Boone 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade 12:00 Sign Off

FRIDAY 5:58 Sign On 6:00 News 6:05 Personality Programing 7:00 News 7:15 Best Of Broadway 8:00 Concert Time

10:00 Sports 10:15 Here's to Vets 10:30 ·Deacon light Serenade 12:00 Sign Off

Bullard, Smit~ Pass Holidays · AtiFC Meet

Howa,rd Bullard and Vic Smith traveled to New York during the Thanksgiving holidays to attend the Golden Anniversar,Y' Meeting of the National Interfraternity Con­ference. · ·

Bullard is .a member of Kappa Sigma Fraternity and Smith is a I member of Pi .Kappa Alpha. .

Dr.· Edwin G, Wilson, Actiug Dean, Dr. John Nowell and .Mark . Reece also attended the conference.

I _. The Conference, founded in 1909,

· is the advisory body of the national coJJ.ege fraternity system. · · ·

The conference lasted three days, beginning Friday. .

Both Smith and Bullard attended . the conference last year at Atlanta,

·Ga. The Wake Forest Interfraternity

Pet.a· Kn.ight'• TV a~d Ap~liaca Co. ~wa.y Shopping Center a.nd

lfQrthside Shopping Center

RCA and ADMIRAL .. stereo-HiFi headquarters. for ·wihstoJ:!,~Salem .

Open Nightly Till 9 EASY TERMS

CENTRAL CAROLINA MOTOR~, Inc. · The Used Car Sh~wplace Of The South .

The Finest In Used\ .cars Phones: PArk 3·9611 • Night PArk 5;4288

725 W. Fourth S.t.

10:00 Sports 10:15 Guest Star 10:30 Cadence Capers 11:00 Deaconlight 12:00 Sign Off

Concert Time Monday will fea· Council paid their ' fare, with $125 · ture Bach's Brandenburg Concerti betweeh 'them for expenses. -----=-=======::::=========================

d N Speakers on the program of the

No. 3 an No. 4, Tchaikowsky's ut- conference included Dr. Norman COXPHARMACY,INC. WEDNESDAY 5:58 Sign On

cracker Suite, Reubke's Sonata for w-rz.. Organ on 94th Psalm, Franck's 1vincQnt Pea}e, author and minister:

6:00 News Grand Piece Symphonique and ·Mo- __ _:~:'A:f<:D:_:Of:.:._:1R:U=~'TE?_::_:E_:~:_-_··~========~~==~- Lowell Thofuas, radio and television zart's Serenade No. 12. commentator and I:ric A. Johnston,

Tuesday execerpts from Johann .---------------------·------: president. of Motion Picture Asso- : In College Village 6:05 Personality Programing 7:15 Oral Interpretation 7:30 Cafe Boheme 8:0D Concert Time

1 ciation. . Strauss' Die Fledermaus, Debussy's CJJeacs ~ho A'' re GreeR'!.. s I The conference, held at the Wal· Three Images for Orchestra and s Conus' violin Concerto in E minor I dorf 'Astoria Hotel, .included· ds7 will be played. cu.ssion groups on such things as

,. (Just Off Robin Hood Road)

· . PRESCRIP.TIONS - COSMETICS e Complete Camera . And Stationery Depts.

10:00 Sports 10: 15 Army Bandstand . 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade .12:00 Sign Off

Thursday's Concert Time will fea- By DAVE RAWLEY \ IFC operation, pledge training and ture Beethoven's piano Concerto scholarship. .

e ·Prompt Delivery· Service To W~ke }?~rest Area . '

Registered Pharmacists on Duty at all Times · · No. 2, · Three fraternities chose their Sweethearts last week.

Parties were held by most fraternities after the N. C. Lawyers B~aten In First Round

· PA-3-3628. r '

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PA3-'1139 DAY OR NIGHT 314 FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE

LENWOOD AMMONS A. C. MOTSINGER. JR.

AMMON'S ESSO Servicenter Welcome Wake ·p orest Students

And Family

Emergency AAA Service

ROAD s·ERVICE

State basketball game Saturday night. Several men were pinned last week and one . became

engaged. Alpha Sigma Phi .

Elga Loftin has been elected Alpha . Sig Sweetheart.. Bruce Arrowood was elected president of the pledge class. Pete

Stirrup is vice president, .and Rod Abbott, secretary-treasurer. Alumni Jesse Castner, Bill Barr

and ~ick Porter visited .the chap­ter last weekend.

Delta Sigma Phi Susan McGahey, pinned to Norm

Snead, was cih os en Delta Sig Dreamgirl.

Bob Yarbi'oug~ recent;ly pinned Barbar.a Blackmon, Wake Forest coed.

Larry Archer heads this year's pledge project of redecorating the office.

· Kappa Alpha JL'll Phillips became engaged to

Marlot Hayes duringThanksgiving. The annual Rose Ball was held

Friday night in the ballroom of ·sul£ .1\'lcGA.I::l.I!:Y . the Hotel Robert E. Lee:

An open house was held in the chapter room following the Wake . ' Forest-N. C. State basketball game.

Kappa Sigma

A team from · the Wake Forest JOE LAPQHIGK; TENNIS SHOES Law School was defeated in the • HIGH and LOW CUT • BUiLT IN ARCH first roimd of arguments· at the FOR Regional Moot Court Competition B k JL II a· T • a· d . at the University of Richmond, Va., IS 8 ua ' Jlil, enn1•1 _lft ball Nov. 20-21. All law schools in North · · Carolina, South Carolina and Vir- $3 · 99 to' $4 99 ginia were represented at the tour- . !·

1 -, AT · •

nament. I. The Wake Forest team was C()M• u •. ' S' L . s' '

posed. <>f Bill Marshall, R. A. Jones .RIRRe'lf s· ltOe ·, tore and Charles McDaris, all third-year J law students. Prof. E. M. Faris· ac- 419 N. TRADE ST.

companied the team as· adviser. ~===========~~~~~~========~ The Moot Court Competition is sponsored each ,year by the Y oling Lawyers Committee of the New York City Bar Association.

··---------·········~-·-·· I

Junior Year in

POLO . CiRI'LL And Restaurant

CORNER POLO ROAD AND CHERRY ST: EXT. "Buck" Sto'll·er, District Grand Master, recently visited the chapter. , Bobby Robinson rece<'ltly pinned Carol Gwinn of Greensboro. ' Jimmy Lanier has become pinned to JoAnne Flowers, a student at •

Mount Olive Junior College. ·

New York An unusual one-yeat college program Specializing In

Howard Bullard attended the N:ational Inter-Fraternity Council con­vention in New York City during the Thanksgiving holidays.

Pi Kappa Alpha Bob Waddell recently. pinned Linda Lassiter of Baptist Hospital. A party was held after the South Carolina football game at the home

of Alex Marsh at Charlotte. An informal party was held Friday afternoon for brothers and

pledges at Tanglewood Park. An open house was held Saturday night after the N. C. State basket·

ball game. Vic Smith attended the. National

Inter-Fraternity Council convention in New York City during the Thanksgiving :holidays.

Sigma Chi An informal p.arty was held in

the house Friday night. Sigma Pi

Patricia Ann Miller of Woman's College was c h o sen Sigma Pi Sweetheart. She is pinned to Mark Hodges. ·

Bill Tabor recently pinned Robin Shakan, a Duke University sopho, more.

A party was held before the N. C. State basketabll gan;te Satur­day.

On Other Canlpuses ...

Write for brochure to.

• Prof. J. W. Ecerer Wlshlqtan Sqlllrl

i:at111•

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APPLIED MAGNETISM 405·406 Reactions of water~ hair, womenj

Professor D. Juan

10:00-11:00 p.m. Saturday ' TIRES • ACCESSORIES - BATTERIES North Carolina Staie College The professors will be nominated by

1200 Reynolda Road Corner Robin Hood Road The senior class at North Caro- the seniors every year, and will be Examination of\ why men usually use water

PHONE 5·2681 lina State College has proposed ·a selected by committees composed·

:.-------------------------! plan whereby ·an "Oustanding !To· of seniors, according to The Tech-;:========================~ fessor of the Year" will be named. nician, newspaper of the college.

Remember Us For The Finest In Haircuts

OPEN 5 DAYS A WEEK

9 A. M. -9 P. M. 9 A.M. -·6 P. r.t.-- SATS.

LeVAN BROTHERS BARBER SHOP.

CORNER POLO AND CHERRY STS. NEAREST BARBER SHOP TO CAMPUS

Do YQu.Have A<

Sick ·Car? AND DON'T WANT IT FIXED BECAUSE OF EXPENSIVE REPAIR BILLS

T & C AUTO REPAIR CAN REP AIR YOUR CAR AT SUCH A . VERY LOW COS'l'.

Phone Or See One Of The Skilled Mechanics AT

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Pick Up & Delivery "Anywhere" ~n The Qity Limits .,_

. with their hair tpnic. Demonstration that wa­ter causes dried-out pair resembling explosion ip a silo. Practical applications of cvaseline' Hair Tonic; proof that 1Vaseline' Hair Tonic replaces oil that water removes from hair. Definitive interrelationships of water to 'Vase­line' Hair Tonic to hair to ·women to things in general. Laboratory evide~ce :or. reverse magnetism between women and messy hair. Positive correlations betweeri alcohol and dry hair, cr~am tonics and clogged-up hair (~ag­mop's Third Law). Required b~ore Christmas vacation.

Prerequisite: JtNIMAL MA.GNETISM 209-204. Materials: one 4 oz. bottle ~vauline' Hair Tcmic

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$·10 Offered By WFDD Radio Station WFDD will give Students will · leave their entry

$10 to. the first per.son-who can -iden- blankS at the informati<>n desk <>r tify "the three wise men,'.' a · riew with an annou~cer on duty at the contest which begins· tonight. station. Mrs. A.- L. Ayrock and Mrs.

. The three wise men are all-pro- George Griffin· will take the blanks :fessor.S or administration officials. at the desk from 10:30 a. m. "'to They .will speak at various times noonanyday this week . .Announcers over the air; giVing clues to their o:n duty w:ilt take the blanks fl'om identity. Program director Myron 6 p. m, to midnight. Hafetz ·bas said that the sound of· The winner will receive a prize the voice will be the ma4t giveaway. of $10. The , fii'st person tO<. get all . The anonymous. ~oiceS' ·will be three voices' identity eorrect will . he.ard .each -day 'Monday through

1

be declared winner. T.he winner will Friday several times from .6.:30 to be announced during chap~l' Tues-8 p.m. and 10:30 p. m. to nudnight. -day. · ·

. . - . . I . -

THRE~ WISEMEri CONTEST-.:---"' I · Nam·e __ ..., _______ .:._ ____ ·--------.... ~-=--~----..: _____ .. , Class ____________ .:;·--.------------------------- I , ·school Address --------...:-----------...,-------.:.~-

1 think that : , . . . · · j. · Wise Man No. 1 is ______________ _: __________ -. .

. Wise Man No. 2 is -...:------------·-------~---[ ,, Wise Man No. 3 is-------------------------.- -- -- -\-- ~ - - -.- --. -

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Dec. 7, 1959 . PAGE SEVEN

NEW ASIA RESTAURANT, Inc. Chinese Dinners That Are The Talk Of The Town

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Jewelrr By Trifarri 106 W. 4th ST. •

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· Odeii~MaHhewsMotors DeSoto Plytnouth _Borgward Fiat

24 Hour Wrecker . Senice · Also General Repair I BodJ Work

I. ALFRED DELLER, counter-tenor, ebats at fn~ssion with the other members of the trio. Roberi Conant. harpsichordist. and DesmOild Dup~. lutiat. The bi" performed at Wake Forest College Wedaesd117 u the second in the Chamber Music Series Con~~

638 W. Fourth St.

Fritts Motl!r C~mpany·. 967 Brookstown Ave. .PA 3~1677

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W~~hing. • Waling • Lubricating

Allen Equipment 2'743 Reynolda· Rd. . PA 5-95'76

yv ant To Be N·eatly Dre_a,'sed For The Fall and Winter Activities?

(!OTO

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McGREGOR and PURITAN CARDIGAN SWEATERS SPORT SHIRTS and TAYLOR-ltU.DE -SHOES

Corner of 4tb and Cherry S~. ·:.

~lfred Deller Trio

Program Is ·'Unique' _Experience N 0 WI·· 2 Stores To Sene Yau ••• REZNICK'S DOWNTOWN

440 N. LIBERTY ST. . RECORDS - INSTRUMENTS - JEWELRY

Wachovia Official To Give Talk On Nassau, Bahamas

Nassau and the Bahamas-that's Mark Reece, director of student the subject for the next Student affairs, thinks the talk may be illus­Union-sponsored lecture at Wake trated w.ith a film. He has said Forest College. that those students interested in . . Richard Anderson, manager . of taking a Student Union-sponsored the travel bureau of Wachovia Bank trip to Nassau during the spring anti Trust Co., will speak Tuesday holidays Will meet after the talk. on Nassau and the Bahamas. The So far, he· says, the trip plan talk will begin at 8:30 p. m. in East ihas had .. good response·" from stu-Lounge o.f · Reynolda Hall. dents. "I think we are definitely

- ' going," he said.

..

REZIIOI'S· NORTHSIDE . NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

RECORDS - INSTRUMENTS -AND A NEW LINE OF SPORTING GOODS

YOUR NEAREST DRUGSTORE Away From Traffic Plenty of Parking Space

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OLD TOWN PHARMACY 3704 Reynolda Road WAbash 4-9<130

Boys' ·Cam' p· ·Jobs He ~s ~ge<l all students t? co?-· tact him m the Dean's offtce if ;==============::;:=====:;; op· en To Students they are. inte:ested _1n going .. ·'!be tnp Willl begm at Rale1gb April 14. Students will leave by

'Telephone PA ~6032 Or PA 4-9887

El Cam.Rey RESTAURANT

THE REYNOLDs BUILDING 4th & Main ,Sts., WjDston-Saleui, N. C. . .

:Yeur Place For: . . P A.RTIES - :DINNERS -·DANCES - B.ANQlJETS

W. T.GRANTCO. · "Your Friendly Fllnily ·store"

USE OUR CHARGE-IT PUN . .

W. T.GRANTCO. Located AI

Northside Shopping Canler

Several positi<Jns fon teachers and train there, arnving at Miami, Fla .• students are now .open at camp the next -day. The ship will sail at ~equoy~h nem: Asheville. Summer 4:30 p, m. for Nassau, where stu­Jobs will proVIde a salary, board dents wii.ll have two -days to explore and room. on their own or with guides.

Applications should be made to Cost of the trip has been esti~ Walt<>n Johnson, Box 8, Weaver- mated from $82 t() $100. Reece says ville, N. C. that because so rnany·students have

Qualifications for the job include already asked abOut the trip, it is a ~minimum age limit of 19, good likety. that Wake Forest will Charter health, "good habits-no. smoking, a special bus, leaving from Wake no dninking," and "a positive out- F<>rest. look on life." The trip is being spcmsored by

Executive and administrative poo the University of Florida student sitions are · o.pen to teachers. Stu- union. Sch:ools in eight states in tbe dents may apply. for jobs as in- Association of College Unions, Re­structors, cabin counselors and busi· gion Four, will send 300 students ness positions. on the trip.

PORTABL£S • ELECTRIOS •-STANDARDS The Typewriter

Showroom Of The South

Kelly Typewriter Co. 618 W. 4th ST.

''TYPEWRITER IS OUR liiDDLE N..Al\IE"

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~ -<· PAGE EIGHT l';l()nday, Dec. 7, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Season Begins For. Big F Olfr Cage . · '.' "'. ·_ .... T·' . ~eams

Duke, UNC, Maryland And Wake_Eye 'fitle

By ZENO MARTIN Basketball has taken over the

spotlight in the Atlantic Coast Con­ference, and the 1959-60 season pro­mises to be the most exciting in the conference's seven year history. Preseason predictions figure that the fight for the ACC title to be decided next March in the tourna­ment will be a four team battle be­tween North Carolina, Duke, Mary­land, and Wake Forest. No one, however, has ruled out Everett Case's State team, despite the fact that it is missing four starters from last year's ACC championship team.

Probably every team in the ACC will be improved, with the excep­tion of State. Clemson, South caro­lina and Virginia have been fore­casted to finish in the bottom three positions in the eight team confer­ence. All of the three are always rough on their home playing courts, and each will probablY' furnish a few surprises before the season's .. end.

,---~-----A- r .... •.. :.- ·.

-'~i- ., ~ ' ... ·-:3--4 ., '··.•. . .

: . . . '

ENGLEHARDT

This season will mark the debuts of two coaches in ACC competition. Duke's sophomore-studded surpris­ers of last year will be handled this year by Vic Bubas, the former as­sistant coach at North Carolina State. The youthful and able Bubas inherits a team that 'has all of its first five leading scorers returning, including All-ACC choice Carrqll Y oungkin. The other new mentor r:.·;:;r.:::,.;~·::;!:t@t.'ffi'f#JNS!Jll~~:r;.:s"'!.:-t::;~:'·~-~-:l

Davidson Tickets

Wo_lfp.ac~ May· Spring Surprises This Year

* * ''* '*· .'* f" "' ---- . * - ' New Coach, New.'System

Blue-- ~DeWls ·Are · 'ifeanl . To Watch Despite 'the· <>pening game· 1o$s, to added.: height-; makes matters ·.even pre-seaspn practice was John. Cant­

Georgia Tech, Duke University-:-wlll worse for oppos.illg. clubs.· He's a well, a sophomore from Wisconsin. be a team to watch in ·the ACG·and fine shooter, good rebounder, and Another promising soph figures to in the nation,this winter:~The ·Blue if Bubas can set a fire under him be Buzz Mewhort, six-foot-four-inch Devils; starting their · .. first ·-year to get .him· to play: 40 minutes of forward who ·was a leading scorer under new head coach' Vic·--BUbas, basketball without"tiring; 'lie can.:OO .for the Duke Blue Imps last winter. may take a while .to get adjti.St~ one. of the beSt. . The teams to beat in the ACC to the new style of play·1hat ,,th-ey - Leading the Blue Devils'. reserves -figilre . to be Carolina, Wake · For­will be using this year. ·Once: they is Fred--Kast, an occasiolial ~arter est, Maryland, an.d State. Bubas·de­adapt themselves' to this neW'·~~ last year atforward. '-Kast .. stands six clines to predict the pos5i!>le fUture tern, the Dukes-_,will give any·team feet··seven -inches··and--is -a .gooci- for his own club.- but it can--be all that it can halidle. · l shooter but is only so-so ''on ,de- safe to say that ·he _knows that· the ·

Last season -the Blue DeviiS->were fepse and gets push~ aroJUid by club that he inherited is expected · a sophomore:team·and''showed'prQ.~ lm1.aller men. He can be counted to be in the thick of the champion­mise of ·greatness. for 'the' nert"two ·on 'for ·:goOd ·:spot .. performances, ·ship race .in' the conference -. • • seasons. Lastc. ye-ar's ··club i•Jtad-'~ a however. . · · - - and he'll be trying to put' them on 13-12 record,\and-·four· of 'the:·:fiv:e Bubas' most pleasant-surprise in top. · starters. are·--returning:.-The -club"Will .. · · · ' be· -led ·by iast:- year'.s ··top seorers, Carroll Youngkin. and 'Howard'Hurt. In Youngkin,"Bubas'bali'one of·'the outstanding ·big men in the -Soiith; he averaged. 16.0 points per· game last year ... Hurt,· this· year's eap­tain, leads the Blue Dukes' floor play' and. rank~ second' to~ y-oung. kin in Duke scoring last WiSter, averaging 15.7 points.

Everyone Back Despite the fact·that nearly every­

one is back from the-~19ss:59. start­ing quintet, new coach Bubas re­mains quietly conservative. His

will be Bob Stevens, who took over at South Carolina following Walt Hambrick's resignation. Stevens comes to the Gamecocks fro m Michigan State, wllere he had been serving as assistant coach.

Feeling sorry for coach Everett ing with Englehardt at the other chief apprehension is the club's de­Case's North carolina State bas- guard. Of these four Hoadley will fensive ability; which he calls only : ketball future this year is some- probabiYt become the leading of- fair. The -fact that the team has·.! thing that the close observer of bas- fensive threat. The six-foot-six-inch play~ together now for two Y.~ ketball in this area hesitates to do. Raleigh junior is a fine shooter lS Clted by. Bubas as the clubs

Tickets for the Wake Forest- The old Gray Fox of the Wolfpack and jumper, and if he can control strongest· pom~. . • . • · · ~ Davidson basketeall. game went on is not used to losing, and despite an oft-times erratic temper, he In the startmg fiVe .tha .wmter , distribution to students this morn- the fact that· four of his regulars may be the big scorer on the Wolf· :O,uke. expects to. go With· SIX-f~t- : ing. The game has been set for from last season's ACC and Dixie pack five. mne-mch Doug 1\:i;itler and Hurt-at ' Thursday at Memorial Coliseum. It Classic championship team are Darkhorse on the Wolfpack roster forwards, Youngkin at center, .. and will be the last home game for the missing, no one thinks that ole Ev is big John Key, a six-foot-eight· guards· John Fcye and new'?~~r

A glance at the conference re­veals that Frank McGuire at North Carolina will probably have the team to beat. If the temporary loss

Deacons before Christmas. will be left out in the cold. inch soph who .is one of the best Jack ~ullen. Mullen saw only. limit- · Case has, called this year's squad shooting big men around. Key's big- ed- action fo~ the freshmen team .

"a fair team in an ordinary league." gest trouble is his fragility under last year, bemg out _for the most He realizes that one cannot easily the backboards. He weighs only 185 ~art of the seaso~ With a knee In· . replace players like John Richter, and just doesn't like to mix it up Jury. But g~eat thmgs art: expected Lou Pucillo, George Stepanovich under the boards. If Case can make from the f1Ve-foot-eleven-mcb play­and Bob MacGillvray. But he also this boy mean,. many of his prob- m_aker who played several years .

~~:·~:.:·;~·::: .. :;1·:~:~::!::?.:.::·~~:·:~:l~::t:~;;::::I.:!.~~:~~:~r:1:.rr:::--::-.:~·;:;~:~ of starters Doug Moe and Dick Kepley ·gets the team off to a bad most likely to spoil the Tar Heels start, ·however, it can be given even dreams of the ACC title. With the more than the predicted "serious addition of sophomore whizzes Len challenge" by Wake Forest, Duke Chappell and Billy Packer. the Dea­and Maryland. Depending on Har- cons should be terrific by March. vey Salz, York Larese, and Lee Returning starters George Ritchie Shaffer as a nucleus foe the team and captain Dave Budd will team in early season, the Tar Heels with Chappell and Packer to give should not be hurting very much. what may well be Wake Forest's

Wake Forest can be the team finest team.

Fooling Nobody

McGuire Picks Duke sider themselves fortunate to be in McGuire's plight of having to find two boys to add to this threesome.

Larese is the real big gun, with one of the finest jump .shots in collegiate basketball.

McGuire picks his team, along \Vith Wake Forest an~ Maryland, to be Duke's chief contenders. He says that a 9-5 record will be good enough to top the ACC this season,

realizes that -his Wolfpack, by. being lems might be solved. With_ Norfolk s .Navy team before too lightly regarded, will be able Sophomores make up exactly a com1ng to ?uke. • to spring quite a few surprises. half of State's' 14 man squad. Be- . Kistler ~rowing This year's squad has talent in sides Key the Wolfpack- have two Tl_le l:ng surprls~ f()r th~ Blue abundance, even though they do other first year men on the varsity Devils ~ b~ Ki.Stl~r, -who has.·. not have much experience. · who may break .into the State start- grown another mch this year. Last

Case's Material ing five at any time. They are Russ year he ~ot off the floor better than What does Case have in the way Marvel, a six-foot-six-inch forward -a_n_:y_o_n_e_m__,~::_!le_c..:._o_nf_er_en.,..-ce_;_, _an_d_·_tb_e _______________ BUR:--_T ______ :-----::-:-----

of material? .. from Case's old~- territory, Gary, First he :has- the lone returning Ind., and Anton Muehlbauer, a

starter, Dan Englehardt. Engle- guard that Case got from rival hardt, who is the team captain this coach Frank McGuire's old home­season, is a little six foot guard place, Brooklyn. with plenty of finesse and a real Another boy not to be forgotten desire to win. This desire is some- is Stan Niewerowski, another Brook­thing inherent in Case's players, lynite who has not yet lived up to and what they lack in talent is the expectations that State had for often made up with an abundance him. If he does get started, Case of the "will to win." can rest much easier.

The others who will be expected ·The State ·squad has depth, in to form the first five for State, at one sense. Nearly all.of the top 10 least for the first of the season, players on Case's squad are of near are Don Gallagher and Bruce Hoad- equal ability, and he will be able ley at the forwards, Bob DiStefano to substitute Without losing any at ~enter, and. Bob McCann team- talent. In the :first games of the

DiXie -Classic To ~Be :Dec. 28-30 William Neal Reynolds Coliseum Annually four strong inter.secUon- no team outside of the· Big Four

at Raleigh is the site for the- eleven- al. teams are "chosen to face the has ever won ~e ~itle. Host N. C. th 1-0 . · Cl . b k tball Btg- Four teams of -State, Duke, State ha.s the lionS< share of. past

annua ooe assic as e North Carolina, and Wake. Forest. tiUes, having won all but. three of tournament, a holiday. tourney gen- This year another· strong field of the Classics. North Carolina has erally regarded as the ChristmaS outside~ teams •indicates ·that the won it twice, while Duke has won World Series of collegiate-·basket· 1959 Classicwill:be"one of-the best. it once in the 11 year bistory. ball. The Classic is a three day, Invited to be in tbe tournament ·In first round action Wake Forest twelve game affair that will be· held l'bis year are the teams from Holy plays Holy CrosS in the opening Dec. 28-30. North Carolina state Cross, Minnesota, the University of game. other contests' are :Dayton­College. plays host for the three day Utah -aild DaYtOn University. · S-tate, Carolina-Minnesota, 'and event. In the history of the~e ·Classic Duke-Utah.

Over at Chapel Hill Coach Frank McGuire at the University <>f North Carolina picks Duke as the ACC favorite this year, but he's not fool· ing anyone. Despite the temporary absence of Doug 1\Ioe and Dick Kepley, both starters on last year's club, the Tar Heels are going to have a fine club. With Moe and Kepley both able to return by sec­ond semester, the Carolina club should be the team most likely to succeed State, last year's ACC titlist.<l.

Kepley, the six-foot-nine-inch cen­ter on last year's quintet, suffered a badly sprained ankle in the first practice of this season. He had to ihave an opevation on it, and it is predicted that the earliest that he might be able to return would -be.: for the Dixie Classic in late Decem-

Maryland Is Strongest Out-side Big-.Four· ber. .

One of the leading contenders for All-American honors this season was to be the Tar Heels' six-foot­six-inch ace, Doug Moe. Moe, how­ever, has been sidelined fo~ the first semester of the .'leason due to academic deficiencies-namely too many class absences. Therefore it will be February before the Tar Heels will have his services again.

Without ;Moe and Keepley, Mc­Guire is faced with the task of find~ ing adequate replacements for the early season contests. McGuire has said thlit he does not believe that the Tar Heels are up to the chal· lenge that their schedule affords them in December. Kansas, Kansas State. and Kentucky Invitational, and the Dixie Classic are all on tap during this month. That would be a large order for the team at :full strength.

Moving into the starting spots that ihave been temporarily vacated by Moe -and Kepley are Ray Stanley and Hugh Donahue. Stanley, who at six feet four inches is one of the best jumpers .in the conference, was the ACC's best sixth man last year. He will replace Moe at for­ward. The replacement at center, Donohue, saw action in 11 varsity games last winter. He stands six feet eight inches and weighs 211 pounds; so the Tar Heels don't give up any height. To be alternated at that position with Donahue will be SQph Jim Hudock. Still there is no experience at. the post, and center will be the Yankee Tar Heels• weak­est position . • . until Kepley re-turns. '

Forming a strong nucleus for Mc­Guire~& club which has represented the South so ably in recent years are a couple of Erooklynites, York Lar~ and Harvey Salz, and a -p~_ylv.auian. Lee Shaffer. Other ~ m tb.e ACC would con·

It is generally agreed that, of the remaining four teams in the Atlantic Coast Conference outside the Big Four teams, the University of Mar.yland will be t-he only one t-hat can challenge seriously for the ACC title. And the Terrapins are given a good chance to regain the title that they won in 1958.

Bud Millikan at Maryland will have top scorers Charlie McNeil, Jerry Bechtle and Al BWlge back from last year's squad. That takes care of one forward, one guard and center in the starting five. Of the three McNeil is easily the most ex­plosive, as well as the most incon­sistent. He can have 20 points at halftime and fail to score in the last 20 minutes. If the big six-foot:. six-inch l?enior ca~ start going stead­ily, he will be the Terps' big man to stop.

If Pete Krukar. recovers satisfac­torily from a preseason groin in­jury, he will be the other starting guard. Others who will see action at the ·guard position are Jerry Sh~a­ha-n and Bruce -Kelleher. The re­maining starting post, the other forward slot, will be manned by either Bob McDonald or Bob Wil-

upsets, and this year should be no Despite -the new and colol'ful exception: · tack Stevens will have a hai-d time

Last year Virginia finished a sur- fi~ing five ball. players· from his prising fifth in the ACC, but· grad­uation losses have hurt -tbe Cava• present personnel-who can',l'Wl th~ liers ·considerably. ·eoach Billy -Me- offe~ the way he ·wants it. Lead­Cann has his little ace Paul Adkins ing thUI year's returners are back -t() quarterback the team. His Hudson and Mike callaban, a other veteran who can -he counted 1e of rangy forwards. ·No one on is John Haner, a six-:foot-four- quite 5U1"t' who· will make up inch forward. GameCock starting five, not

son. McDonald is six feet seven in- . Weak· ReboulidiDg Stevens himself. ches. and Wilson six feet ten inches, The ·Cavaliers are weak in re- The man tG··w.atch on the'SCJ\&adl:-so the Terps should ~ <>ne of the bounding strength this· season. ·With can ~well·-~>-'S<>phomore -Art -vnJ:U~···" strongest ACC teams off the back- the loss of the massive· Herb Busch nant. ··a ··Hildebran, N. C., boards. the ·Virginians will find it much who"l~ ·the:·freshman ·team-~

Lack Of Depth harder to ·clear -the ball off_ the year 1D sconn'! and rebounding. Millikan's chief problem -will be backboards. After Willi-am .and Mary ~~~ work_~t ,~~ for

his lack of experienced deptl;i. Be- beat them in the first game, Me- cocks---~,,~. biear .. · e- -~ yond the fir.'lt eight players there is Cann noted that W&M "killed us hi"' :' "po ·:cm.s.~hse.:._ut-a great drop-off in experi~nce and off th~ boards all night." ;w>t p tiDl~tcanh t co~,:~-bou,,t·": · te - · lin • o~ -rappe.ars.. a an.T ....... g .a -a talep.t. The del~b~r~.. style that The starting . eup_ now compns- seventh or eighth place finish in the· Maryland uses -~nnmzes the foul es Haner -and Walt Densmore at rugged ACC is at least a year away. problems, however. -H the Terps be- forwards, Bob .Mortell at ·center, . . come consistent, -they will be a de- and A<Ikins and sophomore Tony finite -top C()ntender.' Laqui:ritano· at the guards. La:quinta-

Clemson should be-better than its no m~y ·be a surprist; -.s~ fer the ·a-16 record of last season. Coach Cavahers, but .the Vll"ginia attack . Press Maravich: -has a fine ball- is still. concentrated on· its little player in George· Krajack and some plaJQDaker' Adkins. . much needed exPerience in his first Virginia cannot be counted· out,

_ five. Teaming with Krajack at for· esPecially when it is playing in its ward for the Tigers. will be -brother bal;k yard at Charlottesville. It has Ed Krajack. Don Carver and Walt one of the biggest home court ad­Gibbons are other veterans slated vantages . in the conference while

·to see action in the front line. playing in-its antiquated Memorial Gibbons also can play center, arui Gym: Last year Virginia beat North

will see action along with Earl ~- Carolina', Maryland, and Duke while well and Frank Clark at the pivot. playing on its own home court • . • The guard positions will be manned and can be looked for to do more of by little Dutch Shample and either the same this season. Choppy Patterson or Bobby ·Benson. USC Last

Maravich Picks Wake Pieked at the bottom of the eight Maravich labels Wake Forest as team Atlantic Coast Conference

the team most likelY' to be the one race tilis year has been the Uni­on the top of the ACC heap. He versity of South . Carolina. The looks for the other Big-Four teams Gamecocks will be playing 'under .. to be the others that have a cha~ce new coach Bob Stevens, who came to gain the title. As for his own from an assistant coaching·. job at team, he regards a fifth or sixth Michigan State. stevens plan to in­place finish as a big improvement sert, a -new attack at SoUth Carolina, for the Tigers. However, the Tigers with an emphasis on-running ••• have always bee~-:able to spring a ·~reiined:-fa.St--break.'' _

...

I I T

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'>

I I

'. ,.

Y.l E.WI·N.G the DE'ACS

A characteristic ingredient of recent Wake Forest basketball teams,· a tight defense, w~. lacking in the Deacons'. opening game with Ohio State University last week and its absence was the main reason for the Deacs' dropping the 77-69 decision. Despite the defensive lapses, . the Deacons stjll might have won the game if their rebounding -and Sh<>oting . had not .dr:Opped · pff so' badly jn the second half. ·' . ·

, The Deacons led for nearly all of. the first 23 minutes of the game, having a 42-37 haJftinie edge. Early in the second half, however, Coach Bones McKinney~s big men-Len Chappell, Jerry Steele; and Dave Budd-got into. foul trouble; Chappell and Steele had three fouls, while Budd llad four going into the last 10 minutes.

It is hard in any conference to play at a diJsadvantage in the f<1Ul situation, b-11t it is doubly hard while p],ayi~g a Big Ten . team <>D its·

· home court. In the' Midwest' the play under the ·backboards. is con­siderably rougher than 1n the East and South, where only a minimum. contact, by comparison, is allowed. The reason foJ; the differences in play. :is due to the looser interpretation of :q1any rules by officials in the Midwest. . 1 • •

Rebounding Weakened •• I

For this reason the Deacs. 'were in difficulty, serious difficulty, when the fouls on. the big men began to mount up. Wake was in a predicament where it had to play under the backboards with: some degree of con­servatiJsm and merely had to absorb Ohio State's pushes and s1loves withoUt. 311y effort to retaliate.

When 'a team's reboltridiil:g strength is so severety. ·handicapped, it often fi!W.s itself in a P;Osition where . it can only get one shot at the · basket. In the second half'Wake.-Fofest was only getting one shot at the, basket. Wherea8 in the ftrst haif..th~ I>eacs shot a fine 48·per ceni from the floor, tlley cotiici onij manage a . meager thirty per cent in the second half. For over .st:it ·and one-half minutes in the. early 'part of the second ·half,. Wake went without a field goal. It was during this time that Ohio State caught up with and passed the Deacons for good ..•

. Most of the crowd. clime ~~t to see the ihighiy touted Jerry. Lucas ptay his first val:'Sity' game for the Buckeyes, . with the game being billed as a Lucas-Chappell duel. Both ,{if _the sophomores, who were two of the most highiy regarded high;, s_choqi ~gers in the country a couple of years back, played below theii capabilities in the game and showed opening game jitters. · · · · . . . ·, If Lucas is everybody's All-American aS a ·sophomore, ·he S1J!e1y concealecf it nicely in 'the .o~ne~. He· rebounded well, .-although the official statistician evid(mtly' drew about 10 of the 28 rebounds credited to lrlm out <~f a lb.at, foi: he did n~t get over 18, at the very most.

, , Little Men Spar.k · Deacs • -•• While -everybody in , the standS ·vias trying to focus on Lucas and

ch:appell, Wake~s Billy Packer began stealing the show in the first half. The dandy Deacon, smallest man on the court at five feet nine inches, connected on six of ih·is first nine field goal attempts and sh<>wed the Ohioans sorne ·dazzling 'ball handling. It his first varsity game is any indication, Packer can b_ecome the best little man in the seven year history of the Atlantic Coast Conference. It's a cinch that ihe is goi-ng·

·to be Wake's crowd-pleaser extra<~rdinary for the nen few years, while being an effective Door leader as well. In the first half of tlie Ohio State' game Bones McKinney did 'not Call a single timeout; that indi­cates the confidence that he places in· the jUdgment of the sophomore .•.

. •Chappell had an off night shooting, but he was effective in reb~>und­ing and in holding down Lucas. Heralded Lucas scored six field goals and four free throws for 16. points; however five of the six goals from the Door :were of the follow .up or tap variety, wihile only one field goal was ma'de out from the basket. From the way that 'Chappell handled himself against Lucas, it is apparent that he is at least on equal foating with the Buckeye. Chappell has more strength and better outside shots, . while Lucas .appeared the better jumper and maneuverer underneath.

,The Lucas-Chappell duel never actually took p~ace at Columbus this year, but next season· when the two meet again here in Winston-Salem, it should surely be a battle worth watching. Both could be potential candidates for All-American honors by that time. . . 1

Wake Forest got a ·fine performance from . senior guard George Ritchie, the Chattaroy, W. Va. jumpshooter who .really. hit a torrid streak in the second half to keep the Deacons in the ball game. Ritchie connected for 10 points in a period of two minutes, hitting on five field goals in succession. Ritchie wound up with 20 points, high for both teams. :.

ACC Basketball Notes •.•

... Going into t!ie game' with North Carolina State .last Saturday, · Coach Bones McKinney had never won a game· again~t a member of

the Big Four during the two y~ars that he has been head1 bask~tball

· · eoach for, the Demon Deacons. Up to Saturday's contest the Deacons had dropped 16 consec).ltive Big Four games: ..

. . . In tlie six year history of· the Atlantic Coast Conference W.,ake -Forest bas had the best team and individual foul shooting for five of the six seasons of ACC basketball. Last year the Deacs' Dickie Odom won the individual championship, while Wake was also first as a team.

. . : Wake. Forest is the only Big· Four team that has not won the · Dixie Cl~ic, the "Christmas World Series" of basketball Duke :has

won it once North Carolina twice, and North Carolina State has won the remail!l~g six titles. A nsiting team has never won the champion­ship.

. . . Wake's basketballers have a chance to get back in the viot<lry column out in Ohio in late January, when the Deacons journey to play Dayton University: and the University. of Toledo. Dayton is also on~ of the four intersectional teams in the Dixie-Classic this December ...

• . . This weekend two of the Big Four teams will play host to a couple 1 of powers from the· Midwest. North Carolina and North Caxo­lina State face Kansas and Kansas State Universities on Friday and Saturday nights at Raleigh. Victories by the ACC teams would do much to boost th~ conference's prestige in national basketball circles.

Sunday, Mond'ay and Tuesday

Two: Sen~sational·· Hits! ZACHARY SC01T - MARCIA HENDERSON

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CE-NTER THEATRE "

Deacons ·Lose ' '

lnReho:tmding, · Weak Defense

·Ohio State's Buckeyes caught fire nrldway in the second half and r.al­·Iied to defeat the Demon· Deacons of Wake. Forest, 77-69 in the sea­son's opener for both teams. The :tieacs, who led 42-37 at the ·half, ran ·into a long dry spell at the same time that Ohio State began t~ start hitting; Wake werit from 17 minutes, 15 seconds to 10 minutes, 45 seconds · remaining in the se'c­ond- half without a' field goal. Dur- . ing this time the Deacs lost their halftime advantage, and Ohio State forged ahead for good.

In the fir~t half the Deacons con­nected on 48 per ·cent of their shots, · while the Buckeyes could only.hit 36 per cent. The scoring for both teams at halftime was led by little Billy Packer, Bethlehem, Pa. sophomore guard, who had .12 points. Packer cooled somewhat in the second· half and wound up ·with 18 for the

()LD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Dee. 7, 1959 PAGE NINB

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~ I L . OUtside Shots Weak GEORGE RITCHIE, guard for Wake Forest, was high !scorer for both I xpre· ssway· anes Obi~ State, playing its first game teams in the Deacons tangle Tuesdl!T with Ohio State. The Wake senior . : , , , . . w.ith its highly regard~d sophomore got 20. poiDts, 10 of them on consecutive field goals within less than two center Jerry Lucas, was unable in ,'•LANES OF THE CHAMPIONS" the finst atalf to .hit the outside shots minutes. ________ :_=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-J that the Wake Forest zone defense Joe Roberts.' Nowell paced the Buck­forced ·them -to take. Lucas parti- eye scoring with 18 points, many cularly was off in his shooting and coming on the fast br~ak that h~ had dnly one field goal and one led. The six-foot-six-inch Negro for­free throw for thi'ee points at the ward, Roberts, was even m or e intermission.. · troublesome. He rebounded and

Most of the 10,000 spectators wlb.<l shot ·better thlll). .anyone on the court came to .Ohio State's massive Field while the Ohioans were taking ad· House were there specifically for vantage· of the ·Deacons' temporary the purpose of seeing Lucas debut scoring famine early in the second in varsity competition. In the tirst half. half he was ou~c~red nine points When the Deaco-ns finally broke· to three· -by ?PPOSing: center Len out of their scoring dearth, it was Chappell, but rn the second half he George Ritchie Packer's running ~eld Chappe~ score!~ while tally- mate at guard, 'who took charge of lJ!g 13 to WUld. up ~tb 16 for the , the scoring burden. This burden mght. Rebounding-wiSe LU:cas a!so Ritchie- assumed almost altogether had an edge. He was credited With for a short while, .as lle tallied five 28 to Chappell's ·1~. . consecutive field goals to keep the

Backbreakers ·, Buckeyes from pulling farther away. The players who broke the Dea- Ritchie wound up with 20 points .

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PAGE TEN Monday, Dee. '1, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

WF To Meet Davidson Thursday At Coliseum

Bones McKinney's basketball Deacons get their next test Thursday night at Winston-Salem's Coliseum, when the Davidson Wildcats come to face the Deacs. This will be the Deacons' last home game until Jan. 4, when they travel north next week to play games with the University of Maryland, (;eorge Washington 1-------------....::... University and the University of Virginia.

The Wildcats of Coach Tom Scott are faced with a rebuilding prob­lem, as they lost four of the regu­aars from last year's squad. Only six :foot-four inch forward Bill Shinn of Raleigh is back this year.

Campus Play In Basketball Gets Started

In its first two games Davidson Intramural obasketball action be­won over Pfeiffer College and lost gan last week in both the Frater­to the University of Tennessee. nity and Independent Leagues. In

The Deacs are expected to count- Fraternity League play scores er with the same starting lineup were: Theta Chi 21, Lambda Chi that faced Ohio State and N. C. 12; Delta Sig 31, Alpha Sig 6; PiKA State. It consists of Dave Budd 151, Sigma 1Pi 27; Sig Ep 46, KA 33; and Jerry Steele at forwards, Len 1 Sigma Chi 31. Kappa Sig 27. Chappell at center, and George In the Independent League there· Ritchie and Billy Packer at the are 27 :beams divided into three guards. divisions. There will be round-

In its openi,ng game a 77-69 loss robin play in each d~vision, with to nationally-ranked Ohio State, the winners playing off f{)r the Ritchie and Packer were Wake league championship. Forest's o.f:fensiye guns with 20 and Fraternity ·bowling goes into the 18 points respectively. Budd, how- final round tonight with Kappa ever, made five of seven :field ·sigs meeting the Sigma Pi's for the goal attempts to have the best title. Third place was won .by Kappa night, percentage-wise, from the Alpha in the double elimination floor. Chappell was the Deacs' tournament. Jeading rebounder in his first The intramural swimming meet varsity game, a position that he was held last week, with Kappa will occupy for the most part of the Alpha winning. Four new intra-

. games of the next three years. mural records were set; Bill San-Last year at Davidson Wake ford in the 50-yard free style and

Forest won a tight 56-52 decision, in the 100-yard free style claimed but in Thursday's game the Deacs two of them while swimming :for will be a heavy favorite. Gametime Kappa Sigma, while Jim Aber­is 8 p. m., with a preliminary game crombie of Kappa Alpha and Larry between the freshman squads of Archer of Delta Sigma Phi set new ihe two schools preceding the var- marks in the 50-yard back and sity contest. breast strokes respectively.

Harriers End· '59 Season

BOBBY ALLEN, Wake Forest halfback, was a valuable man for the Deacons this seaSon. Allen led the Atlantic Coast Conference in p~ receiving. He snagged 25 passes for 462 yards and an average 18.5 yardage per catch.

'Defeated Selves'

A:men Happy WithY ear By FRED WARDLAW wick, the Deacons had :the leading .

Wake F{)rest's cross country team recently finished its season with a 3-6 record matching 1958's record exactly. Deacon coach Bill Jordan is pleased with the outeome, and looks forward to a better sea­son next year with the addition of two sophomores, Bob Dorsett and Jeff Mitohlner.

Coach' Paul Amen, Wake Forest's pass receiver in the conference. Al­football mentor, described his len led all ACC ends with 25 re-

.,. ceptions for 462 yards and an 18.5 the season. Jordan placed sixth in fourth year at the Deacon helm as yard average per catch.

Biggest loss from this year's squad will be captain Sam Jordan, :the Deacons' number one runner who won six of nine meets during

the Atlantic Coast Conference "V(!ry- pleasing .. We were not The other ·vital factor noted by tournament. The other Wake bar- stopped a single time this year." Amen that contributed to the rier who consistently ran well this Amen pointed out that in the success of the '!double b2rrel" pas-fall was Warren Bloodworth, who sing offense was the tremendous will be back again next season. Deacs' 6-0 loss to Tulane Wake tecti 1 S ad b th

After the regular season Sam Forest "stopped themselves. We pro on g v~ ne Y e ·Wake Forest line. Amen remark­

J{)rdan participated in the National dr<Jpped -two touchdown passes and ed, "I can only think of three times Seni{)r. A. _A. U. ~r.oss country failed to score on two occasions when Norman was caught behind champwnshtp and :ftmsh~ a res- when we had a first down inside the line of scrimmage while at-pectable twenty-s~venth m a field the five yard line." tempting to pass." of 130. The. 6.3 mile meet was won Amen's chief disappointment ______ .;;..··------..,-by Australian Al Lawrence, the was the Deacons' inconsistent de- =-------------world two mile. 'rec:>rd holder who fense. In the final game against FLATTOP,SPECIALIST ----------------= atten?s the Umverst.ty of ~ouston. the University of South Carolina,

FLATTOP SPECIALIST Ru!Imng for the Htgh Po~t Ath- however, Wake gave its best de­

Bill Burrus Gives--a haircut "Designed with only you in mind."

at W. 4TH ST. BARBER SHOP

Yz Block West of SenJ;s

let1C Club, Jordan helped h1s team fensive performance of .the season place fifth in the national event. in the second half.

Orchesis Recital The Orchesis Club, campus· dance

crganization, ;wil~ have a Christ­mas party at 7 p.m. Dec. 14 in the dance studio featuring a short re­cital by club members. Refresh­ments will ·be served after the re­dtai.

- Pass Offense The passing offense was singled

out by Amen. Norman Snead, the Warwick, Va., ace, set new marks in total offense and in passing for the Atlantic Coast COnference.

Just as important to the passing attack was the wealth of pass re­ceivers that Wake Forest had.' Amen said that he had "never been

. with a team that had so many fine

Bobby: Todd. Give~ haircut "Designed with only .you in mind."

. at ; W. 4TH ST. BARBER SHOP

Yz Block West of Sears A detachment {)f Marmes under receivers." In Bobby Allen, Snead's Colonel Robert E. Lee, U. S. Army, high school teammate ·:from. War- '------------....! captured John Brown at Harper's Ferry on October 18, 1859.

Cil R L S! ~

To Be The Sallta .Claus' In Your· Mali's Life .... Select His ·Christmas Gift A.t !

BEN' 5/ . we Have Tlia Right Kind: Of· ol11· Fir Hi~

Whelht~r lie Is i 8 Or 48_ CHOOSE FROM OUR WIDE· SELEGTIOII! · ·

·Wallets and Leather Gooda · Rain Wear and Jackets Muffler ·and Glove Sets Sport .and Dress Shirts P~jamas and Robes · Tie and Belt Sets Formal Wear·· Sport Coats Sweaters Jewelry·

·Slacks · Socks Suits Hats Shoes

' .

I

For Those Who Are Uncertain Of Your· Man's 1...-s. - Wa.Have

GIFT CERTIFICA .. TES . . ' ~

HELD OVER FOR THE SECOND BIG WEEK!. DRIVE IN TO A NEW KI·ND OF EATING PLEASURE!

1st WINSTON SALEM

SHOWING 3 SHOWS NIGHTLY

BOX OFFICE OPENS

5:15 COLOR

l-1 .. , .uugs bunny- M.1ckey Mouse- Road Runner Cartoons ALSO

CAT ON ·A HOT .TIN ROOF

STARRING P .AUL NEWMAN- ELIZABETH TAYLOR

STARTING THURSDAY

THE. WONDERFUL ··COUNTRY

WITH ROBERT MITCHUM AND JULIE LONDON

WINSTON-SALEM DRIVE-IN

Staley~s DRIVE-.IN. RESTAURANT

/

AT REYNOLDA ROAD AND OLD TOWN ROAD

~ -. . ( . .

• Park under a canopy and enjoy Staley's delicious foods ••• ordered by T eletray microphones with the finest CQr-Hop system·in the South.

• Also there) a ·b._e9utiful and comfortCjble dining room open 24 hours a day. . ·;:;,-'' .

• ·You never havcit)o "dress up." Come as y,ou are ••• enjoy relaxing eating in a clean end pleasant ct:mosphere. .,

. . . Under the personal supervision of Lawrence Stal~y

...

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I !.t

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-Writer E D~e-U1

Merits I

,,

VOLUME :X

J PI t . an '";.'

~·-norl1

··ByC By

Plans :for dormitory f recently by the Reynold ma.Uy :appr~ overall facU: ing .• '

Thursday' Building. ·Col Elton C. 0 ahead in pis tion to begir

. 1960. The cons1

tory for gil: taneous witl sciences buil gun in Mar< :·Both are

tion by the. . _ MissJ

Full· thou ·to th~ plan gi.rls' dormit Miss Lois J. Dean of Wor

"We defin It's really we dation saw .dOrmitory .at

··She will crease in the charges.

One thing to last" week of · females t like to- ·see tl one to two.'

. one to tbr~ She feels

200 additiona· dormitory f{)! provide a be natural situa1

"I hope the new dormito i:ence," she.

· mended ;that be connected sage, with th( present situal the ' dormitor much · rriolein: ty_ in locating

4

The approv ulty committe of -several ]; planning for the College.·

The cornml mend:ations b; cifically il'esp< plans for .cor tocy for girls

•· ence Patrick. Approval '

plans l:)y a e~ tion of :a life sc ed by Dr. Cl:

I•.

Thursday's 1

ty committee · mendation to Committee wl uary. The fu will then tak1

A third buU planning stage social science

·1ist of propoS€ nite plans for been made.

Long-range constr,uction c fine arts buill for the depart mi·nistration.

Deba~ .. 6 We

The Wake : can ±est ·on its six weeks.

The team he the Twelfth: Al examination 'l

. Jones and Die tive speakel"S, '' George HemsiJ ers, debated I in this tournan versity of Pit

Tile PittsburJ from the tradi bate-rebuttal i of five rounds

. cross-examinati person had ei~ structive spee( examined by -~ end of the de negative· and o mary speech.

Jan. 28 thr{) semester breal! haters will aom th Annual Univ .tercolleg:i.ate DE Coral Gables, :

Feb. 5-7 the participate in Debate Tour:nm of William and

The temn wi western -Univer!

Feb. 19-20 thE part in · the FiJ bate _T~iu.rnamen