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German. Educati(jn Sy;stem' Compared
· To Ours· -· ·Jones
Page Four
VaLUME XLV
Marian Anderson
. ,,
lh _,
...
$86,000 BabcQck .Grant Awarded To Law School
A five-year scholarship plan oo4 for stronger support 'that· ~ur proa three-year visiting professor pro- gram of service may e'ontinue to gram will be established at the improve." School of Law through a Mary Rey- Weathers . said "The grant from nolds Babcock Foundation grant of the ·Babcock Foundation helps to ·about $86,000. provide long;felt needs in our Law
, The .grant was 18rulounced Satur- School." day 'by President Harold W. Tn"b- -------ble and Law School Dean Carroll Ad''- • P w. Weathers. Both programs will be ~lnS To .L'.OCe ~~~tio~ for the 1960-61 school Charge Of '£heft
About · $41,000· of the grant will David c. Adkins, Kinston junior, provide scholarships <:overing ·full will appear in Winston-Salem Munithree-year tuition for five entering cipal Court Thursday on charges restudents each year' for a period of sulting from a break-in at the Colfive years. The s~o1arships will lege Book Store just· before the be awarde4 on the basis of· character Christmas holidays. and scholastic achievement witihout The break-in was discovered the regm-d to financial need. Eac'h morning ·of Dec. 17 by book store scholarship is worth $550 a year. employees -arriving to open the They will be named the Babcock store about 8 a. m. A plate-glass Schol~ps.. . window had ·been smashed.
At present the Law School offers. , Missing from the store was . 10 scholarships of $200 e~ch for the $491.26 cash and $235.61 worth of incoming class each year based on merchandise. character, scholarship and financial Char.ges were brou.g'ht against Adneed. One other schoLarship, whiCh. kins Monday, the daY' classes recovers full tuition for three years, swned after ·the holidays. Investi· is avaiLable to· one beginning stu- gating officel"S said fingerprints dent each year for the tbree years. found on the smashed window led
The visiting professor program them to Adkins. will ·use up to $45,000 .to bring.a Adkins is free under $500 bond .. distinguished law professor from Everette C. Snider, manager of
* ·I
'·
nlh -nuh lark Critic Calls Play '0 Mistress Mine' 'Best Seen Here'
* Page Five
Wake F!Jrest College, Wmston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, January 11, 1960 NUMBER 13
Seniors ·'will meet after chapel period TUesday, Dick Burleson, preside:n.t of the senior class, has :mnounced.
They will fill out forms listing their activities and will vote on the· 10 outstanding senioTs. Both will be used in· the Howler.
Bill Smith, co-editor of the Howler, has· suggested that· tib.ose students unable to att-end the chapel slide a list of their activities under the door.of the Howler office.
Turner l{eepsJoh
Theater To Present Opera 'The M~dium'
Jim Turner keeps his office as treasurer of the student. body after the Student Legislature failed Thursday night to get the necessary two-thirds majority vote to put him out of office.
The vote was 13-5 to relieve him of his duties. At least 17 votes were necessary to pass the motion.
The motion, presented by the committee on absences, would have put Turner out of office for having missed three "unexcused meetings.
:The vote came up as a result of action.by the Legislature earlier in the year. The lawmakers decided Oct. 29 . that any legislator accumulating three unexcused absences should be charged with inexcusable neglect of duty, subject to removal from office by a vote of two-thirds of the membership of the Legislature.
Bullard Argues . Howard Bullard, junior class pre·
sident, led the wgument for· retaining Turner. He said that Turner was "an exception." He contended t·hat Turner's working at nights kept ihim from attending the meetings and that working is a valid excuse. Bullard said that "under the circumstances" Turner's absence at ·all the meetings this year did not constitute neglect of duty. Bullard also said that Turner was doing "a good job."
Don Schoonmal•er, president of the student body,- argued that whether Turner was doing a good job
By SUE FULKERSON in "The Consul," another opera by or not had nothing to do with the . The Wake Forest College Thea- Menotti. - discussion. ter's next production, "Tihe Medi· Jean Burroughs, wife . of speech Vi~ president of the student urn," an opera by Gian-Carlo Me· in~trw:;tor, Dr. Julian Bu:roughs, body, Buddy Young, pointed out 'notti; will- be given· Feb. l9 and 20 Will smg the role of Momca, the that not only had Turner failed to at the Winston-Salem Arts Center. medium's daughter. Mrs. Burroughs attend the meetings, but that also·
Emerson Head of the ~usic de- is a member of the faculty. of Salem he had failed to turn in any written. partment faculty is music director College. . . excuses for the absences. for the opera, and speech instructor Rick Medlock Wlll portray 'foby, Maddrey Suggests Change James Walton 1s .stage director. The a m_ute. The. roles of Mr. ·and Mr_s. Willis <Doc) Maddrey suggested · Wake Forest ·Little Symphony wih Gobmeau Wlll· be stmg b~ David that the rule on absences might be be the orchestra. ~eal .and. Anne Hocutt. Judith Mor- amended to retain Turner, or t'hat
The lead role: the medium, will ns wrll smg the role of Mrs. Know- Turner niight be removed from ofbe sung by Emily Kalter. She ihas land: . . fice and then reinstated. But under sung in over 500 operatic ~orm-- M1Ss Hocutt, Miss Morns,._ Med- the. rule as stated, Maddrey conances an~ has appeared wrth the lock and Beal are. s~dents. m the tended, Turner could .not keep' his San Carlo Oper.~ Company. A resi- Co_llege an~ stud! v~Ice Wlth Dr. sition. dent of Winston-Salem, she is con- Chfford Bmr, voice Instructor. po tralto soloist at Centenary Method- Ac~ording to Head, the plot of . The vote ~as take~ ~the necest ist Church. She appeared recently 4 'The :[Vledium" is "quite intri~u- -sary. two-thirds maJonty was,. no at the Lyric .1'heater as the mother ing." A medium has tricked clients. obtained.
into ·believing that she can com- . Mter the vpte is vias moved. that munica.te with the spirits of 'their the rule on absences be made more. loved ones. During one of her flexible by· the inclusion of: the seances, she feers ·a clammy hand phrase "in extenuating circumstancon her throat. The panic-stricken es." The vote to include the amendwoman makes an unsuccessful at- ment found favor with 15 persons, tempt to convince her clients that but iD. thls case, a two-thirds·, rir:ashe is a ·-fraud.· Her terror drives jority was also necessary., The her to drink and, finally, to kill amendment failed. The Legislature Toby. adjourned, having failed to gain a
"The Medium" was first perform- two-thirds majority in -two cases. ed at Columbia Univ&sity in 19!16. (Continued on ·page 4.)
Trusb'i~s_hka§Hildehr~nd, Vote Three_Year Contract
By ZENO MARTIN Bill Hildebrand has been given
a three year contract as head football coach at Wake Forest College. Formerly the chief assistant on the Wake . staff, Hildebrand . succeeds Paul Amen, who resigned Tuesday to accept a position in the . Personnel Department of Wachovia Bank and Trust Comp-any in WinstonSalem.
Chapel Subject Is Atomic Age
The announcement of the appointment of Hildebrand to tihe position was made official Friday at a meeting of the College's Board of Trustees, which accepted unanimously the Athletic Council's :recommendation .that he ·be named. Hildebrand, 35-year-old native of Memphis, Tenn., has been on the Wake Forest coaching staff since Amen took over as head coach in February of 1956.
Amen stated that his change from college coaching to the banking profession was dorie primarily because it enabled him "to fulfill and realize a long-standing desire to enter pri
Dr. Karliis Ley.asmeyer, an au- v.ate business." He also cited the thority on Communist ideology and increased sense of permanence that strategy and the Soviet Russian ~- such a job offered to him and to tem, will lecture in Chapel Tuesday his: family. on "The fateful problems of the Since coming to Wake FOT'est atomic ·age." from the :United States Military
Ley.asmeyer is a member of the Academy in 1956, Amen. compiled Committee on Education of Inter- a won and loss record of 11-26-3. He national Christian LeaderShip, !nc. was twice selected by the Atlantic in Washington, D. C. Coast Sportswriters Association as
Donald' C. Stone, chairman of the the Coach of the Year. He first won committee, has .said that Leyasmey- the award after his 1956 team finish· er is "formerly a European educa- ed with a 2-5-3 record. His team's tor, analyst of Communist doctrine, 6-4 record of last fall won Coach and victim of communist persecu- of .t'he Year honors for ihim for the tion with an ,.unforgettable story." .second time in his four years at
Stone believes he has an "ex- Wake Forest.
another school each year during a the College Book Store, mdicated three-year period. that full restitUtion . of the $749.43 : . , : .• . :
"I am delighted,'" said Tribble, break-in loss was immediately as- . . : · . · · .. : : .· . "to·ihave SUch a Splendid grant for Sllred. . - . ' . _I • • , -PHOTO. BY ~R•GG_
traordinary gr.asp of world-wide de- Prior to coming to Wate Forest v:elopments." "But what is unique," Hildebrand had served on the coachStone con1inues, '1is his skill in pre- ing staff of Mississippi State, his senting his message of what stu- alma mater, and .at the University deBts can do to help keep America of Tennessee, the University of strong and free." - · Minnesota, and Whitworth Co-llege
our Law School. It is recognition of. The College has taken ~0 official· TAKE ~ ~TI'ER-Roga: ~.as S1.r ~ohn Fletcher m the College Theaters cw:rent production, 0 ~the value and qwillty ·of the work action in the matter, pending the tr.ess Mme, commallds hls secretary Miss Dell~ played by Ann Haltin. The play began Thursday and will that .is !being done and of the need outcome .of COurt action. run . Thursday through Saturday of this week. The review appears on })age 5.
• ' • -. • • • • 0 , •
· .. '
Leyasmeyer is billed as an ''ob- in Spokane, Washington. At Whit· server and student of Events lead- worth he was the head coach, while ing up to the present international at the other colleges he served as crisis." an assistant.·
PAGE TWO Monday, .Jan. 11, 1960 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Dr. Albert Meiburg
Forum To Feature Pastoral Care Dr. Albert L. Meiburg of Baptist
Hospital will speak tonight at the B.aptist Student Union Supper Forum.
Meibw-g is an assistant to Dr. Richard K. Young, director of. the School of Pastoral Care at the hospital. Young and the pastoral care pxogxam were saluted last summer by the Reader's Digest in its condensed book section.
Meiburg will ·speak on the progr-am. Part of the program's philosophy is that a patient often must get wor-se emotionally before he can get better physically and spiritually.
Meiburg's lalk, "Religion and Healing," will show the relation, if there is any, between f;aith and physical welfare and health. ·
'rhe forum begins at 5:30 p. m. in the Magnolia Room. Tickets will pe $1 .and may be purchased at the
door, says Supper- For-um director, Charles Waldrop.
Meiburg is -a graduate of Clemson College, where he also taught chemistry for a year. Later he went to Southern Baptist Seminar~ in 1948, where he remained until 1955.
He took a teaching position at Wingate College in the department of r-eligion.
He came to Baptist Hospital at Winston-Salem in 1957.
Waldrop has :s·aid that the meeting will be open to all students. Meals will be served beginning at 5:30 p. m., followed by Meiburg's talk. 'After the talk students will have an opportunity to qt!estion Meiburg from the floor.
Meiburg works with a progr-am at Baptist Hospital that holds that "pastoral care of the sick consists of more than smiling or praying at the bedside." l\lEIBURG
--------------------------------~-----------------------
'Deacs Who Are Greeks
Speaker ·Tries To . Show Effects On Rilk~ 's Po~try
By KELLEY GRIFFITH school for reasons not certain. Dr. Geoi"ge 'c. Schoolfield, asso- His uncle, a rich industrialist,
ciate professor of Germanic Ian- sent him to a commel'cia.l school guages and literature at Duke Uni- in MWlich where he had plenty of versity, in his lecture entitled "Rilke affairs ,with his· lady teachers. After and Austria" :attempted to show commercial .school he had speci·al how Rilke's .aversian· to hi:s home- tutoring at Berlin. , land, Austria· affected his· life and Non-Austrian Life · works. ' · While he was in Munich, he be-
Schoolfield spoke at the Student c::ame acqu~p.ted _wit:h non-Ausb'ian Union sponse>red lecture Thursday life ·~nd trred his best to forget night in the East LoWige of Rey- Austn~ co~pletel~ ~ven t~ough !he nolda Hall. , occas:s10nal1y r-eVIsited h1s home
Rainer Maria Rilke, Schoolfield COWltry. said, is considered the foremost He ·spent much time in the ScandiGerman lyxic poet of the fir-st half navian countries and although. he of the twentieth century. He was did not forget his homeland he born in 1875 at Prague which was made very little reference to it in at that time a city in the Austro- a novel and other works written HWlgarian Empire. at this time. He felt, Schoolfiield
Father Unlucky sai~, that Austria was .a land in . Rilke's father was a fairly un- whtch •amusements were sought after
luckyr person in that he £ailed to at •any• costs. And since the .amuseachieve the milita1·y ranking which ments of Austria were often of the he felt he deserved. His father had lower class type and Rilli::e definitealso made an unlucky marr.tage ly preferred the ·upper. class or nowith .an extremely "ugly" but sup- bility to the lower class Rilke was posedly wealthy young .society girl. given more reason to :hate his· homeAs it turned out the married couple land.
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Giving Phone Number & Mailing Address
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YOUR PRES<";RIPTION OUR FmST CONSIDERATION
Three Licensed Pltarmaclsts l'o Serve You
Prompt Delive:ry
Pete Knight's TV and A,pliance ·Co. Thruway Shopping Center and
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RCA and ADMIRAL Stereo-HiFi headquarters for Winston-Salem
Open Nightly Till · 9 ·EASY TERMS
Cullom Group· 1 Hears Griffin On 'Sermons'
By DAVE RAWLEY
Delta Sigma Phi
ended up without a. cent of their He tried to escape the fact that own and without too much affection he was pl.'acticaUy "without a counfor each other. It was in this iatmos• txy" by settling down in various phere that Rilke grew up. cities-Nienna, Copenhagen-but he
Schoolfield further said that Rilke, finally settled at Duino Castle on ~;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~:;;;~~~ since his fat:her was a military man, the Adr1atic Sea. At this castle he was pushed into a military career fo~d the weather- very much lil)e and several "miserable" (as ihe Austrian weather (he hated Aus~ termed them) .years .at a military trian weather), but it was her-e that academy in Prague. By this time he created !!:Us· most famous group he had built up a hatred for his of poems in 1922, the Duino Elegies. home city of P!lague, fox his horne- These elegies pidure the Austrian life and foi" A:ustria in. general. He hero as representative of Austria, was released f:.:om the military said Schoolfield, not in the glori
Od .. II-MatthewsMotOrs . DeSoto Plj-rno~th
Valiant Fiat
Dr. George Griffin, adviser- to the Cui lorn M i n i s t e r i a 1 Conference, spoke to ·the gorup Tuesday evening o.n how to prepare to a sermon.
Griffin said that the introduction to a sermon is one of the most important parts. He advised the students to use the Bible or some other book as a "starter."
Bob Leeds has pinned Pat Cielenski of Laurel Springs, N. J. Chris Bramlett has pinned Par Starnes of Salem College. Don Steelman has become engaged ·to Pat Butler of Peace College. Jim Philpott has become engaged to Cordie -'Wingfield of Martins-
ville, Va. Kappa Sigma ..
Jerr:~-, West and Ruby Hogue of Winston-Salem were married Dec. 19. ~hil Harris and Noel Vossler of Fayetteville were m1rried. Several brothers became engaged durh]g the ·holidays. They are
fi~d, usual form of the Germanic hero but as the "ordinary" Austrian who is the real hero. These were his 1ast poems of any consequence. Rilke died in Switzerland in 1926. 638 W. ~ourth St.
He .said that it is good for the minister to write his sermons ·at a prescribed time in the week. He suggested that they should ask themselves ·about each serm<>n, "Is what I wxite r-easonable, logical and true?"
Bill Covington to Jennie Curry of High Point College; Bob Hewitt to Sue Mincey of Woman's College; Johnny Rogers to Jo Summexlin of Woman's College; Bobby Downing to Patti Danovitch, Levittown, Pa.; and Albert Thornton to Ann Hedgepeth, a coed.
, Lambda Chi Alpha
Mooney May Make Army His Career·
Schoolfield received his BA d~ ~~~~~~~::::::::::::~::::::::~~~~~::~;::~~ gree from the University of Cin- ~· cinatti and his PhD from Princeton University. In the Summer of 1950 and 1951 he studied in Switzerland. Griffin observed that it is easy
to tell people to be good but that it is difficult to tell them :how.
FINE PHOTOGRAPHY BY
Warner Rembrandt 616 W. 4th St. PA 31331
Wake Forest and Salem girls were serenaded before Christmas. The Baptist Home fox the Ageing was serenaded Dec. 16.
Sigma Chi · Max Beverly married Mary Cochran during the Christmas holidays. Darel! Dennis maxried fraternity sweetheart Jean Daniel.
Sig,ma Phi Epsilon The annual Christmas Party was held at the Mills Home orphanage.
Sigma Pi Gor-don Mercer- has pinned Myra Carpenter of Albemarle. Buddy Smith has pinned Sarah Jane Firebaugh of William and Mary
College. 1
After 25 yea,rs in the United ~tates He was ,a Fulbright scholar in Axmy, Master Sergeant Damel ~- Aus-tria during 1952 and 1953 and Mooney says that he thinks hell .was a .Guggenhein fellow in Sweden "make the Army a career." in 1955-56.
Mooney, Wake Forest ROTC ad- He tutor-ed for three years at ministrative s erg e•a n t, reenlisted Harvard University .and w:as :ari Wednesday in t:he Axmy for thxee assistant to an associate professoryears. He was :sworn in by Col. of German :at the University of John F. Reed, professor of mili- Buffalo. He is· the author of the tary and tactics. book Figure of t:he Musician in
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Mooney has been an ·assistant in German Literature and also of
~•!':; •. /.:K;;r,!!<k~n''tt:::''~~'"•":,:'~&"'t~f.':<::~''~'r::EKi.!:;';' ~~~~fYr~:~~!~~~;a,~ti~t YV:!~ ~~~~:~~;: P~:~s~~~!;'sae:a~~ ~::;::;::;::;::;::;~::::;::::;::;::;~::;~::;::;::;~::;::;::;::;~~ Date Changed He is· ori the rolls of the Detached ic languages and uterature at Duke
Enlisted Men's List, U. S. Anny. Univer-sity.
Corner of 4th, and Ch,erry Sts. ·
. At W:ake ·F'<Jrest he assists in the --------------~appa ~u Epsilo~, honorary keeping of records and other gen- :-------------..... ...,---:.
ma~ematlcs fraterruty, ~s ch<J.ng- el'\al administrative duties. REYNOLDA GRILL ~d 1ts regular Monday mght mee~- Mooney bas been in t:he armed Home of Pizza Pie mg date to Wednesday for tins :sexvice for 25 years. Specializing in ,
'El Ca~n Rey RESTAURANT
week. . an Artillery Captain with the U. S. e ItaUan Spaghetti THE REYNOLDS BUILDING The date w~ chan-ged m ox~er Army Reserve on active duty. He e Charcoal Steaks
4th & Main Sts.. Winston-Salem, N. C. that the ~atermty could meet WI~ sexved as caJ)tain Wltil 1953. Since 853 Reynolda Rd. Alpha Epsilon Delta, honorary medi- the Korean conflict he has had ms '---...;;;~;;,;::.;;;~;;..;;;.;.;;;;... __ ~
Your Place 'For: cal fraternity. The group will meet present xank of master- ser-geant .. --------------
1 PARTIES - DINNERS - DANCES -BANQUETS at the west .ent~ce of Reynold:a He has been at Wake Forest since ~------------""\'1 ~~~;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;::::::::~::::::::~~::::::::::::~~~~~~~
1 Hall wher-e 1t Will leave togeth':r 1956. FLATTOP SPECIALIST
;: f~r Bowman Gray School of Med1- Among decor-ations and awards cme. . . Mooney has received .are campaign
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Bowman Gray doctors will ~tve ribbons for service in Europe in a pxo~am on rthe mathematical World War li -and in Korea. He :re_an-aly!SlS of ·blood flow. ceived the Br-onze Star medal in II !1&&1< ii!i!II!i!liiJJl!!!!W!IIH ; I Europe 4J.-1944.
Second Class ..
ACP Iud:ges Howler Bobby Todd
Gives-a haircut "Designed with only you in mind.'• ,
, at . W. 4-TH ST. BARBER SHOP
Patterson's Stratford Pharniacy
YOUR PRESCRIPTION SPECI,ALISTS
FOR THE BEST II CiiSMEnCs WE FEATURE
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FREE DELIVERY SEilVICE PHONE P A 3-4368 111 STRATFORD RD. S. W.
•
The Howler, W:ake Forest College sion of academic content. Yz Block West of Sears
~~~re~a~~~~~~fub~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~ "second class." The Associated Col- judging. In the .section on .athletics, legiate Press judged the book for for example, the comment on cropthe r-ating. ping of pictures was "a beautiful
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Off East Polo Rd. Turn at Wake Forest College Entrance 134 IDLE WOOD DR. P A 27801
WHO WILL BE , •
THE NORMAN STOCKTON ,, •
FOR FEBRUARY
, •
PARTY BOY , • LOOK FOR HIM IN NEXT
MONTHS ISSUE OF THE OLD GOLD & BLACK
The 1'13ting is fox last yeax'IS an- job.'' The Howler was given :a ratnual. It is the same nting the ing of "superior" :in this departyearbook received the year before ment. last. Overall score for the yearbook
Winfry Whicker- was· last year's was 4065 points. The' illnnual was editor. . entered in competition with schools
Judges' criticism of the yearbook in the 4000 to 2001 students enr-ollincluded such comments as the ment class. following: . -------------
Technical quality is ".spotty." Illustrative content received a
IJating of "good." Writeups of facu1ty -and adminis
trativ... offidals received a rating of "weak.''
Photography Wlas criticized in a· number of places for being "grainy."
Judges said that "almost· all social activity shots oare of unusually poor quality."
Most of the yearbook received "good" and "excellent" r-atings. Its fin.al rating, however, was pulled down by failure to :include such things as "academic content." The judge says that the most recent evolutionacy content development in the modern yearbook is the inclu-
•t.aaeK Warren Gives-a haircut. "Designed
with only you in mind." at
W. 4TH ST. BARBER SHOP Y2 Block West of Sears
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Shop Daily 9:30-5:30 e Monda.ys, ·Fridays Till 9:00
I .
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*SE 8:0 8:3· 9;()(
9:3• 10:01
OTE 1:~
1!31 2:0~
2:3~
3:0( 3:3( 4:0( '
*Onl
adn
35th
i!~ Tbeta
of Lam celebrat
Give wit
w: 4-~ Y2
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P,A: ~81i
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R!EGISTRATION SCHEDU1E
SPRING 1960 I -
' Monday, February 1 ' Tuesday, February 2
*SENIORS 8:00 H-I
8:00 H~K 8:30 J-.Km
8:30 L-P 9:00 .Kn-L
9:00 R-Z 9:3_0 MeA.-Ma
9:30 A-c 10:00 Mb---My
10:01) D--....G 1{):80 N-o
OTHER STUDENTS 1:00 A~ . 1:00 J?I-Q 1:3o Ba-Bl 1:30 R-SCa
2:00 Bm-By 2:00 Scb-Sm
2:30 c--po·. 2:30 sn.......se 8:00 ep.-...D 3:0(} T-W~ 3:30 E-Ft 3:30 :Wb-Wn 4:00 Fu-G 4:00 Wo-Z ' . '
*Only candidates for degrees in June, August"'&lld January will be admitted. Doorkeeper will hold approved list·
35th Anniveraary
J!rqterpity Celebiates Tbeta Tau, Wake Forest chapter
of Lambda Obi Alpha frater.riity, celebrated ills 35th anniversat"Y Dec.
16 with a dinner, a serenade at the Baptist Home for the Ageing, and a parbyl in the fraternity bouse.,
Dr. Lee F .. Tuttle, .grand high -------------:. gamma of the national Lam'bda' em
FLATTOP SPECIALIS~ F.ratern~ty Board, was guest :speak
·Henry Penum~n Gives-a haircut "Designed
with only you in mind." • at w: 4TH ST/BARBER SHOP
Yz Block West of Sears
er at the banquet held in the College cafeteria. He spoke to the brothers and pledges . on scholarship and !hazing.
Tllttle is also district · superintendent of the .Methodist Church in the Winston-Salem ·area. ·
After the dinner,. the fraternity serenaded the Baptist Home for the Ageing in Winston-Salem. The chapter presented residenbs of the home a floral. arrangement. .
Later in the evening, ;pledges treated brothers to a party. Pledges gave a skit depicting then- intei-I>retation of characteristics of certain
~----------------------.J brotiners.
-PHOTO BY GRIGG
YOU GOT WHAT YOU WANTED?-Coed .Jackie Mitchell's little charge •at the Chr;istmas· party seems to app;'-"Ove fully of her new 40-piece tea set. All the girls were given sets just like it. ·
Christmas Party Brings Letters Of Appreciation
Campus Movie The next student union movie
will be "Home of the Brave." Also chapter 12 of the Spider's Web will be shown.
1DDDL\ MOUSi
The film wili begin at 8 p. m. Harru Southerland Students have received a letter of bullet-'Shooting toy tank and the Friday .and Saturday in Room 14
• • appreciation for. the annual Ohrist- girls got a "4Q-piece tea .set. Coed of the Science Building. Clothes Made · To Measure mas partyt for children. spon:sors also gave gifts.
AJ,TERATIONS . Letters were from Mrs. Elizabeth After the gifts and after the --'--------------~ p A 22013 Plunkett, director of Red Shield children had set up their tea sets APPOINTMENT SPECIALIST
~---------....---..: Girls' Club ·and David Rickard, -all over the floor ·anti. fired their ~o-....,......--...:....-----------=========== director of Red Shield Boys' Club. tanks at each other- a cartoon
"We feel that the party was the movie was shown. best that ha·s ever been held for our Football pLayers tossed up footchildren," said Rickard. He con- balls to the boy's in the bleachers, tinned, "It was evident :to me that and the coed cheerleaders gave more students were present this dolls to the girls. 1
year than any time previously and As the children left, bags of I am sure our Club members were fruit and candy, prepared by SOPH grateful for this." _ and Strings, were given . .at the door. W. N. Tedder
Mrs. Plunkett reported that "one The childr.en climbed on to the ohild'·s mother .came to · me and I buses, balancing their presents and Gives-a haircut '.'Designed -asked that I sign up her child for grinning a little s 1 e e pil y. They with only you in mind."' the party because it would be all watched through the_bus windows as W. 4TH ST. ;!RBER SHOP
/
OLD GOIJ) AND BLACK ·Monday, .Jan. 11, 1960 . PAGE THREE
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All Merchandise Completely Guaranteed the Christmas that her daughter Santa threw !his arms .around two
would have." c~~e~ds~a~n:d~m~ar~c~h;ed~h~o:"h:o:·:in~g~t.:o·~==Yz=B=lo:c:k:::W:e:s:t:o:f::S:ea:r:s:::::!~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two-hundred boys and girls at- ward the soda shop. ==========-,-----tended l!he party, held Dec. 16 in the gymnasium. The party was supported bY' $238.49 from the .student body, $250 _from the Interf~aternity CAMEL ~;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:~~~~~~~;,;;;~~~~~~~~~~~ Council .and $100 from the Monogram Club.
'
Agent . For
John· Roberts Wake Forest Rings
.WithNewWaitChapel·c · 1 Prices from $26 to $34 ompare.
Byerly And Steele Credit jewelers
Arrive In Buses The boys and girls :arrived af the
party in buses .and filed into the gym where Jane Greer, George Williamson .and Bill Shepherd, chairmen of. the party, .and a number of coedS met them.
'11he children held their numbered cards ·UP in front of them. They surrendered their shoes and went padding off t'o the main fYm, iholding firmly to the . ,}],and of their eoed sponsor.
Clowns representing the 10 soeioal frateniities · and Alpha Phi Omega capered through the crowd.
When the child~en's -coats were off, after most of them :bad been to the ladies' or ·gentlemen's rooms at least once,. and when -all of .them were ·somewhat s e t t 1 e d on the bleachers, Carroll 'Stegall lead the group in singing.
PA 3-1939 P A 2-3211 The freshman 'basketball players 418 w. 4th st. Thruway Shopping Center gave a shooting :and scrimmaging
~~:::~::::::~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~:::~~~ eJcllihition; Norman Snead and Pete r Manning demonstrated some foot-ball passes.
K and w (AFETER~IA
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422 N. CHERRY .ST.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
S~rving !Jreakfast, Luncheon. And Dinner
• ' ' ' J
Santa Claus CDan Motll'Y') gave out the presents. B'oys received a
BSU. Discussion 'rhe Baptist Student Union Liter
ary Discussion Group will discuss "Notes From th.e· Underground" by Fyodor Dostoyefsky at 7:30 p. m. Friday. Dr. Edwin G. Wilson and Dr. Dan 0. Via will lead the discussion, whiCh will be held at 2132 Faculty Drive.
For Nice Things To Wear And Relaxed Suburban Shopping
Visit
Thruway Shopping Center ·
Open Eve,ry Night Till 9 .Monday Through Friday
Have a real cigarette-have a
®lb ~nlb an~ ~lark * * Wake Forest College * •
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., ~ONDAY, JANUARY 11, 1960
Murray Greason--A Quiet Man Many have commented on the death
of Murray Greason. We regret that our own comments necessarily come so late; we can say nothing that has not already been said.
As a player, as a coach, as an official of the College, Mr. Greason served
Wake Forest with an unselfish concern. He was a quiet man with a great talent.
The tragic impact of his death was felt in athletic circles everywhere. but nowhere more deeply than at the college to which he dedicated his life.
Death Of A Legislature Well, we learn that our buildings
once more have brought us attention. Twentieth-Century Fox has decided to film a •movie here. It may be welcome attention. And it· isn't costing the Col-· lege 3:nything. Monetarily, that is.
Whether it will cost us a great deal of peace of mind remains to be seen. For the first week it will' be excitingthe presence of important people,- the • opportunity to see a movie.filmed, the general activity. People from town will come out to have a look, students will eagerly anticipate the release of the movie, and if a Wake Forest crowd happens to see it together, there may be several e x c I am a t i o n s such as "Look! That's me!
After the second or third week, however, students may get tired· of having to walk ~ r o u n d roped-off areas. They may get tir~d of tripping over wires. They may get tired of all the activity.
Our bet is that the whole College
after four weeks of such activity will be mighty glad to see things return to their normal pace.
Gifts To College Within a month's time Wake Forest
College has been given two funds for scholarships and for a visiting professor program. The one is expected to total eventually $50,000, the other, $86,000. It seems, although we have made no thorough investig~tion, that the College has received an increasing number of gifts each year. It was only four years ago that'the College's largest scholarship fund, the Hankins Scholarships, was set up. Since then Bowman-Gray School of Medicine has been given money for a number of generous scholarships.
What more can be said about such gifts other than a word of gratitude, hoping that Wake Forest College will provide living reasons for the continuance of such generosity.
Successful Screen Test October 29 the Legislature passed a
good rule, designed to curtail absences and to instill a greater sense of responsibility in those holding student government positions.
Thursday night when the Legislature had the opportunity to back up what it had said, it balked.
Its action disappointed a number of persons, some of them Legislators themselves, who had seen in the original ruling the spark of a serious, .respectable body of student leaders. f 'The pathos lies in the fact that a ·small minority, those who voted to retain Jim Turner as treasurer of the student body, have caused the entire Legislature· to be a traitor to itself. The vote to uphold the Legislature's word was 13 to 5, one of the five votes being Turner's.
The majority wanted to place the Legislature first. Five persons wanted to place it second. And they did;
Does anyone doubt that they placed it second?
Let us examine the facts (although we may find ourselves somewhat alone in this venture) . .
The law states unequivocab}y that only those excuses accepted · by the College shall be accepted by the Legislature. There is no cause where a student has been excused from ev~ry single . class of the year because of work.
Arguments about the importance of Turner's work, his sincerity and every other possible unrelated bit of debate were unashamedly thrown into the
JOHN ALFORD Editor
smarting air. The originators of the arguments simply refused to recognize 'that the only grounds for debate rested on the phrase "only those excuses accepted by the College."
If they really believed the Legislature was a serious business, they would have carried out their plans at least by parliamentary means. If they say they do believe Legislature is a serious business, then they can plead only ignorance for their action. For no serious, parliamentary-wise legislator ever voted in direct contradiction to the law. The intelligent Legislator, when he sees that the law contradicts his own feelings submits as js his duty -or he gets that law changed.
Someone (the correct Parliamentarian) suggested that the law be changed in order that the proceedings assume some semblance of legality. :r'his was ignored, however. If the Legislature is to balk, they evidently · figured, it might as well have a field day. Turner, as we have said before, is a conscientious worker. Whether the Legislatur~ should or should not retain him, we cannot objectively say. But if the Legislature was to retain him, we wish it could have been done in a somewhat more respectable way. There is a. right way and a wrong way -smne chose the wrong way.
There are demogogues. It is not the end that makes a demogogue; it is the means. Perhaps those who chose the unparliamentary way feel their end is right. Perhaps it is. But we can't forget the means.
BRENT FILSON Business Manager
FoWlded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black is published each Monday during the school year except during examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.
RAY ROLLINS Ass'ociate Editor
FRANCIS FENDERSON Circulation Manager
JOEL STEGALL Managing Editor ...
ZENO MARTIN Sports Editor
FRANK LORD Asst. Circulation Manager
EDITORIAL ·sTAFF: Barr Ashcraft, Jim Batterson, Sylvia Burroughs, Sherry Dailey, Sid Eagles, Diane Finlayson, Sue Fulkerson, Kelley Griffith, David Hadley, Charles Johnson,·
· Glenn Hamm, Carolyn McBee, Doc Maddrey, Sarah Murphy, Dwight Pickard, Ge<~rge Pruden, Kenneth Quarterman, Dave Rawley, Carolyn Rowe, Don Schoonmaker, Lynne Smathers, Fred Wa:rdlaw, George Williamson, David Westerfield, Pat Woodward.
BUSINESS STAFF: Janet Bullock, Brent McRae, Jim Spillman.
Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by National. Advertising Service, inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Second-Class mail privileges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C.
Offices In Reynolda Hall 225-227 'Telephone PArk 5-9711 P •• 0. Box 7567
Extension 215 Reynolda Branch Winston-Salem, N. C.
·Wake Forest, German University .. .
J o~es -_Compares Coll~ge Systems By DAN JONES
Third in a Series of Letters My_ course of study here at the
Free University of Berlin is classified as Germanistik, German literature, and is contained in' the Philosophishcer Facultaet along with 'histo!"y, philosophy, religion,. languages, music and theater. In other · words the J?lhilosophischer
· Facultaet is very much similar to a liberal arts college.
My weekly schedule consi~ts of 12 hours of lectures, nine hours of language instructi(m and two hoursof choir ;practice. These are spread out from 9 a. in. until 9 p.m. Monday through Friday. My language instruction consists of reading, writing, conversing and ·making speeches. My · lectuJ;es include Goeth~. Russian history, German history, religion ·and tlb.eater.
Various departments of specializ-ed study are in institutes scattered throughout this section of Dei-.· lin, Dahlem. For example, niy. Russian history class is in the East European Institute which is about four blocks ·.from the center of the university. Each institute has its own library for .parallel reading. Some of the professors recommend · reading but most of the time we must do our own sel-ecting.
Wake Forest Different ':Dhe classes you have a· Wake
Forest with: classroom discussion and lecture are actually unknown here. We go to lectures to hear lectures and if we wish to di!j,cuss .or analyze, ·we must attend seminal"S. There are also · advanced seminars for which one must pass' admission tests. The seminars are usually small but my lectures usually contain from 500 to 2,000 stu-
Back
dents, since the Germanistik student faculty ratio is 600 to• 1. However, this is not typical of the. university as a whole.
The freedom of the' German university allows the students to go · from one university ·to anotlhoer at will. The stndents are not classified by years but rather <by semesters of university study. The key to the smooth operation of the tr~errin:g is the study book which contains the cour11es and sig-natures of the profesbrs. Several students I have met here have chosen tfu.e Free University as their third or fourth university.
Main Goal The students have one main goal
and that is the state examination usually afte·r eight semesters of study. 'l'here are no· required courses which clutter up (}ne's time and no one tells tihe· students what· to study. The whole decision is left entirely to the student. He studies wih only_ the state examination in mind and is not bogged down with sei:nester exam-cramming. However, · some of my friends are now ~ttending review classes in preparation for their state examinations.
This may seem ·a cold fonnal way to· study-in huge lectures and changing uiiiversities, and always working :for that state examinati(}n, but really there are, many · otl;l.er functions which make -this universit~' interesting and exciting. Several weeks ago I found myself march· ing through the streets of Berlin with a group of 200 students carrying flaming torches. The Fackelzug, or torch proeessi(}n, was not a football rally, and w.e were not burning anyone in effigy.
and Forth By "Doc" Maddrey
BUT I HAVE COMMENTED at length in recent weeks on the more theoretical aspects of campus life. Let me radically change the pace and turn to a more immediate topic. I dar.e say this subject may be at this moment very distasteful and uncomfortable to you. Of course the reference is to' the gastrono~c distress which daily ·disturbs us all in the cafeteria.
The idea of writing this frail appeal was fostered by indigestion and nourished by the many ·disappointments suffered at the hands of 'the cafete1'ia.
Being an optimist and more ready t(} praise than to criticize, the author h{lS waited in the, fond but futile hope of improvement. Now after exhausting both ·hope and Alka-Seltzer, I begin my plea for better service. -
not, for .a novel change, cater to the students? , THE SERVICE as a rule is very satisfactocy. Those not in command seem almost apologetic for what they have to do. But .try to complain. It has been remm-ked that it would be easier to attack the College by force than to meekly mention changes for the cafeteria. With this in mind we continue. · Recently I have noticed a decline
in the number of students in the dining ·halJ. I do not mean the number of people present, for the help :alone would take up a sizable area. (The hiring <>f so many must be Wake Forest's contribution to the unemployment problem.) The decline is due both to enterprising restaurants ·and to boarding houses which are so successfully compet" ing with the cafeteria.
What -could it have been. It was the German way of expressing respect and h(}nor for a professor in the .pihilosophy department'who had turned down a.n oppor.tunity to be the head of-the ·philGsophy department at Freiburg and had decided
-to remain with }:lis one love,· the Free University of Berlin.
For this gesture of loyalty the students were · thankful ·and they expressed tih.oeir thanks. We marched into the pr()fess-or's rose garden and there saiJ.g songs and listened to him .speak. What a thrill it was to see ·how highly these students respect the teaching profession.
Chapel . If y(}u are tired of chapel, then
you should be over here! Since the student body is six times the size of the auditorium ·.there are certain difficulties in arranging programs. One must receive -~m invitation in order :to be allowed to attend. Earlier in the semester the new rector, yearly-elected uni'V'ersity head, was' installed in a :formal ~nd lengthy ceremony. The o:rcbestra played and the faculty marched d(}wn the long, gran9, stairway ·of'.the Henry Ford building into the auditorium:' in their brilliantly colored g<lwns. Speech after speeeh was made for . this occasion, which · marked the beginning of a new decade of free study· and ·freedom of thought in Berlin~academ.ic a;nd political crossroads.
One of the first duti-es of the new rector was to shake hands with every new student, iransfer stu- . dent and foreign student and to
, present us with a formal certificate o\f registration. .Another dhapel program was Called and one by one about 2,000 of us beeame official s-tudents of the ·Free University and pledged ourselves to "Veritas Justitia Liberatas," the school ni.ctto.
lim Turner· Keeps Job
(Contin9ed from page l) Barely a quorum was present. If
only one person voted in the minority, a two-thirds majority was impossible. ·In the voting on Turner, four legislatorn present wanted to keep_him, They·were Bullard, Jerry Galehouse, Anna Ruth Current, and Harry Gamble. The fifth vote-was · oast ·by Turner, who was absent.
The bylaw which applied to Turner's absences stated that a Legis-· lator sha:U be charged: wi~ inexcusable neglect of duty if 'he misses three meetings for reasons · other than those excused by the Oollege.
Movie To Be Filmed Here
(Continued from page 1) made a fortune but who didn't attend college. The story begins with Crosby entering college· ·as a 50-year-old freshman. -
McCarthy said a large ·portion of the movie will be shot at Wake
M~gnolia Leaves
, By GEORGE PRPDEN
At least some of the Christmas • spirit lingered until students retUrn-ed to the campus last Sunday nig!pt. A oar with a PiKA sticker was park-ed in front <>f th~ KA hoUJse. _I -- •
A sopbomore (you know the type) .received a very nice w a t c h for Christmas. As he was riding back
·to tne c•ampus someone ra s ked him the time.
"Ex;actly sev~n o'clock," he re-plied. '
About 15 minutes later the same perso
' again woo.ted to know the time.·· The ailJSwer this time was a' little puzzling. '
"Three minutes until seven." He hadn't ~earned to-<tell time yet. '
Numerooo. coeds. received diamonds during the iholidays .. (See Deacs 'Who Are Greeks for confirmation.) In all the rlliSlr of num- . hers, one little recipient was being neglected in· the chorus of "Ohh:hhih"s and ".All:hbhh"s. When some of the .tumult bad died down she me'ntioned cas-ually, "My,. it's right stuffy in here. I think I'll take off my ring.'' ·
There seems t~ have been •a lack of stories ·about. absent minded professors · in this C~>lumn, mainly because there were none to print. However, last 'Ilhursday, one of. w;ake F()l'est's.finest w:as seen walking out of the cafeteria 'with his tray of dirty dishes. Just before he· started up the stairs, ·he srheep. ishly returned .the tray-to 1lhe sub- . veyer window, looking arouna to see how many pet>ple s'aw him. Needless to ts.ay, a .few did.
Tbe following poem· was- sent to the Old Gold ·and Black office ·by an alumna who was rather elated over the results of the Dixie Classics. The -poem was ·written, she writes, by ·a Carolina alwn:nw.
"How meek the .squeak of Toar Heel voices
Today so weak and sad Now t'hat the doughty Deacs have
shown .us · That we can be had.
Ohorus: For we are Tar. Heels; sore . Tar Heels who lhave bled And on Wednesday we should
have stood :in bed. So it's Oh, Oh, Oarolina-lina, Oh-oh, Carolina-lina .Oh-oh, Carolina Oh-oh-ob.
-··
Forest and that any scenes done later in HollY'Yood would be exact reproductions of the Wake Forest campus. ·
He said Wake F.orest was seleebed ",because of the beauty of its ea:mpus and -because weather conditions should •be better in the South during Febru8.ry.~·
FffiST 'LET US LOOK at where we "dine" (to ·use a phrase very .loosely). We have a large dining !hall, and it is not ill-eqUipped. However a visitor is struck by the drabness of the whole situation.
WhY are we not endowed with a better lighting system? Wby do we fail to find a place to stand in line without having the distinct feeling of being a participant in someone else's lunch? It is particularly discouraging to me to :have to pass the garbage bins so thoughtfully placed near both the line and the tables. The :remains of another's limch is not C(}nducive to a hea-lthy appetite.
Knowing little of business and not hi n g of profitable restaumnt qtanagement,
1 I can only wonder
why the great disparity between commercial service and success and tlte con.stroit clam(}r for hi .g b: e r prices heard here; It does seem thlat with a :semi-captive audiencethe cafeteria would have the distinct adv.antage.
SPEAKING .FRANI{L Y
These of course are minor factors but, coupled with the dirty tables and empty salt shakers, one feels depressed before the actual ordeal begins.
AFTER THE GENERAL view of :the situation comes the time for selection:....:..Often a major battle of wits. It is rather humorus to see an wert student gazing into the soup cauldron to attempt a determination of what might be within.
The seup titles are'deceptive. Reflect a moment and think of the range of mixtures· and oonglomel"ations which pass under the panoramic -title "vegetable.'' ·
But this iack of imagination in soup titles is more than coWlter-
. balanced by the ingenuity shown in those chosen for the main dishes. .Many a -perplexed individual ihas read the ominous· black chart on the wall and has still been compelled to ask the waitress which delicacy correspo:iuis · to the seductive title.
WOULD 'IT NOT BE fairer to the contestant-.and this is a true battle for survival- to mark, the product accordingly. A :travel bureau would find competition 1¥ the -ability to glorif.y a rather pl:adn object. .
But let us move on for space is ·limited and there is much left to mention. In aU fairneess · it must be admitted that many selections are very palatable. It does seem odd, and not without some pre-
. design, that usually a good meal isto be had on such (}CCasions as visitors might be' on the campus. · Were 'every day Sunday or the meeting of this or that venerable group our lot would be improved. Outsiders, with their limited contact,· can realize little of the deceptiveness employed in selling them. Why
WHY IS THE FOOD service not competitive? Few of t'he students are connoisseurs and those that are would not eat in any cafeteria ·under any circumstances. This problem should be a concern to us all.
Few complain of the prices as such. They seem only out of line when one examines the food re·ceived. An ex;ample of what I mean is to be found in the "samples" passed out for vegetables or the hint of coffee flavor which one may find in tohe dark-ened cup.
The more s<~phisticated member of the food services i:s the Magnoli-a Room. Here the same food for a niekel more is brought to the table. The difference is that the supervisors upstairs seem to w.ant to please the customers. Besides we must make a few allowances-who wants a trained waitress anyway.
BUT B:A.CK TO the main topic. Where is the blame to be placed ? The ·answer to this is ·not simple. All along the line the individuals seem to have excuses f(}r every shortcoming and it is very difficult to tell wh(} is in error. Someone definitely is and if eDfrUgh: students ask enough questi(}ns,.1 maybe we all will come to apprecciate more· fully: the problems of food management. Along with better food, we all invite enlightenment.
I ihave tried-with a hint-"()( what some would caJ.I exaggeration-to point out a few facets of this program about which most of t:he complaints are aimed. Many of these seemingly coul!i be improved without great hardship or expense. We definitely invite .these changes.
An attractive cafet¢a with good and adequate food ' would be a .S(}urce of pride to w;ake Forest rather than living portender of gastric distress we now know.
I close wif:h this thought. ·The philosophical materialists have said "we are what we eat." Considering_. the possibility of the validity of
· such a statement, the future is dire . hi deed.
I •
By George Williamson Back in the· year w-hen the Bap-·
ti:sts of the state made 'their g:rea:t ·sortee on sin and deprived the ' Devil of his most effective weapon; back when dancing and an innumerable host of demons were driven from our midst; back when PioUs· was Pope, castro was nobody and J. C. Oanipe was president of the Baptist. State Convention; that ~e ecclesiast made a declaration that, in his opinion, relegated our College · to the position of an instrwnen~ ".for the propagation <>f our faith."
Fortunately the administration :has, for the most part, operated on the assumption that Wake Forest is. an institution for the education of our people, not the propagation of our faith. But the influence · of the kind of thinking or lack ofthinking represented by s u c h a statement is fe1t here nevertheless, and is a constant source of embaras:sment to all w!bo have any pride in their school, and a thieat to the true purposes of education.
There is a great deal to say f<>r the opinion that a religious ·group has no right to operate a co]Jege or university. To ·be sure, any grolip;' be it political or economical or fue Baptist· State ·Convention is wasting its :f:Wlds, ·insulting its people, and retarding its cause when it presumes t(} operate .an educational institution for. any purpose ~ther than education.
Shapeless Forms? What do they take us for, shape
less forms that need to be molded; empty containers·, yearning for the "truth" that only they can give? Granted, we often, .give this impression, 'but there is ,yet something of the student here. We at least have the right to search out the truth for ourselves, as they :presumably did for themselves. Wake Forest is n(}t a church: It - is not a sacred temple of worship. .And yet because seven per cent of :its support comes from "titihes and offeiings," its students are forced. to treat it as such. -
We ·are .forbidden to desecrate its hallowed broWld with those t'hings our benefactors consider eviL We are offered the Qpportunity· to worship in its holy atmosphere, but denied the alternative to refrain from worship. We moe educated in ·the Christian· influence in hopei; that some of it will rub off on us, whether !We want . it or not.
Christian College? · So, having fulfilled all.of these
requirements,:Wake Forest is called a · Christian college. But is :this really ·a Christian college ? I wonder. I w(}nder if it is Christian to compel. I wonder if it is the method Df Christ to drill a disinterested mass with religion, to seek' large number.s of nominal Baptists, to ignore the deeper needs of an :Interested few, to discou:rage at a handful of devout Christians. Wasn't it· He who sorrowed when anyone turned away, but never, called him b.il.ck? Wasn't it He who :preached
•'his -message to only those who oared to 'hear, twelve, I ·believe, and let the world seek God as it chose? · Perhaps I am miStaken, but · I cannot be convinced that people have ch-anged so in these( 20 centuries that they ai"e incompetent to decide for th~mselves what is rig!ht and wrong, or to decide when or if or how •to worship. And if the claim of a Christian college rests on required religion courses, compulsory clmpel, and the absense of dancing, it seems a shallow claim. 'indeea.
The shame of it all is that we have here the potential of a fu~e unlimited. And yet we .allow re- · ligious bigotry to deprive us <>f the vastness of religious thought, and the freedom of true education. We , aHow our future to floWlder in the narrow opinions· of a few, our name to be COUpled with retarded I religion, and our inconsistencies to be sanctified with the name of God; and we .are contented. Only answer me this-Why?
By For the
Wake ·•· can be
almost
\
\
,,
N
./
CriticL-aU.ds Theater,~ 'Best s·ee:O This Year' . . .
. ing a really professional job of By PAT WOODARD.· For the first time :this' year a
Wake Forest Theater production ,,- can be rerommel)..d~ to everyone
almost without reservation. The
. presenting a play, no matter:. 1 what some prev:ious · plays have ; indicated.
arena theater boasts a· new rug, 711.. • R • / ·comfortable new chairs, and a· _1r_.1.USIC. ec1ta produc~i-on, "Ob Mist~ Mine" 'by Terence Rattigan, that is tlhe B Sl _J t best seen at the thea-ter this year. . iV__ U, uen 8 Almost without exception .the ·act~ .J' ing is excellen-t. The set is one of. T.s lTJ:_ edn!es;-~. ay· the best ever. seen at Wake .1.~ W t U~ Forest. Attention to detail and' excellent pacing. makes "Oh Mistress Mine" a very professional show. · -Judy Palmer'::; portrayal of Oli-
. via Brown ranks aloqg side the hest job ~one by an actress this . year. ,She ·bas a heautifql .mas- · te:i:y_-.of her clharacier; her .voice, movement, anP, interpretat1on· of lines is almost -above even the
The - second in a series of monthly recitals- •by_ students in -the music department will be g.iven at 8 p. m. WedrieSday in Wait
·Chapel. · ·
·. most servere criticism. Roger Burr, an actoT who
-seems incapable o~ (j.oing a: bad , job, did his best job of acting__
seen yet· m· the ·part-Of Sir John Fletcher. Burr's understanding of how drawi~~oom . comedy should be played was a delight · to watch. His perfornuinoo. ranks; well alongside the. •best job done by an actor this year.· · 1
-Sam Allen as .Micb¥1. Brown tumed in a "professionaH' P-erforniaDce; however, the interpre;tation of Brown, professional as it was, seemed Melly_ out of place :in · high comedy. It was like · watching a vaudeville comedian ;playing Hamlet.
The ;play's supporting actors are to be commended .. Nancy Mitchell as Polton, the cockney . parlor maid, ga'Ve a performance that was a. delight to watch. The par.t of Miss Dell, the secretary, was well :handled by Ann Hultin. Ellen Boone as Diana Fletcher gave- a comme:n_dably smooth per
. formanee. James Kennedy as Charles Wentworth was indeed.
\amusing. · "Oh Mistress Mine" is a ~efreshingly light, well-done comedy tib.at proves that the Wake Forest Theater is capable of -do-:.
The program features trombone, vocal and -organ solos, be-. sides· a trumpet trio. ~bert •Boatwright will _open
the recital with a trombone sol-o, Ar.ioso by Back. '
.Following Boatwright, Edith .Shepherd will play on _the o:rgan _Toccata in C Major by Bach and Wi-e Soli leh Dich Em.pfangen by Pepping. · ·
'· Ja~ .Thompson, soprano,· will sing 0 Sleep, Why Dost Thou Leave Me by Handel; No, No, No, I .Don't Wish to. Marry, a
-Spanish Folk .Song_ and A Wood.' land Journey by Franz.
Rayxoond Ebert, .organist, will play ~antasia and Fugue in G · Minor by Bach.
The next group will be sung i?Y .tenor Kenneth Hauser. '--Songs Hauser will sing were 0 Delorio Dolc-e Ardor.by Gluck, I Attempt From Love's Sickn-esfi! -to Fly by Purcell and A Brown 'Bird Singing by Wood.
Dottie BiSsop, will play Bach's Fugue in G Minor ("Little'') 'and Sowerby's Carillon.
L-inda ·Crawf-ord, soprano, will . sing Selve Aoniche iby Caldara; Jesus, Jesus, Rest Your Head, arran~ by Miles; and These Are
. 'Ilhey by Gaul. · · Dottie Privette will play on the organ Bach's Prelu~ and! Fugue in E flat Major and a trwnpet trio -compqsed of Jerry Essie, Denny Fordham and John Sur-
TASSELS' new members pose just before being initiated: They are Ann Whicker., Janie Dale Poole, Miss Elizabeth Wright and Llew Baucom.
ODK Plans Incomplete
Tassels Initiates 4 New Members
OLD GOLD AND BLACK Mond;lY, Jan. 11, 1960 PAGE FIVB
r
835_ REYNOLD A ROAD
NOW S~RVING SANDWICHES AND PIZZA FROM
OUR OWN BAR!
TOWN STEAK HOUSE
2 Locations .
' 107 LOCKLAND AVE.
300 S~ STRATFORD RD.
Winston-Salem, N~ C.
CE-NTER 427 N. LIBERTY
DOUBLE FEATURE
SUN., MON., TUES. - JAN. 10, 11, 12
~-- FLA 'ITOP SPECIALIST~ gener will p~ay Bugler's, Holiday · Tassels, campus hon-orary so-by Anderson. - ciety for vomen; initiated three
at a ceremony at Student Chapel Before Christmas.
So far ODK bas made no anouncement of plans for initiation.
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se-nior coeds and a staff member Thursday evening prlor to a •buffet supper at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Paul S; Robinson.
Coeds who were initiated a1·e Ann Whicker, Llew Baucom and Janie Dale Poole._ Elizabeth Wright was also initiated as an honorary. member. ·
Miss . Whicker is co-editor of The Howl-er. Miss Baucom is secretary -of 'llhe Student Legislature and Miss Pool is active in religi-. ous affai:rs and Student Government.
Miss Wright is secretary to Lois Johnson, dean of women.
Tassels .tapped the four persons
At the same Chapel period, Omicron Delta Kappa, national honorary fraternity for men, tapped five senior men into the organization. Wayne Smith, John
I Alford, Buddy Young,'Bill Cullen
_and Willis (Doc) Maddrey were tapped.
Smith is ou-tstanding in scholar· ship and military scie-nce. Alford is editor' of Old Gold. and Black. Young is vice px:esident <:Jf the .Student Body. Cull-en is Atlantic Coast Conference Tennis Ohampion and a member of the basket•ball team. Maddrey is outstanding in scholarship and is a -member of the Student Legislature.
Schola,-ship Money Given By .Oxford'$ Mrs. Parham
A scholarship flind whic!h eventually is expected to total $50,-000 ·has. been established at the College by Mrs. Katherine J. Parham of Oxford. ,
The scholarsliip is m honor o:t Mrs. Parham's husband, Ben- -jamin Wingate Parham, Wlho died in February, 1947. A lawyer, Parham was an alumnus of Wake Forest, a . Trustee and State Legislator.
Th-e gift was announced Dec. 21 -by Harold W. Tribble, President of the College.
"The gift is ,especially significant," he said, "in 'that it further strengthens the identification of a fine family with Wake Forest College."
The first scholarship will be awarded for :the 1960-61 sclhool year. ,It will cover basic expenses for either a male student or a coed and will be awarded on the basis of ability and .need. It will -be renewed annually on the condition the student maintains certain standards.
The fund also 'provides that . any excess will be used for other
scholarships or, for prlzes for
Revenue ·work A r-epresentative of the Inter~
nal Revenue Service will meet at 4 p.m. Thursday with majors in b.usiness administration, economics and accounting to discuss careers in the Internal Revenue Service.
'llhe me-eting will be held· in Room 125 of Reynolda Hall.
Students of any class who are interested in this meeting have be-en 'asked to sign up a-t the Placement Office.
meritorious academic performance in one or more :fields within
- the liberal arts. Mrs. Parham is the sister of
.Wake Forest Dean of ·women Lois Joihnson.
Her husband gradtiated from ·Wake Forest in 1904 and taught -~~ool two years at Elizabeth -city before attending the Har-vard School of Law. After graduating from Harvard he practiced law in both Winswn-&lem and Thomasville before moving to Oxford in 1914.
Parham ~ :also a deacon in the Baptist Church. of Oxford.
Registrar's Announcement
Attention 'is directed ·to the statement on page 68 in the CUl"rent cata-log. It should ·be noted that the time for removal of a
· conditi-on expires after one year in .college. One wh{) planS .to take a re-examination d u'r in g the approaching examination period
· should apply in advance to the Registrar's Office for a R~exantination Permit.
Transcripts desired after the close of the semester should be
' requested in advance. .Supplementar-y transcripts (to complete transcripts formerly issued) ·are not issued unless •specifically requested:
Students · interested in having class ranks .reported. to Local Boards should keep in mind that the office is allowed to r<Ulk: enly th()se carrying full-time studies -at least 12 hours.
There was a young collegian named Joe, Who saw a lot of what is called dvugh. He read a few ads~ As do wise undergrads,
Now he knows where his dough will flow. Don't be in the dark when it is tiine to spend your "dough." Read the ads iJy' the Old Gold & Black for the latest clothing styles, the best places to eat, and th,e !'coolest" entertainment spots.
J
ODX has 'been making plans for a Leadership Con:£erence of high school students to be held here Feb. 5-6. It is expected that about 100 ·high sdhool students from this area will-be on campus for the Conference. Workshops will be held for the students on every phase of campus life. -
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KCIDL KROSSWORD ACROSS DOWN
1. Tbere's nothin.r 1. __ Cliburn to it 2. Alone, without
6. Courseinfigures AI 9. Manners min1111 8. Kind of revenue
Mrs. 4. Prof's bastion 10. It's an eartby 6. Alma and her
- plot family 11. Those long . G. Bitter
black stockings 'l. Like not being' 12. Binge, da~ it! asked to a Prom 13. Luscious 8. There's one for
Scandinavian every him import 14. Loud talker or
15. Arrival (abbr.) Oklahoman 17 •. sputnik path • 15. Slightly open 19. Political cliques 16. A Harry Golden 21. You need a real . ·Invention?
_: Kools 18. Where you 26, Walter-upper appreciate
d Kools 27. They go aroun 20 Rib~-• f brl In the movies • """ a e 28. Kind of pitcher 22. Adlai's initials
23. Outcome of a 80. Betsy, Barney, bird's nest
Harold, etc. 24. Club that should 31. Part of USSR be happy 83. Links blast-ofi 25. Sum's infinitive
spot 29. _ around. ~~EJndofnaut iostnnnentWUF 87. Long--short- 30. Late date
short foot 32. Koala have 89. EJnd of security Menthol-
for Goldilocks 84. Gala don't glva 'em right
41· Early, in 85. She came to Brooklyn Cordura
44. Greek letter 86, Gladys Is, 46. He's a confused · mostly
lion 88. Scandinavian 46. Joint where joke?
skirts hang out 40. Goddess of · 47. Kind of sack Dawn 48. Religious group 42. It's for kicl.l 49. Benedict's first 43. Proposal
name acceptance
2 3 4
YOU NEED THE
6 7 8
No.1
fARE '\'OU KCDL
ENOUGH 'TO
PAGE SIX Monday, Jan. 11, 1960 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
.-----JVFDD------------------~
650 On The f)ial MONDAY
Sign On Jan Huggins Show News G. I. Record Shop Swing Shop
10:00 Sports 10:15 Serenade In Blue 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade 12:00 Sign Off
TUESDAY 5:58 Sign On
'
LITTLE MAN. ON CAMPUS S~iley Helps In: .Re~sing History Book
Dr. David L. Smiley, assistant professor of hi:s-tory at Wake Forest College, is the co-author of a re· vised edition of a histJOry book titled "The South in American His·
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5:58 6:00 7:00 7:15 7:30 7:45 8:00
Navy Swings Concert Time
6:00 Ricky Schultz Show tory.'' '-----------------------.:...~ 7:00 News
7:15 Supper Club 7:45 Lawrence Welk. 8:00 Concert Tinie
10:00 Sports 10:15 Guest Star 10:30- Cadence Capers 11:00 Deaconlight Serenade 12:00 Sign Off
WEDNESDAY
Job Interviews For January Set By O~fice
5:58 Sign On Representatives of seven indus- 6:00 Jeff Mitchiner Show
The book was wriiten originally by Dr. William B .. Hesseltine, pro-, fessor cf American· history at the University of Wisconsin, and pub-.Ushed in 1936. ·
Smiley has writ-ten 10 new chapters dealing with Southern hlstory since 1876 ·for the revised: edition which will be published in January by Prentice-Hall, Inc. The new chapters co-nstitute about one third of the book. · ts '"""' 7:15 Oral Interpretation
tries will interview studen uus 7:30 Cafe Boheme A publisher's note Says that "per· week in the Placement Office for 8:00 Concert Time haps the most significant feature positions with their companies. The 10:00 Sports of the revised second edition is its
TOWN I DQUNTRY GULF SERVICE FOR
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interviews will be the last sched- 10:15 Army Bandstand expanded treatment ·o( the new
uled for this semester and the last 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade &>uth. Here the authors show that -========::::::~~===~~==::::::::::::::::::==~ time mos-t of these companies will 12:00 Sign Off the contemparary Sauth~alive with l have :representatives on the campus. THURSDAY its· hydroelectric· power, ~tomic in-
Industries to be represented here S:S8 Sign On stanations ~d the burgeoning pe-are Burlington Industries, Inc., 6:00 Bill Wall Show trochemical industries-is achiev-Western Electric, Inc., Deering, 7:00 News ing .a IW!W kind of equality." Milliken and Company, Goodyear 7:15 Weekly Forum The- -chapters written ·by Smiley TireandRubber Company, Genesco, 8:00 Concert Time are: "Econo,mic Development- in Burroughs Corporation and Dan 10:00 Sports On o. ther Ca.~_ pus"es... the New South," "Politics and Gov-River Mills, ·Inc. 10:15 Pat Boone , ernment in the New South, 1876-
Tuesday a Deering, M~en and 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade 1900.'' "'The Culture of a 9<>Iony," Co. representative will interview 12:00 Sign Off Duke University t solved after her election to the "Economic Nationalization of the students graduating with any de- FRIDAY A Duke University coed has post. South, 1900-1932,", "The South in gree for -positions in s.ales. 5:58 Sign On been named editor of the Duke Mi.ss_Sapp, according to the Duke Politics, 1900·1932," "Southern So-
A Goodyear Tire and Rubber 6:00 Ray Southard Show Ohronicle, student newspaper of Ohr<micle will appoint an editorial ciety and Culture; 1900-1932," "Th~ Company representative Will ;~·ter 7:00 News uk u . ·t ""---· S b d, · 11• h d " New -Deal and the New South ..... • D e mverst y. ••..wlan app wa:s oar a of er recommen aw.ons "P l'ti 1 R t f t!h South, view Wednesd-aY' .January graduatE*l 7:15 Best Of Broadway elected by a publications board. being .subject to .approval by the .. ~e1 ~uth ~ W: 0 t w;d Econ'o' with any degree. Openings are in 8:00 Concert Time Four o~er candidates applied for Board of Publications. mic In<lepende~c=~· ~nd "Culturai retail sales management. 10:00 Sports the posrt10n. Disti ti . th Contem :r·
A Genesco representative will in-~ ~~:~g Here's to Vets The position of editor became va- Duk~ University '!as !eatured in Sou~;, ves m e po ary terview Wednesday business admin· · Deaconlight Serenade cant four weeks ago, when the ad· an \article on education m the Dec.
8 .1
. ed th B A and istration ,and economics majors for 12
=00 Sign Off ministration of the University sus- 22 issue of Look magazine. · ·· rnt ~~ recetv e Ba·l :r. ._
positions in personnel .and manu- . . pended the publication for a parody A three-man team from Loo~ mas~t s H degree? ~t the ~~ D u: facturing, industrial engineering, Concert. Time ,MondaY' Will fea- on the Christmas story, branded by spent .a week at Duke University' in vers1.Yt· the Ure~eiV "ty f w·· · -~-accounting .and sales·. The ~mpany tur. e T, Chaikowsky s. Concerto No. 1,, th dm' . tr t" .. li . , 1 Oct be th . material gree a e mver.si o . J:Sconsm
'-V B t C S t d R bk e a rms awn •as sacre grous ear y o r ga enng h h t d" d der H It" offers training programs. rze s armen Ul e an eu e 5 and "obscene." and,photographs for the article. w ere e . .s u te ~ ~ me,
Thursday a Burroughs Corpora- Sonata for Organ on the 94th Psalm. The Ohronicle :received some 30 The article deals with university .an .auth?r.Ity on Ctvil War pnsons.
LBNWOOD AMMONS A. C. MOTSINGER. .JR.
---AMMON'S :- ~ .. -~ .
· ESSO ,Servicenter Welcome Wake forest
And Family
Emergency. AAA '
Students
Service·
ROA'D S'ERVICE tion representative will interview . Tuesday B~thoven's Mi-ssa.Solem- letters from students, "the majority education prospects in the next 10 ~rmtyley' J~~~~ t:he Wake Forest fac-students graduating with any de- rus. and Tcha1kowsky's Nutcracker unfavorable," concerning the pub- years. Political science teacher at m . · . , · •
1120() Reynolda Road Corner Robin Hood Uoad
TIRES - ACCESSORIES - BA TTERI1ES gree for sales positions. Swte will be heard. lication -of the article. The news- the University, Dr. Richard Leaoh, H-esseltin.e 15 _the a~t!ho! of 11 PHONE 5•2681
Friday ·a -Dan River Mills repre- Beethoven's Concerto No. 2, Cbe· paper did not print any of the let- was singled out for. extensive ques- ~0-= d~l~fgw wtth various aspects -=----------------------""!"'-----.: .sentative will talk with business rubini's Symphony in D, Debusy's ters, explaining that "the tone of tioning. 0 e lVl ar. -~~~oo~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~is~s~·~~ ~c~~~~~ -----------------------~-----------------jors about positions in management hussy's Sylvia will be played Wed- "limitations of time and space" A student at North Caroli~ State training positions. nesday. would not permit it. ' College W<SS found guilty of stealing
Job openings for January grad- Thursday Harris' Symphony No. Miss Sapp, the new editor, was from the student supply store there. · uates include positions with the Bar- 3, Saint-Saens' Concerto in A for interviewed by a special committee He had pleaded guilty to the charge
rett Division of the Allied Chemical cello, Bruch's Scottish Fantasy and of Publications Board for the posi- of stealing a book. _ Corporation, the ·Coca-Cola Com- Clementi's Sonata in G will be fea- tion. The committee includedanmn- Probation was the sentence hand-
. pany, the Winston-Salem office of tured. ber of faculty members. It was. dis- ed down by the Honor Code Board . . the New York Life Insurance Com- To be heard Friday is Sibelius' Probation .at State College includes pany and the Winston-Salem branch Symphony No. 5, Franck's Sym- sending a letter to the parents· in-of Ge_neral Motors Acceptance Cor- phony in D minor, Rozsa's Con- Dr. Goodman formfng them of the inci~nt. and por,atiOn. certo for vi0lin and orchestra and • makmg the report of the mcident
More information of ·all inter- Brahms' Double Concerto. G s • a part of ·the student's permanent views and openings is available Des try Rides Again will be heard e ts t1pe nd records. in the Placement Office. Friday on Best of Broadway.
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North Carolina Stat~ College is Dr. Harold 0. Goodman of Bow- participating in an exchange pro
man Gr,ay School of Medicine of gram that will .select several stuWake Forest College has been dents in the United· States for an awarded one of 21 five-Y'ear Senior eight-weeks tour of Ru.Ssia. Research Fellowships given by the Cost of the trip, about $1,500, United States Public Health Ser- maY. be raised by clubs on campus vice. The awards went to scientists and civic clubs in the successful in universities and schools of medi· applicant's hometown. 'cine in 13 states. The program is sponsored at
Goodman was awarded the grant State College by the YMCA. A State for work in preventive medicine College student participated in the and genetics. program last ·smnmer.
The awards are designed princi- Pfeiffer College pally for the partial support of pro- Pfeiffer College -at Misenheimer mising young scientists sponsored has been accredited by the Southern by preclinical departments in the Association of Colleges and Secon· period between the completion of dary ScJ;loO>ls. the postdoctoral research training The school has been a senior coland their eligibility for permanent lege for three years. It waited the a c a d em i c appointments. Senior required three years before -applyscientists may be ·awarded the fel- ing for accreditation. Its first applilowships to supply needed strength cation was accepted. in preclinical science -departments The college was accredited as a of schools of medicine, dentistry junior college in 1942. It was voted and public health. into senior college status in 1954 . t------------------------------------------------------
EXAMINATION SCHEDULE Jan. 20-28, 1960
Morning 9 a. m. tp noon Afternoon 2-5 p. rn.
1 TTS Wednesday Jan. 20 6 Tf!'S and Chemistry 1
4 TTS '11huisday Jan. 21 8 TTS and English 1
2 MWF Fr~day _Jan. 22 4 MWF
3 MWF Saturday J-an. 23 2 TI'S ' 5 MWF Monday Jan. 25 (j MWF
3 TTS and Tuesday Jan. 26 5 TTS
Mathematics
1,
7
8
2, 3, 5
MWF Wed-nesday J-an. 27
MWF Thursday Jan. 28
Reading day will be Jan. 19.
I 1 MWF
7 TTS
English 1 examinations will be from 2-5 p.m. Jan. 21
Chemistry 1 examinations will be from 2-5 p. rn. Jan. 20.
Mathematics 1, 2, 3, 5 examinations will be. from 9 a.m. to noon Jan. 26 ·
"No deviation from this posted schedule will be allowed except by SP®ial authorization of the Executive Co~ttee."
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tournamen fitting· thai CaroliD.a, j
Tar Heels Winston-Sc;
Wake c1. sophomorE s-coring 61 But i-t was much ,apa never best·
It is ·saf Deacon-~
shooters, l with a ba! wo11der of
'Besides mo:st char
After th had scored him .if _pla~ "N(), ·I wa. stol'Y'," he
This ··CO'l"
~ coaeh is· cc ihave confi
Coach B of Packer I hcpe the Brother, tl
11! the 'E morning it Few realil Packer na garire timE
That af lthrcws; hE on -au five a perforrru it was neco and' five of
Such is !he is one c he. will ~et
11! the Cl Budd, Wh() timeand 1 rebound dj :hib~ted tha cro-wd gaS)
It is not to Eudd a:s great :Perf<
Coach p 11·26·3. Aft :rose this ~ Prospect'S : it came as
Amen's years, Co.a football COl
in m first the favorit
The choi as it is, it ForeSt per. the respect so part of
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By ZENO MABTIR
.VI EW·I N·G· .th,e· D EACS·
Wake Forest went into the Dixie Classic Tournament' rated the tournament dar!Morse and came back willh the championship. It was fitting that the fil)al victory •should come over the University of Nortih CaroliD.a, for it was the fil'St time tl:J,at Wake Forest had defeated the Tar Heels in either basketball or footbalf since the Co.llege moved to Winston-Salem during 1956. · . .
Wake claimed the tourney's Most Valuable Player In its superlative sophomore, Billy Packer. P.acker played three sensational games, sc~ring 61 po~ts and getting the crucial ones )in the Carolina finale. But it was the field .generalship, .the coolness and confidence that is so mach .a part of Packer, that won for !lim the MVP honbr ... an htmor never bestowed on a -sophomore in the 10 .previous Dixie Classics.
It is ·safe to say t}lat :P~cker is the most exciting player to pLay on Dearon cage teams in recent years. Not onlr one of the ACC's best shooters, Packer c·an usually show thc;l crowd some dazzling stunts with a basketball . . . his repertoire of tric,ks a Ia Cousy makes one wo11der of llhis isn't another Houdini on the hardwood.
Confidence • . . And Courage 'Besides his bag of tricks and shooting proficiency, the two traits
m~t characteristic of .Packer are his confidence and courage . After the first game of the Dixie Classic witb Holy Cross, Packer
had scored 25 points and was being questioned by reporters. One asked il:iim if .Playing in his first Classic game made him nervous at the start. "No, ·I was~·~ nervous," replied J3illy; "Sorry if that messed up you.r stol'Y'," he qmc~ .added. . ,
This ··confidence 'is al,l part of the theory ·that Packer has: "If the coaeh is· confident enough in me to, Jet me play, the least I ·Can do is to
~ ih.ave confidence in myself." · . Coach Bo~es McKinney. of the .Deacons explained this ~b:aracteristic
·of Facker by saying that "Whenever I'm talking about somethin:g that I h<lpe the team ·can do, Billy· will talk .as if it had already been done. Brother, that's confidence." .. ) ·
l.lJ the 'Holy 'Cross game Packer jammed his right thumb. The next mo·rning it was swollen noticeably and w.as. difficult to move. freeLyt. Few realized that .prior to the Dayton game ilie second -afternoon, Packer 1had been treated extensively. for the ;injury and' even up to game time was complaining of its stiffness~
That afternoon Packer attempted nine field goals and five free lthr<Jws; he connected on seven of the nine shots from the f.Ioor and on ill five free tosses. The hand was swollen to the extent that such a performance was virtually unbelievable. In the Carolina game al&O it was necessary for the hand to be taped . . . he h.it six of nine shots and' five of six• foul shots.
Such is the courage of a ch~pionship competitor. As a sophomore !he is one of the best ·lit~le men that this conference ·ha:s seen ... and he will get better . . .
. ' Budd In Orbit •• •'• l.lJ the Classic Packer shared the spotlight with Deac;on captain Dave
Budd, who turned in three of his finest performances. It was Budd time and time again who would rise. into the stratosphere to ·pull a rebound down. His phenomenal jumping ability was never better exhibited than it J.as ·in Raleigh • . . It was common to hear the capacity cro=~d gasp as he would clear the boards for the Dea~ons.
It is not difficult for one to realize why> the Deacons' McKinney refers to Eudd a:s "Mr. ACO." In recent games h.e has 'been just that . . ': a great :Perfcrmer.
Hildebrand At The Helm •••• Coach Paul Amen leaves Wake Forest with a .four year record of
11-26·3. After three years of 'losing, the Deacon footballers ··under Alnen · ;rose this year to m!lch greater rewards, winning six of ten games. Prospect'S for the. coming season look to be the best in ten years, a:nd it came as a surprise in. lieu of this fact that Anlen will not be back.
Amen's replacement will be his chief assistallt for the· past "four · years, Coach Bill Hildebrand. At 35 he is one of the youngest head
football coaehes in the Atlantic Coast Conference. He faces a challenge in ibis first year, because the team he inherits is one tbat will share the favorite's role in·the ACC next season. .
The choice of Hildebrand was a ·good one. With the football situation as it is, it ·was certainly wisest to get a man familiar with tbe W.ake Forest personnel and style of play. Wake's new head ooacll gained the respect and ·admiration' of his players while serying as ass·istant, so part of his batUe is already won . '. • the players will play for him.
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DIXIE CLASSIC CHAMPIONS-Bones McKimley and his Wake Forest Deacons celebrated Christmas lat~ and New Year's early by winning the country's top holiday tournament, the Dixie ·classic, late last month. They did so by defeating Holy Cross 8nd Dayton University, then winning.for the first time in the last nine tries over·the Tar Heels
Fourth Conference Win
Deacs Get Sixth Straight Wake Forest's newly-crowned shots and made 3 less field goals,
Dixie Classic champions, shooting hitting on 32 per cent. with a torrid 57 per cent field goal Behind Packer in ilie scoring accuracy, easi1y< won its fourth were three oth.er ·Deacons in the consecutive ACC start by defeating double figures. Budd bad 17, Len Clemson's Tigers by .a 77·62 score. Ohappell 16, .and George lUtchie 141 The Deacs were never headed in to pace the balanced attack.'
/ OLD GOLD AND BLACK PAGE SEVEN Monday, Jan. 11, 1960
i·
of the University of North Carolina 53·50 in the championship finale. :At top are Dave Budd, captain, and ~IeKiniley, coach. At left is Winston (Twig) Wiggins, forward, and Len Chappell, center. Qn the right are George Ritchie, guard, and Billy Packer, guard. (Photo by li-viD Grigg.)
Deaclets Win 81-55 In Game With Institute
Big Bob Woollard, Wake Forest's six foot-ten inch freshman center, paced the Baby Deacons to their second win of the season in a game preliminary to the varsity game with Clemson.
The Deaclets won 81-55 over Oak I Ridge Military Institute with. Woollard tallying 22 points.
Coach Charlie BrY'ant's freshmen cagers ·swept to a 43-28 halftime lead and built .the lead up to· ·as much as 32 points in the second half , before the ·starters were replaced.
OAK RIDGE-Hameline 10, Jones 11, Buffalo 7, Truitt 15, Egerton 4, ,Speaks 8. WAKE; FOREST - Jackson 10, Woollard 22, Zawacki 14, Koehler 15, Caldwell 7, Mitchiner 3, McDowell 2, Mitchell 2, Pruitt 4.
John ,Philip SOl:lsa, the march king, was .the leader of the Marine Band for nearly 12 year.s.
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It w~ Dave Budd, Wake's rugged reboun-der, and little Billy Packer, the sophomore sensation, who were the big guns in the Deacon attack. Budd grabbed 19 rebounds, with 14 of llhem coming in the first half. Packer led the Wake Forest scoring with 18 points, connecting on all five of· his field goal attempts in the first half to get the Deacs off to a 38-20 :halftime advantage.
W.ak:e extended its lead. to 24 point'S in the second half, and Deacon Coach Bones McKinney< began substituting freely. Clemson narrowed the margin to 15 points in the contes-t's waning momCllts against the Wake reserves.
The Deacons shot 51 times from the -floor and made 29· for one of its best shooting. performances of the season. Clemso~ took 30 more
. -PHOTO BY GRIGG
DEACON REBOUNDING ace Dave Budd snares ·one of his 19 rebounds in the Wake Forest-Clemson· game here. Contesting him . for the ball is Clemson's ·Jim Leshoek.
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EXTRA CONVEN• IENCES OF BODY BY FISHER-No other car in Chevy's field gives you crank-operated ventipanes, Safety Plate Glass all around and dozens Of other Fisher Body refinements.
lEW ECONOMY TURBO-FIRE, VIHere's a vs with the "git" Chevy's famous for-plus a new economy.contoured camshaft and other refinements that get up to lO% more miles on a gallon of regular.
CHEVY SETS THE PACE WITH LOWER PRICES-All Bel Air and Impala VB's are lower priced, as are many options. Ex· ample: a Bel Air va sedan with Turboglide, de luxe heater agd push-button radio lists at $65.30 less for '60.
EASIER-10-LOlD LUGGAGE COM·· PARTMENT- The trunk sill is lower and the lid opening is more than a foot and a half wider than Chevy's nearest competitor's. There's over 20% more usable space!• •antd • ellcbl 11111 ,. portod ID tho A-~llo lhnllfootllrMS ~otion.
QUICKER STOPPIIIC BRAKES:._ long-lived bonded-lining brakes with larger front· wheel cylinders for '60 give you quicker, surer stops With less pedal pressure.
MORE ROOM WHERE YOU WAIIT MORE ROOM - Chevy's . trimmed down transmission tunnel (25% smaller) gives. you more foot room. You also get more head and hip room than in any other 2- or 4·door sedans in the field.
SOFTER, MORE Sf.. LENT RIDE-Chevy's the only leading lowpriced car that gentles the bumps with coil springs at all four wheels. Noise and vibration are filtered to the vanishing point by new body mounts.
WIDEST CHOICE OF POWER TWIS - A choice of 24 enginetransmission teams in . all - to satisfy the most finicky driving foot. There are seven engines with output all the way up to 335 h.p. and live silk·smooth transmissions.
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The more yoo look around the more you'll find to convince pr~ cars-and only some of the smoothest riding you that no other low-pr~ced car has so much to show for higher priced ones-build into their suspension systems.
your money as this nw Chevlolet. Here's the kind of Here's more room inside (where you want it) without an styling sophistication_ and subtle detail thqt only Fisher inch more outside (whereyoo don't want it). And with all Body .cr.aftsmanship can create. Here's the kind of Full these advances Chevy has managed to hold the price line! Coil comfort that neither of the other two leading low- Your dealer will be delighted to fill you in on all the facts.
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•. .I
... PAGE EIGHT Monday, Jan. 11, 1960 OLD' GOLD AND BLACK .~--~--~------------------~--~----------~--~-------,· I
For Basketball" Team
State., USC Are Next By FRED WARDLAW
WakJ Forest has its ;uational ranking at Stake twice this week as the Deacs go on the road to play the University of South Carolina and North Carolina State. The Deacs, ranked eighth and eleventh
· last week in the two national basketball . polls, face South Carolina at Columbia, S. C., Wednesday and :the Wolfpack of State a;t Raleigh Saturday.
S-outh Carolina, playing its first season under ·coach. Bob Stevens, !has compiled th~ hest offensive and worst defensive records in the Atlantic Coast Conference to date this season. The Gamecocks are led by Mike Callahan, a senior forward, and_Art Whisnant, flashy sopbom01·e frontcourt man.
Whisnant has . .been the most pleasant surprise for .Stevens; he is
. averaging over 18' points a game and is one of the :team's leading reb-ounders in his first year . of varsity ball. This year's Soutlh Carolina squad has compiled a 3-7 record so far in its first 10 games, :including a win over. N. C. State
· and a narrow two point loss to Due. .· . ·
W olfpack me_ntor Everett Cast ' is' in the midst of what may be his mo-st unsuccessful year in 41 years
. of coaching. State, a perennial ACC powerhouse, suffered losses by graduation last year and has only ma'llaged to win three of eleven garnes this winter ..
Wake Forest holds a 73-59 win over .the Wolfpack .earlier in the year. In recent games State has attempted to couter for its lack of manpower by playing a possession iyp.e of game. With the comparatively successful results that Case bas been having with this style of Jl]ay, it is expected that he will use it against the Deacons.
Wake Forest, riding high after its Dixie Classic championship; had • won six consecutive games going ·into last Saturday's game with No:rllh •Carolina ·at Greensboro. Th-ey are expected to start the usual lineup of Dave Budd and Twig Wiggins at the fol'Wards, Len Chapp-ell at center, and George Ritchie and Billy Packer at the :;·uards.
JERRY GALEHOUSE jumps high to take a shot for Sigma .Phi ;Epsilon in an intramural game with Pi Kappa Alpha. Sigma Phi Epsilon won, 34 to 28.
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tramural nflery champ~on. Their 7 p. m.-Red Vests vs. SoliCJtor:s- • winning sco1·e · was 812; followed 7 p. m.-Delta Sig "C" vs. Black by Lambda Chi Alpha's 772' and Clergy
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New Football Coach
BILL HILDEBRAND, former Deacon. assis'tant football coach, is Wake Forest's new head coach. His appointment was confii·med Friday when· the Board of T~tees awarded him ·a three-year contract,
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For N. C. Heart Fund
McKinney Will Head. Drive Basketball cOaeh Horace (Bones)
MclGnney. ·has ·been nam-ed 'chair~ ·man of the 1960 Heart Fund Drive
Matniert To Face Maryland, ·U. Va
Coacli Clarence Peters' "WI'estling team, plagued by i:r;ijuries in the young season, meet hvo apponents this weekend away from home. The Wake. Forest grapplers meet the teams of the University o:f . Vir. g1nia aild of the University of Maryland this Friday and Satur-day. · · ·
"fhe team, which is still lacldng .strength and depth in so1lle of ·the weigiht. divisions, has. recently been 'bolstered in the heaVyweight division by' the addition of several new men. · ·
m North Carolina. Dr .. A. C. Bulla, Wake C<>unty
Heart Fund chairman, lias said· of McKinney, "There is. no question about making our goal with a coach I like Bones calli:Q.g the plays/' · ·
McKinney was horn in Pamlico County and movecrto Durham when .. he was five years. old. 'He attended Durham schools and began his basketball career at Durham IDgh. He attended college at North Carolina State 'College and the University of North Carolina.
· MeKinney has 1been head basketball coach at the 'College since.1957.
. McKinney is .married to rthe former Edna Ruth Stell of Raleigh. They are the parents of six cblldren.
· On March 25, ·· 1861, ·a · C~nfeder- $ ate Marine Corps was organized in Richmond, . iVirginia.
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. . ... ' c Water polo action continues this Gold .
week >Yith three matches scheduled.\ 8 p.m.-Buccaneers vs; Sig··'.''C" ·=============~~===========================~============~=::::=======~===~== In last week's action PiKA defeatc Bees . ed Sigma ·Chi, KA won over Kappa · · · Sig, a11d Sig Ep over Theta Chi. . . . · h t d'
. The year 1941 was t e mos IS-Fra~er~uty ~eague b:'sketball has astrous year on record for traffic
reached Its m1~way pomt and a f~ mishaps in North Carolina-1289 set of games 1s scheduled for th1s d"ed week. Last week's scores are. as _1
_·-------'-------:-:Eollov .. -s: Sigma Chi 52, Lambda Chi 1'7;; Delta Sig 36, Theta Chi 27; K.A 43, Kappa Sig 36; PiKA 53, Alpha Sig 21; Sig Ep 50, Sigma Pi 26; ami Sig Ep 34, PiKA 38. There will be an intramural manager's meeting Jan. 18 at 4 ;p. m.
·in room 30·2 of the gymnasium, it has been announced.
Monday's Schedule 4 p. m.-Kappa Sig vs. Sigma Pi 4 p.m.-Trouble. Shooters vs. Day
Students 5 p. m.-Pika "B" vs. Bombers
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