6
154 . ' ',. .in- md· r.ew. bia in- lsi- hox: ra·- 110-.'- . of:· de..:,· .. ' .. : ' ••: .. J ,. · .. '" i ·' ,. ... * * 1 ' ----- k u.r * ··- VOLUME XXXIV- Forest College, Wake Forest, Caroiina., Moftday, March 1, 1954 NUMBER 17 CampJJ-,$ _pa.rty 'fo Candidates For"33 Governlllental Sunday . ' -, -' - ' ·, ·. Pat .Alphin. To Reign At Festival 24 Delegates'· To Pick Slate 9 Other- Coeds To Fill Court , Pat -Alphin will reign as queen of the Seventh Annual Wake For- est College Magnolia Festival May 3-8. Ann . Scruggs will be maid of honor .. s·ally Umstead and Delia Aycock will be senior ·attendants to the queen. -Junior class representatives will be Lib Gouldman and Kay Arant,. .while Jean Sink and Lorraine Munn are to--be-- sophomore at·· tendants and Dee . Hughes and Gwen Johnson freshman . ·. .__ •• _ Arrangements the Magnolia Queen· are- __ being made _ by the -Physical Edu- cation Department. The theme -:Of · the coronation ,wm· be based on. Hans · Ande:;'Son.. _ :- . Magnolia €orirt 'members were elected by student body . vote in 'chapel services. . :Mba Alphin .-· · ·Miss Alphin; a' Raleigh ·senior, was maid of honor in last year'::> festivities and was an attendant in ner- sophomore year. She ha:S- ·- secr,etary o:j: :her junior class and· a member .of the Howler ·busi- -: :Pro--few Side: ;lless staff. Campus Party delegates m1.l -hold a no:minating convention m Johnson Auditorium Sun d a 'I afternoon at 2 o'clock to candidates for student govern- ment elections which will be held in latter April. Twent)'-four delegates, which have not yet been elected, WI11 represent independent men, coeds, Chi Alpha, Sigma Phi. -Epsilon, -Kappa- -Alpha and Kappa Sigma social fraterllities. They will elect the Campt:s Party. for 33 student government offices in· conven- .tion_which is _._to. .the.. public, .... according to Joe Mauney, a<"ting chairman of the Party. Also. a committee will be se- lected. 24 Delegates Factions of tM Party are to be represented in the convention by seven independent men, five coeds, and three each 'from the four fra- ternities, which constitute the 24 ·delegates •. To elect delegates to the .eon- vention, · independent men of the ·campus Party will meet Tuesday at- 4:30 p. m. in Johnson Audi- torium. ' - -- coeds - of . the Party .. -will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. . in -Bostwick: Parlor to select· two A cheerleader and member of . lk f p I'' .. .. R ' the Freshman Orientation Com· -;: ·a . - ' : ll' estine ;.-' -ow of court for the Magnolia Festival to be held May 3-8 were elected by the -student' ·delegates, and Johnson Dorm body in ·chapel I>elia Aycock. senior attendant; Ann Scruggs, maid ·of honor; Pat Alphin, coeds will meet at 8.:30 p. m. in · · - Johnson Parlor to select three queen; and Sally -Umstead; senior attendant, are among those chos-en. Theme of the Festival will be delegates. · Hans. Christian Anclenon: (Photo hy Irrin. Grigg.). Fraternity men will elect three - .. · Women's Government; , . _ --r ,.:.By HELEN PUCKETT . -eept .thQse in ·the Arab block, ap- Miss ·scruggs Il).akes- her third T B GMS u • . , ·-.. In .. ·pro-Arab proved of and a n th M I" CUrt.· - :.· ;: j - 0 eoollle lllt of Pales- , - ·- . . · ; ·· - , - · - U - · . . - · -- · - · in·- Palestine. .. out. Sociology_, Club and Delta delegates each · in their regular Monday night meetings. Preliminary Meet Following the" elections of dele- gates, a preliminary meeting of to the International Relations Araba Attacked Kappa Nu, she also serves on the By STEVE MAHALEY Club by Dr. E. F •. Steinespring o-J! When th.e- Arab armies staffs of the Howler and Old Gold Effective with the 'beginning of Duke, Mrs. E. J. Ev.ans, wife of marched into the small Jewish and Black. Miss Scruggs is a academic year 1954-55, the Re- ,i-the of Dux:ham, 'presented state with ,the idea of driving the junior from Rutherfordton. serve Officers Training Corps will ·the Jewish views of the question Jews out,. the Jews, instead, re- Senior be converted from a chemical military training program has been effected. Only those students who will be enrolled in MSIV next year will continue to receive spe- cialized instruction in chemical at the IRC meeting Wednesday sisted them _and protected -their Senior attendants Sally Urn- corps to a General Military night. right to _their state. As a result stead Delia Aycock are from ·science unit. · D b 'T' Evans is a Hadas.sah vet- (Continued On Page Six) . (Continued On Page Six) The change to a G:MS unit is - 'e ate . .1. eam eran, having served in top posi- , designed to accommodate military tions on local, , regional and, D h . T) k ACC T . - training in au fields and branches sz· ., c t t __ e _8 _ _ OUrney has ,. :. -!I!·- . Wake· F_orest's de- tea:mS from ·M:aryland, the_ prepared. the_ cadet· for service ·in in the Atlantic Forensic Tourna- -:- -sive_ .the_ CC)Un• .i>lite:=:tum·--of. Sain. Johnson and of South Carolina ·and · cheinicai._ although- his ment ·at Lenoir-Rhyne Co_llege _try':' - . - ... ; ' ·· ·; ::: ·: _.. -_ _- J'ini Greene_ vroil the Un_iversity· of--Virginia, 'losing ·college "major: been in ·inl Hickory Thursday throug-a -- -:Recenth; -returned from visit . initiai AtlantiC . Coast -Conference only- to UN C. . , • an - .entirely - diffe:-ent .field.· I;t'- ; to Israel, she is well-quali:f\ed to debate tournament in Charlottes- Miss Arant and LeRoy won-over -has become necessary ·for the· D ' ' h · 1 ' b · f · unng the three-day meet, · interpret the scope of Hadassah'.; ville, Va., Feb. 20. Maryland and· the universities of c em1ca -to -o tain or· 1ts · ned · 1 h abadenta will participate in de- program in America and Israel. ·Kay Arant and Carwile LeRoy,. Virginia, South Carolina and comm1ssio personne men w o ' h d · · · 1" •t bate and other forensic activi- J. -s ...... ..--.ll the negative team from Wake North, Carolina. Their· single-- loss ave aca em1c maJors.-m a 1m1- - - I' _ ..,.. 1 .,.. dinner, iiD{promptu ·.As a r'esult of H1 "tler's perse- Forest, shared first place honors was to Duke. ed ·number of subjects-chemistry,. b • 1 h · d h · 1 and extemporaneoua. speaking --rcution of the· Jew in- the 1930's, with the- University of · North Teams from each of. the ·eight . 1o OS"Y, _ l' ys1cs an .mec amca and oratioJUI. C 1• b f th ACC were pre arts :and scienees.' ·· · · , said Mrs .. Evans one-third ·of the aro ma. ntem ers 0 e ' . _ . MS•V ·unehall.-ed _ , _ Men s _ !"'ama (rom -the Col- . world's .Iewish, .-.,opulation, . 1!-P• tealJ1S particil?ated_ fiv.e serit, . A-ft!!r: the the Ih.·erder to eqiiip. men for ser- : Beare of Joe. Hough and warfare. the Party delegates will ·be held Freshmen in MSI will receive Wednesday at 8 p. m. in Johnson training in American military his- Auditorium to lay plans for the tory, operations, logistics and convention. · drill. MSII cadets will study tech- Mauney said the meeting Wed- niques, logistics and drill. nesday night would be an org-.l.n- Juniol's in MSIII will be-instruct- izational and get-acquainted ses- ed in operations, tactics, tech- sion. "Nothing particular will go niques and drill. All MSIV cadets, on," he said, unless possibly the except those to be enrolled in next permanent Party officials will be year's class, will thereafter stutly named. operations, administration, logis -. _ Serving with Mauney on the tics and drill. - arrangement -committee are Jim . Basic courses in the Gl\-IS umt Privette, Howar.d _ Twiggs 3Dd. will-- ·be . elective effective. next Bruce McDaniel. year. However,· once a student en- . The - Stiia(mt Council . haS not rolls in a course the successful yet set a date for the spring elec- !!Ompletion .of that' course is a pre- tions. Pet!tions for. offices mnst requisite for graduation. be turned m by April 15. The elee- . tions will be between that date 4 Factors and May 1 · proximately six million Jews, was _?( durmg the two- coaches decided to the vice 'iri"ottier'·b·ranChes artny Jolmson, Jim . ,; .. oc- - .. ,, - - ·. .. - . day and both_ squads won - _on an basts. The and to' benefit .fJ/:pm other'liberal' and Jam a f. --- -:A:fter 'world War- II, the fate four of flve debat,es. X vanous - .schools _wlll rotate as artS majors, a more generalized . Women. s teams$ are Under the GMS - plan four factors will determine which branch of the. a,rniy the cadet will enter upon graduation: the stu- del'\t's major, personal choice grades in all courses and ability: Last summer more- 4() per cent of all ROTC units had been into GMS units. Lt. Col. J. S. Terrell, states that it is his opinion that 50 per cent of the ROTC units will . ha·ve undergone such· a conversion by September. · Student Party Plan·s Not Set I• . I• of the 10 million remaining Jevrs Johnson and Greene_ defeated hosts. MarJorie Thoma• and Geor1ia was a sad one. Peace had C()me to . MeNemu, affirmative, a a d everyone but the Jews; no coun- c . d t -Servi·ce--s- For· .. Doris Taylor and Minnie Jane try wanted them and they were ' on -uc s Bowman, neg-ati:ve. left to wander ·over -the world, . . _ · SLurling, Miss Thomas and .•. she said. · :. · -- - .' "·-: .: · · ' - · ·. Miss Bowman are 11ovice de- When the was put in Dr . .' Ed McDo:Well · bater& and· will be campeting the hands of the U. N., 52 of bhe in their- first intercollegiate nations 'represented there, 'all' ex- At Rocky Mount .. tournament. . The primary changes in the (Continued On Pagt> Six) "Nothing definite" has yet decided concerning plans and meetings of the Party for spring election campaigns, ac- cording to Joe Hough, teniporaey chairman of the· Party. · '- A meeting, added Hough in a Friday night statement, will be held in the near future for the purpose of organizing the Party: · . . List.s · In Standards By DAN POOLE A man who played a major role in the North -Rocky Mount Baptist Church case recently,.and who has Dften been the object of much wrath in various fundamentalist publications, has been called· by the - loyal faction of the chl.irch as l!Up- ply pastor. Remh_ski Views Culture, Education ,- '" o p o •- '> .... A o 0 ' < 0 Requirement-s for readmission to Wake Forest College each se- '• mester and total quality points and hours for graduation have beim ·jacked up in the new College catalogue issued last week. The minimum of 15 · hours and six quality points required for 1·eadmission to the .sophomore class has· been lifted to a total of- 16 hours and-12 quality points. In the new bulletin, as in the old, at least 124 quality points. must be presented for graduation. Instead of the leeway· of nine hours more than the number of Auality points, however, the new ·catalogue requires .-that, the . ber of hours an!f quality points be the same. · · Also, says the new catalogue, "Any student who is on probatio:1.· and fails to satisfy all conditions of probation must out of College for at least one semester, after he may apply for re-. / admission. · Other changes in the catalogue :include seyeral new courses and the change of the Reserve Officers Training Corps fro;m a chemical unit to a General Military Science ROTC unit. . Dr. E. A. Seminary professor here, is serving aa supply pastor for the loyal faction of the North Rocky Mount Baptiat Church. He a11d the Rev. Samuel H. W. leader of the other faction, alter11ately use the church. (Photo boy Irvin Grigg.) Dr. E. A. McDowell, pastor of New Testament interpretation at the Southeastern Seminary here, who testified as an expert witness in the trial involving the Rev. Samuel H. W. Johnston, has been preaching in Rocky Mount every Sunday for two months. Having met the leaders of the loyal faction of the church .at tlie trial in Nashville last November, Dr. McDowell was asked to con- -duct the first service held in the church after Judge Malcolm Paul ruled that the two factions should use the church building on alte!."- nate Sundays. That service· was held Jan. 3, three days after Judge Paul's ruling. 'Fumigation' The next Sunday, after Dr. McDowell had preached in the the Rev. Johnson is quoted as- having said that the church ought( to be "fumigated." He said he had ·always had control of his pulpit, · but since the court had taken of it, he would not be able to keep liberals out of the (Continued On Page Six) Remb$ki, who painted Lois Johnson, dean of women, last week, . talks with Mrs. Margaret Perry, .assistant ;registrar; Doria Craven, Women's Gove-rnment Association President; and Bettv Carnf.nter, WGA vice preside-nt. .. · Painter Discovers No Skeptics Here By WILi.JAM PATE Culture is the key that unlocks the treasures of the world, ac- cording to Stanislav Rembski, painter, who last week completed a portrait of Lois Johnson, dean of women. Rembski, in a Friday chanel speech, s a i d, "T h e shadow in the world today, I am firmly convinced, is the lack of culture." This is the co1·e to which small artist with the gray-touched hair accrues a philosophy on the ultimate good of education. Culture, he said in his speech, "isn't just a matter of education alone." It is understanding. It 1s the key, a genuine search for the good things. Notes College In a later interview Rembski -noted the accomplishments Wake Forest had achieved by transcend- ing the mere educational and at- taining an understanding of God that is the essence of culture. He found, he said, an (Continued On 1•age Six) - ,.

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Page 1: CampJJ-,$ pa.rty 'fo Nominat~ - Wake Forest University

154 . '

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in~ . of:· de..:,· .. ' .. : ' ~ ••: .. ~

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* * 1' ----- k u.r * ··-

VOLUME XXXIV- w~ Forest College, Wake Forest, Nort~ Caroiina., Moftday, March 1, 1954 NUMBER 17

CampJJ-,$ _pa.rty 'fo Nominat~ Candidates For"33 Governlllental :Positi~n.s Sunday

. ' -, ~ -' - ~ ' ·,

·.

Pat .Alphin. To Reign At Festival 24 Delegates'· To Pick Slate

9 Other-Coeds To Fill Court

, Pat -Alphin will reign as queen of the Seventh Annual Wake For­est College Magnolia Festival May 3-8.

Ann . Scruggs will be maid of honor .. s·ally Umstead and Delia Aycock will be senior ·attendants to the queen. -Junior class representatives will

be Lib Gouldman and Kay Arant,. .while Jean Sink and Lorraine Munn are to--be-- sophomore at·· tendants and Dee . Hughes and Gwen Johnson freshman ~ttend-an~s. . ·. ~r-- .__ •• M·~ _ ~~

Arrangements ~or the Magnolia ~·­Queen· Coronati~ii are-__ being made _ by the Women~s -Physical Edu­cation Department. The theme -:Of -· · the coronation ,wm· be based on. Hans · Christi~n Ande:;'Son.. _ :-. Magnolia €orirt 'members were elected by student body . vote in ~onday's 'chapel services. .

:Mba Alphin .-· · ·Miss Alphin; a' Raleigh ·senior,

was maid of honor in last year'::> festivities and was an attendant in ner- sophomore year. She ha:S­

·- 2~~~:!~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~:=:=~~~~-·-lbeen secr,etary o:j: :her junior class ~ and· a member .of the Howler ·busi­

-: :Pro--few Side: ;lless staff.

Campus Party delegates m1.l -hold a no:minating convention m Johnson Auditorium Sun d a 'I afternoon at 2 o'clock to choo!l~ candidates for student govern­ment elections which will be held in latter April.

Twent)'-four delegates, which have not yet been elected, WI11 represent independent men, coeds, _a~d Lam~da Chi Alpha, Sigma Phi. -Epsilon, -Kappa- -Alpha and Kappa Sigma social fraterllities.

They will elect the Campt:s Party. c~ndidates for 33 student government offices in· a· conven­

.tion_which is ..:.op~n _._to. .the.. public, .... according to Joe Mauney, a<"ting chairman of the Party. Also. a p~atform committee will be se­lected.

24 Delegates Factions of tM Party are to be

represented in the convention by seven independent men, five coeds, and three each 'from the four fra­ternities, which constitute the 24 ·delegates •.

To elect delegates to the .eon­vention, · independent men of the ·campus Party will meet Tuesday at- 4:30 p. m. in Johnson Audi-torium. '

- -- Fr~shman coeds - of . the Party .. -will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. m.

. in -Bostwick: Parlor to select· two

A cheerleader and member of . ~;T lk o· f p I'' .. .. .· R ' the Freshman Orientation Com· -;: ~- ·a s· . - ' : ll' estine ;.-' -ow ~:~:f· ~=dat~hi~o::it!'i t:~ Me.rib~ra of court for the Magnolia Festival to be held May 3-8 were elected by the -student' ·delegates, and Johnson Dorm

body in ·chapel I>elia Aycock. senior attendant; Ann Scruggs, maid ·of honor; Pat Alphin, coeds will meet at 8.:30 p. m. in · · - Johnson Parlor to select three queen; and Sally -Umstead; senior attendant, are among those chos-en. Theme of the Festival will be

delegates. · Hans. Christian Anclenon: (Photo hy Irrin. Grigg.). Fraternity men will elect three

- .. · Women's Government; , . _ --r ,.:.By HELEN PUCKETT . -eept .thQse in ·the Arab block, ap- Miss ·scruggs Il).akes- her third RO~fb T B GMS u • . , ·-.. In ,reply~to~a .. ·pro-Arab -{lise~~- proved of and _w~r.e res~nsible a n th M I" CUrt.· - :.· ;: j - 0 eoollle lllt ~ion-of th~ Je~isii:."'Arab"·-·diSput~· :"~ora""·JeWish'~tate"se·t--upin Pales- =~p~:~ C:t~~no~. ~e:bii'-0£' ~ , - ·- . ~ . · ; · · - , - ~ · - U - · . . - · -- · - · - · in·- Palestine. presen~d reeen~Jx .. ti_n~~. ~r~. Ev~ns._ poi~F!!d out. th~ Sociology_, Club and Delta

delegates each · in their regular Monday night meetings.

Preliminary Meet Following the" elections of dele­

gates, a preliminary meeting of to the International Relations Araba Attacked Kappa Nu, she also serves on the By STEVE MAHALEY Club by Dr. E. F •. Steinespring o-J! When th.e- la~ge. Arab armies staffs of the Howler and Old Gold Effective with the 'beginning of Duke, Mrs. E. J. Ev.ans, wife of marched into the small Jewish and Black. Miss Scruggs is a academic year 1954-55, the Re-

,i-the m~yor of Dux:ham, 'presented state with ,the idea of driving the junior from Rutherfordton. serve Officers Training Corps will ·the Jewish views of the question Jews out,. the Jews, instead, re- Senior Attendant~ be converted from a chemical

military training program has been effected. Only those students who will be enrolled in MSIV next year will continue to receive spe­cialized instruction in chemical

at the IRC meeting Wednesday sisted them _and protected -their Senior attendants Sally Urn- corps to a General Military night. right to _their state. As a result stead ~nd Delia Aycock are from ·science unit. · D b 'T' Mrs~ Evans is a Hadas.sah vet- (Continued On Page Six) . (Continued On Page Six) The change to a G:MS unit is - 'e ate . .1. eam

eran, having served in top posi- , designed to accommodate military tions on local, , regional and, D h . T) k ACC T . - training in au fields and branches sz· ., c t t

~._ rz~~~~~v~~~~:I::~-~~~~;~~; __ e -~ter~- _8 ~ _ _ OUrney ofir~~:::~ROTC ·traini~g has W~e~~~st wi?~rti~p~te ,. :. ~nd-- -oth.~ religi~ris -!I!·- :Jtei-.~1!~ .~ . Wake· F_orest's affirm!lti:v~ de- tea:mS from ·M:aryland, Duk~, the_ prepared. the_ cadet· for service ·in in the Atlantic Forensic Tourna­

-:- -sive_ tr~yels ~tD.r.oughouf .the_ CC)Un• .i>lite:=:tum·--of. Sain. Johnson and U~iversity of South Carolina ·and th~ · cheinicai._ corps,-~ although- his ment ·at Lenoir-Rhyne Co_llege _try':' - ~'.-: . -... ·;-·~ ; ' ·· ·; ::: ·: _.. -_ _- J'ini Greene_ vroil frrst''plactd~n-the the Un_iversity· of--Virginia, 'losing ·college "major: may_~haye. been in ·inl Hickory Thursday throug-a -- -:Recenth; -returned from ~a visit . initiai AtlantiC . Coast -Conference only- to UN C. . , • an - .entirely -diffe:-ent .field.· I;t'- Saturd~y.

; to Israel, she is well-quali:f\ed to debate tournament in Charlottes- Miss Arant and LeRoy won-over -has become necessary ·for the· D • ' ' h · 1 ' b · f · unng the three-day meet, · interpret the scope of Hadassah'.; ville, Va., Feb. 20. Maryland and· the universities of c em1ca ~orps -to -o tain or· 1ts

· • ned · 1 h abadenta will participate in de-program in America and Israel. ·Kay Arant and Carwile LeRoy,. Virginia, South Carolina and comm1ssio personne men w o ' h d · · · 1" •t bate and other forensic activi-J.-s ...... ~.tro' ..--.ll the negative team from Wake North, Carolina. Their· single-- loss ave aca em1c maJors.-m a 1m1- - -

I' _ ..,.. 1.,.. ti~after dinner, iiD{promptu ·.As a r'esult of H1"tler's perse- Forest, shared first place honors was to Duke. ed ·number of subjects-chemistry,.

b• 1 h · d h · 1 and extemporaneoua. speaking --rcution of the· Jew in- the 1930's, with the- University of · North Teams from each of. the ·eight . 1o OS"Y, _ l' ys1cs an .mec amca and oratioJUI. C 1• b f th ACC were pre arts :and scienees.' · · · · , said Mrs .. Evans one-third ·of the aro ma. ntem ers 0 e ' . • _ . MS•V ·unehall.-ed _ , _ Men s _ !"'ama (rom -the Col-

. world's .Iewish, .-.,opulation, . 1!-P• B~th tealJ1S particil?ated_ -~n fiv.e serit, . A-ft!!r: the tourn.~y, the Ih.·erder to eqiiip. men for ser- : Beare co~sa~t of Joe. Hough and

warfare. the Party delegates will ·be held Freshmen in MSI will receive Wednesday at 8 p. m. in Johnson

training in American military his- Auditorium to lay plans for the tory, operations, logistics and convention. · drill. MSII cadets will study tech- Mauney said the meeting Wed-niques, logistics and drill. nesday night would be an org-.l.n-

Juniol's in MSIII will be-instruct- izational and get-acquainted ses­ed in operations, tactics, tech- sion. "Nothing particular will go niques and drill. All MSIV cadets, on," he said, unless possibly the except those to be enrolled in next permanent Party officials will be year's class, will thereafter stutly named. operations, administration, logis -. _ Serving with Mauney on the tics and drill. - arrangement -committee are Jim . Basic courses in the Gl\-IS umt Privette, Howar.d _ Twiggs 3Dd.

will-- ·be . elective effective. next Bruce McDaniel. year. However,· once a student en- . The -Stiia(mt Council . haS not rolls in a course the successful yet set a date for the spring elec­!!Ompletion .of that' course is a pre- tions. Pet!tions for. offices mnst requisite for graduation. be turned m by April 15. The elee-. tions will be between that date

4 Factors and May 1• ·

proximately six million Jews, was .%9:tJ.n~s. _?( ~~_b~te durmg the two- coaches decided to contu~ue. the vice 'iri"ottier'·b·ranChes ~:bthe artny }?~ Jolmson, ~egat•ve, ~nd Jim . ,; deS~J:.'?Y.ed~- .. oc- - .. ,, - - ·. .. - . day tourn~y,_ and both_ squads won me~t - _on an ann~~! basts. The and to' benefit .fJ/:pm other'liberal' ~reen~ and Jam ~hurl•ng, a f.

--- -:A:fter 'world War- II, the fate four of flve debat,es. X vanous - .schools _wlll rotate as artS majors, a more generalized . f·rm~b~e- Women. s teams$ are

Under the GMS - plan four factors will determine which branch of the. a,rniy the cadet will enter upon graduation: the stu­del'\t's major, personal choice grades in all courses and ability:

Last summer more- tha~ 4() per cent of all ROTC units had been ~onverted into GMS units. Lt. Col. J. S. Terrell, Pl\IS&T~ states that it is his opinion that 50 per cent of the ROTC units will . ha·ve undergone such· a conversion by September. ·

Student Party Plan·s Not Set

I•

. ~\

I•

of the 10 million remaining Jevrs Johnson and Greene_ defeated hosts. MarJorie Thoma• and Geor1ia was a sad one. Peace had C()me to . MeNemu, affirmative, a a d

everyone but the Jews; no coun- c . d t -Servi·ce--s- For· .. ·Fa~ti·on Doris Taylor and Minnie Jane try wanted them and they were ' on -uc s Bowman, neg-ati:ve. left to wander ·over -the world, . . _ · SLurling, Miss Thomas and

.•. she said. · :. · -- - .' "·-: .: · · ' - · ·. Miss Bowman are 11ovice de-When the probl~m was put in Dr . .' Ed McDo:Well · bater& and· will be campeting

the hands of the U. N., 52 of bhe in their- first intercollegiate nations 'represented there, 'all' ex- At Rocky Mount .. tournament. . The primary changes in the

(Continued On Pagt> Six)

"Nothing definite" has yet ~11 decided concerning plans and meetings of the Stu~ent Party for spring election campaigns, ac­cording to Joe Hough, teniporaey chairman of the· Party. · '-

A meeting, added Hough in a Friday night statement, will be held in the near future for the purpose of organizing the Party: · .

. List.s t;;~l!:ll:gt}s · In Standards

By DAN POOLE A man who played a major role

in the North -Rocky Mount Baptist Church case recently,.and who has Dften been the object of much wrath in various fundamentalist publications, has been called· by the -loyal faction of the chl.irch as l!Up­

ply pastor.

Remh_ski Views Culture, Education ,- '" • • o p o • -· '~. •- '> .... A o 0 • ' • < 0

Requirement-s for readmission to Wake Forest College each se-

'• mester and total quality points and hours for graduation have beim ·jacked up in the new College catalogue issued last week.

The minimum of 15 · hours and six quality points required for 1·eadmission to the .sophomore class has· been lifted to a total of-16 hours and-12 quality points.

In the new bulletin, as in the old, at least 124 quality points. must be presented for graduation. Instead of the leeway· of nine hours more than the number of Auality points, however, the new

~ ·catalogue requires .-that, the . nu~; ber of hours an!f quality points be the same.

· · Also, says the new catalogue, "Any student who is on probatio:1.· and fails to satisfy all conditions

~ of probation must rem~in out of College for at least one semester, after whi~h he may apply for re-.

/

admission. · Other changes in the catalogue

:include seyeral new courses and the change of the Reserve Officers Training Corps fro;m a chemical unit to a General Military Science ROTC unit. .

Dr. E. A. Mc~well, Seminary professor here, is serving aa supply pastor for the loyal faction of the North Rocky Mount Baptiat Church. He a11d the Rev. Samuel H. W. Johnston~ leader of the other faction, alter11ately use the church. (Photo boy Irvin Grigg.)

Dr. E. A. McDowell, pastor of New Testament interpretation at the Southeastern Seminary here, who testified as an expert witness in the trial involving the Rev. Samuel H. W. Johnston, has been preaching in Rocky Mount every Sunday for two months.

Having met the leaders of the loyal faction of the church .at tlie trial in Nashville last November, Dr. McDowell was asked to con­-duct the first service held in the church after Judge Malcolm Paul ruled that the two factions should use the church building on alte!."­nate Sundays. That service· was held Jan. 3, three days after Judge Paul's ruling.

'Fumigation' The next Sunday, after Dr.

McDowell had preached in the ch~rch, the Rev. Johnson is quoted as- having said that the church ought( to be "fumigated." He said he had ·always had control of his pulpit, · but since the court had taken c~mtrol of it, he would not be able to keep liberals out of the

(Continued On Page Six)

Remb$ki, who painted Lois Johnson, dean of women, last week, . talks with Mrs. Margaret Perry, .assistant ;registrar; Doria Craven, Women's Gove-rnment Association President; and Bettv Carnf.nter, WGA vice preside-nt.

.. · Painter Discovers No Skeptics Here

By WILi.JAM PATE Culture is the key that unlocks

the treasures of the world, ac­cording to Stanislav Rembski, painter, who last week completed a portrait of Lois Johnson, dean of women.

Rembski, in a Friday chanel speech, s a i d, "T h e great~st shadow in the world today, I am firmly convinced, is the lack of culture."

This is the co1·e to which th~ small artist with the gray-touched hair accrues a philosophy on the ultimate good of education.

Culture, he said in his speech, "isn't just a matter of education alone." It is understanding. It 1s the key, a genuine search for the good things.

Notes College In a later interview Rembski

-noted the accomplishments Wake Forest had achieved by transcend­ing the mere educational and at­taining an understanding of God that is the essence of culture.

He found, he said, an "absenc~ (Continued On 1•age Six)

- ,.

Page 2: CampJJ-,$ pa.rty 'fo Nominat~ - Wake Forest University

PAGE TWO OLD COLD·AND BLACK . MOND~X ~ARCH J, >t9s.<~.

Editorially Speaking: · . . Critic'': Praiges '0 lass M~nag~tie' F 0 rlv ard . By ~'ioHN DURHAM fore the "gentiemeu caller" comes. the play that. a dreall:.! !VaS jn_dee~l audience'_ ~Qncentration on i~9i-: : _,

She acted with a .sureness ancl unfolding. . viduaL characters,, with• th~ .se1ni- : ·

Takes Commendable Step \V'ake Forest Co!Je·ge has taken a com­

mendable step forward. Scholastic l~e­

quirements have been raised consider­a,bly, effective next fall, over previous Years.

Freshmen will now luwe to receive C·redit on 16 hours and make 12 quality points for ndmission to the sophomo1·e clas..<;, instead of the previous .15 hours and six quality points. Equal numbers of hours and quality points will be re­quired for graduation, instead of the.­former lee>vay of nine hours more than quality points.

These changes are in line with a, ruling by the English Department, made last year and planned to go into effect in September, which will require all

A Light At Night ·wake Forest students were afforded

cultural opportunities last week equal to those of any first-rate institution. The College could unquestionably be proud of itself, culturally speaking, for a week.

The College Theater· produced Ten­nessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie" Tuesday and ·wednesdaY nights in a manner approaching the professional level. .iVIany persons have said, after having seen the performance, that it was the best job the group had ever done. It is possible that the College Theater reached its pinnacle this week.

The Concert-Lecture Committee spon­sored an appearance of the Euzkadi Thursday night. The troupe of Basque singers and dancers from the Pyranees Mountains of France and Spain proved to be a completely refreshing and unique experience for the concert-goers of the College. _

Both of these events were cult1,1ral as well as highly entertaining. Alt!10ugh the two aspects do not always go hand in hand, the student and professional productions last week readily provided almost everYthing a patron of culture and entertainment could desire.

If the cultural pace set here last "veek were to be continued even l)artially, those persons who ha,·e called \V:ake Forest students "semi-hicks," and who have said that the College is "culturally arid" would unquestionably be proved erroneous.

However. until students of the Col­lege are afforded with ever:v cultural opportt.mit:v possible, and wHh ~>ven more and better such events, Wake For­est will have no valid come-back to an ?.onarent lack now. in existence in that field.·

Granted, the events lal't wePI{ \Vere superb. But unlike the College Theater, Wake Forest ha:.; in no wav reached its cultural peak. Until lectrires by such men as Robert Frost and Carl Sandburg are p1·ovided, and until a wirler variety of good concerts is offered. Wake For­Est will continue to lie rel~tivelY dorm­ant in the cultural realm.-D. P.

rising juniors nnc.i transfer students to take proficiency tests in English com­position. If the student should fail these tests, he would be required to undergo a special course before continuh1g 'vork in that department.

To the extent that a college raises its standards, to that same extent wil1 its graduates be men and 'vomeu of higher educational and intellectual caliber .. Of such graduates a college can well be i:n·oud.

.Academic standards throughout the countrY are low enou·gh. That "Wake Forest has seen fit to raise its minimum. requirements is evidence that the Col­lege is not satisfied with itself. And· as long as self-complacency is not present, the future is far from black. Dissatis­faction· brings improvement. .

This elnphasis on scholarship, which; after all, is why one comes to college, is certainly in line with the purposes. of Wake Forest, of developl.ng well-edu­cated -students.

The strengthening. of Wake. Forest's . standards is evidence of a desh'e to give the students more for ·his four }·ears of "higher education." ·

9:55 a.In. Thought Walking on the path,

. The shadowy one

That leads unenticingly

Through the maze of trees

Bent heavy with snow in winter,

He thinks: ·The fla.tened brick,

The a·geless custom

Lead me here today .

Ho·w pleasant to •valk beneath

The snow bent trees in wintel­

On the flatened brick

Into the ageless custom.

·with the glint of diamond

On the flatened brick,

The snow is melting ge11tly now,

With crystal clingings

From the heavy branches, '

Onto the coats

Of one potential congre·gation,

Waiting, patronizinglY,

For the ageless convention.

Certainly the snow will melt,

But will the timeless custom?-. H. J.

Big Thaw Comes To Walie Forest Politics The Big Thaw has hit "rake Forest;

campus politicians are· coming out into the light. One party has announced that its candidates for ·student government positions will be nominated in less than a week. The other party will not be far behind.·

In recent rears, Wake Forest politics --or elections--have served at. least two

.lb 8otb anb ~lack .Founded January 15, 1916,, as the official student newspaper of Wake Forest College and published weekly during the school year exce~t during examination and holiday per-iods as directed by the Wake Forest Publi-cations Board·.

E..Sitar _________ :: . ., ........................ Wilfred Winatead Bu.ainesa Manager ..... :............ Glen Garrison l'fiaaaging Editor ...................................... Dan Poole Sports Editor .................... Charles Newman· Associate Editor ....................... William Pate Photographer ................................ Irvin Grigg Circulation Manager ................ Anita Brooks

Editorial Staff I Buah•eas Staff

Linda Boothe Don Craver Durell Bullock Wilbur Early

Bo-b Jeffords Bob Girard Jim Reinhardt Ottis King Ann Scruggs Steve Mahaley Shirley Mudge Circlllation· Staff Patsy Pearce Dot Brooks

Helen Puckett Motsie Burden Marian Cabe

Jack Robinson Dorothy Canipe Flora Nell Roebuck Callie Ann Coughlin Jim Shurling Caryl Dixon

Bob Simpson Lou Newsome Reba Oxford Jimmy Taylor Patsy Pearce

Bin Williams Frances Tharrington Tony Wrenn Blair Tucker

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc. Subscrip-tion rate--$2.50 per year.

Entered as second c,Iass matter January 22; 1916, and re-entered April 5, 1943, at the po.st office at WakE!. Forest, North Carolina, under the act, o:f. March 3, 1879.

OFFICES IN THE STUDENT CENTER Telephone 4056 P. 0. Box 551

primary purposes. Students have· been able to participate in the feveri~h in­tensity and dramatic execut~on . of democracy, and they have been .able .to· . learn every deal, coup and manipu- . lation in the book-s.

Those who have never seen a 'Vake Forest election campaign have· a me­moJ;"able and exciting experience in the. offing. Those who have been here lie­fore will again find themselves caught in the whirlpool of ~nt'roduction, hand-shaking and discussion. .

Campus politics should, however, go beyond elections. Gene Boyce, student body president, last week took a step beYond elections. . . Noting the importan_ce of several cam­pus offices, he appealed to students and parties, in an article in Old Gold and· Black, to "demand due emphasis .on the, offices which have heretofore been too overshadowed and obscure in the politi-. cal calnpaigns."

Boyce had several suggestions to offer to the platform committees of the two parties. He suggested investigation: of the Southern- Student AssGciation, uniting of the various classes and the moving of the College to Winston­Salem as three thin·gs that might be­come campaign issues.

Boyce's position is an admirable one. The number of times in recent years that anyone bas suggested something students can do other than ridiculous proposals of putting ash trays in class­rooms and returning benches to mag­nolias has been small, if indeed at all.

In addition to the suggestions made! by Boyce, others might be renewed ef­forts to place stud~nts on faculty com­mittees and more authol'itY and respon­sibility for student government. Certain­'ly there are more worthwhile things for students to consider than the pseudo­proposals of past years.

Before students can be entrusted with responsibility, they must assume. ·some degree of seriousness in their pro­posals and projects. . To C'ombine the healthy and demo­cratic features of elections with con­crete undertakings would be a notable improvement in campus politiCs.

Such improvements is the first step toward better student government.

It is not often that one sees a work of art which transnuls him from reality into the arlisti:: experience itself, but last we::!k those who saw "Glass l\'lenagerie'' fuund that ,experience. · In a play given m a delicate, clrea::n-like manner which reflected· tl1e title, the College Theater pre­~;ented what is easily its best work in a long, long time.

an insight that' made a memorable Norm Larson darkne~s of the set adding to the . performance from a very difficu!L Unfortunatel~r, the use of the illusionary· quality of· the play. 1-ole. Even her comic scenes were ·spotlight on ·the father's pictitre, . The· charming dresses of Laur11 . comedy overlaid with tragedy, as really a picture of Swain, 'blurred- and Amanda, designed and mna.e ~.' ·-. the audience 1·ealized the impossi- · the picture so that the audience· by Jimmy Taylor; were excellent · b!lity of what Amanda was tryint~ · was unable to distinguish· its fea~ ' creations and ga,ve tlie roles added to accomplish. t'tu·es, and thus ,was unable to reality. ' ; · ·

Barbara Land c.ompletely understand the symo- Prof. ·clyde MC;Elroy, the diree-· b holism. · .. . · ·:-.tor, and 'the entire College Th'e~

·As Laura the daughter, Bar ara '£he ligh~ing by Larson and Boo . ater most assuredly, turned· in. a Land a. newcomer to the Wake Jordan was otherwise excellent, performance smoothly imd almo~t Fore~t stage, gave ;_ completely d th f · t h · ht d ±1 1 I d ~ believable intel'pretation of the an · e use 0 _.spo s eJg ene· aw ess Y one. painfully shy, crippled daughter . ·- :· who was unable to fit herself int\1 • Introduction: the ~;cheme of her society. . , ·• . ·· ..

s"';n, .,8;:,:~::·,on, <Ud •• d~~~;:·f.:~~:~:;;,2:.:~~ illnnlt ®t_ (!l~uJ_tl.;t~, . .. 11 t P ·t ·a\'al of tiM f1·usr- t1•a•relly but it was tra!!edy \Vit}l- ~~

exec en or 1

-· -~ ~ "' ' 1 - b • I' By· HUNTER JAMES 'goodness.' ThesE!· institutions ·v.·ere1 .

From the ±irst magic moment when Bob Swain~s face was illumi­nated by a quick-spurting match flame, and he spoke the words "t;ruth in disguise of illusion," the auqience -..vas. spellbound .

rated, 1:estless youth trapped by out movement trage< Y Y unp l-circumstance into the dull mono- cation, and a~ such it was wei! · AND BOB BPRNS · · called colleges. . tony of a· factory job. His dicti'Jn presented. Judging from her first In a restaurant one day· a man Wlien the. -institutions were and facial expressions wet·e per- performance, Barbara Land shoul:i a_sked me, ~'What is the Book of brought -before· the eyes .of men feet, but more tha1i that it was prove a valuable addition . to the Charles?" - ' by nmch subtleness. _

J tlleatcr g "oup. · I loo' ked .. at th~ man. But it came to pass tl1at, foilow-the feeling that he gave to t 1c L ~ role· which made it outstanding. Jack Kehoe, the extroverte:l "Where is it.?" he asked. 1:What ing the first years of' these es:.. .

In the tragi-comic scenes, he young "gentleman calle1·" whose is its purpose?". . tablishnients,. the. whiskey multi-was at his best, pa1·ticularly in well-scrubbled, uncomplicated per- How could I answer. Did.I know · plied and covered the areas which, the scene when he forced himself sonality unwittingly involves it- the beginning of all knowledge in time, were to be called cam-to apolog·ize to his mother and self in the deep tid~s of emotion any more ·than· he? · puses. begin his same routine of living which moved _the family, gave a "Very Vo!ell, then," said I. "You It passed through the yea1·s again. The under-playing here fine performance, will hear' the story ·of the Book ,that the whiskey became good to was a strong factor in the impact After he attempts to "stl·aight· of Charle,s." . man because they had to live. to-of the scene. en Laura out," he is at· his best Henry was the first man to dis- . gether. ·

Pat Banks when he begins to painfully ex- " cover the Book:-. Now .this is a Man ·Retaliates Pat Banks, as· Amanda tho tricate himself from the tr«p touchy situation to expose, but it Then it was the turn of man b

mother, gave her best college per- which he realizes is trying to close has been said that. Hem·y, by the retaliate, .being rignteously indi­:t'o~·mance. As the nostalg-ic mother about him. The first scenes with masterful and subtle · usage of · gnant at the corruption which the caught between the degTadation Laura were also well done, as his words, c~ncealed the, Book 1 from whiskey had brought upon them; of her present life und the happy sharp materialism was held up so Charles in order . to' salvage a so it then ca.me about that the /-time of the mint julep South and sharply against her dreams. · much larger degree o:f; personal whiskey was ostracized. the "gentlemen callers," she \\'ati The set, which was designed exaltation. It remains ostrasized to this a pathetic, moving figure. and planned by Norm Larson and Resurrection day; but the whiskey has' in lt.;;

· Things about her role stay with Bob Swain, was skillfully ex!'!- It happened, however, that, al- turn l:etaliated,. though suppressed · one a long time-the telephone cuted. The raised floor of the St't though. the Book was well hidden, in method; so that it seeps in · scenes as she grovels to sell her added to audience vision, and tl1e Charles, in time, resurrected it. .ilightly on· .. large_ 'and lumbering. magazines, the attempts t 0 us~ of. the disappearing· wall gave TlliS· incident was, of course; much tl~u.cks, ,~nd".:r;p.en still be~ome cor~ bolstet· her daughte1·'s courage be- the illusion to the first part l>f to the embarrasment of :Henry, .l'Upted at times. · '· • _ ________ :.______________________ but Charles . nevertheless .. :res.ui·- · ··No one- is absolutelY: certain

B · d- E A' l · rected. it. - about·· the trucks. The ·:,fsook of · . OrePaT e xnreSSes· : Ur_·m The Book now looms as tl1e vas.t '·chal.~les,does·not say they:actually, ~ r interpreter and the final judgment exist, it only points its venerable

Ab El • T T of all knowledge. finger at an authoritative source . OUt eCtlOn l.Jita·wareneSS It is written between, the lines. who . steadfastly maintains they

By BILL WILLIAMS Boregarde Smith in a stiring

statement to the pr.ess late last Thursday voiced alarm that "there has yet been no outward appear­cnce of awareness that this year's student body elections are soon to be held".

Citing. that "at this time last year two political party's plat­form committees were. working, and one had formed its slate," Mr. Smith said he is "deeply dis­turbed at the apparent political dormancy of the Wake Forest campus."

"I am," he admitted, "inueeJ fearful that our· student body political leaders· have completely overlooked· the necessity of pro­viding candidates for the impend­-ing elections. And candidates are required if this year's elections are to be conducted in the custo­mary mltnner.

· Another Method "It is doubtful that to choose

student b~dy officers by putting­the name . of each ·-student iri · a · large bowl and ,allowing: a blind­folded · child indiscriminately to select our leaders would be a su-J?erior method. . ' "It does not seem. unreasonable

to assume. that a' man capable . of shoulde~·ing the duties of presi­dent ·should also. be capable of organizing. a portion of the stu­dent body in);~ a political party.

"Shall we then believe there :i:s no one among us w_ho is qualified to hold the top student office on our campus ? .

"Where is that cdriving spirit of competition? Where is that

and that is a time-saving -device do. deep love for our alma· 1nater? now, with everyone. fumbling for The Book of Charles ~peaks ,):: Where is the old sound of chem·s between-the-line interpretation. this so'urce, and dec;lares thl:lt it from the 'rallying throng of sup- Again, the Book of Charles will is not good. pol·ters who cry antl _sing the not burn, and, what with this ·day merits of their chosen candidates 7 of book burning, that is really . \

Silence of Disinterest a commendable characteristic. Georgi· a_ Annua· ··I· "Is the silence of disinterest to We have been offered the as-

be the reply of our last year'~; tronomical sum of $350,000 per ~: political parties to the charge left annum from hel·e to eternity on Staff Resi·gns the American student by tha . condition that it ba permanentry . venerable founders of our demo- · place_d in the Library of Congress. The entire staff of the Unh·ersi-cracy? This offer, of cout·se, was not ty. of .Georgia yearbook recently

"In my most sacred moments only sneered at, it_ was ignored submitted their I'esignations . to I have dreamed of ways in which completely.· the dean. of the university, as· a I might serve Wake- F01·est. I . Hopeless Depravity :result of a controversy ·conce:rning have wondered what sacrifice I ·continued association with the publication of the university year­could place on the alter of service · 'Book of .Charles will, we hope, book, The Rampway. to my college. Even now I wonder. afford enlightened hope for tha Rampway's staff had asked p~r- .·

"I consider nothing that I could ·hopeless depravity of the twent!- mission of the administration ro J do to be more than humble al).d eth century. publish only ·senior and organi- . unsatisfactory duty to my alma In fact it has already done so. zation pictures. Freshman, sopho-mater-even the sup1·eme sacri- The Book points out that in the more and junior pictures were to fice of postponing my gradtiat~on beginning men were essentially :be omitted because of the poor another year if she should have good. ·quality of pictures and lack of need of me. Am I alone to feel Now there was also in the be- continuity. such devotion? ginning two bottles . of whiskey, Administration_ officials agree({

"Are there· none who wish to and the whiskey was not good in i for the_ ·staff· to_ contt:act a.- ·new: carry· the ponderous. responsibili- the eyes of men. . · p)l.otograp_her--:.for. 11enio1' .pictures~ · · ties -of. student govemment? If It ·was. -natural, then, that 'the. but aske·d·:. that: lower· classme1i so where- are they? Why do they whiskey wished ·to become . gocd.. ,pict:urt;!S;. of ·sufficient· qu~lity ~c~e· not voice their concern? Do they So it came:about that these two· ·.published. The proposal was re­intend to wait until the last bottles of whiskey multiplied and jected~ by the staff on the basis moment before elections and have ·flourished in certain areas of the that to delete a student's pictu1·e us believe they seek office because land, but th~ men still did not without giving him a. chance to they wish to work for the bette!'-· cherish the whfskey. submit another one' would defeat ment of their college when thay WLiakey. Plots t_he purpose rof including under-· .. have been so slow in . showing There was a meeting on the classmen .. their alligence? . -land one day, and it passed that Rampway'~ business manager

"I feel I must raise such ques- the whiskey ploted against the said there was no written policy tions, and I shall -continue-. to rlo ways of men, being righteously from the administration concern- .. so' until r have a satisfactory indignant ag!linst them. ' ·ing what is expected of the publi,,.:' answer. So it happened that the many cation staff. He added that the

"Who are those who would. bottles of whiskey established new sta:f;f did not have a sufficient operate our next· -Year's ,.student institutions, -where it . was said budget· with· which to work. "Wa government?" that men could increase t)le1r sacrifice q_uantity for quality." · ·

Colleg,e Editor. Reports On Tour Of Russia By DEAN SCHOE.LKOPF · . . ·. . , • : .. in· their of!ic·es. During· 'fihat time thr~e ti~es. during our stay, once

Editor; Minnet;,ta', Daily (Th1s lS' the :f;u.st of ~lX art1cles . we dej;ected . abs~lutely no feeling· at his Spasso house ·residence dur:' (AOP)-The first Russians I by Dean Schoelkopf, ed1~~ ·~f the ;bourgeosie. Mo:st of us had ing our stay, once at his 'Spasso

saw were soldiers. Six of them- University of Minnesota Daily and . financed the. trip through loans house residence. during a lunch-.. all armed--elimbed aboard our one of ·seven American college ·-:-'in. that respect we were alike. eon he and Mrs. Bohlen held for· plane as· soon .. as it landed in editors just return_ed · from . a Politically, w:e were· miles apart. us. Leningrad airjl~n-t. · . . three-week tour cf the - Soviet Two' of our ·group were Taft men;

A· senior lieutenant of the ,Red Union.) one supp·o,rted Eisenhower, and army marched f(!rward in· the four beJonged to thE: Stevenson plane and looked qui.zzically at in their faCtories, fanners in their clan. . . the seven ·American··· students hom.es and directors and, managers We had differences of opinion dressed in strange furrY caps and of hostility to us persa:nally. on alm~t. every issue, and in that coats. He raised his right hand in Early in our trip, one of the respect we provided. a striking salute and adqressed four or five two interpreteri; who traveled contrast to the Russian students sentences in Russian to the other with us throughout the country we m'et, who agreed on almost passengers. asked us why we had c~me to everything in tlte a:rea of. religion,

Then he turned to us and said Russia. We told him the answer economics and' government.

Enihaiaai H~n-dicapa The embassy there operates

u n d e r. tremendous handicaps. Practically no ·contact is permitted viith · the Russian. people. Mail, ~ which moves through the Russian postal system, is. opened before it reaches the . embassy. All tele· phones are assumed to be tapped. \Vires ·and miniature micropl10nes have been found in the walls.

in English, "Passports." After we was simple. Early last fall a few Frequent Arg-llmenta had showed · him our visas, the American college editors met a Arguments on these. subjects other five soldiers stepped aside student press convention (the erupted . frequently during our to let us leave the plane. · ACP conference in Chicago) and talks with R~~ossian people. There

We stepped into the chilly, decided they wanted to see this were few things we could agree three- above -zero weather and countzy, so little understood in on-bu:t through it all they re-

Russian police guard the en. trance to the embassy 'round the clock, ostens-ibly to p1·otect the Americans .but more likely to p1·e. -· • vent any Russian from entering. .

were met by a young, English- the United· States. mained completely friendly to us. speaking official of Intourist, the Visas, Pa .. ports .Almost everYW!here we were official Russian travel agency. We. applied. to the .Soviet em-- objects of curiosity. Cosmopolitan. He welcomed us to the Soviet bassy in Washington for '17isas, . Muscovites, more accustomed to Union and told us· we would be- and within- three weeks Moscow visiting delegations, paid less at­met in Moscow by other lntom·ist granted -us permission. The Ameri- tention to us than their country-representatives. can state department issued pass- men in southern Russia.

Soldiera .On Plane ports Dec 23,_ and on Christmas In many areas .• we were the But the warmth of his reception Day we boarded a plane for Rus- first Americans the Soviet citizens

didn't erase the apprehension we sia. · had ever seen. They followed us had when the six soldiers boarded Students a.t Stalin University in the streets and crowded around our aircraft. The strange wei- in Tbilisi asked us who was pay- us if we stopped to take- a pictuxe .. come was but the first of many· ing for the trip. "When we told It was . not unusual to stop in a unusual situations we were to en. th_em we financed the trip our:.. department store to buy· a gift counter. selves, one blue-eyed coed said then turn around to find from 25

During . the next 22 days in in perfect ;English, "Ooh, you to 150 Russians crowded about. the USSR, we wer·e to travel must be rich." The only other Americans we more than 5,000 miles by air, "Bourgeosie," shouted a black- saw- in Russia were at the United train and··car. We were to talk to haired lad. States embassy in· Moscow. We students in their schools, workers Our group was anything but met ambassador Charles Bohlen

A policeman is on almost every_ corner in the cities. But a sight even more common than that of policemen is- .th3:t of Russian sol-:. , diers. We saw Red tro.ops every­where· we traveled. It was not at all unusual to see ·a platoon of sol-:. diers with machine guns or rifles on their backs walking down the main street of a. town. Russian soldiers traveiied on the trains we rode,. and_'fJ:'om our train win­dow . we once infantrymen run­ning and falling in the snow-on the rifle range--and at mortar praCtice. . · '

:We were told not to take pic­tures which included soldiers,. bridges, ports or airfields, and our cameras were taken away when we traveled by air. ·

I ~

I•

(•

;.

. ~' '··

At very

... . ._

Page 3: CampJJ-,$ pa.rty 'fo Nominat~ - Wake Forest University

J, ,t95;o~.

on i~di..:~ • he semi- : g to the · play. ·

)f Lam·a · nd maa,e J·· ... excellent · es adrle~

ile direc- · lge The~· ted· in· a - 'j _,.'

d almost · .·

... •ns ·v.·er~1 ·

lS were of men

;, foilow­hese es:. iT multi- -;S which, ed cam- L

e yea1·s good to live. to-

man 't:> ly imli­hich the n them; ;hat the i'

to this s' in lt.;; ~pressetl · ;eeps in mbering­rme cor-

certain . 3ook of actually. ene~able l source 1s they

reaks ••"' th~t it

-- \

1ual ~:

lS nh·ersi­recently ions _to y, as· a tce:t•ning ty year-

ted per- · Ltion ' 1:0 i organi-. sopho-

IVere io 1e poor lack of

agree;{ -a.- ·nev.r. •ictures; - · lassmen ~lity :"~e·_ ~~as re­e basis picture

mce to defeat under: ..

1anager policy

oncern- .-! publi::-:· 1at the fficient k. "W.'! lity." ..

:t. y-, one~. ce dur-'Spasso lunch-..

eld fot•

perates :dicaps. ~mitted

Mail, tussian fore it l tele-:apped. phones tiis. be en• nd the ct the to p1·e. -· ' ering. _ ; every_ L sight hat of m sol-.-. every-not at_ of sol-: rifles

m the :ussian trains n win-l run-w-on nor~ar

e pic-ldiers,-

1-1d our ~ when

i

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Prizes Offered In WF Contest

Persons able to predict the final standings of the Atlantic Coa;;t Conference basketball teams have a chance to win a free evening'.; entertainment.

Ken Ward, campus Chesterfield representative, in cooperation

ingBehind them the littlest kid with Dick Frye's Restaurant and was throwing another bottle a- th~ · Forest !heater here, offers gainst -a green box that had the P_r;zes of dmner fo.1· two, ~w_o wo-rds "Keep vour city clean". The . tic.,ets to the thcate1 and a ~a;­bottle would~'t bt·eak. ~n and a half of Chesterfield

Ctgarettes. . Two seniors at Valparaiso Uni­

versity (Ind.) brought too editor of the Torch, stude.nt .. newspaper, a .strange gift. It was a 1bell clap­per; stolen at 1 a. m. on a Sun7 day morning.

GET 'Tl-IIS FRE.~ PLASTIC PISPiNSER(WOR1'1f 6'o~) ~EN 'IOU &V'I VIILI>Roor CREAM·OU •• A$1.:1.9 VAI..!JE-ONL'f 7'9$

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Entries, lisiting the final stand­ings of all eight of the ACC teams I in the conference play-offs, must be written on the ·back of a Chesterfieltl wrapper.

Entries should be placed in boxes. located in the College Book Store and at Dick Frye's not later than 6 p. m. Frida~·. March 5. Iu case of .a tie, the prizes will be I split.

Teams in the AGC are Virginia, Maryland, Clemson, South Caro. !ina, N. C. State, North Carolina, Duke and Wake Forest.

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. At the University of Connecti­cut, an explosion · desn·oyed a bubble:t; fountain in a dormitory. Students who set ·the blast-­which did $200 damage-said they were just trying to counter­act the noise that was going on in the building, not trying to injure anyone.

·How the stars _got

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Vaughn lflonroe says: "In high school,

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Page 4: CampJJ-,$ pa.rty 'fo Nominat~ - Wake Forest University

. . . · MONPA,Y. MARCH 1,

Deacons •- Smasli- ··U·SC~- -Gatti.,~-·"···"··."-·· , IS~., 1~(!)3rifitfO;i~\~ · Mq~;~(Jl: {~,:4~'i$tetl;,:.; , · ·· · · · · , ,. · · · · · · · By fl!-gJJ:!!:rious Ff}~ale· F:~~~. · ...

Score-Marks Highest· Ever Amassed By Wake Forest Compiling a record-breaking score, Wake Forest rolled

m:er the Gamecocks of South Carolina, .103-70, in Gore Gym last Monday night. ·

This high mark was the highest score ever amassed by the Deacons, breaking the previous mark of 101 set against Clemson earlier this season.

The first quarter was a see-saw battle, v.ith South Carolina hold­ing a 25-24 edge at the close <Jf the period. Deacon guard Al De­Porter hit a field goal at the sturt of the second stanza to send \Vake . Forest ahead, 26-25.

At halftime, the Deacons held

,-------

Wake Tops W&M,57-56

a 50-38 margin, and continued to By CHARLES NEWMAN roll on. For nine and a half The final score stood at 53-53, minutes of the third quarter, the and the game went into an over­Gamecocks were unable to sink a time period. Eoth teams p1.1t in ;field goal, while \Vake put in 30 three more points, and, with five points. seconds left in the overtime, Dea-

'The visitors started the game con forward Ray Lipstas went in with a four-man zone around for a last-ditch lay-up shot. Wake Forest center Dick Hemric, Lipstas was fouled in his at­but when forward Lefty Davis tempt. Stepping to the free-throw began hitting from the outside, line, he put his charity shot for the loosened defense, allowing the <hlCiding point, fot; the c!oc.;: Hemric to get staJ·ted on the 30 had 1;un out, and \Vake Forest points he sunk during the game, won over \Villiam and Mary, 57-takin::; scoring honors for both 56 F b 0 , e . 2 , in V'iilliamsburg, Va. teams.

The Deacons got the jump on These tallies boo.sted Hemric's

seasonal total to 582. Team Capt- the Indians in the first period as ain Joe Smith led the Gamecock's the visitors came through with 18 scoring with 22 points. points, while the home five got

only eight. However, William and For seniors Billy Lyles, Al De- l\1ary was not to be outdone; the

Portet· and Ray Lipstas, the South Indians led each of the remaining Carolina game was the last they periods in scot•inoo. will play in Gore Gym. The trio • • "' ·

. . . . By CHARLES NEWMAN one more. 'ln order. that another

The arena was packed, and as might share his enjoyment, lie · the .· gladiators approached the and the party seated next to him scene-each from his own, end of wagered the second maduro on the coliseum-the crowd alter- the outcome of the bout. The first. nately cheered one· and booed- the lost the bet and reluctant)lr -he · ·other, for indeed, the one· in handed over the cigar. The second black was the favorite, as welt as soon · joined in ·the dubious· the champion.. . > --~- : pleasure. .;· ·

.As the pair' n~~r~d tb~-:;.ring, ·a . . -Hero WiD& · .·. collectio\' of young :entlittsiasts, · Then the match was over-the

· clad in modern-day togas, swarmed hero. had .,used a legal, about _each combatant, seeking his illogical method of paralyzing the· signature upon a scrap of Jlarch- villain's forearm •.. As the crowd ment. Both fighters granted a few cheered, he started to leave the · of the aspirants his scrawl of a ring. The v~llain conti~ued. to name and then proceeded into the grasp his wrist and plead that the ring, w~:~ving aside the others. . winner release the freezing ner'V~ •

Champ Draws Cheers "No, No1" the people shouted; The champion dre~ cheers from and 'the· lady holding the child

the throng in the first seconds added, "Don't help that lousy· by dumping the challenger three bum,;, Remembe~ what he did :to times, in quick succession. Then, you. ~ut agam the -hero. dis­suddenly, the champion was down, re~arded h;r words _an~ ,fmally and his opponent incre~sed his tw1~te~ the defe~ted one s arm·

· advantage with illegal tactics- u~t1l. 1t suddenly hung loose at using his feet against the bouncing h1s side. ropes as extra leverage. As the murmuring crowd filed

But the hero was quickly out, the lady continued her verbal I'e.scued by a silver-haired lady efforts in behalf of the victor,, seated in the first row, as she "He· done you dirty!" she cried, ·

I. assailed the villian upon .his thick and the winner (and still cham­legs with her huge leather purse- pion) looked up at her, a twisted: and the villian let go his ill-gotten smile on his face, and then left gain. g the arena. · ......

But the silver-haired lady not alone in her condemnation·:lr--------------:: of the one clad in dark blue-the plebians seated around the arena voiced their negative opinif)nS and made sure they were heard.

received the applause ,of the al-l Altho.,ugh .'Wake For:s~ scored most-capacity crowd when public-· only lu p~mts to Wilham and addt·es.s announcer Gus Bryson Mary's 19 ;n ~he seco~d quar~er, told the audience of the veteran's the Deacons f1rst penod sconng last game before the home crowd. spree was still enou?'h to gi-.·~

Wake Forest a half-time lead or

Hillenbrand Given Trophy

31-27.

Tl1e Indian~ put in 15 points in the thh·d quarter, while 'Wake scored 13, to bring William· and

Deacon center Dickie Hemric hooks in two poin :a agaiDat South Carolina in last Monday night's game in Gore gym. While teammate forward Rav Lipataa mov.es to cover rebounding, Gamecock forward Rabinowitz (21) and teammates center C'oHina (31) and guard Hufford (14) crane tlieir necks in fascination 'at the arcing ball. (Photo b.f Irvin Grigg.)

A lady holding a small girl who sat calmly chewing her thumb, screame~ "Yon dirty bum!" and joineq the many-more who tossed folded paper cups into :the ring, The little girl still chewed her thumb and did not share her mother'? enthu__siasm-or anyone else's.

One spectator was smoking a somewhat ancient cigar; be had

Clr.:§=l

~-----··..,=-Try Our Expert

l\iary within two points of the 86_74 •• Deacons's lead. The Indians ma-de Cleaning ,Service The Phil Harris Sportsmanship up these two deficits in the last - -

Trophy was presented to Bruce period., when forward John _l'l1a- Coloni··als Hil!enb1·and at halftime at the honey connected on a long JUmp Wake Forest-South Car 0 1 in a shot for William and l\lary to tie

Take Deacons EAT AT B'OB'S ·,

Today

F b 22 the score with a minute and · a gaiDe, e ruary . half left in the game. 'i'his award is g-iven annually

to a Wake Forest athlete who has The Indians regained possession engaged in spo1·ts for 4 years at aftet· that shot and held the ball the cellege and who has been out- for more than a minute, but standing in sportsmanship. missed the last second shot that

D Ita S. P'-" . 1 f would have decided the game in e 1gma HI, a soc1a ra- l h · t 't t' t th' t en· favor. The game then went erm y now ex me on 1s cam- . h 'd" . . !Jlf.S, ·gave the trophy to the school mto t e dec! mg overtime period. in honor of Phil Harris a Wake Deacon center Dick Hemric, Fot·est athlete, who was' killed in with 27 points, including a pair ar1 auto accident in 1940. of foul shots in the ove1·time, led

FOREST THEATRE Week Of March 1, 1954

Mo1ulay

SLows 3:15 • 7:00 • 9:00 Ma'ureen O'Hara & Jeff Chandler

-in-"WAR. ARROW"

Tuesday Shows 3: IS • 7:00 - 9:00

Wake Forest scoring and took top honors for the game. Forward Lefty Davis hit for 14 to come in second for the Deacons.

!lrlahoney's 21 points were hig·h for the Indians, while his team­mate Stubbs sunk 14 for the run­ner-up spot for the losers.

The victory brok-e a two-game losing streak for Wake Forest and brought the Deac's overail record to 14-10. It was William and Mary's eleventh loss in 20 gami!s.

Spear-headed by Corky Devlin, a starting guard, the Colonials ·•f George Washington outscored the Deacons of Wake Forest in the second half to win, 86-74, a game played in Washington, D. C., Feb. 19.

Baffled by · the Wake Forest zone defense in the first half, the GW squad, ranked 8th in the nation, was evenly matched by the Southern invaders. With·. Dickie Hemric lending the attack, i the lead changed hands nine · times and stood in a deadlock 10 times during the initial period.

The struggle was a nip and tuck affair until Devlin and his team mates found the basket from outside the tight Wake Forest zone.

Devlin was high scorer for the :night with 28, followed by Col­onial Forward Joe Holup who chipped i~ with 27 points. Center Hemric was next, chalking UP.. 2u

Steve Cochran -iD­

"SHARIC RIVER"

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

Gary Cooper -in-

"HIGH NOON"

DRUGS COSMETICS.

·SUNDRIES STATIONERY

Thursday & Friday Slaow. 3:15 • 7:00 -.. 9:00

Cornel Wild .. & Mel Ferrer --in­

"SAADIA"

Saturday Sloow1 ConliDuoua 1 to 11 P.M.

Raftge Busters -in­

"BULLETS & SADDLES" -at$o-

Eaat Side Kido -in­

"FLYING WILD"

SllnGay Silows 2.00 - 3:4'5 • 9:00

Alan Ladd & Arlene Dahl -in­

"'DESERT LEGION"

---·---COLLEGIATE THEATRE

Week Of March 1, 1954

Monday Shows 3:15 - 7:00 • 9:00

Fred Aatair -in­

"SHOWBOAT''

Tues. - Wed. & Thul'l. Shoows 3: lS • 7:00 • 9:00

Joel McCrea & Yvonne DeCarlo -in-

"BORDER RIVER"

Friday & Saturday Sho'W'II 3:15 • 7:00 • 9:00

James Stewart -in­

"NAKED. SPUR"

Sunday SLows 3:15 - 7:00 ~ 9:00

Ester Williams '-in­

•'TEXAS CARNIVAL"

On Your Total Food Bill At Hollo~ell' s Super Market

".We Are Always Glad

.To Serve You"

HOLLOWELL'S CASH FOOD STORE

"Good Things To Eat" 205 Roosevelt Ave. Wake Forest, N.C.

markers while Lefty Davis con­tributed 16.

The victory, though hard-earn­ed, gave George \Va~hington a record of 18 wins against 1 de­feat for the season.

COLLEGE I We Can Restore Your

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Call 307-2 The Students' Choice For Good Food

B I E CLEANERS When Stalin's 8irthday came up last . Dec. 21, there was no official mention',of it ·in the Rus­sian papers. PATRONIZE OG&B ADVERTISERS

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ITS ALL ·A MATTER OF TASTE I

• with cigarettes II guess,n9 games ur brand- . 'When Luekies ar'~~other smo1ce.

A cleaner, ftrh~:~eally gtand! . A taste

phiZW.Eldet. , . - Oklabom.a uruvemf?

When you come right down to it, you smoke for one simple reason • • . enjoy­ment. And smoking enjo~nt is all a matter of taste~ Yes, taste is'*hat counts in a cigarette.'Anct'i.uckies ttiste better. · Two' facts ~i~ifl· why ~~.~~kies t~ste

better. First, L.S./M.F. T .-Luck:yStrike .~means fine tobacco ••• light, mild, good-· tasting 'tobacco. Second, Luckies are ac­tually' made better. to taste better • • •

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Donald A. Bell Crei$h~on University

A comprehe~slve s . . d super-. . tervlews an

31,000 student Ul fi s-shows that 11 8 pro essor ··

vised.by co eg · f oast to coast . 'leges rotn c .

S·mokers 1n co• b ds' The a11 thet ran · "

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CLEANER I •RESHER. SIHOTHERI.

, 'MOl'

''l;'lli ·:.' ., -~

.·t B. ; ; . l i'' I

_\1··.:· • n :, . .: f1rst .

• •1 1 basket

. 'i est g ·<:.South

.•:: se'um i !·: ~ay.

· ., . The '( which

.~· year. l .:< playini

rolled .\}. De.ac~r

:•:. previ01 C., the

., I

'\·} The

f Wheth• ... loses ~: \ ing on

·'A This i:

: ,·~ game! :"·.-, a. win

' ,unseat I I ahead

. ~ .)· would ~~ ·,~ ahead

Nati .,, plays · H, ·second'

··.' startin: ' of tlie

!ina. ga }laryla

.J semi-fi·

;! Thm ,, · clashin:

· :-~. 7 p. m Carolin with a-

• edge ·< .1; have a

At ! "• • - -meets

,,.. in anot - ·., ':··winner~

-w In

By

.. ·,I Tri : 'jdefeate

\: 30, in~ I> ·, 1,ed Th~

· ·.~ Bea J

. ·-~r~~iete: ', with : ' 3amma . . :'A'rnmeti

t<. ··•1':.;-:~h~ " · · ·· cessitat!

edged 1 j. ·night b•

':.•: natiqn· .Wednes• TriPi's.

i

Sylvia for the points, second l McNeill losing T

P.lans Magnoli: sponsore cation this yeaJ Andersm

... r'-

A gro· to travel play Me ball. Thi tWeen th won by year.

1 't 'i

The 1 sociation Sport's 1 in April from- all Eastern

· ,,. . Sport's I

·I ' A·. ro

tourname . between

thi-s tour 1

· teams pi: an elimin · Sopho11 day; fre1

~~1'

,. l

day;.fresl day; and Thursday

Page 5: CampJJ-,$ pa.rty 'fo Nominat~ - Wake Forest University

... -,•. {•. • •,, ',., '!.• '' ··, -i

.. 'MOND'A y. MARCH ... 1954 ".

·Wi.ke·-· To·.· M.eet':: u~sc ,1Iii-Play-O!£Thursday ; ;t .• By CHARLES .NEWMAN and- the· Duke-Virginia clash are

, •1\:' . In the opening game of ~he to· meet' i.n the second semi-final ,I ·•' first Atlantic Coast Conference .match Fnday at 9 p. m. ' ) j basketball play-offs, Wake. For- The untar.nish.ed .AC~ . basket-

• . '\ est goes again;;t sixth-ranking ball crown Wlll fmd Its f1~·st home . · .. ;; South Carolina in Reynolds Coli- Saturday at. 8 p. m., when the two '":. , :. seuin in Raleigh at 2 p.m. Thun- teams und~feated ~n tournament

· • !') day. . . . ,play !Jleet m the fmals. . ,, .· Tlie co'ntest .marks the third in 'f which these two . ha,·e met this ·spl V' _ KA ' .

year. Last :Monday, Wake Forest, .D S · · S v. playing host to the -Game::ocks, I .. ' , ·

rolled up a highest-ever-for-the~ · ~-~ . ,.., • h De.a~~n.s ~cor~ o.f_ ,103-70 •. In a lr,J.eet ~ OnJg t previous meetmg m Columbta, S. . · · · -: .. :· · .-· .. · . .

.. c., the Dea~:~ '~::e77--62 • · ln Semi-Finals ~ , T.he Deacons met Duke' Friday.. · . . : - .. :t' Whether Wake · Forest ·wins - .Jr Kappa ·Alpha'~ and the Sigma

.'( loses t.hat game will have no !:!ear- Phi Epsilons_ will battle it out I ing on the conference standings. tonight to decide who will tangle

. \ This is the only remaining ACC with Sigma· Chi for the fraternity ··:i, game left in the whole conference; league championship in Intramu­

OLD COLD AND BLACK

'Jim #oots; newly•:·elected bead cheerlead;,;r. Ie;a~a th~ yell-l~adi~g squ~d thl'ough a l~c:omotive yell after -selection..- for nine .. vacancies i.i the gri,.;'p ·wer-e: ~a-;ie~ Three of ':tlioi:e' naine'd. we~e with. the aq~ad. this ye~r. Exercising . .;ith H~t ... are. J~h~ Long, c'a.roly~ Huff, D'ou~ ~ay~a~d. Jan Bell, Cba'rles Reid;. Darle'ne· Herman, Brunoon Salley, Carol Jeannette, Herb Ridgeway and Juanna Joy Mitchell. (Photo by Wayne Kinser.) .

83-81 Score:

PACE FIVE

3·Returneea:

Names Six Cheerleaders Nine cheerleaders, including I was renamed to the ~quad. ·

tlll'~e. re-elected o•:es, 1\.'cre named Darlene Herman, Kannopuoo t~ J~m ~wo retu:·n.mg· men to ~ead freshman, Jan Bell, sophom~ W nke F o:rest spmt next year. from Spart.'t~bnrg, S. C., awlli.

Four men, one of whom was Juanna Jo~·· Mitchell Zebufc!lt! among the 1U53 squad, were se- f1·eshman, a~e newly ~a~ned ch~­lected _fron! 10. aspirants to fill leaders. Carolyn Huff, A.sl:leville,. va~anctes m , tne g1·oup. Cha1·h!s sophomore, and Ca1·ol Jennct:ill:,. Reid, Charlotte ~ophomore,· Brun- freshman ft-om '\Vestministcr, MJ1.,.. son Salley, freshman from Char- were reinstated to their last. vear':s.< lotte, ancl ~·Herb Hidgeway, Ra- positions. • leigh junior. are the new men. Jim Hoots, High Point juni~ Doug .Maynard, sophomore stu- wm; named 'head chee1·lead~­dent from San .Jose, Costa Rica, During the past season, lf<ffi~

Co:eds Attend Athletic Meet

took oYer the cl1i-ef spot, 1:eplaci~ ?ene Boyc~. who resigned tru.t. jJosition at the end or· .tfu! ,fint;; ::;emeste1·.

Judges for the select1Gns "'11'-1!!\!0l

1·epi·esentatives from each of · tM.!: •;at•sity sports, two graduat~

Six \Vake Forest coeds and MiF.s cheerleaders and tliC head chceT.­Dot Casey, ad,,ise1·, attended the leader. Athletic Federation of Collcg·<llr Competitors for the nine spot~ Women's Annual Conference at 32 in all, were divided into sec'_' Chapel Hill last week. tions of four or five, and eax€

Pm·pose of the group is to pro-a. win would not be enough to rill basketball. T)le Independent unseat Maryland·, ranking second league remains pretty much an 'ahead of Wake Forest. and a loss open :::ffair .. would still' J.eep the. Deacons • Last week the KA's downed Pi ahead of foUl'th-place · State. Kappa Alpha, 22-18, for a cracl;:

Natitnially- ranked ftl:aryland. at the SPE's. The Campus Dea-

D I Ed T B ·b mote interest in the Woman';; . eac. ets · · ge · ar a ·· ies :;l:~·::~·£r.::::::~ .. i::.t;: group led three yells and rendere.t: "0 Here's To Wake Fo1·est'' v.i~ appropriate motions before t'M.: judges.

Billy' Lyles, }>resident of tilt!!< Monogram Club, along with. h~P~r~> Judges, counted the ballots ani:~ announced the , results. Tho~' chosen were elected by a. deal:' majority and no run-off wac needed.

.,. plays last-place Clemson in the cons walked ·over Bond's Boys 31 >;, ·second· game Thursday aft~rnoGn, to 22 ,to keep the Independent

starting at 4 p. m. The winner leag.ue lead. . of the Wake Forest-South CaN- But the Ridgecresters defeated !ina game meets the victor of the S~g A, 29-24, an'd the Sem~nary, llaryland-Clernson match in the 3o-33, and the Royals captured a

'. semi-finals, Friday at 7 p. m. hard fougl:t 36-31 win from th_(!

By JACK ROBINSON I a slow start, and the Deaciets For the home group, guard Jean Butler, Bea McNeill, Jo Anne With, a record of eight wins\ jumped into an early lead. At the Campbell approiately enough led Powell, Arameta Rhodes and

against three losses and a game end of the ·first quarter, Wake the scoring with 20 points. Peggy Stewart. against Duke' left to play, \Vake Forest led by seven points. Five Wake Forest ·starters sank The conference consisted of Fdrest's Baby. Deacons downed a However, in the second period, double figure totals as the Deac- discussions on the different physi­fighting Carolina five, 83-81, in the. visitors found their marks, lets won e;,1silv over Edwards cal education programs in both the fourth contest between tl:ie and, led by for:ward Rosenbluth, Military Institute, 91-52, Feb. 18. coed and women's colleges .

.J . Thu.raday Came• . Camp,us ~av:'lliers t.o. · make . the . i! Thursday · finds State College C. Deac~, ~Igh . pos1t10n a httle

clashing with North Carolina at rno!'e un~asy.

two· freshman teams in Gore Gym dumped in enough points to even Murdo~k got 17 points, Gilley 16, A play day was held in the last· Monday.· · the score at 'halftime to 41-41. Wi!r!!'ins 15, forward Rob· Bell 15 ._,. Women's Gym Friday night. Girl's

The Little Tar Heels got off to Too Ma~y Foula and Gerdes 13. ;from colleges all over the state FOR THE VERY

Best , · In the second half, several \Vake Forest got off to a close pat·ticipated in the various games.

Ho. ·n· o' 'rs· ~Bones' Carolina starters began to ama-'!S start. but Rosenbluth, leading the I The confei·ence ended Saturday

• p · r~ 7 p. m. State ranks fqurth, while Other rohlems Carolina is fifth. However, State, The Ridgecresters will play the with a· 5-3 record, holds quite an Royals Monday in the first haif edge ·over the Tar Heels, who of a twin bjll. Tuesday, the win­

a too:big total ·of fouls and, as Carolina fresh, forged ahead to 1

. !with a busi11ess meeting. The a result, were u.nable to play the give the Deaclets tlJeir third loss president elect college for next game they might have played of the season, 76-67, Feb. l6. T?el year is Meredith, and Wake Fot·­were it not for the fouls. With, Deacons clid not put up any seno- est was voted the recording seCL·e-

IN

. t' ha\'e a 5-6 conference record. ner of this game will meet the .. : At 8 p. m., first-place Duke Bond's boys for a chance at . the

-meets -·seventh-ranking Virginia C. Deacs · Wednesday: Also on' ,,. in another preliminary game.-The Tuesday riighl the. wiimer.Qf·.the

.. winners of the State-UNC game KA-SPE gan:ie fights i,t out \Vith

Raleigh's News and Observer recently chose Horace "Bones"

·McKinney a& iU Ta~ Heel of the Weeli:. . . ~ Herbert : O'K~ef' descri:hed

·' Wake Forest's· assiatant basket­:. 'bii:ll ~coach' in .. a.: long feature

center Jim Gilley freer to control. us defense ·against the Greater 1 ·the bac~boa·rds, · the Deaclet:;:'l University five un.til i:Jte last -'t?-:..1_·~-·_c_o_l_e_g_e_. __ _,._-~.:;-_· __ _ pushed ahead, but the Little Tar 1 quarter, but Cal'Olma harl too Heels returned. almost go·al for much of a head start and fnished

Home-Cooked Foods.·

AND

·women liz. Shorts

By JO ANNE POWELL

the Sig Clii's~ · · . · · .· · - . li. Sigma Chi loses in· ti1e ga1i1a

with t1:e KA-SPE fracas wiimcr the deciding 'game will be played \Vednesday night. If the C Deacs ,.,-in the;r Wednesday night game, they will meet the . first winner Thursday for the campus champi­onship. If they lose, the champion­ship game will be played n(!Xt

, . i Tri Pi, coed basketball team, !\ionday. ·

· articie. He .told· of "Bones" bench·fidgeting at games, and

, of his e~tire life which has been centered around basket­ball; ·both as a player and as a coach.

~-defeated the Gamma Tau's, 32- At the end of last week's tour­

: 30, in a championship game play- ney piay, -Sig Chi- and the C. Deacs

The story told how "Bones" has 'played ball for N. C. State, University of North Carolina and Wake Foreat, as well as for many service an professional teams.

1, ed Thursday night. he1d unbeaten records in the · ·~ .Bea McNe~}l led the. chanrpi~n-1 double-elimination struggle. Sylvia Messick and Max Burdell

Jsh!p team w1th 14 pomts, wh1le I 0th£r:- In~ramurals forfeited to Prentice Fox and Jo

,-· A~gie Oldham. was second h~gh .. Paul Bu:ns beat Ralph SteUI'Cl' Ann McSwain to give the latter , .vtth 13 pomts. · The losmg m Golf 'fnials recently. Steurer two the toul'ney championship. ' Gamma Tau's were sparked by led. Burns into the 18th hole by . Intramural volleyball entries I .. :'A.ramet'a Rhoaes' 14 points. one -stroke. On the final hole· open· today and continue through

t<. ~:'\'. .. ;.if~~ _Thursday game was n~- Burns gGt a birdie· and SteuNr Friday. . · cess1tate4 .when the Gamma Taus got par for -the hole to tie the Don Jackson.is to meet Knobby I

edged the Tri Pi's, · 32-29, the ·game. Walsh Wednesday in the final j. · night before in the double elimi- The two played a nineteenth play~offs of the table tennis tour-

i.t. nati~n tourney. :The. ,defeat "sudden death" hole and Burns ney . .Wednesday was the first for the wo'n by a stroke. The Third round of the handball Tri Pi's. · In the coed tennis tou1·nament tourney is to be played next week.

Sylvia Messick was high scorer -------.:..' ___________ :._ ___ _:_;:.._ __ ....:__::..:..:_ for the Gamma Tau's with 15 points, and· Miss Rhodes wasll second high with 11 points. Miss McNeill sank 16 points for the losing Tri Pi's. · · I

Pl~ns are .being made for. tbe

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~!!lrrarmce 111ncll automobile insurance thru dividends. LET US ·TELL YOU ABOUT IT' ·

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. . . 'PHONE 43'47 , ··- :. Magnolia· Festival which is being~ sponsored ·by the Physical · Ed:u-, cation Depart.ment. · The ·theme . M.rt. C. S. BJa~k and ~rs. D~n.ald Culley~ l'epresentin~r

} this year will be "Hans Christian I North:oweat Caeualty Co. and No):'thwestem Mptual Fire Asao. ).Lnderson." ... ,. ~----~--------~~--~----~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~.J

. ~<\ grOl1P of girls ~ill .~e ~h~~- 'liiiiif-iilili~g~~g~~;;a;g~;;~~~i~ .• ,J .......

I'( 'i

to travel to ~leigh next '\Veek "tO." . ' play Meredith College in bask~t~ · ball. This is a.n annual game. ~-:-..

-®'-..,. . ... ·· tween the two ·colleges, and is was

won by Wake Forest College last ·, Y~ur. He81th · . ' ,, <·

,,··

•\ !

year •

The Women's Recreation As· sociation is making plans for the Sport's Day wii'ich is t.o be hell~ in April ·at Wake· Forest. Girl's from· all of the colleges in the Eastern District will.' atterid this

. Sport's Day here.- ·

' A ·. round robin basketball tournament will b·e held this· week between the different elasss. In thi-s tournament, all of the class

. 1 • teams play each other instead of an eliminaUon ·contest.· ·

1 • Sophomores: meet juniors to-day; freshman vs. seniors Tues­day; .freshmen vs.· juniors W ednes.: day; and sophomores vs. seniors Thursday.

,.

f~ ··Our First· C'oricern. ~:. T~e row u~o~ row of preparati~ns that you ~ - see on our, fC!_~o~atory sht;lv.es •• ,' evidence t: ~_of. the .fact ttiat we are ready to .fill ANY ' ~~~sc~iption .r~~r doctor may .write. . .,. •

C!u•c~I_Y:· _.:. ~pe~d~b!y ..• accurately. Calf us when· in .need •

: . _,.~ . . ' J .

..•. , ·_ ·-P.hoa• 2761

. .. ~il~nt't Pharma_cv;.· f ..

I• . . . ... ,-:--ala~. .. . . BENJAMIN MOORE PAINTS

W~ke Forest B~il~ing., Supply, Inc. "Eve~ything T Q .Builil. ~nything"

W. H. C~ea~,. Pr~sideni:

goal, and ·,the· final · score was a' ahead. , tight 83=81. · In tbe second contest betweeJl ' Campbell College played host the two schools, Feb. 11, Wake to the Wake freshmen and lost, Forest beat the Baby Tar Heels, 79-69, recently., The home five 66-57. Wake held a slim one~ I led the Deacons at the intermis- point advantage at the end of the l sion, but an empty bench allowed first period, leading 16-15. In the the visitors to go ahead in the second ' period, the Deaclets \ second half. Four Wake Forest pushed in enough to· take a seven-~ starters shared the high scores, point lead at halftime. The Bap-

1 forward Jon Gerdes getting 19 tists put in J5 points in tbe laslll points, Gilley, 14, guard Jack quarter to take th~ contest ..

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Murdock, 16, and guard Erni~ Murdock led the visitors with Wiggins, 14. his 17 points.

Oppooite ~::i:~:r;:;king Lot 1;.,.. __ H_._O_· _M_' _E_·_T_:E_l_-__ ~··'

. : ..

f.

Americtes (

·v· . _,:.-

Knights of the Sky. n

r;;.;;:;;;:;:::----~:1 ~ 7'he Liglzt Brigade t!-.at charged the gUllS, . ~ . ~ Iii Across the battle plain ,. "' ~ ~ Can claim no greater c"for_)' thai! • · · • · • '· it ;;t;: t.:Uat.&.W o.- TI-t& CMCIIII.N ~S.W .f1o i1 Tlu! dedicated few ~ ~ W!w wear tile Wings of Sib'er ~ ~ •.. on a field of Air Force Blue. ~

~-~cHll:mt~iDh'l!r.l:ll!ill'.Cii'.l!ililt!ll'!ll!lir.~l~.a~~~~r.1.1UiliUr.iliti<'!I'J.tw.;;;li!ll:liL1~

For Fellowship ••• High Adventure ••• and a proud mission ••• wear the wings of the· U.S. Air Force! e In. d~ys gone· by; young men in s~ining armor ruled the age. Today, a new kmd of man rules the age-America's Knights of the Sky, the Aviation Cadets! They rule from on high, in Hashing silver-winged Air Force jets •.. a gallant band that all America looks up to! Like the Knights of old, they are few in number, but they represent their Nation's greatest strength.

If you are single, between the ages of 19 and 2~, you can join this select Hying team and serve with the finest. You will be given the best jet training in the world and graduate as anAirForceLieutenant,earning S5,000aycar. Your silver wings will mark you as one of the

· chosen few, who ride the skies in Air Force jets. As an Aviation' Cadet, your kingdom i~

space-a jet is your charger and your mission .is the highest. You are a l<ey defender of the American faith, with a guaranteed future both in military and commercial aviation.

Join America's Knights of the Sky, new men of a new age. Be an Aviation Cadet!

WHERE TO GET MORE DETAILS: • Co11tur:t )'OUT ntarest Aviation Cadet Selecti~m Team, Air Force R.O.T.C. Ur.it o,; Air Fora RecrllitingOJfic<!r. Or write to: A~·iution Cadft, llq., U. S. Air Force, Washington 25, D. C.

UNITED STATES

AIR FORCE

Page 6: CampJJ-,$ pa.rty 'fo Nominat~ - Wake Forest University

PACE SIX OLD GOir.D AND BLACK

Dickie Hemric Makes AP All;..Antet-iCan . , . - . . .

Big Den1011 Deacon, (;enter. Gets Position On '3rd Tean1

MONDAY MARCH 1, 1954

Who· Are.; Greeks· ' ' . . ,

.'By Jimmy Taylor· . . Sigma Phi Epsilon mday night at the fraternity

Wake Forest center Dickje Hemdc landed on the As­:;sociated Press All-American third team, it was announced ::Friday. The Jonesville junior has been IJamed to other .1\.Jl-Americ:an teams in his freshman and sophomore _years.

The' Wake ·Forest chapter of house and was highlighted· with Sigma Phi Epsilon has been chosen the music of .a combo. Prepa~ as host ·chapter fm· the ·District 1·ations for the party included a . V, Co.nvention to be held. here ·general clea-n-up of the house and J ·· I March 27. · · . - yard. ,

. Hemric was a ,third string choice despite a foqt injury ~·hich seriously hampered his effectiveness midway in

· District V is compo'sed of North . Three men were added to the

-fu.e season, and which cut down . -

.011 his total point 'a:ve1·age. o·l. 'Ike B' . e' ' a··· s' .

and South Carolina. Chapters to pledge Class last week, Lster Russ ·be .represented are , N. C •. .Sta~e Rupert Flah~rty, of: Raleigh, antL. College, Duke U nversity, .. Uni- Joe Cero's, of Winsor, Canada. · ve1:sity of North C~rQlin:ap~ )Iigh ;Plans. hale '!Jeen, laid .. for the ...

· ··P-omt--Gollege, Len01r--Rhyrre ·Col- .Inte;r;-~l'\Sta .. Basketball. !I'ourna-- .... : · -~, lege, Davidson College, University ment to be held in Frank Thomp. Fil'l't string choices for All-

~merican were Frank Selvy, Fur­:man; Don Schlundt, Indiana; Tom

- of South Caroli:t:ta and· W a_ke For- ,110n Gym at State College •. The

•1Gnla, La Salle: Cliff Hagan, Ken- WF 90 31 ~ucky, and Bob Pettit, Louisiana · ' • 'State. Though Pettit polled fewer ::iir;;t !Jlace votes than Bevo By CHARLES NEWMAN ::Francis of little Rio Grande Cbl-' Wake Forest's Deacons fell be-:Jege. he nceived his first string fore· Duke's Blue Devils 90-81 ::!ating by virtue of numerous Friday night at ·Duke's Indoor

est. College. . . , . . :_ ~a,ke Forest chapter meets State . _,_· . -:fhe p~rpose· of._ the conv:ent~o.n In t~e op~ning ga~e, and the: :pu~~- ': \.

'is to better co-ordinate· the chap- chapt_er ·~o.e~ aga~nst Ca~ohn~ · t;n ·J~ . tet·s : an,d tq ·study mutual prob~ the ~ec~n~ ,gam~. ,.. . \ : · \ : ·. i len1s· and aCtivities: Johnnie Ray - . WmnE\rs fro~ 'the preliminary ·, ::1 ,Hend1·en, prfsident. cif 'the chapter gfames; me·e~ in' ~he' final ~ame for-~.~: , ·here; is the chairman for the con- the championship,. A trophy will ·:-,, ,

. venti-on. ·. -'be awarded·the winn~r, a.nd.that' · . ..llecond place ·votes. Stadium in Durham.

Znd Team The ·win gave Duke a 2-1 record P · b d prize becomes thl'! ·'·possession · f · placed fourth in the Southern bivitational:ROTC Rifle Tournament:. · ete Mauney has · e.en name th'e ''chapte..:·w· . · 't th .· .. 0

T h · I d 1m • • • · · · · • .. pled t · Th ·o' n the rush- •· mnmg I ree times · On the ,;eeond team with over the ·Deacons in play this ::J'rancis were Indiana's Bob Leon- :rear. "rake up:>et the favored :-ard, Kentucky's Frank Ramsey, Blue Devils 96-89 in Gore Gym .lluquesne's Dick Rickett and Jan. 12. The r.wo met earlier in We~-tern Kentucky's Tom :::liar- the Dixie Cla;;sic, and Duke came

eam mc.rn et-s tnc 11 e, eehng Wtlham Ryan Lew•s Crawley Frank --Bennett Btlly ·Watkins. gq rainer. ose i ·· Th' . . Ch I O'B • D Bo. bb' ' c ' · ·· ' ' · ' ing committee are Jim DeVos n succ~!i~Ion. Is year a new.

~res rten, ew~y _., ttt, J. . Turner,_ Mat-vm ~at-ter, Bobby Moss, C...-1 Veach, Sid Cutts ·and ·<!hah'lllan, Bob- Koontz,:'. B 0 b t~·opl}y ~s bein~. offered, as Caro:::.· · '·

MaJ. Ivan J. Cooper, team coach. (Photo by Wayne K•nser.) Bl k h' · d. J h D k' lma retired the last one last year

:.rl;aU. out on top, 83-66. With Hemric on the third team In the first €{uarter of the I

· an ens 1p an · o nny aw ·ms. . .. ~ ·

T Those on the s9c~al committee are .. R 0 .. c R if I e u n it W'i n s '4·t-·h' ~~7-~g~~y:~'d c~::.::;nTa~~ a 1' c tr s The Si:::;· ~~:s recently 'Were Togo Palazzi of Holy Cross, match, the score teetered back Arnold S1rort of Oklahoma City, and forth with Duke coming out The rifle teani of the local Re­::Bob Mattick of Oklahoma A and ahead, 19-20. Deacon center Dick- I serve 'Officers Training Corps JII. and Johnny Kerr of Illinois. ie Hemric g·ot off to a slow staJ;t I placed fot;rth, in the recent South-, Hemric, a ·20-year-old sensation, in the initial period and finally ern Inv1tatwnal ROTC Rifle

. ,. . , . pledged · A,ndy Clement,. Jack three · other units and lost to. was held recently in G1·eensboro. Pi Kappa· Alpha Coates, John Johnson, George three, scori~g a total of 33 711 M. P. 'Carter was high scorer Joe Royster of Portsmouth, Ponder and Hugh Terrell. points for the match. Highest for_ the Wake Forest rifle team Va. was initiated Tuesday in a A hobo party at the community sco1·e, 34 71 points, :was made by 1 with 714 points and received an I fori'-naz ceremonY. preceding the house recently attracted almost

JJ.Olds practically every record totaled eight points, as did Duke Tournament." 1vailable at Wake Forest and has guard Joe Belmont. 'Vake Forest's l:ept' on or near the top in most of Second Half

the Naval ROTC umt from Duke 1 award fo1· that honor. Others regular meeting. 50, Sigma. Chi', members and . team de'feated University. Last 'leg of the meet j firing for the team were C. P. New ·pledges of the frate~nity pledges.

O'Brien, 680; B. C. Moss, 667; are Jim Adams of Winston-Salem Charles Jaczko, alumnus brother. -the indh·idual stati>-tics depa1-t- The. second period, filled with :ne~1ts among the Big Four. fouls, p1·oved to be a retake of the

He scored \>29 points as a fresh- first quarter. B?th. ~eams sank 21 G t L D _e ·· I Q L. C.- Crawley, 353; F. A. Ben- and Stanley Stone of Lumberton. now in . the Army, visited ·the e S arge e.termen nota nett, 331; R. C. Veach, 323; W. Officers for the new f-ear are ho,use last week.

. D. Ryan, 303. Ralph Adams, secretat·y; Bud man for a 21.7 average- ancl held·, points to run the halftime score 'Vake Forest's ·Reserve Officers :in l1is sophomore year, the nation- to 41-40. with the Blue Devils Training Corps unit has received ;."J.] two-~·ear scoring record with holding the· slim n)argin. . a- generous quota allot.ment for ::1356 p•:)ints: · After the intermission, during I the deferment of qualified ROTC

ln High School which a swing band gave an im- students, according. to Lt. Cal. _-J. In l1igh school he starred as promptu concert, the Devils S. Terrell, Pl\IS&T.

".basketball and football player. He forged ahead, scoring 30 :points -was named to the All-State team to Wake Forest's 13, to·boost the :tor 'three straight years. [score to 71-53. Duke f01·i.vard and Talks iOf Jews

Ai'ter· graduating in June of I co-captain Bernie Janicki lied. the J!l55, Hemric plans a career in home five with 11 points. (Contini.ted'From Page One) .fuusiness. At Wal\e Forest he is a \Vake Forest put ·in 28 points of this war a Jewish state and aii' :membei· of the ::.\fonogram club, in ·the fina1 period, while Duke Arab s~ate were set up .. Boun­':ROTC and Sigma Chi fraternity. sank 19; but the nine point mar- daries. ·between the two ,ivere :He is also listed in "Who's 'Vho." ii:n was not enough to put the :He fias been on the All-Confer- Deacons out in front. formed ~vhere the fighting stop-·'<'nee . :f.irst team b<?Jh years at Hemr-ic Gets 28 ped and sometimes di\·ided cities. "Wake Forest:' All-America Hemric sank 28 Mrs. Evans, during lier ~-isit to

F Palestine last s,ummer, found the l"ank Selv-y, who, has had his points in the game. Forward Ron-;.Share of records and honors, is ny Maver put in 19 'points to lead Jews there stimulated with ·a deep

~ lo,·e of land and of freedom. 'iops ·on the All-America collegiate Duke scoring. "Lefty" Da•"is was

·For a student to be in good . Duririg. the. week or' Feb. l5, ·K~lly;· phidgeina.ster;' 'Chris Goley; . Kappa Alpha· standing he must have sibrned th<' the rifle team fired a score of chairman; - Frank Wyatt, 1.·ush The fraternity initiated six meR ·w defe1·ment agreement and must be 1.878 _against three. other schools: chairman. last. week. They are · Clifto-n doing_,acceptable work in his other Tusl<'~gee Tnstitute,~ Geo1·gja Tech •- ~ne~d~n, Johnny Lineberger, .Al-academic courses, to insure Jirad-. and LaSal.le 'College. Both Georgia :Lambda: Chi·,, Alpha bed. 'Newman,.. Walter . Ward uatio.n. Tech and LaSalle College were A rushing pro·ty was held··'Sat- Charles Snipes and Paul Bu;rfis. '

\' Th~ ROTC sta.ff is p:te~aring to defeated; the: final score of Tits- Carwile LeRoy· .. was .a;. member·~ .screen the quality point ratios of kegee ·Institute has not been ·i·e- PI Ch of the Wake Forest debate· team all freshme·n immecijately_ The ceived. On March 6' the te$m will . '·. ,a_·n·s '• a,·nge that'· tied- for first place in .the ROTC board will then i11eet for fire a :sho.ulder-to-shouldel': match . . . , . Atlantic Coast Conference turna-final' agreement on the 'MSI stu- against the State 'College Army ((lontinued From Page One) ment held ·recently in Char~ottes-dents who will Q.e deferred. · ROTC' m1it. · · · ' ROTC unit required tQ convert it ville, Va. '

Screeni'ng tests fo'r all sopho- Four tro'phies will be awarded into a GMS: :unit include a new Howard Twiggs was . recentlq mores_ ha,·e. 'been 1~ece~ved, ,and to members of the.· ROT.C r1fle ·theory of the military training eleCted· "Ki1;1g of Hearts'' at a: Colonel Terrell described them as team at the end of the academic course' · and some property Valentine dance"sponsored by the "vety difficult."' The tests-to be year. The trophies ,..;.m be awa1.·d .. changes. Colonel Te;r,·1·ell stated coeds. administered earlv in :March- ed on .the. basis of the cadet's that he is convinced that tltis is Plans are underway for the

----------------------------- State·and Wake Forest. Bob Cul-

l.

k'<ketball team. He was picked on second for ·wake Forest with 17, These people, she said, have ibe first team on 280 out of 1356 and Belmont was runner-up for known hardships and persecu-llallots. Duke with 18. tions, and when at last given a

stress speed,- proficiency in ·Eng- scoring during the e'iitire year. a move in the right direction to annual Old South Ball, which will . lish, vocabulary, grammar, pro~ Also, 10 metals will be pres~nted benefit the gov~rnment, the Col- be held April 10 in Raleigh. The ·. ficiency in math and reasoning ~ to students firing for the rifle lege and·. the individual cadet en- B!lll is being plan·ned by the KA · ability. team. rolled in ROTC. chapters from Carolina, -Duke, .

ler and-John Brooks are the repre~· · .1

.

Olfl·cers Go In !For Women: . sentatives from the local chapter Sel""''• who pre>ious to thi~ year F 'd · ht' the lan!l of their own, are devoted tu to the Big Four Old South Ball • J ~ r1 ay mg s game was th f k · · 3iad been close to Hemric in total last regular season game in At- e purpose 0 ·eepmg It. :points scored, gained the ascend- !antic Coast Conference play. !he land. is. a waste land, she .;.ncy early in the season, and com- Most of the <Jther conference said, yet With the love and devo­.:Jortably expanded on it since that teams met non-conference <lp-\ tion they put into their work, the :rime. ponents o;;er the week end. I Jews make things grow. This land

Phi Alpha Delta legal frater- Di- C' ./.. L f 'I. 'to Committee.

:!~~tin~~ ii~rn:·::i~la~ns~~fe~esd:/~ scovers utrange egattL.Y Kappa Sigma ·,; : ~-=;

ficers for the coming year. They A Wake Forest· law student heeled shoes, or bolstered hips, Nine men were recently initi-are Joe . Mauney, justice; Perry has some consolation for males shall .incur the penalty of the a ted into the fraternity. They Walker, vice-justice; Harold Ed- suffering from the wiles of laws now in force against witch- .are Chester Howe,· Lee Pridgen, wards, cla·k; Bill Musselwhite, modern woman. craft, sorcery and such like mis- Jimniy 'Todd, Bill Starling, Brun­treasur~r; Wesley Baile)', sheriff. While pursuing his studies, the demeanors, and that the marriage, son Salley, Frank Bennett, David ·Completes Picture Of Johnson

is the only one fo1· the Jews; ther had cheir beginnings the:.;e anoi their traditions a1·e there, accord· ing to ~frs. Evans.

The ceremony was conducted by law student found an old Englisl1 upon conviction, shall stand null Burns, :J!obby .Suggs and Fred . (Continuw From Page One) 1 remain a school with that status .. This Jewish state has received Boyce Gibson, outgoing justice. law so enlightening that he had and void.' " Weeks.

·<>f unhealthy skepticism" among ~ith an enga~in~ smile .and millions of refugee Jews from all Bob Summey and Pete Wilder, to bring it to the attention of The ·judge who had quoted the Approximately 18 members·and Vlake Forest students that is. I kmt brow ~embskl dis~ussed hg~t over the world, she said. These fraternity alumni, .were present Old Gold and Black. law had a further w<Jrd of his own pledges attended the District -~~erally speaking, sometimes an? shadov. s, the subJect of his Jews who have been persecuted for the meeting. Old Gold, realizing the message to add to those' of the venerable Conclave at Davidson College '!!cund in other colleges. Fn?ay. ad~r.ess. . _ and trampled upon for so long Gene Boyce was accepted into of hope contained in the recent English solons. He said: recently. At the conclusion of the

~ t t th s· p· f '!he mdn'Idual JS the recetver of have created quite a problem. the fraternity as a pledge. findings, faithfully reproduces the "So thoroughly and artistically business meeting' the brothers ·"~:.~tguesh_ a f·. et 1~1aht 1 h ra- the light, Rembski expounded. As They were uneducated, and even attended a dance -:~~ y IS 1rs n Plans were made to hold & sup- submitted note in its entirety: have the druggists and bealiti- · • . · . . • Jg. ere, it. takes only on~ line from the know nothing_ .of .h.yo-ie_ne, y_et .they. · Bruce McDaniel was re-elected :P~bskl conYersed wtth the fra- nucleus 0· f a . s•-~e t · th - • w~re ... -ken

1.n. .,. -per;, party . .at one of -the local res· "In 16.70, in the middle of the cians 'done their stuff' in these

~t m · ·htT 1 H · · · · -- P"' re 0 · e. pen- ~ """ · - t~1!S in the neai: future. .. . .. reign of _Charles H, the English modern times, that where is there treasurer ·of the fraternity lasi! 'lli'el'Y .'S'mu:: ~m I e s~d m~.· : '\~~s pltery. so there must ·be only CJne· "Th~se· peo~ should .be a les~ Parliament. solemnly passed the a man who woQld be satisfied witq week, and Buddy Page was elect:.·

· · · • · ·· f P{h s. lt e avenue_ from· the :source of the .san to ..all of us," .. s&id' !.lr.a.. Ev.anl. ~.est_. i'.ol'!ll.-~f living ·standards, fellowing act:. 'That all women of an unwashed, unscented or un- ed .f?ecretarjr, replacing Chales ~Joll.~nes!! 0

· · e young men, light .. to -the individual. To turn "They were concerned with man's she -said. ...whate'\.·er -age,· rank, profession or painted female today'!" . ·Reid. . e sau • one's back on the light is to face humanity to man." "Wh 'd n~-'--k' en you cons1 er this," con- degree, whether virgin, maid ·or In keepi_ng with modern journal-~...,_.,,..,. I attributed this fact to the shadows, he continued, \Vhi'ch On the other hand, "Irs. E"ans 1 ded M E "

...__ h' 1 n • c u rs. vans, you can un- widow, that shall, from the pass- istic ethics, this newspaper firmly .:.~~<' Ig Jer standards which a is the world of darkness. noted. the Arab state t's not con- d ta d h h A b -" h 1 h h · ers n w Y t e ra s want to ing of this act, impose upon 'or refuses to add any commen.ts of

!!im&I.U sc oo sue as t is one is. lnaer . lll··-1·natt"on cerned with democracy. There, 90 b k 1 1 B · ~- 1-.1 t · t · --· go ac to srae . · ut, conditions betray into matrimony -any of his its own. . -...., ... ,;er a.., e o ma1n Bin. per cent CJf_ the land 1'• o""ned by t J'k h' Th "To understand the meaning of ~ " canno • go on 1 e t 1s. e ."..rabs Majesty's male subjects by scents, ------------

SaaU College• Beat culture," ·he said, is "to under· five per c:ent .. of the people, and and Jews must. be brough_t tCJ- -paint.-;, cosmetics,-. washes, arti-'"1 ;am con\'inced," he said, "that stand that the greatest power in 90 per cent of the people are il- gether to make some kind <lf de- I ficial teeth false hair Spanish

~ is more important to have small this world is inner illumination. ~erate and have been cast into the cision.'' I wool, iron ' stays, hoo~s, .higli.-·rolleges with high standards than There is no human force that can :J&rge universities that lose t~uch pre\-ail against that.''

The geographic center . of. the United States is in Smith County, Kan.

_Gr~ds·_ In Navy Four Wake Forest graduates

w~rE! among the ;newly conunis-· sioned officers. in the Naval ·Re­serve_ wh.o .. wei-e graduated recent­lY ·rrom the ·Navy's Officer Candi-date School, "'Newport, 'R I~· .

'

"Litll the student.'' He expressed Of his profession the painter ~e hope ~h-at W-ake:Forest woutd said that "Talent is the ability to

learn." He pointed out that his early masters established strict programs to develop his talent. Plan Available

In Fellowships

Se~inary Prof Pre,a;ches Af!lq~ MOUiit '" <?ontmued From Page One) the position under the stipulation made the decision by themselves- McDowell, 'arid there _has' b~en no

·Wake Forest men among· the -~ graduates are 'James -R: ·Qutnei-li- ... . of Whiteville, 1953; Osby Z. Gen-

Applications for Fellowships :providing the unusual opportuni­-;;y -of studying at three universi­"rles are available to students in­-::ierested in. public affairs and ]'nblie· servicl!· 11areers who re-

. irei'l'e their· bach~l\)rs degree next June:

The fellinvsliips carry stipends •.G>:f' :$1',2{10:a year and college .fees. !Begiiming in June, Fellows ·V.·ill :'iiEI've· an internship with a public agency such as the Tennessee "Valley Autliority, or a department .5!J a city or state government.

The 1954-55 school session will !>e ·organized to provide fellows .:all opportunity to take graduate -:eourses at the University of Ala· mama, the University of Tennes­;;ee and the UniYersity of Ken­"±ucl:y.

Completion of t.he 12 months ~aining period entitles fellows to ~ certificate in public administra­i:lo:n. Fellows are awarded a :master'S. degree at either of the 'illree participating universities :apon satisfactory completion of :;De mastei·'s thesis and after ]JRSsing examinations for the :master's degree.

F()r eligibility requirements and -other information, students =e- invited to write ·Educational :Direetor, Southern R e g i o n a I 'T.raihmg Program in Public Ad­:ministration, University of Ala­!>ama, University, Ala. The dead­he for submitting ·applications :is .March 10.

"God has given you," a teacher age, "something that is the gift told liim when he was 12 years· of of a very few." Years later, he re­calls, a composer gave him some advice that has further influenced his life and painting. .

The c<Jmposer said, . "Whenever you begin something new, forget that you have e\·er done anything befo~e." Rembski explained that he ·had discovered this valuable advice. He found that in prac­ticing this he was able· to retain the good as a part of him and for­get the bad.

Came From Poland Stanislav Rembski · came to

America from Poland in 1922 . .He has studied for two years at the Royal Academy in Berlin .

Today, he maintains a studio in Maine, one in New York and one in Philadelph!a. having giv;m up.a large one in New York.

He has expressed the wish to .find more commissions to paint in the South, which he finds refresh­ing.

Hembski has completed a por­ti·ait of' Dean Lois Johnson for which he '\\·as commissioned to come here. At present he is work­ing on another of 1\Irs. Mm·garet R. Perry, assistant registrar. He has begun a portrait of Dean of Men D. B. Bryan.

Miss Johnson's ··portrait was paid for by coeds, alumni and friends. The portrait begun on Dean Bryan will be paid for by anonymous fa<!Ulty members and friends. Rembski plans to leave Wake Forest before !\larch 9.

pulpit. that the membe_rs get a full-time ·to· remain loyal to the Baptist apparent ··crossing over 'between Dr. McDow~ll said that at pre- pastor as ~oon as posible. He said Com·ention. ·~They know• ·the the ·two factions; · · · ·

s~nt t~e .original _fa~tion meets that a pulp~t comn:tittee is active- whole event is a tragedy," he said. - The FJrst Bapt~st Chur~h in WI!h .htm m the W1lkmson School ly· engaged m seekmg such a pas- No Malice Rocky M:ount has aided the origin­bmld~ng every Sund~y morning t~r! and has already made sev-eral . Dr. McDowell stressed· tRe fact al faction of the No1fth ltocky and m th.e church _butlding eve1·y VISits to other churches. that the peQple of the congrega- Mount Church by taking up . an S_unday mg~t. The Johnston fac- "I was willing to go," Dr . .:O.Ic~ tion have no bitterness or malice .offering recently to: ··help , the tJOn ;neets m .the church Sunday Dowell said, "because I saw an op- toward the· J·ohnston faction. He church pay for its legs\ expe:nsee. :nornmgs. and m the school build- portunity to represent our de- said that there .have actually .been Dr: Douglas M. Branch, pastor of mg e•·en.mgs. nomination . in -supporting a very splits in families over the matter. the First Baptist Church, has fr'i'-

He said he preaches both ser- fine, courageous group." He had dinner in the home of a quently· counseled the leaders ·of vices on Sundays and has already He said that the loyal faction "':'oman recently, he said. whose the loyal factio.R. . c?~ducted .one funeral. He also manifests a good spirit. "We men- sister is an ardent suppor~r of Dr. Branch VI~Its th; Sick among the member- ti~:n the other group in our pray- the Johnston faction. She feels Dr. Branch, who is a past pre:si-shlp. His formal call as supply ers every Sunday, and we pray sorry for the . mistake her sister .dent of the N. C. State Baptisi; pastor came Jan. 17, three weeks for the Rev . .T'ohnston.'' has made, he said, and she deeply Co!lvention; in a prepared state-

try Jr. of Roxboro, 1953; John T. })avis J.r •. <Jf Walhalla, S. C., 1953; and Lamar Caudle Jr. of Wades­boro, 1950.. .

The· graduates ha,•e ·undergone·. an intensive· four month course in nav.al science similar to that pre­sented to ~ROTC students at col:. leges throughout the nation.

After a short leave periotl, most of. the .new· ensigns will report di­rectly: . to sea billets. However; many have been accepted in the Navy's Special Training Program, both long range and short term officer courses. ..

after he .began preaching to the Dr. McDowell said that he ad- regrets it. ment on the North Rocky Mount congregation. mires the courage of several of The members of the loyal con- Church case, said, "I join .with the =---------------"!

Dr. 2\fcDowell said he accepi.ed the laymen of the church who gregation, he said, "are absolute- hundreds of other people through- Sfep_henSOD'S Record

Magnolia Fete Set for May (Continued From Page One)

Roxboro and Wake Fot·est, re­specth·ely. Miss Umstead, selectel for the Magnolia Court for the third time, has been a cheerleader :for three years and is a member of Ka.ppa Mu Epsilon, honorary math fraternity.

l\Iiss Aycock is pre"Sident of the Sociology Club, Secretary of the Student Legislatu:r;e and a mem­ber of 'Vomen's Government. She is also a member of Who's Who in American Colleges and Uni­versities in 1953.

l\liss Amnt, a junior from Mi­ami, Florida, is .a . varsity debater president of Eu Society, membe~ of Pi K~ppa Delta, Internationai Relations Council and Sigma Pi Alpha. She was sophomore re­presentative to the student legis­lature and a Wake Forest repre·

sentative to the North Carolina Student Legislature.

Others In Court Transfering from Women's Col­

lege in Greensboro in her sopho­more year and appearing that year in the Magnolia Court, Miss Gouldman is one of this year's junior representatives.

Miss Sink, from Tltomas•·ille, is a member of the French Club, Howler and Women's Recreation Association. She was a freshman attendant last year. -11-liss 1\Iunn, also a frosh attendant last year, is a Phi, member of BSU, the French Club, Sigma Pi Alpha, Glee Club and traveling choir.

Miss Hughes and Miss Johnson belong to the Young Women's As­sociation, WRA and BSU. Miss Hughes also belongs to the Glee Club and the College Choir.

ly convinced in their own minds. out our community whq are pray-· that they could never accept the ing that Ml'. Joh~ston and 'his . Department Re\T, Johnston as their pastor any followers will accept Judge Paul's more, and could never go back. decision and order their future LONG PLAY RECORDS They are firm and determined in course accordinglN." · .. BY COLUMBIA thei~ convictions, but they are not . The church dispute iri'l;olvin_g CL-6275 . holdmg a grudge.'' the Rev. Johnston, which has be~n Music From

He said that the entire incident appealed to the N. C. Sitpretue Kismet has caused the congregation to Court, will be heard in the· latter develop in its loyalty to. the de- part of April, but a decision will Percy Faith & Orchestra nomination. It has been an educa- probably not be rendered until CL-6281 tiona! experience for them and fo.r: late summer or early fall. . M·USIC. For Jennl·fer ·the whole area, he said. · · ·

Not Heretics· · Pa:Ul We~ton & Orchestra '"They have discovered that the CL-6282

denominational leaders are nob Quick ~!'Vic~ . .uid Tasty Paramoun~ Presents • heretics but are interested in the -- _Red Garte· rs , local chm·ches. These people have Foad is Rese~ed lor you_';:: responded in a remarkable way to with· th - t t f th d · t' -when you meet me e m eres s o e enomma 10n. . . ., Rosemary Clooney

"':.'.:'hey are firmer now than eve~ " G~y Mitchell Joanne Gilbert befol'e in their faith in our de- -at~ nomination, its institutions, and in Christianity as inte1·preted in our seminaries."

The attendance -Qf the Joyal fac­tion of the ch:!trch has been con-

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