10
nued. since ·e be- by 11ters. :real entia} With :trike- l fine \ IS the \ of a !h as ;ht be :e top :. No lanton lty to Ltight. s s l481 ( \• I \ \ \ :o ' . . \ --. I :R .... 1 ' TODAY, EDITORIALLY e Mullen's Advantages e Creativity nu TODAY. INSIDE e Challenge Report e Play Review e Marchers Go To Work * * * Best Newspaper In The Two Carolinas * * * ---------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- Wake Forest University, WIDSton-Salem, Nortb Carolina, Monday, May 6, 1968 NUMBER 27 VOLUME Llli F acuity Salaries Here Increase Significantly By LINDA CARTER MANAGING EDITOR Faculity compensation at the Univer- sity has improved significantly over the last four years, but it still has consider- room for improvement. Both the gains and the needs are re- vealed by the annual financrai report of the American Association of University Professors, which publishes compensa- tion and salary figures for leading col- leges and universities in the United States. For the first time this year. the AAUP ' report, as it will appear in the June quarterly bulletin, listed the University among those institutions dese1-ving spe- cial recognition for salaries and com- pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty, Wake Fo- rest was rated as 286th in the nation. Total compensation is $11,887, 235th in the nation. Approximately 1000 schools, in most cases those with the highest compensa- tion rates, responded to the survey. AAUP assigns grades of A-G to institu- tions for both overall average compensa- !'ation and for each of four ranks ofi pro- fessors. In the summer 1964 bulletin the Uni- versity's overatl rank was D, below na- tional averages. This year Wake Fo- rest received an overall C rating, above national averages. Ratings for each classification of pro- fessor also show marked· improvement. The new rank for salaries for the 32 instructors is A plus, the plus indicating improvement within the top A rating. In the 1964 report salaries of the 36 instructors received an A rank. This year's rank for the UniversitY's 37 assistant professors was A. Four years ago salaries for 37 assis- tant professors rated in the B category. On the associate professor level, in- -PHOTO BY McNEILL THREE STORY • , • press box in the west stands of the new football stadium will contain a section for the President's party on the first floor. Sports writers will occupy the second level, and television and radio announcers will be located on the top level. New Stadiuin Expected To Be Ready In Fall By BARRY ROBINSON ASSISTANT EDITOR The University's new $3.9 million sta- dium should be ready for the opening f<>otball game against N. C. State Sept. 14 in spite of severe winter construc- delays Harold S. Moore, superinten- dent of buildings and grounds said this weekend. Construction of the stadium is. pro- ceeding "very well" now said Moore, al- though the contractor has not yet com- pletely overcome a serious setback dur- ing the winter when nothing was done for five or six weeks. The press box, located on top of the v•est stands, will be three stories and ninety feet high. The first story will con- tain the President's guest box, the se- cond will provide room for the press and the third will be for use by radio commentators, television, the public ad- dress system, and photographers. The main concourses under the stands will have concession areas, toilets, first aid rooms and storage space. The stands, seating approximately 15,000 on each side, are set back from the field about thirty-five feet. There will be parking facilities for over 8,000 cars, or for about every 3% (Continued on Page 5) <'luding 43 professors, the University this year received a B rating. In 1964 the rank for associate profes- sor compensation was C. At the higlrest level, 57 fu!.l professors this year receive compensation of C rank, the nationa,\ average. The rank for the 37 fuH professors in 1964 was D. While there sWI is a wide dispa,rity between compensation ratings for va- rious ranks of professors, the ranks have improved in every category. The fa.ct that the 5taff this year is old- er than in 1964 - there are more full professors, in the category witb the low- £·st rank, and fewer instructors, in the category with the highest rank - keeps this year's average compensation from being higher than it is. In AAUP compensation figures are in- cluded salary and fringe benefiiJS. Fringe benefits figured are on:ly those where the institution makes a definite payment of a specified amount for the individual fa>eulty member. Major benefits that Wake Forest pro- vides are federal old: age, survivors and disability insurance: retirement pro- grams in wh:ic·h the benefits become vested in the facuLty in five years or less; life, hospital, medical and disability insurance protection. Benefits considered by AAUP but not provided by the University are housing CJJilowanccs with an equivalellJt cash bene- fit made avaHable to any faculty mem- bers who live in other housing, and tuition or cash assistance for faculty children attending an institution. The average salary of $10,527 com- pares with $9,614 last year and $7,842 four years ago. The average compensation of $11,887 L'> an increase over last year's $10,922 ::md the average of $8,736 for 1963-64. Tuition andi fees for 1963-64 were $700. Laet year they were $1,000. This year the total is $1,150. Dr. Ollie Edmunds To Be Speaker At June 3 Graduation By ARDEN HARRIS STAFF WRITER Dr. J. OJ:lie EdmUIKls, chancellor and former president of Stetson University, will speak at commencement Monday, June 3. The graduating ceremonies will take at 9:30 a. m. on the Plaza. Edmunds, who was president from 1948-1967 of Stetson, a Baptist university located at DeLand, Fla., is a director of the Ja!Cksonville branch of the Federal Re.Serve Bank in Atlanta, and served · 'irom-ltm!HiO as a member of President Eisenhower's Committee on the Develop- ment of Scientists and Engineers. A graduate of Stetson, E<llrm.mds was elected president of the Southern Bap- tist Convention in 1961. His daughter, Jane Edmunds, graduated from Wake Forest in 1965. Dr. Theodore F. Adams, of. Richmond, Va., who recently announced· his resigna- tion as pa·stor of that city's First Baptist Church, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon at 8 p. m. June 2, in Wait Chapel. Tickets Allotted Each senior wiH be allotted four tic- kets to the commencement exercises. Three of the tickets, according to senior class' president David Pugh, will denote top priority for guests who wiU be seat- ed in Wait Chapel, in case of rain. SilllCe graduation is planned for the Plaza, ho-wever, seniors may invite as many guests as desjred wi,th the under- standing that reserved seats w1ll be hon- ored untiL 9 a. m. A buffet luncheon wiH be served on the Plazza immediately after the com- ceremonies. Tickets for the luncheon will be on sale at the inform;I- lion desk May 14-16 from 2-4! p. m. Senior crat;ons wi.Il be given in De- Tamble Auditorium Sunday, June 2, at 3 p. m. After the speeches, President and Mrs. James Raiph Sca,les will honor oeniors at a from 4:30.6 p. m. in Lounge. Candid-a:tes for degrees wm on t'he Plal'i!a at 7:30 p. m. Sunday to form the academic processional for the baccalaurea-te service. Adams, who received· the Upper Room citation for leadership in 1960, is presi- dent of the Virginia of Pastoral Care and a member of the Board of Di- rectors of Rockefeller Brotilel's Theolo- gacal Fellowship Program. He received the B.A. degree from Denison Univer- sity and the B. D. from Colgate-Roches- ter Divinity School. LESTER MADDOX , . • 'Stop 'The Mareh' , • Maddox Wants To Government Prevent March By LINDA LEVI ASSOCIATE EDITOR Gov. Lester Maddox, Georgia's advo- cate of state's rights, called upon "the government of the United States to take steps to halt the so-called "poor peoples" march on Washington when he addressed Chapel Thursday. "It is not for or by the 'poor people' " he said. "It is for and by the punks, bums, criminals, communists and the mistaken-demanded and encouraged by the communists to bring America to her knees through disorder, division, destruc· tion, rioting, looting, injury and death." Construction is now centering on the stands, with work being done on the tapered supporting columns. The seat backs have to be added to the west stands; the only work that will not be completed by September will be land- scape work, Moore said. Over $250,000 is still needed to finance the stadium. The University is borrow- ing $2 million of the total, and until this year the fund-raising campaign had been plagued by lack of large gifts. President Announces 14 Promotions For Faculty Although six students, bearing an ax handle and posters telling Maddox that "Georgia is not the promised land," picketed the front of Wait Chapel Thurs· day morning the general student re- action to Maddox was polite. Maddox received a wann welcome when he entered the Chapel and scat· tered students gave him a standing ovation at the conclusion of his speech. Occasional boos or hisses were heard throughout his 35-minute S'peech. In December, however, $100,000 was anonymously donated to the campaign, and last month the University received three anonymous gifts totaling $70,000. The stadium is located between 30th St. and 33rd St. near the Coliseum, Ernie Shore Field, and Whitaker Park of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. The land was given to the University by Charles Babcock. Moore said that parts of the field house the press box will be painted black. All seats will have gold-painted aluminum backs, thus giving the stadium a gold and black appearance. The fieldhouse will be two stories tall and the electric scoreboard will be placed on top of it. The first floor of the field- , , house will contain the dressing area and showers, a meeting room, and space for post game conferences. The second floor will provide sleeping quarters for fifty !Jlayers so they can get off campus the night before a game. Fourteen faculty promotions at the University were announced Saturday by President James Ralph Scales. They include six promotions from as- sociate professor to professor, seven from assistant to associate professor, and one from visiting lecturer to assistant professor. It also was announced that Miss Mar- jorie Crisp, assistant professor of phy· sica! education, has been named director of physical education for women at the University. · Those promoted to professor and their departments are: Dr. Carl V. Harris, classical languages; Dr. Elizabeth Phil- lips, English; Dr. Ralph S. Fraser, Ger- man; Dr. J. Robert Johnson Jr., math- ematics; Dr. Robert W. Brehme, physics; and Dr. Mary Frances Robinson, Ro- mance languages. New associate professors and their de- partments are: Dr. Joseph V. Wagstaff, business administration; Dr. Herbert Wallace Baird, chemistry; Dr. Samuel A. Syme Jr., education; Dr. Robert N. Shorter, English; Dr. Oalvin R. Huber, rr.usic; Dr. Charles H. Talbert, religion; and Dr. Phyllis Brible, religion. Dr. Karl Heinz Rupp, visiting lecturer in German, was named as assistant pro- fessor. Harris received the B.A. degree from Wake Forest, the B.D. and S.T.M. de- grees from Yale University and the Ph. D. from Duke University. He joi-ned the Wake Forest faculty in 1956. Miss Phillips holds the B.A. degree from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, the M.A. from State Univer- sity of Iowa and the Ph.D. from the Uni- \'ersity of Pennsylvania. She came· to W:lke Forest in 1957 Fraser received the B.A. deeree from Boston University, the M.A. from Syra- Cl!Se University and the Ph.D. from the University of Illinois. He joined the uni- versity faculty in 1962. (Oontinued oo Page 5) Maddox told students it is sad that the government has helped finance "this attack upon law and order" as exhibited by the march on the capital. It is even sadder, he said, "that some of our leaders in government, labor, business education and religion have encouraged inspired and ,at times parti· cipaled in so-called 'non-violent' activities that were and are the fore--runners of the rioting wrecking, burning and law- lessness threatens our liberty, coun· try and well-being." Maddox urged the national govern- ment to issue a restraining order against the march on Washington, "based on the insurrection statutes of the United States and prevent the seige or the destruction of our national capital. To act otherwise is to couTt disaster," he said. The governor stressed the actions that' his administration in Georgia had taken (Continue<! on Page 5) Wake Forest's compensation is high- er than that of almost all other Southern Baptist schools. In North Carolina, the only other of the seven Baptist colleges rcportin'.:( were Mars Hill in Mars Hill and Mere- dith in Raleigh. Mars Hill, with an. average compen- sation of $8,725, had a D rating, and Mere<lith, with an average compensation of $8,743 was rated D plus. Baylor University in Waco, Texas, was rated an overall D with an average compensation of $10,192. In Greenv!Ile South Carolina, Furman University, another Baptist school, re- ceived a. C rating as did Wake Forest, but its average compensation, $10,719 was lower than that of Wake Forest. Oklahoma Baptist University was ranked an overall D. Its ave-rage com- pensation was $9,280. But compared with other leading North Carolina Schools, Wake Forest did not fare so well. Duke University in Durham, with an average salary of $14,071 and an averag-e compensation of $16,075, was 15th in the nation in both categories. Its overall com- pensation rating was A. Davidson College in Davidson had an overall compensation rank of B, with an average compensation of $14,223. Also receiving an overaJ.J B compen- sation rating was the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where the aver- age compensation is $13,901. The only "Big Four" school receiving the same overall C rating as Wake Fo- rest, N.C. State University at Raleigh, had a slightly higher average compen- $11,897. Despite the improvements shown !:Jy Wake Forest and other schools, the AAUP report warned that private institu- tions face serious financial problems. (Editors' Note: Next week a follow up story will deal with the AAUP study of the financial dilemma of private col- leges and with the suggestions off ere<!.) ··:··.··· ... :::· ......... .. " ... ' ... !: What 'Pro Humanitate' ;:· .. Means For University '" For mankind, this University has -: existed for 134 years. Its purpose bas been to turn out preachers, pedago- ... gues, politicians, and thousands of other servants of man. To accomplish this, Wake Forest has chosen to re- ' . main a small denominational school . , with a sometimes rowdy personality. Will this continue? This is the last of five issues in which Old Gold & Black will publish five articles on :] how Wake Forest can best serve man- ':. kind dwing the next 25 years. The ,. · articles are being written by five very different, but very knowledgeable and (j outstanding alumni. They are Gerald Johnson, Gilbert T. Stephenson, C. B. ?; Deane, Dr. John W. Chandler, and Mrs. Donia W. Mills. By DONIA WHITELY MILLS To a sentimental old alumna from ;r the ciass of '65, it is to , know that a few things besides :·; magnolias have remained unchanged ;.-1 in the midst of Wake Forest's recent ;:] and rapid metamorphosis. I see by the i:< Old Gold & Black that WGA reformers :''1 are still trying to stamp out hypocrisy, :/ that hard-headedness still persists as a chief trait of certain North Carolina Baptist preachers, and that Slater ['': food still leaves something to be de· r:' sired. ,, L have only one question: is "Pro i'' Humanitate" still what Wake Forest ,,., is all about? In addition to "pro" get- ;:; ting the sheepskin and "pro" getting . pinned and "pro" making the old man press keeps telling us), for whom the Great Depression Years exist onlv as after-dinner tales told with leistirely reminiscence by our elders when we are impatient to be off to the movies. We have today more money, more cars, more comforts, more freedom, more mobility, more lesiure time, and more despair (the press goes on) than any other previous generation in history. ; Could it be, bred of a people who sur- vived by grappling with the land on a do-or-die basis and racing the sun to get the chores done each day, could it be that we moderns simply don't know what to do with ourselves? The implications are everywhere evident: a little bit of combat is good for the soul. And since so many of the traditional opponents have defaulte<l · · by means of that process called pro- gress, it's up to us to find new outlets for the restless energy that seems so characteristically American. The concept is not an original one; John F. Kennedy called it "The New , . Frontier." If he had gone to Wake For- est instead of Harvard, he might have thought of it in terms of "Pro Hwn- anitate." But John K. Kennedy is dead now, quite dead. And millions of Americans are rotting on front porches. Something funny's going on in our U. S. economy. And whatever happened to the good old days of military ad- visors to Vietnam? (Continued on Page 5) i .. i happy and "pro" avoiding the draft, are University students still going to Mrs. Donia Whiteley Mills, a 1965 college "Pro Humanitate?" graduate of the University, is novel· ; , Sometimes we need to think about writing assistant to the president ("and :.. these things, lest .the phrase become vice president and dean'') of Dunbar· 1! relegated to the ignominy of mere ton College, a small Catholic women's Latin words painted on the crests of college in Washington. Her first novel < beer mugs the bookstore sells. is practically finished, and is the story .. It happens to be a very fine motto. of campus life set at a "small co-edu- As a matter of fact, if there were one cational denomination college in North big cosmic university, with the best Carolina." Mrs. Mills is the wife of professors and the brightest students Richard Mills, an imported car dealer : ·: and biggest library and leafiest cam- and former Old Gold & Back sports pus in all the world, I can.',t think of a editor, and is the "mother of O'Meter, · ' better motto its founders could choose a small tri-colored Beagle." She calls than "Pro Humanitate." Because un· herself "the mistress of the house, ' ; less the object of all our education is queen of the supermarket, washing to make ourselves more hUinan, how machine, and vacuum cleaner." She can we create a world fit for humanity received her M.A. in English from the to live in? University of Pennsylvania and plans "' We are the affluent generation (the to teach. next year at Dunbarton. .. . . ..... ' :::.: .;·. :::_ ·::;;.: . .. :.::: ..... ·.:.. :·.: ' ·. ,;)o, -PHOTO BY McNEILL PICK HANDLES . • . and anti-Maddox signs greeted the Georgia segregationist govemor when he spoke here Thursday. A streaming banner, covering most of the balcony railing, stared Maddox in the face during his speech, and reminded him, "Segregation Is Civil Disobedienee."

1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

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Page 1: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

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' TODAY, EDITORIALLY

e Mullen's Advantages

e 'P~' Creativity nu TODAY. INSIDE

e Challenge Report e Play Review e Marchers Go To Work

* * * Best Newspaper In The Two Carolinas * * * ---------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------Wake Forest University, WIDSton-Salem, Nortb Carolina, Monday, May 6, 1968 NUMBER 27 VOLUME Llli

F acuity Salaries Here Increase Significantly By LINDA CARTER

MANAGING EDITOR

Faculity compensation at the Univer­sity has improved significantly over the last four years, but it still has consider­~ble room for improvement.

Both the gains and the needs are re­vealed by the annual financrai report of the American Association of University Professors, which publishes compensa­tion and salary figures for leading col­leges and universities in the United States.

For the first time this year. the AAUP ' report, as it will appear in the June

quarterly bulletin, listed the University among those institutions dese1-ving spe­cial recognition for salaries and com­pensations.

With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty, Wake Fo­rest was rated as 286th in the nation.

Total compensation is $11,887, 235th in the nation.

Approximately 1000 schools, in most cases those with the highest compensa­tion rates, responded to the survey.

AAUP assigns grades of A-G to institu­tions for both overall average compensa­!'ation and for each of four ranks ofi pro­fessors.

In the summer 1964 bulletin the Uni­versity's overatl rank was D, below na­tional averages. This year Wake Fo­rest received an overall C rating, above national averages.

Ratings for each classification of pro­fessor also show marked· improvement.

The new rank for salaries for the 32 instructors is A plus, the plus indicating improvement within the top A rating.

In the 1964 report salaries of the 36 instructors received an A rank.

This year's rank for the UniversitY's 37 assistant professors was A.

Four years ago salaries for 37 assis­tant professors rated in the B category.

On the associate professor level, in-

-PHOTO BY McNEILL

THREE STORY • , • press box in the west stands of the new football stadium will contain a section for the President's party on the first floor. Sports writers will occupy the second level, and television and radio announcers will be located on the top level.

New Stadiuin Expected To Be Ready In Fall

By BARRY ROBINSON ASSISTANT EDITOR

The University's new $3.9 million sta­dium should be ready for the opening f<>otball game against N. C. State Sept. 14 in spite of severe winter construc­ti~n delays Harold S. Moore, superinten­dent of buildings and grounds said this weekend.

Construction of the stadium is. pro­ceeding "very well" now said Moore, al­though the contractor has not yet com­pletely overcome a serious setback dur­ing the winter when nothing was done for five or six weeks.

The press box, located on top of the v•est stands, will be three stories and ninety feet high. The first story will con­tain the President's guest box, the se­cond will provide room for the press and the third will be for use by radio commentators, television, the public ad­dress system, and photographers.

The main concourses under the stands will have concession areas, toilets, first aid rooms and storage space. The stands, seating approximately 15,000 on each side, are set back from the field about thirty-five feet.

There will be parking facilities for over 8,000 cars, or for about every 3%

(Continued on Page 5)

<'luding 43 professors, the University this year received a B rating.

In 1964 the rank for associate profes­sor compensation was C.

At the higlrest level, 57 fu!.l professors this year receive compensation of C rank, the nationa,\ average.

The rank for the 37 fuH professors in 1964 was D.

While there sWI is a wide dispa,rity between compensation ratings for va­rious ranks of professors, the ranks have improved in every category.

The fa.ct that the 5taff this year is old­er than in 1964 - there are more full professors, in the category witb the low­£·st rank, and fewer instructors, in the category with the highest rank - keeps this year's average compensation from being higher than it is.

In AAUP compensation figures are in­cluded salary and fringe benefiiJS. Fringe benefits figured are on:ly those where the institution makes a definite payment of

a specified amount for the individual fa>eulty member.

Major benefits that Wake Forest pro­vides are federal old: age, survivors and disability insurance: retirement pro­grams in wh:ic·h the benefits become vested in the facuLty m~mber in five years or less; life, hospital, medical and disability insurance protection.

Benefits considered by AAUP but not provided by the University are housing CJJilowanccs with an equivalellJt cash bene­fit made avaHable to any faculty mem­bers who live in other housing, and tuition or cash assistance for faculty children attending an institution.

The average salary of $10,527 com­pares with $9,614 last year and $7,842 four years ago.

The average compensation of $11,887 L'> an increase over last year's $10,922 ::md the average of $8,736 for 1963-64.

Tuition andi fees for 1963-64 were $700. Laet year they were $1,000. This year the total is $1,150.

Dr. Ollie Edmunds To Be Speaker At June 3 Graduation

By ARDEN HARRIS STAFF WRITER

Dr. J. OJ:lie EdmUIKls, chancellor and former president of Stetson University, will speak at commencement Monday, June 3.

The graduating ceremonies will take pl~e at 9:30 a. m. on the Plaza.

Edmunds, who was president from 1948-1967 of Stetson, a Baptist university located at DeLand, Fla., is a director of the Ja!Cksonville branch of the Federal Re.Serve Bank in Atlanta, and served

· 'irom-ltm!HiO as a member of President Eisenhower's Committee on the Develop­ment of Scientists and Engineers.

A graduate of Stetson, E<llrm.mds was elected president of the Southern Bap­tist Convention in 1961. His daughter, Jane Edmunds, graduated from Wake Forest in 1965.

Dr. Theodore F. Adams, of. Richmond, Va., who recently announced· his resigna­tion as pa·stor of that city's First Baptist Church, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon at 8 p. m. June 2, in Wait Chapel.

Tickets Allotted

Each senior wiH be allotted four tic­kets to the commencement exercises. Three of the tickets, according to senior class' president David Pugh, will denote top priority for guests who wiU be seat­ed in Wait Chapel, in case of rain.

SilllCe graduation is planned for the Plaza, ho-wever, seniors may invite as many guests as desjred wi,th the under­standing that reserved seats w1ll be hon­ored untiL 9 a. m.

A buffet luncheon wiH be served on the Plazza immediately after the com­mencem~nt ceremonies. Tickets for the luncheon will be on sale at the inform;I­lion desk May 14-16 from 2-4! p. m.

Senior crat;ons wi.Il be given in De­Tamble Auditorium Sunday, June 2, at 3 p. m. After the speeches, President and Mrs. James Raiph Sca,les will honor oeniors at a re~::eption from 4:30.6 p. m. in Reyno~da Lounge.

Candid-a:tes for degrees wm asemb~e on t'he Plal'i!a at 7:30 p. m. Sunday to form the academic processional for the baccalaurea-te service.

Adams, who received· the Upper Room citation for leadership in 1960, is presi-

dent of the Virginia Inst~tute of Pastoral Care and a member of the Board of Di­rectors of Rockefeller Brotilel's Theolo­gacal Fellowship Program. He received the B.A. degree from Denison Univer­sity and the B. D. from Colgate-Roches­ter Divinity School.

LESTER MADDOX , . • 'Stop 'The Mareh' , •

Maddox Wants To Government

Prevent March By LINDA LEVI

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Gov. Lester Maddox, Georgia's advo­cate of state's rights, called upon "the government of the United States to take steps to halt the so-called "poor peoples" march on Washington when he addressed Chapel Thursday.

"It is not for or by the 'poor people' " he said. "It is for and by the punks, bums, criminals, communists and the mistaken-demanded and encouraged by the communists to bring America to her knees through disorder, division, destruc· tion, rioting, looting, injury and death." Construction is now centering on the

e~t stands, with work being done on the tapered supporting columns. The seat backs have to be added to the west stands; the only work that will not be completed by September will be land­scape work, Moore said.

Over $250,000 is still needed to finance the stadium. The University is borrow­ing $2 million of the total, and until this year the fund-raising campaign had been plagued by lack of large gifts.

President Announces 14 Promotions For Faculty

Although six students, bearing an ax handle and posters telling Maddox that "Georgia is not the promised land," picketed the front of Wait Chapel Thurs· day morning the general student re­action to Maddox was polite.

Maddox received a wann welcome when he entered the Chapel and scat· tered students gave him a standing ovation at the conclusion of his speech. Occasional boos or hisses were heard throughout his 35-minute S'peech. In December, however, $100,000 was

anonymously donated to the campaign, and last month the University received three anonymous gifts totaling $70,000.

The stadium is located between 30th St. and 33rd St. near the Coliseum, Ernie Shore Field, and Whitaker Park of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. The land was given to the University by Charles Babcock.

Moore said that parts of the field house ~nd the press box will be painted black. All seats will have gold-painted aluminum backs, thus giving the stadium a gold and black appearance.

The fieldhouse will be two stories tall and the electric scoreboard will be placed on top of it. The first floor of the field-

, , house will contain the dressing area and showers, a meeting room, and space for post game conferences. The second floor will provide sleeping quarters for fifty !Jlayers so they can get off campus the night before a game.

Fourteen faculty promotions at the University were announced Saturday by President James Ralph Scales.

They include six promotions from as­sociate professor to professor, seven from assistant to associate professor, and one from visiting lecturer to assistant professor.

It also was announced that Miss Mar­jorie Crisp, assistant professor of phy· sica! education, has been named director of physical education for women at the University. ·

Those promoted to professor and their departments are: Dr. Carl V. Harris, classical languages; Dr. Elizabeth Phil­lips, English; Dr. Ralph S. Fraser, Ger­man; Dr. J. Robert Johnson Jr., math­ematics; Dr. Robert W. Brehme, physics; and Dr. Mary Frances Robinson, Ro­mance languages.

New associate professors and their de­partments are: Dr. Joseph V. Wagstaff, business administration; Dr. Herbert

Wallace Baird, chemistry; Dr. Samuel A. Syme Jr., education; Dr. Robert N. Shorter, English; Dr. Oalvin R. Huber, rr.usic; Dr. Charles H. Talbert, religion; and Dr. Phyllis Brible, religion.

Dr. Karl Heinz Rupp, visiting lecturer in German, was named as assistant pro­fessor.

Harris received the B.A. degree from Wake Forest, the B.D. and S.T.M. de­grees from Yale University and the Ph. D. from Duke University. He joi-ned the Wake Forest faculty in 1956.

Miss Phillips holds the B.A. degree from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, the M.A. from State Univer­sity of Iowa and the Ph.D. from the Uni­\'ersity of Pennsylvania. She came· to W:lke Forest in 1957

Fraser received the B.A. deeree from Boston University, the M.A. from Syra­Cl!Se University and the Ph.D. from the University of Illinois. He joined the uni­versity faculty in 1962.

(Oontinued oo Page 5)

Maddox told students it is sad that the government has helped finance "this attack upon law and order" as exhibited by the march on the capital.

It is even sadder, he said, "that some of our leaders in government, labor, business education and religion have encouraged inspired and ,at times parti· cipaled in so-called 'non-violent' activities that were and are the fore--runners of the rioting wrecking, burning and law­lessness th~t threatens our liberty, coun· try and well-being."

Maddox urged the national govern­ment to issue a restraining order against the march on Washington, "based on the insurrection statutes of the United States and prevent the seige or the destruction of our national capital. To act otherwise is to couTt disaster," he said.

The governor stressed the actions that' his administration in Georgia had taken

(Continue<! on Page 5)

Wake Forest's compensation is high­er than that of almost all other Southern Baptist schools.

In North Carolina, the only other of the seven Baptist colleges rcportin'.:( were Mars Hill in Mars Hill and Mere­dith in Raleigh.

Mars Hill, with an. average compen­sation of $8,725, had a D rating, and Mere<lith, with an average compensation of $8,743 was rated D plus.

Baylor University in Waco, Texas, was rated an overall D with an average compensation of $10,192.

In Greenv!Ile South Carolina, Furman University, another Baptist school, re­ceived a. C rating as did Wake Forest, but its average compensation, $10,719 was lower than that of Wake Forest.

Oklahoma Baptist University was ranked an overall D. Its ave-rage com­pensation was $9,280.

But compared with other leading North Carolina Schools, Wake Forest did not fare so well.

Duke University in Durham, with an average salary of $14,071 and an averag-e compensation of $16,075, was 15th in the nation in both categories. Its overall com­pensation rating was A.

Davidson College in Davidson had an overall compensation rank of B, with an average compensation of $14,223.

Also receiving an overaJ.J B compen­sation rating was the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where the aver­age compensation is $13,901.

The only "Big Four" school receiving the same overall C rating as Wake Fo­rest, N.C. State University at Raleigh, had a slightly higher average compen­~ation, $11,897.

Despite the improvements shown !:Jy Wake Forest and other schools, the AAUP report warned that private institu­tions face serious financial problems. (Editors' Note: Next week a follow up story will deal with the AAUP study of the financial dilemma of private col­leges and with the suggestions off ere<!.)

··:··.··· ... :::· ......... .. ='{y·::t.>~··· " ... ' ...

!: What 'Pro Humanitate' ;:· .. ~

Means For University '" For mankind, this University has -: existed for 134 years. Its purpose bas

been to turn out preachers, pedago­... gues, politicians, and thousands of

other servants of man. To accomplish this, Wake Forest has chosen to re­

' . main a small denominational school . , with a sometimes rowdy personality.

Will this continue? This is the last of five issues in which Old Gold & Black will publish five articles on

:] how Wake Forest can best serve man­':. kind dwing the next 25 years. The ,. · articles are being written by five very

different, but very knowledgeable and (j outstanding alumni. They are Gerald

Johnson, Gilbert T. Stephenson, C. B. ?; Deane, Dr. John W. Chandler, and ~~ Mrs. Donia W. Mills. J~ By DONIA WHITELY MILLS t~ ~j To a sentimental old alumna from ;r the ciass of '65, it is comforti~ to , know that a few things besides th~ :·; magnolias have remained unchanged ;.-1 in the midst of Wake Forest's recent ;:] and rapid metamorphosis. I see by the i:< Old Gold & Black that WGA reformers :''1 are still trying to stamp out hypocrisy, :/ that hard-headedness still persists as [!.~ a chief trait of certain North Carolina

Baptist preachers, and that Slater ['': food still leaves something to be de· r:' sired. ,, L have only one question: is "Pro i'' Humanitate" still what Wake Forest ,,., is all about? In addition to "pro" get­;:; ting the sheepskin and "pro" getting ~, . pinned and "pro" making the old man

press keeps telling us), for whom the Great Depression Years exist onlv as after-dinner tales told with leistirely reminiscence by our elders when we are impatient to be off to the movies. We have today more money, more cars, more comforts, more freedom, more mobility, more lesiure time, and more despair (the press goes on) than any other previous generation in history. ; Could it be, bred of a people who sur­vived by grappling with the land on a do-or-die basis and racing the sun to get the chores done each day, could it be that we moderns simply don't know what to do with ourselves?

The implications are everywhere evident: a little bit of combat is good for the soul. And since so many of the traditional opponents have defaulte<l · · by means of that process called pro­gress, it's up to us to find new outlets for the restless energy that seems so characteristically American.

The concept is not an original one; John F. Kennedy called it "The New , . Frontier." If he had gone to Wake For­est instead of Harvard, he might have thought of it in terms of "Pro Hwn­anitate." But John K. Kennedy is dead now, quite dead. And millions of ;-~

Americans are rotting on front porches. Something funny's going on in our U. S. economy. And whatever happened to the good old days of military ad­visors to Vietnam?

(Continued on Page 5)

i .. i happy and "pro" avoiding the draft, are University students still going to Mrs. Donia Whiteley Mills, a 1965

;:~ college "Pro Humanitate?" graduate of the University, is novel· ; , Sometimes we need to think about writing assistant to the president ("and :.. these things, lest .the phrase become vice president and dean'') of Dunbar· 1! relegated to the ignominy of mere ton College, a small Catholic women's

Latin words painted on the crests of college in Washington. Her first novel < beer mugs the bookstore sells. is practically finished, and is the story ..

It happens to be a very fine motto. of campus life set at a "small co-edu-As a matter of fact, if there were one cational denomination college in North big cosmic university, with the best Carolina." Mrs. Mills is the wife of professors and the brightest students Richard Mills, an imported car dealer

: ·: and biggest library and leafiest cam- and former Old Gold & Back sports pus in all the world, I can.',t think of a editor, and is the "mother of O'Meter,

· ' better motto its founders could choose a small tri-colored Beagle." She calls than "Pro Humanitate." Because un· herself "the mistress of the house,

' ; less the object of all our education is queen of the supermarket, washing to make ourselves more hUinan, how machine, and vacuum cleaner." She

~·.; can we create a world fit for humanity received her M.A. in English from the to live in? University of Pennsylvania and plans

"' We are the affluent generation (the to teach. next year at Dunbarton. .·~ ~t:1~·:::-: "~'' .. ~:· . . ..... -~-'. ' :::.: .;·. :::_ .>~:~:·,~~~!.:: ·::;;.: . ..::t::::~.::~-.. ~:. :.::: ..... ·.:.. :·.: ' ·. • ,;)o,

-PHOTO BY McNEILL

PICK HANDLES . • . and anti-Maddox signs greeted the Georgia segregationist govemor when he spoke here Thursday. A streaming banner, covering most of the balcony railing, stared Maddox in the face during his speech, and reminded him, "Segregation Is Civil Disobedienee."

Page 2: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

PAGE TWO Monda.y, May 6, 1968 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Trustees Back Challenge., Suggest Foundation Support

By GRAY LAWRENCE The University's Board of

Trustees last week endorsed the Challenge program and urged it to cunt inuc to seek financial aid from foundations.

According to Norma Mur­doch, junior of Macon, Ga., and Challenge director, the Board of Trustees also guaran­teed that Challenge would be

able to meet its expenses. Miss Mw·doch said that do·

nations had increased from $4,500 to $5.650 in the past two weeks. A $200 gift from Mayor W. C. Benton. Jr.; a donation of $100 from Irving Carlyle, a former president of the Uni­versity's Board of Trustees; $100 from the junior class; and $750 from the College Union

Camel Pawn Shop,lnc:. "Money To Loan On Anything Of Value"

422 N. Liberty

Bargains In Out-Of-Pawn Merchandise

Radios .. . . . . . .. . . . 9 95 up Phonographs . . . . . . 12.50 up Binoculars . . . . . . . . 14.95 up Port. and Desk

Typewriters . . . . . 29.59 up Guitars . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.59 up

Wedding Bands . . . 3.95 up Transistor Tape

Recorders . . . . . . . 12.50 up Electric Tape

Recorders ....... 29.59 up Cameras . . . . . . . . . . 3.95 up Suitcases . . . . . . . . . . 3.95 up

WINSTON-SALEM'S AUTHORIZED FENDER GUITAR AND AMPLIFICATION DEALER

have ~dded $1,150 to financial support from the program.

Pledges have increased the total cost to almost $7,000 out of the organization's $12.000 budget, Miss Murdoch said.

Miss Murdoch will present plans of Challenge '69 to stu­dents in chapel on Thursday.

Board of Advisors

Benton, former governor Terry Sanford, and Erwin Belk, state senator, and an of· ficial of Belk's Department Stores, Inc., have agreed to serve on Challenge's Board of advisors, she added. Benton has volunteered to help in invit­ing the mayors of the nation's 250 largest cities.

The general survey of the Challenge program, the "Ur­ban Crisis," has been divided into areas concerned with ur­ban environment, disease, ig­norance, unemployment, city finance, government, values, racism, personal identity, so­cial deterioration, and com·

Bobbitt~s Pharinacies COSMETICS •• PRESCRIPTIONS -- SUN.DRIES

FREE DELIVERY 3 LOCATIONS

Reynolds Building - Nissen Building

Corner S. Hawthorne Road at Lockland

munication. Prominent figures who are

being considered to lecture in each area are urban environ­ment-Charles Abrams, head of the Model Cities Program, and Dr. Robert C. Weaver, Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Rede­velopment: ignorance.-Jarnes B. Conant, head of the Educa­tional Policies Commission, and Nathan M. Pusey, presi­dent of Harvard University; unemployment-John Gardner, former secretary of the De­partment of Health, Education, and Welfare, and· Sargeant Shriver, head of the Office of Economic Opportunity.

Possible Speakers

Other persons being consid­ered to debate various aspects of tht urban problem are: city finance-Walter Heller former chairman of the Co~cil of Economic Advisors, and John Kenneth Galbraith, professor of Economics at Harvard; ur­ban government-John Lmd­say, mayor of New York, and Charles Percy, senator from Illinois; values-Harvey Cox, author of "The Secular City."

Invitations have also been sent to Whitley Young, head of the Urban League, to lee· ture on personal identity-Eric Fromm, author of "The Sane Society;" social deterioration­Lewis Mumford, author of "The City in History; comr munication-Ralph McGill, edi· tor and publisher of the Atlanta OJnstitution.

Students in the Department of Mental Health at the Uni­

versity of North Carolina School of Public Health are prepared for practice, research and teaching in public mental health.

C .. , .... ,,.,.-

".;.. > • :..J • I• .,,;_, ' . ',, ,, .

u •••••••

APARTMENTS

Country Club and Peace Haven roads approximately 4 miJes from Wake Fiorest campus

College Families Should Reserve Now For Assured Ot:cupancy!

Special Feature&:

* Wall-to-wall carpeting.

Ueluxe kitehens equipped with Frigidaire dishwasher, range, 14 cu. ft. refrigerator, disposal, exhaust fan.

I-BEDROOM $129.50 garden apa:rtment Large living room, big eat-in kitchen, ()De bedroom and huge walk-in closet. Private outside entrance. Plenty of extra closet space.

:\ '. 'l~ Brooks Hays' New Book

Relates Life In 5 Worlds

SANDY HUTCHENS ... Heads YDC •••

Brooks Hays describes his life in five worlds in his fourth book, "Hotbed of Tranquility," published recently by Macrnil­lian.

Hays, director of the Univer­sity's Ecumenical Institute, in­cluded in his latest book stories from the realms of poli­tics, religion, law, the Ozarks, and the South-his five worlds.

Most of the stories were told first to grassroots Af!lericans and. to his political fnends on Capitol Hill.

Hutchens Is Elected President Of YDC

Sandy V. Hutchens Jr., state finance chairman of the col­lege federation of Young Dem­ocrats Clubs, was elected pres­ident of the Wake Forest YDC Thursday.

Hutchens, a senior of Mt. Airy, has served as secretary­treasurer of the 80-member organization this year.

John May, junior of Spring Hope, was elected men's vice president, Betsy Daniel, fresh­man of Wilson, was named women's vice president, and Edwin M. Speas, second-year law student, was elected law school vice president.

Secretary of the club next year is Jenny Robinson, fresh­man of Boone, and treasurer is Dan Godwin, sophomore of Oxford.

Hutchens named two direc· tors of the club this weekend. They are Valjean Griggs, jun­ior of Winston-Salem, and Charles R. Brewer, freshman of Raleigh.

Although most of the club members have aligned them­selves with various Demo­cratic presidential hopefuls, including Vice President Hu­bert H. Humphrey, Sen. Eu­gene McCarthy, and Sen. Rob­ert F. Kennedy, Hutchens has pleaded unity next fall.

"Democralts on the cam· pus," Hutchens said, "will fight hard in NoY,ElD.l~.!l.':: Jo~. th_~. Democratic camUda~ ., w\lo­ever-,·he is:" - · :·~·~-:~' ., ~!:lr.~:\

He also said in an interview Friday that he would help lead a Democratic push next fall "to keep a Democrat in the Governor's Mansion."

Politically, Hutchens consid­ers himself a member of the Sanford wing of the party. He is practically unscarred of bat­tle wounds received from in­traparty struggles.

Established Southeastern Talent Agency seeks cam· pus representatives to so­licit business from fraterni· ties, dorm and campus or­ganizations. Excellent pay. Sophomore or JUDiOr. So­cial chairman preferred bu1 not required.

Call Collect Mr. Thompson

919-237-6196 Wilson, N.C.

This spring he has worked in a limited capacity for Ro­bert M. Morgan, Smith Bag­ley, and Robert Scott.

He is a business major and transfer student from Wingate College. While at Wingate he was active in the Mecklenburg County YDC.

Hutchens is circulation man­ager of Old Gold & Black and served as treasurer of Chal· lenge '67.

Outgoing president of the lo­cal YDC is Ralph A. Simpson, senior Qf Charlotte BIDd co-edi­tor of Old Gold & Black.

Simpson asswned the presi· dency in late March when John Patrick Exum, senior of Snow Hill, resigned to lead the Uni· versity campaign fur J. Mel­ville Broughton, gubernatorial candidate in Saturday's Demo­cratic primary.'

Carroll Leggett, third-year­law student of Buies Creek and secretary of the State YDC served as law school vice­president. Judy White, senior of Winston-Salem, served as women's vice president.

4 Summer Jobs To Be Available In OEO Project

Summer counselor-tutor po­sitions in the Upward Bound program are avail·able for foor--Imlle· Wake'""Foi'CSt ·stu-' cfehfSlC~··)g :.. '", , ,•oq .·~.! -n<1

bStxilis6fuli l{y the"'Office fdt'l Economic Opportunity, Up· ward Bound is designed to motivate high school boys to seek a college education.

In the summer program ris­ing lOth, 11th and 12th grade high school boys will live for eight weeks at Winston-Salem State College. The counselors­tutors will live in the dorms and be responsible for the students.

Counselor-tutors will work: for nine weeks, beginning with orientation during the week of June 9. They will receive salary, room and board.

Wake Fodest juniors, sen­iors and graduate seniors are preferred.

Information and applications are available from Dr. W. A. Blount at Winston-Saelm State, telephone 725-3536, Ext. 61 or 725-8190.

Jackie Transou

SENIORS! Make your appointments now for

your portrait in Cap aitd Gown

McNABIB STUDIO Wake Forest University

Phone 723-4640

Recalling his experiences as a former congressman from Arkansas and a past president of t~e Southern Baptist Con­vention, Hays said he has found "laughter can ease ten· sion" and so has relied on it to help him out of the "thun­derclouds" he often has en• countered.

Macmillian approached Hays for the book, their first of his. "They had heard me in my oral medium and they wanted something using my spoken word," he said.

Hays' first book was "This World: A Christian's Work· shop." Next was "A Southern Moderate Speaks" and then "The Baptist Way of Life."

"I think I still have at least two more books in my sys­tem," he said. "I may at­tempt to do my memories, and I want to do a guidelines book for young people aspiring to politics. I want to tell them where the 'perils and pitfalls' are. That may be my title."

While Hays is somewhat re­moved from the mainline of politics now, he still has astute observations. For instance:

"We have always had these occasions of mass discontent, evidences of lack in discipline, but we musn't panic. All we can do is to tap the resources of disciplines and faith and sort of roll the punch. We must find a way to avoid over­reacting. Our reactions to ac­tivism must not bear the· same quality of irrationality we've got to claim."

For!Jlative Stage

Hays comes to the Univer­sity each week. The Ecumen­ical Institute, he said, "is now definitely in the formative stage. We are now counseling with leaders of all faiths, co· ordinating the program Presi­dent Scales has in mind."

When Scales announced the program Feb. 1, he said its purpose would be to pr<>mote understanding among various Christian groups through semi­nars and study. He said he hoped the University would give direction to the ecumeni­cal movement by seeking to rediscover "the bases of our

h~"

!i~~i~f&e~~~~~~~~: Baptist people rela.e the life of our churches to the interests of the total Christian cause."

Response Satisfactory

He said the response to the institute "had been satisfac­tory with an amazingly small amount of criticism."

BROOKS HAYS . . . Writes Book • • •

The institute, he added, would not be a "crusade or a social action committee. Even­tually, however, it will have an impact on Christian action; but that's down the road. Right now we want to make progress among the different faiths for greater cooperation and better understanding of each other's beliefs." ·

Planned for the spring of 1969, the first formal sympo­sium is expected, Hays said, "to draw to Wake Forest some of the world's leading authori, ties in the field of ecumen­ism."

Hays said he believed the institute "is the only one of this type on the Protestant side in the United States. There are, of course, many Catho­lic-oriented ecumenical insti­tutes."

Couferences With Leaders The institute will not include

at first undergraduate students· or systematic study, Hays said. Instead, it will consist primarily of "conferences with" Baptist leaders leading to con· elusions about the soundest way to define what our rela~: tionship is with other Christian bodies-how Baptists respond to gestures of Christian good will extended toward us and to what extent we attempt to unify the Christian mission of this ,wp.t:t4,:~ . ..,., ~~ ... ~,, . . . ·Dr., .1.lUds9n ~J\llen~· ,:assis~aJ;lt, --;.." ss .. -.~ u"·'·~"-E""'-h~-;is -'ecre:." P.rl-!+~ .Qf~ -m""J~ ,., ....,, ~"'

tary for the institute. Working with Hays and Allen is a com­mittee composed of Dr. Claude U. Broach of Charlotte, Uni­versity trustees, and the chair· man or his proxy from the departments of English, his· tory, religion and sociology, anthrophlogy.

Student Uses Computer To Win Court Contest

(ACP)-Who says you can't fight city hall? All you need is a computer.

Bruce Kusens, a student at Miami-Dade Junior College North, proved that as he reel· ed off computerized facts and figures before a judge and jury in Oke~chobee County, the Falcon Times reports.

Kusens, 19, was arrested for exceeding a 70-rniles-per-hour speed limit. The arresting of· ficer, Corp. D- H. Cannon, said he clocked Kusens tra­veling at 80.

Certain of his innocence, Kusens turned the situation into a mathematical problem and fed figures of speed and distance into one of Miami­Dade's $15 million compu~rs. After weeks of prograrnmmg, the computer reached a decis­ion: the defendant was travel­ing at 69.7845 miles .per hour. Kusen's prograrn.tn;lng _ was verified by a Miam1-Dade physics profe~or.

Aeting as his own attorney, Kusens presented his data in

court. He also showed the jury numerous awards he had received in physics and engi­neering to prove himself an ex­pert in the field.

The judge ordered the panel to disregard any computer testimony since Kusens had applied all the facts to the LBM machine himself.

But after an hour of deli­beration, the jury handed the court a verdict of not guilty. Whether the computerized evi­dence helped his case or not, only the jury knows for sure.

"I can't help thinking that if the judge had accepted it, and with the impact it had on the jury, maybe someday soon there will be teams of lawyers and computers," Kusens said.

Besides his not-guilty ver­dict Kusens' computerized testimony may have won him the chance to face another panel-he has been contacted concerning a visit on the tele­vision quiz program, "To Tell the Truth."

~~~~----------~ This book will help you clarify your thinking about the moral and religious questions raised by war.

It is the first book to examine impartially the whole spectrum of argument-philosophical and religious, pro and con-­about "jusl" and "unjust" · wars. conscientious objection, and 1he rights and responsibilities of the ind:vidual in a nation at war. Against the background of Vietnam, It Is an important book for all :. tormented Americans ••• an Invaluable book for religious counselors ••• and an urgent book for every young man who is subject to the draft.

WARAND. CONSCIENCE IN AMERICA By EDWARD LEBOY LONG, JR. $1.65. paperbound, now at your bookstore THE WESTMINSTER PRESS• Witherspoon Building, Philadelphia, Pa. 19107

I

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attorney. Banquet that the E ing lhe n are capa' selves."

Hoge SJ the Magi a part of of Law I School of Arguin~

sent is I the righ1 said mob a point \\ come feru ed to re measures

•·confro a prospec reflection tion is ~ time sine· la\r, and are at a t

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Students by the S phone Co. have thei disconnect days of sc

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If studer few days c man said. will proba and thus 1 sent until gone hornE

The spo dents to ca to find ou them to h< removed it can be pr end of sch

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Page 3: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

s

lAYS 10k •••

he added. ~rusade or a 1ittee. Even­t will have stian action; road. Right

1ke progress 1t faiths for 1 and better !ach other's

spring of mal sympo-Hays said,

:Corest some ing authori~ of ecumen-

telieved the •nly one of ttestant side 1tes. There 1any Catho­r~ical insti-

1 Leaders not include :~.te students 1dy, Hays will consist rences with iing to con­e soundest 1t our rela~: !r Christian ts respond istian good 1rd us and attempt to mission of

... .., .... rr . , . i~A·ssistant., h~"ls , .. te:.'" ,.f. .-lf,ec r-.-.~ e. Working 1 is a com­Dr. Claude ~lotte, Uirl­i the chair­' from the 1glish, his·

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t you ~s about ~laus r war.

examine spectrum lphical [!con-just" · Jbjectlon,

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RESS•

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Criti~ Praises Prod~ction Of ·'The Madwontan Of Chaillot'

By DOUG LEMZA The University Theater's

production of. Jean Girau­doux·s "The Madwoman of Chaillot" was r.ot the most perfect one of that play. Nor was it the best work of that creative institution. Yet. MEr­tin Bennison's staging and the actors' efforts gave Girau­doux's wot·k a drive that did not let up and a fire that ef­fected both comic and cere-bral points well. · .

Giraudoux as as the mam conflict of his play a war be­tween those who are sane, but rule society with an irisane t'llthlcssncss: and those· who, though on a lower plane than the rulers, have .more human­ity and compassion for the world.

But I thihk that Giraudoux placed in his play a more real and interesting problem: the plight of an agin~ man who is not able to bnng back a long last love. 111e leading lady, Rita Case.. gave a mar­velous '"tour de force" per­formance in making human characteristics come alive on

as friends or the troubled stage.

P1·obably, this effort is the best p:nt of the pre~R·nt pro­duction. for most no!;L<JI~ie moments in pla~•s. especi;llly new plays. ai'C h<Jnd!ed in heavy-handed manner. The nostalgia usually drips im-mediately into sacch<~rine drenched sentiment. Mi~s C:1se"s portrayal of the Mud­woman of Chaillot (The Coun­

. tess) can be ranked as one of the major acting achieve­ments I have seen:

She has the fantastic glow of a worldly-wise womandorn ::b:mt her. Miss· Case np­,,roached each crisis as if slw ~1ere superior to · it. The Countess however, putters uround i~ a haze which allow-; the victims of her whimsical wrath to feel that she is a pu~h-ovcr for their schemes. Actors do not manufacture this feeling and to achieve· it is a worthy accomplishment for the actress.

Giraudoux creates a large number of chm·aclct·s who act

Countess and as a chorus re­.ac_ting to the mooching busi­m·ssmen and their plots. Ri­cm·do Corrcdot·, as ·the shoc­][,ce peddler, and Charles Har­t·ill, as the deafmute, portray these two minm· roles with gu:;to. They never cease to c,·catc a', charac:le1· from the m:nimal material Giraudoux sketches into the script.

Thcr.:! is also a love story en­tangled in the war. A drowned man, Pi~re, who really hasn't gone under due to the agres­siveness of a young police of­ficer, is attracted to the pretty maid, Irma, who keeps house for the Countess. Pete Edt'll!1, at Pierre, and KaH1y Smm­ders, as the flirting .Irma, giV<! performances that take the !o·:c episodes through the play quickly and neally.

Dav·id McNaught, Paul Washburn, Fred Wendorf, and Calvin Stringfield, as tlJC pre::;. irJcnt and his loud friends who search for oil bidden under the streets of Paris, build ex­Citement into their roles, which

ROSE GARDEN ••• lies between John54)n and Babcock Dormitories. The· University Club, composed of faculty wives, donated the money

-PHOTO BY MeNEILL

to plant 60 rosebushes between the two dormi­tory buildings. (See story page G).

Negro Leader Leon H. Sullivan Will Speak Twice On Tuesday

program in the nation.

Attorney Addresses Law Day Activities

are representative of the One of the nation's foremost money-grubbing Wull Street Negro leaders for employment brokers. . · opportunities and against juve­

The Countess's three "mad" Itile deliquency will speak in fdends Countesses Constance, chapel and at 8 p. m. Tues­Gabrielle, and Joscph"ine, arc · day in Wait Chapel. played by Kathy Germut~, Dr. L~n H. Suilivan, found-1'errina Cheek and Leshe er and director of Opportuni­Gayner respe~tively. Their ties Industrialization Center in caricatures of a flock of pse;.~- Philadelphia, was chosen one do-aristocratic biddies ne~·er of the Ten Outstanding Young

He organized the Philadel­phia Citizens Committee Against Juvenile Delinquencies and Their Causes in 1955, and within a year, over 20,000 peo­ple had been mobilized in block organizations and com­munity action.

In 1956 the National Confer­ence on Youth Work organized a national citizens committee patterned after the one estab­lished by Sullivan in Philadel­phia.

At the age of 20, Sullivan as. sumed the assistant m"inistrv of Abyssinia Baptist Church o.: New York City, which is the !c:rgest Negro congregation in America.

Three years later he bccan~e pastor of First Baptist Church in South Orange, N. J., where he was the first Negro elected president of the South Orang"' Council of Churches.

James F. Hoge, a New York attorney, said in the Law Day Banquet here last Saturday that the essential question fac­ing lhe nation is "whe~her we are capable of governmg our­selves."

Hoge spoke in a banquet in the Magnolia room that was a part of the 15th observance of Law Day by the University School of Law.

Arguing that the right to dis­sent is being perverted into the right 'to destroy, Hoge said mob violence has reached a point where society has be­rome fearful "we may be fore. ed to resort to police state measures.

•·confronted by so dreadful a prospect. our need for sober reflection and dedicated ac­tion is greater than at any lime since the Civil War. The law. and all who belong to it, are at a time of testing.''

Hoge urged law students ·to­ac!:ept ·-the·. X$!~POD;sibility . ; of,

• making the rUles of self gov- · ernment understandable to so­ciety. Hoge's topic was "You Belong to the Law" and in

his speech he said "the mob goes to the extl·eme, and t~c-~r Men in America in 1955. has got to belong to the law; 1·~dt"v1"du"l perf"o.•~aiitles exhlbll s

d t d th t th l- a " " ~ ullivan's opportunities cen-to un ers an a ere s crazy and pathetic qualities. · b hat "nd't ter sponsors widespread ]"ob distinction etween w 1 - There was a successful at-

d d hat training and retraining in Phil-viduals may o an w tempt to integrate all techni-adelphia, and has branches in large groups may. · · cal aspects of the theater for 65 major cities.

"Hysteria and organized th1·s production. Dr. Harold t. h t nded The Philadelphia center was mass ac ton ave ex e Tedford provided the costume h

their disorder and disrespect Ch 1 11 .11 de t e first such job opportunities . . . t design. ar es arr1 - - grr..cs. .

for law from campaigns 0 vised the lighting scheme -----------­civil rights to strikes of school which was exceptionally good teachers and government em- for the arresting entrance of Three Lab Plavs ployees, to · antiwar d~mon- "d ts to re " sirators to campus d1stur- - · the prest en ' pro spec rs, - To Be· Presented bances, ' labor strike and a poters, and the press~e

. - ty f ro groups into the bottomless plt. Fri·day, Saturday-growmg vane 0 P - Then the Direction. This

te~.d~r~~ Judge John Lar- year for the product~on , ~f Three one-act plays will be tr. "Look Back In Anger ' t,u3 '"ven each night at the Uni-kins of the Eastern Dis Ict h .,.

of the state received the Stu- critic invented the term "t e varsity's Arena Theater on dent Bar Associations Award Bennison touch" to explain Friday and Saturday, May 10 for outstanding service to the the mature, expressive di- and 11, beginning at 8:00 p. school. Larkins, who lives in rection given to that play by m.

1 · 1 Martin Bennison. After many Phyllis McMurray is the stu-Trenton, is a former egts ~- queries, I am still stuck to de. dent director of "Dreams of tor and former Democratic fine this term; but I assure Don Juan." Actors are Pete candidate for Governor. "OU that the touch is in this Edens, Gene Combs, Doug · Mrs. Bonnie Lynch Hauch J

show. Bennison has shown the Lemza, Laura Jordan and Danser of Winston-Salem re-ceived the Watten · A::., Seavey, same· sure .touch in..,handl~. Kathy Germuth. -,~aid' . .for~"acnieveffient·:·in the Theater's young actor~-.m. The cast ·of "Masks of

~6hrses :.in. :torts: and· agency:· this comedy. I for :one would Angels," directed by Thorn Seavey, a former Harvard Uni- like to thank him for infusing Case, includes Willy Jones, versity law professor who the University Theater with a Claire McNaught, Christie died in 1966 was a visiting new drive and creative out- Monthan, Linda Van Oot, Dave professor at the University for look. McNaught and Bob Smith.

John H. Vernon of Burling- College Relations Director

"Life" magazine named Sul­livan· one of the 100 most out­standing adults in 1963. He has received numerous other awards, including the Free­dom Foundation Award in 1960, Outstanding Young Man of the Year Award in Phila­delphia in 1955, Afro-American Achievement Award in 1956, the Silver Beaver Award by the Boy Scouts of America in 1957, c.nd many other Philadel­phia awards.

A native of Charleston. W. Va .. , Sullivan attended West Virginia State College, Union Theological Seminary, and Columbia University. He is the reCipient of six earned de-

Since Sullivan went to Phila­delphia in 1950, the member­ship of Zion Baptist Church has grown from 600 to over 4,000.

w H A T

I s ., I

C.I.P.

OW GOLD AND BLACK MoDd.ay, May 6, 1968 PAGE THREE

College Dropouts Earn More Money

(ACP) - Quit school- you probably can earn more by saving the money instead of purchasing a college educa­tion, the University of Minne­sota Daily reports.

A recent study concluded that a college graduate's life­time earnings mig'ht often be greater if he had chosen not to continue in school and plac­ed the cost of higher education in a savings bank.

Arthur Carol and Samuel Parry, ass·istant professors of operations analysis in Mont­erey, Calif., said that in some cases it is wiser for an ind:ivi-

dual to leave school earlier and invest his earnings during the years w'hen he would have been in school.

When the costs of undergrad­uate education are added to those of graduate school, they found, for example, a person, would be better of.f financially as a plumber than as a chem. ist.

They also found that when the money for graduate school must be ·borrowed, the life­time earnings of many profes­sions are lowered consider­<:bly.

So why wait? Drop out now ;:,nd avoid the rush.

Students Urgerl To Disconnect Suite Telephones

Students have been urged by the Southern Bell Tele­phone Co. of Winston-Salem to have their suite telephones disconnected before the final days of school.

two years. -- -:l ton was named president-elect c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008 of the Wak~ Forest Lawyer

1 Alumni Association at a meet- Please send me a free Sheraton Student 1.0. Card: 1 ing earlier in the day. Taking I office as president was J. Sam Name:: _________ ""!!:' .. ---------- ~~ Johnson of Greensboro. Pro- Address=------------------­fessor James E. Sizemore of the Law School was re-elect-

Get your

bumblebee degree~ A company spokesman said

Friday that by calling the company sometime in May to disconnect the telephone, the bill for that number can be prepared before students leave for the summer.

If students wait until the last few days of school, the spokes. man said. the billing period will probably run unto June and thus the bill will not be sent until after everyone has gone home.

The spokesman urged stu­dents to call the business office to find out the Lest time for them to han~ their telephones removed in order that the bills can be prepared before the end of school.

Skipper~ do it! 1

Inglish teath~r® For men who want to be where the action is. Very intrepid. Very mas-

• cullne. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION. '$2.50, $4.00, $6.50. From tile com­plete array of ENGLISH LEATHER men's toiletries.

ed secretary. Named to the ·---------·--- ·----executive committee were Sam Behrends Jr. of Raleigh, Su­preme Court Justice Jose~h Branch of Raleigh, Archie Smith of Asheboro, Louis B. Meyer of Wilson, H. Edward Knox of Charlotte, Murray C. Greason of Winston-Salem, Dewey W. Wells of Elizabeth City, Billy Joe Maun_ey ad; Shelby, Philip B. Whitmg ~f Winston-Salem, Lonnie B. Wil­liams of Wilmington, Richard A. Williams of Newton and J. Benjamin Miles of Greensboro.

We're holding the cards.

Get one. Rooms are now up to 20% off with a Sheraton Student 1.0. How much depends on where and when you stay.

And the Student 1.0. card is free to begin with. Send in the coupon. It's a good deal. And at a

good place.

~~~~~~M~~~~ ~i~~~r Inns@

CR-UISE TO NASSAU AT END OF SCHOOL

FOR

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Reserve a seat now on the Bahama Star to Nassau June 3-return. to Miami June 7 at 9:00. All meals included-use· the ship as your hotel in port at Nassau. Special Student rate is $74, including port taxes. First come first served. $20 deposit is required.

DON'T MISS THE BOAT

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Enroll in one of three exciting classes. Charger R/T, Coro·net R/T, or Dart GTSport. Each has its own dis­tinctive sporty style, but all three have a lot in com­mon. like automatic transmissions, wide-tread red line tires, special handling packages, and a long list of other standard and optional features.

To help you make the grade. the standard engines for the Scat Pack include a 340-cu.-in. V8 for the Dart GTS. And for Charger R/T and Coronet R/T, a 440 Magnum VB. Or for a more accelerated course, you can order the optional 426 Hemi.

All three members of the Scat Pack offer distin­guishing marks at no extra cost. Bold bumblebee stripes ·wrapped around the rear. Or Rallye stripes along the side. Or if you prefer to be a little more modest, no stripes at all. It's your choice. Ready for class? With the Scat Pack, you've got it. Why not sign up at your nearby Dodge Dealer's and get your Bumblebee Degree, today?

Dodge 0 CHRYSLER MOTORS CORPORAnON

To add some color to campus, get your Official Dodge Scat Pack Jacket in the official "Dodge Red"

Color-with the authentic embroi­dered "bumble· bee" design on front and back. Send for yours today.

r------------------, FILL OUT ANO MAIL TO: I Hughes-Hatcher-Sulfrin, 1133 Shelby at State, 1 Detroit, Michigan 48226. Attn.: Mr. Gus Anton. I Enclosed is a check or money order (made payable to 1 Hughes·Hatcher·Suffrin) for$ to cover cest of I ____ jackets at $9.95 each. Available sizes: S.M. L. XL, XXL. (Add 4% sales tax lor deltvery in Michigan.) I Name S1ze _ . _ . I

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Page 4: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

HENRY B. BOSTIC, JR. RALPH .A. SJMPSON

Co-Edftorl

DICK HEIDGERD BasiDess Mauger

LINDA CARTER, Managing Editor LINDA LEVI, As&Gclate Ediior GRAY LAWRENCE, Assistant Editor BARRY ROBINSON, Assistant EdiCior

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, MAY 6. 1968

Mullen Has Advantages Dr. Thomas E. Mullen has said

that he is "peculiarly favorably situated" as he assumes the posi­tion of Dean of the College. It is clear that he does indeed have the advantages that will make his administration a successful one.

Not only will Mullen be fortu­nate in having his able prede­cessor as Dean, Dr. Edwin G. \Vilson, serving as Provost. He also possesses the personal qual­ities that make an administrator both understanding and responsi­ble. Mullen combines the best at­tributes of youth and maturity.

He is young in outlook - dy­namic, progressive and creative. But at the same time he i:-; ma­ture in judgment, experience and principle. These qualities have characterized his work at the University that led to his appoint­ment as Dean.

Mullen's record as a teacher and scholar is admirable, as was €Videnced by a Fulbright Fellow­ship to study in the United King­dom. His contributions as coordi­nator of the University's interdis­ciplinary honors program proved him as an intellectual leader.

However, his accomplishments as a teacher include more in­tangible factors. He has been a

professor who demands much of his students, yet gives them even more in return, in the way of personal consideration and at­tention.

It is undeniably an asset that Mullen has been on the Wake Forest faculty for more than ten years. He knows the University's heritage and has figured in its greatest period of transition. The experience he has gained while participating in some of the Uni­versity's f>ignificant changes of the past will facilitate his task of coping with equally momen­tous developments yet to be made.

Perhaps most important, Mul­len is a man of strong convictions. He has been outspoken in the past when the occasion has de­manded. Many of his colleagues, for instance, remember one fac­ulty meeting in which former President Tribble criticized a faculty -member. Believing the charge to be unjust, Mullen, al­though a relatively new member of the staff, took the President lo task.

Mullen has earned the respect of his students, fellow professors and the administration. His ap­pointment is proof of what ten years have already shown. We are sure that his administration as dean will fulfill his promise.

'Pro' Creativity Read Mrs. Donia Whiteley

Mills' comments on the mission of Wake Forest during the next sev­eral decades. If you have already read her article, the last in the series of· five on "Pro Human­itate,'~-what the univ"e.r.sity motto means, then we're sure you're planning to re-read it. It's worth thinking about.

With her knack for writing, 1\irs. Mills has combined her con­tinuing love and interest in the University, and in mankind. The most refreshing thing about her column, ho\vever, is an interest in indiYidual creativity, a sermon which she practices as well as preaches.

In her reflections on the Uni­versity's motto, a Latin phrase which she claims would do justice to any institution of higher learn­ing, even "a great cosmic univer-

sity," Mrs. Mills urges students not to become "dis-involved."

We can't afford much longer a life consisting only of 'a beer and a broad and a few soul minds, Friday-afternoon-to-Mon­day-morning Nirvana, just sock it to me baby· and never mind 'humanitate'."

A beer and a broad isn't a bad life, and it can't be denied that those are essential components of a well-rounded existence. The bad state of affairs, however, is when the good life means that "Pro Humanitate" is only the beer mug crest.

All of these things and many, many more are pointed out in Mrs. Mills' stimulating article. Think about the article, and next time you pick up that beer mug over in the house, ponder what you're "Pro Humanitate."

'Musings On Maddox' By DAVID RIFFE

DIRECTOR, WESL.EY FOUNDATION

If graduate school does anything, it enables a person to appear to give rapt attention to the professor while the mind w::nders hither and yon. Such was my feeling as I listened to the governor of Georgia.

What does one do in a public lecture to show disapproval of the statements being made by a speaker? Custom dic­tates that when we approve we may, at any time, show this by applause. Some w!Jo agreed with Lester Maddox did this.

I was among a number of those who disagreed. <Jnd I felt somewhat frustra­ted that I could not, politely, show my c!isapproval. But our society does not al­low for a polite way of expressing dis­approval.

Booing certainly seems inappropriate. To get up and leave is more socially ac­ceptable. but this in no way is com­parable to being able to show apploval by applauding-you can get up and leave only once!

It occurred to me during this lecture that we should have some socially ac­cepted way of showing our disapproval of a speaker's ideas while listening to him.

"With friends like Maddox. The Church doesn't need any enemies.'" This phrase occurred to me in terms of his defense of Christianity, God and public prayer. And. in the discussion period which followed when the governor al­leged that the Bible says Hell is scgre· gated, I received some insight into the reason that so many persons have writ­ten off The Church. If Lester Maddox has arrived at his posi·

tion because of the teachings· of The Church, then we must say that The Church has failed. Perhaps the Church has failed. but I should rather think that the governor has. not listened to it close­ly.

He interprets the tea(!hings of The Church much as he intcrprel<; the Con­stitution: as H suits his own private in­terests.

"If only everyone in the world were a Christian, then the problems of the world would be solved." No, the Governor did r:ot say this. But this statement came to my mind as I listened to the governor.

The problems of the world would not an be solved if everyone were a Chris­tian. Lester Maddox demonstrated this quite dearly. He claims to be a Chris­tian. I claim to be Christian. But, L sus· pect, on nearly every social issue we would disagree.

Never in the history of The Church have all Christians been of one mind on the pressing social issues of the day. What The Church is now coming to rea­lize, and this is all good, is that to effect wcial change we must be political rea­lists: no significant changes in our so· cia! climate come about except that some real power is brought to bear on the establishment.

This is whv we are afraid of the civil rights movement - it is exercising pow­er and thn t threatens us.

Another reflection of mine upon hear· ing Governor :VIaddox is that Wake Fo­re:st «s an educational institution has !'Omf!hiJw nl)t done it for the majority of thr:: stw:ie~:ts presently enrolled. How else i.= it r-vssible to evahHite the posi­tive re:=.y.r,n'c ef such a large number of ~tudf::nts: to such fllppant and irrc:.;pon­:::ible remarks about the Supreme Comt of the: United States; to a totally er­roneous view of the Bible and Christian­ity; and to plea for re;;ponsibility to the law of the land but a personal dis­regard of it when the "right" of private property seems to be infringed upon.

Is the University really providing the conditions and stimuli to help the stu­cents make mature judgements?

But, perhaps there is yet hope for Wake Forest University. We do find in her midst a "remnant" which seems dedicated to a concern for the rights of man - all men. Hopefully this "rem­nant" will become larger to include more of us who have thus far been :m­reflective and unresponsive to the in· equities in our society.

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Garrity's Materialism Is Alumni -Office's Weakness

By BROOKS STIU..WELL With coRege graduation imminent and

admission to the ranks of alumni-dam rapidlly approaching, ·it is a good time to reflect on the soundness and the future of our alumni program.

From personal · observation and con­versations· with both ~>resent andJ former Woke students, I think that it is realistic to describe the program as a disgrace to the new University. ~ administra­tion is, in this area at least, out of touch with the persons w1hom they serve, and to whom they must appeal.

The sb.a11owness and the faiLure of ahmmi activities are best seen in two areas; the pitiful excuse which is ex­·hibited as a magazine representing Wake Forest, and! philosophy of Alumni Direc­tor M. Henry Ga·nity.

The deficiencies of the magazine should

be obvio\.15 to any layman in the fwld of publicatiorui. The writing is of me­diocre quality, the liayout is worse than that of the average high-5Chool year­book, and ·the picture quality leaves much to be desired. "The Wake Forest Maga­zine's" greatest fault, however, lies in its content .

A major portion of space in. the maga­zine is devoted to raising funds for the poor, downtrodden and helpless Wake Forest of 1:00 pres>ent. The appea·ls llave all of too· punch of a Baptist church­building drive and aJ.I of the taste of a funeral home advertisement (just clip the mailing coupon in the last issue for a happy afterlife).

Context Of Philosophy

Letters To The Editors (All letters to the editor must be signed; names will be withheld on reques'- Spell­in&' and punctuation are Ole writer's own•>

The problem of the alumni magaJZine can be understood more clearly when seen in the context of it::: editor's philo- 1

sophy, Mr. Garrity is probably the most materialistic individual to hit Wake Fo­rest in the ~st couple of decades.

The first time that I saw Mr. Garrity speak was at .a meeting in Kitchen House more than a year ago. He was put on the hGt seat in trying to defend Wake Forest ..,,gainst the claims of the deprived in­dependents of the world. (Anyone who knew the M.R.C. in-group in its first couple of years will recall the self­righteous paranoia with which the lead­Ers viewed the hostile, pro-fraternity campus).

Ferm's Gratitude To the Editors:

May I ask for modest space in your r ampus journal to expre:>s my word: of ••PFeciation to the many students wilo have been in my cours€s?

As I take leave of the col.lege I go away with fond memories of the fine attitude r:isplayed by Wake Forest S•tudcnts: their willingness to take on assignments, their response to the wonderful subject of tlhilosophy, their respect and courtesy in the classroom and lh€ir patience with <m "old guy" who our.ht long ago to ha're taken retirement more c:erious·1y.

And may I th<:mk the Tribble ad.mini· 5tration, especially President Tribble, who chose to take a wild chance by in· viting me he-re two and 8J half years ago and prolonging my appointments

And to an. inner circle of Wake Forest friends - faculty and administrative -the thanks of Mrs. Ferro, and' myself for so many expressions of friendship.

I speak at1so my appreciation to Pro· fessor Helm who courteous:l.y guided my path in departmental responsibilities. He is well informed, grncious and coopera­tive.

Thanks, thanks, thanks to "you-alL" Vergilius Ferm Professor Philosophy

More Than To the Editors:

It shou:d never be forgotten that men and communication are basic parts of America. Therefore, it should never be forgotfen that good communications and good understanding among men lead to the betterment o.f the American society. With these in mind, I would like to sub· mit a response to Dr. Broyles (OG&B, April 29).

I was enchanted to know that there is agreement between Dr. BroyleS! and my­l:·elf. I agree that considerable discus· sions of all j:roblems are both neces­sary and advantageous. But I do not agree that problems should mainly be discussed.

Agreeably, a University is a unique pla~e "to enga:~e in thoughtful dis· (:ourse." But I am convinced, that if dis· eussion is all that students and profes· sors engage in while at Wake Forest, then we wm not be prepared to face the conditions of society once we leave.

America was not built on discussions alone. Suppose Washington and others had merely discussed the Declaration of Jndependence am:! not actively enforced it, then this would not be the America it is today. Suppose Dr. King had merely discussed his ideas, then once · again, America would not be wlrat it is today.

America was not built on discussions alone. Therefore, it is dangerous for those who can take responsible action til neglect to do so. It is dangerous for one to sit and play his fiddle while America is on the verge of burning.

Dr. Broyles' statement that "No po­iitical system wiH ever achieve justice without promoting good character" is a twofold statement - no political sys­tem will ever achieve good character wit·hout promoting justice. It is simply impossible to .achieve good character 1mder unjust conditions - justice is the foundation of good character.

The new born baby (black or white) is born with no definite character. If he gets justice. he will more than likely develop a good character. But if this ~:::me infant is denied justice from birth, he will more than likely develop an un­::>cceptable character. And the same so­ciety which denied him justice will con­derr.n the victim as unjustifiably violent. J do not advocate violence, but neither do I advocnte the denial of justice.

I readily agree that the constitutional processes "promote discussion and rea­soned agreement•• among men. But I hestitate to agree that these fundamental processes promote "men who respect tnd support such institutions" who "guide their own behavior accordingly nnd themselves become men of reason and good character."

Dr. Broyles would have been correct had he stated that the constitutional processes promote some men who "re­:;,pect and support suC'h institutions.''

This, "some," sad ,though it may be·, is cha:llenged by the "many" who fail to exhibit the essential "reason over pas­::.ion."

If this be an error, then why was there need for a Martin Luther King. If this be an error, then why is there a need for civil rightst legislation? "Reason over psssion" is good, but this s!hould be a l;ilateral thing. If reason over passion is not a bilateral thing, then the black man is justified in exhibiting violence.

According to our much appraised De­duration Independence (the actual and formal beginning of the American sys­tem), no men should sit id•ly by and al­low themselves to be unjustifiably crush­ed by any system of government, but in­stead" ... whenever any Fonn of Govern­ment becomes destructive of these ends (Inalienable Rights - Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness), it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, aud to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and or­ganizing its powers in such form, as !o them shaU seem most like•ly to effect thei·r Safety and Happiness."

Dr. Broyles let us not consider only the Constitution., but other American docu­ments as well. I have learned: in my political science course to judge from e whole - not from one standpoint.

I am convinced that the American ::.ystem is far better than others, and I DO NOT advocate the ab()olisihment of this government. But I do advocate the nbolishmen.t of the systems in which the black man is degraded.

Violence is one .method t9 bring at­tention to such systems; .it js dangerous;'' <:nd ·destructive;· it s1i.ould '\bf!,_underS'fl:lfiW."'rlt ab~e, but I do not advocate it! I advocate responsible action.

I state that violence is und.erstandable :md justifiable: maybe I do so becau3e I'm black; maybe I do so because I'm human; maybe I do so because I, too, &m American and have faith in its great documents; maybe I do because I be­lieve in bilateral reason over passion; or maybe I do so because I'm disen­changed with many American practices and know that primarily discussion will not solve them.

As for the fate of the Negro Com­munity, your leaders will be its leaders, your· ideals will be its ideals, and your system of government will be its system of government.

My last response­Freemoru A. Mark Class of '71

Beamer Blasted To .~he editors:

Another .letter of complaint? Maybe. But I do wish to answer the challenge of Mr. Bob "Bomber" Beamer, manager of the renoym Wake Foresf Laundry. Mr. Beamer has just exhibited to me an· ether example of the service offered by hie es·tablishment.

After paying for a laundered shirt, I discovered a ripped sleeve (my second such this year) that had been acquired curing Mr. Beamer's modem laundry process. I expected the usual minute renumeration for the damage but instead [our.d myself confronted witli an obvi­ously overworked and overweight gen­tleman.

He recommended that I pay for their futile attempt at taoping shut the ripped seam. I declined and demanded refund. •·Bomber·• Beamer then demonstrated his concern for my property and his ser· vice by declaring the shirt rotten and ;~ot worth a cent. (Needless tu say a rot­ten shirt - if it is - is better than none.)

Mr. Beamer then proceeded to illu­rtrate his point by ripping both sleeves in numerous places. Friends, I was ::>ghast! True to the Wake Forest tradi­tion I call for God's damnation on Mr. Beamer for such a dastardly act. In vain was I taking His name because -"Bomber" Beamer then threatened to throw me through the wall. I declined his advances. I threaten retaliation to !:is business. Beamer's reply to that was :1 sarcastic "I'll bet you're a real pow­erful individual."

No, Mr. Beamer, I have no power, nor a red Cadillac, nor a business· that ho~<is a choking monopoly on laundry

Fnund<>d January 15, 1916, 31S the stUdl'nt newspaper of Wake Forest University, Old Gold and Blark is published <'ach 1\Innday durin&" the school year except during examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board 1\lailed each Tues­day, one day after publication date.

l\l<•mbcr of the Associalt>d Colll'giate Press. Re11resented for National Advertising by Na· tional Educational Advertising Service. Inc., a division of Reader's Digest Sales and Serv­Ice:>. Stlbsrripllnn rate: $3.50. Second-Class postage paid, Winston·Salem, N. c. Form 357!1 should b<• mailed to Box 7567. Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, N. C. 27109. Printed: by The Nashville Graphic, Nashdlle, N. C.

service. To wit, I am merely one irate, disgusted, and vindictive student.

To all those patrons in student-land T wish to make the f(}llowing suggestion. 'rhe student welfare committee Qf student government is always avaiJ.ahle for com­plaints about any service offered on campus. Heretofore each one of us has had legitimate complaints against the consistently mediocre and often times vile conduct of the profit making organi­zations run- for the student's "con­venience." There will now be instituted - hopefully (please) with the support of all ill-treated patrons - a sub-com­mitte~ on complaints. Every student is urged to register his problems and the-re­by permit united action against the ;,erious•ly offending companies.

To the administration, and particularly to Mr. Lucas, I recommend that other laundries in town be allowed· to compete with: Mr. Beamer's exclusive six year tenure. Perhaps the space now occupied by hiS' establishment could be designa­ted a pick-up and delivery point for the competitive laundries. In any -case, the conduct of the Wake Forest Laundry manager should be noted and remem­bered when his contract oomes up f()r renewal.

Be sure to be capable of defending yourself at all times - you never kno·w where "Bomber" Beamer is lurking.

John L. Tate Class of 1969

'Dixie' As 'Hymn'

Mr. Garrity made a talk in which he outlined the virtues of Wake Forest ·­those virtues which he believed distin­guished it from other academically su­perior schools. First, he said, Wake's academic reputation meant a lot to busi­nessmen. Wake graduates could make more money than their counterparts from Carolina. Second, Wake was a Christian college.

What parent would't want s.uch an en­\'ironment for his son or daughter?

A student in the back of the room got rather indignant. He wanted more from his college, he said. Total education meant more than the chance to make a buck. Didn't Wake have something else to offer? And what is a "Christian col­lege" anyway?

Mr. Garrity wasn't puzzled. The stu­dent was wrong. He had heard down in the business fraternity he had visited that the guys wanted to make more money than their dads. Of course that was what students wanted.

As for this "Christian college" stuff, d.idn't we have required chapel and two basic religion course?

The students who left that room last year were mad. They did have more in mind than money when they came to college - and if they didn't then, they

TO the_Edito~:. .'.~ ,~v"~ ""~~ ~···· · ·""hadofuund.their~somethip;g·els€ irr-a play :· · 91), :i)les4~;: .\pril ~~··~ .Wa1t~¢P,f.~l"1 fn; 1 ~ri!·. a;'nov~~ of~'ri~:~tlliT,~la_nri#;~lr,3J~ss_or was very disappointe&' i!f the"·reactioli fo r., .. l;omewhere~2 Wli¥r'qj3rt· ufHm<m--'·coufd the song "Dixie." I was personally glad be so materialistic as to suggest that we to hear the "hymn" sung because I were in education for money's sake? knew it would bring out the best in the The alumni program at Wake Fore:ot students. is failing to attract the young alumnus

Disappointed, I said, because if you of the 1960's. Its philosophy is direct~d noticed not ·all the white students stood toward the sons of a bygone age, 1ts like they should have. However all the presentiment is shoddy, and its method Negro students rose and marched out is that of a Dale Carnegie course -singing like Dr. McDonald wanted every· vigor without substance. one to do. Charlie Davis Freeman Mark There was a student speaker at a con· and others realized the' true meaning of vention which I attended recently who the song and so they were not ashamed summed up the feelings of the modern to shJ" their beliefs by being the first to generation - we are the first genera-rise and leave singing. But white stu· tion which has had the opportunity to dents sat and did nothing but laugh at stop grinding long enough to find out the leaving students' convictions-where th:;.t the smell of flowers is beautiful. w~ the sitting students' pride? Mr. Garrity hasn't thought of buying

· (Continued on Page 5) his flowers yet.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Let FREEDMAN Ring

(The column this week is written ily Sam!.y Savage who is substituting for Glenn Freedman.)

There was an article in the latest is· sue of our college magazine entitled "Assembly Line Education." The by­iine for the article read, "You Are Lucky to be Reading This Essay," which made me sha·rply aware of the select group whiC'h we here at Wake Forest really are.

The. article dealt with academics in a purely academic sense. But then isn't Wake Forest known more for its aca­demic atmosphere than for anything else? And who, more than we as stu­dents, should know?

Most of us· are aware of the ·ract that we went through ·a tmique . screening program before we embarked upon our endeavor of higher education here at the University. As a result of the screening program, we are expected (and justifi­ably so) to do the supernatural in our studies. . We must continually remind ourselves that we a~~ a select group. Else how would· be endure the combination of challenges constantly imposed upon us by the University?

One of these intriguing challenges is the eagerly-anticipated pop quiz. Though we are taking. say. sixteen hours apiece, we must relish the thought of .reading ev~ry assignment for the day it is due. ~l'lu~ does present problems at times; It makes those nine· and ten-hour re· yiews for hour quizzes quite hard to fit mto the schedule. The preparation for the pop quiz also tends to put a dent in the paralle 1-reading time.

And then there is the term paper. Ah. Manna from Heaven. Not only is this facet of college a challenge to our r.cademic potential, but it is also a direct challenge upon our levels of endurance. There _is the fun game of seeing how

many hours we can put in at one try (after, of course, we finish the reading , for the pop quiz and rush through the outside reading requirements). And there is the race to see how many ciga­rettes we can do away with in a six­hour period. Ah, yes, the challenges are so good for us.

After an inspi1·ing all-nighter, we can all look forward to a day chocked full of more inspiration. That is, the lectures that we hear on the average of sixteen times each week. Again we must rea· li.ze that we are indeed a select group - we must be if we have so many doc­torates stalking the classrooms and spouting knowledge. Each of the profes­sors here has no doubt read everything in print that has anything to do with his department. And. as his illustrious lectures imply, so have we (supposedly).

By the end of the week. we all no doubt thank God for placing us as indivi­duals among our own kind. Education is a fine, fine thing. Especially here at Wake Forest. And the outside influences of big-theatre play productions, art :>hows, concerts, and worthwhile chapel programs ··serve as further stimulation to learning.

We are such a select group of stu­cents. And it is ·such a beautiful thing l":ow illusion of individuality pervade::; the campus. By the time we reach senior­ship, we are all convinced that books a.re better than sex and that attending a math lecture when you're an English major is more worthwhile than ...:.. well, than anything else. It is such a good thing because we all believe it.

Wake Forest makes learning such a great thing. Indeed we can all. in years to come cover our mans about the , · world o~tside with the consoling re­minder that we were once students of Wake Forest Unirersity; we were the chosen few,

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Page 5: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

..

OLD GOLD AND BACK Monday, May 8, 1968 PAGE Fl,

Fulfill 8-Hour Pledge Mullen 'Favorably Situated' For New Position As Dean

Seniors' Late Movie ./s Tonight Marchers Start Work Now

By LINDA LEVI

Dr. Thomas E. MuHen new dean of the College said Fri· day he accepted the position last week without working out ·a philosophy beforehand. How~ver, he said,. "my own

feeling is that I am peculair­ly favorai;}Jy situated in that I can learn what my responsi­bilities and duties will be with the advice and support of the person who has been doing it.

"I think that my conception of what the dean's functions are and what the office is will be determined and filled out as I learn the job," he said.

Dr. Edwin G. Wilson, pro­vost of the University· and for­mer dean of the College, said that the division of powers be­tween dean and provost have not been differentiated fully.

Wilson said. however, that the dean would work prima­rily within the area of the u~- . dergraduate college. The posl­tion of provost. he said, is a University position. "It is a little more inclusive.''

He added that th-e trtL~tees. are now in the process of rc­wl'iting the by-laws of the University with a statement of responsibility for the vnrious 'admiristrative offices

The duties of the provost have not yet been defined. When the trustees complete this task, Wilson said. ~he di­vision of powers between the offices of provost and dean wHI be spelled out.

Mullen said. that his primary interest is in the acad~mic sphere and "in whatever ways a dean can do so. I hope to contribute to the academic de­velopment of the College.

"There are certain points· where the dean is involved in the acquisition of new fac· ulty," he said. "H is an im· portant job of the dean to keep the . strong faculty we have in the highly competitive academic world and to adrl to that strength the best new faculty members that we're capable of · attracting - in cooperation with the depart­ments."

'Pro -Hum~nitate'

In the area of curriculum, Mullen said that one of the functions of ·the dean wn~ lo "usc whntever influence he has lowm·d a continuing re-evalua­tion of the curriculum.

"I don't think thnt any dean can impose his own ideas about the curricuh1m," he ·said. "But the departments necessarily think in terms of their own discipline. It is one of the dean's functions to take a broad·er view and. play the watchdog to see that a rea­sonable balance is maintained between the departments."

In the discussion between teaching and rese·arch. Mullen said that both were essential" in the kind of coiJege Wake Forest is and' oughlt to be.

"I would hope that as we in­crease in schoJ.arly producti­vity, we will have to be on our guard to guarantee the con­tinuation of Wake Forest's tra­tion of eanph.asizing good teaching."

After he asumes his position on July 1, Mu.Jlen . will take over Wilson's office in Rey­nolda Hall. No announcement has been made concerning where Wison will move.

Senior Week will be~in today with a. movie nt Rcynolda Cinema Theater

According to senior class president David Pug·h of New Bern, girls alf'e not required to be in until half an hour af­ter the movie, "Arrividerci, Baby," is over. The movie wila end about 2:00 a. m.

A President's banquet will be •held in the cafeteria Tues­day evening at 6:00. "This i!'l the one thing in which the President is .directly involved with the seniors," Pugh said. He urged all seniors. to attend.

The Impacts will be featured Wednesday from 8 to 12 p. m. at Graylyn. A senior may date anyone ·he wants, including underclassmen and studelts from other campuses.

The senior outing has still -not been definitely scheduled, Pugh said. Because of con­flicts with beach weekends, it will not be announced until later this week. He said that letters would a1so be sent out informing seniors about gra­dll.lation procedure.

Any senior who d1d not or· der invitations may obtain the remainder of the stock by con­tacting Pugh.

(Continued from Page 1) yearbook. They've created "The best-laid plans o' mice something-and when this pro~

and men gang aft agley" cess can be transposed· into seems, indeed, to be the most the ar~na of service to human­persistent lesson of history, ity, the implications are tre-

Maddox Wishes He Could Prevent March

and youthful idealists usually mendous. I always sort of liked (Continued from Page 1) find this sort of universal chaos the lines from a crazy poem to bring honesty, efficiency an awfully tough enemy to by Oscar Wiliams called "The d li b tackle-much more elusive Leg in the Subway" in which an mora ty ack to govern-than Indians and forests and he perceived ment. "And I am going to do

1 everything in my power to floods. So they became cool Y "How civilization was as promote the public good of all dis-involved turn the radio dark as wood and dimen- the people of Georgia," he up a little l~uder: a beer and sional with things said, "regardless of the dagger a broad and a few soul And how birds dipped in that national politicians are rn i n d s, Friday-afternoon-to- chromium sang in the ere- trying to' drive between the Monday-morning Nirvana, just vices of of our deeds·." races in our society." sock it to me baby and never mind about "humanitate." And what are <lur deeds- Maddox accused the Federal

Relaxing fare all right, but "pro humanitate" or "pro" government of preempting the rather expensive: and just how anything else? Is it too ele- rjghts of states and then ac-

wild" as Senator Robert Ken­nedy <Jf New York who is also seeking the nomination.

He added that he thoug'ht the country needed a man like George Wallace, former gov­ernor of Alabama and a third party candidate for the presi­dency, in the White House.

When asked why he did not attend Dr. Martin Luther King's funeral in Atlanta, Maddox said that :he "would have been a hypocrite" if he had. long can we afford it? mentary to suggest that Wake cusing the state of "not doing

th 1 I 1 1 "The whole world was look-Once upon a time, when Forest University can best m~re on e oca eve -Wake Forest University was serve humanity during the . There are those o~ the na- ing at Georgia, expecting it to

11 th d d d t · tlonal level," he sard, "who blow up," he said. "I stayed Wake Forest Co ege, ere next eca es an cen unes ha h ~ ga· t in the governor's office to be were two red clay planters only when each Wake Forest ve sworn un ° Y war a Ins overnor ,

By DIANNE JONES STAFF WRITER

Students for Responsible Ar:­tion who· participated' in t~e March to City Hrul began their eight hour work pledge Sat­urday.

Approximately 50 University s'tudents pa·rticipated in a clean-up campaign in a Negro seetion of Winston-Salem, and several coeds started special interest -classes for seven through fifteen year-old Negro girls at the Patt€'l'son Avenue YMCA.

The student committee un­der the supervision of t!J.e lo­cal Experiment for Self-Re­liance (ESR} group wants to il'lustrate "the White commu­nity's obligation to heLp alle­viate the causes for current disorders through positive and immediate action," one of the march lea<klrs said.

300 Pledge Time

Nearly 300 students pledged eight hours of their time tl\ work in any capacity for open coalition in a petition present· ed to Winston--salem's mayor, W. C. Benton, after a four­mile march f.rom Wait Chapei to City Hall.

Bob Perretz, senior of Park Forest, Ill., Jim Wells, sopho· more of Greenville, and Jim Warren, sophomore of Wins­ton-Salem O·l'ganized the march and are in charg<C~ of co-ordi­r:ating the present eight-hour work pledge with ESR's pro­g;-ams. Perr~tz emphasil"..ed this ac­

til·•l cannot be ignored by eith­er the white or Negro commu­nities. "We are proving our~ selves to tbese people, but this is only a token, just a begin­ning. We're· hoping that the students won't stop at just

eight hours· of work," he said. Use All Talents

Eve Varenas, junior of Greenville, Tenn., has been comparing the student work applic-ations with the job op­portunities. "The reaction has just been great, but I want everyone to realize that we're just starting and can use any­one's talents," she said.

The ESR leaders held an orientation meeting Wednes­day afternoon to acquaint the students with the type of work they would be doing.

ESR, "a small-time VISTA," gets very limited funds from the national government and is based mainly on volunteer work.

There are openings for stu­dents interested in clean-up work, tea,ching special inte­rest classes, acting as recrea­tional instructors, and doing clerical and; :research work.

"Evaluating the results of the ESR in actual statistics would be difficult," one stu-dent said. (

"The evidence of the sue-

Letters ... (Continued from Page 4)

I must commend Dr. Mc­Donald for his great choice of a closing song that so re­presented the Northerners on this campus. It was consider­ate of him to give them the opportunity to pay allegiance to the government of the Con· federate States of America.

I would like to say to Dr. McDonald-Good job! I am sure that the "hymn" repre­sented the feelings of each and every student on this cam­pus.

Bucky Scarborough Class of '71

Reynolda Gardens Parking Improvement Begins Today

cess of the program can be found on the faces of under­priviLeged· youngsters taking their first airplane or train ride, or in the expression on lhe faces of Negro adults who realize that the volunteer workers are sincere in their efforts to help. them," he said.

Volunteer Work

The very foundation of the ESR is volunteer work, and the Student movement for Re­sponsible Action is modeled directly after it.

Volunteers only contribute their time and efforts after the community requesting aid provides an equal amount of manpower. The two groups learning to work together is one of the basic purposes of the program. C~ds have organized spe­

cial classes whkh wm be taught from 9 a. m.-12 noon

every Saturday at the Pat­terson YMCA. Austine Odom, senior of Martinsburg, W. Va., and Linda Levi, senior of Nor­folk, Va., wiH instru~t a course in personal hygiene. Susan Howard·, junior of Gastonia, and Jan Wuertenberger, senior of Oh<l'l'lotte, will direct a swimming cl·ass.

Debbie Boone, a junior of Ronceverte, W. Va., will teach dancing, and Je·an Deter, jun­ior of Winston-Sal€m, wHl con­duct ballet sessions all sum­mer.

Eve · Varallas, who .is. con· ducting sewing cloasses, urged any student interested in con­tinuing this class work during the summer to sign up.

"I'm really excited about the response. One of the work­ers at the Patterson Y cal1ed me and said the girls enrolled in my class couldn't wait to start their lessons," she .said.

Legislature Approves

Heads Of Committees New committee chairmen

were approved and a bill to give seniors priority in room choices was passed. at the m€€ting of the Legis·lature Wednesday.

The general meeting is the first since the elections two weeks ago.

The four major student government committees will be coordinated• by student body treasurer Mike Gunter. The

. new chairmen are university development, Jeff Mackie; student welfare, Jim This: academics, Cassandra Martin; and judicial review, Jim Car­ver.

Committee chairmen who were approved are fall carni­val, Jim Cross; intercollegi­ate activities, Bek Howell; communications, Ed Wooters; state relations, Sam Long; and orientation, Chuck Alexander.

Chris Barnes; and transporta­tion, Woody Mefford.

The positions will not become official, however, until they have been accepted.

A bill which! would give sen· iors first priority in choices of dormitory rooms was proposed by Dale Glendening, junior ·of Fayetteville. The measure was amended and. passed.

A proposal by Bucky Scar­borough, freshman of Spray, that Wake Forest participate in the Model United Nations sponsored by Holl:ins College was tahled.

Gunter reported that the new budget totaled $3,875, a definite increase over the past few years.

Seniors Can Get Scores Of Tests

full of dirt sitting on the low University student decides, on ~v~ry. ~ook an~ cranny of g __ · ------brick wall which ran between a very personal and individual JUriSdiCtiOn the city, the coun.-

. Do · h h · h ty and the state has left." Bostwick and Johnson. rms. basis, ~ at e wis es to serve He blamed this, at least Scales Names

Additional chairmen approv- Seniors may receive their New parking spaces will be wm be restricted to the pave- als are handbook, Linda Ed- scores of the senior test<; from

installed this week to a-ccom- ment. wards; traffic board of ap- 8 a. m.-4:30 everyday this modate the increased traffic The parking problem became pels, Paul Long; dorm board week in tile P~hological

,One daJ! L~m.e.~v$J,i.gg_.Q.~.ql\., . .,.~u~pity? A~d sets about_do- .. parfUil;' o( 'the "nl!JJ~ll~!i,Qr.,i.: _., f :: .• _, "' _. -·' , ... '-· , .. ; ·fe. Jh~b.:P~~_}~9fg;aC~S~)? b.U!-.-o~n{g J!JSt •. t thst~~JQJ!~at~~,Yff..!~, u•'QfoJogfSt~i""iVM''call thent§!'l~eS;lr!'.i1·4t [J.:Prom'Qt«Jn'$1: .paus,ed.ou~slue, In;~lgu~ . ..., see .... o. ~c, Ion ne s ues smu::u o . the Supreme . Court of the

iii 1 H,eiiJ\>)d,a "~aro~s.:.:. , :· ·~lf~Jtf;for t!W'}irst;_~me' this_~ '.'?J. ap~J~~,.G;~g~¥~~Sio~;~ ¥~#~,' ~~~ry!~~-s qentet.r;~ .~: ... • :,·~· ·; . year . becaust! of . an impre<;e• 1or part!nts, David' Ta!fiafei+o; The :f>'YschologJCal ServiCes

a freshman coed I ~a~ aly;ays serve. . United States." (Continued from Page 1) :··About· 24'rtew'''pi:llrking spac- dented five or six weeks of freshman leadershlp, AI Sas- Center is located in Efird

es will be buhlt between the beautiful spring displays. ser; chapel, Bob Casey and Hall. Seniors took tbe day-thought rather und1stmgwshed No Genrus Needed "d "th t f • who now appeared to be pour· You don't have to be a musi- B~t. h~ ~a! • e cour 0 Johnson rece1ved the B.S. de-ing water into one of the plant· cal prodigy or a genius of wit Pll;bll<: opmwn has. not yet lost gree from Wake 'Forest and ers out of a Dixie cup. and words. The nebbish who farth .m the Amencan f~ee en- holds the M.A. and P~.D. ~e-

circle and the woods and ten "Many people have been at- Charlie Kirkpatrick; Slater, long tests last month. more across from the boat tracted by the displays of cher­hO<use, said Dr. Walter S. ries, dogwoodS, and rhodden­Fiory, Babcock professor of dron in succession," he ex­botany and director of Rey- p-Iained. "What in the world" I in· claims he "hasn't got any tal- terprise ~ystem, an~. It has gret15 from Duke Umvers1ty.

quired "are you doing pour· ent at all" probably hasn't n_ot l~st fcuth that a Citizen cll:n He beca.me a member of the ing water into that planter?" looked hard enough-or can't me m a democracy b.Y hi! faculty ln 1957:

"Well, I planted these flow· be bothered. If you can do one own efforts, and. th~t l.s th Brelune received the B. S. nolda Gardens Flory also mentioned some

The areas will be construct- improvements that he hopes ed limestone and fine gravel, to make in the Gardens. He with .cement blocks separating pointed out the possibil·ities of the indiv~dual parking spaces. dearing the path from the Uni-

eds " h 'd perfectly th1ng and do it well whether only way he c~n nse. degree from Roanoke College er ~e • s. e sar • . , . ' In a question and answer and the M. S. and Ph.D. de­senous, ho~?IDg up the e~pty It s ~ookmg ~ p~t roast or sess·ion following the Chapel grees from the University of envelope. They c~e m !1 ~aulking a sarl~at, then you- period, Maddox said he North Carolina at Chapel Hill. box of cereal. I don t know 1f v_e got so~ething to work thought Hubert Humphrey, He came to Wake Forest in they'll co~e !-IP ~r not, but I With. If nothmg , e!se-do y~u Vice President of Ute United 1959. · thought I d give It a try any· know your ABC ~ · Can Y u States would be able to cap- - M:rs Robinson holds tlhe way." . te~ch? them to a disadvantaged tuie the Democratic nomina- B.A. degree from Wilson Col-

After that little encounter, ch1ld. n _ tion for president. Maddox lege and received the M.A.

The parking facilities are .. versity campus to the Gardens blended with their surround- and decorating it with orna­ings by several spaces in mental plants and, eventually. which plantings have been of cleaning the lake and sur­left, Flory said. rounding it with cherry trees.

Signs will later be. P!lt up containing the speed l.1m~t ~ regulations. No plcmck.ing will be allowed and bicycles

somehow, I always thought of I wonder how rna ~ stu said Humphrey "is . not as and Ph.D. degrees from Syra-her as rather remarkable. dent~-;even. the ones. w 0 may cuse University. She joined the

It seems to me that there be Sltting m educahon. ~ours- Football Stadi"um f culty in 1952 are many occasions where we es "getting the cert1~1cates a · might "give it a try any'way" just in case"- fully realize th~ Expected To Be -~;w,~---------------, a bit braver. And since "pro'' tate,"· -that are synonymous _ "pro humanitate" if we were opportunities "pro humaru- Finished By Fall ' 1111 ~~ ~ s~ -., means "for" instead of with the teaching profession. (Continued from Page 1) "against," we might begin by It's writing and ac~ng and people in a sell-out. About 4,­substituting some plain old building and learnlng and 000 of these spaces will be In­creativity, the passion for creating all rolled into one. cated directly around the stad­building instead of tearing And in case you've .already ium, and the others will be on

. down, in place of that primi- been thr~ugh all this. ]az~ •• al- Ernie Shore and Coliseum tive penchant for combat. ready given "humamtate a parking lots. · Very Satisfactory Substitute try and become discouraged Meanwhile, the cily is pre-

For new and different id'eas for your Mother's Day shopping, stop in and see our gifts. Handmade pocketbools, jewelry, flowers-under-glass, and: wooden tableware are just a feW of Dur originally designed, handcrafted items It makes a verv satisfactory by the futility of it all, you can paring the approac-hes to the

substitute; if you don't think always plant some seeds. stadium. Shorefair Drive (run- ..._ .... so, wander around campus First of all, you plant a ning north to south on the east , ____________________ ,

614 Main Street - On Salem Square

sometime and just observe the couple of hundred-in hop~s of the stadium) and 30th Street energy being expended in the maybe a few of them will are being widened to fom· band room or theater, or ·come up. Even if only one of lanes; the construction of the Howler offi~e. These students them blooms, it'll probably be Cherry-Marshall Expression to are anything but dis-involved. th~ best-lookin~ flo~er you U.S. 52 is also part of the They've grasped, in their own ever saw. A~d 1f nothi~g hap- overall traffic plan. · small way, the primary func- pens at_ all, 1f you don,t even An underpass for pedestrians tion of all artists-past, pre- get a Slngle spout, ~on t t.ake is being built under 30th Street. sent, and future-to create it too hard. Somethi~g IIllght Besides the lights in the stad­some sort of order out of the come up after Y?U re long ium, lights are also being put cha<JS of our daily existence. gone, and .you might never in the parking lots.

They've taken the raw rna- even know 1t. · Recruiting high school foot-

· the K & W cafeterias INVITE YOU TO DINE WITH mEM TODAY OR ANi' DAY AT YOUR CONVENIENCE - AT ANY ONE OF THEIR FIVE LOCATIONS

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terials of law and somehow Do those two red ~lay pla.nt- ball players, and more home molded them into something ers still sit on the ht~le bnck games are just a few of the meaningful-a eacaphony of wall between Bostwick an.d benefits of having a new stad­stray notes into a concert; a Johnson Dorms? If not, lt ium, according to Bill Tate. multiplicity of words and ges- ~oesn·~ matter; there are fer- varsity football coach. In ad­tures into a play; a host of tile soils everywhere. We have dition, it will be a motivating

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·'.

Page 6: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

Monday, May 6, 1968 OLD GOLD AND mACK

AAA Students May Apply For School Of Arts

Interpretation Classes Will Give Reading

A reader's theater program will be ·presented in the pros­cenium theater Wednesday at 4 p. m. and 8 p. m.

24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE ALSO GENERAL REPAIR AND BODY WORK

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HOLYDAYS: Davis Chapel, 5:00 p. m.

CONFESSIONS: Church, Saturday, 4:30 to 5:30 p. m. 7:30 to 8:30 p. m. Da'>'is Chapel, Saturday 3:00 to 4:00 p. m.

CONSULTATION: Room 107, Library, By Appointment

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Students with special inter­est in dance, drama, or music may apply for enrollment in summer school at the North Carolina School of the Arts.

All students interested in at­tending the summer session should apply for admission by writing to Director of Admis­sions. Summer Session, North Carolina School of the Arts, P. 0. Box 4657, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27107. Applica­tion forms will be mailed.

Each applicant should stat? in what field he or she is in­terested (dance, drama or mu­s'ic).

Dance students will be re­quired to send pictures with applications. Drama students will be required to send letters of ~·eference from ;teachers and directors. Music students me requested to send tapes of 12 to 15 minutes of excerpts which will demonstrate tech­nical and musical competence.

Summer school tor dance and music students will be

Dr. Pohris "fo Speak At

German Club The head of the German

Consulate at Atlanta, Ga., will speak at a dinner meeting of the Gennan Club in the Au­tumn Room Thursday at 6:00 p.m.

Dr. Heinrich Pohris, a native of Bavaria, Gennany, is the consul for the region includ­ing Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee. He will speak on "Divided Gennany and Ger­many's Role in the Common Market."

Mter graduating from col­lege in Upper Bavaria ·and Ber­lin, Pohris was drafted into military service in 1941. He fought with the German army in Russia, receiving several wounds before he was dis­charged as a Second Lieuten­ant in 1944.

Mter the war he studied law and received the Doctx>r of Laws degree from the Univer­sity of Munich. He joined'"ffl.e German Foreign Office in 1952.

He has served as third sec­retary with the embassy in Madrid, Spain; as a ronsul with the Consulate General in Calcutta, India; with the Fo­reign Office in Bonn, Ger­many; and as first secretary v;ith the embassy in Copenha­gen, Denmark.

Pohris has been the head of the diplomatic mission at At­lanta since 1965.

Students are urged to con­tact their German professors or Sam Merrill, extension 358, by Saturday, May 4, to assure reservations. Meal cards will be honored.

Get A Card For Mom

AT

College Book Store

fl'om JW1e 23 to Aug 3. Drama students will attend an eight­week session, June 10 tx> Au· gust 3.

The drama department will accept high school juniors and seniol's and college level stu­dents. It will also sponsor for the second season the Festival Theater, which is a profession­al summer stock company. Some of the performers will be members of the summer school teaching drama faculty. Drama students will be class­ed as apprentices in the pro­fessional company.

-PHOTO BY McNEILL

Dr. Julian Burroughs' oral interpretation class will pre­sent "The Brick and the Rose" by Lewis John Carlino and "The poetry of Luv," a col· lection of love poems.

"We are doing the program primarily so students may see what reader's theater is," said Pat Rampy, rising senior of Springfield, Va.

Miss Rampy and Mrs. Susan Tutt, rising senior of Winston­Salem, are directx>rs of the program. Plays to be presented by the

Festival Theater are: "Marat­Sade" by Peter Weiss, "Can­dida" by George Bernard Shaw, "Taste of Honey" by Shclagh Delaney, "Thieves Carnival" by Jean Anouilh and "Oh What a Lovely War" by Joan Littlewood.

Missy Suffers From Extreme Spring Fever. "We are responsible for cast­ing, rehearsals, lighting, and the setting," said Mrs. Tutt.

One of the six productions will be a week of dance featur­ing the Festival Theater Dance Repertory Company directed by Robert Lindren, dean of the school of dance. Ira Zucker­man, dean of the drama de­partment, is producing direc· tor of the Festival '!'heater.

Wake Men Needed For Boys' State

Student Supporters Travel To Indiana

Reading in "The Brick and the Rose" are Jim Best, sen­ior from Greensboro, N. C.; Ronnie Bulson, senior from Annandale, Va.; Elizabeth Groff, rising junior of Salis· bury, N.C.; Walt· Kitchen, sen­ior of Clinton; Gary McHam,

Dr. Louis Mennini, dean of the school of music, said that music students attending the summer session will have pri­vate study in piano, flute, oboe, clarinet, French horn, bass on, guitar, violin, viola, and cello.

Ensemble work will be em­phasized during _the summ:r session with spectal emphasls on the woodwind and string chamber groups. Public con· certs will be scheduled accord· ing to students' progress.

Annual Will Be

Retreat Held

In September The annual pre-school inter­

denominational retreat for both upperclassmen and in­coming freshmen will be held at Camp Hanes this fall from Sept. 8-11.

The theme of the retreat is "Christianity Through the Arts" and the program will

Approximately 20 male Uni­versity students are needed to serve as counselors in the Boys State session to be held here June 16-22. '

Designed to provide train­ing and apprenticesihip in lo­cal, state and national govern­ment for rising high school sertiors, the program is con­ducted by the North Carolina American Legion in conjunc­tion with the University.

University students who >:erved as counselors will re­ceive $75 plus room and board Undergraduate, graduate and law students are_ eligible for the positions.

Those students who are se­lected will be expected to de­vote their fuH time to the pro­gram for that week. They will live in the dorms with the Boys State delegates and will advise them in their political activities.

Students interested in parti· dpating shouid contad Dr. Jack Fleer, associate profes­sor of poHtical science and di­rector of the program, or Dr. Percival Perry, professor of history and dean of the sum­mer session.

By CHRISTIE MONmAN STAFF WRITER

Four Wake Forest students journeyed to Evansville, Indi­ana this weekend to drum up support for Eugene McCarthy in the State's Democratic pri­mary Tuesday.

Pete Stiles, oo-ordinating chairman of Students for Mc­Carthy in Winston-Salem called the Indiana primary "the key to the democratic nomination at this point."

Volunteers from Wake For­est were Joe Mount, senior of Columbus, Ind.; Bill Cusmano, sophomore of Cranbury, N.J.; Laura Ford, sophomore of Lynchburg, Va.; and Stiles, junior of Charlotte.

They shared the campaign work in Evansville with several

'Deaconlight Serenade'

To Have Local Groups The Deaconlir,ht Serenade,

Tuesday at 11 p. m. on WFDD, will feature campus talent. Among those performing will be Mim Belk, Rob Caskey, the Foresters, Laura Jord·an, Montgomery and Myers, and Larry Thurner.

feature a one hour color U • , •t CJ b S ~ov~e;~~~~~~.~ds~;er~~ , DIVers~ .Y -~::.:: ... lu .. _.~, ·~·J p~n~~~S ·"~ experimental films, an art ex- · ·' .,. ·~·r :··· "' .

hibit, a photography exhibit, a Rose Garden For Women possible drama production and recreational periods.

For the first time faculty members have been invited to the retreat for the full four­day period. Dr. Thomas El­more, dean of students; Dr. Doyle Richard Fosso, Dr. Ro­bert W. Brehme, Mrs. Louise Denham, Dr. Edwin Hendricks and Dr. John J. Woodmansee are among those who have ac­cepted.

Transportation will be pro­vided from the campus to Camp Hanes. The C!)St for the entire period is $20.00.

Sign up sheets are posted at the information desk in Rey­nolda Hall.

The University Wive's Club, in conjunction with the Wo­man's Government Associa. tion and Tassels, has sponsor­ed a rose garden for the coeds between Babcock and Johnson dormitories.

The wive's club organized a trip to the furniture market in High point and charged each person one dollar to go. The project made $102 for the gar­den. To insure that the project was properly financed, the club allocated an additional $20 from its budget.

Approximately 60 rose bush­es have been planted between

the two dormitories and the · WGA is purchasing garden furniture for the area.

When the project is com­pleted, according to Mrs. Mar­garet Perry, president of the University Club, the faculty wives will hold an informal party in the garden for all the coeds.

The University Club has also initiated a "Fountain Fund" with money made on projects and saved over the years. The members, under the direction of the buildings and grounds office, plan to place a fountain in the area in front of the library.

Summer Opportunity (Male Students over 18)

Students can earn $550.00 per month while working towards Scholarships, Trips, Prizes and Awards.

This yea:r Collier's Vacation Earnings Program -offers College Students more prizes and awards than ever before in the history of the Company;

-Nine days all expense paid trip to Acapulco -Fifteen $1,000.00 Cash Scholarships -Three $500.00 Cash Scholarships -Valuable Merchandise Awards

Students accepted for summer will have location of their choice.

Portsmouth, Va. Norfolk, Va. Richmond, Va. Waynesboro, Va. Roanoke, Va. Va. Beach, Va. Newport_News, Va. Danville, Va.

an opportunity to work in

Petersburg, Va. Charlottesville, V a. Staunton, Va. Fredericksburg, Va. Roanoke Rapids, N. C.

Qualified previous Employees would have opportunity for Management All who would be interested fill in the next few lines and mail prompt­ly in ~rder to receive first consideration.

Mr. Ernest G. Burnett District Manager 700 E. Main Street Suite 1128 Richmond, Virginia 23219

Name ----------------------------------------·---------------

School Address ----------------------------------- Phone ______ _

Home Address ----------------------------·------ Phone ______ _

Date available for interview -----------------------------------

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Area you perfer to work --------------------------------------

busloads of student VQlunteers from Illinois and Tennessee.

The city was divided into six wards, comprised of 18-20 dis­tricts. Each volunteer took one district, knocking on doors, talking to people, and passing out literature, Stiles said.

The students who made the trip called it successful in rallying support. Stiles said many Republicans were con­vinced to cross party lines and vote in the Democratic pri­mary. Most of those who con· sidered croosing party lines . leaned toward McCarthy, Stiles said. Many Indiana voters are not aware they can cross party

. sophompre of Inman, S. C.; Frankie M~Clain, senior of Anderson, S. C.; Mike Sasser, senior of Winston-Salem; John Spivey, jWlior of Rockingham; and Becky West, senior of Bethlehem, Pa.

Readers of "The Poetry of Luv" include Julie Davis, jun­ior of Nashville, Tenn.; Ron Jerewicz, jWlior of West Allis, Wis.; Celie 'McAdams, senior of Rockville, Md.; Tim Quigg, sophomore of Huntington, W. Va.; Jim Robinson, junior of Hickory; and Margaret Tobey, junior of Louisville, Ky.

lines, he said. Service Club Expemes for ·the trip were

taken from contributions to El t o~j!.r,· the North Carolina and Indiana ec S 'JJI.Cers state campaign headquarters.

Meanwhile, supporters of For Next Year Sen. Robert Kennedy have been concentrating their efforts here J. D. Wilson, junior of Mt. in Forsyth County. Kenned~'s Sterling, Ky,, was elected presi­national headquarters have told dent of Circle K last week. local students there were al- Other officers elected for ready plenty of out-of-state the 1968-69 year were John volunteers in :¥ldiana. The last Hughes, freshman of Pitts­estimate from Kennedy's Wash- boro, vice president; Tom Sea­ington headquarters exceeded ver, freshman of Greensboro, 6,700. secretary; and Skip Queen,

Bud Talley, senior of Ran- sophomore of Logan, W. Va., delman, Cameron Yow, sen- treasurer. ior of Lexington, and Larry Circle K, a service club J~eshW.i!W~on,-~~m lfAWY~, s~or~. by. Jh,e,. ,Awin.~ City .• and state tr~r#rn·.Of t·VT?0.,, Kiw.anis..Cluh was.ieorg~ed. are co-Qrdin;ifiDi't:h~' 'K.~~dy-' afffie 'Uz\l've~ftf ifi 'N'O'vemoer." movement in the 5th Congress- Sam Gladding of Decature, ional District. Ga., a graduate student in re-

Accord.ing to Talley, the In- ligion, led in the revival of the diana primary is perhaps more club. crucial for Kennedy than Me- Included in Circle K projects earthy. Kennedy must show this semester were a "Future he is the people's choice by Freshman Weekend" and a winning in the primaries, Tal- ''TWIRP" (The Woman is He-ley said. quested to Pay) .dance.

Examination Schedule MAY 2D-29, 1968

Morning 9:00 - 12:00

3 'ITS classes and English 112, 156

2 Tl'S classes

8 'ITS classes

Monda) May 2G

Tuesda) May 21

Wednesda! May 22

Afternoon 2:00 - 5:00

12 Tl'S classes

11 MWF classes

9 MWF classes

Reading Day - Thursday, May 23, 1968

Math 102, 105 Friday 1 MWF class~ 111, 112, 161, 162 May 24

3 MWF classes Saturday 9 Tl'S classes May 25

10 MWF classes Monda)' 12 MWF classes May 2'1

1 'ITS classes Tuesday 11 Tl'S classes May 28

8 MWF classes Wednesday 2 MWF classes May29

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

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I '

--·Pr~ ll(J

Profes of the dE represer Monday ner at honoring member Universi1 years.

Raben! bered fc against in 1919 v Wake F from his horst, be head of back, wb fore it r~ zone. It Wake F touchdo~

The ki in the ai

Memor were sf Wake Fo served a the Deac and 1919 also play White to• duties.

"I was so fans ' Memory

Fou To~

Edit Appoin1

ial board for 1968· last wee next yeat

As so cia D. Wilso1 ing, Ky. sophomor Gray Lav Asheville,

' editor. S editor wi freshman

Wilson, was an a: newspape: from an He has ~ since his: active in I was publ year and tions· chai is · puJ;litci! lenge"'69;

An assi! Robinson Old Gold year. He· paper in summer c there aga is a histo1

Lawrenc ing for th his fresh: named a Y!'ar. He and a mer pha frater ceived thE man jourJ sented eac outstandin Wednesda• cations ba: she was winning n kie Pow \

An org for next y1 ing the la The locat. v.ill be. thE office, 2: Time. and nounced ir. paper.

All stud1 ested in W> should attt contact Mu several op1 and typist and humor ed. Previot ience is nol

Positions vide oppor ment and i

SPEI

I

I OPE

OT Hill #I

Page 7: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

(Y 0

program he pros­:Sday at

1s' oral 7ill pre­Ie Rose" ino and " a col-

program may see is," said :enior of

·s. Susan Winston­: of the

for cast­ing, and Tutt.

rick and .est, sen-

N. C.; [)r from ~Iizabeth of Salis­hen, sen­McHam,

L, S. C.; enior of ~ Sasser, m; John :ingham; enior of

•oetry of 1vis, jun­tn.; Ron ~st Allis, ;, senior n Quigg, gton, w. junior of ~t Tobey, Ky.

b

~ers

(ear r of Mt. ;edpresi­week. cted for re John n Pitts­rom Sea­~ensboro,

Queen, W.Va.,

.ce club 7iin, ~City .• r!l~ed .. ifemJJer.-· lecature, nt in re­al of the

projects "Future and a

m is Re· :e.

le

I • 5:00

I .

lowed nmittee

I •

·,·Prof Attends Dinner Honoring WFPlayer

WFoo·. This Week ~

MONDAY

7:00-Campus Report: News of Wake Forest and inte1·views wjth campus personalities.

sity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill..

Maddox Gets Rough Treatment

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 6, 1968 PAGE SEVEN

Medical School Professors Receive New Appointments Professor Jasper L. Memory

of the department of educat1on represented :the University Monday at a testimonial din­ncr at Baton Rouge, La., honoring Harry Rabenhorst, a member of the Louisiana State University athletic staff for 43 years.

Rabenhorst still is remem­bered for his 110-yard punt against North Carolina State in 1919 when he played on the Wake Forest team. Kicking from his own end zone, Raben. horst booted a punt over the head' of the State defensive back. who touched the ball be· fore it rolled into the State end zone. It was recovered by a Wake Forest player for ~ ·touchdown.

The kick traveled 89 yards in the air and 21 rolling.

Memory and RabenhGrst were students together at Wake Forest when Rabenhorst served as a player-coach for the Deacons during the 1918 and 1919 seasons. Rabenhorst also played in 1920 when J .. L. White took over the coaching duties.

''I was one of the 10,000 or t " so fans who saw that pun •

Memory said. "It still stands

Four Named To Old Gold Editorial Staff

Appointments to the editor­ial board of Old Gold & Black for 1968-69 were announced last week by Linda Carter, next year's editor.

Associate editors will be J. D. Wilson, junior of Mt. Steri­ing, Ky. and Barr~ Robinson, sophomore of Arlington, Va. Gray Lawrence, sophomore of Asheville, will be managing editor. Serving as assistant editor will be Dianne Jones, freshman of Winton.

Wilson an English major, was an ~ssociate editor of the newspaper this year, promoted from an assistant editorship. He has worked for Old Gold since his sophomore year. Also active in College Union, Wilso_n was publicity chairman this year and will be major func­tions· chairman ·next year. Hc·­is · pugileify"-d~rest~f:fot;::GruJ.J:·.'!

• lenge .. '69; · :' · . · -An assistant ed1tor this year,

Robinson began working on Old Gold during his freshman year. He worked for th~ news. paper in Arlington durmg the summer of 1967 and will work there again this summer. He is a history major.

Lawrence also began work­ing for the newspaper during his freshman year and was named assistant editor this year. He is a history major and a member of Pi Kappa Al­pha fraternity. Miss Jones re-

. ceived the E. E. Folk fresh­man journalism award, pre­sented each year to old ~!d's outstanding freshman wnte~, Wednesday night at the publi­cations banquet. In high sc~ool she was editor of the priZe­winning newspaper, the Ahos-kie Pow Wow. .

An organizational meetmg for next year will be held dur­ing the last week of clas~es. The location of the meeting \\<ill be. the Old Gold & Black office 226 Reynolda Hall.

' Time' and date will be an­nounced in next week's news-paper. .

All students who are mter­ested in working for the paper should attend the meeting or contact Miss Carter. There are several openings for report~rs and typists, and ~ cartoorust and humor columrust are need­ed. Previous newspaper exper­ience is not necessary.

Positions on Old Gold pro­vide opportunity for adyance­ment and for remuneration.

in my mind as one of the gre<1test things I've ever seen in football.

"I even went to the library a few days ago to check the wcathe1· for that day," Mem­ory said in class last week, "and L can assure you there wasn't any hurricane that day."

Rabenhorst served for many years as head basketball coach at LSU as well as coach in football and several other sports. He later served as as­sistant at.hletic director and was atnietic director for a couple of years following the death of Jim Corbett.

Rabenhorst reached the mandatory retirement age at the end of April. 'I'he testimon­ial dinner was held at the LSU Union Building.

Doctor

Speaks Banks

About

Current Study Dr. E. Pendleton Banks, pro.

fessor of sociology and anthro­pology, recently gave a series of lectures on ·his current re­search.

At Asheville-Baltimore Col­lege and at a meeting of ~ld Town Civic Club, Banks dis­cussed "Social and Cultural Change in Yugoslavia.'' He sp[)ke about his archaeol?gical research in North Carolina in a lecture at Catawba College.

Banks spent last year as a Fulbright lecturer at the Uni­versity of Zagreb in Yugoslav­ia. While there he conducted research on the impact of post­war economic and political ehanges on the traditional peasant cultures.

He has been involved in archaeological studies in pied­mont North Carolina since 1956.

7:15--Wake Forest Sports: An interview with a sporl<; personality.

!J:OO The Salem College Sym­posium: "The Dehumanization of Man," Maurice Whittinghill, Professor of Zoology, Univer-

ECU _Slates In Program

Dare County East Carolina University an­

nounced last week the begin­ning of an instructional pr?­

. gram on Roanoke Island m Dare County.

As a part of East Carolina's Division of continuing Educa­tion courses in drama, music, art 'and community relations will be offered from June 17 to Aug 2. Tuition is $27 per course.

Any high school graduate who is eligible to return to any college or un!ver~io/ which he has attended IS eligi­ble to enroll for the undergrad­uate courses in art and music. Courses in drama and com­munity relations are open only to college graduates or stu· dents with senior standing.

Course Schedule

TUESDAY

7:00- Georgetown Forum: "Science and the Humanities Today." · , 9: DO-Seeds of DiscGntent: Discussion on the relative ef­fects of poverty on variGus ethnic grounds such as poor Negroes and Southern whites.

9:30--A Question of Art: "Is Art a Form of Communica­tion?"

WEDNESDAY

7: 00--Business Roundtable: Leading figures in business and industry discuss current policy questions that touch on many aspects of life.

9:00--Seminars in 'I'heat~r: Third of three interviews w'Jth Ted Mann about Circle-in-the· Square Theater; this ~~ek a director and an actor JOin the discussion.

THURSDAY

7:00--NER Washington Forum: A public affairs ser!es from Washington featurmg many outstanding individuals of our time.

9:00--Theory and Practice Gf Communism: "Marx and Eng­les."

FRIDAY

Lester Maddox, Georgia's ax-swinging, archsegregation• ist governor, received some of his own treatment last Wed­nesday when he visited the University of North Carolina campus at Chapel Hill.

Members of U. N.C.'s Black Student Movement brandished ax handles at Maddox during the speech in which he called for Democratic party unity.

The Georgia governor, at­tacked many for his ax-han­dle-in-hand refusal to serve Negroes in his restaurant, told U. N. C. students that tlhey should change what they dislike about the Democratic party by wo·rking within :it, in­stead of deserting it.

Negro students from the BSM equipped with posters and an ax handle, occupied the front row during his speech. One poster said, "The South shall rise again, when the Maddoxes step aside.''

Although the signs brought some applause, they were gen­~;rally hissed.

Three associate professors at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine have been promoted to full professors, effective July 1.

They are Dr. Frank R. John­son, surgery; Dr. Charles N. Remy, biochemistry; and Dr. Louis deS. Shaffner, surgery.

Promotions for 16 members of the full-time faculty at Bow­man Gray were approved at the quarterly meeting of the University B<>ard of Trustees April 26. The promotions were announced by Dr. Manson Meads, dean of the medical school.

Promoted to the rank of as­sociate professor were Dr. Margaret D. Conrad, physio­logy; Dr. Robert H. Coombs, sociology; Dr. Robert N. Head­ley, medicine; Dr. Alanson Hinman, pediatric-neurology; Dr. Julius A. Howell, surgery; Dr. Frank H. Hulcher, bio­chemistry; Dr. Robert C. Mc­Kone, pediatrics; Dr. George S. Malindzak, physiology; and Dr. Stephen H. Richardson.

Maddox cited several instan- Placement Office ces where Republicans we~e To Allow Seniors elected to former Democratic strongholds. To Buy Pictures

7·.00--Speci'al of the Week: "The people of America are Seniohrs who desire wathllet-size p otos may secure em An address given March 19, shouting for us to clean up our from the University's Place-

19611 at the University of Mich- own house," Maddox said. ment Office for $1.25.

microbiology. Named assistant pr()fessors

were Dr. M. Robert Cooper, medicine; Dr. Stephen Homer, orthopedics; Dr. Doris Y. San­ders, pediatrics; and Dr. Wil­liam J. Spencer, medicine.

Johnston, who recently was elected to membership in Al­pha Omega Alpha, national medical honor society, was ap. pointed to the Bowman Gray faculty in 1950 and was pro­moted to associate professor of surgery in 1963.

A 19311 graduate of Presby­terian College, he holds the M. D. degree from Duke Uni­versity School of Medicine. He completed internship and resi­dency training at North Caro­lina Baptist Hospital.

Johnston is a diplomate of the American Board of Surgery and the American Board of 'I'horacic Surgery. In 1965 he

was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree by Presbyterian . College.

Remy joined the Bowman Gray faculty in 1962 from the State University of New York's Upstate Medical Center, Syra. cuse, where he was assistant professor of biochemistry.

He received the B.S. and PH.D. degrees from Syracuse University after which he took postdoctoral training at the University of Pennsylvanm School of Medicine and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Shaffner, a native of Win­ston-Salem, was appointed ~o the Bowman Gray faculty m 1951 after surgical residency training at Baptist Hospital.

He received the A.B. degree from the University of North Carolina, and the M.D. degree from Harvard Medical School.

R

DO YOUR STUDIES INTERFERE WITH YOUR

COLLEGE EDUCATION? igan by William S .. Cof.fin, "They are telling us to shape The pictures, made from the To Earn An Undergraduate Degree, The Average Student Chaplain at Yale. Uru~ers1ty; up or ship out.'' proofs of junior pictures which RS the address was giVen m con- He told the students that the d · 1 t ar's How STUDIES 4 YEA 'I'he first summer's pro- h cri'es of both the ultraconser- appeare In as ye -di t d b nection with a teach-in on t e Ier, were used for interview- COURSES f~g!S ~ew'ry ~poop~in~!I e Dar~ draft. vatives and the ultra-lidrberals ing. Ln many cases, not all the TAKES 40

9:00--Hope of Mankind: "must not be allowed to own 20 pictw·es were used and, ex-~o~~~ett~,';::· .. :lliJ:::' ro'i: "Eoonomio Impliootio"' of out all o...,... oopt '" one ropy -h will READS 280 BOOKS OR War and Peace." Perryle S. Maddox viS· 1'ted the campus be attached to the student's RDS :~~~:u:c~~~~=s~f three quar- Rukeyser, commentator, au- this week and spoke to stu· file, the rest may be obtained 80,000,000 WO

thor, columnist. dents in Chapel Thursday. from the Placement Office.

June 11·28, "Contemp.,acy Read;ng at 200

wo"" per -ule, It will ""7 you at '"'C'' Drama" (seniors and graduate SATURDAY

330 days (or

8000 hours) to read t~ requ

1

red matenal students); July 8-19, "·Art Ap- 2.·0"Concert Hall: Classical s T E v E I s 00 't tak 100 days (2500 hrs )· Prec

iation" (undergraduates); u- only one time. At 6 wpm I es . · • l musi·c I·n stereophonic sound.

2000 3o ..... (800 hrs ) Of course if you want to July 22-Aug. 2, "Home-Schoo - at wpm, lli:l.ys • · . ' .

Community Relations" (sen- 8:00-Music off the Beaten read your assignments twice, it will take a little longer. iors and graduates) and "Mu· Path: Classical music in It 1• R• t t The Evelyn Wood READING DYNAMICS Course has sic Appreciation" (undergrad- stereophonic sound. a lan IS oran e taught over 350,000 people .to read faster and better. They

uates). SUNDAY don't skip or skim; they read every word. ~d they under-Attention ECU's program is envisioned BaptiSt stand more and remember more and enJOY more than ultimately as an improper ~d- 11:00--Wake Forest Best in Italian food they did when they read like you. But, no matter how

Sophomores dition to the campus, offermg Church. A slowly you read, if you don't at least TRIPLE Y~UR curricula tailored to needs 3:30--Ancient European Or- SPAGHEnl and PIZZ . READING SPEED with equal or better comprehensiOn,

Sophomo''" have been m"ged . "'"""""" by. p-.slonal """'' Looatlono Santa "'!""' READING DYNAMICS will "'"""your tuition. """' we by the <egi>t"''' offioe . to ''""'" and pubtio deman"'. del Dexelettl Chw"oh, Vemoe, AUlO AN AMERICAN MENU guarantee. F" '""""' lafonnation, rend tWs ad, ,..., keep the~ app~intmen!s Witll The program will have its Italy. Op,en 11:00 A. M. • 10:00 P. M. name and address to: their maJor adv1sers this week headquarters on property 4:00 _ Collector's Corner:

and to plan carefully the rna- given the ECU Foun~~ti<:Jn las_t ..• ClassicaL music in stereo-, · OLOSE'D SUNDAY EVELJII WOOD ftEA·DJNG:DYftAMJCS jar and related ·courses_ for fall by the- people!<. of Dare phonic sound. '" ·.· _., .. "~ :-' -' -' ... ·: ~' ., ,_. ..,, .• - · · II

the;)!¢, -t.w;o~ :.: , •. ::· .: ·· County. Tbe .. Hmoted value ''00--Sh"""""' Re=dlng 112 · Oakwoo(l Drive ,.. N. ""- SL, Box 592, """"b ... , N. c. 274112

of the property, about 90 acres ;:fW:ins:to~n:-S:a:le:m:~a:nd~~ar:e:a~~-~(~A~C~R~O~S~S~F~R~O~M~'~l11R~~UW~A~Y~S~H~O~P~P~IN~G~C~EN~TE~R~)-~~~===::::::::::::::::::i Reece Requests

List Of Officers 1'he president of each stu­

dent organization has been asked to submit a complete, up-to-date list of officers to the office of Mark Reece, dean of men, this week.

The list is necessary to fa­cilitate communication with the Student Affairs Committee and the administration.

at ManteG Airport and t"':o musicians in concert. school buildings in Manteo, IS more tha!l $500,000.

Conducting Study

Currently the university is conducting a $50,000 ~tudy of its proposed operat10n on Roanoke Island with funds from the Economic Develop­ment Administration. The study is expected tG yield some positive guidelines for future development of the Dare Coun­ty campus.

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Page 8: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

PAGE EIGHT Mondlay, May 6, 1968 OLD GOLD AND BlAIS

Lewis Takes North-South; 'No Surprise' To Haddocli.

Scholarship Fund Continues Memory Of Buddy Worsham

By RICHARD SINK "The North-South Amateur

tournament is one of the ton amateur tournaments in the cotmtry. It is real outstanding, and the field is always well­regarded. The course on which it is played (Pinehurst No. Z) is a true test of championship golf."

This is what Wake Forest golf coach Jesse Haddock had to say concerning the North­South Amateur. To win this tournament the champion must play seven of the finest amateur golfers in the U.S. over six days and defeat each oil€. This was the task fac­ing Wake Forest golfer Jack Lewis. Jr. two weeks ago to­day.

In the first round on Mon­dav. Lewis defeated Robert Wiiford. six up with five holes left to play. Tuesday Lewis squeaked by Bud Stevens. 2 and 1. Wednesdav the survi­vors of the first" two rounds are required to win two match­es in one day in order to ad­vance to the quarterfinal~. Lewis took Phil Antibus ;n the morning round. 6 and 5. and won over Carl Heedt in tl~e afternoon round. 3 and 2.

Beats N.C.'s Best

With eight golfers remain­ing out of the original field of 128. Lewis advanced to the que1rterfinal round Thursday against Dale Morey of Higi1 Point. Morey is generally re­garded as the best amateur in !\orth Carolina. but Lewis won 8 and 6.

Frirlay Lewis hdd to face Bill Harvev of Greensboro in the semifinals. Harvey is an­other amateur with quite a reputation in these parts, but Lewis was able to edge Har­wy. 2 and 1.

Lewis called the Harvey match "my toughest match. I played well. but Harvey also played well. He was one over, and I was one under."

Saturdav Le'l'.'is met former champion· Bill Hyndman Ill in a scheduled 36-hole match. The match went 30 holes with Le\\is \vinning. 7 and 6.

The match started as if it were going to be a complete

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rout. Lewis was 8 up after 14 holes. but Hyndman won the last three ho1e3 with two birdies and a par to go to ltmch five down. However, if 52-year-old Hyndman thou<>ht 2G-year-old LCwis was begin­ning to ehoke. his thoughts were quickly forgotten when Lewis won the opening hole in the afternoon round.

Amacing putting and great recovery shots characterized his match with Hyndman. Lewis had H one-putt greens in the final match. "I w:Js putting real well from under 10 fee.t. Putting was definitely the best part of my game in the North-South, as it always has been, except for last year. Now my putting has improv­ed, and! my game· has· improv­ed."

His putting gave Lewis re­newed confidence in his game, but even with this con­fidence, Lewis admitted that he was nervous before the final match. ''Everybody';; nervous before a match, but I was more nervous for the Hyndman match than for any otller."

Haddock Not Surprised

Haddock was not really sur­prised that his star player was able to wir. the North-South. "Jack is a very able golfer, and I'm deiighted that he won. Knowing Jack's capabilities, I was not surprisEd.

"Jack got started better this year than last year. He had two 69's in r:ractice rounds at the Masters. and with the way he finished in the Mas­ters, I thought he ~ad a chance to win the North-south."

Lewis felt that thls was one of his two biggest thri!ls jn golf. "It was a big thrill be­ing named to -represent the United States in the Walker Cup matches. Rep:esenting our entire country is some­thing I've never done before.

"However, the North-South is the biggest tournam€!\t I've ever won. I'm hoping, \f I'm lucky enough, that thi:. win will help me in being named to some other teams."

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for Lewis - a summer of study mixed with golf. ''1':1 probably go to summer school first session to catch up on my hours."

Besides tlle ACC tournament this month at Sanford, Lewis will attempt to qua•lify for the U.S. Open June 4 at Pitts­burgh. June 9-11 Lewis will play in the prestigious Sunne­harma Amateur at Johnstown, Pa. He won this tourney in 1966.

The NCAA tournament at Las Cruces. N.M., June 19-22 is also on Lewis' schedule. In ~ugust, Lewis plans• to play m the Western Amateur, che Eastern Ama~lhl". the US. Amateur, and the Porter Cup matehes.

Lewis Has Long List Of Victories . Jack Lewis Jr. started play­mg golf about the time he started going to school. At the age of six, Lewis took up the game in Florence, S. C., un­der the expert guidance of professional Grant Bennett.

Lewis began his high school career while in the seventh grade and played six years of golf in high school. Randy Glover, who is now a touring professional, also played for Florence High School, which is now on the verge of win­ning its lOOth straight match.

While in high school, Lewis started making a name for himself in junior competition. He won the Carolinas junior championship three years straight-each year defeating Leonard Thompson, now a Wake Forest teammate, in the finals.

After graduating from high school, Lewis was recipient of the Buddy Worsham scho­larship and transferred his talents to Wake Forest. He won all his matches his fresh­'man year and in the summer between his freshman and sophomore years won the Sun­nehanna Amateur and finished one stroke behind in the u_ s. Amateur.

Loses First Match

Entering his sophomore year, Lewis had won every high school and college match he had played from the seven­th grade on. However, last year he lost to Bobby Foster ol S()uth Carolina, 2-1.

Yet, last year was also a memorable one for Lewis. Be­cause of his high finish in the U. S. Amateur, he was invited tt> participate in the Masters tournament. Lewis failed to make the 36-hole cut, shooting a pair of 81's.

Also, because of his fine showing in the summer of 19-66, Lewis was chosen as a member of the U. S. Walker Cup team.

to

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-PHOTO BY MCNEILL

DEACON GOLF GREAT ... Jack Lewis Jr. blasts out of sand trap en route to one of many wins.

DAVE ROBERTS RUDY ASHTON Sports Editor Assoc. Sports Editor

8-0LD GOLD AND BLACK, Monday, May 6, 1.968

All-Sports Banquet To Feature 'Bones'

Hora'Ce (Bones) McKinney, a member of the Wake Forest ba-sketball coaching staff for 13 years and head coach for eight years before resigning in 1965, will be the featured speaker at the fifth annual Wake Forest ALl-Sports Ban­quet, May 17.

McKinney now serves as as­s.istant director of prisoner rehabilitaticm for the State Pri­son Department. He is active in basketball as color man on the regional television net­work, which carries an ACC game each week during the basketbaH season.

"We are delighted Bone1 wHl be with us for the All­Sports affair," Athletic Direc­tor Gene Hooks said. "Every­one knows he is a most enter­taining speaker, and he'll add a great deal to the program."

Hooks also revealed that all of the pJayers -wh{J p'ayed un­der McKinney during his st:zy at Wake Forest will be issued special invitations to attend the affair.

The banquet, which has

grown to be one of the high spots of the Wake Forest ath­letic year, will. be held in the university cafeteria at 7 p. m. It is open to the public, and reservation~ can be made by contading the AthletiC! Depart-ment. , · The highlight· Of th~r program

will be the presentations of trophies by the Wake Forest Monogram Club to the top athlete in each of the eight varsity sports. The recipient in each s·port is selected by the votes of his teammates.

In addd.tion to the top ath fete ·in each sport, one will be se:ected as the school's ath­lete-of-the-year and will re­ceived the Arnold Palmer A ward. Previous winners of this award are Frank Christie, basketbaH and baseiba~l, 1964; Bri2n Picco!o, football, 196~; Bob Leonard, basketball, 1966; and Paul Long, basketblall]), 1967.

Four of the winners at last year's banquet are e'igible to repeat in their sports again this spring. They are Leonard Thompson, junior from Laurin­burg, golf; Milt Ackerman, senior from Rivera Beach, Fla., in swimming; Cliff Pear~, junior fu:om Winston­Salem, tennis; and John Hod­sdon, senior from Delmar, N. Y., in track.

By RICHARD SINK STAFF WRITER

Buddy Worsham was an outstanding junior golfer from Cabin John, Maryland. He was the youngest sm1 . of a goJ•fJng fami:y, and one of his bro­thers, Lew, once won the U.S. Open.

About the time Worsham was ETaduatJng from high ::chool, Wilke Forest was try­ing to imp-rove its golf pro­p.rmn. The P.olf coach at this time was jim Weaver, who was a'so the athletic dire:!tor at Wake Forest, and is oow commissioner of the ACC.

Weaver knew the Worsham family and was able to con­vince Worsham to come to Wake Forest. The summer be­fore Worsham was to enter school he cal:led Weaver. Wors;ham said that he bad a real good friend, who Wl!S also a golfer, and they had de­cided during the summer to attend the same school.

Worsham asked Weaver if he cou~d bring his friend along. Weaver wanted to know how good his friend was. Worsham told •hlm that his ttrierrl: was ibet$.er than he was. Weaver told Worsham, "Bring him on."

Wor:;ham's friend was Ar­nold Pa1mer.

While at Wake Forest, Palm­er played number one on the golf team; Worsham, number two. Not oillly were Worsham and Paolm.er teamo:nates, they were also roommates. The two friends turned the golf pro­gram at Wake Forest into a winning one.

For two years and the be!!in~ ning of their junior year. Wors. h2m and Palmer made their stay at Wake Forest a happy one.

Then, one faH night in 1948, Wofliham and a fresi!unan basketbal~ player made the short trip frOI:l old Wake Forest to Durham for a dance. Around midnight, as the two ath'etes were returning to Wake Forest their car ran off the road into a river. Both drowned.

While at the ct!lnce, Wors­ham had made plans with Mike Souchak, then a student at Duke, to play golf the next day at Pinehurst. Worsham tried' ro:JtiDk, Souchak into ·ioe­turninc:; to Wake Forest with him that night, but Souchak

. finally decided to remain at Duke and drive over the next morning.

After the tragedy, PaJmer completed his junior year at Wake Forest but left before his senior year to join th<e service. Palmer returned in 1954 and completed his four­th year of eligibility.

Palmer turned professional soon after leaving school and became one of the greatest goliers of all time. After win­ning his first Masters cham­pionship in 1958, Palmer be­came curious as to how the Wake Forest golf program was progre·ssing and returned to the campus, now located in Winston-Salem.

In 1960, as Palmer's earn­ings from go~f were beginning to skyrocket, his• manager, M2rk McCormack, contacted Wake Forest about establish­ing a Buddy Worsham golf scholarship ftmd to be pre­sented. to some outstanding ju-

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nior golfer. The deta1ls were finalized

and Palmer, former Wake F; rest president Harold Tribble and Jesse Hadlock, nCJ!W golf coach at Wake Forest met in Rail.ei.gh to decide who would be the first recipient.

At this time, Jay Sigel had estab-lished one of the most impressive junior golf records in history. His being from Palmer's home state of Penn­sylvania may have influenced' the decision, but in any case Sigel became the first reci: pient of the Buddy Worsham scholarship.

Since Sigel, one other junior golfer has received a Wors­ham scholarship. Jack Lewis Walker Cup star and North: South Amateur champion, is the other recipient.

The total in the Worsham fund is now bebween $54,000 and $55,000. Haddock explain­~ h.ow the fund is operated. The money received has gone

to support the golf prograan at :Wak~ Forest. A scholarship ~s ~ven to some outstanding Junior golfer to provide him with an education. It is quite an honor to receive a Wors-

ham schotarsarip." . As ·it is now, Palmer is the

principal donor and helps to make the decision as to who receive; the scholarship. The Greensboro Jaycees are also quite interested in the Buddy Worsbam schotarship ftmd.

Prior to this year's Greater Greensboro Open, whloh tlre Greensboro Jaycees sponsor, a check for $15,000 was pre­sented to Palmer by the Jay­cees for the Worsham fund. The GGO pro-am is held each year in behalf of the fun.d, and each ye8JI' the Greensbor.o Jaycees present a, check to Palmer for the fund.

This year at the banquet rl"ior to the GGO a telegram from the Bing Crosby Youth J Ftmd was received. The tele­gram said that the fund wish­ed to present a check for $2500 to Palmer in behalf of the Buddy Worsham scholar­ship fund.

Thanks to the generosity of Arnold Pa:1mer, the Buddy Worsham scholarship fund continues to grow, an outstand­standing jtmior golfer ·receives an education, and the memory of a dear friend lives on.

Lynch Does Wonders For Sports Equipment

By RUDY ASHTON ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

In order for an athlete to participate in a S'port he needs equipment, and at a univer­sity like Wake Forest, outfit­ting every · member of every team is a: difficult job.

Wake Forest is pleased h have as its athletic equipment manager Leon D. "Dal" Lynch.

Before Lynch came to Wake Forest in 'March two years ago, the equipment supply sy­stem was inefficient, poorly run, and costly. Each year many dol1ars were spent re­placing equipment which was lost, stolen, or needlessly dam­aged.

But the situation soon chang­ed. Under Lynch's skillful guidance, accurate inventories were kept, :.:a ,'wo~ing·,·equ\P:,·. ment cheek-nut• rsystem. 'was, established, and· items were repaired before they: were al­lowed to be damaged beyond repair.

Many Duties

After Lynch had accomplish­ed the essentials of his job. he began looking for more methods of improvement. His various jobs now include the storing and issuing of all sport equipment, the daily check­out system, the cleanin~ of ali clothing worn by the ath­lete~. and' the ·repair of all equinment.

When Lynch came to Wa'ke Forest. mucb cleaning was to local firms, but now every piece of clothing is done in the school gym. This is a tre­mendous savings.

The repair work has also improved one hundred per cent. Lynch does all seamstry work, pad work, and mechani­cal work on anything athletes use.

In performing his duties, Lynch is aided by a small staff which includes two or three part-time student help­ers and the managers of the various teams.

He is also assisted by his son Merle, who is in the eighth grade at Wiley J1mior High

School. As well as being an outstanding student, Merle is on the school track team and doing very well.

The story of how Dal Lynch came to Wake Fores"t is an amazin~ one which · makes Deacons prQUd to know him.

He was raised in Pilot Moun­tain, and at the age of fifteen was afflicted with polio. He was sent to Baptist Hospital here and toldJ he had less. than three days to live. ·.

Now thirty-Seven, Lynch re­calls, "They didn't think I'd even live, but here I am to­day. The po~o affected my legs and they told me I'd never walk. I threw my crutches away in two years. They told me I'd never be able to work, but I have an excellent job here at Wake." : Mter .he was: .on. ,his. feet;

Lynch contact~d ,Goodwill ·In­dustries and was train-ed as a furniture upholsterer. He then worked in both Florida and North Carolina for furniture companies.

On one o4' his visits to Wins­ton-Salem, Lynch got in touch with athletic director Gene Hook and Jesse Haddock and was offered his present job.

Enjoys His Job

"I don't feel there is anyone who feels better than I do,'' said Lynch. "I fee~ li.1~e I'm part of a family here and reaUy enjoy it."

The athletic department is extremely arppreciative of Lynch's efforts and is build­ing him an apartment in Uie field lwuse of the new sta­dium. He will then be the manager and supervisor of the field house as well as of the equipment department.

"We of the ath!etic. depart­ment are very proud of Dal Lynch," said Haddock. "He came here with no experience in equipment supply and yet has worked wonders with our system.

"Dal Lynch is a man whose dedication and desire have made him a success. Wake Forest is proud! to have him as a member of its family_"

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VI t

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For res tin: havinJ ence. had a

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For its thr score ponen ent 29 at ho11 more 1 over l ferenc

In 1 avera11 the D' 6.0-17. than i mar gil

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Page 9: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

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VIEWING the DEACS

By DAVE ROBERTS Sports Editor

Home, Sweet Home The man who first said "There's no place like

·1 home" must have been associated with Wake For­est athletics.

All sports fans know that playing at holrne is an advantage, and it seems to be more of an advantage to Wake Forest than to most other schools. It isn't that Wake Forest te-ams are excepti<mally difficult to beat _at home, but that they generally reek on the road.

For example, this season's baseball team was resting in the ACC cellar after its first 26 games, having an 8-18 mark overall and 3-9 in the confer­ence. At home, however, the Deacon diamondmen had a 4-4 record.

The 4-14 road record is reminiscent of the basket­ball team this year, which posted a bad 5-21 mark, but was a horrendous 1-14 away from home.

These striking differences in home and road ma-rks prompted me to do some research in the records of major athletic teams during my four­year tenure here. Some of the results are surprising.

For example, this year's football team outscored its three home opponents by 30 points. The average score at Bowman Gray was W·ake Forest 27.3, Op­ponent 17.3. On the road, the average was Oppon­ent 29.1, Wake Forest 13.3. The gridders were 2-1 at home and 2-5 away, and they averaged 10 points more t}:lan their opponents at hoime while averaging over 19 points less on the road, an astounding dif­ference of over 25 points.

* * * In 1966, the gridders were 1-3. at home, but the

average score was 18.0-18.7. On the road, however, the Deacons were 2-4, but the average score was 6.0-17.7. That year's team averaged fewer points than its foes both home and aJWay, but the mean margin was exactly 11 points smaller at home.

In both 1964 and 1965, Deacon grid teams were 2-1 at home, .and they averaged 2.6 and 2.0 points more than their opponents. On the road, however, ' the': H)i>4r'~'clu;b' was···' :3!4 anckr'aver.ag;ed :-.2.0-!3:i!ewrer. poi:rit'-srwah !it~"d"on'Emts, W'ffile~ftl:i.~'?l9!65-;~chtb wa-s' a dismal 1-6 away and its average margin was minus 17.4 points.

In Coach Bill Tate's four years here, the Dea­cons have been above the .500 mark at home with a 7-6 record, ·while winning only eight and dropping 19 on the road. Someone may object that the Dea­cons have played their toughest games on the road against non-conference foes, so I have compared the Deacs with teams in their own league. Against ACC teams, the gridders have a 5-5 mark at home and a 5-11 slate away.

* * * The basketball figures are even more interesting.

Although the Deacons have not exactly been De­mons at home for the past four years, they have been respectable. In the last two years, when the cagers have posted 9-18 and 5-21 marks, they have twice posted 4-7 marks at home. The 1966 club which won eight of 26 galmes won five of ten in the Win­ston-Salem Coliseum, and the 1965 outfit which was 12-15 overall was a solid 7-3 on its own floor.

The -four-year totals are impressive. The cagers have won 20 and lost 22 at home, but on the road they have dropped 50 games while winning only 14. In the ACC, the Deacs are also two games under .500 with a 13-15 record at home, but on the road they are a miserable 7-27. Two games below even at home, the cagers are 36 under .500 on foreign floors, including 20 under in the ACC. (The above f!gures include ACC tournament games and con­Siders the fe-w games each year on a neutral floor as road encounters.)

. Deacon ·baseball fortunes have been on a steady decline for four years, but. the comparison of home and road marks is still revealing. The 1965 club \vhich was the first in 20 years to lose more games than it won, had a fine 8-3 record at home ·but was 6-12 away. In the ACC, that team was an even .500 -6-1 at home and 1-6 on the road.

* * * _Th.e 19?6 team rallied to post a 12-12 record,

wmmng five of eight at home, but only seven of 16 on the road. In the ACC it was again 7-7, 4-2 at home and 3-5 a way.

The 1967 baseball season is the proverbial excep­tiim that prives the rule. The Deacs were 5-6 at home and 3-9-1 on the road, but in ACC games they fared better away from Ernie Shore Field, winning two of seven here and two of five (plus tying a rain-shortened game) on the road.

Over the four-year period, the baseballers have been 22-16 at home but only 20-54-1 on the road: In ACC games, the Deacs have been 13-11 here and 8-20-1 away.

What this proves is that there is a definite ad­vantage to playing at home, at least for \V'ake For­est. I suggest the psychology and sociology depart­ments attempt to discover the reasons for this phe-

. 1menon.

For the fan, I suggest going to see the Deacons :rl.ay .at home because they have a good chance of wmnmg. I also recommend going to see them on the road, because they need your moral support.

Deacons Win, Tie In Weird Gaines

By DAVE ROBERTS A 12-inning, 2-2 tie With ACC

leader Maryland ended a wild week of baseball for the Dea­cons.

The game was a preliminary to the Winston-Salem Red Sox' Carolina League game, and it had to be stopped because of an agreement that no inning would begin after 8:45p.m.

Tuesday night, the Deacons were involved in ·another ·strange outcome, winning a 9-0 forfeit from Duke after holding a lD-2 lead with one out in the top of the ninth in­ning. Duke coach T~m B.utters was ejected for disputmg a call at first base and when he refused to leave the field, the umpire awarded the game to Wake Forest.

'l'he two games were a. com­paratively successful endmg to a week that began badly with 6-0 ·and 2-1 losses in a double· header vtith N; C. State at Ernie Shore Field.

er, Mike Herson, which moved the runner to third. Mike Baier drove in the tying run with a sacrifice fly, and after anoth­er walk, Gene Heiser singled in the second run.

Unusual Play

An unusual play kept the Terps from scorjng a third run in the inning. With runners at first and third and one out, .Joe Schlict hit a fly to Digit Laughridge in medium deep right field. The runner on first base apparently assumed the throw would go 'home, so he broke for second only to be thrown out by Laughridge, costing Maryland a run they almost certaanly would have had.

-PHOTO" BY BUNN

OLD GOLD AND BLACK MODday, May 6, 1968 PAGE NINE

White Squad Wins As Summers Stars ·.

By BILL UPTON ASsiSTANT SPORTS EDITOR

The White team defeated the Black squad, 45·26, in the an­nual Gold and Black football game Saturday, April 27, on t.he Wake Forest practice field.

The G<lld team, wearing white uniforms, mixed a po· tent ground attack with a su· perb passing game to over­whelm the Black squad before over 2,000 fans. White quarter­back Fred Summers paced the attack by amassing 216 yards of total offense. He rush­ed for 60 yards on eight car­ries, and hit on 10 of 16 passes for 156 yards.

yards on 11 carries, scoring on a one-yard touchdown run, and .connecting on one of two passing attempts for 11 yards.

Kicking specialist Chick George was another standout in the contest. He kicked six of six extra points for the Whites, and also connected on a 24-yard field goal.

Dolbin Has Long Runs

The Black team displayed a powerful breakaway offense paced by halfback Jack Dol­bin. Dolbin led all runners by amassing 228 yards in 15 car­ries, and by breaking away for touchdowns, on runs of one and eight yards.

Frustrating Situation

Elements of the unusual were also present that day, as Deacon hurler Ruffin Branham found himself training at one point, 2-1, although he was Vitchlng a no-Jhitter. State's two hits in the game were not connected with the scoring.

The Deacons tied the score in the bottom of the eighth When pinch-hitter Bob Blan­ton blooped a leadoff single, Jim Callison sacrificed pinch runner Dwight Bartlett to sec­ond, and Craig Robinson hit a sacrifice fly.

John Glover pitched the last four innings for the Deacs and survived two threats to pre­serve the tiet.

QUARTERBACK DAVE CONNORS ... who transferred from Purdue last year, played well in his first Deacon spring game.

Running back Buz Leavitt scored two touchdowns for the Whites, on runs of 10 and 19 yards. Ron Jurewicz, run­ning powerfully from his full­back slot, gained 134 yards in 22 attempts, and scored one touchde>wn.

Jimmy "Jet" Johnson, play­ing fullback for the Blacks, gained 54 yards on 13 carries, and also tallied a two-point conversion. Quarterback Lar­ry Russell, a promising new­comer from last season's fresh­man squad, carried eight limes for a total of 33 yards. He scored two of the Black touchdowns, on runs of ne and eight yards.

Branham was also the start­er in the Maryland game, and he was ·breezing along with a 1-0 lead in the seventh inning. Bill Heitman's opposite-field double, a ground out and a passed ball had given the Deacs a run in the second.·

In the seventh, Branham walked a man, and then allow­ed a hit to the opposing pitch-

•·.

In Tuesday's game, the Deacs pounded two Duke pitchers for 14 hits in support of Blanton's strong three-hit 1>itching. They scored twice in the third through sixth innings and once in the seventh and eighth for the ten runs.

Bot'h of Duke's runs, scored in the fifth inning, were un­earned.

In the ninth, Dave Johnson led off for Duke with a bloop­er into right which Laughridge dived for and appeared to have caught. The ball was

Undefeated Golfers Win 19th Straight

By RICHARD SINK A closer match than anti­

cipated resulted in a 13-8 vic­tory for Wake Forest over Duke Thursday. The win was the 19th straight for the Dea­cons, 12 of the victories com-1D:g:n~tw,> ,.seaf~<!Jl· ~..,!~ J'. ''f<r)

.. ,O~r<i o£.,.,the.r r,~o~ ·t;.~ match was 'SO close was that Leonard Thompson lost his first varsity match. Thompson, playing number two, lost to Bob Stuart, 2lh-lk. Stuart was medalist for the match, tying the Duke course record with a 67.

(Last week 'I'he Greensboro Daily News reported that it was Jack Lewis who lost his first varsity match. The news­paper report had Lewis losing to freshman Bob G<lldman, 2-1, with G<lldman shooting 72 and Lewis, 73. In reality, Lewis defeated Goldman, 2lh­lh.}

Harris Medalist

Third man Johnny Harris also won, 2%-lh over Mike Strickland. Harris was medal­ist for Wake with a 70.

Fourth man Joe Inman and sixth man Mike Kallam scored the only shutout victories for the Deacs. Inman and Kallam picked up three points apiece with victories over John Wilie and Bob Martin, respectively.

Fifth man Chip Lewis halved his match with Duke's Roddie Ingold. Seventh man Sammy Brewer was the only Deacon to lose all three points as Hy Young picked up a 3·0 win for Duke.

Monday Wake Forest won its second match of the season from Davidson. Earlier this

year t'he Deacon golfers scored a home victory over the Wild­cats, 14-7. However, on the Davidson home course, Wake Forest was able to win, 17-4.

Coach Jesse Haddock was pleased with the win "con­sidering the conditions. N!>Jlf:!. Q.(.;;q~-;.bQy~ had.,-.~'!lm-.. pl;cy.ed the course, and we .. did not have time to play a practice round.

"So we got there early and got four carts to ride around the course. This gave our golf­ers a chance to decide where to hit their shots and also to see the position of the flags on the greens.

"It was drizzling when we teed off and rained most of the first nine. The rain let up a little after the front nine, but on the back nine, it just got harder.

Play-ed Well

"I think, considering these two factors, that we played as well as could be expected."

The rain had a very telling effect on the scores. Nobody for Wake Forest was able to shoot below 75.

The Deacon linksmen com­plete thejr regular season with a match tomorrow at N. C. State. If Wake Forest wins, the Deacons will complete their second straight undefeated season in dual match competi­tion.

As the ACC tournament May 13-14 at Sanford approaches, Haddock calls this year's team "one of the best, if not the best, Wake has ever had. Depth enables us to substitute more. Depth-wise, it is the best."

ruled trapped, however, and the Deacons protested for sev­eral minutes.

The next batter hit a ground ball down the first base line wh'ich Doug Horner fielded and then stepped on first for an out. Butters argued that the ball should have been called foul and was ejected. He re­fused to leave, and the umpire

· then declared the game a for­feit.

Laughridge was the hitting star of the game with four-for­five, raising his average to .391. Heitman and Bruce Berg­man had three hits each.

The victory was Blanto'n's fifth against two losses.

In the doubleheader loss to North Carolina State, the Dea­cons were victims of great State pitching, and their own shoddy fielding. Freshman pitchers Joe Frye and Mike Caldwell gave the Deacons

Gymnastics 1.,eam Tops uN·c, · so~:si~,.~_:

Surprise! The Wake Forest gymnastics team defeated North Carolina two weeks ago. 50-31. What? You didn't know Wake Forest had a gymnas­tics team?

Technically, Wake Forest does not have a gymnastics team but rather a gymnastics club, which means it does not have formal athletic depart­ment sponsorship. Physical education instructor Glenn Dawson serves as coach just because he is interested.

The meet with Carolina, however, was a formal one, complete with judges. The Deacons took seven first places; the Tar Heels, two.

Jane Barnes and Nick lanuz­zi were double Winners for the Deacs. Miss Barnes won the free exercise for women and the balance team. Ianuzzi took the parallel bars and the vault.

Other first-place finishers for Wake were Harold Mc­Dowell in the free exercise, Ben Horton· on the trampoline, and Joan Fulp on the uneven parallel bars. Debbie Smith took a second and a third.

Dawson plans to have sev­eral gymnastic meets next fall, possibly with North Caro­lina, East Carolina, and Ap­palachian.

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only one run and nine hits in 14 innings.

The Wolfpack wrapped up the first game. in tlle first in­ning when they combined some bloop hits and Deacon errors tc score four runs. The Deacs got two runners on base at the same time only once dur­ing the game.

Wake Forest might have won the seeond game except for some fielding blunders in the second inning. ~~~£:~~~¥~:::;.-::.~::~r:: ~- ·::?::, ••:·:;.:~:.·:: :::: .. ~::· ~ ·, ~ ;:·~:·::;:1·

.. : Duke Gets t.1

::< McCloskey ~ :-1 r~ ·"" Wake Forest basketball fi n coach Jack McCloskey~~ :'.! will recognize a familiar ~.! <: face on the Duke fresh- (; (! man bench next season. ~-\ ;:.! His oldest son, Mike, is i\i i ; going to Duke University :;: U next year on an academic !f [:] scholarship, but he plans i~) [;' to play basketball. Ej ,.,; Mike led the Bishop ['' [.) McGuiness High School f~ t:1 team in scoring and re- ;;; hl I:I~<U~ this,.SEI350n. a,s, ;'@ '"'~ 91h'···v·n· · ., .... , d''· f".- .. ,f~r, t.}-:L e. i ams.·na p1;1e o .. ;,.,: h their best seasons in his- n ~.; tory. He was also chosen tJ { on the all-city basketball n ':i team-the first McGui- ~; . ; ness player to make the H ':l squad in the school's his- > ~·:,~~-~-::,-:,~::, :.:.:.:·::~::::::·,_:: · ..... :.:· ::;' :'z~l w H A T

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Rick White Grabs 6

Flanker Hick• White caught six passes for 90 yards for the Whites, including a 12-yard touchdown strike from Sum­mers. Don Kobos, playing at the other wide-receiving po­sition for the Whites, hauled in three passes for 53 yards in· eluding 32-yard touchdown bomb from Summers. Tight end Fred Cooke caught two passes for 24 yards.

Reserve quarterback Dave Conners performed well for the Whites, rushing for 54

Ken Erickson, who is to be red-shirted next season, com­pleted three of four passes for the Blacks for a total of 29 yards, while Russell hit only cne of five for 15 yards .

In the receiving department, Gary Winrow grabbed two passes for 24 yards, and Fred Angerman and Eddie Arring­ton caught one apiece.

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Page 10: 1 TODAY, EDITORIALLY nu · among those institutions dese1-ving spe cial recognition for salaries and com pensations. With an average nine month salary of $10,527 for full-time faculty,

PAGE TEN Monuay, May 6, 1968 OLD GOLD AND JLACS

Netters End Year With 15-5 Record

By DOUG BUCKLEY STAFF WRITER

Winning two 5--t squeakers over Davidson and Virginia Tech and routing North Caro­lina State 8-1. the Deacon net­ters concluded their dual matches with an outstanding 15-5 record_

Coach Jim Leighton said the fine clutch play of his playl'rs was the key factor in winning the decisiom m·er Da­vidson and Virginia Tech as well as the 5-4 win over Duke last week.

After splitting the six singles matches with Tech last Thurs­dav _ the Dc<.Jcons came through to win two of the three doubles matches to record the victorv _

The. Deacons dropped the number two matches to VPI as Mike H.ubenstein fell to Jay Collins. H. 6--t. 5-7: and Ed Parker lost to Jack Burrows. 2-6_ 2-6. Dave Ashcraft got the Deacs on the winning track with a 6-3. 6-1 win 0\'er PTeble Ware. and Cliff Pearce follow­ed suit with a 6-2. 10-8 victory over Bobbv Burleson. After Ken West dropped a three-set match to 1\ent Jones. 4-6. 6-1, 5-7: Gravson Brown came back to e\·cn the score with a 6-1. 6-1 triumph over Chuck Samuels.

Doubles Action Parker and Ashcraft lost at

first doubles, 3-6, 2-6, to Col· '!ins and Burrows. Fortunate­ly for the Deacons, Ruben­stein and Pearce won at sec· ond doubles with a 7-5. 6-4 triumph over Ware-Burleson while West and Ronnie Mac­Vittie won the deciding doubles match. 9-7. 6-1. over Jones and Samuels.

The previous day, Leighton's crew recorded its third ACC win against four losses by de­feating North Carolina State or: the Wake Courts.

The team won all six singles matches and two of the three doubles contests to capture the match easily. The only State victorv \Occurred when Jim Donna'n and James Hunt com· bined for a 6-3. 3-6. 7-5 win over Rubenstein and Pearce at number one doubles.

On April 29. the netters re­versed a 5-4 loss last season tv record a 5-4 win over Da·

vidson on the home courts. Leighton suid, "ll was our ht•st win of the season."

In singles play, the Deacons ciroppcd three of the first four matches_ Rubenstein lost to the Wildcats' George Berner, 6-2, 4-6, 1-6, and Parker was defeated by Sam Hatcher, 1-6, 1-6. Although Ashcraft won 6-3. 3-6, 7-5 over Davidson's Dan Hearan, Pearce fell to Woody Faulk, 3-6. 1-6. However, West lopped Jim Cantrell, 7-5, 6-1, and Brown defeated Dave Jen­nings, G-1, 7-5. to enable Wake Forest to even the match af­ter singles play.

Once again the Deacons proved superior in doubles. Al­though Parker and Ashcraft cropped the first doubles to Berner and Hatcher, 3-6, 2-6, Rubenstein and Pearce topped Faulk and Hearan, 6-4, 6--4; and Ronnie MacVittie and West won over Cantrell and Jennings, 6-3, 6-L Leighton said he was especially pleas­ed with the play of Ken West in the Davidson match.

Sigma Pi's Still On Top In Softball

The Sigma Pi's widened their lead in the fraternity in· tramural softball race as they rJpped the second place Delta S1g's, 4-3, Thursday. The win upped the Pi's record to 6·0-

In other fraternity action, the Theta Chi's topped the Sigma Chi's, 5--4; the KA's won by forfeit over the Alpha Sig's: and the Lambda Chi's rolled past the Sig Ep's, 14-5.

In the Fraternity B League, Theta Chi B was knocked from the ranks of the unbeaten by the Ralphers, 5-L

The Independent League tightened last week as the Aces stomped the Bandits 17· 3, the Defenders clobbered PAD, 16-1, and the Criminals outlasted the Faculty, 19-8.

In other intramural action, both spring golf and badmin­ton are in the semifinal round this week.

Evans-Bingham Team Wins In Tennis Day

By DOUG BUCKLEY The Wake Forest team of

Susu Evans and Anne Bing­ham won the doubles champ­ionship at the eleventh annual Chapel Hill termis day, April 27.

Misses Evans and Bingham, who were finalists in the tour­ney a year ago, were second 5eeded this year and conse­quently received a bye in the opening round.

In the second round, the coeds easily defeated Misses Turner and Timmerman of Meredith to reach the semi­final round. Misses Hughey and Dodson of the Univer­sity of ~orth Carolina at Cha­pel Hill then fell to the Evans­Bingham pair, 6-1. The team finally won the two-set champ-

Zadrozny Is Second Boy Signed

Coach Jack McCloskey and his staff announced last week the signing of Stan Zadrozny, a 6-7. 230-pounder from Mead­ville, Pa. Zadrozny is the sec­ond basketball player signed bv the Deacons and both are from Pennsylvania.

Assistunt coach Billy Packer was first impressed with Zad­rozny in a preliminary game to the Dapper Dan contest played in Pittsbm-gh_ The Dap­per Dan game is an annual mec>ting between the Pennsyl­vania and the ~ational All­Stars. bUL assistant coach Neil Johnston said thut many of the players who played in the first game arc comparable to players who played in the Dapper Dan game.

While at Meadville Area High School. Zadrozny played on confei"ence championship teams for three years and captained the team his senior year. Last season. he averaged 20 points. 15 rebounds and five assists. Zadrozny, who is re­ported to still be a growing boy, also set a school triple jump mar}: of 44 feet.

ionship match from Misses Eskridge and Johnson of St. Mary's of Raleigh, 6-0, 6--4.

Miss Evans and Miss Bing­ham received engraved silver trays for their victory.

Also representing Wake For­est were Kay Stoudenmire and Susan Powers in the sin­gles competition. Since Miss Stoudenmire was a runner-up last year in singles play, she was seeded third and received a first round bye. The coed then defeated Miss Lotz of Salem, 6-1, in the second round and Mary Pennington of St. Mary's in the quarter-finals, before dropping a 6-0 match to Joan Evans of Queens College in Charlotte.

Miss Evans eventually went on to win her second consec­utive tennis day championship. She was ranked fifth in the na­tion in the 16-and-under girl's singles in 1962 and was the National Junior Champion in 1963.

Powers Wins Two

Although unseeded in the tournament, Miss Powers won two of three matches she play­ed ll:nd advanced to the quar­ter-final round before beino' eliminated. She defeated Ka: Miller of Atlantic Christian 6-1. in the first round and wo~ her second round match, 6-2, o.ver Barbara Moyerman of Campbell College. Miss Pow­ers then played Laura Dupont, a lreshman at the University nf i\"orth Carolina at Greens­boro. who 'is ranked fourteenth nationally in the 18-and-under age bracket, and lost the match, 6-0.

Miss Dupont went on to reach the final round where she lost to Joan Evans, 4-6, 4-6.

Team scores were not kept at the Chapel Hill tennis day. However. the Wake Forest girls would have won the tea_m title, if any such calcu­lat1on had been made, because of their doubles win and their steady play in singles com­petition.

At present, only one more dual match is scheduled for the coed tennis team. The match Will be played with Salem College Wednesday af­terno>On on the Wake Forest courti.S.

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