8
, IT 1St. p ae pus - ,, "Finian'' Is Gay S11ccess; Irish · MusiCal Delights ·. Pace Five * * Chileans Enjoying Visit Here; Give Impressions Of WF Page Two VOL1JME XLVIJ Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North CaroUna, Monday; February 5, 1962 NUMBER 15 Snow,Registration,Exchange Greet Semester First Book By Brantley Published First novel by Russell·Brantley, "The !Education of Jonathan Beam," will ibe released by Macmillan Pub- lishing COIIliPaDY early in March. Brantley is Director of Com- munications at the College. A Macmillan review describes the work as "A·pleasantly written, cheerful and often funny book about a young Southern. BIIIPtist boy and . his !first encounter with college. "Jonathan Beam," it continues, ''is bright; open, naive; he had been·il'aised on a small farm by his God-fearing, warm-hearted mother, with some help from a nice older brother and from the local preach- ers ... "When Jonathan decided to !be- come a preacher and enrolls at ·eonvention College he is prevailed upon by his two mentors to S!PY and report to the!!IlJ whalt evils he may ' encounter ·there. "Jonathan, who finds the atmos- phere at school shockingly liberal compared to his sheltered back· ground, is faced with serious di- lemma, lfor he must treconcile his two conflicting worlds. "Jonalthan begins painfully to learn to think for himself. The review concludes, "Nicely observed, sober at heart, this is a warm and compact book. . ." SITTING •.• Miss Elizabeth. York is surrounded by students as she struggles to place them in classes without conflict during registration,· Jan. 29-30. Miss York is an instnlctor in the Department of History at the College. (Photo by 1\litchell) Reynolda Gardens Section WF Receives Grants Brantley received notice of the Wake Forest has been given 100 The property. includes half a mile acceptance of his book for publi- acres of the Reynolda estates by along Reynolda Road, from the cation last March. the Mall'Y Reynolds Babcock -Foun- present ·gardens to Coliseum. Drive. The author says that he S!Pent dation; the large section is to be Also, the land fronts about 18 months writing the /book. used · for Olf Reynolda one-fifth mile on Coliseum Drive. Most of the work was done on week· Gill-dens. The tract extends east to the and . ,. , .. n-;. .,, " ., L t)le Woods resi- . Pattiiin*U Goes Wake Forest 1944. 'He '0 Reynolda estates except a 19-acre · was editor of Old Gold' and' Black ,., · 111 · • [ tract on ·which the Babcock home during ltis senior year. ' .1. 0 lr.l.emorza is located. Before returning to Campus as ' The deed, recorded last Tuesday, communications director, he was The portrait of a ·ni:m who "did d,id not stipulate anY monetary associated with various newspapers the little extra that made the enor- value. Judging by ·present land in the south. He was at one time mous difference". was presented to values in that !Part of Winston-' managing editor of the Durham the Wake Forest College Depart- Salem, the donation would probably Morning Hera1d, ·and he also served ment of Philosophy Jan. 17. lbe valued in the millions of dollars . . as city editor of the Concord Tri- The iPOrtrait was of Claude v. President Harold W. Tribble bune. Roebuck, philosophy instructor who spoke for the college and express- died last Feb. 11 at the age of 41 ed his appreciation for the gift. after a long illness. He had been "Wake ·,Forest, College is happy on the Wake Forest faculty since to have this attractive all'ea as a 1955. . · part o.f i.ts total program in Win· Religion Week Schedule Set In presenting the portrait, Wil- ston-Saien;. Certainly grate- liam Greene of Kingsport, Tenn., ful for this generous gift, he de- also described Roebuck as a man . . "at home with students wherever It a JOY to carry out the Religious elll!Phasis week, a mod- he was" and as one who "most of the donors fo; the eration of the traditional five-day wanted a closer understanding and enrichment cultural life of 2115 Register For Spring Semester Committee Selects Coming SU Flicks 3 Profs Assume Positions Tuition Raised For 4 Years $50 Increase Announced Peace Corps Tests Soon To Be Given Probation Reward -For Poor Grades. .Grade sheets !Passed out dwring registration !Perhaps caused some students to ce>me close to the point· of passing out, too. event, is scheduled Felb. 12-15. The relati'onship beween God --·"' man." our commuruty. · . . · theme will be "Christianity Con· awu Th B b k F d ti fronting a Revolutionary World.'' Greene and other fonmer students . e t'e athcocl nd oun 'da on, m (!JII'e- B CHARLES ·o'soLIN of Roebuck arranged for the por- s m? .' e a sal : . Y . The series of religious programs trai't whi'ch .was done by Ra' .It 15 the purpose a.nd desrre of Assistant Editor Probation ibrilllgs punishment in Especially included in this cate- gory were students with very low quality-JPOint ratios, low enough to put them on the probation list. Will beg 1 " w1'th Kelly Mill S 'th .. ., the form of no unexcused class cuts er ID1 , . g Jr ' f M ill the grantor to further enhance the Thr f ulty' 'l·· ber be :pastor of the First Baptist.Church, =rm ' . o ooresv e. research and educational facilities ee new ac ··.mem s - or chapel absences. This applies Nashville, Tenn., speaking in chiiiP· Dr. Robert Helm, associate pro- of Wake Forest College in the tgan both to freshmen as well as ;upper- el Feb. 13. ·· fessor. of philosophy, accepted the field ol botany, to ::n:O !a de: classmen. A faculty luncheon at one will portrait on behalf of the detPart- the cultural services which Wake t t · .Ii., Also, students who. entered the follow, with Dr. Rober:t Handy, Di- ment. Forest College is now rendering par men· ·;; 1 College during Ou- after 1960 lose rector of Studies at Union Theologi- "Those who claim friendship with ; .. and to. enlarge the established Threlkeld, will te!lch the privilege of keeping an auto- cal Seminary in New YDl"k speak- Claude Roebuck saw in him and Reynolda Grurdens of Wake Forest Amenca_n _mternati.on- mobile on calll!Pus duringtheperiod ing on "No Man Can Serve Two will see in his portrait many quali- College in order that the open space relatiOns, and they are on probation. Masters-How Can a College?" ties associated with the richness areas ·of pastoral beauty may be Is the only. one assummg a full-time The dean's office does not notify At 4 !P· m. Handy and Smith will ·and vigor of his life," Dr. 'Helm maintained ...• " post. each student of his academic sta. lead a seminar "Is the Church said. . strict regulations were included Jivan R. Talbibian, whose fields tus, so a student should calculate Obsolete;?" . "Those of us who owe much to in the deed to assure that the gar- are international relations, com- his quality-point ratio and deter- Dr. Herbert Gezork, President .Qim will Temember his ungrudging dens are preserved. The area is parative government, and Middle mine his scholastic standing. Stu- of lthe Andover-I\I'ewton his open-hearted genero- to be used in perpetuity for opera- Eastern politics,. and R. LaMarr dents· must assi.mne reSjponsibility School ·in Newton Centil'e, · Mas., sity; his imfailing courtesy and his tion, maintenance, and enlargement Smith, who will teach freshman for obeyin-g probation requirements will speak throughout the. series OD; complete devotion to all that is of Reynolda Gardens. It is to be English, are filling in for regular without a notice f-rom the dean's "Christian· Faith and the Crisis of best and noblest in numan life ... manaJged by a board of seven trus- faculty memlbers on leave for the office. Our Times.'' I accept with sincere gratitude this tees. · second semester. .. A student on probation is normal- " he speaik on the fine portrait ...vhich for generations The deed specifies that the area and Tabib@n are ly given the spring term and the Cnsis of Belief. · to come will remind us and our cannot be used for picnic grounds· WOII"king on Doctoral summer session to remove himself Tuesday's seminar will be con- successors of om· colleague and in athletic contests food Threlkeld for Columbi(' and Tabi- NEW PROFS CHAT · · · James Threlkeld Cieft) ·and Jivan Tabibian from the probation list. tinned Wednesday. Gezol'lk willlec- so doing remind us of our mission.'' or ·drink sales, facili- bian for Princeton. Smith is work- joined the Department of Political Science second semester. To determine quality-point ture on "Crisis Morals.'' Dr. A. C. Reid, chairman of the ties, or other uses not in keeping ing toward his masters degree at (Photo by 1\litchell) , l'ation, the number of semester A reading of Alan Paton's "Cry, department, presided at the cere- with the purposes of the gift. Emory. I hours attempted is divided into the the Beloved Country" will be pre- mony, ·which was held in a class- However, musical concerts may Threlkeld, who is teaching for izing for Nationnl Security,'; and of intelligence and data in foreign I number of quality points earned. In sented in chapel Feb. 15. Dr. G. room. ibe held on the •grounds. the first time, served as a research written articles on Asia, Ja!Pan, policy making and the legisla:tive I figuring the 'ratio, only a student's McLeod Bryan, associate professor Aimong :those attending were Roe- The Reynoloda Estates were built analyst in United States foreign and Korea in the "World Scope process. record at Wake Forest is considea-- of :religion, will lead a discussion buck's !Parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. in 1909 by R. J. Reynolds, .founder policy and national defense iirom Encyclopedia." "Even though they are immersed' ed. on Paton's work in that afternoon. Roebuck of Raleigh. of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. 1957 to 1959. His included He said .that the people he has in complex problems, Congressmen the writing of research,'studies and met so far are "•genial and out- are infinitely more infQI11llled than Coeds N. Y. Bound By LINETA CRAVEN Kathy Looney, and Mary Martin major from Brooklyn, N. Y.; Con- Staff Reporter Pickard will represent Wake Forest stance Brown. an economics major Four Wake Forest coeds will pack in New York Feb. 4-12. They will from Prairie Village, Kan.; Esta their suitcases early /tomorrow attend classes, participate in Kossack, a gova-nment major from morning and board a train bound numerous campus activities, and the Bronx, N. Y. for Barnard College, the woman's meet with the Wake Forest visitors The students will be living in the division of Columbia University in in New York the day they return girls' dormitories and will attend New York City. to discuss the values of the ex- regular classes, in addition to Filling their empty rooms will be change. . . .. : such activities as parties, luncheons speeches for members and com- going, genuinely f.riendly and ear- their constituents. It is almost Southard Km• g mittees of Congress, espt;cially the nestly .and that the faculty miraculous that they are able to do ' . House and Senate Rela- has been consldCII"ate and accom- so well considering :the weight of At N p f tions and Armed.Services <:ommit- modating.'' theu- burdensome problem:;," he ew OS s . tees and the Joint on In discussing his work with Con- said. Atomic ',:';if·. g;ess, Threlkeld said .that .he car- Threlkeld added that he plans to' The editor of Old Gold and Black He was iborn m Kentucky m 1931, ned on some consultation w1th Con- do a book on the Eisenhower Ad has announ d th t' grd td 1 d th - . . . . - ce e promoion a _ua e cun: au e u.um e ;n- m. adVIsory capac.1ty mmistrahon, and that he is eSIPe- two staff members, effective im- .of Lomsville With a maJor on P?s1tions With res,pect to policy cially interested in national defense mediately. · mall beast mfet l:sulesth. . problems and military policy. Ray Southard, junior of Frank- UIL urn 1a s 11" e n s or .ee ere lS a great need for Ta:bibian was born in Lebanon in lin · · t edi · a Ph.D. except the dissertation, the expanding role of research to 1937 and received a B A with P , n:ow tor of !he tqpic of which is "Congx:ess and facilitate the ··maiJdng of rational in politics from rthe Ameri- ad edir. 'to u bar h' ad twormer assist- Strategic Ah- Power " li · th 1 · 1 ti r, as a o years ex- . · ': ·,; po cy_ m.. e egis a ve process," can University of Beirut in 1959. perience on lthe staff and is active This semester he will, tie teach- he sa1d. The !Problems of govern- He was given an award in recog- m' AI h Phi o · mg . · trod to ·. · Am · t ...... hi · P a mega servtce fra- four girls from. Barnard, who are The four coeds will· also have an with Dr. Harold W. Tribble and continuing an -exchange program OPP'>rtunity to tour the United Na- Dean Lois Johnson. They will be . "l which proved highly successful last ti.ons building, New York City, and special guests of the Wesley Foun- year. The primary purpose of the attend a broadway play. dation, and tour Re:vnolds Building program is to provide an opportuni- The guests on our campus, all and Old Salem. The WGA is spon- ty to exchange ideas on the racial juniO'rs, will be Connie Foshay, a soring a coffee .in honor of the visi- situation. government major from Tenafly, tors, and treating them to a per- rrma Browder, Barbara :Metcalf, N. J.;. Joanna Sllverbmg. history (Cominiled on page 5) m uc ry m. . eri- men w ch _legiSlators must nition of scholarship, character and ternity. can deal are lbecommg increasingly leadership, and held a Rockerfeller Promoted to the st va t db o! interest. are rela- COIII!Plex, n v o 1 vi n g complicated Fellowship during his junior and Southard is King ca tions, political theory, and U. S. technical ISsues. senior years. mor f Kin to King ally fOil'eign and defense policy. "!his is no relflection on the in- He entered Princeton's Graduate a n::S :ro- Threlkeld "':as .. of !the telligence of the Congressmen, but Department of Politics in 1959. and moted to assistant editor Senate Committee on Government there is a need for enlightened and had !Passed his Ph D examinations wor:ked .... taH · g n.....-ations• report enti.•'ed m re ffi i t · ti · · on •o..ue s J.Ol' one year, . . ... - o e c en orgamza on and use <Continued on page 5) and is president of the Y.R.C.

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Page 1: Is Gay Visit Here; Give ;~ Of * * Snow,Registration,Exchange Greet … › bitstream › handle › 10339 › ... · 2018-03-20 · IT 1St. p ae pus --· ,, "Finian'' Is Gay S11ccess;

,

IT

1St. p

ae

pus

--·

,,

"Finian'' Is Gay S11ccess; Irish

· MusiCal Delights ;~ ·.

Pace Five

* *

Chileans Enjoying Visit Here; Give Impressions Of WF

Page Two

VOL1JME XLVIJ Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North CaroUna, Monday; February 5, 1962 NUMBER 15

Snow,Registration,Exchange Greet Semester First Book By Brantley Published

First novel by Russell·Brantley, "The !Education of Jonathan Beam," will ibe released by Macmillan Pub­lishing COIIliPaDY early in March.

Brantley is Director of Com­munications at the College.

A Macmillan review describes the work as "A·pleasantly written, cheerful and often funny book about a young Southern. BIIIPtist boy and . his !first encounter with college.

"Jonathan Beam," it continues, ''is bright; open, naive; he had been·il'aised on a small farm by his God-fearing, warm-hearted mother, with some help from a nice older brother and from the local preach­ers ...

"When Jonathan decided to !be­come a preacher and enrolls at ·eonvention College he is prevailed upon by his two mentors to S!PY and

-· report to the!!IlJ whalt evils he may ' encounter ·there.

"Jonathan, who finds the atmos­phere at school shockingly liberal compared to his sheltered back· ground, is faced with a· serious di­lemma, lfor he must treconcile his two conflicting worlds.

"Jonalthan begins painfully to learn to think for himself.

The review concludes, "Nicely observed, sober at heart, this is a warm and compact book. . ."

SITTING •.• Miss Elizabeth. York is surrounded by students as she struggles to place them in classes without conflict during registration,· Jan. 29-30. Miss York is an instnlctor in the Department of History at the College. (Photo by 1\litchell)

Reynolda Gardens Section

WF Receives Grants Brantley received notice of the Wake Forest has been given 100 The property. includes half a mile

acceptance of his book for publi- acres of the Reynolda estates by along Reynolda Road, from the cation last March. the Mall'Y Reynolds Babcock -Foun- present ·gardens to Coliseum. Drive.

The author says that he S!Pent dation; the large section is to be Also, the land fronts ~proximately about 18 months writing the /book. used · for e~pansion Olf Reynolda one-fifth mile on Coliseum Drive. Most of the work was done on week· Gill-dens. The tract extends east to the ~nds and f~IQ ~·-~""~}gb,t.<>.~C~9~ . ,. , .. n-;. .,, " ., L • ;;·.,~;~·.c .~~ge <>.~ t)le ~-:ynolda Woods resi-

. l~B~!t~~:t· ;;~~:~- ~;~~ Pattiiin*U Goes :~:a.alL:~a;:!~:;!~~i~~:e a~e~f Wake Forest College.~.m 1944. 'He '0 Reynolda estates except a 19-acre

· was editor of Old Gold' and' Black ,., · 111 · • [ tract on ·which the Babcock home during ltis senior year. ' .1. 0 lr.l.emorza is located.

Before returning to Campus as ' The deed, recorded last Tuesday, communications director, he was The portrait of a ·ni:m who "did d,id not stipulate anY monetary associated with various newspapers the little extra that made the enor- value. Judging by ·present land in the south. He was at one time mous difference". was presented to values in that !Part of Winston-' managing editor of the Durham the Wake Forest College Depart- Salem, the donation would probably Morning Hera1d, ·and he also served ment of Philosophy Jan. 17. lbe valued in the millions of dollars .

. as city editor of the Concord Tri- The iPOrtrait was of Claude v. President Harold W. Tribble bune. Roebuck, philosophy instructor who spoke for the college and express­

died last Feb. 11 at the age of 41 ed his appreciation for the gift. after a long illness. He had been "Wake ·,Forest, College is happy on the Wake Forest faculty since to have this attractive all'ea as a 1955. . · part o.f i.ts total program in Win· Religion Week

Schedule Set In presenting the portrait, Wil- ston-Saien;. Certainly w~ a~e grate­liam Greene of Kingsport, Tenn., ful for this generous gift, he de-also described Roebuck as a man cl7~ed. . . "at home with students wherever It ~lllbe a JOY to carry out the

Religious elll!Phasis week, a mod- he was" and as one who "most sug~estions of the donors fo; the eration of the traditional five-day wanted a closer understanding and enrichment ~f ~e cultural life of

2115 Register For Spring

Semester

Committee Selects Coming SU Flicks

3 Profs Assume Positions

Tuition Raised For 4 Years $50 Increase Announced

Peace Corps Tests Soon To Be Given

Probation Reward -For Poor Grades.

.Grade sheets !Passed out dwring registration !Perhaps caused some students to ce>me close to the point· of passing out, too.

event, is scheduled Felb. 12-15. The relati'onship beween God --·"' man." our commuruty. · . . · theme will be "Christianity Con· awu Th B b k F d ti

fronting a Revolutionary World.'' Greene and other fonmer students . e t'e athcocl nd oun 'da on, m (!JII'e- B CHARLES ·o'soLIN of Roebuck arranged for the por- s ~ m? .' e a • sal : . Y .

The series of religious programs trai't whi'ch .was done by Ra' '~h· .It 15 the purpose a.nd desrre of Assistant Editor Probation ibrilllgs punishment in

Especially included in this cate­gory were students with very low quality-JPOint ratios, low enough to put them on the probation list.

Will beg1" w1'th Kelly Mill S 'th ~..- .. ., the form of no unexcused class cuts ~ er ID1 , H~~ . g Jr ' f M ill the grantor to further enhance the Thr f ulty' 'l·· ber be

:pastor of the First Baptist.Church, =rm ' . o ooresv e. research and educational facilities ee new ac ··.mem s - or chapel absences. This applies Nashville, Tenn., speaking in chiiiP· Dr. Robert Helm, associate pro- of Wake Forest College in the tgan ~;lie~ teac=g 1du~? las~ w~, both to freshmen as well as ;upper-el Feb. 13. ·· fessor. of philosophy, accepted the field ol botany, to furth~r- ~nhance ::n:O am~ ~~e !a tl~~r:~:lis~ de: classmen.

A faculty luncheon at one will portrait on behalf of the detPart- the cultural services which Wake t t · .Ii., Also, students who. entered the follow, with Dr. Rober:t Handy, Di- ment. Forest College is now rendering par men· ·;;1:£ • College during Ou- after 1960 lose rector of Studies at Union Theologi- "Those who claim friendship with ; .. and to. enlarge the established Ja~es Threlkeld, WI!~ will te!lch the privilege of keeping an auto-cal Seminary in New YDl"k speak- Claude Roebuck saw in him and Reynolda Grurdens of Wake Forest Amenca_n governmen~ _mternati.on- mobile on calll!Pus duringtheperiod ing on "No Man Can Serve Two will see in his portrait many quali- College in order that the open space ~I relatiOns, and ~!itieal th~ry, they are on probation. Masters-How Can a College?" ties associated with the richness areas ·of pastoral beauty may be Is the only. one assummg a full-time The dean's office does not notify

At 4 !P· m. Handy and Smith will ·and vigor of his life," Dr. 'Helm maintained ...• " post. each student of his academic sta. lead a seminar ~n "Is the Church said. . strict regulations were included Jivan R. Talbibian, whose fields tus, so a student should calculate Obsolete;?" . "Those of us who owe much to in the deed to assure that the gar- are international relations, com- his quality-point ratio and deter-

Dr. Herbert Gezork, President .Qim will Temember his ungrudging dens are preserved. The area is parative government, and Middle mine his scholastic standing. Stu-of lthe Andover-I\I'ewton ~eOlogical servi~e. his open-hearted genero- to be used in perpetuity for opera- Eastern politics,. and R. LaMarr dents· must assi.mne reSjponsibility School ·in Newton Centil'e, · Mas., sity; his imfailing courtesy and his tion, maintenance, and enlargement Smith, who will teach freshman for obeyin-g probation requirements will speak throughout the. series OD; complete devotion to all that is of Reynolda Gardens. It is to be English, are filling in for regular without a notice f-rom the dean's "Christian· Faith and the Crisis of best and noblest in numan life ... manaJged by a board of seven trus- faculty memlbers on leave for the office. Our Times.'' I accept with sincere gratitude this tees. · second semester. .. A student on probation is normal-" T~u;sday he w~ speaik on the fine portrait ...vhich for generations The deed specifies that the area ~el:keld and Tabib@n are ~oth ly given the spring term and the

Cnsis of Belief. · to come will remind us and our cannot be used for picnic grounds· WOII"king on Doctoral ~sertations, summer session to remove himself Tuesday's seminar will be con- successors of om· colleague and in athletic contests food concessio~ Threlkeld for Columbi(' and Tabi- NEW PROFS CHAT · · · James Threlkeld Cieft) ·and Jivan Tabibian from the probation list.

tinned Wednesday. Gezol'lk willlec- so doing remind us of our mission.'' or ·drink sales, ~mus~ment facili- bian for Princeton. Smith is work- joined the Department of Political Science second semester. To determine ~he quality-point ture on "Crisis o£ Morals.'' Dr. A. C. Reid, chairman of the ties, or other uses not in keeping ing toward his masters degree at (Photo by 1\litchell) , l'ation, the number of semester

A reading of Alan Paton's "Cry, department, presided at the cere- with the purposes of the gift. Emory. I hours attempted is divided into the the Beloved Country" will be pre- mony, ·which was held in a class- However, musical concerts may Threlkeld, who is teaching for izing for Nationnl Security,'; and of intelligence and data in foreign I number of quality points earned. In sented in chapel Feb. 15. Dr. G. room. ibe held on the •grounds. the first time, served as a research h~s written articles on Asia, Ja!Pan, policy making and the legisla:tive I figuring the 'ratio, only a student's McLeod Bryan, associate professor Aimong :those attending were Roe- The Reynoloda Estates were built analyst in United States foreign and Korea in the "World Scope process. record at Wake Forest is considea--of :religion, will lead a discussion buck's !Parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. in 1909 by R. J. Reynolds, .founder policy and national defense iirom Encyclopedia." "Even though they are immersed' ed. on Paton's work in that afternoon. Roebuck of Raleigh. of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. 1957 to 1959. His duti~s included He said .that the people he has in complex problems, Congressmen

the writing of research,'studies and met so far are "•genial and out- are infinitely more infQI11llled than

Coeds N. Y. Bound By LINETA CRAVEN Kathy Looney, and Mary Martin major from Brooklyn, N. Y.; Con-

Staff Reporter Pickard will represent Wake Forest stance Brown. an economics major Four Wake Forest coeds will pack in New York Feb. 4-12. They will from Prairie Village, Kan.; Esta

their suitcases early /tomorrow attend classes, participate in Kossack, a gova-nment major from morning and board a train bound numerous campus activities, and the Bronx, N. Y. for Barnard College, the woman's meet with the Wake Forest visitors The students will be living in the division of Columbia University in in New York the day they return girls' dormitories and will attend New York City. to discuss the values of the ex- regular classes, in addition to

Filling their empty rooms will be change. . . .. : such activities as parties, luncheons

speeches for members and com- going, genuinely f.riendly and ear- their constituents. It is almost Southard Km• g mittees of Congress, espt;cially the nestly hel~~ul," .and that the faculty miraculous that they are able to do ' . House and Senate For~Jgn Rela- has been consldCII"ate and accom- so well considering :the weight of At N p f tions and Armed.Services <:ommit- modating.'' theu- burdensome problem:;," he ew OS s . tees and the Joint Co~ttee on In discussing his work with Con- said. Atomic Ener~. ',:';if·. g;ess, Threlkeld said .that .he car- Threlkeld added that he plans to' The editor of Old Gold and Black

He was iborn m Kentucky m 1931, ned on some consultation w1th Con- do a book on the Eisenhower Ad has announ d th t' • grd td 1 d z..~ th u· - . . . . - ce e promoion o~ a _ua e cun: au e u.um e ;n- gress~c~ m. a~ adVIsory capac.1ty mmistrahon, and that he is eSIPe- two staff members, effective im-yerSl~ .of Lomsville With a maJor on P?s1tions With res,pect to policy cially interested in national defense mediately. · mall ~liCoticlal sb~~nceeq, wr~dm. beast mfet ~~I l:sulesth. . problems and military policy. Ray Southard, junior of Frank-

UIL urn 1a s 11" e n s or .ee ere lS a great need for Ta:bibian was born in Lebanon in lin · · t edi · a Ph.D. except the dissertation, the expanding th~ role of research to 1937 and received a B A with P , ~s n:ow ~~HI e£ tor of !he tqpic of which is "Congx:ess and facilitate the ··maiJdng of rational hon~s in politics from rthe Ameri- ad edir. 'to u bar h' ad twormer assist-Strategic Ah- Power " li · th 1 · 1 ti r, as a o years ex-

. · ': ·,; po cy_ m.. e egis a ve process," can University of Beirut in 1959. perience on lthe staff and is active This semester he will, tie teach- he sa1d. The !Problems of govern- He was given an award in recog- m' AI h Phi o · mg. · trod to ·. · Am · t ...... hi · P a mega servtce fra-

four girls from. Barnard, who are The four coeds will· also have an with Dr. Harold W. Tribble and continuing an -exchange program OPP'>rtunity to tour the United Na- Dean Lois Johnson. They will be

. "l ~ which proved highly successful last ti.ons building, New York City, and special guests of the Wesley Foun­year. The primary purpose of the attend a broadway play. dation, and tour Re:vnolds Building program is to provide an opportuni- The guests on our campus, all and Old Salem. The WGA is spon­ty to exchange ideas on the racial juniO'rs, will be Connie Foshay, a soring a coffee .in honor of the visi­situation. government major from Tenafly, tors, and treating them to a per-

rrma Browder, Barbara :Metcalf, N. J.;. Joanna Sllverbmg. history (Cominiled on page 5)

m uc ry c~urses m. . eri- men w~o..u w ch _legiSlators must nition of scholarship, character and ternity. can government.~sprin~palfields deal are lbecommg increasingly leadership, and held a Rockerfeller Promoted to the st va t db o! interest. are mternation~ rela- COIII!Plex, ~ n v o 1 vi n g complicated Fellowship during his junior and Southard is Adri~ King ca !P~ tions, political theory, and U. S. technical ISsues. senior years. mor f Kin to King ~ ally fOil'eign and defense policy. "!his is no relflection on the in- He entered Princeton's Graduate a n::S re~rt!; befor':a:~rm :ro-

Threlkeld "':as ~auth~ .. of !the telligence of the Congressmen, but Department of Politics in 1959. and moted to assistant editor ~ ~as Senate Committee on Government there is a need for enlightened and had !Passed his Ph D examinations wor:ked .... taH ~ · g n.....-ations• report enti.•'ed nn..~an m re ffi i t · ti · · on •o..ue s J.Ol' one year, ~ . . ... ·~~'li - o e c en orgamza on and use <Continued on page 5) and is president of the Y.R.C.

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PAGE TWO Monday, Feb. 5, 1962 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Friendliness, Snow, And ~ • , Harry Golden Twist Will Lecture

Greet Visiting Chilean Group On: Thursf!ay Harry Golden, an author and pub­

lisher o.f the Carolina Israelite, will speak under the lecture program of the Student Union Thursday at eight o'clock in the East Lounge of Rey­nolda Hall.

By .JO DE YOUNG impressed with the ward for re-Staff Reporter I tu:rded children and the cancer re-

Fruit salad, fraternities, and the search), ~ f~shion _sho'"':• and :'isit­twist may be everyday things for ed Joe Kmg s studio. Kmg, ~amt~r most Wake Forest students, but of the Madonna ~hat ha~gs m Wa1t they Lire new experiences for thir- Ch?pel, hLis an ~ternational repu­teen Chilean students visiting the tation as an artist. College through the Experiment in The students were introduced in International Living prog~ram. Chapel. Afterwards, Antonio Lizana

The grotliP landed in Miami on. remark~, ''It .:vas a very emotion­Jan. 25 after a plane trip from 1 al expenence. Santiago. They were introduced to I Last Thursday evening in the American slang during their bus East Lounge and in several Spanish trip to Wins.ton-Salem. Elba Gon- classes, they ll'ead the poetry of zalez, an English major, laughed Gabriela Mistral, a Chilean !POetess when she •recalled her confusion who won the Nobel Prize for Litera­when a woman sitting next to her ture in 1946. asked her if she was trying to Miss Gonzalez remarked on the "catch forty winks." College's punctuality. "When we

Golden was born in New York City, May 6, 1903, and was educated at East Side Evening High School and City College of New York. He worked for the New York Daily Mirror and the New York Post before coming to Charlotte in 1942 to work for the Charlotte Observer.

Golden founded the Carolina Is-· raelite in 1942.

In 1958 Golden's book, "Only in Ameljca," was !PUblished. ''Only :in America" wo.:s followed by ".For 2c Plain" in 1959 and "Enjoy, En­joy" in 1960. Golden's commellitarr'Y on the American poet Carl Sand­lburg was released in 1961 in the work "Carl Sandburg." I

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Accustomed to Santiago's hot say 7 we mean 7:30, but here, summer 1Lhe students greeted Win- things start on time." The students ston-Sal~m's snow as a welcome I commented on the differences in surprise. "We never eXJpected such scl~ool systems in Chi~e and in the a friendly welcome!" they exclaim- Uruted St~tes. In Chile a student ed. The only disappointment the I attends ~IX years of. elementa~y city held was for two English stu-\ sch_ool, SlX Y_ears of high school m dents who thought that Salem was wh1ch English a_nd ·Fa:ench are •the home of Nathaniel Hawthorne I mandatory, and fwe years of col-

Golden is now working on a new 1

book of essays which will lbe !PUb· lished in July, 1962 under the title,

"You're Entitle." ~==========================::; The ibook will include some es- ; says that have appeared in the Ca.rolina Israelite, material on Gol­den's travels a!I'Ound the world, and an appraisal of the Eichman trial which Golden covered for Life Ma1gazine.

and who were looking forward to !lege. . seeing the House of the Seven Wake Forest Is small compared Gables. to .the University fo Chile which LOTS OF LANGUAGE8-CI1ilean senoritas (left to right) Elba Gon-

M t d t t . . has 25,000 students, most of whom zalez, Elizahet~ Nordhaimer, .Marcela Munoz and Alicia Montenegro any s u en s are s aym~ J? live in homes instead of dormi- gaily sing out "chao," Italian for goodbye, as they lllepart for classes

~o:z_nes.near the c~mpus, ~ne grrlisltories. "Students have more liber- (which will be conducted in English>. livmg m a woman s ~or~tory, a~d I ty here," they commented. "We ,.---------------------------­the ·~ys are staymg m Davis I like the friendly environment."

SU Announces Student To Study Here Bermuda Tour

Dormitory· Eating habits here ru-e quite dif-Classes, lectures, and parties- ferent, they remarked. They usual­

the daily schedule o.f ~e average ly eat four meals a day, with tea co 11 e g e student-awa1ted them. at 5 and dinner at 9 .• For breakfast

tThhey 'Vdi~itedl t.hh eltobdacBco t~atctoHry,llthey enjoy hot lriulk with a little From Free Universit-v The Travel Committee of the . e me 1ca sc oo an ap IS . os- coffee in it and toast and marma- 'J pttal (where they were espec1ally lade. Cereal with milk was a sur- Student U!llion announced last week

Franz Scherer of Berlin will study r~ceived only one serious a[pplica- that it, will se:we as the agent on prise for them. For lunch they a.t Wake Forest next year as the hon so far. . the Wake_·Forest Campus :for the often eat it with onions, pepper, oil, Ge11man rparticipant in an exchange The scholarship offered lby the College. Union of Nonth Carolina and sauce, but never with milk! with the Free University of Berlin, Free University provides 400 marks State College for a Bermuda trip Howell's

Collection Fruit salad was also a change. the German department announced {about $100) a month for a period during the s[mng Vacation April

They eat their lettuce with vege- Wednesday. of ten months for living expenses, 19

_25

. ' tables and eat fruit onlyfordessert. Dr. James c. O'Flaherty, chair- and 100 marks a semester for the Frank Lord 'unior of Richmond They enjoy the !food here, howevm-, man of the depaJrtment said that purchase of ibooks. V h . ' l f th •tte ' and especially like the self-service. d b til 1 T h d t will 1 a., c aiJI'man o e comm1 e,

E hili • d When asked his opinion of Wake Scherer was accepte Y • e Co· he exc ange stu .e~ a so in revealing the plan, stated that

X t lege ~s a 'graduate student m ~ath- be ~xellll?ted. from tUition fee~ and the North Carolina State Union has I e Jrso:~~ ~~~d~o~~et~~i c~~dd:·;!r~: ematics on ~e re.cc>mmendatwn of re?JStration msurance, and Will be invited Woman's College, East Car­them-WOW!" When asked about the Free Uruvers1ty. reimbursed for the cost of travel olina, Carolina, Peace, and Queens

The second of five Student Union, an activity of many Wake Forest O'Flaherty eXiplained that Scher- lirom any ~uropean harbor to and to pru-ticitpate in the prc>gram in ad-art exhibits for the year is now 1 students, Marcela Mnnoz remark- er is a political economy major, from ~er~. . . dition to Wake Forest and North being presented in ithe lower corri- ed, "We just can't seem ~o learn ~ut s_ince grad_ua.te work in that . Aptplicahons Will be received un- Carolina State. dc>r of the library. The showing the twist It hurts'" field lS not available at Wake For- til_ Feb. 15, and blanks can be ob- Lord added that the itinerary for · · · · · · t h 1 d · th m th de- tamed from O'Flaherty or fu-om the IS a collection of pamtinlgs and "I wish we could spend a month es • e was .Pace m . e a . Dean's office. The completed appli- the trip includes bus tr~sportation drawings by Claude Howell, Asso- here instead of two weeks!" the I pnrtmen~ With the _option of taking cations must be returned to O'Fla- rto and f'rom New York C1ty, ronnd-ciate P·rofessor of Art at Wilming- girls exclaimed. Mter theiT de- courses m other 'fields. tritp plane travel between New York ton College. parture Feb 10 the Chileans will Scherer was born in 1941, and is herTty. lif stud ts t ib and Hamilton Bemnuda and ac-. . . o qua y, en mus 1 e • •

According to Jerry Ma:rkatos, •travel to Ipswich, Mass., where now m h1.s se~enth semester aJt the rising juniors in good academic comodations for three nights at the

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sophmore of Wilmington, chairman they will live in private homes for Free U~1vers1t~. ~e has_ alrea?Y standinlg who have had at least two Sunset Lodge in Bermuda. The of the Student Union Music ·and Arts about five weeks. Then they will been ass1~~ed his dissertati~n topic, years of German . hotel provides facilities for tennis, Comm~ttee, the_ primary theme of visit Washington, D: c., and _New "Producti'~lty .. as a Determmant for O'Flaherty added' that Dr. 'Horst golf, dancing, and swimming. Howells work 1s the sea coast of York before rcturmng to Chile. Wage Policy. w. Hartwich Director of the For- The Travel Committee has sched­North Carolina. Dr. Jolm E. Parker, associate Since late in 1959 he has been eign Student OJifice of the F;ree uled a meeting tomoiTow afternoon , Some of Howell's recent works '?rofe~s?r of Romance languages, chief of the local student's division University, plans to visit lthe Wake at 4:30 in Room 121, Reynolda Hall, "Nets," "Pamlico Sound," and Is ~ff1c1al hos~ to the group. of an Ol'lganization dealing wilth the Forest campus in March or April of for all students interested in takmg

""The Wa~terway" are centered LlZana, AleJandro Qpazo, Oscar career and employment problems thid'is~y~e~arr~-~----------~th~e~tri~·P~·-----------~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ -a;round the water scene. Among Marchant, Miss Gonzalez, Luz Es- of •graduates in economic studies. _ Bowell's drawings are "Broken trada, Carmen Wrighton, Oriana In 1960 he was elected a member Pier" "The Beach" and "Cala- Gajardo, Miss Munoz, Alicia Mont- of the student parliament, ?.nd has bash Trawlers." ' I enegro, •Elizalbeth Wordhaimer, and been speaker for the members of

Howell has exhibited his draw- Mo:Uca. Brito ar7 seniors at th~ the economic faculty since Jan­ings and paintings at the Pasadena Uru':ersity o.f Chile and the Um- uary of last year, re[presenting Art Institute, the Corcoran Gallery versJty of ConcepciOn. student interest in the faculty and in Washington, D. c., and the Metro-j toward organizations outside the

University. politan. Muneum of Ant in New 1H d ·L d York C1ty. i ea ea s Four Debaters State Bands Seek Trophy j Emerson Head, Director O!f In-

1 strumental Music at Wake Forest, Four varsity delbaters will travel was the conductor of one of two

to William and Mary College this clinic bands at the Southwest Divi­weekend to !Participate in the an- sion North Carolina All State Band nual Marshall-Wythe Debate Tour- Clinic. nament. The clinic was held in Gastonia

AI Baker, senior od: Lancaster, last Friday and Saturday. S. C., and Ed Gaskins, juniOO" of Nilo Hovey, Educational Director Monroe, will uphold the affirma- of the Selmar Band Instrument tive side of the query, Resolved: Company, conducted the other All That labor organizations should ibe State Group. under the jurisdiction of anti-trust Return Engagement legislation.

Baker and Gaskins recently won T,his was a return engagement second place in the Atlantic Coast for Head; he conducted this same Conference tournament at Duke, clinic last year.

O'Flaherty said that the recom-mendations of Scherer's professors were especially warm concerning the German student's !Personality.

He also expressed disappoint­ment over the lack of interest shown by Wake .Forest stude:ats in the exchange, noting that he has

Saturday evening. The students were selected by

privalte audition from high scbool bands in the Southwest Division.

Conducts At ECC Head also conducted one of two

grolliPS in the North Carolina All State Orchestra Clinic, held: at East Carolina College in Greenville Jan. 26-28.

The other orchesbra was conduct­ed by Robert Rimer, Supervisor of Music in the Cleveland, Ohio, school system.

ana both .received superior indi- In 1!-d.~~on to his conducting re-vidual 'I'atings. spon~1~1lities, he rpresented a_trump- ,-

Susie Jones, senior of Raleigh, et clinic a';ld a trumpet rec1t~ for ~ I and Flranik Wood, sophomore of the alttending students and direc- 1 D D. D L 11!! Miami, Fla., will take the negative tors. . . 5o side. Miss Jones and Wood have ~e students were mvolv~ m M 0 U S II! compiled the best won-lost rec- clinics and rehearsals both Fnday ~ . Iii .-J ords for the vars1·ty ~,.,_ year WI.th and Satur~ay, and bo~ bands were rfj iiJ 1

......., e e t d oncert m th F ank t11•i•l1~••••fi:rl•: 10-7 and 12-10, respectively. ~~ ~~~Y ~~~ School au~to~um ---- -!! __ . .-~-

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!Program of are availabl of Southecr Emory, Mi Cornell, Vm

In the fiel are avnilab universities: Connecticut, Florida, Lo:y Kansas ~ Mississippi, Rutgers, Ro Green, Ken State, West Temple, Pe:

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Stanford, EI Buffalo, Okl vcrsity of li

Modern 1m 80 and mayi State, BroWJ Northwesten

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Students. i work in phil

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'South I

SU Parj In c01mectior

).International 1 · Student Union mittee has pia Border Party, at the BII'I'D, .J p.m.

David Fors: ., Richmond, Va · the committet program has b the Wake ForE Chilean studeJJ lege can demo1 their native d

Dlll'ing the . dance, Americ PJayed. The C

· Present, durin! the evening, VI and songs.

Refreshment! the Student UJ:

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'South Of Border~ SU Party Theme

In connection with Experiment in lnternatiomtl Living Program, the ·,student Union Small Socials Com­mittee has !Planned a South of the Border Party, which will lbe held at the Ban~, ·Friday from 8 to 11 p.m.

David Forsythe, sophmore of .,:Richmond, Va., and chairman of ' the CO!Ill.mittee, stated that the program has been planned so that the Wake Forest students and the Chilean students visiting the Col­lege can demonstrate to each other their native dancmg customs.

During the first hour of the . dance, American records will lbe

. played. The Chilean visitors will ·present, durlng. the ;remainder of the evening, various native dances and songs. . .

Refreshments will be served by

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OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Feb. 5, 1962 PAGE THREE

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®1~ Q;nl~ uub ~lurk • • • Wake Forest College • • •

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, FEB. 5, 1962

Higher Tuition And Its Dangers The trustees of the College have

voted to increase tuition costs $50 per ~rear for the next four years, an in­crease which will total $200 1by 1966. Thus, tuition in 1966 will be $800.

First reaction to the increase is chagrin that it should be necessary.

However, a closer look at the cir­cumstances which influenced the de­

. cision justifies the tuition increase and reveals the wisdom of the higher fees.

The $800 tuition, when it has been completely effected, will be no higher than the tuition charges of compar­able schools in the state (comparable schools being those schools not sup­ported by the state which have aca­demic standards comparable to the standards of Wake Forest). Tuition at the College will, in fact, be less than at several of these schools.

However wise the tuition increase may be, there are still some dangers involved in the increase which we as a college should keep in mind.

The danger exists of excluding qua­lified students who are una·ble to meet tuition charges. This danger is a two­fold one. Students may be prevented from applying to the College for ad­mission because of their inability to meet tuition charges. Thus Wake For­est stands in danger of losing promis­ing students because these students fail to make themselves eligible for Rcholarship assistance.

There is also the danger that the College may not be able to increase its scholarships in proportion to the yearly tuition increase, and thus lose promising students by not having ade­quate scholarship aid available.

In each case the loss of qualified students would be as much a loss to the College as to the individual ex­cluded from enrollment.

There exists still another danger, perhaps more distant in its threat, in the increased tuition rates of Wake Forest and also in the tuition increases which all privately-owned colleges are finding it necessary to make in order to keep their doors open.

This danger is inherent in the fact that colleges. with support from the gtate and federal governments can op­erate at much less expense to their !'ltudents than privately-owned institu­tions can afford to do. Thus these government-supported colleges are na­tnmlly at an advantage in competing for qualified students.

The academic standards of these schools are on a par with those of the privately-owned colleges, yet their tuition rates are much lower.

The danger of which we speak in this connection lies in the temptation for the privately-owned colleges, in­cluding Wake Forest, to accept fed­eral or state funds to aid in meeting their expenses.

Colleges are crowded now, large numbers of competent students will be clamoring for admission in the fu­ture, and the country needs to give a sound formal education to as many. people as are capable of acquiring this education in order to maintain our position in the world and guard our freedom.

Then why not accept governmental support of privately-owned colleges, such as Wake Forest, in order to en­able these qualified people to get the education which they want and which we as a country need for them to have? The answer to this question lies imbedded deeply in the United States Bill of Rights.

Neither the present administration nor recent past administrations, state or national, have attempted to dictate what may be taught in schools, col­leges and universities which are sup­ported ·by our government.

However, the possibility always exists that an administration might come to power which would try to do so. As a safeguard against such a possibility, our privately-owned col~ leges should remain free of govern­mental support at either state or na­tional level, in order to ·be free from possible governmental control.

This last danger, perhaps,· seems a remote one, and likely it is. However, it is well to be aware of its existence, however remote, in order to guard against losing a freedom by the very means with which we seek to protect it.

Thus, our $800 tuition in 1966 will not be out of proportion either with our own operating expenses or with the tuition charges of comparable col­leges.

If we as a college are aware of the problems which will ·be raised as a result of the necessary increase, we should be able to safeguard Wake -Forest against any ill effects which might result from these problems and preserve intact the integrity of her purpose and tradition.

Don't Quote Me! "Don't quote me." Time and time

again an Old Gold and Black reporter has ,been told, "I'll give you the in­formation you need if you won't quote me as having said it." Or, ·worse yet, the reporter receives ambiguous ma­terial or is refused information neees­sary to the story he's writing.

This week we received an observant letter ·which commented on a current situation at the College. The letter was unsigned.

There is something basically wrong with individual attitude when people consistently refuse to be quoted.

Perhaps the situation is indicative of the society in which we live. More and more we seem to be coming to the point of wanting to be told what to think.

Students in classrooms lack the courage and initiative to form and ex­press their own impression. They want to know :what the professor thinks so they can garble his opinions back and make a good grade on the quiz.

We let the reviewers select our

reading material for us, because we want to have read the "right" books. We wait until having read the review before expressing an opinion of the play or musical performance. \Ve let the political analysts tell us what to think about current world events.

Granted, the professor probably knows more than the student; the reviewers and analysts may have a more infomned insight into their sub­ject matter.

But the process of education in­volves learning the power of self expression. The person who allows others to do his thinking for him is cheating himself and sacrificing his integrity as an individual.

Freedom of the press is severely limited by those who refuse to be ·quoted. Thu51 our right to know, the very basis of our heritage is endanger­ed.

This heritage was founded by peo­ple with the courage of their convic­tions. It can be maintained only by peop.le with the same courage.

LYNNE SMATHERS IRVIN WILLIAMS Editor Business Manager

Foundro 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 ex.aminatiolo and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest P'ublications Board.

RAY SOUTIIARD Associate Editor

CAROLYN YOUNG Managing Editor

JACK HAMRICK Sports Editor

CHARLES OSOLIN Assistant Editor

ADRIAN KING Assistant Editor

BLAKE AYDLE'IT Circulation Manager

COLUMNISTS: F. Bruce Bach, Stanley H. Jackman, Angela Johnson, Lewis Morgan, Jim McKinnon, Charles Stone, Charles WinbeiTy. CARTOONISTS: Peter Wong, Bill ·Fulcher.

ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR: Ernie Accorsl. SPORTS STAFF: Bill Bentz, Steve Bost, Barry Dorsey, Dennis Huff, Pat Williams, Rodger Wood.

EDITORIAL STAFF: Sandy Barnes, Barbara Bennett, Pete Bi.J.lings, Marvin Coble, Lineta Craven, Kay Doenges, Ron Enders, Jon Fiedner, Kelly Griffith, Glenn Hamm, Adrian King, Caroline King, June King, Bob Krause, Cliff Lowery, Jim McKinnon, Walt Pettit, Jan Me­Quere, Susie. Simmons, Leon Spencer, Phyllis Steele, Jay Stroud, Dave Sumler, Sandy Thomas, Kay Wilson, Frank Wood, Jo De Young, George Mitchell, Dick Cridlin. BUSINESS STAFF: Nancy Howell, Roy Rockwell, Bill Spates, Bill Watson.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertlsJng by Na­tional Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Second-Class mall privi­leges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. c.

Telephone PArk 5-9711 P. 0. Box 7567 Extension %15 Reynolda Branch

Offices In Beynolda JlaU 225-227 Winston-Salem. N. C.

Study In Berlin Is Challenge Which Should Not Be Ignored

By CHARLES OSOLIN Assistant Editor

First impressions of a college can be next to worthless or extremely valuable, depending on the circum­stances. Criticisms made of Wake Forest without a complete know­ledge of the situation can often be easily rebuffed; however, com­ments by visitors on certain condi­tions which derive from legitimate comparisons with other institutions may incite reapprasial by those who aTe a part of the College, and who may be unable to see the Forest for the trees.

This is especially true when the impressions are borne out by circumstances which, in the normal course of events, might pass by and attract only fleeting notice, but which, when consider­ed in the light of fresh opinions, seem to reflect a definite short­coming in the College. The fresh opinions to which we

refer are those of a visiting political science professor, on leave from study and teaching at Princeton. A native of Lebanon, he was struck by the very small number of foreign students studying at Wake Forest, and cited the January 1961 catalog, which lists, out of a total enrollment of over 2,500 students, only 19 in attendance from foreign countries. He feels that this fact, along with what he termed "a lack of dissatisfied faces," is indictative of a certain apathy within the stu­dent body toward the problems of the world.

The circumstance which seems to validate these impressions in­volves the attempted establish­ment of a German exchange pro· gram for next year. Three weeks ago the German department an­nounced that applications were being accepted for a very gener­ous scholarship offered by the Free University of Berlin. Since that time a grand total of one serious application bas been sub­mitted.

difficulty would arise in finding a Wake Forest student to participate.

If the problem lies a fear of · hazard over the Berlin situation, we agree with O'Flaherty that such a consideration is not valid when

· analyzed. There is no more risk in Berlin than anywhere else in the event of a sudden outbreak of hos­tilities, since such an eruption would make itself felt simultane­ously throughout the world. If the tension slowly became intolerable, O'Flaherty feels that there would be sufficient warning for all for­eigners to leave East .Germany. "East-West tension focuses on Ber­lin," said O'Flaherty, "but this doesn't mean that the trouble will be confined to the focal point. Ber­lin is the symbol of our willingness to defend the Free World, and when someone goes there to study he is committing himself to the sup­port of this symbol. The Free Uni­versity was founded as a protest to tyranny and censorship in East Berlin, and it should be particular-

ly close to American·s, since we have spent a great deal of money on it and it is closest to us in spirit. The American is more welcome in the Free University than anywhere else in Germany."

A year of study in Berlin would be a year of challenge and oppor­tunity, a chance to observe first­hand the most exciting and news­worthy area of the world. We can­not quite share O'Flaherty's opti­mism over the student interest in the exchange; but if the·tension is the reason students have hesitated to apply, we would suggest a second look, for what seems to be a deterrent to going should actual­ly be the majO'r incentive.

If, on the other hand, the impres­sions of the visiting professor are correct, and if a genuine lack of interest in the world beyond our doorstep is being reflected by the apathy toward the exchange, then a re-evaluation by each of us of our role in our country and in the world is desperately needed.

One Moment Please By JIM McKINNON

Staff Columnist

Wake Forest is on the move. From reports last Thursday in Chapel by Dr Tribble and former Dean Archie, one should be proud indeed to be a part of an institution such as Wake Forest.

Amid all this growth and achieve­ment there is one very pressing problem for the student of Wake Forest today that can and must be met not by a long range plan, but immediately.

Time and time again students have voiced "gripes" about the lack of study space. Measures have been taken from time to time to correct this deficiency.

For instance the library is now on a new schedule so that students will be able to use the facilities offered by the library on weekends.

This the students realize and ap­preciate; however, this does not solve the problem presented to the student day by day in his effort to find a place that is conducive to study to do his day to day work.

Theoretically a man's home is his castle and he should have the right to determine what kind of environ­ment will prevail in his "castle." 'While at college; a student's home or 'castle" is his dormitory room.

ed place to study. Second, though the East Lounge

is a place conducive to study, and in spite of the fact that it is now open till to a. m. for those who wish to use its facilities, it is in dire need of better lighting faciliti­es.

Third, it seems that there should be some way to provide an area in the Library where students could have lounge furniture to study in.

Finally, its also seems that areas could be provided in the space not presently used in the stacks in the .library to have a limited number of smaller seminiar type rooms where small groups of students could gather and study for quizes or work on projects.

The need is real, ever-present, and must be met. It is not some­thing that should be classed as a "student demand," this is much more serious, it is a student need.

LATIN SICKNESS It is recorded that in the 1890's

a student went to the instructor requesting the discontinuance of Latin due to the fact that "as soon as he took up his Latin book he began to get sick at the stomach, and if he persisted in trying to pre­pare the lesson he fell to vomit­ing."

Off-Beat By F. BRUCE BACJI

Staff ColiUilllifit Last Thursday night the unpar­

donable sin of Baptist Hollow was committed. Yes, you guessed it. People were actually dancing in the East LoWlge of Reynolda Hall on the Wake Forest campus. These were the exchange students from Chile however, and everything was okay.

The students and their sinful dancing .were accepted by almost everyone. Even our cont."''versial leader was quoted as conceding, "From one group of Americans to another group of Americans, I say welcome."

This is quite a concession when one stops to consider that they are Catholics.

The only real rumblings of dis­content came from our ultra-liberal Political S c i e n c e Department (known affectionately as 'Richards Rangers'). Some persons over there insisted that an investigation be conducted into how Chile voted on the United States proposal to expeU Cuba from the O.A.S. before any of their representatives were ac­CE!!Pted. The Bog "T" put a stop to this nonsense quickly with his now famous statement, "We are just one big happy family."

•eoffee And Convulsions• For an entire year now thet:~

has ibeen nothing but bad lthfngs said about the Slater Food Service. Off-Beat, in a spirit of real charity, thinks that it is time that some­thing good be said.

After thinking about this ·matter over the semester break it is clear to us how Slater has developed a really good:device for selling more Coca-Cola in the snack bar.

The coffee in that godawful place is so bad that after drinking a cup of it you are forced to drink . a Coke in order to get the ta.ste out of your mouth. There is a good side to every story and the coffee in the snack bar has its merits also.

H you particularly like peanut oil and things that taste like peanut oil, then Slaters co:llfee must suit you fine. In conjunction with their contest to name the snack bar. Off-Beat would like to suggest "Coffee and Convulsions"' as being appropriate.

Off-Beat has received numerous requests from various sources to launch a full-scale attack on the Business Administration Depart­ment. Off-Beat would like very much to accomodate all of these requests but it is impossible. It is not the policy of this column to attack anything or anybody that really deserves attack and ex­posure.

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Insofar as the limited number of foreign students is concerned, our visiting professor's comments may be somewhat unneccessary. Only last summer four new scholarships for foreign students were establish­ed, and Wake Forest's participation in the Experiment in International Living, through which 13 Chilean students are spending two weeks on the campus, is a further example of the fact that the deficiency has been recognized within the College and that steps are being taken to -correct it. ·

However, in view of the lack of response exhibited toward the Ger­man exchange, the visitor's com­ment that Wake Forest students . seem "contented in their environ­ment" and lacking in world outlook would appear to have more than a little justification. Again, of course, there are various factors to be taken into consideration. The ma­jority of Wake Forest students do not qualify for the exchange, since the German department requires that the student be a rising junior with two years of German and in good academic standing. However, a ·Sizable number of students re­main who are eligible and have not responded.

It follows that if a student really wanted to study he could in his room. This is all fine on paper, but it doesn't hold water in actuality.

In reality the men's dormitories are very noisy and on most oc­casions not conducive at all for study until one or two in the morning when most of the inhabi­tants are in bed.

Cast Member Gives Inside View Of Play

Dr. James C. O'Flaberty, who has worked extremely hard to have the exchange established, finds it difficult to accept the notion that students are uninterested in going abroad to study, and feels that the poor response is due chiefly to the tenseness of the Berlin situation. O'Flaherty has overcome numerous obstacles and has fought through considerable red tape to get the Free University to agree to the exchange, never expecting that

Reports are that the women's .dormitories are plagued at times by uproar. Though Freshmen women students are required to observe quiet hours five days a week.

(I cannot speak personally for the conditions in the women's dorms since I in no way supported, pro­moted, or participated in the raid last fall on the three dormitories on the eastern side of campus! )

Future plans for the College con­tain more areas than can be used for study, and that will be fine for the students of the future.

Today through there are areas of the College that could be used to help solve this need if only the time and effort was exerted to do so.

The classrooms in the Library could very easily be divided up among the campus population so that everyone would have a specifi-

By LINETA CRAVEN Staff Reporter

The seaorch for the pot of gold was making last-minute prepara­tions to begin the final rehearsal before the premier performance.

Grease paint, lipstick, pointed ears and noses were being artis­tically applied to the actors, as all personal items of jewelry were being removed in respect of the superstitions held by professionals. Costumes were sewn into place, and a last minute glance in the miiTor assured each iindividual of the part he was playing.

Backstage the prop table was checked and re-checked, in fear of misplacing an insignificant . sheet of paper which turns significant in the hands of an artist. No fuses blown '(yet!), the lights over the arena stage were slowly dimmed in time with the notes of the over­ture.

Over the stage the musicians

union frantically attempted to make out the notes they were sup­posed to be playing by the glow of a 7~ watt bulb. Squinting and squirming with every measure, the trio mutters words of an unprin­table manner beneathe their breaths, but continue to strive for the best as Mr. Walton exclaims. "The show must go on!"

Around the stage paper leaves of blue, orange, purple, and green blow in the breeze of anticipation. The gigantic tree over the arena shakes with fear as it prepares to support 'the 1,130 pounds of various "hams" that climb up on it during the course of one production. Flowers bloom their lovliest, pump­kins are ripe with fervor, and the lone stump rlchens as it prepares to hide the lost pot of gold.

No lights ... no camera ... but plenty of action-the players run on the stage in darkness to be found smiling happily when the daybreak dawns. From the beginning of the tune of the harmonica to the last note of "Glocca MoiTa," lthe cast ,:eels every moveiDlent that is made and every note that is sung. Each catastrophe is faced with ac­ceptance that it· was supposed to happen, in hopes that such expres­sions .could convince the audience.

Then all of a sudden its aU over. .~ No more grea·se paint and pointed ears ... no more burlesque move­ments from the "get ·rich· quick'" girls in the second act ... no more bruises or cuts from poorly- judged leaps on the well. All of this is gone from view, but it never fades from one's memO!'y.

APO Sends Men To Raleigh Meet Alpha Phi Omega, national ser­

vice fraternity, will send represen­tatives to the Carolinas Sectional Conference this weekend, Feb. to­ll.

The meeting will be held on the campus of N. C. State and will fea­ture workshops and seminars on leadership and service, in addition to addresses on service by Joseph Scanlon, National Scout Executive. and William S. Roth, national presi­dent of Alpha Phi Omega.

Students from the Wake Forest chapter will participate in various programs during the conference.

Jennings Ruffin, junior of Ahos­kie, will lead a discussion group on pledging; and Dave Beal, junior of Lenior, will conduct a seminar on community service.

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Robert Shaw Chorale Appears In WF Artist Series Sixty-Two Member Ensemble Interprets J. S. Bach

By CHARLES OSOLIN Assistant Editor

The Robert Sllaw Chorale and Orchestr-a performed -J. S. Bach's sac.red "St. John Passion" before a

. large and enthusiastic audience in: Wait Chapel at 8:15 ip. m. last Wednesday.

The performance, ·sponsored by the Wake Forest Artists Ser-ies, was the third of the Chorale's cur-rent seven-week tour. The ensemble will tr-avel through the South, Midwest, and East, giving 45 consecutive performances of lthe work.

The group consists of a 3!Mmember choir, a 25-piece orchestra, and seven vocal soloists. Shaw, the asso­ciate conductor of the Cleveland Orchestr-a, is con­sidered to be one of America's finest inteJ:1Preters of Bach's music.

He feels that the size of :the chorus and orchestr-a IIIPProximately the same as those used in Bach's day yields the maximum of sonority and clarity.

The "Passion According to St. John'~ by Johann Sebastian Bach was first performed on Good Friday,

1724. It 'is believed that Bach wrote five Passion­settings, /but only the St. John and the St. Matthew have survived.

Said Shaw, "If any man was witness to the cruci­fixion, or at least to its meaning, it was Bach. The St. John Passion is a work of great religious fervor and 'faith, and we endeavor to let Bach tell his own story."

He said that the Passion is not limited to one denomination, or even to Christianity, but is as big as all man's faith, whatever the religion.

"It is a wonderful thing technically to have the opportunity to do the same work ·45 times and really go into it before 45 consecutive audiences," he added.

The St. John Passion was written several years before the St. Matthew, and has been performed only rarely in · compan:ison to the loDJger, less dra­matic later work.

"There's a popularity that works attain," said Shaw, "and the pbilospohic, meditative quality of

------------------------:--------;the St. Matthew Passion is m.ore mature, a r~ository of the great­ness Olf the St. John plus something

Chess 1Club Plans. .First Tournament

The campus Chess Club has ten­tative plans to line up tournaments with other schools after a tourna­ment is held here to select the best players on campus.

The fi.rst mee1:jng of the club this -semester will be held in 302B Reynolda Hall at 7:30 p, m. Thurs­day. This will be the permanent meeting place and time.

Plans are now being made to hold the tournament on Sunday afternoons, starting this coming Sunday afternoon. There will be a small entrance fee· and possibily cash prizes for the top players.

John Pbythyon, sophomore of Dayton, Ohio, will be the director of this tountament.

Chess sets will be purchased through the Student Union for the club shortly, but it has been re­quested that everyone coming to the meeting Thursday and owning a chess set bring it.

Three Profs Begin Duties

Former Dean Delivers Reminiscent Address

more." (Continued from page 1) Comparing the two works, Shaw a yell!l' later. He lacks only his dis-·

said, .. The St. Maltthew is a more sertation, entitled "The Political reflective work. The St. John has Ideas of the ·French Resistance, moments of reflection at the be- 1939-1945," for the degree. ginning and eil.d, but in the middle He now holds an Assistanceship

A prominent educator told Wake berent throughout the curriculum it is terribly active, presenting a in Instruction in Princeton's De-Forest College students and faculty and particularly in those courses lynching of truth and 1goodness. partment of Politics, where be members that tensions have made have a substantial, and difficult, "A major problem is :to get the teaches a course in Democracy the institution "str-onger than ever . lements "f repose and thought and Totalitarianism. He has also before in its history lby any measur- mtellectual content · · · The av~r- ~ulness in the !beginning, the surg; conducted high school classes in ing device one chooses to use." ~~~~:n~e~ox::-:sr:g:;es~~: in the middle, and the reflection French and ·F-rench geography and

_Dr. William C. Archie, execu~ve and political values, which be has at the end into their proper.il"ela- history. director of the North Carolina garner-ed from his background: his tion. In the St. Matthew the re- He will be teaching courses in Board of Higher, Education, _ad- school, his family, his church, his flection runs constantly through- international 'relations, compara­dress~ Founders Day exerc1s~s £riends. No matter the somces, out." tive government of Germany and in Wa1t Chapel last Thursday. He IS these value systems be holds are Historian and critic J. A. Fuller Russia, and Middle Eastern Foli­a former dean. of Wake Forest and not really his own. They ha-ve been Maitland_ concurs with Shaw's O!Pin- tics at Wake Forest. former dean of the College of Arts accetPted automatically and have 'ion of the greater reflective quali- His main fields of interest also and Sciences at Emory Universit;. not been subjected to self-criticism :tie~ of the St. M_atthew Passion, and include F~nch P~litics and AJ.?.eri­The !Program marked the College s and challenge Although students wntes of the St. John: can fore~gn policy and political 128th ibirthday. are lfar less n·aive now than they "Th": utterances o_f the crow?, ,tho~~t: . . .

Ar-guing that there can be "little I were a generation ago, it is yet the pnests, the disCiples, and, m G1vmg his d'IrSt .1~ress1.ons .. of learning and little gr-owth" with- true that most of our !beginning col- short, all the persons who could be Wake Forest, Tab1ll>1an _said, It out tensions, Dr. Archie said that lege students continue to bring with represented by a chorus, are lfar would /be ;r-ecomm~ndable if the stu­"one can predic:t with some assur- them a borrowed faith and bottow- ~ore. elalborately set th~ !they ~e dent. body opened I~elf more to the ance that with continuing enlight- ed ideologies. If it were not so, m the St. Matthew Passio.n, bemg outside world. Foreign students are ened leadership and continuinlg perhaps we would have less need longer and more organic m struc- under,.represented h~re, and there SU!Pport, Wake Forest will become for colleges and universities ..• tu;_e. . ar~ not many foreign :teachers. one of the !finest undergraduate .. 0 f th t . d d In both the great PassiOn-set- The studen~s seem to be con-

ut o e ension engen ere t· th ':tati f th E t ded · th · - · t d schools anywhere in the country b th nfli ts If aly mgs, e rec~. :ves o e van- en m etr enVtronmen , an and will inevitably I think lead ! eslfe co .c ticome sde fin-:mally- gelist and of Christ are marvelous the shortage of dissatisfied faces

• • • SIS se -examma on an · th · ti al th t th · · d' ti f 1 t' 1 k £ the pan-ade of Baptist colleges. May under the best cil"cllllilstances, in: lnl ell' emtto on powf erth; a . e IS t~dlc~ t:ve ot .~ hre a: divde d ac o I cite jiUSt a few facts to bolster t ll tu 1 d iritual wth •• so emn u erances o e savtor ou SI e m eres , e a e . this claim: the physical plant has e ec a an sp Jgro • should inspilre a great il.'eligious He suggested that organizations gained in -value some 12-15 fold; the writer ~e Bach to his su~~st like the International Relations faculty is larger, stl"oD~,ger.- better Fo· ur Coeds thoughts IS !Perhaps less sur:pnsmg Club should be encouraged, and trained batter housed and better than that he should have found that students should not feel that paid b~t not well enough. varying expressions for the words such gr-oups are limited to those "~ t dents have im roved Will G T of the EvaDJgelist, and have fused, majoring in politics.

to the s ~ t th t P t b · 0 0 as it were, the conventional end- Tabibian noted that the Middle detopoknm tah tyouu mus et ings of recitative into phrases that Eastern Politics course is being

prou ow a YO r curreu · · ff d f 1th f' t tim k freshman class is better than that N y k must str-ike ev«:ry hear~ as giving o eret ar ... e ll'S h e at Wa _e of any of. ihe ... tax-supported."in-. ... c._ :ew-<-• . o~ "' the extiact tomldUSlc_alth theqw'Vtmfllentt 0~ a Fo~~ .band =s d opelfiul that lt stitutions in the State and must .J., n~a :ve . WI e U OS SIDl· WO_ • e con . ue . . t k d 1 n1 to Duk plic1ty, yet wtth the most complete Smith, who was born m South a de ;ec?:S P,ace

0 Y e (Continued from page 1) and affecting sympathy. Carolina, graduated from Wofford

an aVI on. formance of "Finian's Rainbow." "Never before or since has re- in 1960 with a B. A. in !English. His Dr. Archie also had ~tr-ong praise citative been raised to so high a two courses here and two at Salem

for W~e Forest President Harold This exchange program was in- value of expressiveness ... surely will ibe his first teaching experi­

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Feb. 5, 1962 PAGE FIVB

~Rainbow' Is Gay Critic Finds Play Pleasing, Humorous

By ANGELA JOHNSON Arts Columnist

The Wake Forest College Theatre is presenting a good evening's entertainment in Harbury and Lane's "Finian's Rainbow." It is light and gay and a rather nice way to start off the new semester. The musical itself bas a nice type of humor, a li:ttle corny at times, but on the whole very laughable. Shades of "Waltonish" humor were creditable additions.

The lovely, trained voice of Judy Morris definitely put all the others to shame. Miss MOO'ris, who proved herself a competen:t musical comedienne last season in "Kismet," was equally as effective as the heroine Sharon McLonergan, and her Irish accent, while not exactly authentic, was consistent and well handled.

Jan Huggins, the dreamer Finian, bad more trouble with the Irish accent and was less ibelievable as an old man than Sam Allen, the Senatoah Billboard Rawkins.

Fored Eaves, who played Og, the Letprechaun, for­got his accent a few times but was so comically ef!fective that it added rather :than substracted to the humor. Endowed with some of the funniest lines of the production, Og handled them well, in addition to performing some difficult comic ibusiness.

John Bell was very pleasing as the young hero; his voice came :through much better in his duets with Miss Morris than his solos.

-John Blanks and Chris Frost, two gangster types, were interesting and !Provided a good balance foc the chor:us •girls. They both looked tall and str-ong and imposing and therefore suspceptible to the wiles of

the pretty singers and dancers. Jim Shertzer sang well in his role as the Share­

cropper preacher. He and _his partner Becky Burgess stole at least one scene. With Elaine Efird as Mr. Shears and Mrs. Robust, he was less effective. These roles were somewhat "hammy," anyway.

Jackie Mitchell danced so well that one might wish she had danced more in the !Product.ion. The chorus girls looked and acted well; their outlandish costumes in Act Two were good, as were those of the sing&s.

Except for the filrst nwmber, which included more shouting than siruging, the singers were delightful. The color of :their costumes, the attr-activeness of the •girls, and the fact :that they all seemed to be enjoy­ing the show so much caught the audience up in their enthusiasm.

The scenery being behind the audience gave one a sense of being in the play to ibegin with. Of course~ arena :theatre is more intimate, and the staging took advantage of this lby allowing the singer-s to step into the audience for a number in all their SheaJI's and Robust finer-y,

A tr-ee banging over one section of the audience was an interesting dance platform. The small comlbo set above the stage was sometimes shaky, and miss­ed notes bothering the otherwise fine dancing of Jackie Mitchell.

A !packed audience for the first !Performance gave the players the laughs and applause they desel'Ved. The production was short enough not to be tiring and well handled enough .to be pleasing. Everyone, evea the most hard-boiled cynic, should enjoy iit.

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yr. Tribble who bas ~en the sub- stigated last year by the students some of the airs surpass all the ence. Ject of controversy durmg many of at Barnard, who included Wake musical outpouriDJgs of the human ------- '-------------=-=-----------------------=-----=------------­the 11 years be has /been head of Forest in a comparative study of spirit in intensity of melodic utter-

. the institution. integrated and non-integrated .col- ance· "It is finished" and "Con-"He landed in Wak~ Forest in leges in the South. sider', 0 my soul" of the St. John

Seyt~mb:;r. 1950, o~ his _lfeet and . Th~ir purpose. is to find out. what Passion, and "Have mercy" of the runnmg, Dr. Archie said of Dr. IS bemg done m the South m all st. Matthew have no rivals in the Tribble. "He bas rall'ely slowed phases, and what is not being done. II'ange of art." down since. He was handed the Last year only one other school The Robert Shaw Chorale was mandate to move the college. He was included in the exchange, but organized in 1948 and has made accepted. the mandate and be~ an the program has expanded now to more than 100 recordings since :that the move. It w~s not easy or Sl.J?l· include three colleges: South Caro- time. The group appeared in the IPle. From all ~~~es there arose dis- tina's Bennett College, West Vir- Artists Series two years ago, [per­gl'!lllltled oppos1tion. It was held that ginia state, and Wake Forest. forming Bach's "Mass in B.;minor." the college could nqt move without ---------------------------­losing its soul . . . But Harold Trib-ble never wa-vered. His energy, n .1 C •t A . his boundless o~tim_ism, -hi~ simple rro l es s zan yet profound faith m the fightness · of the move SWetPt him along. With d • A • !!!~~~i~<t~~!~s::e!:::~J Stu· zes s Promznent foundations and other leading citi-zens of North Can-olina and Winston- By DAVE SUMLER Dr. Gokhale outlined a three-Salem, move the college be did. Staff Reporter I point plan for Wake Forest's gain-

"Little'thanks did he receive for The Director of Wake Forest's ing national prominence. He said his troubles. Nearly every group Asian Studies Program said last the faculty should be more active found something wrong with what Thursday that the program has had in national organizations; the Col­had /been done; the students, the "a gTeat impact on this area." lege should have its own publica­faculty, the alumni, preachers and Dr. Balkrishna G. Gokhale came tion series as do the Universities laymen. Even so, Harold Tril:}ble to Wake Forest' in 1960 to head the of Chicago and Princeton; and the stood his ground· and has happily Asian program. C{)llege should edit at least one lived through those bruising years He said in an interview that Wake jour-nal of an organization such as of gettiil/g moved and getting set- Forest's prominence in this field is the American Historical Society. tied. He rightly deserves the ever- evidenced by the decision of other Commenting on the Peace Corps, lasting thanks of ever-y person college groups to bold the South- Dr. Gokhale said that it "is doing whose life is or has been touched east Regional Conference on Asian well in the Phillipines .and Pakis­by Wake Forest." Studies on this campus next Jan- tan" but -is just entering India. He

Dr. Archie said that the college nary. thinks this is a good way to "get faces tensions created b,- the J. The 42-year-old Indian scholar the students involved," - better creasing enroDment demands, the commented on student exchange "than stacks of printed informa­·~ual demand made upoa the col- programs durmg the interview. He tion." lege for teaching and research," advoc'ated a "Wake Forest in Dr. Gokhale lives in the faculty ::dth::~o:f:::a~in!ta:~o!:a~~::~ India" program. Under this the apartments with his wife and two and international happenings. College would send several recent daughters, ages 14 and 9. He came He also discussed the "tension g·raduates to teach in In-dian col- to Wake Forest in 1960 and has

leges for a year-. Dr. Gokhale said now received his permanent ap­built up in !the individual, student this "contact on the lower gr-aduate pointment. or teacher, when he comes to .grips and under graduate level" is what with something new and conflicting -with his past. Such tension is in- is needed.

Equal Ability

Winners Announced In Duplicate Tourney

Asked to comment on Wake Forest students, Dr. Gokhale said they "can compete scholastically with students in New England ... " but the other students "have a natural advantage" because they

Since receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Bombay in 1946, Dr. Gokhale has taught at that uni­versity; at Bowdoin College, Bur-ns­wick, Maine; at Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio; and at the Univer­sity of Washington, Seattle, Wash­ington. Winners in the Wake Forest Du­

plicate Bridge Club last Tuesday night were North-south, first, Mr. and Mrs. William Carson, of Win­ston-Salem; second, George Mit­chell, junior of Jacksonville, Fla., and Ron Honeycutt, senior of Liles­ville; third, Mr. and Mrs. R. M. David~on of Winston-Salem.

have better speakers on their cam- Productl•on Conti"nue• puses as guests and the students o

East~vest winners were first, Sue Stowe, junior of Mt. Holly, and Drew Moore, sophomore of Sylva; second, Mrs. W. H. Daniels and Mrs. Stephen Paine of Winston­Salem; third, Pay Myers, senior of Winston-Salem, and Dennis Bell, junior of Goldsboro.

come from a wider geographical area. This makes them more aware ~£ national · and international is­sues.

Dr. Gokbale explains the differ­ence in the quality o£ speakers by saying that Wake Forest has "not made a real effort so far." It is just beginning to do so, and "the funds are limited" for this purpose. He praised the Student Union sym­posium on existentialism as what the College needs.

The production of "'Finian's Rainbow'' will play fonr nights this week, Wednesday-Saturday in the College theatre.

Reservations for the play, a musical with an Irish setting, may be made at the Information Desk in Reynolda Hall. Ticket Prices are $.75 for students and faculty of the College, and $1.50 for other tickets. Reservations should be made as early as pos­sible.

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PAGE SIX. ....... •• Fob. '· '"" OLD GOLD AND BLACK Second· Term Begins Mov1es Also Slated O Oth £1 _ , ..

• n er t..~arnpuses Twl. sti• ng Party Coming By LEON SPENCER lseve~ty-eight confined most of their Staff Reporter reading to "the front and back

As the llreshm~n plunge into the prges." By CHARLES WINBERRY Entertainment Columnist

. !final week of pledge training, it is "The latter fact would seem to

All Night... 1942 · reactions to the events which occur of turning pages is not preferred

Odell Matthews Motors . P/ymauih .. Valiant Fiat use of their hiits-"At the Hop," ~hould be ~nJoyabl~ for all th~se I interesting to hear other college's suggest that the ominous rustllng "Twisting U.S.A.," and "Twisting mterested m the Jungles durmg

The sounds of show business and B al 'th It· 1 t'l 8 tu d h during a similar week. Dean Mylin in classes by the various faculty

The "KiDJg ees" ong Wl Pays un 1 a ray wen H R of Ohi · st te u · ·t b ,. ~~==========================~ bearty moving of the spirit aTe aU "Tommy Haley and the Monitones" "Black Sunday" hits the screen.; ... oss o a ruversl y mem ers. prominent parts of the center stage with Dick Bennick as the M. C. When it hits the screen, it is ad- ?.~c~.a~. denounced. allf for~s h of Seventy-three per cent read the ;to which our entertainment. senses will bring up the curtain at each vis able for you to hit the road b azmg . once aga~, or I as lead editorial, but 81!Per cent "were must ·be drawn at one trme or of the three shows. somewhere else. ecn the Ignored !POlicy for years. more concerned over the ~iris' new another. T~e aspec~s of ~s area This is the first in a series of The Carolina has had much bet- The Dean identified hazinlg as dorm hours (a current article) than of college life are VItal and unport- really big dance parties planned ter weeks and there are big thiiiigs " ... ;padding, 'rides,' scavenger any Olther article ... "

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ant. at the Carolina, More are to come in store for the future-we have hunts, or eating odd foods · · ·" Some interviewed readers desired I once heard an educator say and there is dancing on the stage that straight from our source. . ~e _also stated that the colleg': ·:pro- that their campus paper be made

that there were three t:hinigs that of all sorts planned. Back on campus if you need en- hi~Its any act that does · .· ·InJure, a daily paper, to which the staff we needed to learn in college if "Cry for Hap,py" plays for the tertainment drop a firecracker in fnghten, degrade, or disgrace a sarcastically !l"eplied that they "na-we were to ibe successful on the last time today and is the one the court or' Kitchen Dorm and see fellow student." turally welcomed the sqggestion." outside. He cited that everyone bright spot, movie-wise, at the the white-headed anti-firecracker When asked if ;there were inci- Dead Week while in college needed to le:l.rn to Carolina this week. "Seven Women machine come to life on the porch dents in recent years which 'brought After observing rthe results of a play bridge, to dance, and rto play From Hell" is a real go-getter. It of an uwer :floor. It is quite a treat! about the edict, Dean Ross said, semester's work and the damage

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• golf. "There were some evidences of done •by the final exams, perhaps

He said the degree could come 'muscular tfatigue,' "-an under- some Wake Forest students would -----------------------------~ but to use it right; we needed to v. ~h . G k statement, perhaps. adhere to the one-year policy of

learn these three things while in - ·nacs 0 Are rree s Political Philosophy Florida State University, tried four r--------------------------,. VISIT OUR SHOWROOMS •

the hallowed halls of higher "uni- ~ From the campus of a mid-west- years ago. versity" education. ern college, a professor has con- The administration decla:red a

By CHARLES STONE ducted a survey to discover Jthe Dead Week, othe week before exams. MOI!'e thaD: tha,t, we SEek to say . _ political philosophy of college stu- "During this period, no meetillgs

that entertamment and the relax- The word this week, among fra- Kappa Alpha dents. The survey primarily was could lbe held· no !Parties wuld be ing of the mind, the quest of :e- ternity pledges at least, is "Help!" Craven Williams was recently I designed to disting;uish !between the scheduled; an' extra activities came lease from bored~m a~d the de!lrre The reason? Most fraternities are enga,ged to Beth Parker of Woman's conservatives and the liberals in to a complete halt. The adminis­of men to let t~e1r h~t~ do~n IS a cond~;ting. ~h~ir ann u a 1 "Hel? College. American colleges. tration put the clamps on us ... ," pant of our soCiety. \\hich lS :very Week actiVIties tfor pledges anti- Brent Mudd pinned Tara Friz- Dr. Thomas A. Petit CW:ector of the editor of !the ·Florida Flambeau. Important ~nd whi~h ~annot be ci!pating initiation. zelle, a coed of Winston-Salem. the Breech School of 'Business at the caill(pus paper, wrote. . overlooked if a~ this (I.e. book~, So don't be surprisedtoseeyoung Kappa Sigma Drury College in Springfield, Mis· exams, classes) lS to. mean what It men in suits washillg cars, helping I Wilbert Faircloth has !Pinned coed souri, felt that "the results of this bshould to 1ad fuftbuJI"e. m lthe hustle- surprised coeds with their trays, Maory Lou Butts of South Hill, Va. SU'l"vey cause(dl him to have a s:X ·Stu· -:IentS

ustle wor o usmess and com- k' · bli 1_., t · t f k t' · b t ., U~ . 1 . t t wor mg on vanous pu c re "'w.ons Dave Scarboro recellltly pledged [ ccr run amoun o s ep 1c1sm a ou

mercia 10

eres s. . !Projects, etc. They are trying to the fraternity. the genuineness of the so-called T. E h .Enough .foc othat smce we rec~g- show by deed rath?r th~ word Lambda Chi Alpha conservative movemend:s on Ameri-1.6." XC ange

mze the rmpo~an~e of entert~m- . , · their desire to be The following were elected fra- can college campuses. . ment. Let us mq~e furth~r ~to found wo.rthy to ternity officers: Bob Stanley, presi· Dr. Petit proved another one of ~lX stuaents will take advan~a.ge the sch.edule ahead m the Twin City be called brother dent; Jim Biesecker, vice-president; his theories. He asked the fresh- thi~ semester of the new Jomt to achieve thes~ ends: in the fraternity to Charles Stone, secreta.cy; Bobby men and the seniors to determine !POlicy aJt Salem and Wake .Forest

Skimpy which they have Allen treasU'l"er· Lee Weddle so. before taking the survey ilf they colleges !Permitting students at We are afraid that as illsual ilt is giventheirpledge. cial ~hairman; Bill Fulcher 'rush were conservati"V"es or liberals. each to take cou;rses fw full credit

very skimpy but ~s the P.ostal de. To the outsider, chairman; Jerry Moore, ~ledge Fifty !Per cent of lf:he fu:'eshmen at the other institution. partmen.~ says neither ram, sn?w, "Help Week,. ac- master; and Charles Corey, house appraised themselves correctly; 75 Four .Wake Forest College stu-sleet, shine or. second:rate m~v1es, tivities look soph- manaoger. per cent of the seniors were cor- dents will take art coursesatSalem some of the time, will refram us omoric. It seems J _ k P d h h lb rect. that are not offered at their own from the task ahead '-"di h td t ac en ergrap as ecome Th ults D p tit bell h 1 On Sal tudent will tab . a Cuu s ' ou a - engaged to Sandra Jordan a stu- ese ;res ' r. e eves, sc oo . e em s '

The Winston continues its run of ed practice which dent at the Greenville Gene~al Hos- prove that "education causes stu- an advanced psychology course at "Flower Drum Song" tb!l'owgh Wed- STONE is founded on pita! School of Nursing Greenville dents Ito iknow themselves and their Wake Forest not offered at Salem, nesday. It's a !l"eal winner straight needless humiliation. s C ' ' attitudes better." and another Salem student will take from the studio of Rodgers and But this is not so. It seems a · · . . The College Eye a political science course on Latin Hammerstein that is taking the fact of human nature that one W~o~ Ens•glil sh .pmndedB KbaJy Cook .of I On the campus of the State Col- America at Wake Forest. country by storm. Nancy Kwan, · t thing th t · t ms on- a em, an ° ones pm- lege of Iowa in Cedar Falls, the The exchange policy of the two star of "Suzie Wong," takes the :::-:~~~ e!it:

0labor. a Is no 1 ~=~t;;~olp~~an, a coed from Jen- newspaper, The College Eye, con- colleges went into elffect this se-

lead assisted by James Shigeta and • ducted a surveytodetermine exact- mester. Miyoshi Umeki, who wo-n an aca- Realizing this and the fact that Pi Kappa Alpha Iy "who reads whalt" in the campus Its pur.pose is to broaden the aca-demy award for "Sayonara." a man experiencing a highly ideal- The chapter's !faculty advisor, paper. demic offerings at each institution

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BEST PRICES II TOWN! . . istic initiation will be more im- Dr. C. B. Earp, was the subject tin li

It 1s one of th~ ~st moVI~s of pressed if he approaches it with of a feature article in the Pika Of eighty interviewed, one read without necessita g a dup cation the year, the mus1c 1s exceptional, a humble attitude, fraternities have mutional magazine, "The Shield and all:_:an~d~o~n~e:_r~e:a~d~n~o~t~hin~·~g:·~Tb~e:_~o~th~e~r~o~f~e~ff~o~rt=·----------~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: the photog~aphy excell~nt, _and the .replaced the questionaiJ>le, out-dated Diamond," in honor of his long color beautiful: The enci!DgisTath~r pre-initiation rites with service and service to Gamma Phi.

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curt bu~ that Is !the ~am reason It public relations jprojects which are An h h ld S turd is runrung at the Wmston. . open ouse was e a ay

"The King and I" takes over worthy m themselves. , night. . Thursday for a long run Yul Bren- During "Help Week' a pledge Aaron Strmger recently became ner and Deborah Kerr a~e the stars learns the value of labor and the engaged to Carolyn Fields of Monte­in this a retU'l"n :visit to the Winston. virtue of humility, and he remem- cello, •Ky. _ It is an exceptional movie and one bers it all his lif~. . Al Hall was initiate_d this week. you should enjoy Alpha Sigma Phi Sigma Chi

Dane~ Party The ch8JPter recently purchased A record party was held in the The Carolina is rather devoid of a washer-d;ryer d'or the brothers' house last weekend.

decent flicks this week, ibut a big use. . The following were re~ently ini­twist party highlights the calendal' Luther Vann became engaged to tiated: Brad Brooks, J1m Isreal, of events. The party is set for 'nles- Jeanette Rivinus of Roanoke, Va. Jerry Randolph, ~nd Dave Turner. day at 4:30, 7:30, and 9:30 all p, m. Jerry Hass recently visited the Slade Howell pmned Gay Myers, The admission is a buck. chap.ter. a student at Salem.

"Danny and the Juniors" begin Delta Sigma Phi P~t McDowell won th~ . interfra-a ovisit to the Triangle cities with A "fallout" party was held in terruty h~dball comp':btion. their appearance and should make the house January 12. SiglDa Phi Epsilon

A number of brothers recently Jr.TP'D.~ n. A 111 & p'M visited the Davidson Chapter. W .1.' J ~- !11.1P'.J .1.' .J -------------, Dick Marsh pinned Bartlett Smith

of Salem College.

8685.01 0 n The D I. a I Alumnus Lou Klechak was elect-ed treasurer of his class at the Uni'Versity of Maxyland Dental School.

Monday, January 15 5:00-Evening Concert 8:55-News 7:00--Campus Report 7:15-Wake Forest Sports 7:30-Special of the Week 8:00--Reynolda Hall Lecture

Series 9:00-Special of the Week 9:30-Broadway Spectrum

10:00-Interlude 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-Sign Off

Tuesday, January 16' 5:00-Evening Concert 6:15-0pera of the Week

10:00-Interlude 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-Sign Off

Wednesday, January 17 5:00-Evening Concert 8:55-News 7:00-Germany Today 7:15-Washington Report 7:3{}-Behavioral Science 8:00-Development of the-

Individual 8:55-Busine::s Review

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9:00-Music from Wake Forest Theta Chi 10:00-Interlude Ted Lockwood and Oavid Reis 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade were initiat~ recently. 12:00-Sign Off The pledges are experiencing

Thursday, January 18 "Help Week" Jan. 31~Feb. 4. 5:00-Evening Concert There will be a party at the house 7:00-American CoWlboy Feb. 10. 7:15-World of Conductor 7:30-Gcorgetown Forum 8: 00-Book Fair 8:15-Food for the World 8:30-Toward Peace 9:00-Ethic for Broadcasting 9:30-Cartoonist's Art

10:00-Interlude 10:30-Deaconllght Serenade 12:00-Sign. Off

Friday, January 19 5:00-Evening Concert 6:55-News 7:00--The Consuzner Question 7: 15-Special 7:30--American Law 8:00-Classical Drama 9:30-Special

10:00-Interlude 10:30--Deaconllght Serenade 12: 00-Sign Off

Fellini Film Plays "The Nights of Cabira," an Iita­

lian film directed by the director of "La Dolce Vita," .Federico Felli­ni, willlbe shown Wednesday even­ing at 8 p. m. in Room 14 of Win­ston Hall. The film will !feature the outstanding Italian actress, Giuletta Masina.

Irt; has won several awards, in­cluding the 1957 Academy AWIU'd for the best foreign language film. Tbiree Gold Donatellos, compll!"able to the Academy Awards, were awarded for the film, the direction ar,.d the actress. "The Nights of Cabira" was also featured at the Cannes International Film Festival.

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the DEACS . . . B:r JACK HAMRICK

Sports Eclltor

McCREARY· SEES IMPROVED ·sEASON FOR·· DALLAS COWBOYS--

Bob McCreary, lfo~e~ Wake Forest tackle who has just returned :lirom the gridiron· wa;rs in the play-for-pay ranks, thinks that the Dallas Cowboys, for whom he has started as an offensive tackle for most of the season, will definitely improve on their 4-9-1 record for ihe 1961 pigskin season. · McCreary, a 6-4, 245 lb .• giant during his collegiate days, was draft­ed li>Y the San Jr'rancisco 49ers of the National Football League after. the 1960 football season. ·

But the 49ers had an abundance o£ talent at lllie tackle position, and McOrearry was traded to the Dallas Cowlboys. For the first part of the season this bulking 250 pounder, served on the ''taxi squad" and didn't even dress for the first four games. · "I had just been traded to the Cowboys at the beginning of the

season," McCreary explains, "and I needed to learn and adjust to an entirely different style of play. Therefore, I didn't dress for the first foll!I' galll.es·of the season, but I !Practiced all along with the squa4 and gradually adjusted to the CoWJboy play.ill!g system."

"Then on the eve of our filith game, Tom Landry (head coach of the. Cowboys and former defensive coach of the New York Giants) told me that I was starting that Sunday against the Philadelphia EaJgles_ On this first assignment I played opposite Leo Shugar, one of the better defensive men in the league."

McCreary must have !played fairly well that day, for during the reanainder of the season he started every game. But the Cowboys did not fare as well collectively as McCreary did individually.

A season with only four ;victories-one of the victories came at the expense of the subsequent Eastern Division champs, the New York Giants-obviously couJd not be termed successful.

Next year, however, Bob sees things a J.iJttle differently. "I think we'll win twice the number of victories we notched this past season," exclaims the former Hudson Hilgh School (near Lenoir) athlete.

"We have several boys who are coming along fast and should help us a lot. Don Perkins, hal:fback from New Mexico State, is !Probably oux best iback. He was the fourth leading rusher in the NFL last season."

McCreary also had words of praise for tackle Bob Frye, terming him the "most consistent lineman on the squad." Drawing additional !Plaudits were J. D. Locket, quarterback Don Meredith, and corner man Don Bishop.

Yes, McCreary is defini-tely enthused about CoWboy prospects for the 1962 season. "We'll at least win more than we did this year," he concludes.

VAST DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COLLEGE AND PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL- '

Now that McCreary appears to have made- the 1grade in the pro ranks, what does he consider Ito be the main difference between collegiate football and the l})il'ofessional 'brand? ·

"In college ball," Bob said at a ·recent inter:view prior to the Carolina-Wake 'basketball clash, "the coaches tell you what they want you ito ·do ·and then· they show yo.u how to do it, but in pro lball they . only tell you what they w:ant you to do. They expect you to know how to do it already."

.D.uke Wins

W. Va .. ~d:ges :Peacs -.· .. t ... - - '

West Virginia's Mountaineers, sparked by the point making of their hot-shot twin guards Jim McCormick and Rod Thorn and an harrassing first-hal!£ full court press, outlasted Wake Forest's scrapping Deacons. in a wild scoring foray, 101-99, in Charleston's Civic Center in Charleston, West Virginia Wed­nesday night.

McCormick and Thorn, connect­ing on shots both from lthe outside and near the basket, accounted for 59 of their teams total :Point output.

Wake .Forest had a hot scoring duo of its own in All-.Aim€rica L€n Chappell and sophomore sensation Frank Christie, who also racked lliP 59 tallies between them, but even this proiligious effort was not enough to stop the Mountaineers.

The Deacons were breathing down West Virginia's back for the entire game, but each time that it appeaTed that Wake was in a posi­tion to lengthen its leBid or take the advantage, the Mountaineers would come down with a crucial relbound, make a critical steal, or receive a Wake bad pass giiit and regain a more substantial advantage.

The game started off at a fast pace right oH the ibat, with the Mountaineers drawing first lblood on a jumper from the left corner of the d:'orecourt by Tom Lowry.

The Deacons, however, came right back on a tap by Chappell and then went ahead on a charity toss by Christie. Then Chappell and Christie, aided by free throws by Dave Wiedeman and Bob Wool­lam, forged Wake into a four point

-lead. With 12:05 on the clock the Moun­

taineers tied UiP the game a.t 18-all on a charity toss and quickly bolted into a four poi!nt adovantage on back to bacik: Iayups by Thorn and Mc­Cormick after intercepting two suc­cessive Deacon in~unds attempts.

Wake Forest's FRANK CHRISTIE ( 41) goes up over the outstretched hands of Du.ke's JEFF MULLINS (44) to snare a rebound. Duke center JAY BUCKLEY (22) tries vainly for the rebound while ART HEYMAN (25) looks on.· Duke won the ACC contest, 82-68.

For ·the remainder of the initial period West Virginia held the lead, I=------------------~---------. at one point leDJgthening the ad- c - I p Sh I · ~:!a~~etoM:~~:::·le~t 5~~~ ,, ~IQ' awn· op, nc.

After intermission the Deacons began to whittle down West Vir- 16 E. 4th STREET ginia's lead chip iby chip, and with . MONEY TO LOAN ON ANYTHING OF VALUE

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"That Snead's really respected throughout the league. He's a tqp­notch player and shows a·tot··or-poiSe,"·-compDments M:ccre'iu-i. ·

With 3:40 left West Virginia still -

~e~yli~0:a~~\i~~~:£:~id~: ., -- "'T:HE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES Paul Miller. Miller, however, miSs- · · , - · -· -· -

P.rdbalbly big Bob would have had more plaudits to bestow upon Snead or his own Cowboy teammates, but time would not permit as he lumbered out of the office to try to .line up !two tickets to the nearly sold-out Carolina-Wake lbattle.

ed his free toss on the one-and-one, 5 u E G and Wake Foresthaditsbi>gchance. AL T : RO ER DAUB

,, But AI Koehler travelled and Darve Wiedeman failed to cOIIlD.ect on a h-ee throw before West Vi!rginia

" · "Strength Is Key To Athletic Success''

lengthened its lead to six. With jlllSt over a minUJte left the Mountaineers led by seven, 97-92, and Wake ap­pLared finished, but not so.

ChR!Ppell connected on a three point play to cut the margin to four, but the Mountaineers had pos­session with less than a minute re-

. , By PAT WILLIAMS and it looks like he's come up With mainiii!g. . . "Strength is the key to success a winner. He .is interested primarily !he Deacs regam~ possess1on

' !,

'• in modern athletics. Such a state. in building stronger athletes and WJth ~ seconds lef~ and guard menrt: may sound extreme, but leaves nothing for ,granted as he Butch Hassell sank a ~umper to cut nevertheless it is true. The coach delves into every possible phase of the lead to two. But the Deacs had who capitalizes on- this ilmowledJge his mushrooming facet:·of athletic to foul to ,get the ball back, and is destined for success. The ·coach training. • _ , : _ ." . . Thorn was the wrong man to foul. who doesn't is destined for medio- !Hooks discusses Strength (the The 6-4 junior made good on two crity." '· · ~,. only ;r.aw ability that: can .be radi- lftree !throws to !break the century Th~se startling words form the cally developed imd improved); m.ark. ;Chappell came right ~ack

ope~g sentences ko~ Dr. Gene Muscle (its anatomy and physic- Wlth his 37th marker of the wg~t Hooks ~as~ul1Y-wx:tten book I logy, its strengrt:h and endurance); to make the score 101-99, lbut 1t ;t'he Applica~on of 'Weight Train- Strength DevelOIPIDent (the rvarious :vas too late as the ~er sounded mg to Athletics, recently published known ways we have for inereas- JUst after the ball whisked !through

~> by Prentice-Hall, Inc. Hooks is an ing strength or "The Last Time the cords. associ~te professor of physical r Saw Nick Patella."); Developing ----------education at Wake Forest who the Weight Training Program M •tun• M t ~t becam~ interested in this field (equipment; facilities, designing an ers ee

••

while wol'lking on his doc.toral dis· the prQgram, general salf'ety l(lrac­sertation nt George Peabody Col- tices>; and Weight Training Terms lege. He has combined eight years and Exercises (description of body of extensive study and research movements, lifting positions and

The Maritimers will hold their first meeting of the Spring se­mester Feb. 15. At !this time, the club will start work on its planned water show, "Tropical Tempo." Tile meetinlg was announced by James Johnson, !President of the

with a crisp, clear style or writing exercises.) ' an~ the. result is this handbook This preliminary information is which will be devoured by coaches followed by the real meat of the and 81thletes all over the country

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Many books have been written on the "lron Game" and there have,. been a lfew previous attempts · to al(lply weight training to lthe Ameri­can sports. However, these !books bave ibeen vague and superficial in nature and never met with any astonishing success. They never-set ll!P really . concrete training pro­grams but were more coocerned with weight· lifting ~·<seeing · how much one can lift) and body build­ing (developing a pretty physique.>

Weigh~lifting Mushrooms· Now arrives Dr. Hooks' effort

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.AGE EIGHT Monday, Feb. 5, 1962 OLD GOLD AND BlACK

WF Mariners Top Cavaliers, 59-35

Deacs.Rally; NipS. C. By ERNIE s\.ECORSI gister 11 points. times in the final five . minutes of

The Wake Forest Demon Deacons With the' capacity crowd roaring play. Each time South Carolina did battled back from a 16 point deficit its approval, the Gamecocks spurt- the tying up, which was a turn of early in the second half to whip ed points at the outset of the second events from early in the game. the Gamecocks of South Carolina half. This streak stretched the Chappell Hot In 2Dd Half

By DENNIS HOFF points. Surgener's best dive was An eager Wake .Forest swimming the reverse somersault, ill.Sing a

squad showed its potential by down- tGck position with a difficulty inlg the rvisiting University of Vir- rating of 1.6. Newton took first ginia Cavaliers, 59-35, in the final place, Fisher second and Surgener home meet of the season Satmday. third. The diving victory sent U.

78 to 74. South Carolina lead to 16 points, ·Chappell, who scored 26 of his The Deacs trailed 50 to 38 at the their biggest of the night. 36 points in the second half and

WF mau-iners overcame the Cava- Va. into a 23-20 lead. liers' 26-25 lead midway through Wake's catPtain Petrasy defeated the meet and held the .top S!POt for the Cavalier competitors with ease the win. It was the team's second in the 200-yard butterfly. Gaining ACC victory. the edge in the first 25 yards, he

half, !but led by the rebounding and It was at. this time, with 15 mi- picked up most of his markers late clutch s c 0 r 1 n g of All-American nutes rem<~ining in the ban game, in the contest when the club most Len Chappell and Bill Hull Wake that the Deacons ignited their re- desperately needed them, scored roared back in the second h~lf out- markable comeback. Rookie Butch 8 of Wake Forest's last 14 points. scoring the homestanding Game- Hassell threw in a 20 foot jumper With the score tied -at 70 all and cocks 40 to 26. · and Wake was on its way. Carmi- four minutes left on the clock,

chael ftlllowed with another jump Christie and Wiedeman hit free

Through the eifforts of Ed Wood, finished in a span of 2:40.1.

Chappell was the game's indivi- shot: and Wiedeman collected four throws to give the Deacs three dual high scorer with 36 points. Bill straight points as the Deacs rack- point lead. Hull aided the winning cause by ed_ up 25 points to USC's 7 in a siX Bobby Robinson immediately chipping in with 10 points and a mmute span. countered for a field goal to narrow bullhel full of key rebounds in the During this 25 point rush Wiede- the Wake lead to 75-74. Bill Hull second half. man contributed seven points and then drove for a layup and convert-

Gene Petrasy, Paul Poston and Ted Poston edged the Cavaliers' Meredith, the Deacons copped the Geovge Pease Jby three inches to initial event, the 400-yard medley take his second event of the day relay. Endurance proved the de- in the 100 freestyle. He held second ewing factor in the relay as U. Va. place until the fourth and final coach Mike Mm.strong's boys slow- length where he pulled ahead to ed after completing one length of rate a :55.6 clocking.

~ Whisnant le~ South c.arolina's Chappell six. Bill Packer garnered ed a free throw to cop a three point s~or~g P_arade With 28 pomts. ~e four, Bill Hull two key free throws, play and seal the victory for Wake 6 4 ~debran, No~h Carolina and Butch Hassell four points as :Forest. product hit on 7 of 15 field goal at- ~he Deacons streaked to get back Wake :Forest hit 29 for 69 from tempts from the floor and made m the ball game. the floor for 42%, while the Game-the pool. In the 200-yard backstroke, Wake

Leon Thomas and Tom Gibson poolmen Ed Wood and Bobby Allen went on 'to take first and third, re- clutched the first and second po­spectively, in the 220-yard free- sitions, Wood stotPping the clock style with Thomas solidly in the at 2:36.7 and pushing the Deacons lead after half a length. His time into the pilot position, 38-30.

good on 14 of .19 free throws. The score was tied four different cocks hit only 25 for 65 and 38'1< South Carolina was also paced

0'

was 2:24. Thomas held the front spot The Cavaliers saw victory in the thwughout the 440 freestyle iby a

50-yard freestyle, La'I'ry McKnight thlrd of a length, placing at 5:14. setting the pace with a :25.0 clock- Gibson was second. The 220-yard ing. Wake's Meredith placed third. breast stroke was Petrasy's all ;the

Poston won the 200-yard individ- way, with Surgener only a length ual medley in 2:31.5 to give the behind. The Cavaliers' Gregg Shook home team a 19-15 .margin. Virginia captured the runner-UQl spot, bow­won both second and third places. ever.

Jim Newton and Bill Fisher In the final event d.f the after­downed Wake Forest contendetrs noon, the 400-yard medley relay, Sew Pulitizer and John Surgener team mates Wood, Thomas, Mede­in the diving COilJIPetition, accumu· ruth and Gibson combined forces lating a total of 255.3 individual for the win in a 3.57.3 swim.

Davidson Frosh Top Baby Deacs, 78-53

The Davidson College freshman The Kittens, utilizing their two basketball team took full advantage inch height advantage to the ful­of the second-half scoring splurges lest, also dominated the boards, of center Fred Hetzel and forward 55-44. Don Davidson to break open their Kittens Score First interconference clash with the Davidson broke the scoring ice Wake Forest frosh midway the early in the contest on a two-pointer second period and win easily, 78-53, by Tommy White and then outscor­at Davidson, Thursday night. ed the Deaclets, 22 to 7, to open up

Hetzel and Davidson scored 17 a 17 point bulge over the Wake of their team's first 22 points of Frosh before the period was 10 the second stanza to give the Baby minutes old. Wildcats a 12 point advantage, 59- But the Deaclelts were not out of 47, with 7:50 remaining in the the contest yet. Apparently making game, and the Deaclets were never up their minds that the Kittens able to recover. were not 'going to maike a =away

Two of Wake Forest's freshman coed golfers, Sara Jo Brownlow (left) and Robbye King, don't even let the snow interfere with their practice on the links as they prepare for the forthcoming golfing season.

'Two Wake Coeds Are Stars On Links.

By BARRY DORSEY woman golfer-of the Florida state Influenced by their fathers and championship team. She was also

dedicated to the game, two Wake junior girls' champion of Pompano Forest coeds are fast becoming Beach. known in women's golfing circles First Tournament At 13. throughout the eastern U. S. Also influenced by her father,

S;;~ra Jo Brownlow from Pompano Robbye entered her first tourna­Beach, Fla., and Robbye King from ment at the age of thirteen. Since Arlington, Va., both freshmen, have that time, she has averaged as participated in numerous district, many as three to four tournaments state, and national junior tourneys a week during the summer months. and are 'regarded by golf pros as She was girls' champion of the top contenders in future women's Washington, D. C., area and com­tournaments. peted in the National Junior Cham-

Sara Jo, who has competed in pionship Tournament ,from 1958-several Florida tournaments, was 1960, finishing in the quarter-finals president of the Pompano Beach her last year of play. Junior Golf Association. A member Both girls are eagerly await­of a large golfing family, she began ing th.e arrival of spring, rthe !begin­playing at an early age and was ning of the golf season. Rob bye said encouraged by her father to con- that if she can get her swing in tinue the sport. shape, she hopes to represent Wake

Continuing to rely on his instruc- Forest in the National Collegiate tion alone, she has as yet had no championships this summer. formal lessons. In high school she Current plans also call for her was a member-and number one entering the National Women's

by three other starters in double :figures. Scottie Ward hit a hot streak early in the co-ntest and finished with. 13 points. Bobby Robinson had 12 and Bud Cronin added 10 points for the losers.

Wake Forest's backcourt combi­nation of Billy Packer and Dave Wiedeman had nine points each.

Whisnant Starts Early Whisnant and Ward pulled the

Gamecocks into an earlY 26 to 20 lead wh.ich only held up momen­tarily as the Deacons ran off 7 straight points to take a 27 to 26 leoo with six minutes left in .the first half.

It was in the final six minutes of the half however, that South Carolina bombed the basket for a 'fantastic percentage. Scottie Ward hit a jumper to give the lead back to his club, and the Gamecocks then errupted for 22 torrid markers while Wake Forest could only re-

Amateur Tournament to be held in South Carolina this year.

"I've been playing at Old Town some, and I'll continue to practice there until I go back home to par­ticipate in some Florida tourna­ments this summer," Sara Jo com­mented. "I've got to work on my ' swing, too," she added.

Golf Club Being- Org-anized

The 6-8, former High-School All- of the game that early, the Balby American, from Washington, D. C., Deacs started to come back. ended up the night with high scor- In the next several minutes the ing honors, sinking 23 markers. He Deaclets chalked up 14 points to also led in the rebounding depart- Davidson's 2 to cut the Kittens' ment, pulling down 14, margin to five, 26-21. Lozier pump-

'Strength Is Key' --Hooks

The two golfers are currently helping the women's. physical edu­cation department set up the Wake Forest Women's Golf Club-and they are enthusiastic over its pos­sibilities. Sara Jo, handicap and publicity chairman, pointed out that many girls have expressed a desire to join and that everyone interested in golf at all is encour-aged to join. ' ·

"We plan to have a lot of tourna­ments, and a Scotch foursome will begin as soon as handicaps can be established," Rob bye, the president of the club, said.

Davidson took second place ed in seven of his 15 :Po-ints during (Continued from p, 7) among the scorers with 17 points the hot stretch. 'book, namely the scientifically and guard Dave Thomas contribut- By halftime the Deaclets had tested (programs which have been

muscles on both sides of a joint actually increases his flexibility and coordination after several ses­sions with the barbells.

ed 16 to the Kitten Cause. d th •t designed especially for athletics.

narrowe e K1 tens' advantage to For Wake Forest forward Al a slim four points, 37-33. After in- There are ex±ensively written chap- Hooks also questions the value of

Lozier, possibly playing the best termission Wake Forest cut the ters on baseball, ibasketball, foot- dynamic tension, or isometric con­game of his fresh career, sank five lead to one point at 37-36, but this ball, swii:nming, track, and field, traction, a craze that has infected of nine shots from the floor and was as close as the Deaclets could golf, and tennis. the naticm's strength addicts in the connected on five of five from the get. Hooks' captivating style of writ-· same manner that the twist has line to end up as high man for the At this point Hetzel and Davidson ing not only conveys a definite at- enthralled our "hipsters." night for the Deaclets with 15. He put on their scoring display to put tempt to sell his views, but also to He feels that simply pushing led his team in rebounding with 7. the game out of the reach of Wake convince others of his beliefs. In against a steel bar is not a sub-

Anderson Scores 14 Forest. addition to describing his findings, stitute for weight training and will

Undaunted by the winter snows' refusal to melt, Wake's two detet"­mined golfers have been sighted "putting around" in the gym as wel as in the snow . . . Loving the game that much, it's surprising to learn that neither girl intends to become a "pro."

John Anderson, Richard Herring, he flouts many of the stigmas that not develop endurance, speed, flex-and Jay Martin also scored in t.he have been attached to weight train- ibility, and cardiovascular improve-double figures for Wake Forest, PiKA' E t d ing and have curtailed its growth. ment. LOST! chalking up 14, 11, and 10 markers s X en Hooks believes beyond a shadow The effectiveness of the book is respectively. of a doubt that in this age of auto- greatly augmented by the wonder-

But even though four Deaclets w· Str k mation our young athletes never ful drawings and pictures which ROYAL BLUE COLUMBIA scored in the double figures, it was m ea get the proper body development are scattered throughout the en- BICYCLE not enough. to offset the superior that they need so badly. tilre 254 pruges, portraying the vari-shooting ability and overall height Pi Kappa Alpha extended its Sports demand strength, but yet ous equipment, positions, and grips.

1961 Girls 26" model. Padlock on

k back. Last seen on Fac. Drive advantage of the Kittens. basketball win streak to six games do not build it, so we must use an Hooks' wife s etched the draw-

For the entire game Davidson in fraternity intramural play to artificial means, namely weight ings and we never saw Henry behind Science Building. took 59 shots from the floor and stay atop the tpack with a 6-0 record training. Hooks asserts that weights Newton look better as he plays the REWARD OFFERED made good on 26 for 44.1 per cent last week. Sig Ep and Sigma Chi, are not an end in themselves, but role of Bridgette Bardot posing I Contact Lois Schultz accuracy while Wake Forest, ex- with 4-1 marks, are the closest merely a means to achieve an end, for most of Irvin Grigg's life-like PA 5-9711, Ext. 324 periencing one of its worst shooting challengers. the end being stronger and better photographs. ._ ____ .;...;,.;.;;;;;.;..;~.;;..;.;;.;;;_ __ .J nights of the season, hit on ohly In "the other three leagues each athletes. 34.0 per cent of its shots. race is knotted with the first place Hooks claims th.e old "muscle

During the initial stanza the spot shared by two teams, each bound" myth that has been so Deaclets actually outshot the Kit- with 4-0 records. overworked by opponents of weight tens from the floor, hitting 42.9 per The Sixty-Niners and PEK Gold training has no validity when cent to Davidson's 41.9 per cent. lead the Blue League; PiKA B and weight training is properly admin-But in the second half the Deaclets Sig Ep B pace the Red League; and istered. · made good on only six out of 25! PEK Black and the Eagles are out It has been shown that an athlete

shots while Davidson hit 13 of 28. front in the White League. who strengthens and stretches

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