8
, degree :ionow. Tribble of Wake will not !Sident, line of astCol- .James Forest esident ty. . , Is Rl Color) Color) lOP s RK V' 1177 .ed ltS y Kincheloe Outlines Ambitious Program For College Union Page Five VOLUME LD au Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, May 1, 1967 ar Kappa Sigs Place In Every Division For Greek Victory Page Three NUMBER 28 Cooper-Baker Team To Govern Student Body Scales To Assume Ne·w Post July 1 By RALPH A. Sil\IPSON ASSOCIATE EDITOR ·Dr. James n .. Scales. d<'an .of tlw· f.'ol!cg<' of at·ts nnd sciencl's of Oklahoma State Friday accepted the prcsidcncy of Wake Fot·cst University and thc challenge of making it "one nntionaHy respected university. bridging ·East and West. North and South." Scales wi\J assume his presi- dential duties July 1 .. In making the nnnounce- ment Friday afternoon. the chairman of the Board or Trustees nominating commit- tee said Scales 11·as tllc only mnn out of 100 eons!dercd that ''met with the Board's appro- HENRY S. COMMANGER •• noted historian ••• val." Lex Marsh. a Charlotte real-' to•· who has led the commillcc in its <'ight-month a sucecssor to Dr. 1-ribb!<'. said thnt the right man." scnrch for· Hnrold W. i!i A Challenge Scales said by t!'!eplwn!' this week-end that "It is a chal- lenge to be :tskcd to Jead such a distinguished institution. "What was once a loc·al col- lt-ge." he said refl'rring tu Wnke Forest, "has hc!'omL' a st 1·ong rcgiona I university. Schools nf law. medicine .• 11HI business administt·atinn have n .national reputation." He called Wake Fon'st "tlw l!'ading B:tptist institution or ,. higher education in the coun- try." ,James Mason. a Laurinburg lawyer and nwmbet· of the trustee nominating commitlcc . described S('nles as "a man with new id<'as. progrL'Ssive, and dedicated." Interested In PeoplE' "He is interested in people and in the affairs of the world," Mason said. Mason recently went to Oklahoma with Leon Riel', an- other commiMee membeT, to screen Scales and ta•lk with his associates in the West. "Wherever we went," Mas- on said .. "thct·c was a con- tngious enthusiasm about Dr. Scales." Scales is the <'h•vcnth presi· dent of Fol'l'st CollegP. nnd the fi1·st historian to hold the position. lie is 'the first president nf \Vakc Forest to eonw frnm west of the Blue fiidge Moun- tains. TWO SAMS • • • and a BPOC c:ompose the Coopt•r administration for 1967-68 student government. Winners of the Monday general eleetion are Bill Gordon, treasurer; Jerry Baker, vice president; and Donna Gill, secre- tary. W GA Apartment Rule Committee D'elays Final Decision By LINDA CARTER STAFF WRITER The executive committee of the College listened for two hours April 22 to a Woman's Government Association pro- posa'l to amend the controver- sial apartment rule, then voted to study the issue. The proposa!l, presented by WGA president Andy Gunn and vice president Vicki To- lar, asked for a modification of the rule forbidding coeds to visit a man's room or apart- ment without the permission of the Dean of Women. efforts by WGA and other stu- dent leaders for Hberalization of the rwlc. During the 1964-65 school year the executive commit- tee considered the rule and voted to "reiterate and inforce" it. re- Miss Gunn has made the rule change one of her main projects this year. The WGA surveyed the girls' dormitories and found that 84 per ·Cent of coeds who had had an oppor- tunity to visit a man's apart- ment had broken the rt.W.e. cial gather.ings. Because the college facilities for such gat- herings are inadequate, it sraid, the apartment rule places fi- nancial difficUilties on many maQe students. · The college atmosphere was criticized as unfavorable for ":fireedom af decision and in- dividual responsibHity" and thus not a realistic preparation for soci!al life after coMege. A woman':s presence dn a man's ·apartment is not con- sidered sociaUy unacceptable today, the proposal said. SAM Has Majority Of Two In Next Year's Legislature By LINDA LEVI ASSISTANT EDITOR BPOC Chip Cooper will lead a SAM- dominated Legislature as a result of last Monday's election in which he defeated Ken Thomas, SAM's candi- date, 812 to 752. SAM captured a 14 to 12 majority ff Legislature. next year's Student Government The two split. the top four···M.udent Government offices with BPOC's candidate for VIce-president, Baker, soundly defeating Mike Gunter (SAM), and Donna Gill and Bill Gordon defeating their BPOC op- ponents for secretary and '::J·espectively. · Although BPOC candidates won the three class presidencies and many of the class offices, SAM gained control of the legislature, capturing 8 out of 12 of the class legislature seats. Cooper took his oath of office before the student body during Chapel Thurs- day and presented a prepared statement concerning his broad policy plans for Student Government and the stu dent body next year. He stated that there exist three basic pa11adoxes which have stifled the program af the College and submitted his ·goals for the ·resDlution of them. "The first panadox is so- cial," Coopeor said. "On the one hand we are trained in the claSSToom to seek and to arrive, to question md to be questioned, to analyze and to synthesize ... Yet, outside. the -classroom, on the other hand, our ethics and momlity oa're legislated ·by a tyrannical Vic_ tori:an standard which is to- tally out of step with a mo- dern society which we ai!'e &upposed to lead. Goal To Liberalize "It shall be .the goal of this ·admiillistration, then, to seek to libeTalize the entire fabric of social regulations W•ake Forest, keeping in mind that the fundamental right to choose should be granted by to most &tudents. "Thus, it shall be the goal of this ooministration to in- crease the academic excel- lence of Wiake Forest by en- couraging informa·l contact ·among students and faculty, by . initiating more seminar courses, and by se€king to revise basic course require- ments. Rigidly Controlled "The third paradox is ad- ministrative. On the one hand, it has been said that 'the university shall serve Church nor State'. . .Yet, on the other hand, our tion is rigidly controlled y a vested interest which tri- butes only a small perc age of our budget, and whose membership is represented by less than half our enroll- ment." Commager's Speech Here On _Tuesday Steele· Commager. · a. no.ted American historian now on the faculty of Amherst Col- lege, will speak at the College tomorrow on "The Limits of Power." The new chief a<iministmtm· is a former college rwesicl<•nt and professor. He._ was )H'<'Si- ··derit of Oklahciirl&.Ba!)tist Uni- versity iii' S11aii·nee froln i961· 65. In 1965 he went to Okl<thom;, State University in Stillwater <Continued on Page 5l The amendment wou1a al- low girls to go to an apart- ment if they have .. itt. ·least sophornore ·standing and pa- rental consent specified on a permission form. Ninety-one per cent :favored some change in the rule. Miss Gunn and I,V!iss Tolar included these survey .J"eSUltS _ in the proposal they presented to the executive committee. In a statement after the hearing, Dc·an of the College Edwin Wilson, head of the exe- cutive committee, said the group had "voted to study the proposal, but will not take any action on it until! it has made its own study." Law Prof;\ppointed Campbell College-President PRESIDENT • • of the student 'body.: uext is Chip Cooper, .. Ken Thomas in Monday's election. "Thus, it shaU be the goal of this administration to co- operate in every way in re- leasing from these resltric- tions which now bind us. Cooper added that .there ex- isted tWo major obstacles to .SJtudent action. "The first is the one year time limit. Sucti a limited period seriously re- stricts an ambitious and far reaching program. He ,\im speak at 8:15p.m. in DcTamble Auditorium in the Humanities Buiiding. The lec- ture is part of the College Un- ion· series and will be open to the public. Commager has been profes- sor of American history at New York and Columbia Uni- versities and has been at Am- herst College, which is in- Am- The executive committee hearing culminated extensive Wake Coed In Accident, Still In Critical Condition He declined to predict whet- her any •action wou:Id be taken before the end of this school year. In the midst of the response to the appointment of a new president for Wake Forest last Friday, another event of imporbance that took place on Aprill 22 !also deserves no- tice - the appointment of Dr. Norman Wiggins, professor in the Law School and general ·counsel for Wlake Forest Col- to the presidency of Campbell College. was a •leader ·in the drive to change the college from a junior college to a 4-year in- stitution. an institution which professes to prepare free thinking indi- viduals for constructive and meaningful life in modern society, "The second is a lack of coordin.ation-actually a lack of cooperation if you Will-<ln the part of all campus or- ganizations." Cooper recommended three steps "to remedy three par-a- doxes in the face of these ob- s.tacles." \l herst. Mass., since 1956. Adele Patrick. sophomor·c or Winston-Salem, 'in critical condition in Forsyth Memorial Hospita•l last \\'eek after suffering multiple in- juries in an outomobile wrcl'k late Tuesday night. Mrs. Cla1·cncc Patrick re- ported Friday night that her daughter's condition had im- proved so that she recognized her parents. Wi•lson added that he felt the committee members have "no tendency to side" on the issue and will deal with it serious[y. Dr. Wiggins, professor here since i956, has been designat- ed to assume the presidency of Campbell, a private senior college in Buie's Creek, N. C., in either September of Feb- ruary of this coming school year, contingent on the time at which a rep•lacement can be found.M his position here. "The problems that I will encounter in managing a sen- ior college will be different to an extent from the problems that the new presidents her·e wi 1 11 have in heading a school that has just become a uni- versity," hut the basis of them will be the same. Wiggins grnduatcd from "The second paradox is ac- ademic," he continued. "On the one hand, we were led to believe th31t the real advan- tage of a small college was the close relationship of fa- culty and sWdents both inside and outside ;the classroom. _ . Yet, on the other h·and, the truth is .that informal contact with faculty a·nd adm.inistra- tio·n is rarely to be found out- side freshman orientation and othc annual apple polishing feast. And seminar courses which teach self-expression and intellectual interchange a·re too rare to be accessible -First, the formation of an Execu'tive Cabinet composed of campus leaders who would draft the major objectives of each organization and then "act as one representative body in negotiations with the administration." He is widely known as a lcc- tm·cr both in this couniry and abroad and is authOT of a long list uf books on American his- tOI'Y, some written in colla- boration with other hi!>torians. He also contributes m<::.ny ar- ticles to current publications. Born in Pittsburg, Pa., in • 1902., Commager holds under- graduate, master's and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Chicago. He also studied at the University of Copenhagen and at Cambridge and Ox- ford Universities in England. He has been awarded numer- ous honorary doctoral degrees 1 from schools in this country and abroad. Commager began his teach-· ing career at New York Uni- versity in 1926 as instructo1· in histm·y. He joined the Co- lumbia faculty In 1939 and · (Continued on Page 5) Miss Pntrick. daughter f1f Dr. Clarence Patrick, chair- man of the Soc·iology and An- department. was 1ltnn\·n fmm a car driven by Carroll Watts, sophomore of Arlington, Va., when it ran off a curve and overturned on N.C. 66 ncar the Stokes Coun- ty line. She \Yas placed in Forsyth'3 intensive care w1it with a ('Oncussion, several broken rills, a cracked pelvis. and cx- tcnsh·c facial injuries. She al- so de,levopcd pneumonia. By the end of the week, Miss Patrick's condition \\'<Is dcs- (·ribccl as improving but sti I! critical.. A hospital spokesman said she wus responding fav- orably to treatment. Watts treated and re- leased from the hospita.J. She also asked to sec some of the many telegrams and cards f<he Jwd received, her mothl'r added. One of the tele- grams \\'<ls from Lamhdn Chi ft·at('rnity. "We have high lwpcs." Mri'i. Patrick said. "The progress has be('n cneouraging, but she is still a very sick girl. We have really appt·eciatcd all the interest her friends at Wake Forest hnve shown." Investigating officer State Tt·ooper W. P. Upright said Wntts' cal' was heading south when ft ran out of control. The vehicle overturned seve- raJ times. The accident happened in Forsyth County about :360 feet from the Stokes County line and two miles north of Rural 1-Ia.J\. Investigation of the accident is continuing. ..... !IZ!h u;; :;.' J• ',\ from two men who have been instrumental In the · nominating committee's thorough screening of candidates. James Mason, mem- ber of the Board of Trustees committee, and Lex Marsh. committee chairman, both praised Scales as the most qualified man to lc•ad Wake Forest University. The WGA proposal called existing rule "for a ill practi- cal 'Purposes unenforceable." Reference was made to "reputation of hipocrisy" in the existing WGA because the officials "do not beLieve in the rule" and reallize many viola- tions go undetected. Another reason offered for change was that a coed's pa- rents should be responsible for her mo.ral standards. "The co,l- lcge should not pretend to be the guardian of the morality of the women students,'' the proposaQ read. The proposal described apant- ments •a:s filling a need for a place for sma•U, informal so- 'The Association' To Perform This Evening On Lawn The Association, one of the hottest groups of recording artists in the country today, will appear at Wake Forest on Monday night. The popular folk-rock group will play such hits as "Along Comes Mary" and "Cherish" in a College Union-sponsored •lawn concert on the MagnO'lia Court behind Reyno.lda Hall. The major functions com- mittee is presenting the As- sociation as a bonus to its regular schedule of events. Admission will be free. The group, has been des- cribed by Phyllis Burgess, en- tertainment editor of 'Teen Magazine,' as able txr "play bluer blues than the Rolling Stones; harder hard-rock than the naiders. and to put more folk into folk music than the Kingston Trio." The six members - Russ Giguere, Brian Cole, Ted Bluc- chcl. Gnry A•lexnnder, Terry Kirkman. ond .Jim Yester - \\Titc many or their own songs. ''Cherish," one of their best known hits, was written hy two of the group. "The job of presidency there will be on a different road th·an the one I have held here," he said, "as it is always a large change in going from an academic position of teacher to the administrative one as president of a college. How- ever, I have had adminstra- tive experience in my work as a general counsel here, so the kind of work I wiU encounter as president wila not be en- tirely new to me." "I do have definite admini- strative plans, but I do not want to commit myself on any of them .as one of my aims is to establish close co-operation between the administration faculty, and president. They should have as •large oa part in the decisions made at the col- lege as the president. Dr. Wiggins, succeeding Dr. Le&lie Campbell, the son of the preceding president and founder of the col!ege, will be the first man to hold the presi- dency of the 80-year-old col- lege not in the Cambpell family himself. "I did not ihe!Sillate in being the first to accept the presidency outside of the fami:ly for that Teason in itsCilf," he •satid!. "However, the two men that have held it before me have done an exceHent job in head- ing the college, and it is go- ing to be a difficult job to maintain the standards they have followed. Wiggins has a commanding, capable manne- rism ·about him, however, that indicates that in all probability will be able to handle such demands with cfficency ann rc.sults. liP attdbutcd to the work of tloese two men the accredita- tion toot was recently given rto Oampbell. He himself, Wake Forest in 1950 and from the Law School here in J9.'i2. He received his doctorate in jurisdictional science from tht• Columbia University School of Law in 1964 and has recently v.'Titten two books in the law field. Snmmit Conference -Second, the scheduling of a Summit Conference between stude!llts, faculty and ·adminis- (Continued on Page 5) 'Und_er Milkwood,' Last Play Of Season, Opens Tomorrow By LINDA CARTER "Under Milkwood," the Col- lege Theatre's Last production of the 1966-67 season, running Tuesday through Saturday nights in the Proscenium Theatre, promises to be one of the most fascinating pre- sentations of the year. The pl].ay, by Dy.1an Tho- mas, portrays the inhabitants of !Milkwood, a small Welsh sea-coast viJlage, as they move through thedr daily routines. Thomas, who lived many years in the Welsh town of Laugharne, disp!l!ayed an inti- mate of a typical village with its drama, hu- mor, and eccentricities. The entire action of the play takes place in a single day. The audience is given brief but reveaHng gilimpses into the lives of the Milkwood townspeople, beginning with their dreams in the early mor- ning hours. From this dream-world, the inhabitants awake, again be- fore the eyes of the audience, and move into the tasks of the day. The characters con- tinue to play out their private drama of their lives through the •afternoon and evening. As the play ends. the action is again in the realm of dreams. The number of char- actE"rs portnwed more than makes up fo1· the hrcvity or the time cl<'ment. The au- dience's one-day visit to Milk- <Continueld on Page 5) --PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY READING A w without a letter is just one of props. Here reads a letter in the ; in 'Under tbe Mllkwood' do without Jones, sophomore of Richmond, Va., play which opens tomorrow night.

Cooper-Baker Team To Govern Student Body - WakeSpace ... · lt-ge." he said refl'rring tu ... screen Scales and ta•lk with his associates in the West. ... has been designat

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, degree :ionow. Tribble of Wake will not !Sident, line of astCol-

.James heel~­Forest esident ty.

. , Is

Rl Color) Color)

lOP

s

RK

V' 1177

.ed

ltS

y

Kincheloe Outlines Ambitious Program For College Union

Page Five

VOLUME LD

au Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, May 1, 1967

ar Kappa Sigs Place In Every Division For Greek Victory

Page Three

NUMBER 28

Cooper-Baker Team To Govern Student Body Scales To Assume Ne·w Post July 1

By RALPH A. Sil\IPSON ASSOCIATE EDITOR

·Dr. James n .. Scales. d<'an .of tlw· f.'ol!cg<' of at·ts nnd sciencl's of Oklahoma State Universit~·. Friday accepted the prcsidcncy of Wake Fot·cst University and thc challenge of making it "one nntionaHy respected university. bridging

·East and West. North and South."

Scales wi\J assume his presi­dential duties July 1 ..

In making the nnnounce­ment Friday afternoon. the chairman of the Board or Trustees nominating commit­tee said Scales 11·as tllc only mnn out of 100 eons!dercd that ''met with the Board's appro-

HENRY S. COMMANGER •• • noted historian •••

val." Lex Marsh. a Charlotte real-'

to•· who has led the commillcc in its <'ight-month a sucecssor to Dr. 1-ribb!<'. said thnt the right man."

scnrch for· Hnrold W. ·~scah-s i!i

A Challenge Scales said by t!'!eplwn!' this

week-end that "It is a chal­lenge to be :tskcd to Jead such a distinguished institution.

"What was once a loc·al col­lt-ge." he said refl'rring tu Wnke Forest, "has hc!'omL' a st 1·ong rcgiona I university. Schools nf law. medicine .• 11HI business administt·atinn have n .national reputation."

He called Wake Fon'st "tlw l!'ading B:tptist institution or ,. higher education in the coun­try."

,James Mason. a Laurinburg lawyer and nwmbet· of the trustee nominating commitlcc . described S('nles as "a man with new id<'as. progrL'Ssive, and dedicated."

Interested In PeoplE' "He is interested in people

and in the affairs of the world," Mason said.

Mason recently went to Oklahoma with Leon Riel', an­other commiMee membeT, to screen Scales and ta•lk with his associates in the West.

"Wherever we went," Mas­on said .. "thct·c was a con­tngious enthusiasm about Dr. Scales."

Scales is the <'h•vcnth presi· dent of W~1ke Fol'l'st CollegP. nnd the fi1·st historian to hold the position.

lie is 'the first president nf \Vakc Forest to eonw frnm west of the Blue fiidge Moun­tains.

TWO SAMS • • • and a BPOC c:ompose the Coopt•r administration for 1967-68 student government. Winners of the Monday general

eleetion are Bill Gordon, treasurer; Jerry Baker, vice president; and Donna Gill, secre­tary.

W GA Apartment Rule Reviewed~ Committee D'elays Final Decision

By LINDA CARTER STAFF WRITER

The executive committee of the College listened for two hours April 22 to a Woman's Government Association pro­posa'l to amend the controver­sial apartment rule, then voted to study the issue.

The proposa!l, presented by WGA president Andy Gunn and vice president Vicki To­lar, asked for a modification of the rule forbidding coeds to visit a man's room or apart­ment without the permission of the Dean of Women.

efforts by WGA and other stu­dent leaders for Hberalization of the rwlc.

During the 1964-65 school year the executive commit­tee considered the rule and voted to "reiterate and inforce" it.

re-

Miss Gunn has made the rule change one of her main projects this year. The WGA surveyed the girls' dormitories and found that 84 per ·Cent of coeds who had had an oppor­tunity to visit a man's apart­ment had broken the rt.W.e.

cial gather.ings. Because the college facilities for such gat­herings are inadequate, it sraid, the apartment rule places fi­nancial difficUilties on many maQe students. ·

The college atmosphere was criticized as unfavorable for ":fireedom af decision and in­dividual responsibHity" and thus not a realistic preparation for soci!al life after coMege.

A woman':s presence dn a man's ·apartment is not con­sidered sociaUy unacceptable today, the proposal said.

SAM Has Majority Of Two In Next Year's Legislature

By LINDA LEVI ASSISTANT EDITOR

BPOC Chip Cooper will lead a SAM- dominated Legislature as a result of last Monday's election in which he defeated Ken Thomas, SAM's candi­date, 812 to 752.

SAM captured a 14 to 12 majority ff Legislature. .,~·"

next year's Student Government

The two p~rties split. the top four···M.udent Government offices with BPOC's candidate for VIce-president, J~~ Baker, soundly defeating Mike Gunter (SAM), and Donna Gill and Bill Gordon defeating their BPOC op-ponents for secretary and treasur~r, '::J·espectively. ·

Although BPOC candidates won the three class presidencies and many of the class offices, SAM gained control of the legislature, capturing 8 out of 12 of the class legislature seats.

Cooper took his oath of office before the student body during Chapel Thurs­day and presented a prepared statement concerning his broad policy plans for Student Government and the stu dent body next year.

He stated that there exist three basic pa11adoxes which have stifled the program af the College and submitted his ·goals for the ·resDlution of them.

"The first panadox is so­cial," Coopeor said. "On the one hand we are trained in the claSSToom to seek and to arrive, to question md to be questioned, to analyze and to synthesize ... Yet, outside. the -classroom, on the other hand, our ethics and momlity oa're legislated ·by a tyrannical Vic_ tori:an standard which is to­tally out of step with a mo­dern society which we ai!'e &upposed to lead.

Goal To Liberalize

"It shall be .the goal of this ·admiillistration, then, to seek to libeTalize the entire fabric of social regulations <~~t W•ake Forest, keeping in mind that the fundamental right to choose should be granted by

to most &tudents. "Thus, it shall be the goal

of this ooministration to in­crease the academic excel­lence of Wiake Forest by en­couraging informa·l contact ·among students and faculty, by . initiating more seminar courses, and by se€king to revise basic course require­ments.

Rigidly Controlled

"The third paradox is ad­ministrative. On the one hand, it has been said that 'the university shall serve ne~ther Church nor State'. . .Yet, on the other hand, our I~itu­tion is rigidly controlled y a vested interest which tri-butes only a small perc age of our budget, and whose membership is represented by less than half our enroll­ment." Commager's

Speech Here On _Tuesday -"Hcni:~· Steele· Commager. · a.

no.ted American historian now on the faculty of Amherst Col­lege, will speak at the College tomorrow on "The Limits of Power."

The new chief a<iministmtm· is a former college rwesicl<•nt and professor. He._ was )H'<'Si­

··derit of Oklahciirl&.Ba!)tist Uni­versity iii' S11aii·nee froln i961· 65.

In 1965 he went to Okl<thom;, State University in Stillwater

<Continued on Page 5l

The amendment wou1a al­low girls to go to an apart­ment if they have .. itt. ·least sophornore ·standing and pa­rental consent specified on a permission form.

Ninety-one per cent :favored some change in the rule.

Miss Gunn and I,V!iss Tolar included these survey .J"eSUltS _ in the proposal they presented to the executive committee.

In a statement after the hearing, Dc·an of the College Edwin Wilson, head of the exe­cutive committee, said the group had "voted to study the proposal, but will not take any action on it until! it has made its own study."

Law Sc]l~ol Prof;\ppointed Campbell College-President

PRESIDENT • • • of the student 'body.: uext y~ar is Chip Cooper, .. Wfio~defeated Ken Thomas in Monday's election.

"Thus, it shaU be the goal of this administration to co­operate in every way in re­leasing from these resltric­tions which now bind us.

Cooper added that .there ex­isted tWo major obstacles to .SJtudent action. "The first is the one year time limit. Sucti a limited period seriously re­stricts an ambitious and far reaching program.

He ,\im speak at 8:15p.m. in DcTamble Auditorium in the Humanities Buiiding. The lec­ture is part of the College Un­ion· series and will be open to the public.

Commager has been profes­sor of American history at New York and Columbia Uni­versities and has been at Am­herst College, which is in- Am-

The executive committee hearing culminated extensive

Wake Coed In Accident, Still In Critical Condition He declined to predict whet­

her any •action wou:Id be taken before the end of this school year.

In the midst of the response to the appointment of a new president for Wake Forest last Friday, another sim~lar event of imporbance that took place on Aprill 22 !also deserves no­tice - the appointment of Dr. Norman Wiggins, professor in the Law School and general ·counsel for Wlake Forest Col­~ege, to the presidency of Campbell College.

was a •leader ·in the drive to change the college from a junior college to a 4-year in­stitution.

an institution which professes to prepare free thinking indi­viduals for constructive and meaningful life in modern society,

"The second is a lack of coordin.ation-actually a lack of cooperation if you Will-<ln the part of all campus or­ganizations."

Cooper recommended three steps "to remedy three par-a­doxes in the face of these ob­s.tacles."

\l herst. Mass., since 1956.

Adele Patrick. sophomor·c or Winston-Salem, rema~ned 'in critical condition in Forsyth Memorial Hospita•l last \\'eek after suffering multiple in­

juries in an outomobile wrcl'k late Tuesday night.

Mrs. Cla1·cncc Patrick re­ported Friday night that her daughter's condition had im­proved so that she recognized her parents.

Wi•lson added that he felt the committee members have "no tendency to side" on the issue and will deal with it serious[y.

Dr. Wiggins, professor here since i956, has been designat­ed to assume the presidency of Campbell, a private senior college in Buie's Creek, N. C., in either September of Feb­ruary of this coming school year, contingent on the time at which a rep•lacement can be found.M his position here.

"The problems that I will encounter in managing a sen­ior college will be different to an extent from the problems that the new presidents her·e wi111 have in heading a school that has just become a uni­versity," hut the basis of them will be the same.

Wiggins grnduatcd from

"The second paradox is ac­ademic," he continued. "On the one hand, we were led to believe th31t the real advan­tage of a small college was the close relationship of fa­culty and sWdents both inside and outside ;the classroom. _ . Yet, on the other h·and, the truth is .that informal contact with faculty a·nd adm.inistra­tio·n is rarely to be found out­side freshman orientation and othc annual apple polishing feast. And seminar courses which teach self-expression and intellectual interchange

a·re too rare to be accessible

-First, the formation of an Execu'tive Cabinet composed of campus leaders who would draft the major objectives of each organization and then "act as one representative body in negotiations with the administration."

He is widely known as a lcc­tm·cr both in this couniry and abroad and is authOT of a long

list uf books on American his­tOI'Y, some written in colla­boration with other hi!>torians. He also contributes m<::.ny ar­ticles to current publications.

Born in Pittsburg, Pa., in • 1902., Commager holds under­graduate, master's and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Chicago. He also studied at the University of Copenhagen and at Cambridge and Ox­ford Universities in England. He has been awarded numer­ous honorary doctoral degrees

1• from schools in this country and abroad.

Commager began his teach-· ing career at New York Uni­versity in 1926 as instructo1· in histm·y. He joined the Co­lumbia faculty In 1939 and

· (Continued on Page 5)

Miss Pntrick. daughter f1f Dr. Clarence Patrick, chair­man of the Soc·iology and An­thropolo~y department. was 1ltnn\·n fmm a car driven by Carroll Watts, sophomore of Arlington, Va., when it ran off a curve and overturned on N.C. 66 ncar the Stokes Coun­ty line.

She \Yas placed in Forsyth'3 intensive care w1it with a ('Oncussion, several broken rills, a cracked pelvis. and cx­tcnsh·c facial injuries. She al­so de,levopcd pneumonia.

By the end of the week, Miss Patrick's condition \\'<Is dcs­(·ribccl as improving but sti I! critical.. A hospital spokesman

said she wus responding fav­orably to treatment.

Watts wo~ treated and re­leased from the hospita.J.

She also asked to sec some of the many telegrams and cards f<he Jwd received, her mothl'r added. One of the tele­grams \\'<ls from Lamhdn Chi ft·at('rnity.

"We have high lwpcs." Mri'i. Patrick said. "The progress has be('n cneouraging, but she is still a very sick girl. We have really appt·eciatcd all the interest her friends at Wake Forest hnve shown."

Investigating officer State Tt·ooper W. P. Upright said Wntts' cal' was heading south when ft ran out of control. The vehicle overturned seve­raJ times.

The accident happened in Forsyth County about :360 feet from the Stokes County line and two miles north of Rural

1-Ia.J\. Investigation of the accident

is continuing.

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from two men who have been instrumental In the · nominating committee's thorough screening of candidates. James Mason, mem-

ber of the Board of Trustees committee, and Lex Marsh. committee chairman, both praised Scales as the most qualified man to lc•ad Wake Forest University.

The WGA proposal called existing rule "for a ill practi­cal 'Purposes unenforceable."

Reference was made to "reputation of hipocrisy" in the existing WGA because the officials "do not beLieve in the rule" and reallize many viola­tions go undetected.

Another reason offered for change was that a coed's pa­rents should be responsible for her mo.ral standards. "The co,l­lcge should not pretend to be the guardian of the morality of the women students,'' the proposaQ read.

The proposal described apant­ments •a:s filling a need for a place for sma•U, informal so-

'The Association' To Perform This Evening On Lawn

The Association, one of the hottest groups of recording artists in the country today, will appear at Wake Forest on Monday night.

The popular folk-rock group will play such hits as "Along Comes Mary" and "Cherish" in a College Union-sponsored •lawn concert on the MagnO'lia Court behind Reyno.lda Hall.

The major functions com­mittee is presenting the As­sociation as a bonus to its regular schedule of events.

Admission will be free. The group, has been des­

cribed by Phyllis Burgess, en­tertainment editor of 'Teen Magazine,' as able txr "play bluer blues than the Rolling Stones; harder hard-rock than the naiders. and to put more folk into folk music than the Kingston Trio."

The six members - Russ Giguere, Brian Cole, Ted Bluc­chcl. Gnry A•lexnnder, Terry Kirkman. ond .Jim Yester -\\Titc many or their own songs. ''Cherish," one of their best known hits, was written hy two of the group.

"The job of presidency there will be on a different road th·an the one I have held here," he said, "as it is always a large change in going from an academic position of teacher to the administrative one as president of a college. How­ever, I have had adminstra­tive experience in my work as a general counsel here, so the kind of work I wiU encounter as president wila not be en­tirely new to me."

"I do have definite admini­strative plans, but I do not want to commit myself on any of them .as one of my aims is to establish close co-operation between the administration faculty, and president. They should have as •large oa part in the decisions made at the col­lege as the president.

Dr. Wiggins, succeeding Dr. Le&lie Campbell, the son of the preceding president and founder of the col!ege, will be the first man to hold the presi­dency of the 80-year-old col­lege not in the Cambpell family himself. "I did not

ihe!Sillate in being the first to accept the presidency outside of the fami:ly for that Teason in itsCilf," he •satid!. "However, the two men that have held it before me have done an exceHent job in head­ing the college, and it is go­ing to be a difficult job to maintain the standards they have followed. Wiggins has a commanding, capable manne­rism ·about him, however, that indicates that in all probability will be able to handle such demands with cfficency ann rc.sults.

liP attdbutcd to the work of tloese two men the accredita­tion toot was recently given rto Oampbell. He himself,

Wake Forest in 1950 and from the Law School here in J9.'i2. He received his doctorate in jurisdictional science from tht• Columbia University School of Law in 1964 and has recently v.'Titten two books in the law field.

Snmmit Conference -Second, the scheduling of

a Summit Conference between stude!llts, faculty and ·adminis­

(Continued on Page 5)

'Und_er Milkwood,' Last Play Of Season, Opens Tomorrow

By LINDA CARTER "Under Milkwood," the Col­

lege Theatre's Last production of the 1966-67 season, running Tuesday through Saturday nights in the Proscenium Theatre, promises to be one of the most fascinating pre­sentations of the year.

The pl].ay, by Dy.1an Tho­mas, portrays the inhabitants of !Milkwood, a small Welsh sea-coast viJlage, as they move through thedr daily routines.

Thomas, who lived many years in the Welsh town of Laugharne, disp!l!ayed an inti­mate know~edge of a typical village with a~l its drama, hu­mor, and eccentricities.

The entire action of the play takes place in a single day.

The audience is given brief but reveaHng gilimpses into the lives of the Milkwood townspeople, beginning with their dreams in the early mor­ning hours.

From this dream-world, the inhabitants awake, again be­fore the eyes of the audience, and move into the tasks of the day. The characters con­tinue to play out their private drama of their lives through the •afternoon and evening. As the play ends. the action is again in the realm of dreams.

The ~argc number of char­actE"rs portnwed more than makes up fo1· the hrcvity or the time cl<'ment. The au­dience's one-day visit to Milk-

<Continueld on Page 5)

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY

READING A w ~"""ow.'liio. • • • without a letter is just one of

props. Here reads a letter in the

; in 'Under tbe Mllkwood' do without Jones, sophomore of Richmond, Va.,

play which opens tomorrow night.

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Ellman Separates '

Types Of Literature By THOMAS PEPPER

STAFF REPORTER

WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL

Richard Ellman, an Eng­.Jilsh professor at Northwes­tern U111iver.s:ity, treated a Wiake Forest College audience Monday tG a whirlwiilld tour through modern literature.

In ·a lecture that sought to catalog litera'ry trends, Elll­rnan distinguished between "realists" and "formalists," and then d.istinguished Vla.r­ious kinds of ."realists.''

They dream their olreamy dreams. I ca,rry off their fil­·thy streams."

This line D<f James Joyce's, Ellman said, is an example of .realism - tbe attempt, In a sense, "to tell it like it is." Joyce waiS criticizing Vicotor­ian restnaint in othe·r writers.

Wihere realism uses art to convey a message of social impo.rtance, formal.ism, Ell­man said, u:ses the real world merely as the raw m·aterLal for the <:re art:ion of art.

Realism is centrifugal, Ell­man said-it goes out from the center, out from the w.rit­i·ng itself and into the real world of consequences.

Formalism, he said, is cen­tripetal-'it moves from the real world toward a crystal-

lization of ideas fn writing. To the formalists, form ls

content, Eillman &aid-.t.he words are the mean.ing~ot the implicatio.ns of the words, as the l!'eatlists would have Lt .

Although extremes of both schools oare possilble, Ellman said, the more likely alterna­tive is an inter acotion between the tw<>-'Where the schools con.tinue to dCibate each other's importance and relevance, but also continue to "influ­ence and check eacli other."

As for the realists them­selves, Ellman told a crowd of a·bou.t 125 people, there are three kinds.

Socialists orealists, found mainly in Communist coun­tries, see reality through their own particular economic per­spec.tive :and class structure, Ellman s1add.

SimHarly, though less dog­matically, the existential !l.'eal­isbs stress the sodal function of liter-ature, Ellman said.

He also outlirred a thil'd school, led by the French au­tho·r Alain Robbe-Grillet, which scorns the attempt to imipOse 'any partieular moral system on literature.

Ellman spoke .as part of the college's fifth Institute of Lit­erature, an annual lecture seTies.

.! . Flori Spea~s For Slater'~· Better Side.

'rnle 'basis of Ji1reooh cook­ery w.ill be demOmtrated Thursday and :mddlay at .the college by the ~xecu.bive ·'cbef lor llihe ARA-sa.tm- Scbool ankil Ca1J.ege Se!rvi~es. : · · · .J

ARA-Slater administers ·din­ing .set'V'ice progran!S' in. more than 200 edlliCatlOn.ail · lniiutu­tions -across the country: in­cluding Wake Forest.

Pierre · FUori is executive chef of the organii.abion :and has headquarters in Philadel­phia. His · primary resjp(li~Si­bility is directirig major func­tions the food services put· on from ltiime to time .... : .

Lecture Thursday

AKA-Slater's executive chef, Pierre Flori~ Will be oo campus Thursday and Friday demonstrating the basics of French

·He will give a lecture and diemOIIIStration in the· .faoolty lounge in Reynoldia Hall at 2 p, m. 'and •at 7 p;· m .. Thllll'S­day ·and at 10 oa. m .. Friday . Si>eclal i.nviltation'S have been issued to ·student wives and to members of the Wake For-cookery. est Coll.ege Club, composed of

Students May Get $325 Tax Credit On Expenses:

women faculty a:nd staff members arul. wives of faculty members, but the· progrram will lbe open. to il1ny interested , person.

Flor>i will lecture on·· such IJ>asis of Brench cookery . as omelets, .sauces and crepes .suzette. He will prepare .. a ·beef tendexloin dish and will offer oom:ples to his audience. The demonstration will '!list

The United States Senate ihas approved by a 53-26 lrOte a iPlan to provide a fedCii"al

mcome tax credit of up to $325 fur ltuimon, ·books . amd fees paid 'bY students in col­leges, universities a.nd other po&t-<high school institutions. F1inal enactment of the plan oprobaibly Wd1J. depend on the decisions made by a Senate­House of Representatives C'OD­ference committee.

'Ehe tax c:redit pllan. was offered F.riday, April J.4, 1967, by Senator Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., oas an .amendJ]1ent to 1a iHiou.se-passed bill which . would restore the investment tax credit to 'businessmen.

.aibO>ut an houtr. . · .. , Flori .is a ldievotee ·of Flrepch

cuisine both by birillh• and edu- , cation. Born in. Algeria, he ' completed 1iecond!ary scl!Pol ·studies in North Africa· and then a.ttended .the Hotel School of the Societe Suisse des Ho­teliers in Lausanne, SwitzM­land. · After furee years' study Jn

restaur.ant allklJ · hotel serVi~e methods, hotel administration

Under th:e •amendment of- and the culinary •arlts, he ··grad­fered ·by Ribicoff and accept- 'll!ated · to respons1ble posts ed ·by !the Senate, the tuition with hotels in London, Algeria and fee ·Cred:i.t is 75 !Per cent and Tangiers. . ,'_.,, of the .first $200 :paid, 25 per From 1957 until he. 141£t cent of tire next $300 lmd 10 North Africa for Puerto ·R[co rper ·cent of the nexrt; $1,000. in 1960, Flori was chef-prOp­The credit is sU!btracted from orietar of a restaurant in Ta,h­the income tax owed the gov- giers. In Puerto Rico he .'6e­ernment. <:arne -chef-manager for ·"Le

The crediil: is available to Carrousel," a French-cuisilie any pei'ISOn who pa~y.s the tui- reSII:aurant in SaJ!tlla"ee. :;:_ ~

> · • ....,_,.HOTO BY McNEILL

tion. Thus, it would be avail- He then · became sous clief 121ble to WOI'Iking students :and fGr the Amerioan'a-c. Hotel in wives 1as well as to pareilJts IsLa Verde, su~sing food and other il'elatives. Parents prodluction and service in the with more than one chilld! in hotel's .restauoont, night club college or graduate school and banquet rooms.

DEAN:OF WOMEN Lu'· Leake and Graduate '.:Director;Henry. M. Strope" lead the pr~cession­

al in Wait Chapel Tuesday at Wake Forest's

Fourtb ··1lmiual Honors:~Day. Eighty-nine stu­dents ~ert; · hon;;roo. -~ Charles M. Allen gave the featured address.

""'a~·get ·~t:~ .... ....., . .....,di~·lor F1!PJ.i. Joilt¢. ~lil!o~i!-ti~~-Re­.,.. " · . : ,...~ .. ·'l'••• ~"- ··:·- · ·tai•le-~· -df -Aihi:.ric-a:, 'Dic:"·-par­;ea:<;h .. ,, -..... ,. f"tl, ::;-..· .... • , 4vrn J,,.r 2 ....,-hent ... C8iii;l8I"ltl0Il .. Of 'XRx-S:tlter, O~er two-~ds of the in 1963: He was director of

obenefits of thls> . ~mendm~t dinling service for the Un.iver­wouild .go tG liamilies e~T~g sity of Puerto Rico before • ~ess ·~ $10,000 a year, rub- becoming a distii'lict manoager, lCOff Slald. A formula ;educ~ supervising -college £ood . ser­the amoun_t of the credit avail- vices in Pilerto :ruco ·aJld the able to high bracket taJq)aY- Virgin lsliands: He was ·a.p­CTS. pointed to his present post as

Eighty-Nine Students Honored

Fourth Annual Honors Day Held Eighty-nine students were After the .presentation, Tdb­

ble congratulated the stu­idents and introduced the ~Speaker fo.r the program, Dr. Chartles M. Allen, Director of Concerts .and Lectm:'es and Professor of Biology at Wlaike Forest.

Boston whe1re traditionally the Cabots spoke only to the Lodges, and the Lodges spoke on,Jy to God.

Capitol observers said· .an executive chef in 1966. imPOIItant pa:rt in the :finoal decision on the tuition tax eredit plan will be played by Congressman Woi!libw: D. Mills, D-A:rk., chairman of he House W.ays and Means Committee. So fa!!:', he has taken no pub­lic Sltand on. the measure ·which long ha:s ·been opposed ·by the Illation.M. Administra­tion.

honored during Tuesday's '- chlaipel program for the Col­

lege's 4th annual Honor's Day.

According to Dr. Hollings­worth, chaplain of the Col­lege, who introduced lthe pro­.gram, Honors Day began in 1963 as a means of recogniz­ing outstanding a·chievement .among the faculty but the fool­lowi.nJg year was expanded to include achievement by mem­·bers of the student body. ' Those recognized during the program were: new mem'bers of Phi Beta Kappa', introduced by President Harold W. 'Th-ib­ble; new members of Beta Gamma Sigma and Senior A wards from the School of Business, illltroduced. ·bY Dean Gaines M. Rogers, Dean of the School of BUISiness Ad­min.istra tion.

Also recognizeid were: new members of Omic.ron Delta Kappa, introduced iby Dr. Henry St:roupe, Director of the Division of Graduate Studies; and seniors outstand­ing in general ·leadership and achievement, introduced by Cha,pla.in. !Wllingsworth.

Allen 1began with a tr:ilbute to Tribble, calling him, "a man for all of our seasons,'' but the main theme of his speech owas, "Unity in a Uni­veil'sitty."

According to Allen, univer­,sities are so diverse in natoo-e thlat no comprehensive defini­tion for the modern concept, univerSiity, is possible.

Universities once :followed the Medieval pattern and de­veloped foll!r areas: philosq­phy, law, meidiicine, a.nd theo­logy. But ·as the undergradu­ate level developed, Allen re­•ported, these fotllr areas split into many divel'se areas, the.reby, threatening the unity in a university.

Fo.r example, Allen said, on the oampus the scientists speak to the humlamst, the humanists speak Ito the theo­logians, arui the theologians speak only Ito God, much like .. - - - -

easy way out Fast, comfortable flights on Piedmont Airlines. Home; Holidays. Weekend days (when you can save 75% on the return fare of roundtrip tickets), flying is the easiest way to travel. On Piedmont.

Because of this ~ac.k of communication, Alilen said, science is often empaled fGr .societies broubles. But a-c­tually, criticlsms of science are often crilticism:s of tech­lllology, the applieation of science.

For exalll!Ple, Allen said, "If the human l:'ace w.ants to go to heil in a basket, tec.hnol­ogy .can ,tJacke it there in a jet."

Acco:rding to Allen, man;y technical !SchOOls like M.I.T. have ·added more courses in the humanities, but not as a compliment' to ~e social scien­tists, rather because "scien­tists dispair •at laymen mak~ i.ng poliey deci\Siions for appli­cations of science." In this w.ay, they hope to train more scientists far leadership.

Education in the ta.rts iis also impol'tant, Allen said, ·be­cause, "after a man has •Irought a house, a oatr, and fallen dn J.ove with a girl-its difficult to get him interested in the arts."

Accor.diing to ALlen, the Old Gold ".complains .about the lack of a·rts and a · stadium, yet devotes halt£ :of ills space Ito sports, phony joanies, and tbad reviews of ·more impor­tant even11s."

In offering the tuition tax crediil: 1amendment, Senator Ribicoff S·aid the-.re ds an 'lll'· gent need for tax re!lief for persons faced with the in­·creasing costs of higher edu­cation. "In the long run." he saild "my amendment would ~e all America.

For outr strength lies not just in the richness of our soil, not just lin the wealith of the factories of our vast, com­plex ph(ylsieta·l tecbnology-'but in our minds, in our skills, iB our oabililty to use these wisely and weolll.."

Wake Forest Law Prof To Be Attic Performer

Professor James Sizemore of w.ake Forest Law School owiQl provide entertainment in the coffee house Wednesday D:i,ght, May 3, · at 8:15 p. m. and 10 p. m. The title of the program is "!\'om BaUa.rd to Blues to Bluegrass and Be­yond."

THE EMPLOYElES OF

ARA SLATER SCHOOL AND COLLEGE SERVICES

Extend· Their Sincere

Congratulations To The New Student Government

Officers •..

GOOD LUCK IN THE COMING YEAR!

Baptist Camp Is Meeting Site

Amerioan anid interll!ational students frOm schools all ova' the n:a.tion owilll meet June 8-14 at Ridgecrest for the 41st annual Southern Baptist Stu-den.t Conference. ·

The theme for the confer­ence, which will include dis­·cussions, lectures and films, will be "Unto the Least of These."

The theme will be explored ' each day in addTesses by Wil­liam M. Dy·al Jr., director of the Pea<:e Corps in ColUDllbia ai!Idl former dtrecotar of or­glamzation for the Southern Bapmst Christian Life Com-mission.

Other speakers will. include Dr. Charles Boddie, president of American Baptis.t College of Bible and American Bap­tist Seminary and Robert S. De1my, associate genCil"al sec­rebail'y .and ·youth secretacy, Baptist WPrld Alliance.

Wake students attending the confereiliCe will share a house with students from Cawlina anid Western Oa:ro­linla. There iiS a $3 registra­tion fee, and the estimated living cost for the entire week is $16. .

The conference is planned as a week of recreation and ~renewal between schoOil aaid summer jobs, •ailld all students a.re invli.ted. to a~. Those who wish to do so shoUld contact· Ed Christman or Becky Wiall before May 15.

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OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 1, 1967 PAGE THREE

l(a-ppa Sigs Win Greek Fest By A Song ' ' .

STRAINING AT THE TRACES ... in a zany chariot race, ·Lambda Chi brothers struggle to rack up precio;,.s points

Wet•k trophy. As they near the wire,

the Lambda Chis pull ahl'ad of the opposing team by a nose­or a fist.

. KJaoppa Sigma fraternity came m first, second and thixd in. the three divisions of Greek Week to win the week's over-<all competition, according to Doug Stokes, president of tJhe Inter-Frater­nity Council.

The three !divisions o.t th~ aJllllual Greek Week competi..: tion a:re homecoming decora- · tions, field day and the Greek· Week sing.

Theta Chii won the home­coming decoration contest, but was . later disqualified from paxticipating in Greek· Week. This moved Sigma Chi up to first place for home­coming decoration and Kappa Sigma up to seconld place.

The field day competition was won by Lambda Chi with Kappa Mpha coming in sec­ond .and KJappa. Sigma third.

In- the fiekl day divi.sdon Lambda Chi WOIJJ the Plaza 500 race. Kappa Alpha placed first in the chariot race. Pi Kappa Alphia, -Kappa Alpha anld• K·appa Sigma placed fi.rst, .second and .third lt"e·

spectively in cross country. Lambda Ohi won the tug-a­war .with Kappa Sigma sec-ond .and a tie for third.

In the Greek Week Sing Kappa Sigma sun-g their w.ay to · fixst place. Lambda Chi c-ame ill! second.

'r.he winners were announced to the fraternities at the Na­tional Guard Armory Friday night where they were enter­tained by the Vee J-ays Com· oo, B. J. Thomas .and the Tri­umphs .and Maey Wells.

Saturday night each frater­nity ended Greek Week with a

· .combo party a.t theh- houses.

DRENCHED WITH MUD .•• but still grinning, this fra­ternity man emerges from the notorious puddle thd gets a real work-out and sets out to find another vic­tim to share in the fun.

"We had really good p~rti· cipation and a good turn-out this year," Stokes comment­ed.

"Every £raternity cooper· ated •and i-eally put out to make 'a good Greek Week ef­fort," the IFC president add-· ed. "The scoring in the com­petition was close right down to the very last.'

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WINSTON-SALEM, N. ·c., 1\<IONDAY, MAY 1, 1967

New President Deserves Fair Chance From Critics

"The thing we ask in all rela­tionships ... is Lincoln's prayer for the children of the soldiers who gathered on the White House Ia wn a century ago: ·An open field and a fair chance.' "

Lincoln said the prayer in 1862. Dr. James R. Scales said it in 1962. We offer the advice in 1967 to those few individuals at the College who have judged the new president before giving him a fair chance.

Even before the announcement that Scales would accept the pre­sidenC.\' of ·wake Forest Unh·ersi­ty, there ·were those fe\Y students and faculty members who label­led him "consen·ative'' and "nar­row-minded." The only reason ·we can see for such a categoriz­ing is Scales' past association 1.\'ith Oklahoma Baptist Universi­t~·. \Ve praise Scales for what he did at Oklahoma Baptist Univer­sity, and do not damn him be­cause he "·as there. The institu­tion is consen·ntiYe: so is the Mid­"·est. especiall~· Oklahoma Bap­tists. But while the young presi­dent guided OBU. it experienced its Golden Age of scholarship with the faculty being strength­ened in number. effecth·eness, and influence. And while Scales was vice president of the univer­sih· a widelY-re~mected member or'the present ·wake Forest facul­t~- recE>h·ed his undergraduate education t11ere.

Scales has spoken on educa­tion, rE>ligion. government. and ·world today, and unless he is the "·orld's biggest liar, he is no

narrow-minded conservative. On religion he told an interfaith group that "Our worthiness for t·e ligious freedom is our willing­ness to accord it to others. On education he insisted that "Our commitment must be 'a strong one; we must have a desire to change the world." On the social problems of the universe, Scales said, "This world conflict is not an old-fashioned struggle for the control of land. It is for the con­trol of man-the mind of man, the soul of man, the whole of man.''

Of foremost importance, though, Scales spoke on Wake Forest and its mission: "Some of us would like to give history a shrove, but despite our conceits. most of the changes will come anyway. This is not to say that a great universi­t~· cannot give' some direction to the winds of change ... One nationally respected university, bridging East and West, North and South, can attract the bright­est and best young scholars to its graduate programs, and scat­ter them abroad to renew the mind and transform the fellow­ship of the whole Christian com­munity.''

This is the Scales' Plan. If it isn't a plan requiring a progres­sive architect, then we are fools. Dr. James Ralph Scales has been a dynamic progressive in the past, and with his mission at Wake Forest in mind, we see no reason for a change: His plan is an open field. All he needs is a fair chance.

Opposition To Cooperation Cooperation doesn't count. Not at least in Great Britain. The blokes there are famous for their loyal opposition. When some­

one makes a mistake, everybody knows about it. This year there is an even party split iri the top offices-and the

Pre;:;ident doesn't have a majority of Gis party in the legislature. But an opposition that is Joyal when it needs to be and ornery

"·hen it has to be can play an effective role in implementing con­structive legislation.

And if student government can do something constructive, jolly well and good.

On Life And Death The proposed liberalization of

the North Carolina abortion laws is a sound and needed reform. It is to be hoped the sentiments of misguided moralists will not impede its passage as it moves from the North Carolina Senate to the House for final approval thi;; week.

The proposal is not, despite the charges of some outraged citizens, intended to make North Carolina an abortion center to be exploited by mercentary physi­cian,; and immoral young women. It i,;, t·ather, an effort to inject some mercv into those sad situa­tions "·ith ·high probability that a hahv will be born with serious deformities. or with grave effects on the mother's health, or when the mother was a victim of rape.

A precautionary provif;ion re­quiring that three physicians es­tahlish these conditions is further eYidence of the moderate tone.

Tho::;e who opposed the bill for technic-al inadennacies had the best interests of the state in mind. There is no ,;urh thing- as ))eing too careful "·l1en dealing with human !ins. As a result of their critici~ms. these rliffinlltiE>s have heen cm·J·ectecl. and the hill now rep1·esents a cautious hut nro­gressh·e a p p1·oa c h to a. serious problem.

SYLVIA PRIDGEN Editor

RALPH SIMPSON, Associate Editor UND.4. J,EV1. Assistant Editor BJLI. VI-~RNOR. SpBrts Editor

But those, both clergy and lay­men, who appeal to emotional reasons as they label the propos­al "im,moral" or "sinful" are de­cidedly off-base. It is legitimate to recognize that there are those who regard the taking of any human life, even though unborn, as too immoral to be justified on grounds of preventing a child from being born into the worst circumstances. Not all people, however, feel this way and it is not legitimate to say that those who do should be allowed to set the legal standards fot· the entire society.

The emotionalists are forget­ting the old American principle of separation of church and state that means not that our society is immoral but that we b~ieve mora1ity involves personal dis­cretion and cannot be legislated. Whenever it is legislated, the re­sulting Ia ws are highly vulner­able to violation. as evidenced in tlie cuJTent controversy by the disturbing numher of illegal and often unsafe ~hortiom; that have flonrished in the state.

There are g-oin.r; to continue to he C'aRes involvin7 what manv re­g-ard as valid reasons for abor­tion. Sm·eh· it is better to estah­lish t·ealistir f'onb·ols and attemnt to minimi7.e the tragedy of the~e situations.

BILL GORDON Rosiness Manager

HENRY BOSTIC, JR .. 1\olanaginar Editor PAM HAWKINS. Assistant Editor DAVE ROBERTS. Assoc. Sports Ed.

ADYERTJSING MANAGER: Lucy Holton BUSINESS STAFF: Bill Lamhr, Dick Heidgerd CIRCULATION MANAGER: Sam Todd PHOTOGRAPHERS: John Daughtr~·. Warren .Johnsnn. Mac McN•·ill

EDITORIAL STAFF: Susann1• Bennett. Gray Lawrence. B~>ck;v Ross, Barry Robinson. Cherry Ward, Laura Ford. Doug Stokrs. Tom Collins. Unda Carter. Jo Ann Tart, J. D. Wilson, Bill Fostrr. Carroll Leggett.

SPORTS STAFF: Hayes Hofler, Rudy Ashton, Don Smith, Bill Upton.

Memher of the Associnted Collegiate. Press, ~cprcs.cn~e<l fnr Nntlnnal A<lvcrtis!ng hv N~tirmal Educational Advcrti~inl! ServJce. Inc. S'!h~crtnhon r:1tc:. !11:2.50 per ~·~nr. R?"!'ond· Class pastage paid. Winston-Salem. N. C. Form 35rn sh?uld he mmlccl to Box 7.>67, Wmston· Salem, N. c. 27106. Printed by The Nashvtllc Graphtc, Nashvtllc, N. C.

./

'Recorder' Says Scales 1,o Mean WF Still Baptist

(From The BibUcal Bec!)rder) The coming of Dr. James Ralph Sca~es

as president of Wake Forest College {Uni­versity) is one of the moot sig,nificant developments to take JPlace :in North Carolina Baptist liife in years. 'l1his is more than the election of a new presi­dent-a-s impor-tant and newsworthY as that is--it mean-s :that t!he college intlends to maintain its deoomilllatiO'llal relation in the years ·immediatedy afrlead.

Unless we ihave completely misl'lead tbe stra.tegic nature of tbis decision, Wake Forest wants to remain a Baptist institution. This will be app}auded by th1>usands of alumni ·and friends of the college. The son of a pioneer Bapbist preacher and attorney, Dr. Scales is a staunch BaptiJSt and makes no aJPOlDgy for it. For nearly 20 yea.rs, he was an integ-ral part of the <mly Baptist college in Oklaihoma-his alma mail!er, Oklahoma BapUst Univer-sity. With the exception oo his two years at Oklahoma State Uni­versity, his entire teaching and adminis­trative ca1"ee<l' was at OBU.

He is yOUlllg enough (48 on May 27), yet mature •e'llOUgh to guide Wake Forest to even g,reater heights. And it must be remembered that he'5 coming to ihead an institution that has already achieved remarkable academ4c status and Is so recognized throughout America. The peor­ISODal warmth and charm of the man is just as contagious in a small rural Baptist <:burch as it is in the highest

Letters To The Editor (All letters to the editor must be signed; names will be withheld on request. Spell­ing and punctuation are the writer's own.)

academic circl:es. 1t' is no· secret that a number of colleges and universities we-re casting covetous eyes at him-but Wake Forest must have presented the type of challenge on whlch he thrives.

Time For US To End Draft System The first and foremost job of Dr. Scales is to be president of Wake For.est, but his leadersihip ability will bolster and .strengthen Nor:bh Carolina Baptist life.

To the Editor:

The time nas come to end the military draft.

That bald declarat~on will startle many. But when all the facts are in, and all the current and projected needs for military manpower have been taken into account. it is difficult to avoid the CDnclusion that America does not need the draft, America can afford not to have the draft, and America is overdue in bringing to an end this drastic in­vasion of the lives and liberties of her young men.

Textile Workers To the Editor:

RE-search for a term paper recently led me to a conference in Greensboro dealing with a long-standing problem in North Carolina: textile workers' rights. It seems thaJt not only do N.C.'s textile manufacturers pay the lowest wages in the naticm (tied with Mississippi's, some­one saidl. but rt•hat they have also ef· fectively, and sometimes violently, dls­couraged attempts by the Textile Work­er's Union of America to unionize rbhe workers.

In a state which will soon legalize therapeutic abortions and abolish capital punishment, the fact that a sc•gment of the state's working population is living under near nineteenth century condition~ is a tragic incon,istency. !';0 the people at the coferE·nce reasoned.

The confC'rc·nce. then, was an attempt by f,hes,e people to coordinate efforts <1mong lahar lenders. tho workers them­selves. and, mo't significantly, college students, to r('mcdy this situation. The reasoning behind this new "movement" runs <:nmet'1iP>:! l;k!' this: Since in the p;~t stat<' JP~c'ers and the manufacturers themsrlv~s h:we rc>fused to listen t1> work­ers' 17ricv:mce~. roll€·gc students can pro­vide effec1ivP means of enlightening the po\\·:rs that be.

This can be done. nnd is in fact being

Cooperation Counts To the Editor:

I would like to tak2 this opportunity to congratulatP Chip Cooper, Jerry Baker, Donna Gill. Bill Gordon, and all ·the other candidntcs who were succecssful in their bids [or c~mpus (}fficcs. But specinl congratulations arc in order for the many students who were inte-rPSl£-::1 enough to devote their time and run for office.

The losers arc in t'he majority now, and the winners aro in the minorilty. With this in mind. I sincerely hope that this majority t·ealizes the important posi­tion they now hold. It will be up to them and the rest of us to sec that this minori­ty who won continue to win. but this timo for us nll.

Without united help from us all, our t'lccted officers might as wdl never be sworn in.

Next yt>:lr is going to be a milestone in tho lif" of Wake F1>rest We, as the student body. have the responsibility m breaking in a new president: we have thP duty of starting W;1kc Forcst off on the right fnot ns n university: and W<'

hav<• the oppoPltmity to work with each oth<•r.

Fo1· thi'< milP•;tonc to be a :o;ucrcssful one. all the on!.:'ni7niions on campus arc goin!! to lwvt• In wot·k hard. and work hard tour·:hrr. not against each other. So let'" givc a little nnd tak0 a little ,,nd mnk<• lhb fir·st year a grent year in oLht• hht:H'Y of Wake• Forest University.

Sandy V. Hutchins, J,r. Class of '68

CongreiSs is now beginning to debate President Johnson's legiSllation to ex:ten.d the draft anotlher four yeal's. In years past Congressiona•l examination of this issue was porfunctory. This year things are different.

traxl:itions and with ,ilbs milltacy man- The<Se are days when far-sighted and power needs. courageous leaders are needed to helip

We must never allow olll'Selves to for· the church and its institutions attain get that lhowe'.'er pressing the circum- new effectiveness and impact in a fatSt-stances, tl!e draft "is" involuntary servi- changing world. As president of the con-tude. It is legitimate ,and constitutional vention's oldest and largest college, his

Thanks no doubt to .tlhe heightened awareneSiS of Am~ica's young people, whose lives the draft so seriously affects, many in CCJongress are now for the first time rethinking the premises upon which the draft is supposedly based. An in­creasing number of them are finding it sadly out of step with both our Nation's

when Congress, exercdsing ifls power to influence will extend far beyond its beau-raise and ..support armies, has no rea·S'OD· tiful campus. abLe alternative. But oonscription must Here -is a man capable of rallying the always be the last despemte .resort for needed nupport of students, faculty, alum-meeting manpower needs, not the cheap ni and denomination. Had the nomination and easy eX)pedient. committee and trustees looked for years

The only real argument for having an insteau of months, we do not believe they involuntary draft ds that the- Nation could could have come U!P with a man so not rearonably a1iford ;to Taise and re- uniquely qualified for such a difficult job. tain the needed military manpower with- The Recorder is eK()ited ~t the prospect 7\Teed Surnn_orl out it. I maintain that ,the Nation "can" of his coming and once Nor.tih carolina

1 l' 4 '.r r· afford t~ ·eliminate the . dra~t. In doing Baptisbs learn to know the man and his . . . so we will restore lost liberj:ies,, We ca.nu ·fiJjilit , ·we beliiev.e they will share "OUr

d-one-, by students JOmmg workers on rthe,. .upgrade our armed foorces and dncrease ·"' --v'r.~- ·" ·"'· t· · bout..the. fu-icket lines speaking to various ~oups' ·'· . . ·~ enthuSiasm anu,;9P..J.!II15m·, a · ,_., ··

P , • . . . . , ·,our national secunty. And we c~~!io_,l .. ,-,·.-'tnr.e of Wake·Forest .. , ___ Marse·Grant twomen s assoClahons, KiwaJUs clubs, at a price this rich and powerful Nation men's lodges, etc.l, writing lettens, hold- can easily afford. ing campus demonstrations, and gener- '11here is no numer.ica•l shortage ol ally making the textile workers' plight _-manpower for filling !Wlitary ranks. Each more widely recognized throughout tihe yea(!' nearly four times as many men as state. the military needs enter the tkaft pool.

Let me emphasize that it was tlhe With more realistic ~rVice qualliications students who initiated this ''movement," and sharply increased wages and fringe and, as it appeared at the ·conference, benefits, and with an enhanced status the workers have responded most re-. far military careers, we can attract ~e ceptively. Several workshops W1ere held 500,000 men we neEd each year, even at at the conference ~n which students and Viet Nam buildup level. workers mingled, exchanging views, and All we have to do !is to make up our more or le8s patting each other on the minds that we are going to stop ex-back. changing preci:ous liberties for false eco-

Afterwards, the students met to form nomy-false because, when the total £'Co-a coO'rdinating committee to direct the nomic costs of the draft system are taken efforts of all campuses represented at into account, includ•ing civilian wages the me€'ting. It was here that my role foregone by draftees, we may well be as objective observer broke down, and saving n(}tJhing at all. And this calcula-for one rea•son. It ·seems that while UNC, tion fails .to take into account the qualita-Duke, Davidsoo. and a score of smaller tiveo value of ski'lled career specialists colleges were weLl represented. I was the serving in crucial military tPOSitons now only student from Wake Forest -in art- filed by reluctant draftees. tendance. And, at !•hat, I was there only From the standpoint of individual for the purpose of gathering m81berial for liberty, equity to all, the enhancement a research paper. of natio:nad security, and the total eco-

So, of course, whe-n the time came nom:ic costs, th'e draft fail"eos badly in to choose campus "contact:s," I became comparison with all-volunteer armed the official Wake Forest "conta~t." more forces system. or -less by default. How do we get from tlle present d,raft

to the volunteer army? Thus, H '<liP'Pears that the new activism, Fi•rst, we mus·t uneqivocally reaffi.rm

in the Carolinas alt. ~east, is in textile our commitmerut to the goal of voluntary

workers' cights. Neg.ro civil rughts are armed forces. The draft shoulu be ex-passe. Texti'le wOO"kers' rights is the thing. tended for one or at the most two years.

So if anyone wants to become a real During .that time the Defense Depart-

honest to goodness activist, and inci- ment should emba(l'k on a program de-denta•lly support a v.ery worthy, poten- signed to make the draft increasingly tially constructive cause, please ccmtact unnecessary. A special joint committee me sometime soon (306-C, Taylor, Box

of Congress-indepeondeJ!t of the DefellS'e 8l47 l · Hayes Hofle-r Department and the Selective Service

Class of '68 System~s.hould be set up to make re­commendations for a phasing out of Um draft. and to maintain a collltinual review

Give Us A Break! To the Editor:

Recentily I was reading a list a£ "regu­lations" governing the ronduct of Wake men in the dorrmitories. Amazemenlt overcame me as I realized our suite had broken the first regulation.

As I ,read the 1ist I was appalled that our group of "nice boys" had broken 14 of ,tJhe 16 regulations. ( Exception.s were firearms and rad!io aerial's. l "How could we have been so bad?" I asked myse-1£. Wer·c we bad?

The suite assembled to see what could be done about tho dilemma. We were undecided whether to rectHy ourse•lves or the regulations.

We concluded rbhat the rules could use a fow "minor changes." Why can't Wake Forest become a real unive-I'Sity instead of a Podunk college? MOISt students will abide by and accept the •rules generally followed at roal universilties. Give us a break!

Name Withheld by Requoot

of the Def=e Depaortment's prog•ress toward that goal. And :miilitary !PaY and fringe benefits should be raised sub­!Stantially, starting now.

It is time we- made the firm deci·sdcm to put an end to Inequity, put an end to uncertainty, but an end to inefficiency, and regain for our young people this liberties the dra£t has taken from them.

Ma•rk 0. Hatfield U. S. Senator (Rep.-Oregon)

'Senioritis' Attacked To the E:ddtor:

The days of "Raih-rail, Wake Forest, rah," are apparently gone. It seems that many students speaking from the dett>'ths of "se.-nirn:itis" ha"e taken ilt upon them­selves to spread the general myth o.f corruption both hidden and obvious in the Wake Forest community.

The glib generaliza•tdons that "the ad­ministration is out to got us." "ignorant Baptists would prefer the College t-o be a modern monastery," and that "student WHative is stifled both by ,faculty and

Let FREEDMAN

Ring By GLENN FREEDMAN

A gripe commonly found on campus Is that we have n.o !l'eally active re­action·ary group. "Wake Forest is too conservative," I always thought, "Some-­thing must happen soon." Fmally it did.

Immediately Sifter the election last month I heard abou.t a new ~roll!P which is faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful t•han a locomotive, able to leap Wait Chapel with a ~ingle bound. And who is the dynamic ·leader o.f •this small band? SUPER COOPER!! Disguised as mild-mannered student SJ.itp Goofer, he fights a pretending battle for truth, jus­tice and rtihe Wake Fo-rest way.

L~ckily I caught ·him changing into ~is Super Cooper uniform in the dumb waiter in the Pit.

"Excuse me, Wake Warrior, where are you going?''

"My sturdy band is meeting today. I must get ready."

''What group is that?'' " •student Leaders EnviJSio-ning Ext,ra-

orddnary Problems.' " I knew his group well.· S.L.E.E.P. ,had

been rumored to be present all this year, but now I ~ad pinned ~t down f~r cer-tain ..

"Tell me, Ca!IllPUS Crusader, what are your plan:s now?"

"You realize, or course, that we are moving J'apidly to a position of ,real po­tential. S.L.E.E.P. wants •to make sure we stay 1111 the dream stage for another

year." , ?" "Wito else is a S.L.E.E.P. er · "My number two man, Gerry Baking,

wbo strongly believes in our motto 'If you can't make it, fake it.' Well, lowly one, the Forest Fighter must go to S.L.E.E.P."

"So long, Administrative Avenger, see you next year.''

administration" come all too easily to the lips of vaguely informed students.

Criticism such as that which appeared in Hoke Smith's article is both con­structive and necessary to thll.e improve­ment of Wake Forest University. We feel, however, that the general down-grading of Wake Forest is unjustified and that our studies. friendships, and extra-cum· cular activities during the past four yeail"S have been most valuable to us as Indi­viduals.

Merry Lynn Bratcher Edydih FlQra Rose Hamrick Sandy Myers

> l should ' • we shall

sonable, solve Ule

"But in

Says. Mean

aptist .ec9rder) Ralph Scales College <Uni­st sig-nificant ce :in North ~ailS. 'l1lris Is a new presi­wsworthy as :)liege intends anal relation ahead. tely misi'Iead hls decision, lin a Baptist tpplauded by riends of the meer Baptist Scales is a

: no aJPOlogy :, he was an aptist college er, Oklahoma exooption of

a State Uni­and adminis-

on May 27), Wake Forest li it must be ing to ihead ~dy achieved > and is so ica. The per­of the man small rural the highest

;ecDet that a ersities were n-but Wake

the type of es.

job of Dr. Wake For.est, 1 bolster and Baptist life. -sighted and 1ded to he]Jp 1tions attain ct in a :fast­t of the con-

college, his ond its beau-

rallying the aculty, alum­~ nomination ed for years believe they a man so

cllfficult job. the prospect l1lh Carolina nan and his 1 share· ·our lOUt,~e ... fu­darse- Grant

4N Lng WAN on campus

active re­•rest is too ght, "Some-­nally it did. lection last WOU!P Wihich •ullet, more 1ble to leap bound. And : •this small lisguised as Goofer, he

· truth, jus­ly. mging into L the dumb

, where are

ting today.

Ding Ext•ra-

E.E.P. had 1 this year, 'I'll f~r cer-

·, what are

1at we are of ·real po­make sure cor another

~?"

Ty Baking, motto 'If

Well, lowly 1st go to

•enger, see

' easily to students. h appeared both con­

~ improve­y. We feel, wn-grading l and that ~xtora-curni·

four yea.rs 1s as indi·

Bratcher

~k

> l

Election Results The following is a list of

t· the fi!llal winners' in laLSt Mon­day's election:

STUDENT BODY

President Chip Cooper •(BPOCJ

Vice-President Jerry Baken- <BPOCJ

Secretary Donna Gili <SAM>

Treasurer Bill Gordon <SAM!

SENIOR CLASS President

David Pugh CBPOC!

Vice-President Jan Wuertenberger <BPOC>

Secretary Becky Stevenson <SAMl

Treasurer Vicki Campbell <BPOCl

Secretary Jenne Lynn Boger CBPOCJ

Treasurer Anne Bingham CBPOCJ

Legislators Barba~a Br:~zil !SAM) Brenda Fasnacht <SAMI Norma Murdock l BPOC) Sylvia West <BPOC>

Honor Council · Sandy Edwards <BPOCl Terry Fuller <SAMJ Janet Magee <SAM! Jimmy Clack <BPOC) Bill Lambe lSAMl Jim Martin <SAM>

Men's Judicial Board John Ellis tSAMl Andy Porter <SAM)

SOPHOMORE CLASS

President James Cai!ton CBPOCl

Vice-President Charlie Holland <BPOCJ

Secretary Marian Scherer ·tSAMl

Treasurer

Legislators Ben Crumley {SAM) Jenni Jacober !SAMl William Parke'!' <SAM! Sara Umstead <BPOCJ

Honor Council Joyce Green <BPOCl Judy Nanney <BPOCJ Tom Ginn <BPOCl Steve Royst€'r <SAMl

Nancy Cummings <BPOCl

Legislators Jim Cross <BPOCJ Carl Hibbert <SAMl Van Joffords <SAMJ Susan Power <SAM!

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY NEW CU PRESIDENT ... Jeff Kincheloe has big plans for next year, including a walk-in movie, a sailing club, and a .Jubilee Week-end at Homt•coming. The rising senior will have a $32,000 bu(!gei to help carry out his plans.

1\Ien's .Judicial Board Michael Royster <SAM> Richard Henning !SAMJ

JUNIOR CLASS

Honor Council Sue Edwards <SAM!.

. Betty Hyder CBPOCJ· Jim East <SAM) Dick Le.-ader !SAMJ

OklalzomaDeanls Named New Wake Forest Pres.

President Howard Stanback <BPOCl

Vice-President James Carver <Sam>

Men's Judicial Board Lex Graham (BPOC)

Day Student Representative· Kay Key CSAMJ Adele Patrick (SAM>

Week's Events Include Med School Evaluations

<Continued from Page 1) as dean of the coilege or arts and science~ and proressor of Jh'litica-1 science.

He ha.s served under tmJ pt·csidents at thE! we&.l ern unt­vrrsity. which has n student e11rolllmcnt of over 18.000, \i"ith

'Under Milkwood' By Dylan Thomas

Med School Evaluation your remaining two years at Opens Tomorrow Wake Forest. Any premedical or preden-

tal students who will be seek­ing ·admission to medical or

Films On Oedipus Rex

dental school beginning in the Three films on Oedipus Rex Fall, 1968, should make pro- will be shown Wedillesday and vis:ion for obt·aining a compo- Thursday in De'Ilamble Audi-site evaluation by College torium. Show·ing times will

.teachen this spring. In- be 3 p. m. Wiednesday and creasingly in the past few 7:30 p. m. Thursday. In the years, admissions officers of three films, narrator-interpre­medical and dental schools tor Bernard Knox discusses

(Continued from Page 11 \'. :.>od is P·ackecl by encounters 1•:ith a >:l!cccss:ion of intriguing )""eop1e.

Milkwood may be a small tlnm. bc;t as the play progres­ses, the audience becomes awa1·e that it is by no means a dull one.

are requiring a single ovenall -the characte-r of Oedipus and Characters like Dai Bread, composite evaluation of ap. the rcligiou.s antd hum'llnistic the baker, who has two wives plicants by thcir former aspects of the play. Selected - oae for morning and one teachers:'c r!? " ... , • '·", ., ••.• ,,,__, ,~!Je~.el'iJd'\fe used to, illustrate- --f?,r .night·:-· spke -~tp th~. a c.-,·.

._.• , ... ,; ., · ..... L·. a ,;n~,J'8.W~~ 92ll"''l:lm b11s ~,-,,,·wltwn.•,·constdcrahly. q,A.nd 6Jl,Wl\

A PrcJ,I!edtlT~ _for 'dbt!l'tnmg ii . -·H .flb J'Wl !'m fy· /'_ tlmrc~ is Poll:Y• Ga:tlt-1". whose group ·evalu•!lthon-has been''i!s~· ·· ··If ·o· ·- BOTe .~:~.ev1ew , . .. . . · · · .. · t bl. h d d · b · d quest.onable morals me dts-a Is e an IS cmg a -ministered by the office of The cadet ROTC brigade cussed at length by the local the dean of students. Since will observe the annual Pres- gossips. applicants for admission to idcnt's review Tuesday on the Numerous otilet· clwractct·s. nledl·cal or -'ental school for drill field. President Harold

"' like Captain Cat. an old se:t •the Fall, 1968, will beg'" •1·1- Tribi:J.le, whose efforts helped ~· " b · th ROTC d eaptain whose sharp cars com-IJl•. g app!,·catt"ons for admt··. sian rmg e epartment to .

., 1 pcnsate for blind eyes; No-this summer, it is imperative ·the college 5 years •ago, will . · th t f 1 t .:::ood B"yo. the village ne'er-that students. make provis·ion revlew e roops or the as

t' e do-well; and Rosie Proberty; a now to obt•ain a group evalu- Im : phantom wllo leaves her grave ation. After May, many fa- Faculty and students arc

l·nvt'ted Ceremon1'es '·egt" at to haunt Captain Cat, lcnc! culty members will be gone · u n · -and it will be impossible to 12:30 p. m. variety to the action. obtain evaluations from them. Coast Guard Rec~uiters This abundance of charact-

Any s.tudents who have not

1 already done so, should go by the office of the dean of students, room 203, Reynolda Hall, immediately and fill out a persorua•l information form.

Sophomore Conferences

Sophomores are urged to keep the appointments which you signed for in April on the departmental conference cal­'cndars. Your advisor will go O\'Cr the work completed by you so far, and will be help­ful in planning your courses for your major as well as the required related courses for

The Coast Guard recruiting office in Greensboro an­nounced today that the of­ficer procurement team for the North C.arolina-Virginia area will be in Greensboro on May 4, 1967 for the purpose of interviewing and testing ·prospective applic.an.ts for the Coast Guard officer candidate school.

Anyone desiring additional information should call or write the officer in charge, Coast Guard recruiting office, 324 West Market Street, Greensboro. Telephone . 275-8809 or 275-9111 ext. 413.

\.Cooper To Strive To Achieve Goals

(Continued from Page 1) tration next fall to "thorough­ly analyze" every aspect of student disconte111t.

...:_Third, the appointment of legislators on a one man, one job basis to •aid in com­piling rcwarch and ''to be responsible for one major student government project." ·

"All these goals and plans to achieve them can not be

l reached fully in one year," Cooper concluded, "but we must begin."

to achieve, we shall need widespread support. We do not ask that you alwa·ys agree with us.

"But when the majodty de­cides to .act, stand firm."

Pate addressed the student body prior to administering Cooper's oath of office, evalu­a ling tilL' accomplishments of his administration and tho disappointments that had been encountered.

ers was one of the main prob­lems in the production, said Dr. Il:!ruld T('(lford, directnr. ThC' solution \\·as extensive douh.Je casting. with most of t~IC' actors filling two m· mo1·e roles.

Tedford said the play, ori­ginally conceived as a r11dio plny, hns aehi<'V<'cl great suc­cess on stage. "rt has become a nH:dcrn c~:1s:;ic'• he said.

"Vle arl' ~taginf( in a st~•lc which attempts to _give instant cl<~rit:v to Thomas· ril·h poetic lan.c:uage." he mlclcd.

The ('3~t inelt:cles: .Jennil! Lrnn Boger. Claudia Krest, Linda :Jones. i\Iarty Andrus, .Joann:~ RoEmnn. Flun1 Hoff. man. Phyllis llicl\1urry, Rose­mary Goii~htly. Rita Case, Virginia .Tones. Timothy Moy­et·. Dennis Sayers. Pete Edens. Ca.Jvin String"rield, Hoy Petti­john. Robert Finn. anrl Laura A benwthy.

Nnna I Iii .t•nhed' i~ b•>th a <:«"t mt•mbt'l" and :t~;,,i::tant di­

. n•dor.

Co:!e.l(e laeuitv a111l staff ei.ildren riil jun•nilc rol,·~.

Tht'SI' itH·ludc: .1 immy Wii­Ji;;r:JS. T111lllll,l" \\'il!iams. Kc;I il:•il. U••n Br:•ntk~:. Don Nich­c·ls<~n. Li. .1 \\'illia_n1s. Glori;1 \:VPhstcT. and Lisn H('l'M~.

Thl' ...:e1tin!.! "·;1:-; dcsi~nt•d

and l'X<•eutcd il~' llohL•t·t Finn uncle•· till' dil·l'<'lion of Martin

!J.aH the number in the col­lege of arts and sciences.

"In a time of dyn-amic change on a university cam-. pus, the office of dean of arts . and sciences affords ·all the scope anyone needs," Scales s•aid Friday.

Opportunity Comes Now

"We are never quite ready for change. and while I wonlrl wish for a few more years in this pleasant task, <the Wake Forest opportunity comes now and the c•all must be answer-ed now," he said. '

Scales received the B.A. de­gree from Ok•lahoma Baptist. University in 1939, and the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Oklahoma.

He also did post-graduate work at the University of Chi­cago from 1945-47, and at the University of London in 1958.

He \\'Orked as a newspaper rqpprtcr: fo.r two years prior

, ~.9.; h~~ ~pl~ufl~!on froii!. Old a­homa Baptist University .. From 1950~53 he was vice president of OBU. executive vice presi­dent from 1953-61 and presi­dent from 1961-65.

Phi Beta Kappa 1\lember

Scales is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the American Historica•l Association, Ameri­can Politica•l Science Associa­tion, American Association of University Professors, Phi Eta Sigma, Pbi Kappa Delta and Kappa Delta Pi, and the Ameri­can Commis,sion of Teacher Education and Certificates.

In 1957 he was a member of the President's Commission on Education Beyond the High School.

He was president of the Ok­lahoma Politica-l Science As­sociation from 1963-64. A De­cocrat, Scales \Vas a mem­ber of the Oklahoma delega­tion to the Democratic Na­tional Convention in 1956.

He is married to the former Elizabeth Ann Randel, and they have two daughters, Laura Elizabeth who was born in 1949, and Ann Catherine who was born in 1952. Mrs. Scales holds a master's · de­gree in international relations from the University of Okla­homa.

Bennison, Ass:istant Director of the College Theater. Light­ing was designed b~· Bennison. ,}omma nol!man designed and constructed female costumes with •t:he help of Virgirua Jones.

Student tickets at 75 cents and adult tickets at $1.00 arc nn s:•.lc in the theatre offices on tho eighth level o.f the

liiJrary. Hcscrvations can be made by cwlling extension 265 !rom 1:00-9:00 p. m.

Show tim<' is 8:15 each even­ing.

"However, if before my ad­ministration is completed, the new president of the Univer­sity docs not take satisfactory ac-tion on these goals, then

Among the •accomplishments of his administration he named the Fall Carnival, Clwllenge '67, revision of the Traffic Board of Appeals and the course evaluation pro­grams. ARMSTRONG OPTICIANS

, bolder steps shall be employ­' ed.

"As your president, I will take full responsibility in signing a contract for a dance band to play for a oampus­widc dance in the plaza. . . if the new administration de­sires to .suspend the Presi­dent of -the Student Body for calling a campus-wide dance -then I am ready to go!

"However, bolder steps should not be necessary. For

' , we shall employ every rea­sonable, mature approach to solve the problems we face.

"But in order rto begin and

Howt·vet·, there were two areas in whieh he .felt he hiad failed-in the construction of a CU building and in the area of Wake's relationship with ·the Baptist State Omvcntion.

In retrospect, Pate said that he could see at least two definite needs:

-an end •to the controversy between the publicati<>ns ami l>tudeont government.

-student respect for Stu­dent Government as well as other campus organizations.

"Whatever we .approach ... we must do 1t with a sense of moderation," Pate concluded

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OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, May 1, 1967 PAGE FIVE

Homecominu Altered ,, .4-_1 !' ~--.. 0 l \1'-.' 1

:

CU Now Planning:~l)\.Ctivities By BARRY ROBINSON

STAFF WRITER

A "·walk-in" movie, a jubilee weekend for Home­coming, the incor:poration of sailing into the · recreational schedule, and a big weekend 1during which every committee 'Of the College Union pro­

vides some form of entertain­ment •a:re some of the pro­posed plans for College Union functions next year.

The College Union, under new President Jeff K.inche­loe, junior of Rocky Mount, is now planni.ng JJext yeaT's activities. Many of the CU p1ans .and schedules are in­definite.

The major functions com­mittee, under Steve Kelly, junior of Rocky Mount, is lining up "top" entertain­ment. Many groups have been scheduled tentatively, but Kdncheloe, remembering this yea1·'s experien-ces with can­cella~ions, was reluctant to r<'le:>o;e any :names.

Co!JJtrads have been obtain­ed with some groups, but the!'" groups can oance1 out up t ~ forty-five days in ad- . van:_e of the scheduled con­cert and even then many faH .to show, explained Kin­chetl.oe, because of ·a clause in i,n the contracts which gives them the right to cancel out at any time due to ''acts of

God" which can include just about anything.

Some of the performances wlth which the CU currently has •cootracts 1all'e the Pozo Seco Singers, Glen Yarbor­ough, Oarlos Montoya, and the Letterman, but Kincheloe emphasized, "There is a lot of time -between .now and the concerts.~·

"Holds" have been obtained for many other groups. A "hold" is a verbal agreement made rut a bool.cing convention •where college unions from many schools express interest in various groups. Written contracts ~are signed later.

One of the plans for the

Noted Historian

To Speak Tues. <Continued from Page 1)

went from there to Amherst. He is still a Sperenza lectur­er at Columbia and was lec­turer· · at the Un.i versity of Mexico in 1965.

He lectured on American history at Cambridge in 1942-43 and atlso has been visiting lecturer aft such otlher universi­ties as Oxford, Copenhagen, Boston, Virginia and Uppsala, in Sweden. He has lectured for the Department of State in Germany and also has lectur­ed in Israed, Italy, Trinidad and Chile.

"The Growth of the Ameri­can Republic," on which he coUaborated with S. E. Mori­son, ·is one of Commager's best known books. Others on which he collaborated are "Heritage of America," ·'Our Nation," -and "The Story of Free Peo­ple."

.ncx.t year will make Home­coming a jubilee wcekerud.

The CoUcgc Union is planning to have a big concert on Fri­day night, another on Satur­day •afternoon. Afte-r the game on S:.~turday night, the IFC .and Lhc MRC, working with the College Union, arc plan­ning to hold dances for their respective members.

Each committee is now planming ~ts own program. Committee- chairm~n have

been selected and mem'bcrs arc being signed up. The movies committee, under Hayes McNeill, of Wilkesboro,

who headed it this yoar, has scheduled a number of oul­stounding movies including "~he Pawnbroker" "The Tcn,th Victim", "Juli~t of the Spirits", "Darling", "Caesar and Cleopatra", and "Intol­erance."

The "walk-in" movie idea is patte.rned after drive-in movies. Under this plan a .silent film festival would be held on fuc lawn and students

Languages To Flourish In Babcock

"Avez vous en rendezvous ce soLr?" will replace "Who're you dating tonight?" on one :hall in the women's dorms next yeail' .

In an kl.ea borrowed from larger universities, the WGA will estarblish one foreign lan­guage balJ. in the basement of Babcock B next year lln which a combination of French, Spanish, ·and Ger­man will be •spoken by the members of the hall as every­day language. Judith Scaro, sophomore of Franklinville, N. C., was elected ball coun­selor by the girls thlat will be members of the hall .at a meeting held last Tuesday. ·

P.art of the purpose of the project is to aHow girls that have become members of the hall on the basis of a fluency in one language to learn a second or •third while they are living on it. Wendy Fa:rmer, j'lnior of Virginia Beach, Va., ·~xplained,, "Most of th~ ,girls . that have signed up 'haVe' 8.1· read>y had courses ·;in a sec-' ond language and are :fairly fluent in it. For that reason, we believe .that the •arrange­ment of having th:ree langu­ages spoken on the same hall will work satisfactorily.

Extensive pla.11s were made by the members at their meeting last Tuesday. Among them were the idea of spon­soring a faculty tea for mem­bers of the faculty at the be­ginning of the year and .the idea of inviting :Faculty. mem­•bers, both male and female, to speak on topics of current interest .to the countries rep­resented in several lectures during which the hall willl. be marked off from the rest of the dorm.

The WGA has given tema­tive approval to giving the members of hall ten dollars .to enable them to car­ry through .plans rto make elaborate decorations cor­responding to the life and at­mosphere of the individual countries for the hall parlocr·.

Among the many books he authored alone are "Minority Rule and Minority Rights,'' "The Blue and the Gray" in two volumes, "Spirit of '67," also in two volumes, "Europe and Amef'ica Since 1492," "Living Ideas in America" ·and "The Great ProcUama­tion."

He has also edited a :long list of other books, including the 50-volume "Rise of the American Nation," now in process.

To sign up· for the hall, girls were required to have taken courses in at least one Iangu.age through 152.

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would "walk-in" to sec the movies. No definite plans have been made concerning this idea yet.

The chairman of the travel committee is Jim Gerr~h. junior of Bc.thcsda, Md. Al­ready scheduled arc a ski­weekend in Februat-y, water skiing in the spring, and a trip to the Bahamas during the Spring brc•ak.

A major chan[lc will he made in the PU'blicity com­mittee. Co-chairmen will head the committee which has

been split into two sections. Carolyn Wright, a junior of J :-.cksonville, Fla., will be .the chairman for the artistic sec­tion of the committee which

includes making posters. J. D. Wilson, a junior of Mt. Sterl­

ing, Ky.,. wilf hea,d the jour­nalistic section i\I{J;lich !s in charge of obLainini publicity fo-r events in papers ·and on television. 1 • r·

The lecture committee, un­der Jim Martin; sophomore of Virginia Beach, Va., has linetl up several lectures already. Two of the spcakers will oc Bill Sands and Harrison Salis­bury.

The smatll socials commit­tee, which is in charge of such events ·as combo parties

and the Christmas dance, will be headed by Buddy Herring, a junior of Westport, Conn. The fine arts committee will have co-chairmen: Don Rice, a sophomore of Bethesda, Md.,

and Paul Weinman, •a fresh­man of Pleasantville, N. Y. Neither of ·these committees has made definite plans for next year.

Some of the other ideas which have been suggested arc seminars for the off yea·rs of Challc·ngc, a bulletin board

announcing College Union ac­tivities in the lobby of Rey­nolda Hall, and a CU news­letter, One plan which is now being thoroughly investigated would cre•ate a sailing club for students.

The newly e-lected College Union for next year ha.s held

several meetings. discussing .possible ideas. "If we get five rc.aHy good ideas out of :.. hundred.'' commented Kin­cheloe, "we feel we've ac­complisht'd something."

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PAGE SIX Monday, May 1, 1967 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

CLUB CASTLE I~ t·). ~

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First Awards Banquet Over· on'' hundred f:tcull.y

members ancl studc·nts crowd­ed till• l\I<1gnolia Room Wt•d­II('Sd:ry night to witness !he MHC's First Annual A\\·anls Banquet. Gradua·l ing ~cnior

nnd· former l\IRC pn·silknt Ilokc Smith was th~ master of c, I'Cmonies. The purpos<• \\'as to honor thost> pl'OJlle, rnninly membcl'S of the f:u·ul­ty :111d adminislr·al ion, who had <·nnt.r·ihull'd to till' d<·· \'elopm~·nt of the l\1HC clur­irn: till' pa~t gchool yt•;Jr. Ct•r·­tific:•tcs of Appr,·ciortion were a\\'nrcted to Dr. John llim­mick Dr. Tom ElmorL'. Dr. .Tolur E:,rle. !\1r. Ilarolct l\Inorc, Dr. Keith Prichnnt, 1\Ir. !\lark Heecl: and Dr. l\Iarccllus Wnd· dill.

Poteat House' \\'hose skim­mer-wearing mcmbPrs IWV<' pnrticipaled in ..,,·e~·y nclivil.'' from watermelon p:n·tks to lecture seminiars to G;rrtcr Bowls and ll"ho organized no less tlwn scvt•n intamural teams with uniforms, won tlH' covoled "Hous~ of the Year" trophy. It "·as presented by Larry Crawford, former vice president of the l\"IRC.

Graduate student and resi­dence counselor D;1na IIanna was prcsentc·d lhc Outstnnding Christian Leadership Awunl.

The highli~ht o.f the even­ing came when Pn•sidcnt H;~rold TriblJlL' found hims~lf the new owner of nn oil ]lnint­ing of 'the "Old 13<-thalJ:mr

Church" by Winst11n-Salem a.rt­ist. I3etty Timmerman. Hoke Smith, who presented !Jhe paint­in~. rcmall"ked that it repro­~orutcd the "piono<!ring \Spirit" of the retiring president and was given in sp-ecial appre­ciation of his time, sym;pathy :and support of thL' MRC this · year.

Dr. Tribble, obviously de­lighted by the gift, tthanked thc ·students and then shed some rays of hope foc the perplexed Taylor House- whose nwmbcrs have bf'OO without a lounge the whole year. A section of •the campus laundry will be moved out, ho said, nml a lounge conskucted thetre by fall of next year.

At tho conclusi:on of the program, Doug Twitty, rising senior of Edenton, and the new MRC pre•sid,ent for the coming year, took his owtlh ·(1[ office al()ng with tbhree othe·r officers-Chuck Alcx:mder, vice president; Ken Martin, secre­tary; and Fred Morgan, treas­u.rcr.

For his presidential re­marks. Twiddy said that tho MRC, "once a sleeping tiger", is now recognized as an or­ganized force that must b~ coped with. "We a-re ·no·t try­ing to colllJpete with anything on thois campus. We simply want to crea,te- a well in­furmcd, responsibLe student. Our philosophy is to imple­ment that of lihe College."

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Amen Clai''"s Science· May Change Ideas·

The conflict of the · "so­called" truths ··of· science and religion :is largely a. myth, nr. Ralph Amen, biology profes­sor, said in a v:e1S1Jer' service on "Science v. Religion" in Davis Chapel Wednesday nigbt. 1

Conflicts may arise ove.r the UISe of scientific know­~edge, he continued, but the scientist's respooorb!1ity is to discover and IPUblish.

Science and religioo deal with different LSubjects, Amen explained. Science explores "how questions," while re-· ligion deals with "why ques­tioos." To ·religious inquir:i'lls LScience Is "unccmcerned but not indifferent."

"EFIRD COUNTRY CLUB" • • • members enjoy 85 degree weather and a portable radio in their west courtyard. Here Hugh Simpson,

Walt Wells, Bob Saunders, and Chris Greene got some preliminary rays before the June exodus to O.D.

Scientific knowledge maY cause revolwbions by forcing people to change : opinions about things, Amen added. But, he said, these- conflicts are value judgments and notr inheJrent in the kn·owledge.

Amen cited ~Several scien­tists whose discove-ries cauS'ed • 'revolutions'':

DEACS. • • who are GREEKS -Copernicus, "the heretic

that he waLS," who changed the idea of the universe;

-Pasteur, whose studi"es ol germs were "not · a gentle­man'·s way of looking at life":

-Malthus, who •suggested · By Tommy Baker

College Needs Reynolda Lake Tavern "there were to-o many people or not enough food";

-Einstein, who "had the audacity to suggest there is no absolute"; In this column for ·the past

two years Thlug Stokes, Cru­sader Rabbitt and I have cam­IPaigned for var:ious ru~e chang­es at Wake Forest College. I am h•appy to note that some !ltbenaliwtion has occurred; however, the drinlking rules re­main unchanged despite the

effeots of our coO.lective pens. Thus, it would !Seem .that

perhaps a new tactic would be- in order. Instead of re­questing change ·simply for the sake •of clhange (011' to pre­vent stagnati0111, etc.) I am now advocating liberalizalbion l1f the drink!ing rules for fi­nancial ~a-sons. Interested? Allow me to coo.tinu~.

Suppose the IFC (Oil:' any other body om callliPIJS) w€!l"e to open a taVIern, 'l11D oolely for al!ld by the stude!lJts. A place like the little house on Re-ynolda Ponld would be an ideal site, a.t once pr-oviding a good atmosphere and eaiSy accessibility. Platforms reach­ing out over the wabetr could be added tJn allow fM out­door dnik.ing, while ·the in­terior wibh its· ·oaken. beams could provide the ··coziness that is much of the TOG's charm.

lit seems obvious that such a ·student ll'un, .;;tudent sup­porte<d establilshment would have great appeal to th:e €Ill·

tire studenlt body. Moreover, it seems not inc010ceivable

that the proceeds from the place-, c-ould, to a large ex­tent, eventually suppoo1t the IFC activi-ties (or the College Union, defpending, I guess, upcm the source of the original

outlay.) The opeill.ing of thi.s Wake

Focest Tavern would quite pr-obably effect the soctial reg­ulati()l!LS at the school, a1so. The maturity needled to ac­cept and back tlhe propooed

taver:n would, I feel sure, be

car.ried ov;er into the social rules, perhaps being realized in the- oomplete dismissal of the chaperone and oa>en house regulations.

The · idea is not origin·al. George Washington maintains its own bar. However, this fact only proves the feaiSi­bility of tlh~ plan. Nor is ,tha plan a ha~bramed scheme. To be sure, ~eases, refrigera­tion units, a beer license, etc., would take a good d~al of financial backing, but in

Fraternity News

Alpha Sigma Phi

Brothler Mike Shaw has been elected fraternity secretary and brother Jim Jacobsen has been elected rising senior IFC represe<llltati v;e.

The frate-rnity recently en­tertained professors in a fl"a­tternity-:feculty softball game. A Ja.tfl~ ~:"il"ally brought tlie .· A'l'~ slg,s 'into., .a 15-15, _ tie. A rematch is scheduled for Miay '1.

B.rotherthood festivities cli­maxing Greek Week were held Saturday night at the Ameri­can Legion Hut, under the di­rection· of ·social chairman Af Fritsh.

Delta Sigma Phi

Harry Fish-er, junioc of Mar­tinsville, N. J., recently pin­ned Suzanne Hutchel1Son of Wi11ston-Salem. Miss Hutcher­SI1n is a freshman a,t Gard­ner Webb College in Boiling ~rings, N. C.

Serenades \'l'ere gdven Ia st week for Jan Magee, sopho­more o£ Oxen Hill, Md., and Clara Ivey, -sophomore of Morristown,' N. J.

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·a ye-ar's time th~ propooed tavern ·shoud •easily be pay­ing its own. The basic idea is gOO!d old American capital­ism-and, above all, ~t's ·sound. All the plam lacks is a moti­vating furce. Any of the re­presentative students g·rOUtPS \ IFC, MRC, CUl oould pro­vide that fore~.

-Kin,se:-y, the man who found "what we say or think we do iLS not what we do". :

He also mentioned Freud and Darwin, and a more re­cent scientist, Spiegelman, of t!he University of Illinois. Spieg­elman "may have created ille" by making a new virus.

NEW PUBLICATION ••• staff positions werE> announced by the three pub row editors last week. Work on the new Howler lias already begun, according to editor Stillwell, only a week or two aftpr the above scene was commonplace in the Howler '67 office.

Publications Editors Appoint Asst. Editors, Staff Positions

An exclusively-male editor­shlp on Pub Row ne:x;t year will be supplemented by staffs made up largely of coeldr according· to staff ap­pointments th•at were made by the three publications last week.

Ralph Simpson, rising sen­ior ~rom Chadotte, and IIenry Bostic, rising senior from Elizabethtown, willl head the Old Gold and Black staff in a co-editorship arrangement, 'that has only occured once before since 1951·52. Under them will be Linda Oall'ter, 'l'lsmg junior of Madison. ma·naging editor; Linda Levi. risinng .senior of Norfolk, IS.S.­

•soeiate editor; and Susanne Bennett, feature edLtor of L1:misville, Ky. In the sports department, Dave Roberts, rising senior of Galax, Va., will be spor.ts editor and will •be assisted by Rudy Asihtoo, rising 'Senior of Richmond, Va., as associate sports edi­tor.

Tim Brown, rising junior of Richmond, V.a., will hold the top position on The Stu-

dent, Bill Twyford, rising jun­ior of Nashville, Tenn., will .J>e the assistant editor. Other .staff members of the maga­zine will be Ted Boushy, ris-• in·g senior of Fayetteville; fic­t[on editor Jim Grout, rising senior of Charlotte, aTt direc­tor, and Durward Jones, ris­ing senior of Zebulon, design director.

Under Brooks Stillwell, pre­viously appointed editor of the Howler and rising senior of Savannah, Ga., were aP-; pointed Ba•r'bar.a Brazil, ris­ing junior of Potomac, Md., as associate editor, and Paul Coble, rising junioc of Bur­Lington, as managing editor.

Section editors of the year­book will -be Cassandra Mar- • !lin rising junior of Rocky Mount, academics editor; Sa.rajane Oakley, rising soph­omore of Louisville, Ky., editor of organ.ization5; Kitty Harmon, nsmg senior of Sarasota, na,, stude~t liv~~g editor; Charles Hardin, rising junior of Plauline, S. C., sports editor; and Ja-net Bowker, rising junior of Bethesda, Md., editor of classes. ·

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'May Ideas,

Deacons Win One Of Four Tough Tar Heels · Drop Wake ·Netters By DAVE ROBERTS·

.ASSOCIATI:. B!"ORTS EDITOR

The ·Dea-con baseball team continued to suffer ilrom weak

··· hitti-ng. last week, dropping •tltree cOn.Secutive ACC games and winning only a lone non­conferen(:e . decision over Georgia Southern.

After beating Duke in W'.m­ston-Salem the Deaes travel-

-ed to Mal:yland and Virginia and failed to score a run in •tlvo · g-ames. The league-lead- . ing Terps won 6-0, and the

. · · Cavaliers eked out a 1-0 win. .. They came lback to ea•lv-age

a· 4-3 win over. Georgia South­' · ern at Ernie Shore field. but

the· following night .they drop-. : pcd a • 9-2 contest· to ·North

:· .. Carolina. ·

The . team. batt:.ulg_ average continued to plummet and settled at the .209 mall.'k .after the ·Tar Heel encounter. And the team has hit onlY four home runs compared ·to 13 :for their opponents. - Dcfen~ive lapses burt · the pitching staff, which pe-rf(lrm­ed acceptably and had a team ERA of 2.80 after the Tar Heel game: At Virginia,' Steve Wrenn allowed only two hits but lost 1;..0 when a misjudged •line drive went for a home run·.

Tbe Deacs committed three errors-·in the Georgia South­ern game, but they allowed only one· une.arned run, and the two-hit pitching of sopho­more Bobby Harris over the

· .· · las.t 4 2 .'3 innings kept the . Eagles i~ check.

t ,, l\fyers Plates Clincher

Diclde Myers, who had been moved from his usual position behin:d the plate to second base drove in the winning ru.ri · fn the bottom of the seventh inning. The scorP

,. had,·been. tied ·at 3-3 since the _,.._ ·fifth. -

- Georgia Southern came into tJie game with a record of 22-7-, and they had been rank­

.. ar . as high as fifth in the ·national small-college Danks.

. _Jimmy Dobson, the lo•si~g . pitcher, had won five of six · _decisions befo-re losing .to the

_ · _beacs. ~ Against CaroLina, the Dea­

, _ · ·con fieliders had five boots, 1·. ; ,· and· four of the Heels' first

.. , ..

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DEACON :BASEBAUERS GIVE signal to · rumwrs as one neacon crosses the plate witb a .valuable run during action last week at Emie Shore! Field. The Deacons were able to win only one of their four contests last wet•k, that win 'a 4-3 victory over Georgia Southern.

six runs were une.arn.ed. Gary Hill. a •Sophomore right-bland­er, was all the visitors .needed to pin another loss on the Deacons.

Hill, ·who has not lost in six clecisions. borought .a 0.43 ERA into the g.aine. He allow~d only five hits a.nd struck Oll t 11, and also sl10wed that he can ldo more than pitch. He baasted a three-'l'un homer in the first inning and hit a two­run ,round-tripper in the third. both ofi' staiJ.'te.r and loser Huf~in Br.amam.

In twenty games, the Dea­con pitchin-g staff. allowed on~Y two m~re earned runs than their opponents. Bwt bhe Deacs committed 53 errors

and gave up 32 unearilc'CI run~ compared to 38 er.rors and 17 unearned runs for tlw oppo­sition.

The Deacons' team field· ing was a woeful .936 ag:Jinsl. .956 fot'_ their opponents. '.l'hc· left side of the Deacon in­field has been cs:poci~lly leaky as sbor-tsttop Billy Myers made 18 boots and had an .851 percentage, and third bas-e­man Digit Laugheridge- com­

mitted 12 err:>rs and had an .836 fielding mark .

One of the few bright spots.· fo.r thn Dcacs last week was the Uii,tting of Laugberfdgc, who ·had four safeties in 1 he Georgia Southern game nnd two dn· the- Carolina game bo-·.

rorc lining out to shortstop. He raised hi.s avera-ge from the lower .200's to a good .273, moving into ·second place ()on Hi.c club behind Steve Wl'cnn's .an.

The three lossos in four gpmcs dropped -.the Deacons' overall record to 7-13, and 3-6 in the ACC. For the D·eacs to escaPe their second losing record in three ye.ail"S, bhey will have to win all their re­maining gaffiles .

Tomorrow night the !Ra­c·ons will end J!lheir home sea­son w-ith a non-con:lierence gamE> against Virginia Tech. Thursday .they p1ay at Clem­son and Friday at South Caro­lina.

. . . '. '

By RICHAR;D S~K . · SPO~TB. WRITER

North Cru-olina's ten-nils team beat Wallie Forest, 7·2, -at Wake Forest on Saturday, ·April. 22, but fOil' -the Deacons'. Ed Park- · er dt was a day to remember. The victuty ·was Carolinl!l's 29th ..sbl'aight, and the majority of tlhOISe vilctories have been by a· score of 9-0. _ . · . Also, Walre Forest has 'lost

to the Tar Heels by a ~ .score ever since most Dea­con fams can remember. But -a· week ago la.st Saturday, · Wake Forest WIOil two matcl!.­es, a:nd the Deacs' No. Tvio . man, Ed Pa.rlrer, was in· volved in bolih of the wc­tories.

Parker dedieated Bob Da~is in singles, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3, amd combined with l!:he Deacons' No. One man, Mike Ruben·· stein, ibo wd.n the No. One doubles, 6-8, 6-3, 2-0 (default). The Wa~ Fortelst pair was Jeading, ~. fn the- tbh'd !*!t when Davis, complaining !!f -back trouble, defaulted. DaVIS was IPdayling wilih Tom· Chewn-mg. .

In his sim.gles Jlll8ll;ch P.arlt­er play-ed some of h.l!s best tennis. Miler losing the fi.rlst set, he made good use of his

mlil.ey -and fought back With a !lline net g-ame to wi:n· the seconxf and third· .sets. His serve also went weal, but Pa.rk­er ~Credited his volleying wVth being the key to his victories.

Wake Forest earned its Tar Heel oppo~ts to ~three sets in three otiler ma.tches. Bron­son Van Wyke defeated Dave .A.sihcrafi of · Wake· .Forest in

feated Rubenstein. 6-2, 6-4, ·in a match that was much clos1!r than the final ,scooe mig<ht in­dicate. Hamilton played a strong net. game a:nd was accurate · with his placcmE>nt shots. ·Rubelllsbein volleyed well at times and got in some -exOOuent placemcon<t •ShOIIls, but the wind bothered his volleys several times. It was, on •!be whole, a fine pcl'formance against a player as good as Hamilton.

The dclieat was the fourth of the year for the Deacs against ten wins.

Wake Forest ·completes its regular season thls week with three matches. The Deaco-ns go ¢o N. C. State today and to Appalachian on Wednes­day. They complete toh!:!ir rE>g­ular season with a home match on · Friday again:st South Carolina.

The Wake Fo.rest- North ·carolina totalis:

Singles - Gene Hamilton <UNC> def. Mi!Qe Rubenstein, 6-2, 6-4; Ed Pa"'kes •<WFl dcf. Bob Davis, 3-6, 8-6, 6-3;

Bronson Van Wyke <UNCl def. Dave Ashcraft, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3; Tom Chewnmg <UNCJ dcf. Clilf Pearce, 6-1, 6-4; Bruce Swenson (UNCl def. Ronnie! MacVitti:e, 6-0, 4-6, 7-5; B-ill 11rott <UNCJ de£. Rob Knapp, 6-3, 6-4. .

Doubl:es-Rubenstein-Parker <WFl dlef. Davis-Ohewning, 6-8, 6-3, 2-0 default; Hamil­ton-Trott <UNCJ def. Ash­craft-MacVibtde, 6-3, 6-2; Van Wyke-Jim Wadsworth <UNCJ ldef. Knapp-Pearce, 13-11, 4-6, 6-3.

tble No. Three sing1es match ------------2-6, 6-2, 6-3. Bruce Swenscin stopped Ronnie MacVittie of' Wake Forest. 6-o, · 4-6; 7-5, in · the No. Five singles match. In the No. Three doubles -match, van· ·Wyke aJlki Jim Wadswort:h :had to s!!a'amble to beat Cliff :Pearce li>Ud Rob · Knapp of W:ake Forest, 13-11, · 4-6, 6-3. .

MacVitltie was a ple~ant -surprise for Coach Jlim Lei~­ton, even _in. losing. He gave his nwre' experienced ow»- : nent plienty of trouble with fim.e placement shots and: ·a sta'ong ~Sernce. ·

In . theo No. ..One sfn.gles match Gene · Hamalton .ile-

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Beautiful Wooded Lot Adjoining. Old. Town Country Club and Wake Forest' Campus; Mont• clair Road, Sheraton Park. F o-r S a l e By 0 w n e r , ·LaFayette Williams.·

"-:a :B,;'ltUDY""Asm,.;;.,.N:"- ,..,.,,_.;d J8fili""H'<idsdmt.-' 'W.Ilo"' was···· K~; ·Who· -woo.:<;'l.e 'SiiOi,:;,.,t.-y • ' <or•r<~\,J'~ o' • t ' \ ~- • ':f" ... ~ ASSISTANT' SPORTS' 'EDITOR . third iri the mile, came back and the diseus with heaves 6f

· · . The WaiDe- Forest track team with a 9:49.5- vic-tory in the 48''12" and 133'3'\2" :respec.tivE!-, - fell to 'a powerful Nontb Caro- two-mile. Jim Hope, running ~Y. Jim Kyle, whio W!Oil. ·the

or

679-8168

OLD GOLD AND BLACK MoDdQ', Ma7 I, 1967 PAGE SEVEN

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· !ina State squad 94-50 Satur~ with a. strain€ld muscle, fin- intermediate hurdles, aDid Phil ·.:..------------day, April 22. at Raleigh to ished bhird. Beavel'IS, who won tare two- -~-~.-----------------------------------------., close out thei-r 1967 dual meet Other scorer.s- for the Dea- mile. Kylie al.oo had a see-

:.- season with a 1-5 record. cons were Julian Rainwater, ond in ltlhe !high hurdlets. · A steady rain, which turned second in both :the IIllf:ermedi- Other score.r.s for the frosh into ·a !downpour an ht;ur be- ate hurdles and the pole w-ere Jolbn ~. ISecon~

:·.fore meet ttime, ·delayed the vault; Dave Asche, second in in thie 220 and tbil:tl: in the . meet about two ihours and left .the triple jump anli ·third in 440, Rich Curd, second in the

---·-!c·-- · ·.the' ttr.ack in poor condition. the broad jump;. Joe Mount;· 880, Rob Klosterman, .1fllim til · ·--:· ·. /, '' ·: ·, -~ ,_. · . .'file i!Jimes of all running third in both the 100 and 220; 11h.7 j~velin, J~ Tag~t,

I .. ·. . ,:;;,,)'~~; . 5.~~~~~~~g =::~::::::: ~m ::;:_::

.:• , ,- · cons had thek best perform- to the Sta.tJe lfrosh 99-36. IinKU- go- bo Durlham to· rmi _In: the

•, '

.'•> . ,.

., . -

-}- - ances ISinee ilibeir 82-63 vic- vidual winners We!l'e David Duke ne.tays. ' . ··}.:<:. tory ovea- Virginda two weeks

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,.,~ ·mile for the first time this --~~ ~ ::. ; ·Season,_ beat State~s 1\fcManus

\;~:-~:. t>'·:::<'~2 ,.··. ~ ~~~~co;~a;n~at: '' - time nf 4:29.8. Viehman was

~-, ; -,• . i\ .. , -~·.· .. - also LSeeond in the 880 with

•"'

_..

-~ '

•,'

. ~-

a time of 2;01.5. Ohuck Adams, steadily im­

IP'J'Oving all season, set a school recard in winning the d.ilscus with a hieave of 141'11". ]t was 11h.e fourth straight dual meet victory for the Char·

.,__. ··. _ _:: ·' ·' :: lotte sid.or. '11om Fitch was the only

· double winner for the Deacs. H-e captureld the high jump with a leap of 6'2" ·and the 120:yard high lhuxdles in a time of i5.8. He was alSo third :in !the triple jump .

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PAGE EIGHT Monday, May l, 1967 OLD ·GOLD AND BLACK

I''

I .. ~

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\ -~

DAN BAXLEY, SOtTTHPAW PITCHER for the freshman baseball team. is one of two mound mainstays. He and Don Polifka have

--PHOTO BY.DAUGHTRY pitched well, and the team's 1-7 record is primarily due to wt•ak hitting.

Deac Golf Future Brighter; Sophomores 1J!a:Y Star Again

By RICHARD SINK SPORTS WRITER

The Wake Forest golf team, already loaded with an abun­dance of sophomore talent this year. may see quite a few sophomores playing again next year. This year's edition of the Baby Deae golf team fin­ished with a record of 2-1 in dual meet competition. but this record may not be indi­cative of just how good the team was.

One of the most important things the Baby Deacs had go­ing for them was their coach, Jay Sigel. Sige-l. who hails from Narberth. Pa.. was an All-American golfer for Wake For£'st in 1963 and again in 1964.

The Baby Deacs were sche­duled to play five matches this season, but their oppo­nents cance<Jled two of the matches. The first match was ~chedulcd for Old Town Golf Com·se on l\Ia1·ch 21 gainst North Carolina. but the Tar Babies cancE.'lled it. The last scheduled match of the sea­son was supposed to be play­ed at Old Town on April 17, but the freshman team from South Carolina failed to show up.

Lose Opener The opening match was fi­

nally played on April 3 against the Duke Blue Imps on Duke's home course .. This .was. ... the first and last loss of the sea­son for the Baby Deacs, as the Blue Imps won by a score of 16~S-4 1.2.

Van Jeffords, the number one man !or the Baby Deacs, was low for the Wake frosh with a 74 and also won his match.

The second match was play­ed against the North Carolina Tar Babies on the North Caro­lina home course, April 6, when the Wake frosh took home their first victory of the season by a score of 141h-9%. Jeffords was again low for the Baby Deacs with a 73.

Eight men played for the Wake freshmen in this match, and the tE.'am sho\\'ed the same balance from number one to number eight as the varsity does. Bob Hamilton, playing number seven, and Clint Gib­son, playing number eight, shot 75 and 76, respectively. These two actually accounted for the margin of victory in

this rdalch. Only one Baby Deac score was over 80.

The' :i:laby' rieacs got sweet revenge' in their' third and fi­nal match of the season, de­feating the Duke Blue Imps in a return engagement by a 13%-101h score at Old Town, April 14.

Jeffords continued his con­s~stent playing and paced the Baby Dcacs with a 73. Great balance again was the key to this win just as it was in the Carolina victory. The fifth man, Randy Price, shot a 74, and Gibson, playing number eight, shot a 76.

Gibson, playing even though he was just out of the col­lege infirmary, was the last Baby Deac golfer to finish. He defeated his Blue Imp op­ponent and accounted for the actual victory margin. Ail of the Baby Deae scores were in the 70's.

Good Depth The reason the Baby Deacs'

record was not a true indica­rt:ion of how good they were is best expressed by SigeL "We had no more than one man over 80 in any of the matches, and nobody in the 80's in the last match. This is amazing for a freshman team to have such a record. Also, we met some pretty good teams. Duke and Carolina have real fine freshman teams. Duke's fresh­men are almost as good as our freshm'en .. _team ·or--1ast year.''

Jeffords played number one for the Baby Deacs all year. He is from Filorence, S. C., as is the varsity's number one man, Walker Cup p:Layer, Jack Lewis, Jr. Jeffords and Lewis both learned their golf from one of the best instruc­tors in the game, Grant Ben­nett.

Jeffords won all o~ his mat­ches this year and was low for the Baby Deacs in every match. He was consistent all year, and Sigel is quite high on him. "Jeffords has a lot of experience •and has the potential to break into the starting line-up for the var­sity next year."

Bugbee Improves Steve Earle, from Hunting­

ton, N. Y., finished the season as the number two man for the Baby Deacs. Albert Bug­bee, whose home is Trenton, N. J ., made the biggest jump for the Baby Deacs this sea-

Coed Netters Perform Well In Tennis Day At Carolina

By P.UDY ASHTON ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

The Wake Forest women's tennis team continued to shine last week, as they beat Cat­awba Tuesday and had pla)r­ers reach the finals in the Tenth Annual Invitational Ten­nis Day at the University of Nor·th Carolina at Chapel Hill Saturday, April 22.

In the victory over Cataw­ba, the Dcaconettes took five girls and played five singles and two doubles matches, winning 5-2. They each play­ed one ten-game match rath­er than the traditional two­out-of-three sets because of a lack of time.

The results of the match was as follows: Kay Stouden­mire lost 8-10, Anne Bingham won 10-3. Annabelle Richard­son won 10-3, Susu Evans won 10-4. and Becky Wylie lost 8-10. In doubles play Stouden­mire and Richardson triumph­ed 12-10, and Bingham and Evans won 10-1.

Exciting Match

The match between Miss Sti'JUd-nmire and the number one player from Catawba was exciting to watch. Both play­ers displayed skill and stra­tegy that is rarely found .among college girls.

In the Tenth Annual Invi­tational Tennis Tournament at

Chapel Hill, the Deaconettes representd W~ke Forest well.

In singles 'play, Kay Stou­denmire :ldli'ancM to the finals and lost' the final match to the nuinbb'r one seeded play­er, a Queens College student.

This girl -..~;- J:'!nkd number five' in the natitln in the 16-and-under group a few years ago. Miss Stoudenmire defeat­ed the number. two seeded singles p.layer in going to the finals.

Miss Richardson, who last progressed to the semi-fanals, fell in the first round this year.

Make Finals

In doubles play, the team of Bingham and Evans also ad­vanced to the fina•ls before hr,wing to the number one seeded team from Duke. On their way they upset the num­ber two seeded team.

Miss Dorothy Casey, physi­cal education instructor and coach of coeds, has been very pleased with her te~trn's P"l•ay.

She said, "The ski~l and ability displayed by all Wake Forest girls has been pleas­ing.''

On Wednesday, May 10, the Salem girls will be at Wake Forest to play a match sche­duled for 5:00 p. m. The next day, Catawba will visit the Deaconettes, match time is 3:30 p. m.

son. He started the year as the number seven man but finished •in the number three spot.

Coach Sigel describes him as the "longest hitter on the team. He hits it a'lmost as far as the varsity's longest hitter, Char!lie Snipes."

Ben Aycock, of Wake Fo­rest, was the Baby Deacs' number four man at season's end. He and Jeffords have the most experience of any of the players on the team. He fin­ished number lthree in the state high school tournament last year.

Price, of Waver!ly, N. Y.; Bill Brewer, of Charlotte; and Hamilton, of Lancaster, Pa.; finished the season in the num­ber five, six, and seven posi­tions, respectiveily. Rounding out the team were Gibson, who Coach Sigel described as the "best putter on the team," in the number eight spot, and Steve Barsotti in the number nine position. Gibson is from Winnetka, I11., and Barsotti from Glenshaw, Pa.

Sigel said, ·"Coach Haddock is real pleased with their play. AJ.l these boys should he'lp the varsity next season. It's just unfortunate that more matches couldn't be played this year."

Transfer Coming Sigel also mentioned · the

fact that Wake Forest has a junior college transfer coming in .. ·next· ·seurson; ·He·· is"·Chip Lewis of Raleigh, and is now attending Wingate Junior Col­lege. Lewis was· a star junior golfer who was much sought­after by severa!l. colleges upon graduating from high sclwol.

Indeed, Wake Forest golf looks even brighter in the fu­ture. Adding this fine fresh­man team, plus Chip Lewis, to the Ukes of Jack Lewis, Johnny Harris, Leon a r d Thompson, Joe Inman, Char­lie Sndpes, Cha.I'lie Cowan, and Norman Swenson gives Wake Forest fans visions of a na­tional. championship.

Kappa Sigs Winln Golf

By DON SMITH INTRAMURAL EDITOR

K!appa Sigma fraternity last week won the IFC golf cham­IP'ionship, defeating Pi Kappa in the finals. The Kappa Sig foursome had to top a fired­up effort on the part of the KA's to make the fiools.

The victorious team includes· Smitty Flynn, Jerry Davis, Ernie Sdmmons, and Jim Smith. The victory moved the Kappa Sigs ahead of the PiKA's in the point race for the ALl Campus trophy.

IFC softball last week saw the Sigma PI's emerge as the

s01lo leader in Greek compe­tition. The Sigma PI's topped the Kappa Sigs 8-6, while the KA's lost their first game to the Delta Sigs. The •loss mov­ed the KA's into a second place tie with the Delta Sigs.

The De;lta Sigs also won over the Theta Chis, whHe Sig Ep lost to the KA's, and then beat Lambda Chi. Theta Chi evened its weekly slate by downing the Kappa Sigs.

In independent action last week the Blue Ribbons mauled the Baby Ruths 34-11, the Doormats topped the Degene­rates 10-5, the Defenders swamped the Bandits 13-1, and PAD nipped the Crirnials 14-11.

Elsewhere, APO defeated Delta Sigma Pi 9-6, and then lost to the M. Oysters 16-13.

Standings Sigma Pi 5-0 KA 5~ Delta Sig 5-1 Theta Chi 4-2 PiKA 3-2 Kappa Sig 3-3 Lambda Chi 2-3 Sig Ep 1-5 A:Ipha Sig 0-5 Sigma Chi 0-5

Baby Deacs Drop Five By One Run By CHRISTOPHER PEACE

SPORTS WRITER

~;;Dillman Shines t~For Baltimore ~i~

With ·a few breaks, the Wake Forest freshman baseba•ll team could easily have had a winning record so far this season. Thus far the Baby Deacs have only one win against seven losse-s, but five of the losses have been by only one run.

As Coach Neil• Johnston opti­mistically pointed out, "With a few breaks this season we could have •a ~ ;record. We have had some readly tough lo.sscs. Our record proves our bad luck."

Opening the season. the Baby Doocs lost to State 2-1 and 6-4. Then in a free-hitting affair the Deacs came out on the short end of a 16-15 game. Against Catawba, the frosh were shut out 3-0 fur one of their two shoutout losses.

all times. It is hard on them to keep 'putting out' with the tough ·losses they've had."

So far this season, hitting and fielding have been the Baby Deacons' weaknesses. Pitching has been the Dcacs main strength, with Polifka and Baxley the nucleus of the mound staff.

Baker, who is the only cat­cher for the frosh, has the grueling task of catching in practice every day as wed! as in a11 the games. ·

Saturday the Baby Deacs traveled to Wingate Junior College for a doubleheader but the results were unavail: ·able at press time.

Bilil Dillm!an, a. pitcher !for , the Deaoon bareball team just • three years ago, is currently enjoying a succe55fUil rookie year with the defendJ.ng Balti­more Orioles.

An example of the Baby Deacs' hard luck was the ctouble-heade1· against Carolina a week ago. In the first game, Don Polifka pitched a strong th rec-hitter, but lost 1-0.

Asked about sume of the prospects for next year's V>ar­sity squad, Cole explained, "Our shortstop Craig Robinson should really help them Cthe varsityl next year. He ds an outstanding fie~der and hit­tera"

This Saturday, the Baby Deacs entertain the freshmen fro~ Virginia Tech.

In his first g13me, he pitch­ed five innings against Kan­sas City without allowing a hit. He finished the game in relief of Tom Phoebus, and received credit for the victQl'y.

Derby Day Correction

Then in the second game, which went only seven innings, n:m Ba::-dey pitchl.'d a one-hit­f(•r for· six innings but then tired and had to be relieved hy Larry llab:1gger·. The Baby 'l'ar I k'l'ls sco1·cd four runs for the 4-3 victory.

Then against Duke the Baby Deacs picked up their only victory, 4-3 in the first game of a doubile header, but lost the second in another close game, 3-2. Finally CaroNna de­feated the f\roslh 1-0 and 3-2.

Assistant Coach Tommy Cole praised the fresh saying, "They give a good effort at

Some of the other Baby Deacs singled out besides Rob­inson, Polifka and Baxley were Alex Wyche, third base; Jim Poole, first base; Paul Jones, outfield; and Johnny Baker, ootcher.

Sigma Chi officials revised the society standings in the Derby Day competi-tion after .a fina•l tabulation of the points for events ·and derby chasing. Les Soeurs were named· second in overall com­tpetition, with Fideles third.

Last Saturday Dillman work­ed three innings on national television, again .against Kan-­sas City. He allowed only one hit in mopping up for Wally Bunker as the Orioles poM.ed an easy 12-2 victorY.

Dillman's totals for his first eight inruings of work were no runs allowed, one hit, one waik and two str:ikeouts.

ORGETOWN aparfntenfs

IDEALLY LOCATED FOR COLLEGE FAMILIES oHers living thai is convenient, easy, pleasant and

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OCCUPAICY -- JUNE 15th

A Sneak Preview of floor plans, architect's render­ing and the site plan-now at the offices of Ferrell Realty · Co. Also preliminary information sheets, de­tailing the features.

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LIVING-DINING ROOM 11'4" X 21'0"

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LIVING ROOM 11'4" )( 19'4"

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The Excellent Location: Georgetown Apartments are near the In­tersection of Cherry-Marshall Expressway and Coliseum Drive next to College Plaza Shopping Center, near Tavern On The Green, and overlooks Old Town Golf Course.

For Additional Information

FERRELL REALTY CO. Wachovia Bldg. Phone 722-5147

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