I ,, • J 1 nl ;~~ull lark · Number One Team Undefeated Wake Forest· will enter the West Point...

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E RE I ' ! . : ,, J POLITICS- The parties begin their catii-· paigns this week. Party Whips Byrne and Upeliurch haye set. · forth some .-of -their ideas on the. situation in special articles. The purpose is . .to let you know what is going on around here. Cheek Page Two. VOLUME .XXXVIII' ••• 1 Student· Platform 1 .'•- . ' .. -·,-.,. :·--;··· ·-;---;- . I nl -; .. ' '"!" lark :r ·-. -:1-, * * : .. Wake Colle.e, Wake North Monday,, Marcil 23, 1953 SPRING- The seasons changed Friday. Winter left, and spring came. Old Gold and Black was there . to record the event, complete with pictures. We don't know: · what the reaction will be, but we doubt that it will be un· favorable. Look at Page Eigllt. NUMBER 20 . ;"--Bred-At ·'it> ' . . . . _,' .. Phi Beta Kappa··- Students· r:· · Would. Install TV In Girls' Dorms·· · The Student Party has pledged to gain· for student government a xeasonable amount of authority, to utilize the student govern- ment's authority, to make chapel ,prog1·ams more il).tere.sting, ;to es- tablish -an ·athletic board. to mstall television in the girls' dormitories, to establish a student employ- l!lent agency, and to continue support ·of the honor system. Debaters Qualify For West Point Amherst Professor Is Honorary Member Twenty-four seniors and one alumnus were named to member- ship in Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholarship fraternity, last week. Mauneyt Moorefield Win Bid In Atlanta By Nancy Craig Selections were made by faculty members who are also members of the scholastic organization. The Student Party platform was adopted at an open meeting of the party , Wednesday, Potential planks of· the plat- form were discussed, altered, ap- proved or ·disapproved at the meet- ing. · The Wake Forest College de- bate team will be represented for the second year in the National Invitational Tournament at West Point, N. Y. April 22-25 by Jo-e Mauney and Virgil Moorefield. Dr. A. c. Reid, Phi Beta Kappa president,' announced that seniors who will be initiated are: Twenty-One Seniora Mrs. Audrey Craig Beck, Evelyn Carson Blackwell, Sarah Mildred Brooks, Helen Younger Carter, Cynthis L. Collins, Eunice Pear- sail Duncan, Margaret N•ewton Floyd, Evelyn Patricia ,Foote, Lawrence Harding Knott, Mary Lide, Mrs. Leona L. Littleton, Royal Judson Mitchell, Virgil H. Moorefield Jr., William Edward Pickett, Walter Fred Sherron, Gleen Weldon Shook, Mildred Jean Short, John Arthur Taylor, Frank Leadley Thorne, J. Bernard Vick, and Mrs. Kate Dunn Weaver. Bill (Chilly) Vaderi, chair- man of the Platform Committee, presided presented the _ tive platform. The committee con- sists of Charin Reville, Julie Wat- son, Luther Britt and Dick Ken- nedy. NSA Affiliation First on the agenda for discus- sion was a possible plank which Phi Beta Kappa, honorary acholaatic fratern.ity, laat week aeleeted members ·for academic year. Old and new membera of woulil call for the placing of affil- · c Bl •--- II 5 h iation with the National Student ai'&i'-Firat ..Ow:. D. -Barham. (previoualy initiated); Mra.' .. Craig Beck, Evelyn arson acKW"e , ara Association'',':before the student Mildred Brooka, Helen Younger Carter, Cynthia L. Collins, Eunice Pearsall Dunean: Marga.ret Newton· Floyd .• Second Row: Evelyn l:tody. Patricia Foote, Wade.M •. Gallant Jr .. (previouaiy initiated), Lawrence Harding Knott, Lide, Mrs. Leona L. Royal Juclaon The authority. of the Student Mitchell, Virgil Moorefield Jr., Mra. Anne B. Patteraon. Third Row: Walter Fred Slierron, Glenn Weldon Shook, Mildred Jean Short, ,Legislature' to' withdraw,.the Col- John.· Arthur Taylor, Frank Leadley Thorne, J. Bernard Vick, Mra. Kate Weaver,. B. Willia:nn (previoualy initiated). Bruce La .. i- lege from. NSA was questioned, ter·ia . .Uao a member of Phl 'Kappa who was initiated Three new here laat and are now in their l:tut decided in the affirmative. firat a_t the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in The three,. who_, :will receive degreea here an June, are John Oatea, Liberalism I of NSA was ques- tioned. A Student Party Iegisla- Dick Taylor and Frank White. ture member expressed the opin- - ion that the legislature had made L :R y·· H tJ Th c d A C , d C I Of Th f e oy o I eau oe s re ·,_ttqpuse as ea er was generally considered a bad · · · · · ·· '·· .,,. - · PI A d 1;: ·orientation· Body In ·Viol.ation -Of R_,le ay nnounce chapel Program• C • · · · 1 1 d Gi. ;rls Senteiiced.B. y ·· 'e_.nt In considering making chapel ommdtee nc U es . programs more appealing, me:m-_ 30 Students For -. · . _ For Possession Of · _ __ ;._ . - __ -"· . . ---- . entertammg programs .. -.' . . . . . .. . . Three coeds 'were placed on the girl" cainpused:;--until· -April 15 · dent participation.--·and closer af- A · alcoholic probation and . given did not involve wine. One of the filiation .between students and Commtttee, of whtch Carwile Le- strict campuses last week by the three has left school. faculty on, chapel programs were Roy will serve as was Woman's · Government for pos- The Woman's Government ruled discussed. The group decided to selected by the Student session of alcoholic beverages, ac- reiterating a former regulation, include the . maki1;1g of chapel Tuesday. cording to Esther Ellen, president. that any alcoholic beverage, which programs more appealing in the The Committee will serve dur- Members of the woman's Gov- may be used only for medicinal platform. ing orientation for the fall term ernment heard testimony, charges purposes, be kept by Dean Securing increased power or of 1953. and rumors concerning the cases of Women Lots Johnson or one of authority for the student govern- The legislature decided to limit by. approximately. 25 girls in a the house only ment was considered, and later the fraternities to ·no more than session which lasted without inter- upon a doctors presenpt10n. approved, as a plank for the plat- two men each. As a result, each of ruption, from 4:30 o'clock until form. The question of how author- the nine local fraternities has two 10 o'clock Monday. ity could be secured :raised. A on. the. Orientation Com- Upon permission of the coeds -resire to have. the field of author- m1ttee, mdependent men cont!erned, their rooms were ity. of the student government de- number f1ve and the coeds seven. searched, revealing .in one of the :fined was expressed. It point- W'll N H db k G -ed out that the student should I ame . an oo roup rooms a perfume bottle contain- not be subordinate ·to financial Fraternity men are LeRoy, Bob ing an alcoholic beverage. The needs. A desire was expressed to Grady, Jim Abernathy, Gene girls claimed, however, that the establish ,a student-faculty ath- Boyce, Bruce McDaniel, Charles contents were for medicinal pur- letic bO'a:rd, such as exists at Reid, Coy Privette, John Hamb_- poses. North Carolina State College. lin,. Paul' Nelson, Bruce Thomp- A meeting was held Tuesday 'Employment Board son, Pat Mast, Harold from 3:30 o'clock to 6:30 o'cloc·k The establishment of a student Bill Burris, Joe Hough, Gus White, to give the three coeds an op- employment board to provide in- Chesley Singleton, Jack Rogers portunity to clear themselves of and Lutqer Britt. possession charges and lying (Continued On Page Eight) Coeds are Sylvia Messick, Elea- chat·ges which grew out of the nor Geer, Pat Alphin, Anita .Monday meeting. Brooks, Sally Umstead, Doris All three of the coeds admitted Craven and Kay Arant: having·had whiskey for medicinal Law Fraternity Initiates 14 Men Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity initiated 14 students and two honorary members from Wake Forest at the Supreme Court Building in Raleigh March 13. Duke and Carolina participated with Wake Forest in a joint initi- ation. Geer, Swain Chosen ·For Leading Bob Swain and Eleanor Geer will have the lead roles in the Col- lege Theater's forthcoming pro- duction, "The Taming of the Shrew," according to Prof. Cly'!e McElroy, theater director. , Swain will play the part of Petruchio; Miss Greer, that of Katharina. Other performers will be Bill Satterwhite as A Lord; Norman (Red) Pone, Christopher Sly; Coy Carpenter, John Long, First Huntsman;' Bob Culler, Bartholo- mew; Flora Nell Roebuck, Hos- tess; Glen Holt, Baptista; Parker Wilson, Vincen_tio. On Boarda In May Ken Grigg, Lucentio; Allyn Gib- son, Hortensio; Harold Wilkinson. Tranio; Tom Mezger, Brondello; Jim Tribble, Grunio; Bob Jordon. Norman White, Vic Kirkman and Wilbur Early, Servants to Petru- chio. Betty Carpenter, Bianca; Mar- garet Wilson, A Widow; Bud (Continued On Page Five) Moorefield and Mauney won top honors in the District Six De- bate Tournament which was held at Emory University in Atlanta, Ga. March 13 and 14. They will participate in the NIT along with the Universities of Miami, Ala- bama and Florida which were chosen in that order. Wake Forest was the only un- defeated team in the tournament, defeating Alabama State College for Negros, Florida State Uni- versity, University of Alabama, Emory University and George- town College. Number One Team Undefeated Wake Forest· will enter the West Point Tournament as the number one debat-e team of the South. Last year at the National In- vitational Tournament, Moorefield and Mauney ranked seventh and ninth respectively among the nat- ional tournament speakers. The win against Alabama in the District Six Tournament marked Moorefield's one hundredtlt de· bate victory in his career at Wake Forest College. Eighteen-To-One Record The current record for the year for Moorefield and Mauney is 18 to one. They have lost only 'to Texas University. Among those the two debaters have defeated other than the District Six teams are Army, Notre Dame, Navy, Ohio State, and Pittsburg and Georgia Universities. A committee chosen from Southern debate coaches of di.s- trict six conducted the tourna- men. Prof. Franklin R. Shirley, director of debate at Wake For- est College, was chairman of the committee. District Six consists of colleges universities in eight southern -;tates-North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Florida, Kentucky and Tennessee. Debate Topic Topic for debate at the NIT is, "Resolved: That The Congress Of The United ''states Should Enact \ Compulsory Fair Employment Practices Law." . Moorefield, who has a double major in history-government and English, is a member of Who's Who In American Colleges and (Continued On Page Five) Morgan To Sing Here Tomorrow Independent men· lire Wilfred purposes. Two of them said that Winstead, Jim Stines, Jim Greene, they also had previously had wine Billy Lyles and Tommy Kitchen. in the dormitory-one having The Handbook Committee will brought it from Raleigh and the Guy T. Carswell of the lotte bar, a member of the Board of Trustees of Wake Forest Col- lege and president of the Wake Forest Lawyer· Alumni, and Gil- bert T.· Stephenson, a. member of the Wake Forest Law School faculty and Director of the Trust Research Department of the Graduate School of Banking of the American Bankers Associa- tion at Rutgers University, were the honorary members initiated. They Talked Them Into It Baritone Mac Morgan, the young American concert and radio singer who will appear in recital at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening in the College Chapel was born in Texarkana, Texas, and reared in Jacksonville, Florida. . On . advice of John Charles Thomas, Morgan went to the ·East-· man School of Music to stu!fy.·He was graduated from E¢man in 1940. He remained in Rochester for p'ost-graduate work before going to New Yorlt to' start his -career. . . Morein will appear here under the. sponsorship of the Concert- . Lecture Committee. . :His ·first engagement included a summer season at the Cincinnati Zoo Opera and a six-weeks tour in an English version of "La :Boheme." Singa On NBC 1943 to 1946 he was in the Army in the Pacific. The war 'he returned to civilian life · .and 'liis profession. Since then he "has toured .the entire country in concerts. and ·has been featured for two Years over NBC in the weekly\ "Highways· in Melody" program. , . The baritone is married· to 'the :former Helen Neilly whom he met when they were both students at Eastman. 1 She acted 'as his piano - accompani't on,. tour until the birth of daughter Kathryn Lynn limited her own iiusical activities. The make their home in Green Connecticut. be selected from the Orientation other having had it sent to her Committee. by her mother. The Student Legislature selects The campuses for the three the Orientation Committee an- girls will last until April 15, 22, nually. and 30, respectively. The case of .. Greene New BSU President Wake Forest law students initi- ated were Wade Gallant, Harry Hill, Parks Isenhour, Samuel Jen- kins, Kurt Martha, Thomas Strick- land, John B. Miles, Alan .White, James Young, Leslie Browder, Bernard Harold, Everett Henry, Bill White, and Charles Qaniel. Mars Hill Transfer Selected To Succeed White By Unanimous Vote Jim Greene has been elected Baptist. Student Union president for 1953-54. · · Greene, a risin-g senior from A banquet at the· Carolina Conn· Asheville and a Mars Hill College try Club followed the initiation. transfer, 'was chqsen by unanimous Justin Miller, dean of the Duke decision to head the student re- Law School, was the principal ligious organization in a general speaker. A dance was held after meeting Wednesday night. Be has the banquet. served as BSU' extension director · AI Thomas_ was in charge of this year. Wake Forest's part in the initi- Greene grad11ated from Lee Ed- ation. W!!rds High and continued his studies at Mars Hill Junior Col- Csmpus PlaHQrm While there he was secretary Ill, of the Philomathesion Literary 0 •u W k• Society, on the .Mission Council, omm1 . _ lftg . member of the International Re- Paul Nelson will serve as lations Club, active qn the v-arsity chairman of the Campus Party debate team, and vice-president ()f Platform Committee, according the BSU. He also made the dean's to party officials. . list several times. Others on the committee, Prior to coming to Wake Forest, which met Sunday to draw up Greene was assistant mission pas- a tentative platform, are Wil- tor of the First Baptist Church in fred Winstead, Carwile LeRoy, Asheville. He is now a member of Barbara Geer, Sylvia Keene, Delta Kappa Alpha, ministerial Joe Mauney, Virgil Moorefield, fraternity, and <in the vafsity d.e- and Jim Tribble.- bate squad. An open meeting, the date of The other officals of the BSU which is to be announced in Council will be elected in a gen- chapel, will be held to ratify the , eral meeting Wednesday night. platform. Wake Forest'a top debate 'team of Virgil Moorefield aDd Joe Mauney, ranked aa one of the beat aquada in the South, will rep- reaent the College at the National Invitational Tourney at Weat Point in late April. The two men won the honor by winning six out of aix. debates ita an elimination con teat in Atlantia. The Atlanta wina gave Moorefield a record of 102 victoriea during his four-year col- lege career. They attended the national tournament last year and were ranked among the top ten dehatera in the In addition to the 21 seniors who are attending classes on this campus, three students at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem will also be initiated into Phi Beta Kappa. The three were juniors here last year and are now . first-year medical students. They will receive a bach- elor's degree here in June. They are John Oates, Dick Taylor and Frank White. Amher•t Profeuor Hotaored The alumnus who received the honorary membership is Dr. James Alfred Martin Jr. Dr . .Martin was graduated from Wake Forest in 1937. He received his master of arts degree from Duke University and his doctor of philosophy from Union Theological Seminary, Dr. Martin is now pr-ofessor of philosophy and religion at Am- herst College in Amherst, Mass. The Wake Forest alumnus is author of one book, "Empirical Philosophies'of Religion," publish- ed in 1945, and co-author with J. A. Hutchinson of "Ways of Faith," a work which was published this year. Five Old Membera Five students on the campus have pt·eviously been initiated in- to Phi Beta Kappa. They are Charles D. Barham, Wade M. Gal- lant Jr., Bruce Lassiter, Mrs. Anne B. Patterson and Lonnie B. Wil- liams. Among approximately 100 mem- bers of the College faculty, 28 are members of Phi Beta Kappa. They are: Dr. Thurman D. Kitchin, presi- dent emeritus and professor of physiology and hygiene; College President Harold W. Tribble; J. B. Cook Jr., assistant to the bursar; Carlton P. West, librarian (Continued On Page Eight) Legislative Body To Request $350 Questions of a budget for 1953- 54 and who should be allowed to run for student government of· fices were discussed Tuesday by members of · the Student Legis:- lature. The budget matter was handled in short order. Student Body President Charles Barham recom- mended that the Legislature ask for a $350 budget for next year, the same amount received this year. The measure was quickly approved. Jim Abernathy's motion to limit candidates for student government offices to persons who have not yet received a degree was tabled until the next meeting. Would Ban Law Student. Abernathy's motion is design. ed to prevent any student who would be in law school from serv• ing as a student government ()f· ficial. The practice of permitting a first-year law student who en- ters law school at the end of three years in academic school to hold office would be excluded under Abernathy's motion. . Abernathy made it clear, how- ever, that the idea. is to bring about the change next year, not this year. Actually, the Legislature can only approve the motion for submission to the student body since such a change would require a constitutional amendment, pos- sible only if the entire student body gives approval. Representative Selected Most of the meeting Tuesday was devoted to selecting a 30. (Continued On Page Eight)

Transcript of I ,, • J 1 nl ;~~ull lark · Number One Team Undefeated Wake Forest· will enter the West Point...

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POLITICS-The parties begin their catii-· paigns this week. Party Whips Byrne and Upeliurch haye set.

· forth some .-of -their ideas on the. situation in special articles. The purpose is . .to let you know what is going on around here. Cheek Page Two.

VOLUME .XXXVIII' ••• 1

Student· Platform

1 .'•- . '

.. -·,-.,. :·--;··· ·-;---;-

. ,· I

nl ;~~ull ,· -; .. • ·~ ' '"!" • lark

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ue~ .~k. (]-:fM~J<;~i(!~ -:1-, Af~''. * * : ..

Wake Fo~"Wt Colle.e, Wake ·F~reat, North -~lina, Monday,, Marcil 23, 1953

SPRING-The seasons changed Friday. Winter left, and spring came. Old Gold and Black was there . to record the event, complete with pictures. We don't know:

· what the reaction will be, but we doubt that it will be un· favorable. Look at Page Eigllt.

NUMBER 20 .

;"--Bred-At M~t ·'it> '. . . . _,' ..

Phi Beta Kappa··­Taps~2-4-Students·

r:·

· ·P~ty: Would. Install TV In Girls'

Dorms·· · The Student Party has pledged

to gain· for student government a xeasonable amount of authority, to utilize the student govern­ment's authority, to make chapel ,prog1·ams more il).tere.sting, ;to es­tablish -an ·athletic board. to mstall television in the girls' dormitories, to establish a student employ­l!lent agency, and to continue support ·of the honor system.

Debaters Qualify For West Point

Amherst Professor Is Honorary

Member Twenty-four seniors and one

alumnus were named to member­ship in Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholarship fraternity, last week. Mauneyt Moorefield

Win Bid In Atlanta

By Nancy Craig

Selections were made by faculty members who are also members of the scholastic organization.

The Student Party platform was adopted at an open meeting of the party , Wednesday,

Potential planks of· the plat­form were discussed, altered, ap­proved or ·disapproved at the meet­ing. ·

The Wake Forest College de­bate team will be represented for the second year in the National Invitational Tournament at West Point, N. Y. April 22-25 by Jo-e Mauney and Virgil Moorefield.

Dr. A. c. Reid, Phi Beta Kappa president,' announced that seniors who will be initiated are:

Twenty-One Seniora Mrs. Audrey Craig Beck, Evelyn

Carson Blackwell, Sarah Mildred Brooks, Helen Younger Carter, Cynthis L. Collins, Eunice Pear­sail Duncan, Margaret N•ewton Floyd, Evelyn Patricia ,Foote, Lawrence Harding Knott, Mary Lide, Mrs. Leona L. Littleton, Royal Judson Mitchell, Virgil H. Moorefield Jr., William Edward Pickett, Walter Fred Sherron, Gleen Weldon Shook, Mildred Jean Short, John Arthur Taylor, Frank Leadley Thorne, J. Bernard Vick, and Mrs. Kate Dunn Weaver.

Bill (Chilly) Vaderi, chair­man of the Platform Committee, presided an!~ presented the tent~~- _ tive platform. The committee con­sists of Charin Reville, Julie Wat­son, Luther Britt and Dick Ken­nedy.

NSA Affiliation First on the agenda for discus-

sion was a possible plank which Phi Beta Kappa, honorary acholaatic fratern.ity, laat week aeleeted members ·for 952~53 academic year. Old and new membera of woulil call for the placing of affil- · c Bl •--- II 5 h iation with the National Student the.-·orgaiii~t:;;,li- ai'&i'-Firat ..Ow:. Chari~• D. -Barham. (previoualy initiated); Mra.' .. Craig Beck, Evelyn arson acKW"e , ara Association'',':before the student Mildred Brooka, Helen Younger Carter, Cynthia L. Collins, Eunice Pearsall Dunean: Marga.ret Newton· Floyd .• Second Row: Evelyn l:tody. ,·~ Patricia Foote, Wade.M •. Gallant Jr .. (previouaiy initiated), Lawrence Harding Knott, M~ry Lide, Mrs. Leona L. ~·ttleton, Royal Juclaon

The authority. of the Student Mitchell, Virgil Moorefield Jr., Mra. Anne B. Patteraon. Third Row: Walter Fred Slierron, Glenn Weldon Shook, Mildred Jean Short, ,Legislature' to' withdraw,.the Col- John.· Arthur Taylor, Frank Leadley Thorne, J. Bernard Vick, Mra. Kate Weaver,. Lon~ie B. Willia:nn (previoualy initiated). Bruce La .. i­lege from. NSA was questioned, ter·ia . .Uao a member of Phl 'Bet~ 'Kappa who was initiated earlie~- Three new member&~were ju~aiora here laat ye~r· and are now in their l:tut decided in the affirmative. firat ye~r- a_t the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in W~:naton-Salem. The three,. who_, :will receive degreea here an June, are John Oatea, Liberalism I of NSA was ques-tioned. A Student Party Iegisla- Dick Taylor and Frank White. ~~·-ture member expressed the opin- -

ion that the legislature had made L :R y·· H tJ Th c d A C , d C I Of Th f :~: ~~~t i:~:ein~~\~~j:~!~~i;; e oy o I eau r~e oe s re ·,_ttqpuse as ea er was generally considered a bad · · · · · ·· '·· .,,. - · PI A d ~:!:~~::~~~! !~~~~:r: 1;: ·orientation· Body In ·Viol.ation -Of A.t~,.llo~l-. R_,le ay nnounce

chapel Program• C • · · · 1 1 d Gi. ;rls Senteiiced.B. y WomA~1•:·co~e_.r_nm_._,· ·· 'e_.nt In considering making chapel ommdtee nc U es .

programs more appealing, me:m-_ 30 Students For -. · . _ For Possession Of Alcohq~ic · _ __ ,l;1tZ!f~:.~9~:oufn~~~;-~;;e~tun.~ ;._ . - __ f.~lJ:.W_o.r~ ~ -"· . . ---- -~--~-:: -~e_v~~-~~~ -~~ .:J?or~, .

entertammg programs .. Mor~::s -.' . . . . . .. . . Three coeds 'were placed on the girl" cainpused:;--until· -April 15 · dent participation.--·and closer af- A · ~btrty- mem~er (.)ne~tatlon alcoholic probation and . given did not involve wine. One of the

filiation .between students and Commtttee, of whtch Carwile Le- strict campuses last week by the three has left school. faculty on, chapel programs were Roy will serve as chairm~n, was Woman's · Government for pos- The Woman's Government ruled discussed. The group decided to selected by the Student Legtslat~re session of alcoholic beverages, ac- reiterating a former regulation, include the . maki1;1g of chapel Tuesday. cording to Esther Ellen, president. that any alcoholic beverage, which programs more appealing in the The Committee will serve dur- Members of the woman's Gov- may be used only for medicinal platform. ing orientation for the fall term ernment heard testimony, charges purposes, mu~t be kept by Dean

Securing increased power or of 1953. and rumors concerning the cases of Women Lots Johnson or one of authority for the student govern- The legislature decided to limit by. approximately. 25 girls in a the house mot~ers-an.d ~hen only ment was considered, and later the fraternities to ·no more than session which lasted without inter- upon a doctors presenpt10n. approved, as a plank for the plat- two men each. As a result, each of ruption, from 4:30 o'clock until form. The question of how author- the nine local fraternities has two 10 o'clock Monday. ity could be secured w~s :raised. A m~mbers on. the. Orientation Com- Upon permission of the coeds -resire to have. the field of author- m1ttee, ~htle mdependent men cont!erned, their rooms were ity. of the student government de- number f1ve and the coeds seven. searched, revealing .in one of the :fined was expressed. It wa~ point- W'll N H db k G -ed out that the student should I ame . an oo roup rooms a perfume bottle contain-not be subordinate ·to financial Fraternity men are LeRoy, Bob ing an alcoholic beverage. The needs. A desire was expressed to Grady, Jim Abernathy, Gene girls claimed, however, that the establish ,a student-faculty ath- Boyce, Bruce McDaniel, Charles contents were for medicinal pur­letic bO'a:rd, such as exists at Reid, Coy Privette, John Hamb_- poses. North Carolina State College. lin,. Paul' Nelson, Bruce Thomp- A meeting was held Tuesday

'Employment Board son, Pat Mast, Harold Edwards~ from 3:30 o'clock to 6:30 o'cloc·k The establishment of a student Bill Burris, Joe Hough, Gus White, to give the three coeds an op­

employment board to provide in- Chesley Singleton, Jack Rogers portunity to clear themselves of and Lutqer Britt. possession charges and lying

(Continued On Page Eight) Coeds are Sylvia Messick, Elea- chat·ges which grew out of the nor Geer, Pat Alphin, Anita .Monday meeting. Brooks, Sally Umstead, Doris All three of the coeds admitted Craven and Kay Arant: having·had whiskey for medicinal

Law Fraternity Initiates 14 Men

Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity initiated 14 students and two honorary members from Wake Forest at the Supreme Court Building in Raleigh March 13. Duke and Carolina participated with Wake Forest in a joint initi­ation.

Geer, Swain Chosen ·For Leading

Rol~s. Bob Swain and Eleanor Geer

will have the lead roles in the Col­lege Theater's forthcoming pro­duction, "The Taming of the Shrew," according to Prof. Cly'!e McElroy, theater director. ,

Swain will play the part of Petruchio; Miss Greer, that of Katharina.

Other performers will be Bill Satterwhite as A Lord; Norman (Red) Pone, Christopher Sly; Coy Carpenter, John Long, First Huntsman;' Bob Culler, Bartholo­mew; Flora Nell Roebuck, Hos­tess; Glen Holt, Baptista; Parker Wilson, Vincen_tio.

On Boarda In May Ken Grigg, Lucentio; Allyn Gib­

son, Hortensio; Harold Wilkinson. Tranio; Tom Mezger, Brondello; Jim Tribble, Grunio; Bob Jordon. Norman White, Vic Kirkman and Wilbur Early, Servants to Petru­chio.

Betty Carpenter, Bianca; Mar­garet Wilson, A Widow; Bud

(Continued On Page Five)

Moorefield and Mauney won top honors in the District Six De­bate Tournament which was held at Emory University in Atlanta, Ga. March 13 and 14. They will participate in the NIT along with the Universities of Miami, Ala­bama and Florida which were chosen in that order.

Wake Forest was the only un­defeated team in the tournament, defeating Alabama State College for Negros, Florida State Uni­versity, University of Alabama, Emory University and George­town College.

Number One Team Undefeated Wake Forest· will

enter the West Point Tournament as the number one debat-e team of the South.

Last year at the National In­vitational Tournament, Moorefield and Mauney ranked seventh and ninth respectively among the nat­ional tournament speakers.

The win against Alabama in the District Six Tournament marked Moorefield's one hundredtlt de· bate victory in his four~year career at Wake Forest College.

Eighteen-To-One Record The current record for the year

for Moorefield and Mauney is 18 to one. They have lost only 'to Texas University. Among those the two debaters have defeated other than the District Six teams are Army, Notre Dame, Navy, Ohio State, and Pittsburg and Georgia Universities.

A committee chosen from Southern debate coaches of di.s­trict six conducted the tourna­men. Prof. Franklin R. Shirley, director of debate at Wake For­est College, was chairman of the committee.

District Six consists of colleges <:~nd universities in eight southern -;tates-North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Florida, Kentucky and Tennessee.

Debate Topic Topic for debate at the NIT is,

"Resolved: That The Congress Of The United ''states Should Enact \ Compulsory Fair Employment Practices Law." .

Moorefield, who has a double major in history-government and English, is a member of Who's Who In American Colleges and

(Continued On Page Five) Morgan To Sing Here Tomorrow

Independent men· lire Wilfred purposes. Two of them said that Winstead, Jim Stines, Jim Greene, they also had previously had wine Billy Lyles and Tommy Kitchen. in the dormitory-one having

The Handbook Committee will brought it from Raleigh and the

Guy T. Carswell of the Char~ lotte bar, a member of the Board of Trustees of Wake Forest Col­lege and president of the Wake Forest Lawyer· Alumni, and Gil­bert T.· Stephenson, a. member of the Wake Forest Law School faculty and Director of the Trust Research Department of the Graduate School of Banking of the American Bankers Associa­tion at Rutgers University, were the honorary members initiated.

They Talked Them Into It

Baritone Mac Morgan, the young American concert and radio singer who will appear in recital at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening in the College Chapel was born in Texarkana, Texas, and reared in Jacksonville, Florida. .

On . advice of John Charles Thomas, Morgan went to the ·East-· man School of Music to stu!fy.·He was graduated from E¢man in 1940. He remained in Rochester for p'ost-graduate work before going to New Yorlt to' start his -career. . .

Morein will appear here under the. sponsorship of the Concert-

. Lecture Committee. . :His ·first engagement included

a summer season at the Cincinnati Zoo Opera and a six-weeks tour in an English version of "La :Boheme."

Singa On NBC .-~From 1943 to 1946 he was in

the Army in the Pacific. The war ~'fer, 'he returned to civilian life

· .and 'liis profession. Since then he "has toured .the entire country in concerts. and ·has been featured for two Years over NBC in the weekly\ "Highways· in Melody" program. ,

. The baritone is married· to 'the :former Helen Neilly whom he met when they were both students at Eastman. 1She acted 'as his piano

- accompani't on,. tour until the birth of daughter Kathryn Lynn limited her own iiusical activities.

The make their home in Green Connecticut.

be selected from the Orientation other having had it sent to her Committee. by her mother.

The Student Legislature selects The campuses for the three the Orientation Committee an- girls will last until April 15, 22, nually. and 30, respectively. The case of

.. Greene New BSU President Wake Forest law students initi­

ated were Wade Gallant, Harry Hill, Parks Isenhour, Samuel Jen­kins, Kurt Martha, Thomas Strick­land, John B. Miles, Alan .White, James Young, Leslie Browder, Bernard Harold, Everett Henry, Bill White, and Charles Qaniel.

Mars Hill Transfer Selected To Succeed White By Unanimous Vote

Jim Greene has been elected Baptist. Student Union president for 1953-54. · ·

Greene, a risin-g senior from A banquet at the· Carolina Conn· Asheville and a Mars Hill College try Club followed the initiation. transfer, 'was chqsen by unanimous Justin Miller, dean of the Duke decision to head the student re- Law School, was the principal ligious organization in a general speaker. A dance was held after meeting Wednesday night. Be has the banquet. served as BSU' extension director · AI Thomas_ was in charge of this year. Wake Forest's part in the initi-

Greene grad11ated from Lee Ed- ation. W!!rds High ~chool and continued ------~------­his studies at Mars Hill Junior Col- Csmpus PlaHQrm leg~e. While there he was secretary Ill,

of the Philomathesion Literary 0 •u W k• Society, on the .Mission Council, omm1 ~~ . _ ~~ lftg . member of the International Re- Paul Nelson will serve as lations Club, active qn the v-arsity chairman of the Campus Party debate team, and vice-president ()f Platform Committee, according the BSU. He also made the dean's to party officials. . list several times. Others on the committee,

Prior to coming to Wake Forest, which met Sunday to draw up Greene was assistant mission pas- a tentative platform, are Wil­tor of the First Baptist Church in fred Winstead, Carwile LeRoy, Asheville. He is now a member of Barbara Geer, Sylvia Keene, Delta Kappa Alpha, ministerial Joe Mauney, Virgil Moorefield, fraternity, and <in the vafsity d.e- and Jim Tribble.-bate squad. An open meeting, the date of

The other officals of the BSU which is to be announced in Council will be elected in a gen- chapel, will be held to ratify the

, eral meeting Wednesday night. platform.

Wake Forest'a top debate 'team of Virgil Moorefield aDd Joe Mauney, ranked aa one of the beat aquada in the South, will rep­reaent the College at the National Invitational Tourney at Weat Point in late April. The two men won the honor by winning six out of aix. debates ita an elimination con teat in Atlantia. The Atlanta wina gave Moorefield a record of 102 victoriea during his four-year col­lege career. They attended the national tournament last year and were ranked among the top ten dehatera in the natio~a.

In addition to the 21 seniors who are attending classes on this campus, three students at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem will also be initiated into Phi Beta Kappa. The three were juniors here last year and are now . first-year medical students. They will receive a bach­elor's degree here in June. They are John Oates, Dick Taylor and Frank White.

Amher•t Profeuor Hotaored The alumnus who received the

honorary membership is Dr. James Alfred Martin Jr. Dr . .Martin was graduated from Wake Forest in 1937. He received his master of arts degree from Duke University and his doctor of philosophy from Union Theological Seminary,

Dr. Martin is now pr-ofessor of philosophy and religion at Am­herst College in Amherst, Mass.

The Wake Forest alumnus is author of one book, "Empirical Philosophies'of Religion," publish­ed in 1945, and co-author with J. A. Hutchinson of "Ways of Faith," a work which was published this year.

Five Old Membera Five students on the campus

have pt·eviously been initiated in­to Phi Beta Kappa. They are Charles D. Barham, Wade M. Gal­lant Jr., Bruce Lassiter, Mrs. Anne B. Patterson and Lonnie B. Wil­liams.

Among approximately 100 mem­bers of the College faculty, 28 are members of Phi Beta Kappa. They are:

Dr. Thurman D. Kitchin, presi­dent emeritus and professor of physiology and hygiene; College President Harold W. Tribble; J. B. Cook Jr., assistant to the bursar; Carlton P. West, librarian

(Continued On Page Eight)

Legislative Body To Request $350

Questions of a budget for 1953-54 and who should be allowed to run for student government of· fices were discussed Tuesday by members of · the Student Legis:­lature.

The budget matter was handled in short order. Student Body President Charles Barham recom­mended that the Legislature ask for a $350 budget for next year, the same amount received this year. The measure was quickly approved.

Jim Abernathy's motion to limit candidates for student government offices to persons who have not yet received a degree was tabled until the next meeting.

Would Ban Law Student. Abernathy's motion is design.

ed to prevent any student who would be in law school from serv• ing as a student government ()f· ficial. The practice of permitting a first-year law student who en­ters law school at the end of three years in academic school to hold office would be excluded under Abernathy's motion. .

Abernathy made it clear, how­ever, that the idea. is to bring about the change next year, not this year. Actually, the Legislature can only approve the motion for submission to the student body since such a change would require a constitutional amendment, pos­sible only if the entire student body gives approval.

Representative Selected Most of the meeting Tuesday

was devoted to selecting a 30. (Continued On Page Eight)

PACE TWO OLP COLD AND BLAC"

Tri-Beta Members, Tired Of Waiting For Spring, Leave For Miami

··\~•••t· ......... '-.""':':'""·.' ~a-a:nard President Says Liberal Teaching

Will Fit Stude1_1ts For Work The liberal arts colleges have as allowing the market place to

been too. afr.aid of the word "vo- invade thhe world of the scholar. cation," ~resident ·Millicent C.' Primary Puri>oae Mcintosh of Barnard College de- "Always, however, we·must keep clares in her biennial report, re- in mind the .primary :purpose ,0 f . leased here recently, adding that the liberal arts, which will guide "teaching which is truly liberal us in avoiding work that is trivial will fit students to use subject or purely technical. We must also matter for work, and at the same seek out material which in itself time will relate to the great human has substance and depth, a'nd which problems faced by every indi- will expose our students· to great · viduat · - · ideas." ·

"Courses which deliberately make these connections should be (Continu_ed On Page Three) given side by side.with' those pure- ____ _..;. ____ .:..._ __ .;,..,.,.;:._

ly theor:etical or historical, just

E~t~RN :_ s 1- , o o-.o ·

--lhis Summer

Thirty-five Wake Forest biology majors gave the photog~apher a moment of their time prior to a 900-mile trip to the fand of sunshine and oranges at Durham Station Wednesday. The occasion was the District Convention of the Beta Beta Beta chapter. at the University of Miami, March 19-21. Those preparing for the journey are, kneeling, Davey Stallings, Dale Simmons, Joe Stokes, Ron Small, Zeb Burton, Roger Bryd, Joseph Lucarella, Newman Lewis, Tommy Olive· and William Cowan.

Standing are Dr. E. C. Cocke, Virginia Cocke, Bill Andrews, Daphne Martin, Earl Watts, Gene Jardin, Jack. Drummon, Mary Mallory Day,, Polk Williams, Minnie Edwards, Bill M~nn, Nana Etchison, Dick Corbett, Cynthia Collins, Audrey Beck, Mary Lide,;Jim Maultaby, Sue Cal"lpenter, Charles Phillips, Catherine Lee, Ronald Kelly, Nancy Monroe, Earl Parker, Mary Wilson, Driver and Betty ·B,ryant.

as we have for years accepted the necessity of laboratory. work in the study of science and statis­tics as a tool for the economist," I she says.

Quoting the Oxford English Dictionary definition of the word vocation-".Ihe particular function· or station t-.> which a person is [ called by God"-i'resident Meln- ~ tosh continues: ''We cannot escape from the broad vocational impli-

Quick· Service and Talty Food

ia Re.erTI!Id fer ::you

-when ::you meet me

-~-

Investigate· this opport!oJD- 1

.ity for s~'mm~r . ~~loy-. ment · with a Marshal}· Field owned organization~ Many college men and· women have found this a profitable · ~nd pleasant occupati!Jn working in or near their home cities. COm.plete . training given.

Write for full details to-' day to College Placement:

Studying Session Tri-Beta At Convention In Paris Planned Courses In French Will Be Offered

Students

Beta Beta Beta Sends 35 To Miami Meet; Three Students Read Papers '

Thirty-five members of the the convention Friday night­Wake Forest chapter of Beta Beta I Catherine Lee, on "The History Beta, honorary biology fraternity, of the Teaching of Biology at attettded the District Convention I Wake Forest College;" Cynthia

Theodore Andersson, director of at the University of Miami March Collins, on "Some Old Algae Yale University's Master of Arts 19-21. The group left Durham by! Mounts of Dr. Billy Poteat;" and :in Teaching Program, announced bus ·wednesday afternoon and Joseph Lucarella, on "The Physic­recently that applications now are arrived in Miami Thursday. logical Effects of Alcohol on the being received from Jll"Ospective Registration, a tour of the cam- System." Dick Corbett, in ad­students for the Yale-Reid Hall pus and an· address by Dr. Elton dition, provided a demonstration Summer Session in Paris, France. C. Cocke, Wake Forest biology of some old microscopes used at

The foreign study program is professor, at the evening convo- Wake Forest in the last century. under joint direction of Mr. cation highlighted Thursday's The convention concluded. Sat­Ande·rsson, Associate Professor of schedule. Friday and Saturday urday night with an informal French at Yale, and Miss Dorothy activities consisted of sightseeing, dance at . the University Student F. Leet, President of Reid Hall. a field trip, banquet, business Club. The'group was scheduled to

The six-week session begins on meeting and a student program. . leave Miami at midnight Saturday July 6 and will end on August 15. Three Wake Forest students and arrive in Wake Forest late It is open to qualified men and I were slated to read pape1·s before Sunday night. women students recommended by

-~:~~st:oi~r::t~~:~/;~~:~~t~re:~~ Cornell Conducts Experiment Courses Carry Credit

Students accepted will leave College Grads Without Teaching Courses New York in mid-June and be L • T I p "I conducted on a tour of Normady, earning 0 nstruct Upl S

~0~~ St ~ic~1 1fnd ~h; chabtea_ux Fourteen young college gr,ad-, In the last eight weeks of the o. e ~Ire a. ey . e ore . egm-~ uates who have had no courses course each student will have full m~dg th~Ir studtihes Itn Pan~1·1 Abt in how to teach are learning to be day-long responsibility for a single mt 1k -setshsion ahnFo etr. bolul" WIB e elementary school teachers in an class in the grade he chooses. a en roug on a1n eau our- 1 • tal C 11 d TL • V

1 d th . . t d 1 exper1men program at arne Stu ents From nree Countries

ges,h azedayf a~ 0 er po~n 5 • an 1 University. The one-year course The students represent 1 at.

1t1

be en. 0 tthe coursek, tte "'t""roupl\ combines internships in public liberal arts colleges and three Wl the.given brefe wee ts 0 . ravte schools with discussion sessions. countries. At the end of the year ~n eu· own e ore. re urnmg o h ·11 • t h this country. · Throughout the entire year, the ~ ey W1 t"1f·:cet1ve permdanentt eac f-

Th y 1' · '· p · cadet teachers spend three davs mg cer I Ica es an mas er o e a e sessiOn 1n aris was h k . 1 1 • d t" de ees

established three years ago and eac wee· m actua c assrooms _in e uca wn gr .. cffers courses in Intermediate and the Ithaca, N. Y., area, from km- The program IS supported by a Advanced French, Contemporary· dergarten !hrough the six~h grade. $250,00~ ~rant from the Ford French Literature French Art They begm by observmg, but, FoundatiOns Fund for the Ad­and French and Int~rnational Poli~ gra~ually take P.a1't in teaching-j\ranc'ement. of Educa:tion. Each tics from the Treaty of Versailles ca~lmg roll, re.admg a sto1·y to the I student th1s _year receives an $1,-to the present. Students are ex- children, gradmg papers. j 800 fellowship. pected to complete one or two of The cadets are asked to write these courses and academic credit application blanks, students may down their questions about each will be granted for the course apply before April 1 to director day's classroom experience, and work. Andersson, Hall of Graduate these questions are the basis for

For further information and· Studies, Yale. seminars held two days each week.

Special For-Easter NOW IS THE TIM'E' TO HAVE YOUR WATCH

PUT IN FIRST CLASS CONDITION

MARCH 23- APRIL 3

SPECIAL COMPLETE REPAIR JOB ON YOUR

WATCH FOR ONLY ~6.50 INCLUDES

Crystal replaced, if needed (Regular Glass or non­Breakable), Cords On Lady's Watches And Leather

Bands on Men's Watches Also Replaced.

ALL WATCH CASES CLEANED AND POLISHED WITH EACH JOB

laNiers Watch Repair Located Behind Ben's of Wake Forest

SHORTY'S Office, Box 3585, Chi-. cago 54, Ill. .

c,IISS.ICII :Lin"UI~'I cations of a college curriculum, . D D even thou.gh we may resist them

Frat Hears S~11iley · Prof. David Smiley spoke to the

Eta Sigma Phi classical language fraternity Wednesday night.

Prof. Smiley, who is on lea""' of absence from the college teaching staff this year . to write a.' bio­graphy, spoke to the group on an­cient history, with speCial atten­tion to the early civilization of the island of Crete.

Plans ·are being made to send delegates from the language fra­ternity to the national Eta Sigma Phi convention, which" is to be held at Agnes Scott College in De­catu:·, Georgia, April 10-11.

After their first day, the students wrote a total of 207 questions. These questions-about textbooks, discipline problems, methods of I teaching a particular study-are so1ted according to subject. · The seminars are conducted by the program faculty or by Carnell specialists in such fields as history of education, child development or psychology.

While the internees are study­ing, they are . also being studied. In addition to developing teacher training methods, the foundation wa·nts to find method_s of selecting students for teacher training, of I evaluating their progress, and of 1

predicting their success in the I profession.

I_ ~!

1 •

Campus capers call for Coke

-Rehearsals stretch out,

for the big Glee Club

tour is ahead. Wo~~ and worry call for a pause-so, relax •• ~

refresh with .ice-cold Coke.

· BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY'OF THE cocA-COLA coMPANY av·

THE CAPITAL COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY. RALEIGH, N .. C.

"Coke" Is a registered trode-marlc. , @ 1953, THE COCA-COLA COMP»>f

Th2 taste thats in a cigarette · Is just wl'iat counts with me -

If you're the same, then look no more, Try L1.1cky Strike and see! •

Richard S. Bunnewith Boston University

Nothing~ no, nothing~beals b~tter taste and LUCKIES

TAST·E &·ETTER! Cleaner, ~resher, Smoother) Ask yourself this question: Why do I smoke?

You know, yourself, you smoke for enjoyment. And you get enjoyment only from the taste of a cigarette. - •

Luckies taste better-cleaner, fresher, smoother! Why? Luckies are made better to taste better. And, what's more, Luckies are made of fine tobacco. L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco.

So, for the thing you w.ant most in a cigarette ••• for better taste-for the cleaner, fresher; smoother taste of Lucky Strike ••.• ,

Be Happy-GcJ--IUCKY! '

Where's r_our iingle? It's easier than you ,think to make $25 by writing a Lucky Strike jingle like those·· y~u see in this ad. Yes, we need jingles-and we pay $25 for every one we use! So send as many as you like to:' Happy-Go-Lucky, P. 0. Box 67, New York 46, N.Y.

I rove i:o Low!, blrt seldom s~;ilce; · It takes good l11ck you see. '

811t: L11cky Stl'ike, the smoke delight, S11te made a hit with me!

Rose G. Starr Creithton University

C I ·G. A R _E T T E S

PRODUCT OP ·~~ J"~ AM~~CA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF ciGAREUES

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MO~DA Y, · MARCH 23, 1953

Hickory Meet:

Debaters Place Second Wake Fore.~t placed second in and lost two debates, winni.ng

.~ the SoUth i\tlantic and· Southeast.:. over the Ulliversity of.Florida,.tlie ern Forensic Tournament at Le~ University of· S9uth Car_olina, Vir­nair Rhfne Coll~ge in ~ickory ginia P{)lytechnic! Institute, Car­March 5:7, "' .' son Newrilim· and ·Duke Univer-

Representing the Coil~ge on sity. The:·iwo lojlses were to Ten­the affirmatiVe were Glen Garri- n·essee Tech and George Washing­son and ·Joe~ Hough, ' wliile Virgil ton:

'"Mo'ol't!field· and· Jim·-Greene~debat;. .In· individual contests~ ~Gr.el!n.e . ed on ·the negative side of.. the took first place in after-dinner iuitional f'air employment: ":Prac.: spe~king, second ·in address read-

,tlces questi«;ln. . . '· . . . . ing lll_ld t~ird in ora~o~y. . '· · Ge-orge -Washington University Moo;ref1el(l 'YOn .~~~~t place m

won the meet· With a 12-2 record. extemporaneous speakmg and se-

..

OLD COLD A:RD BJ,.ACK

Wins Sharpshooter Award· . a . - •

PAGE THREE

Will Dispute On IFC Studies. Campus Relation Tuesday Docket

Thomas, 'Willson. Are ·To Be Caveators

In Moot Court···

Members Examine Function Of

Group The primary function of the

Inter-Frat.ernity Council . is to sponsor social activities, according

A will contest is on the agEinda to the conclusions of an IFC panel for the Moot Court trial to- discussion !ast :~eek. .

, morrow .:i:light .a~ .7:30 ~'eloc~ ..•. _ Dr~_Edwm w:tso~ of t~e Enghsb Superior Court Judge . Cbest_er Department led· a •dtscussion .~our, Morris from the eas~ern d1s- -.composed_ of· Norwood Red trict will preside. .:· Pope, ·a mem~er of the ,Kappa

·Counsels for the propounder Alpha Frat~rmty, and Ken Grigg, ~ ~ii :be ·B: 'I': Henderson and a Theta Ch1, ·

the IFO each year to the non­fraternity group that had the best decorations for homecoming. The idea of constructing floata was a,lso mentioned.

The group realized that tile fraternities could extend their services to the campus. even more tllr<>ugh such mediums as worth­while community project8, chapel programs and the Magnolia Fes­tival. Anoth~r suggestion was for the fraternities to .sponsor a Greek Week during which every student .• on the campus would have a chance to compete in games and.· enjoy entertainment. ~- -Moore'fielaano-Greene --won si~ ·l!"ohd 1ri-radio- newseast-and prob-

debates and lost one, defeating the_ lem solving. . ~ -Marlon- -Bam.' !!'he- ca:v~t9t::~ _ _ j'l}e _ ~o_up _!l~ee~ ~at the pri-Bob Wilson and AI Thomas. mary function of the lFC- rs ·to

'.

United States Naval Academy, Hough won first place in im-the University of Florida, Carson proinptu speaking., Newman College, Appalachian Prof. Franklin R. Smiley, Wake State Teachers College, Mars Hill Forest director of debate, ac-.Junior College and Tennessee companied the team. . · Technical College. The loss was to I Dr. Albert Keiser, head of ~he George Washington University. Speech Department -of Lenoir-

Garris-on and Hough won five Rhyne, directed the tournament.

Veacs Who Are Gr.~eks. By Glen Garrison

Lambda Chi Alpha was the regional conventi~n for The ·Lambda Chi's held their all the Theta Chi chapters in

annual White Rose Ball recently Maryland, Virginia · and North at the Carolina Hotel in Raleigh: Carolina. Preceding the dance, a banquet Sigma Chi was held after which the new The Sigma Chi's annual Sweet-officers of the fraternity were heart Ball was held· at the Wash­installed. They are Wade Gallant, ington Duke Hotel in Durham president; Bill Satterwhite, vice Satur<j,ay ·night. The dance was president; Bill Laughrun, secre- preceded by a. formal ·banquet. tary; :am Page treasurer; Cliff Last Friday night an informal Casey, steward; Bruce Thompson, buffet supper was held at the pledge. trainer;· Pat E:odrie, rush College Cafeteria, after which chairman; Locksley Hall, social members of the fraternity at­chairman.;_ Tommy Stegall, ritu- tended a dance at the Sigma Chi alist; and Joe .Woodruff, house 'liouse: ·. · · ··.· ·

ROTC Cadet Marvin Carter got hearty congratulation" last week from Rifle Team Coach Major Ivan J. Cooper. The oecasioil waa the announcement that Cadet Carter wae high scorer in rifle ma~che11 co~ducted at Wake Forest this year. See Story. (PhOto by Irvin Grigg)

Cadet Is Cited · Marvin Carter Gets ROTC Rifle Awatd

As Wake Forest High Scorer manager. Bob Loftis, who previously Marvin Carter, first yea·r Re-j round February 14 at Davidson

Faculty members attending the the fraternity as consul, serve Officers Training Corps College. · , dance were Prof. and Mrs. J. C. recently visited the chapter. Loftis cadet from Charlotte, received the teams, 40 men participated in the Drake, Prof. and Mrs. J. G. Car- has been ill since last semester. Rifle Medal for the high scorer -of tournamen1;, the first round of roll. ana Prof._ ll"~ ~rs. and is. taking treatment at Duke the Wake Forest Rifle team Tues- which was fired at State College H, .. Durham.· Visiting alumni in- Hospital at the present time. day afternoon. December 6 and the second Tound eluded ·Ben- Williams, Jack Love- · Alpha Sigma Phi Tlie medal, issued for_ the February 14 at D~vidson Coll~ge. lace, Graham l3arefoot, Jerey 1\ilor- The fraternity_ held- its annual Southern Conference. Rifle Out of a possible 400 pomts ris-· a:iid Joe "Baker. Apache Party Satur;day evening Tournament of North Carolina Carter scored 358 at State and

Ralph Young was at the Tar Heel Club in Raleigh. was awarded Carter in· the brief 349 at Davidson. He was high lected the most valuable On the preceding night the Alpha ceremony by Dr. Charles s. Black, s~orer. for Wake Forest ·both of the Lambda Chi's for the year. Sig's had a party at the fraternity head of the chemistry department .. , times.. . . . . "T be fraternity's scholarship house. Ca~er ranked, fifth in the state te~~ster;:o: tht~eco~~~;~;os~ywe:~ awards for the year were present- The. pledges and members have and first at Wake Forest. From N th C

1. St t C

11 ed to Bill Satterwhite and Buck recently been redec'orating the_ . ht t 40 t" - t d or · aro ma, a e o ege, -n· h. B Th th t' ~Ig earns, men p~r lClpa e Duke Univers1"ty Dav1'dson and n.Is . ruce ompson, e re Ir- fraternity house. Babe Narr is in m the tourna~ent, the ftrst rqund Wake Forest. ' ing president of the fraternity, charge of the work. hi h f' d s c 1

d d th ·B 1 H B <>f w c was Ire at ~ate 0 - · MaJ'or Ivan J. Cooper is the was awar e e ever y . arge . Kappa Alpha · · Excellency Cup· for his work in lege December 6 and the second coach of the rifle team. the chapter~ducing'-"the.;past year. The K. A.'s are .making plans ----:.-:.--:,.,..,_-'---,...-------~.,;._----;,_-------.,.--

The fraterni~y recently initiated for their Old South· Ball, which a.·-r c· a· ·del Tea·m To ·a·e· -.. -.H.. e·. ,-. e Bob Hedrick Val Jones John will be held in· Raleigh April 18. ·Maye- Ralph 'Young Buck Rish The Kappa· Alpha ·chapters from Bob Yoder. and. H~bert Howell: all the Big Four schools. take part Charles Newman was pledged in the annual celebration. last week. The newly elected Sigma Phi Epsiloa pledge officers are Bob McCor- J~hnie Ray Hendr:n ~as elected mick Bill Bazemore Charles Hin- president of the fratermty for the son, Whit Hood and A. T. Austin. coming year at the last meeting.

Kappa Sigma The Snappers, an Independent

League basketball team composed .of Kappa Sigs, defeated the Kappa· Sig· Fraternity League team last

·Monday night, 54-42. Bob Jones and Ruffin Johnson were the out­-s~ndipg players for the Snappers. Bob Gibson was the high scorer for ,the losers. .

Members have been practicing volleyball in the back' yard at the .fraternity house in preparation for the intramural games in the spring.

Pi Kappa Alpha The fraternity recently held

party at Perry's Cabin.' Ken Hines was recently pledged

by the' chapter. Last week the Pi Kappa Alpha

chapter at the University of South Carolina sent the local fraternity

"' the skin which the Wake Forest chapter won by virtue of the fact that. the Deacon football team won the South Carolina game last fall.

Other officers chosen are Coy Privette, vice president; Mack Barrett, comptroller; Dan Poole, historian · and Donnie Roberts, secrel;ary.

The fraternity recently initiated Norm Roberts.

Plans for the Sig Ep baU, which will be held in Raleigh April 24-25, are being made · by Bob Sasser, social chairman. Chapters from Carolina, State, Duke, Davidson, South Carolina, High Point and Wake Forest will participate in the ball. ·

Brother Hal Mabry, who is in the Air. Force, visited the chapter last week.

Group Will Assist Students With · Applications

An aviation cadet selection team will visit Wake Forest April 13 to give information about the aviation cadet training program. The· team will be· located in the College· Bookstore from 9 o'clock until 3 o'clock,

The purpose of the visit is to assist interested students in apply­ing for pilot or aerial· observer tr~ining, providing the student can quality.

Filing an application .for' the training program means that the individual is taking preliminary steps . to determine his qualifi-

cations to continue with the type of training program he may choose. It is not an enlistment in the Air Force.

The applicant chooses a date to report to an ai:rcrew classification testing unit for mental and phy­sical testing. Transportation is paid by the government.

To qualify for the program, the applicant must be between 19 and 26! years of age, have completed 60 semester.hours of college work and be able to pass the mental and physical examinations.

Qualifying applicants will re­ceive a four-month draft defer­ment while waiting for an ~ssign­ment to a class of pilot ofl"aerial obFerver training at one of the Air F.orce bases.

@n!Jr Zlme w.tll'Z!Jll .. BEAUTIFUL ....

~ Theta Cbi

AND INTEU.IGENT] BROTH51<.1 THIS TIME JT's LOVE!

.,

Members of the fraternity de­feated the pledges in ·a basltetball game last week. The losers enter­tained the winners at a party given immediately after the game. Leon Shaw and Jack Horton led the members to victory, whjle Jack Horton and Bob Ryan,,:were the leaders of the pled~~eam.

Several members of the chapter attended the Tlieta Chi's Mason­Di"on Jubilee in Richmond, Vir­ginia, last-'week end. The meeting

FOR THAT LATE EVENING· CUP OF COFFEE

SANDWICHES, AND MUSIC

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Meeting Is Held By St~uare Dance Glass

The trial concerns two sons sponsor social activities for the who are trying to break their fraternity men at Wake Forest

. father's will because he left the College. This year, for example, \estate to his son-in-law. The the IFC is giving three big dances

will, which is in the father's own in Raleigh. The square dance class had its . handwriting, is dated August 17. Community Service second meeting Thursday in the However, the father suffered a The group also acts as a means gym at 7:30 o'clock. The class was cerebral hemorrhage on August of communication between the col- recently organized by Miss Mar-13. leg-e administration and the indi- jorie Crisp, Women's Physical

The son-in-law and the doctor vidual fraternities on the campus. Education director,_ for the pur­were the only ones to see the It takes the initiative 'in regard pose of teaching the skills in and father from the time he suf- to regulating fraternity rushing promoting appreciation of square fered the hemorrhage until his and sets its own rules to prevent dancing. death. The sons maintain that undue pressure being put on fresh- --------------­some foul play was involved. men rushees. They say that he could not have -Even though the primary func-: been mentally capable of making tion of the IFC is to promote social!• a will at that time.

For MODERN HAIR STL YING.

The father had made a prior activities, it does not ignore the opportunity to render service to

will one year ago. The sons are the campus as a whole. At the I trying to prove that the present present time the IFC is _taking

Visit HORTENSE BEAUTY SALON Room 2 Wilkin,.on Bldg.

Phone 5596 will is not valid and that the :..-------------...z an active part in the Religion and prior will is valid. Life Week discussions and in the

College Head Gites Fear of 'Vocation'

(Continued From Page Two)

Mrs. Mcintosh_ holds that what­ever trains and cultivates the mind and spirit is fit material for the curriculum, and that whatever problem of society presents a need for solution "by devoted, educated human beings" may be the· busi­ness of the enlightened college teacher.

"I look forward to a day when the woman's liberal arts college will no longer be self-conscious or defensive about academic learn­ing," she says. "By combining in our students the scholar's training with the sensitive conscience, we shall make our full contribution to our generation.

local polio drive. Provisions have also been made by which the fraternities plan to offer a tuition scholarship which will be awarded to some student by the faculty committee on schplarships.

Dr. Wilson, Pope and Grigg con­sidered means by which the cen­tral fraternity body could make Homecoming Day a more im­portant event to the average Wake Forest student. The group sug­gested that a trophy be given by

BEST IN SHOE REPAIRING

FOR A WELL GROOMED APPEARANCE OUR HAIR· CUTS SATISFY EVER.Y TIME. WHY NOT GIVE US A TRY?

"We must confess to failure i£..1

CITY we send our student8 out with

1

-AT-·

many 'courses' to their credit but Harpe. r's Shoe. Shop BARBER SHOP no ·vocational sense;. that is, no __ ...._-..;·o..· ___ .....__ . ..;;..,.: ... . _

particular station or function to ----------------•::::::::::::::::::::::::::::"_ which they feel themselves called. ----------------------------"1 We have failed also if they find themselves inadequate to m-eet the lives they actually lead, be these in . the home, in the pro­fessions, or in business.

T~H~ MUST BE PERFECT

The privacy of a •ecludecl cottage all your own, deep in wooded hills. The friendly companionship of other newly m"rried college folk. Jolly. s .. tisfying meals at an oldtime guest house. Easy· going leisure (breakfast until 11:00) or vigorous outdoor life. We'll send our helpful THREE HONEYMOON PLANS to those who mention dates.

FARM ON THE HILL Swiftwater 92, Pa.

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\

'P ,: .. z· · ·o· ·tt·1c.a Forum 'Athletics And Educatio.n~ ·.·.:::--;:,

The Official Student Newapaper Of Wake Forest College

(The following editorial was · ing far more -~~pe.y to ~bt~ii/ ~th~ · published March 18, 1953, by letes th~n "studen~ of· .supez:ipr

The campai~gn has begun. The fight is ·o~. In one corner The Green\lboro Daily News;) quality academica1ly· and,·intellect-··· the Campus Party, cunently enjoying a majority of stu- "' * • • "' • ually'' is an indic-at1on Qf~i'a.''\'miS::.. · guided sense of values." · .. ' - ·

L. M. WRIGHT, JR. WILFRED WINSTEAD, JR. OTIS GOSSMAN, JR. dent government offices-including the presidency of 1 h' t . Once one thinks· about it, 1·t is the student· body, is the defending champion. At Chapel Hill scho ars Ips o Th h II · · athletes run about $100,000 a hard to get. around that · conclu-.

Editor Managing Editor Buaineu Manager --------------------------------Associate Editor: Nancy Craig. Editorial Staff Members: Bobby Simpsm1, John .I. Durham, Bob Pratt, Flora Nell Roebuck, Allene Nash, Helen Puckett, M. S. Mahaley Jr., Isabel Quattlebaum, Blevyn Hathcock, Dan Poole, Ghm Garrison. Cartoonist: Tom Mezger. Staff Photographer: Irvin Grigg. Business Staff: Frank Davis, Johnny Ratliff, Marthelaine Williams, Nancy Lou Davis, Bob Hedrick, Phyllis Wall, Jack Kehoe. Circulation Staff: Jack Kehoe, manager; Anita Brooks, Motsie Burden, Marion Cabe, Dot Canipe,. Johnny Gilleland, Jimmy, Annis, Marylou Johnson, Mary Lou Lanier, Lou Newsome, Benny 'Vrenn.

e c a enger this year is the Student Party. By no year whereas scholarships to. un- sion. The spectacle of colleges means a ligptweight group, the Student. Party. wilL be dergraduate .non-athletes . r u.n comp.eting \vit~ money -·~nd emolu-. -making a strong bid to wrest control of student- govern- abOut half that much. Chancellor ments for· players rather than stu-· ment fro·m·Campus Party.hands. Robert B. House is- grateful- dents is some ·evidence that 'the

Found~d January 15, 1916, as the official student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black is published weekly during the school year except during examination and holiday periods as · directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

: Written By. Party Leaders and rightly so-for the athletic things the. college stands for no .In the belief that a well-infotmed student is a student capable of scholarships because they enable longer have as strong an ·appeal

casting an intelligent vote, Old Gol!l an.d Black this week begins a "the University to award its limi~ to the alumni as the things· it series of articles which wiil 'be .written by officials of the two parties ed number of endowed scholar- merely allows. Learning is fnnda-. f th · · ships to. non-athletes." mental to tlie university, athletics · or e purpose of bringmg out campaign -issues and informing stu- 'N<!vertheless. it is some sort of 'incidental; but it. is easier to get dents of various.·issues. :.·. commentary on the alumni of an money from the alumni for the

All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, Box 551, ·wake Forest, North Carolina. All business matter should be addressed to the business manager. Subscription rate is $2.50 per year. Advertising rates will be furnished upon request. Old Gold and Black is represented for national ad­vertising by the National Advertising Services, Inc., College Publishers Representatives, 420 Madi-son Avl!nue, New York City. · 1

Entered as second class matter January 22, 1916, and re-entered April 5, 1943, at the post office at Wake Forest, North Carolina, under the act ()£March 3, 1879.

OFFICES IN THE STliDENT CENTER--TELEPHONE 4056

MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1953

WHY A STORY? The editors of Old Gold and. Black

found themselves in a peculiar position last week. Several coeds were in the office, at various ti.mes, requesting that a certain story not be published.

-The story in _question, of course, was the one dealing with the action of. Woman's Government Association in regard to the violation of certain rules governing the possession of alcoholic beverages in dorm­itories. Three coeds were charged with violating the rule last week, and they were found guilty.

The story appears on pa·ge one. There are several reasons for the pub­

lication of such a story. The basic reason is simply that it is the duty of any news­paper to tell its readers as much of the truth as possible about what has been going on.

.If the incident had been one concerning a basketball game, for example, the com­plaints would have been just as strenuous had the story been omitted. Why? We think the answer is simple. People just don't like to have the truth told when the truth is unpleasant.

It is not the duty of Old Gold and Black to spoon-feed its readers. It is the duty of this newspaper to tell its readers the un­varnished truth. As nearly as possible, the editors have sought to do that throughout the year, and will continue to do so until the end of the year.

Certaini_\-, the story could have been omitted. So could several other stories which have been published this year. A ·.good example would be the actions of the Student Council.

thing which happens in this world is not, after all, exactly what one's mother might have wished for her son or daughter. So, let's just look at things as they are. That's all. No coloring. Just look at things as they are.

This week, and every week, Old Gold and Black tries to do just that. Its readers may not a·gree. The question is certainly open for discussion. But to tell the truth must be ou'r aim. Otherwise, what aim have we?

THE CAMPAIGN BEGINS Old Gold and Black this week initiates

a new feature designed to make students on the campus more familiar with student government problems.

Officials of the two political parties have written statements for publication. They are published on this page.

The space for these statements is being made available each week from now un­til election time in the hope that the result will be a better informed student body.

The articles are written by party of­ficials. Each week, the articles are pre­pared and submitted to the paper without any comparing of notes and without any consultation. The only limit the paper. makes is one of space. Neither writer will know what the other writer will discuss. The space is theirs to do as they see fit.

We seriously suggest that· each mem­ber of the student body read the state­ments. The issues discussed will certainly be of importance as the time to vote draws nearer.

.For the .S~ude~t Party, Jim.-Byi-ne, party whip, is thP speaker this institution of higher education incidentals tha·n the fundamentals. week. Fred.:Upchurc!i, who is whip for the· Campus Party speaks his when scholarships for athletes The absurdity of this situation piece for his group this week.. · double those for non-athletes. One in institutions dedicated to rea-

In future weeks, as the· election draws neare~, Old Gold and Black might suspect that the majority of son will not down. It keep!;_poking. will .offer these columns to the politicians to have for their own use the graduates had somehow got its head up and asking' "Why?" irf the· hope that what is said here may, in some way,. contribute to; the id~a in college that foot.ball is President Robert M. Hutchins better ~;;tudent government.· more unportant than e~ucat~on. of the University of Chicago .once

· · _, t. . Of course the Umvers1ty at suggested a way out of the anoma- ·

St.. d'" r •.. p I c p ; I Chapel Hill is not unique in this ly. Colleges, he said, should main-. U eft If J , .. · ampUS 8f J respect. It is on the ·contrary all tain racing stables instead of sub.:.

· By Jim Byrne - . B F ed u Ji h I too typical of universities in gen- sidizing football squads;· . l'hCt - · · · ~ r pc urc eral. A similar situation would be jockeys could· wear the . college·

For the past few weeks, the The s~rmg of 1951 was marked found, we presume, in most of colors. and the horses wouldn't students on this· campus have been by the birth o~ t~e. Campus Par1?y those that go in for big-time· foot- have to pass examinations. .. .. in the process of reorganizing the -the most significant event tn· ball or basketball The editor of Of course another way would Student Party for the forthcoming Wake Forest campus politics in the Old Gold and· Black of Wake be for alumni to make their stu­April elections; · .. . ~ore than a decade, for with the Forest College thinks that the dent scholarships double their

Th'e reorganization has consisted b;rth of the Campus Party came· fact that his institution is spend- athletic scholarships. of a series ·of.. m_eetings conducted the death of a vicious one-party ____ .:._· _____ ·:.__ _ _: __________ :_ __ ~--by :the. diffe:rent groups and or- system, as exemplified by the old gamzatiOJ?S _on . the campus,, for Progressive Fraternity Party. the purpose of developing a bet- With the birth of the Campus' ter ~tudent pa~ty. Party came the first-and only

CAMPUS PARADE Smce th1s IS a party of the -really democratic political or­

students, it is· our purpose and ganization on this campus; po­.aim to bring· each and every litical power was taken from the student into closer contact with the 1 hands of a select few and placed party, in order to receive and 'vhere it so rightly belongs-in

By DAN POOLE

materialize.· individual ideals. the hands of the Student Body. Coed Representation The Campus Party is a direct

Our first step toward reorgani- result of ·a rupture within the zation began with a meeting of th'e ProgresSive Fraternity party representatives from the five which, after years of absolut~ national social fraternities and control, in 1951 became so cor­one .. law ~raternity which are rupt that even some of the groups affiliated with the Student Party. comprising its membership could

The purpose of the meeting was not with a clear conscience tolerate to make plans for the reorgani- its actions.

Closing hours for women's houses at Kansas State College have been extended half an hour to 10:30 o'clock on week nights. The ruling was 'made despite strong opposition from frosh co­eds.

The freshmen feared a time ex­tension ;might hurt scholarship and result in less sleep. Upper­classmen voted for the extension.

* *' * zation of the party, and to fulfill Fraternity Control the promise of last year to give The PFP caucus-not conven- Changes in the college rules on the coeds equal representation in tion-which at that time was com- academic probation will prevent the P!lrty caucus. This would give posed of delegates from the ten students from being on probation the coeds six :epresenta~ives, three social fraternities, n~minated a more than once, according to from BostwJck Dormitory . and slate which included many men Hanover College f~cul~y \action. three from Johnson Dormitory, obviously not . qualified for Students must mamtam a 1.0 and t~e fraternity men six repre- positions on the student govern- schola~tic average to stay ~ff s~ntattves, . o_ne from each of the ment. But -why not? The fratern- ·probatiOn. . SIX fratermtles. , ity party was in absolute control· Under the old rulmg, a student

Re.presenta~~cm of. the indep~n- coeds and independent men had could 'be on probation two times. dent :r_nen was disc;ussed at length no voice in student government. The . new · rulin~, howeve~, says and It w~s >;~~cJ<l.ed: that true Dissatisfied with this slate, four that If a students scholastic _aver­representatiOn·. c~>Uld .not be se- of the ten fraternities-Kappa age drops. below 1.0, he will . be cured from the' mdep·endent men Alpha, Kappa Si.,.ma Lambda Chi on probation. A former probation ~ince t~~Y. could· not be organiz~d Alpha, Sigma Phi Epsilon-V:,ith- s~udent who at any subs~quent m a large group to elect their drew from the party. Their with- t1me .drops below .. 1.0 will be chosen representatives. . drawal was a protest against the dropped from college. .-. ·

Firat Caucus one-party ~ystem; their aim, a * · * * The next· meetings were called representatn':e . student govern- As the main project of the

meetings in Bostwick and John- ment. year, tbe Pennsylvania College son Dormitories for the purpose ·Banding together with the old, for Women curriculum committee of securing three representatives ineffective independent party and plans to evaluate the faculty from from each dormitory, elected by with the coeds, these four fratern- the student's point of view. Infor­the group to represent them in a ities formed the Campus Party. mation collected through the Student Party• caucus. The in- Each group was given a voice in evaluation will be used for the dividual fraternities selected their the convention; candidates from faculty members' information representatives• at their various each group were placed on the only: The evaluation will be exe­meetings. slate -representative candidates cuted by a questionaire covering

The party ·was now well enough selected by the students, not by all phases ' of courses, and the organized to hold its first caucus twenty men in the traditional· student reaction to the course and meeting, which;.was an open meet- "smoke-filled" room. the teaching techniques. The ing held in the Social Science Campus Party Victory faculty and students alike would Building for the purpos·e· of nom- T~~ PFP, reduced to six fra- benefit from such a step, inating a suggested slate. termties, was, for the first time in * * *

... What ,do I as a college stu­dent know about Russia, its' gov­ernment and people? What class is offered that will teach me about these things? My professors would rather not discuss the subject ei­ther in class or in private, and with good reasons,' too.

Look at the number of teachers who have been labeled Communist sympathizers and lost their jobs. American college students are having a vital part of their educa-tion purposely ignored. ·

* • * · A coed at Drake University, Iowa, rushed into Spanish· Class a few minutes late, threw off her coat and started to sit down. Students began to chuckle: The coed looked down horrified, then · quickly threw her coat around her again and ran out.

She had forgotten to wear a. skirt.

* • *' Students and faculty members

at the University: oft Utah, have·a free lunch hour .this ,year. The proposal to eliminate 12 :30 classes: was first made at one of the several open meetings held by last year's Associated Students. Executive Council.

• • • 'Although open for only two­

weeks each semester, the Men's: Council Bookstore at the Uni­versity of Pittsburgh showed a $456.07 profit, for the fall semes­ter this year. The bookstore is operated entirely bir volunteer help from the students, and the money is used by the council for student projects.

* • *

"

I .

I .

A newspaper is not a keeper of the morals when it comes to the matter which

, appears in its news columns. Certainly it ·has a duty to discuss and condemn certain practices editorially. But the editorial policy of a newspaper should be reflected

·in its editorial columns only, never in its

These editorial columns will not be fill­ed between now and election with those insipid "you-ou~ght-to-vote" editorials. We frankly believe that those students who have sense enough to vote will vote. The time, the place, the candidates and the issues will be given ample publicity in the news columns of this paper.

The method used for the nom- its history, faced with the pos- An ROTC cadet at Emory Uni-inations was as follows: Each rep- sibility of defeat. The party was versity, Ga., is charged with slug­resentative was asked to give the forced to revamp its entire slate ging" a superior cadet officer. names of students who they deem- removing the undesirables and re~ He faces a court martial, but it's

A Smith College survey inquir- J

ing into car-driving permissions at women's colleges in the east reveals a tremendous range in answers. Six · colleges allow cars during the spring term of the senior year only, while at four driving is never allowed. Three colleges ·allow cars all of the senior year, while five colleges allow girls to have car-s all four years.

news columns. What the editors think of what happens

is found in these e~itorial columns, here. What does happen is found in the news columns.

That the incident referred to should occur on this campus is certainly unfortm:i­ate. It is ·not our purpose, however, to pass judgment here, but rather to make clear something of the duty of a newspaper in general--a duty which is too often misun­derstood by the reading public.

The rest is up to you. ed the most capable leaders on the placing them with their most! all in fun.

WHAT'S THIS?

campus. These names were placed qualified men. Yet still, the stu- The incident was staged by an on the blackboard in their respec- dent body, rallying to the banner assistant professor of air science tive 'classes. After all the names of repre~ent~tive government, ex- who '!anted to illustrate military had been added, the selection of pressed 1ts w1shes at the polls and, law to the cadets. Witnesses to the the top five officers began. Each by an overwhelming landslide, slugfest were not in on the secret.

The revelation made last week hy col- individual was discussed as to placed the Campus Party in of- * * * lege officials that members of the student leadership ability and capability fice. (From a letter to the Daily b d h 1' · · h h b fl,r each particular office. Nom- This Campus Party victory was Kansas, University of Kansas,):

o y ave been f Irtmg Wit deat y inations were then made from the the death knell of the PFP. One ------------0:.....-standing in front of rapidly moving trains floor and another similar discus- of the major objectives of the

t 'l th f" 1 t th · · 'd c p independent m(;n-not ~elected by un 1 e ma momen , en JUmping as1 e Sil)n was made on the indiVl'dual ampus arty had been accomp-b ht h rt

r h d h 1 the fraternity men of the party. rou·g US up S 0 • candidates. Votes were cast and IS e ; t e se ect few were de- It cannot be said that the Cam-

What is going on here? the candidates with the highest £rocked of their power; the Stu- pus Pa1ty is fraternity. domiiiated.

BSU Plans To Hold Pre-Easter Services

Have we lost our senses? number of votes were placed on ?ent Bodsy wdas now in control of The combined_ fraternity vote is Apparently some have. Just what the the suggested slate. The remain- It3 own tu ent Government equal to that of the coeds and in- By Bob Pratt

intentions of the students involved in this mg offices were filled in the 'same Again in last year's election" the dependent men-and why should A miniature Religion-in-Life

< I

I

I A newspaper is simply a mirror of the. community which it attempts to cover. The duty of recording all the news is just as important to a newspaper as is the duty of studying all the facts to a historian.

manner with the' addition of new Campus Party was victorious de- h childish prank were is certainly yet to be f t' th St d • t e fraternities vote as a block? week is planned for March SO- I

Can history b~ written without record­ing the loss of battles and men in wars? These are the unpleasant factors. Shall we just omit them?

We think not. Nor can the unpleasant news stories be rightly omitted.

There are too many "chamber of com­merce" newspapers in this world already. Old Gold and Black, for this year at least, does not choose to be placed in that cate­gory.

Certainly we are proud of the accom­plislrments of our student body. Certainly we are delighted when we can print stories and pictures concerning conference champ­ionships and Phi Beta Kappa initiations. These are the good things. We are just as proud as can be about them.

But we must also take the realistic view and remember, after all, that there are bound to be a .few human beings in the group. Somewhere, sometime; we have to put our feet down on the ground and see that absolutely everything is not sweet­ness and light? Why fool ourselves?

College students are supposed to be maturin·g students. They are supposed to be intelligent enough to realize that every-

names suggested by the represent" ea mg e u ent Party, which Th b · 1 explained. That the actions are of some h · t , · h d e asic reason for founding the Apri 2 by the Baptist Student atives. The meeting lasted through- as risen o rep.ace t e efunct t k u ·

b ther t th S b d A • 1' R 'l PFP A par y· was to ta e control away mon. The emphasis will be. on o o e ea oar Ir me ai way out the afternoon and contt'nued . representative and demo- 1 · th tt 1 · from a se ect few. Those present Easter.

IS ano er rna er, wwever. the next afternoon, and still the cratic party had again triumphed. h , If t d t

. h t h th 1 G d G . at t e pa.rty_ s convention. had the, Morning watch wt'll be at 7 . s u en s WIS o t row emse ves slate was not entirely complete. 00 overnment in front of trains, that is the business of Work With Freshmen For two years the Campus Party ?pportum~y to .observ.e tliis ~ystem 'o'~lock in the church. Jean Poston,

ha g• en th t d t . d In. operattOn; m .the selP.ction of wh(i~i&..jn charge of the. morning the Student. But the rai'lway company' 1's A meeting w_;as held by the par.ty s lV e s u en s goo gov- th t th d d ,_ ·-t d · Ir Y- rea can I ates, t •• ere was watch fot- the . week has an-gettl'ng worrl'ed about I't, has even sent in Bostwick po:r;mitory, in order ernm_en ' an contmuing-no, ex- not e . I . t . h' h . , •

P · d 't d t• 1' • ·on smg e ms anc"! Ill w 1c nounced that "Because He LI·v~s" · 1 to introduce the Student Party to a:. mg-I s emocra Ic po ICies, th f t 't' b d d " -a specia agent here to investigate the th c p '11 e ra erm tes an e together. is the theme. f or'the week · ' the freshmen.:.Upon the suggestion e ampus arty WI again prove B 'd p • matter We Understand . lf d .11 . n gea For resident M O H . .. 'll , k

' . of this group_and.others, the party ITse an WI agam give the col- Each group acts individually, rs. we~ errm-g_,.wl . spea One engineer reported Monday nrght decided to try to organize the in- lege a student government of yet all labor for the interest of Mon~~.Y on Becaus;? lle.-,LlVeS, I

that a student stood in front of his engin~ d·ependents and give them equal which it may be justly proud. the party-the selection of candi- LL01.vvese, I HTuesd~y,l d BbecDaus-Q.

0 .. HTe

so long that he was unable to see that the representation .. We would like to One may ask how the demo- d t h b · , onor e y r t . 1. . a es on t e as1s of merit and -BI'nkle . " · · '

student did jump aside at the last second. particularly S:~ess that we at no era Ic, po ICH!S of the party have ability, regardless of the group to . Y, Wednes.~ay, Because Apparently he did. We have heard no time resented~having the independ- been expanded: At a meeting which he or she may belong And He Lives, I Serve by Mrs. J. B. report concerning a missing student. ents represent~d on our caucus. In early this spring, by a unanimous so, by a truly representativ~ sys- Hipps_; and Thursday, ."Because

H d h 1 fact, we enco.uraged independent vote of all delegates from all fac- tern, th' e Campus Party has-c' hosen He Live~, I, Too, Shall Live" by

a t e sp it second timing been J'ust a t' f th • h b · D Ed · participation,.,'but we felt that we Ions 0 e par.y, t e asis of its candidates r.. ward MacDowell. After-little the other way, however. the story could procur~~ good men to run rt!prrl>entatiol'l wa~ modifieu. giv- For its ca~didate as president wards the group will meet in ·;the would have been ouite different. and achieve the same ·ends with- ing five votes to the co-eds, seven of the student body, the Campus cafeteria where tltey. :will. eat

Trains are all right for little boys to play out having si~ self-appointed men to the independent men, and three Party has chosen a' ID!ln well breakfast together. with. ·(The model variety, we're talkin•g to represent 'tpe independents on to each fraternity belonging to known by. every· student 'for his Special Chapel Service• .. about, now.) Even some of the bigt?er our caucus. · .. . the party. The coed delegate"! were unquestioned i~tergrity, ability Dot R~iford is in charge of the boys can play with the trains, too. But the. _In order to s.ecure represent- chosen by; an open meeting of the and merit--Ken Bridges. As its chapel services. On Monday the boys who .are st. udents obviously should atives ft·om ~~e mdependen~, ~e coeds-not sele<;ted by tbe fr_a- candidates for the other .. major Glee Club will present a sacred not be playmg With the real trains. . ~~ld ~other ~o~en caucus meetmg ternity members of th.! pr.rty; th~ officeS-Vice-president, secretary music program, and ;Students will

If th t d t . , l d 'll • • h m which the- mdependents nom- inde}Jendent men delegates were and treasurer of the Student Body' read the Scripture ·and lead 1'n the e s u en s mvo. ve Wl . VISit t e inated six rf!presentatives to the choseri by an open meeting of the d d Old Go_ ld and Black office. we 1\;111. suggest caucus. This.'. gave the coeds six __________ __.: ___ an Presi ent of the Senior Class prayers. On ~ednesday,Dr. Glenn

f t · 1 f t , -the pa1·ty · has selected others Bl-ackburn WI}J: address the group, surer 1 no qUIC cer wavs o mee mv. ones votes, the in_~ependents six votes, 'in which every student would have ~ell known for integrity and abil- and the choir will also sing. fate. Just ioin the Old Gold staff and beJ!in and the fraternities six votes. The &1" opportunity to add his ideas to 1ty-Bruce Thompson, Doris Cra- Vespers will be held in the workin~g da~· and night. That'll do it. And suggested slate was then brought. the platform. ven, Jim Green, and Howard church at 6:30 o'clock each even­Seaboard will never be bothered before the representatives for An open platform meeting was Twiggs, ing with Billie Parrish in charge.

,.

II

It is incidents such as these which cause their additions and final approval. :teld the following week and the These, and others all down the the older 2:eneration to say, and with clue Several days after the slate w~s !'la~form which appears in thi!l slate,. are capable candidates,

uwh t . th t• drawn up, the party held a candt- JSI':Ue of Old Gold and Black was chosen by a t!uly, representative NEW HOSPITAL BUSY ,

Nearly 500 patients had. lieell 1 · registered in the files ot the Bap- · tist Hospital in Asuncion, . Para­guay, between: its inauguration on December .9, 1Y52', and a report of

caus.e, ? ,!1 Is e younger genera Ion date meeting in order to inform the result of this meeting. Th.- convention. Their election will irl­CO)nll_l9: to·· . . . the candidates of the ideals of the main. objective 'in the drawing up sure the ~ontinuation of the good

. With !rams traveling at etghtv and party ;and. to m~~;ke plans for the of this platforJil was to promote government which the Campus nmety miles an hour these da:.vs, the an- eampa1gn m April. The candidates only those planks which the party Party luis given the College in the swer shouldn't be long in comill'g. :favored an open platform meeting, :tt>l~ ·that it ·could fulfill. past.' Februa~ 16,. 953. · ·

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situation i to rea­:P!\.PO,king "W.hy?" Hutchins

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• '!

MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1953 OLD COLD AND BLACJC PAGE FIVE

'4oot. Co~ft; ·Jury Rules CataWba College Forln~~7~'. . . . · . 8 8. . 'R~ S. ~. P.'. Praised By Critic M'.·. •, :_' ... ·t:• .;G ·· ... :•'It,' .·:·,·I·' . C·' : . . ·Planning· Forum l!ersonnel M•• To e. ere Opera Workshop's Second Production r. ~~~-.• :nO .,. ': u~.. .Y n ' . ,:as.e . . . ' .. . . dir!to~~sre J~~:;~~ *~~o;n;;! ~~nype~~~~~rt~~~ie~o ~::lo~!~~ By ToOmfMYezgeear_r c. onsidered Good

· , · · Group To Di ·cu · Marilyn Thomas, Cait'lton Cox, Williains .. And Allen Win Trial lnv lvin ·. . . S SS Charlotte,'will·.be·o~ the campus. technical educations but .who _do The Opera Workshop produced Mary Nell Reed, Mary Jo Brown.,.

. · M- ] -· · · . · .. 0 g International , , Thursday. to rnterVJew students have the asset o; academic- tram- Jacques Offe b h' · . Joann Green, and Wade 'Massen.-. . , . ,' -- ~ns. aughter-· Charae ;:_Daniel . . . . , inter~~ted .in :Wbrki~g in radio .. and ing a~d:_who are. seti_()_usly c~~te~· ... . ~'R: S .. V. P." ~haucl·sJa co::;tch,·tfe~a, gill in supporting roles aided tone.

r _, ;•' ' n··-· ., .· .... ,..s. ···':'" ,. 1·,Et ·~ ;> .. . . ' . :- Affairs :. ·, te1eVJSIOn. . ' ' ested m ·careers m the- communi- a:;,dl'en'ce of' t'e th y gh. do ~md · IA.yJe '· tate' · ' a.,_yer· S . · · · · • . 'b · . · . · u SS an a un re little degree the success of the, • .. :-;" :·.:· -~ ·. 1'1! •• • . • '_·, -~"· . .. --~ " .,-•• ' .. • -. - .. - .... In a' letter .written· y· Mr.- Idol cations mdustry, I p" eople. The program for the evo- production.

Catawba' .College will be host t th 1 t b h h ~ B D p I I egl' e W'll' ' t . S t d M h 28 , o. e p ac~me~ . _ureau . ere, e Need Several ning . was another part o.f the The opening monologue dra""-. y an oo e ·: n 1genc on 1 1ams par' · · a ur ay, arc . , to a meeting satd that t':chmcal educatl?n and · WBT and WBTV will be able to Vocal Ar.ts Festival. "'

·Robert· E; Allen· was ·~cquitted ·. Elmer. W. Raper, firs~ witness of the International · some experience are required· of . b. f IT d . . ged somewhat. However, whe11. <If an ·involuntary manslaughter for tl;l~ sta~e, · saiq that .he was. in Forum, according to an .announce- r · t f' 't' · · WBT a num er 0 qua 1 le Mtss Nelhe Kemp a soprano the composer began introducing

h. t th · t · h ·· appd ICWanBTs ·V,or po~l 101!5 md t · in their various oper- gave a voice rec1'tal 'for the f 1'rst' his characters and the act1'on o"

charge at a· Wake Forest Law ts car a · e · tn ersectlon w en ment by Professor G. W. Greene, an s engmermg epar :. t' d . t t 1 · ' School Moot· Court trial Tuesday the accident ·occU::tred. He state.d director of the Catawba:: Co liege nl.ent. a Jon epat.tmen s no 0 !1 Y per- part ?f the program. M~ss Kemp, the play began to evolve, there ni"ght, with Judge John J. Burney, .that ··the cab light ~n the truck World Government Institute .. The There are; manently b~\i -~~~0 durmg the a res1dent of Zebulon, 1s <me of was not a moment which could pas-Superior ,Court:judge from Wil- wa§> on _when he· f1rst saw th.e topic for discussion will·be "Com- · peno · IS summer. Dr. Bair's pupils. · sibly be condemned as dull or :rpington, presiding. truck come over. a kno~l as lt munity Among Nations.'~ Featured Job categories Include those of She sang selections from the dragging.

The ·attorneys for the state, approached the mters.ectlon. He speakers· .will be McNeill Smith, sec~etary, .stenographer, .clerk- three major periods of music- Excellent Score Charles W. ·Daniel and Ferd L. stated that the truck d1d not slow Greensboro .attorney, Dr.· typist, sales promotwn .assistant, 'classical romantic and modern. The cast pulled the audience in-Davis, Phi Delta Phi law fraternity down until. it hit, the car.

1 Dearborn; dean of Catawba Col- radio and television. program assis- " B '1 G d Op ' to its confidence. Once the bound."<

members' alleged that ·a truck Spencer .Ennis, second witness lege,· and· Pr·of. Greene. · tants an.d'contintiity writer. · Th ur eequde• dra.n d~ra bl Th · . t d t 1 t d Id e secon an conclu mg por- were esta ished, the audience:

driven by Lonnie Williams hit ·and for the state, was with Raper in The Forum is being sponsored · e. 5 u en s se ec e . wou tion ·of the program was the pre- could do nothing except give itself killed Sampson as· a result of an his car and also witnessed the acci- by Catawba College through its have . e~_ployment, accordmg to sentation of the comic opera by unreservedly to the action of the attack on ·Williams by Allen, the dent. He told· the exac~ location World . Gov-ernment Institute· in orgamzatlOn and, at the same Offe b h "R s v p" · l"ttl opera. f th t d ' f th · time, would be gaining on~the-job . n ac :' · · · · JS a

1 e

other occupant of the truck. Samp- o e ruck an car a ter e cooperation with campus organ- trainin in th .f' ld . . h" h th ope:a .. designed to burles9ue the Each charlj,cter pulled attentimt son was in a stalled car at the accident. He said that he could izations .Sigma Pi Alpha, Inter- are mo~t . t ~ 1:ed 1~ w IC ey ent1re"-s~stern ~f grand opera. Few to the opera 'rather than to him:_ intersecti~n of highways 59 and -see that something was in front of natiqnal ·Relations Club, and' the. m eres ·-- aspects 'of the master art are left self. Often one·· ~haracter tended 98 a .few miles east of here. the driver's face, but since it was Student Chapter of the· United I Meetb•g Thur•day unscathed.' As one might imagine, to steal a scene,' but even tb.is

State attorneys also stated that raining, he could not tell who was World Federalists. . A group .meeting of all students the result is deligbtful. theft was easily disregarded for Williams and Allen had argued holding the object. He said that Invited to attend are f01;eign · who. wish to have an interview Mr. Stuart Offenbach creates always it added to the general over which road to take from he helped observe. that Sampson students enrolled in various col-I with Mr. Idol will be held at 10 the situation of the opera by de- melee stage. Elizabeth City to Lexington with was dead since Sampson had no leges and universities of North. o~clock Thursday morning in Phi .ciding to write an opera in Eng-

1 · d h' k b k c 1' h · 1 H II The score of the opera was Sl)

a load of peanut butter. They pu se an ts nee was ro en. aro ma, t e1r friends, and .the I a • . lish that he can understand. 1 Of H

. h H'k 'd M T B t · ta t d' opera-like and the situations s~ alleged tpat Allen took out a road •tc . • er pres1 ents · of all campus organi-, rs. om os • ass1s n 1rec- course he employs all the stock

Ed Ch · t h h't h t' · f h • · tor f th 1 t b h opera-like that although the con-

map and shoved it into Williams' . . ns man, w o ·was 1 c - 1 za 1ons ~ t ese mstltutions whose 0 e P acemen ureau, as tricks so familiar to the opera face making him unable to see h1kmg to Wake Forest at that 1 purpose. Is the study of internation- 1 asked interested students to come goer. ' text was not at all that of grand

· t t' th th' d t t ' 1 ff · I by h ff' · \xr 't H 11 t d opera, only the most naive could where he was going. m ersec JOn, was e tr s a e a a atrs. er o 1ce m •• al a o ay There is first the beautiful 't H 'd th t h w·1 "Th T d' · 1 A h throug·h w d d · th ft possibly fail to see the parallel . State Witnesses Wl ness. e sal a . w en I- e ra •tiona pproac '' e nes ay 1n e a er- young daughter of a domineerin2: 1. f h k f F h · t t t' t lk · h - that furnished the humor.

' Attorneys for the defense, Ed- tams got out o t e true a ter or t e past several years these • · noons 0 se a 1me o ta wtt father. Then there is the lover th

'd t h 'd " d t' h b · Mr Id 1 The characters sang arias and ward H. Tenney and Robert G. h~ acbc1 ekn , e sa1. , ........ afmtn, m

1tee mg~ . ave .een sponsored in · 0 · whom the father refuses to ac- duets and chorouses which sound-

Summey Phi Alpha Delta law t 1s rea s ·my SIX year sa e Y a ernatmg years by Catawba Col- cept. And naturally, the father fraternity members, agreed that I record:'' Christman said that it lege and Salem College. M A d M f" ld himself. ed most like genuine opera. But an argument took place but stated appear~d to him that the <>ccupani! The meeting will· begin with auney D oore _le : these were sung at times in an that Williams had grabbed the' of the·truc~ was sitting over clos:' registration from. 2 to 2:30 0·~ ' Characters Disguised Italianized English or repitiou~ map :(rom Allen and was reading to ·.the driver. On . cross-examl-' clock, followed by an open session Debate.. ; -Team . To Atte n' d NIT Since no opera is complete wit h-I nonsensical Italian phrases that it when the accident occurred. nat1on, however, Christman could j at 2 :45. Dr. Donald Dearbol·n out the element of disguise, the had no connection with the actioa They· said that the accident oc- not recognize the men standing in dean of, Catawba College wili , . , : . . daughter, the father, and the lover of the opera. ·

th f th t d t d t f h f . masquerade as Italia'n performers Superior Work curred as a result· of criminal e re.ar 0• e cour room ue 0 1 serve as mo era or o t ~ orum. (Continued From Page One) ?and,.glee. club. a.nd orch_es.tx.·a andj when the r-eal products discover

poor eyeSlght. .. . . . Dr. A. R .. Keppel, prestdent. of Universities, Omicron Delta Kap- IS t 1 t From a musical and from a . G The state then put Wllha~s on! Catawba, wtll welcome the guests. pa national honorary leadership . ac lve ln re lg!Ou~ ac lVltles. I they cannot appear at the soiree. dramatic standpoint, the opera.

B•. Gra· n· I oes the stand. He t~Id his versiOn of. At 3:00 o'clock Mr. Smith will\ fr~ternity and. is among the ten Distinguished Records None of the members of the was a great success. What might lg the .story, where1;n he _ane.ged that present the ~?pic, "The Tradition- most outstanding seniors at Wake Moorefield holds the Degree of ma:squerading party knows italian, have been' a scrambled pottage

. Allen attacked. h1m w1th •.he map. al Approach, followed at 3:30 by Forest. He is also a ml!mber of Distinction in Phi Kappa Delta. but neither do the guests. All goes became a fast moving unit. This

T N t. D Jle stated. that _he had dr;ven for P~·of. G.,;w. Greene,_ whose topic Phi Beta Kappa .. · Mauney, a pre-law student is w·ell. The finale brings about the production is~ undoubtedly the-

0 0 re . arne th.e truckmg ~lrm for ~lx yea~s Will .be" The Essentials of Com- He is a member of Sigma Pi also a member of Who's Wh~ in union o.l the lovers. In true form, best work of the opera worksho}l· , wttho~t a;n acCI~ent! and that ~h1s mumty. . . Alpha, national honorary lang- American Colleges and Univer- Dad is reluctant. in several years.

. . , I was his flr~t trip w_lth Allen, who D•scuss•.on Panel uage fraternity, Delt,a Kappa AI- siti'es and Omicron Delta Kappa. Wallace Shearon performed in Indeed, in all respects, it wa~ The Umvers1ty of. Notre Dame I had been w1th the firm only a few The o';ltstandmg- event of the pha, honorary ministel'ial fratern- He !s a member- of the Signia Pi the r?le of Stuar_t Offenbach. He far superior to the earlier pro-

at, South Bend, Ind1ana, has re-1 months. H~ stat~d. that Allen Forum w11l take place at 4 o'clock ity (past president), Pi Kappa Epstlon social fraternity, His term susta:ned t~': actwn of the opera duction of "Martha."

ce1ved a grant of $23,600 from j scratched h1m durmg the strug- when Dr. Dearborn, as moderator Delta national forensic fraternity as president of .SPE ends this by hls position as a monologue Dr. Clifford Bair and every the Ford Foundation to conduct, gle. Cross-examination, however, will conduct a discu§sion on th~ (also' a past president) and is month. He belongs to Sigma Pi narrator. member of Opera Workshop a self-study of i~s liberal arts I broug~t out that th!re. were no topic~, "~~?ting · Today's'. Prob- co-manager of th.e debate squad. Alpha and is a past president of Sylvia Keene Goo'd should be commended for dis-curriculum, accordmg to an an-

1 holes m the :r;nap to 1?d1cate that l:~s. V:1s1tmg s~gdents wlll par- He has· belonged· to the college t~e Philomathesian Literary So- In the role of Ernestine, the playing what a college group it

nouncement made recently by the • Allen had scratched h1m. bctpate m the d1sc~ssion. . · Clety. . . · daughter, Sylvia Keene displayed able to do with material which it. Rev. Charles E. Sheedy, c. s. c.,, ·weepib~ W!c!ow ' At 5 .o'cloc~l a summation of WGA w··· Ch He lS pr~Sldent of the local I her talent both as a pantominist can handle .

. dean of the College of Arts and I• On cross exammatJOn ~y the de- the meetmg Will be given by the ' I oose chapter of P! Kappa Delta and has and a singer. Charlie Strack, in Yes, Offenba'Ch was done a · Letters. . fense counsels, Williams stated moderator, after which all :visit- N ~ 1• t Off• • J represented Wake. Forest in the' the role of the lov.er, Chysodule great favor at Wake Forest last.

The purpose of. the study will that he saw some road sighs be- ing students will be guests' of the omana •ng I Cia s Sta~e Student LegJs~ature. He was I Babylus, gave an admirable in- Thursday night. be to determine the relationsliipJore the alleged attack by Allen College at supper hi the Cafeteria. ·· ··· · ch.auman of the onentation com-1 terpretation. Jimmy Brisson, as -----------between. th~o}ogy and philosophy· which occurred at a ' knoll· ·just The forum will be open to the A meeting ··of· all coeds will be mlttee here. I Peterman the butler was hilarious 'in'·f1re' C'atholiclibera.I·arts college:1·before the intersection·. Defense general--public .• Interested people held in the .chureh at 5 ·o'clock Maurieyjs vice president <>f the Mr. Cauliflower, th~ father, play~ and the relationship of theology,_ attorneys proved that· the road are invited to attend. toaay to ·select''the nominations Wake Forest student body, and hej ed by Jimmy 1\:Iize, was a very

· d h board of the Woman's Govern- h ld th D and philosophy together with the • signs were located beyon t e · 0 s e egree of Honor in Pi amusing figure.

22 WINS The Deacons' won-lost record

was 22 wins out of 29 games played in basketball for the 1952-53 season. other subject in the curriculum.. I knoll in the road. · . . . Oasl For Theater me;~~ board wilkconsist of Miss Kappa Delta. Rheta Wood, Glenn Watson,

. "W·e think it is not enough Sampson's poor weepmg w1dow ~d~~~~~d~u~~w~ ~"~ed~~~~~~ p ~~hbs~~~~~m~,M~r--------------~------~~=====================; various arts and sciences," Father. court room during the trial, but lay Is Announced Esther Ellen,. president of the:

h b" b h · WGA, Betty McAfee, social stan-

Special ale Sheedy said, "The strident, Vfe are s e was una te to. e t ere smce (Continued From Pag-e One) dards committee· chairman, and · convinced, needs that wisdom by she had to work m a down-town J p 1. which he is enabled to discover~~ restaurant. ames, au me Binkley, Mildred the members who are elected at I how the various sciences are re- State Highway Patrol Lt. James Edwards and Bob Pratt, Guests. the meeting. ·Thl·ee seniors, three lated to each other, and how all M. Potter gave testimony as an The play is the annual Shakes- juniors, two sophomores, and two i

I h . 1 H t t d spearian production and will be freshmen will be chosen. of them are related to the destiny expert on motor ve lC es. e s a e presented during the ·first week of man and the ultimate goals of I that h~ had made a quantitati~e in May in conjunction with the

.life. We are grateful to the Ford I analysis of rubbe.r from the skid Magnolia Festival. · Foundation's Committee on Col- marks proving that the marks

lege Self Studies for this oppor-. were made by Williams' t:ruck. C tunity to improve and develop .at! Potter becam~ somewhat con.fuse~, am pus Red Gross. Notre Dame this integrated edu-' however, durmg the cross-examt-cation of the whole ·man.'' nation by the defense counsel. Campaign Nels $96

Eight-Month Project Defense Witnesses Dr. Vincent E. Smith, associate The first witness for the de- The Red Cross drive, sponsored

professor of philosophy, has been· fense 'was the defendant, Robert by Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity, appointed director of research for! Allen. He s!a!ed that he bad n?t resulted in $90.50 being collected the eight month project which got· attacked Wtlhams, but that W1l- in chapel Monday. . under way recently. Rev. Edward li~m~ had _grabbed the ma~ from · The sponsors have expressed O'<?o.nnor, C. S. C., instructor of I hn~ ~n a f1t of ang~r. He sa1d that their appreciation for the cooper­rehgwn, and Dr. Herbert John- W1lhams was lookmg at the map ation shown by the s~udent body. ston, associate professor of phil- when the accident occurred. Allt;n osophy, will serve as co-directors. ~aintained furtherm.ore, that Wll-

The researchers will study all hams had <>rdered h1m to turn on pertinent documents on what a the cab light. The defense then Catholic liberal education sho~ld I m3;intained . t~at Wil~iams was be. They will travel to other. m- gmlty of cr1mmal neghgence. stitutions and have the advice of 'I The second witness for the de­visiting consultants as well. fense, R, C. Duncan, state highway · The structure and content of I patrolman, corroberated the state­the liberal arts curriculum, es- ment tbat the road signs were pecially with reference to theology located beyond. the knoll. He also and philosophy, will be studied' stated that mall boxes located at and faculty members, seniors, I the side of the road where Raper's graduate students, and alumni I car was parked wo~ld _have som.e: will be interviewed to determine what obstructed h1s and Ennts their evaluation of the contri- views. • bution of theology and philoso., • Verdict · .

· phy· .to the curriculum. . . · After each of the lawyers had

out once referring to his notes. One law student observed that the judge covered two law courses in ·his Clear explanation of. the pro­ceedings of the case.

The verdict of not guilty was rendered ,by the jury after a ·five minute deliberation. The v:ote was eight to four. (Moot Court trials do not .require a unanimous ver­dict from the jury in order to save time.)

The next Moot· Court session ":'ill be held tomorrow night. .

Kappa Mu Epsilon Initiates 13 Students· Thirteen studen~s were initiated I

into Kappa Mu Epsilon, honorary mathematics fraternity, in a can­dlelight ceremony· held in Phi Hall Thursday night, according to Ken Byrd, president.

The new members are Shirley Brooks, Rosa Belle Faison, Arthur Gillespie, Bob Hefner, Bob John­son, Max Lassiter, Albert Leath 1 Jr., Abie Maxwell, William J. Reeves, Alease Roach, Hazel Stev­enson, Bernard Vick, Phyllis Wall.

PARENTS CONFERENCE The umversity of Delaware con­

siders the Annual Parents Con­ference an important event. Par­ents who visit the campus for the event have an opportunity to I meet and talk with members of the university staff who are re-I sponsible for the · academic in­struction, guidance, and counsel-· ing of the sons and daughters.

"This .self-study," Dr.~· ·Smith presented his plea to the jury, I said, "will enable us to consolidate Judge Burney gave a forceful and 1

our achievements and .to assimilate comprehensive charge to the jury. the best in nrii'dern thought with In a fast staccato style, Burney the wisdop1 ·of the ages." reviE\wed the complete case with-

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:PACE SIX

The Story Of ·.A Conference Championship

By Bill Hedrick

For exactly 20 years Murray fitting Jack Williams into the tGreason· has coached the Wake machine. • Williams. ... brought back Forest. basketball team. with him this fall 'one <1f ·his high

This year, and it could not have school stars, Lowell Davis, known · Jiappened at a more ·fitting time, on the team as "Wrong Arm."

fhe elements which produce a Another ele:riHmt that :otate­.ronference champion seemed to rialized out of the blue was for­:materialize out of the blue, to mer All-American and profession­integrate themselves into a close- al basketball player, Horace

· ]y-knit unit, and, in the end, to (Bones) McKinney, here now do­-deve1o'P into one of tlie ·gre-atest 'ing 'wbrk 'in' t'he Seminary.- -· llasketball teams in the history McKinney's help has proved in-•IJf Wake Forest College. valuable to the team this year.

But the story of the champion- He has been an inspirational force .znip goes back two years ago to behind the team, not only from a freshman team which outdid the the coaching angle but from a -varsi~y of_ that year and ended much deeper point of view as well. 'the. season with a 16-4 won-loss McKinney's Contribution l'ecord, A man of McKinney's character

Hemric Comea and outlook cannot avoid inspir-Starring on that team were Ray ing players to "d.o --·great· things.

Lipstas, Billy Lyles and Jack One of the aims of college basket­Williams. ball is to build character, but this

Last year, there desended from fact is often overlooked in the the foothills of Western North commercialized light into which Carolina a giant of a boy by the the sport is usually thrown. With "Jlarne of Dickie Hemric. His ac- McKinney around, this is not the .eomplishments were told far and case at Wake Forest. wide over the conference and the There are three major games nation after he set a new scoring which the team lost this season ·reco1·d here at Wake Forest and which, altogether, proved to be made the All-Southern team in blessings in disguise. :his freshman year. The first loss was the Carolina

The team last year also pro- game; Wake Forest went down, -auced another star in Maurice 72-68. In that game, the team 'George. The 1951-52 team did learned the invaluable lesson of not win many games, but often a holding onto the ball after getting ·successful season cannot be de- a substantial lead. Ahead 34-17 termined simply by the number at one time in the Carolina game, ·cf wins and losses. the Deacons lost the lead and lost

'Haven't Got A Player' the game. The following week No one would baYe thought they practiced holding the ball in

.after a season like that of last order to avoid a repetition of the year that the year to come would mistake. :produce a Southern Conference Learned Lessons thampionship team at Wake For- The second important game est. To quote one of the basket- which taught a lesson was the :t.all preview magazines, "The Duke game which went by the Deacons haven't got a player." board, 101-99. In that game, both

But something came out of Hemric and Williams fouled out, that team last year that should leaving the task of winning to the :not be overlooked. And that one inexperienced reserves. The fol­:iactor is teamwork. lowing game, Coach Greason came

The boys have played so much out with an effective defense, 'together that instead of five men which not only proved good de­"heing on the court, there was fensively, but also kept Hemric >11nly one well-integrated unit. and Williams in the game.

It bad to be that way. With The third lesson came from the oenly six major players, the team team which was later to go down .lad to work as· effortlessly and in defeat against the Deacons in .a.s efficiently as possible. the finals of the Southern Con-

Add Williams ference Tournament.

'< •,- ~'!· ...

,'/ l

OLD GOLD AND BLACK MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1953.

Deacons Will Open Bas,eball Season/JHarstl:af­citadel To . furniSh SanfMls -I

Men Gore Fiercf · CeiP~tit.i.•ll · What Comes With Spring?

With the return of spring, Core Field resounds with the sharp crack of the bat and the pop of horsehide smacking leather. ·T.wo of the caq_didates for thia ·year's team are Ben "Coose" Tatum, at the plate, and, in the catching position, Freahman Linwood Holt. (Photo by Irvin Grigg)

. . . . · ·--:~ · - · ....... -- -· -:·: ·.Coach .Seems P-leased Intramural· Net· · · ·~with -Pi~ching

_ . . . · ·· Prospects .

(0. mpett·t·ien:Set Co~c~ ~aylor ~~nford's .1953 · . 1 - l>iiacon 'baseli"alr "sq1i"aa is·rapidly

reaching completion as the initial game with The Citadel draws near.

Golf, Too, To Begin Soon After Spring

Holiday 'Ends Doug Alexander, Lowel, .(Lefty)

.Davis, and Fred Weeks have been added ·to the roster during the past

By Bob Maan week, announced Coach Sanford. Intramural tennis and goJf These players have joined the

competition will.begin immediately baseball ranks after completing following spring- holidays. the ba_sketball season and spring

The physical education office football training._ in Gore. Gym will be <1pen to ac- During the past week, Coach eept entries March 23 through Sanford has divided· . his squad April 1. Roger Warren, st1,1dent into. the varsity and junior va~ity supervisor of intramurals, reports teams. Howev~r, ~e .has retame_d anticipation of 45 to 50 partici- . mos~ of the p1~chmg staff ro tlie pants for each sport. vars1~y squ.ad .m order to select

Heading the group in golf com- the f1~al .p1tchmg sta~f J?:mbers. petition will be Eddie Oxford, " Pttcht~g ~oola Promtstng Keith Eynon, and Don Rhodes. Our J:?ltchmg staff look~ .verr, Rhodes had • been a representive I encouragmg and very prom1smg, of Wake Forest College in the stated .. Mr. Sanf?rd. He went on to.: "Big Four Sports Day" for the add, In the mtra-squad games pas.t two years. we've held,· the pitching is 'way

T _ • , T" 1 0 L; ahead of the hitting." He explained

Th "-1Cd.w•st d' •t e n.11

•n1e . this by stating, "The pitchers have

e 1vo - Iggers w1 p ay nme b t' · b h 1 d hole th h th t f

. 1

een prac 1cmg y t emse ves, an s roug e quar er 1na s. h b d · E' ht h 1 · .11 b 1 d we ave not een omg too much

Ig een o e g~mes.wl ': P aye batting practice." f?r the champJOnshlp durmg ·the The leading p. itchers 'so far have fmal two rounds

J k L · · · b ht . th been Bobby Lee Brown,· Robert ac ew1s 1s roug 1n e Q · A h · L h d M

sports limelight as he -puts . his umn, .. . rc Ie . ync an · T • · t 1 t · h . h' Bloxom, accordmg to Coach San-m ramura enms c ampwns 1p f. d Th t · d · h crown 0 th r L . ·u t k -or . e mos experience pltC er

n e me. . ewls Wl a e on the squad Don Woodlief a a. record ?f fo_ur ~ntramural ten- senior, has n'ot seen too m~ch ms champwnshlps mto the tourna- action this season because of a me~ · sore arm. T~p flight entries, other ~han In the infield, Jack Lipstack, .

LeWis, are as yet unknown Sl~ee Linwood Holt, Hugh. Smith, Tom many men have begun playmg · Howard Be Tat 0 s· .

W h for the newly organized college m e T, nC 1 umD~ k .. scaHr 1~-it 1355 ·Points: tennis. team: Men taking part in or ' om 0 e, lC le arrls,

.. varsit c m t't' . r 'bl and Larry Spencer are the lead-a• k• H • · y 0 pe 1 wn are me Igl e ing men in their respective po-

IC le em riC Holds Two-Year . ·Scor:ing,. Title. fo~~~t~a~~:-:; :i.a~o out of thre_e s_i~;~~~ Floyd; Rolph Brown, Jack g~mes Wlll be _?layed to the sell!l- Rogers, Frank McRae, Bob Wag-

By Charles Newman team, while ·Captain Billy Lyles not too far behind with a 20~2 fi~als. Three flve .set matches Wlll goner and Luther McKeel are the Dickie Hemric set a new na- made honorable''mention. average. · '· be used for t~e fmal two rounds. leading contenders for the three

tio.nal record. for th~ number of As Hemric's record for regular Billy Lyles bad a 10.3 re~ord outfield spots.

The off-season practice last ~SPring played a great part in JlOlishing off the rough edges, and

pomts scored m the f1rst two years conference play was 1298, he after the final game with Leba- vidual scoring with 728 points, The Deacons open the confer-Fought Full-Court Preas of varsity basketball competition needed only 21 points per game non Valley College. and AI De- and Jack Williams takes the sec- enee season this Thursd!!Y and.

In the second meeting of the with a total of 1355 points, as he ~o break .Selvts record .. By scor- Porter netted a:q 8.'2 average af- ond position with 587 points. Billy Friday ;against ·The_ jJitadei·. <1n year with State, Coach Everette led the Wake Forest Deacons in mg 29 pomts m the opemng game -ter that game.· . Lyles tota!ed · 299 points, with Al .GGre Field, but Coach Sanford Case made use of the press, which defeating Lebanon Valley College of the tourney against Holy Cross, ~ehind DePorter were Maurice I DePo:ter _close b~~ind wi~h· 21~. ·states he would .. rather not make

Jv Team Plans in basketball terminology means in the final game of NCAA Re- and then scoring 29 more in the George, with 6.2 points per- game, M~ur1ce Ge?rge f1mshe?- With 182 any rele.a:'e ~n the players for a maJI-to-man defense not only in g'ional play. Lebanon Valley game, Hemric Rap Lipstas,• with a 5•6 avarage, I pomts, w.h1le Ray Lipst3:s .had ~ach position m that game. ~ the front court but in the b~ck In the final game for the con- pas~ed Selvy's record by' some 16 Lowell Davis, with a 2_0 average, 161. John DeVos scored 18 pom~, ~_...., __________ ,;_ __ --''--court as well. In the following solation prize of the NCAA Re- points. He captured the record Graham Phillips, who netted 1.3 Frank McRae, 20, Lowell DaVIs, : Play Here Soon weeks after that loss, the Beacons gional Tournament against the with seven minutes gone in the points per game, Frank McRae, 30,. '!om Prest?n, 13,. Graham

I worked h~rd to perfect an of- Flying Dutchmen of Lebanon Val- second quarter as ·be sank .his with 1.2 points per game, and Phllhps, four, Bill Alhe1m, three, fense wh1ch would combat the ley, Hemric scored 29 points to thirteenth point in the Lebanon Tom Howard, with an even one ~OJ_ll How~~;rd, two, an~ Joe Koch

The Wake Forest 1953 Junior full court press. take high scoring honors for the Valley game. point average. fmished Wlth three pomts. -varsity team has begun drills af-1 W.hen the pres~ure came in the, game and used these points to Hemric wound up the season In the percentage department, ter being seperated from the var- cruc1al moments m the memorable top Furman's Frank Selvy's pre- with a 25.1 average, scoring 727 Hemric Leads the team finished with a total of liity squad. j game a couple of Saturday nig~ts vious first two year record of points in 29 games. This places John DeVos finished the sea- 41 per cent of the field goals

FOREST THEATRE Week of March 23, .. 1953

Monday &: Tuesday Shows 3:15-7:00-9:00

Although the squad is still ago, the. parts seemed to be p_er- 1339. him in the top five in the national son with a .9 .. average, and Tom I attempted, against their oppo-mlall the final team positions fectly mtegrated, the machme By his display of scoring and scoring race. Preston had a --:8 average. Ex-· nents' total of 36 per cent. Humphrey Bogart &: June Allyson are ;bout set. Bobby Dalton and into ·,~hich had gone the" years of his rebounding, Hemric was se- football player Joe Koch ended I In individual percentages, Hem- -in-Buddy Page will do the catching, planmng and hai·d work came lected for the All-Tournament TEAM AVERAGED 78.5 the season with an average of .5 'ric scored 266 out of an attempt-while Harry Carlton, Howard through, stood up under the stress Team. Rounding out the first PER GAME FOR YEAR points per game and Bill Alheim ed 5-22 shots for a percentage H~ckman and John Russell will and brought back ~o the Wake team were Bobby Pettit, of LSU, With an average of 78 _5 points finished with .3 points per game. of 51 per cent. Williams scored :handle the pitching chore" 1 Forest campus the fust basketball! Togo Palazzi and Earle Markey th W k F" . t S th Dickie Hemric leads the indi- 203 out of 478 for 42 per cent.

· ~. h · h" · th h" t f th •, per game, e a e ores ou -Either Gray Boyette or Matt c am pions lp m e JS ory o e of Holy Cross, and Howard Landa,' ern Conference championship bas-

:Marolla will play first base. At· school. of LebanGn Valley. · ketball team brought its 1952-53 -3hortstop will be Lee Abbott; at!. Avera_ge Was 25.1 season to a close last Saturday. ~econd, Jack Bryant will prevail, 1 Afhlelit Department Jack Williams, the "two" in In the individual scoring race, while Lee Anglin will hold down the Deacons' "one-two" punch of I Dickie Hemric finished on top I the third base slot. lnsmallment Program Hemric and Williams, was selected with an average of 25.1 points per

The outfield now consists of · for the second All-Tournament game, while Jack Williams was 1

~nry.; cne player, Bob Stanley, but, says Coach John Cochran, fhat By Doris Craven

:secti"orr. will be complete by the One of the previously unnoticed time of tile. first game. but beneficial "extras" offered in

Pfay Opposite Var .. ity the Women's Physical Education Th - · program is the weeklv Rec1·eation

e JUmor varsity team usually and Conditioning Activity Night, plays the jayvee team of the school which the varsity plays on sometimes referred to as the In-ihe same day, but at the other smallment Program. ,team's f:i:e.ld. Designed to promote recre­" .!''·'1!1i:at(s rather confusing," says ational interests, relaxation, and Cochran, Su ne explains the situa- coordination as well as wholesome 1ion thusly: When the Wake For- fellowship, this group of faculty ·est varsity squad plays Duke, for wives and town ladies meet each -txample, on Duke's home ground, ·wednesday evening in Gore Gym the little Deacons are to play the under the supervision of "Miss Duke team here. Marjorie Crisp.

·Jn addition to playing the junior The group takes rhythmical -varsity teams 'of the schools of exercises in addition to participat-1~e Southern Conference, the I in!? in ~o:-h individual and group little Deacs are to play the teams sk1ll actJVlty programs. -of some of the neighboring high The basic idea is to keep in ,schools. shape-from all viewpoints.

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BEN'S OF WAKE FOREST ."Ben Wants To See You"

"BATTLE CIRCUS••

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

. George Montgomery &: Audrey Long

-in_:.

"INDIAN UPRISINc••

Thursday & Friday Shows 3:15-7:00·9:00

Charlton Heston &: Susan Hayward -in-

"THE PRESIDENT'S LADY"

Saturday Shows Continuous 1·11 p. m.

Whip Wilson -iD-

·-. "WYOMING ROUNDUP"

---......... Alao '·-.

"NABO~CA" ___ ..... ,"'-,,

Sunday '"-.. Show& 2:00-3:45-9:00

Arthur Franz &: Lee Ma~n -in-

"EICHT IRON MEN,.

COLLEGIATE THEATRE Week of March 23, i953

Monday Tbru

Saturday

'One Entire Week

Robert Taylor and

Elizabeth Taylor

.-i:a--

"IVANHOE"

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FiJ]

- Qt ""Thi: have est's at "\'\

.~ co

his year Jack ward

.purp Dick: from who in tl up.

Bi F.airJ upon outsi a gail Geor upon

·unor steac

AJ tice bere· head

.~·. 'the : The siom scor4

w belts of n in I De vi and tory.

T·l weaz they rank Gym ed 1: pack

0' earn] McC coup the 1 defe veng latez

J• the tour Enk: 59-4

"\"\ werE was ,, nual

.tilt men Unh Play Erni A me the. to· 1:

T: prov ries, gave in tl ball,

T "Cit 3 tc in tl

· All-. pan~

De a• 0

Pall: The .Ijna, The 32-I=

B the;!l Sev• the pel for the • lead

!1 the the gah: fait SUP I

muc D

bef• the the whi got exh min Dav the t011

'I the ton Wil Thil

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~. 1953.

f!Y' rts-~ tiol ···· -~ .. ~;

,_sed g

's 1953 ·'rapidly -.e initial ' draws

.(Lefty) LVe been the past Sanford. 1ed the rnpleting i spring

, Coach s squad r varsity retained f to tl:ie ;o select 1embers. sing >ks very mising," 'nt on tQ-1 games is 'way

xplained ers have lves, and oo much

far have ·Robert d M. T. !Ch San­:l pitcher >dlief, a •o much se -of .a

C.ipstack, . th, Tom car Sig-

Harris, he lead­:tive po-

wn, Jack ob Wag­l are the he three

confer­d~y and ;adeLon Sanford ot make vers for .e.

fRE 1953

LY 00

~ Allyson

00

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'G" .•

LJ' 00

Hayward

LADY"

p. m.

>UP"

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:.ATRE 1953

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ReliteUiO#S~flsofliN NcAATourftt>y• · · ·. · · ·.

F:~~~- ~~~~~··s~:w~ ~h~t-.~~~~etb~Ii·l>~~c~ns Final .. ,.Ga.me .Was Won .. ··Oler Leba~on Val:ley .._. Learned Some ·valuable Lessons By Jack Kehoe . I way as they ran ,headlong 'into the to Jack Willia~'s 23.

' · · ·. . · · ·. ·. · · . . .- . · . Murray Greason's De~on Dea:.. Deacon's .fifty per cent shooting Substitutes Play _ . _ Quo.te Co.ach Murray ·Greason, horn sounded; It dropped through __ 1 k d · - gai 'like theJ average, identicaL to that posted It -was'a battle .o~ the narrow

"·This lias''been ·the· best·.team· I to give· the Deacons a close victo- c~n, ?0 e t~nce a n th • against them ··by the Louisana benches as the· shallow ... :Wake have ever ·~coache.d and. the great- ry; 78-76, over an inspired Indian· ct ampl_odns .t.·h eyF'l. ·.are ·Daust_c:hmeeny·1

1

State 'Tigers in 'the first round of Forest squad defeat~~ a teani_ witn . . . . . h . - - . . rounce e ymg . I f b t't t G est .season since I have been ere team·~ · . . . : ·-. from Lebanon . .Valle· Colle e. 91. play. A brilliant' zone. defense by on y · our s~. s 1 u es. . ~eas~n at Wake Forest." Duke By· .Two Po1nta · 7l t · t ·. th' dy l ~ ~ -th w·ake Forest prevented the Dutch- cleaned the bench by sendmg m

Coach Greason had practically - · The· game-winning luck ·ran out 1-95• 3 °N.cC~ApAuiEe -t1;r. RP a .e ~nl_ et meh from shooting any'better than Bill Alheim, __ To.m Preston, Herbert . . I h . . h . 1 d D .k as enl eglona s a . . . 11 h D 'V T H

Women In Shorts By .·Dor~a Craven

Honorary Basketball Team Members selected for the Hon­

orary Baske'tball Varsity Team ai•e Marian Cabe,. Dori.s Craven, Charlotte Hedgepeth, Betsy Len­non,. Bea McNeill, Phyllis Maye, Sylvia Messick,· Jeanette Moore, Patsy · Pearce, Arameta Rhodes, Sarah Rieche and Faye Teachey.

golf clinic, now meeting eac2 Tuesday night at 7:30 o'clock. Membership can still be arrangect..

Volleyball Tournament

h1s whol~ teamd_l:>ackh from hasdt .ho;n t ? tetham fV: etn 1ft p afye_ h u e Reynold's Coliseum last Saturday. 35.2 ·:percen,t. , . · .. Hodwe ,dJoJ n Ke ohs, f omt~Y /wi year and,• .to ad . to t at, he a ere m e 1rs o a our · orne · · . . . . First half scoring proved to be ar , an oe oc . or e ma Jack .Williams, high scoring for- ga~e. series. At the end of the The pmt-slzed hotshots fr.om th,e the deciding factor as both teams minl.lte and a .half 9f play. Preston w. R. A. Picnic ward out .. of school .last year. He reg'ul~ game the score was tied, college of 400 :'tudents couldn t posted identical scores in the third! made the ·only points for the subs The Woman's Recreation Asso-

Entries for the volleyba1J. tournament opening this week ar~ requested to be 'submitted to Dot Casey or Bea McNeill. The Coed Class Tournament commences this week, followed by the Coed Open Tournament. The tournament is open for any class, department or miscellaneous group. The sameo regulations governing the tourn:t­ment that prevailed previous1y will be observed.

. purp~sely built his offense around 92~92, but· in the overtime the .see~ to. ge~ their offense under-· and fourth quarters. Each team .-by se<oring. tw~. on. _a field goal. ciation held its monthly meeting Dickie Hemric, the rangy center Blue Devils · scored tw4l points ripped the cords' for 18 and 21 1 Had one more basket peen made,: Tuesday evening in the form of from Jonesville, and Williams, more than did the Deacs and took F · · ·I. · T J • points in the third and final'' Wake Forest would have set a new. a picnic at Rock Springs, who was to take over the scoring a 101-99 victory. a· ·c· u··. ty 0 o· In periods, while· Wake Forest -out- team r~cord for. the _most number . . in the eveRt. Hemric was bottled In the next three games the ·. . . :_ ·. : · .. · .· . _ scored Lebanon by .21 and nine, of pomts scored m - a ~CAA Badminton Doubles up. Deacs tumbled Clemson, 87-56; points in the first and ·second· tou.rna~ent .ga~e. Washmgton Badminton do~bles entry blanks

Billy Lyles, hustling guard from Carolina, 89-63, to gain revenge. vo·lte,'. Y. ·,ba··_,., G.r·o· . up quartet'S respectively. Umversity ~ad d~feated ,Seattle will be posted this week. Students FOR SALE F-airmont, was to be depended for. the loss earlier in the season; · · on the· pre~01~s mght ~nd set a interested in participating may Good condition used. boys bi-, upon for the scoring punch from and South Carolina, 88-62. . He~ric. Set~ :~~c.ord . record -~by scormg 92 points. . sign· immediately, cycle basket & light. One week -outside in ease the team ran upl The Demon Deacons ended the By ~c!)ru~g ~~· .. Pomts, wht~h The game was never very close · old-new tires PRICE $27~50· against a tight zone. Maurice

1

regulaz: season with a 12-3 record . Play Started Here made him ·h1gh, pomt man of the as the· Deacons began to pull Golf Clinic . HAROLD DEATON George could always be dependeq in the conference which merited By. T. ·e· a· ·ms. In-. eve~ing, Dickie !J~mric s~t a nrw ~steadily· -away after Williams had Considet:llble progress has been . Room 125 · Huater Dona upon to hit from the corners, and a tie for second place with Mary- national record for the· first two' mi!de:the first two points via the. made in the rec~ntly organized nnorthodox Ray Lipstas to be a I land. A flip of the coin awarded :.T.w_ 0 · Lea ... gues years of. varsity competition. His free. thro.;v line. Midway in· the -----~.;....._;.;, ___________ ,..-,..-~-------steady rebound man. the_ Deacons the number two posi- total of 1356 'topp.ed the former third period, Wake Forest -po- ::--------------------• .. --------.....

·Beat Lejeune ·

1 tion in the play-offs. · · · By. William Pate record of 1339 he~d ?Y Furman's ssessed a 28-p~in:t lead; · ' -

After about a month of prae- The . Co~ference Tourney . College, faculty memb'e~. have Frank ~elvy by l7 pomts. Excellent. Record tice in Gor,e Gym the· team clam- _The rem~mder of .the story IS decided -to . show students that Howard Landa .. s~t a new NCAA Herb Finklenstein provided the

WHEN YOU I;IA VE

bered into the station wagons and sttll fresh m the memory. Three profs, can p~rticipate in sports, tourname~t r~cord .as he ca~e major punch for . the Dutchmen· headed toward Camp Lejeune for successive victorie,s, over Rich- too. T. he faculty ·men have formed i ~hrough With nme asststs. ·An a~sist. by seoring 18 points. Louis Sor­'the first encounter of the season. mond, 85-70 ; Maryland, 61"59 ; an mtramural volleyball team 1s counted when a :player provides rentine was second with 15. The Deacons overcame a profes- and the greates~ victory -of the . 1

THEM CLEANED

-AT-

B. & E. ·-cLEANERS th ~ . . k' which. will. c·ompete v,:ith 13 oth~r a pass or hand.-off, which ·results ·The wt'n enabled the aces from sional-ridden Marine team by the year over e re1gnmg mg, d d f score of 79-68. State College,_ 71-70, gave the teams compose of .stu :nts or immediately in a score. Wake Forest college to close out

With this one game under .their I Deacs the Southern <;onference the volleyball champlOnshtp, Hustling Billy Lyles showed the an impressive season. They' . . h · h' Team members are Dr. Ivey C. ' f' · h d 1 ea n compe belts, they had the dtfficult task c ampions 1P· - G t p f R 1 d L G D 5500 fans how. set shots should mis e regu ar s so -

<If meeting the Duke Blue Devils The book closes with the NCAA en ry, ro • o an . ay; . r. . . · • 1 tition with 18 wins and six losses. in Durham. They beat the Blue j Regional Tournament -when the Tho~as J. Turner, .Prof G. W.l be made by smkm~ seven out of Tournament play provided a final Devils ·at their own running g.ame Deacons fought valiantly in losing! Medlm, Prof. J .. w. Long, Worth 13 shots from the floor. Lyles tabulation of 22 victories and

Four-Point Service • Dry Cleanin,~r • Pick-Up And Delivery • Alteration And Repair • Dyeing

and _walked off \vith a 91-86 vic- to Holy Cross, 79-71, and then 1 Copeland, Dr. W1lfred B~ Yearns, scored 17 points which was third seven ·defeai'f;. ·tory. bounced back for a 91-71 victory Dr. Henry S .. Stroupe, Jesse Had- ---- .. ___ __;_

T·here was no rest for the six over Lebanon Valley to finish the dock and assistant coaches P. W. weary Deacons. Three days later last chapter in the 1952-53 edi- Prest~n and J. T. Cochra~. Had-they were to meet the nationally tion of the Wake Forest basketball dock 1s the only member not on ranked Wolfpack down in Gore team under Head Coach Murray faculty status. Gym. The Wake Forest team turn- Greason. Two Leagues ed back the Wolfpack .in .a gym The faculty members were ad-packed with cheering fans. . Badminton Horseshoe mitted into volleyball competition

· Split With McCrary '· . after a vote of intramural volley-Over-confidence strode into the Rounds To Start Soon I ball managers. They .. are. sched-

camp of the Baptists before the uled to me.et the Semmary Tues-McCrary Eagles game and this, Preliminary rounds in -i;ntra- day and Theta Chi Wednesday. coupled with flawless playing Qf mural horseshoes and badnnn~on There are 14 intramural volley­the hosiery team, ,spelled the first were played. last ~eek. Fnst ball teams rlivided ·into two defeat, 72.:70. The _Deacons re- round games m badmmton are. to leagues. League A teams are venged the defeat several ·nights be con:pleted today a;nd the fnst Lambda Chi Alpha, Pogos, House later by the score of·74-'65. round m horseshoes Will be played of Ptolemy, Main Street Boys, . Just prior to Chrjst:mas·holidays, by Tuesday, Sigma Phi· Epsilon, Sigma Pi and

the Deacons went on a western Horseshoes .<\.lpha Sl.gina Phi.. .. . tour of the· state, ·beating in turn, Those paired for the prelimi- In league a· are Pi Kappa Al-Enka 88-60 and Lenoir-Rhyne nary rounds in horseshoes were pha, Theta Chi, Faculty, Seminary, 59-41i. ' ' Roger Gentry vs. B. C. Phillips, Phi Alpha Delta, Kappa Alpha

While most of the students Fred Hastings vs. ·Fred Craig, Bob and Kappa Sigma. were away on vacation the team Sasser vs. Dick W~de, Keith Price All league play is expected to was getting prepared for the au-1 vs. Jack Isert. Wmners Qf those be completed ·by Easter vacation. nual Dixie· Classic. In· the · first games· will participate in the first I

. tilt of that three-game · tourna- round. . . :---------------. ment the Deacons· defeated Perin · · Badminton -Univ~rsity by t~e scor~,: o:J' · 65-61. In ba?n:inton those. paired for! Playing on the Penn' five w.as the .pre~Immary roun?- were-.H~w­Ernie Beck who later made All- ard TWiggs vs. J. I,. Peeler, Drck American.

1

The second game of Wade vs. Hugh Smith, Bill Tom­the .tournament· was a bitter loss linson ,vs. Bob Bartholomew, Keith to .. 13righ;im· Young; s2:.ss: · · · · · Price vs. Carlton ·cox, Bob·Jordan I

Took Crusaders · vs. Charles Duckett, Norwood. The 'third game of the Classic "Red" Pope vs. Ray_ Motsinger.

proved to be the. best of the se:- Preli~inary winners play 'in the. ries for in· that game the team openmg round. gav~ Holy Cross the worst licking If any opening round games in the history of Crusader basket- have not been played by Tuesday, ball, 91-69. participants will meJt in Gore

The Deacons tra.veled to the Gym at 3 :30 to play.

Grad Appoinlmeal "City of Brotherly Love" 'January 3 to play one of the best teams in the nation, La Salle University.

· All-American Tom Gola and com- ·Johnny Hicks, 1934 graduate of pany proved too much for the Wake Forest, was recently appoint_ Deacons, and beat them 76-59. I ed manager of the Decorative

Our prices are designed, to fit the student's food bud­get. Good food at ' reasonable prices.

On .a three-game trip to the Fabrics Division of Mooresville Palmetto State they beat in turn: Mills'· New York sales office. -The Citadel, 96-67; South Caro- While at Wake Forest, Hicks .lina, 68-50; arid Clemson:, 92-66. was vice president of tl).e student The Clemson game featured a body, captain of the baseball 32-point quarter by the Deacs. I team and president of · the Law -.

Bac'(t home in North Carolina! School !ltudent body, He grad­they romped over Davidson, 91-58. uated with a bachelors degree in

Francis'.Grill Several nights later they tackled law. the high-riding T.ar Heels in Cha- -----------~------~-------''----..,....... pel Hill and went down in defeat for the fourth time. This time by the score of 72-68, after once mo1·e leading the entire first half.

The Davis vs. GW

In the second meeting with the State W olfpack, this time in the_ Coliseum, the Deacs made a game of it for the first· half but faltered in the second when the superior State bench proved ·too

.. Wake Forest Florist-

much. They lost, 99-80. Davidson went •down in defeat

before the "six . iron men" by the score of 79-57. Then came 1

the George Washington g.ame, at which time t;he hometown fans got a chance to see the Deacons exhibit their skills: In the waning .·

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The patte:r:n of· action was much the sam.e in the George Washing­ton game 'when the team met Willia111· · and Mary in Norfolk. Thirvtime it was Ray Lipstas who ~set the ball in motion before the

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.Important facts about the opportunitie~ for YO-U a.s :a ·commissioned -Officer-Pilot or Aircraft. Observer­

in the United· States Air Force Must I be a college graduate to take Aviation Cadet Tr~ining? No. But you must have completed a minimum of 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours toward a degree. In addition, under the new Aviation Cadet training program, you must be be­tween i;he ages of 19 and 26 ~ years, unmarried, and in good physical condition-with high requirements for eyes, ears, heart and teeth.

How long before I get my commission? 60 calendar weeks. You will receive the :finest aviation training in the world-training that not only equips you to fly modern military aircraft but prepares you for executive and administra­tive work as well. At the completion of your training, you will have acqUired a commission as a 2nd Lieutenant and the coveted silver wings of the United States Air Force •

Where Jo I take niy training? Pre-flight training will be at Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas. Primary, basic and advanced training will be taken at any one of the many Air Force baseS located throughout the South and Southwest.

What happens if I llunlc the training course? Every effort is made tO help students whose progress is unsatis­factory. You can expect extra instructions and whatever indi­vidual attention you may require. However, if you fail to complete the course as an Aviation Cadet, you will be required to !lerve a two-year enlistment to fulfill the minimum requirement under Selective Service laws. Veterans who have completed a tour of military service will be discharged upon request if they fail to complete the course.

What pay Jo I get as an Aviation Caclet? And after? As an Aviation Cadet you draw $109.20 a month pay. ·In addition, you get summer and winter;:;wrlforms, :flight clothes, equipment, food, housing, medical and dental care and insurance ••• all free. Mter you are commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant you will be earning $5,300.00 a year-with unlimited opportunities for advancement.

Are all Aviation Caclets trainecl to be Pilots? No. You can choose between becoming a Pilot or ·an Aircraft Observer. Men who choose the latter will become commissioned officers in Navigation, Bombardment, Radar Operation, or A,ircraft Performance Engineering.

- .. Do Aircraft Observers get Rying training, too? Yes. Aircraft Observer Cadets receive approximately 200 h9urs of «in the air" instructions. The primary phase of A:ircraa Observer training is the same for all branches (navigation.. bombardment, etc.). The basic and advanced phases of trai.ning vary, depending on the specific course you pursue.

What kincl of airplanes will I fly? You will fly jets. ,The Pilot Cadet takes his first instructions in a light, civilian-type plane of approximately 100 horsepower., then· graduates to the 600 horsepower T-6 "Texan" before receiving transition training in jets. You then advance gradually until you are flying such famous first-line aircraft as F -86 Sabre, F-89 Scorpion, B-47 Stratojet, B-50 Superfortress. Observer Cadets take flight instructions in the C-4 7 Dakota, the T -29 C~nvair, and the TB-50 Superfortress before advancing to first­line aircraft such as the F -89 Scorpion, B-47 Stratojet.

Will my commission be iu the Regular Air Force or Reserve? Aviation Cadet graduates, both Pilots and Aircraft Observers,. get Reserve commissions as 2nd Lieutenants and become eligible. to apply for a regular Air Force Commission ·when they have cqmpleted 18 months of active duty.

How long must I remain in Service? After graduation from the Aviation Cadet Program, you are tendered an indefinite appointment in the United States Air Force Reserve and are called to active duty with the United States Air Force for a period of three years.

What recreation anJ leisure time will l.have as a Caclet? Discipline will be rigid-especially. for the first few weeks. However, it is not all work. You'll find swimming pools, handball courts, movies and other forms of recreation on the post.

Where will I be stafionecl when I get my commission? You may be stationed anywhere in the world ••• Hawaii, Far East, Europe, Puerto Rico, elsewhere. During your tour. of dutyr you will be in close touch with the latest developments in new flying techniques. You will continue to build up yom flying experience and later should have no difficulty securing a CAL\ commercial pilot or navigator rating.

Your future is assured-if Y.!J! can qualify! Here's what to do: . I Take a transcript of your college credits and a copy of your birth certificate to your nearest

Air Force Base or Recruiting Staticm. Fill 'out the application they give you.

2 If application is accepted, the Air Force will arrange for you to take a physical examination at government expense.

3 4

Next, you will be given a w~tten and manual aptitude test.

If you pass your physical and other tests, you will be scheduled for an Aviation Cadet training class. The Selective Service Act allows you a four-month deferment while waiting class assignment.

WHERE TO GET-·MORE DE·TAILS Visit your'nearest.Air Force Base, Air Force Recruiting Officer,

or your nearest Air Force ROTC Unit. Or write to: . ' .

AVIATION CADET, HEADQUARTERS, U. S. AIR FORCE Washinaton 25, D. C.

.,

PAGE EIGHT

Phi Beta Kappa Names 24 Students And 1 Alumnus

Three of Group At Bowman Gray School Of Medicine; Local Chapter

Has 28 Of Faculty (Continued From Page ·one) I Noble E. Cunningham Jr., fnstruc­

:and secretary of Phi Beta Kappa; tor in social science; Dr. Cronje Dr. G. W. Paschal, William Bailey B. Earp, professor of the Greek Royall, professor emeritus of! language and literature; Dr. E. E. Greek; Dr. C. C. Pearson, pro-~ Folk, professor of English; Prof. fessor emeritus of ~o<:i~l .science; I;tichar!l .P. Gill~a!ll. Jy.,_ associate Dr. C. S. Black, professor of. professor of law; Dr. Emmett w: <~:hemistry; Dr. H. Grady Britt, Hamrick, instructor in religion. .associate professor of biology; Other faculty Phi Beta Kappa :Prof. D. A. Brown,' assistant pro- members: Dr. H. Broadus Jones, :Cessor of English. head of the Department of Eng-

Faculty Member• !ish; Dr. Robert E. Lee, professor Other faculty members: Prof. of law; Prof. Gene W. Medlin, in­

.John W. ·Chandler, instructor in structor in mathematics; Dr. John philosophy ana psychology; Dr.· W. J::i!owell, associate professor of

Chemical Officer to Visit ROTC

chemistry.; Dr. Hubert M. Poteat, professor of the Latin language and literature; Dr. A. C. Reid, head of.the department of Philoso­phy and Psychology; Dr. C. H. Richards, associate professor of social science; Prof. Wilfred J. Ritz, assistant professor of law; Dr. Richard L. Shoemaker, assist-

By M. S. Mahaley Jr. ant professor of romance lang-The chemical officer of the, uages; Dr. Henry L. Snuggs, as­

Third Army, Col. R. D. McLeod,: sociate professor of English; Dr. will pay a visit to the Wake Fores.t William E. Speas, professor of Reserve Officers Training Corps physics; Dr. Henry S. Stroupe, as­·tomon·ow afte1·noon. sociate p1·ofessor of social sciences;

Colonel McLeod will meet with and Dr. ·Edwin G. Wilson, assist­·the PMS&T, Lt. Col. Joseph S. ant professor of English. 'Terrell, and will also witness the • Date for the initiation of mem­·drill practice at Gore field. hers selected this year has not

Colonel Tenell has announced been announced. 'the promotion of three cadets made effective last week. l\:Iarco J I U f II Viola, J. H. Behrman and H. H.\1 emp e 58$ atU J

Spring came Friday afternoon. Winter, alaa, is dead. Our photographer, then, went out in search of a picture to record the fact. Rain, which, in Wake Forest, is no respecter of season, had done· ita work. Onc:e the photographer was almost tempted to write a photo-editorial on the mudhole situation. But then came the 'joke. Some enterprising coed had, erected the Absolutely No 'swimming sign. The photographer, Irvin Grigg, of course, ma.cle the paper boats. The girl is Evangeline Stewart. Photo­grapher Grigg did an excellent job on that paper boat, Eh.? (The boat is in the lower center of the picture.)

Chakahs received advancements • · from private to sergeant. Student Comm11tees

The pre-camp ROTC conference 'Will be in session :March 26. Col­·onel Terrell will attend the con­jerence to be held at Ft. McClel­lan, Alabama. An outline will be :presented at the conference deal­jng with camp training which jun­iors in ROTC are to receive dur­:ing the summer months. Require­:ments for enrollment and neces· :sary preparations for such train­ing will be fully explained to the :PMS&T's at the conference.

For the first time in Temple University history a joint council of students, faculty and adminis­trators has been organized to deal with University-wide problems in

"fhreej.Barefoot ·Coeds Say Spring Is Here Girls Cause Wonder

At 'Early Season the community spirit. Outing A five-hour conference, called by Dean of :Men John A Brown Jr., included representative spokes- By William Pate men foT the student, faculty and It's spring again and a good

Legislature Requests $350 For Next. Year

administration viewpoints. The time to take off your shoes. Any­group decided that future meet- ·way, that is the opinion three ings would deal with specific Wake Forest coeds shared when University problems and formulate they left ·their shoes at home recommendations to all elements Thursday and went to one of the of the Unive1·sity, which is located downtown restaurants. in Philadelphia. Patrons of Francis' Grill were the

Sign Of Progress audience as June Driver, Allene (Continued .From Page One) .... h d Ch R "II h The joint council will have no nas an arm evi e, sop o-

member Orientation Committee legislative powers. It will, bow- mores, walked shoeless into the for next fall. Carwile LeRoy was ever, submit recommendations for establishment. liamed chairman of the committee. N f th th d t legislation to student senate, one o e ree appeare . o

Jn a 1·eport on the problem of faculty senate and administl·ation. have brought shoes along. The trio 'l!electing representatives to at- Dean Brown expressed satis-_ cooly padded · past curious spec­tend the State Sudent Legisla~ure, faction with the degree o:f under- tators and calmly put three pairs LeRoy ~ep_orted. that the two ht:r- standing achieved among the three of b<\re feet under the table· of a ary soc1e~Ies Will_ prob~bly be 1.n-, elements of the University, and booth. ter~sted m \~orkmg With a legJs- with future possibilities. "We have '1 - •It's Spring' lat1ve. comm1ttee to make such! set the stage for cooperation and When asked why the exhibition :select1ons. It was suggested tha:t a coordination at the University.! of pedicures, :Miss ·Driver simply ·~oncrete proposal for a sele.ctl?g: Just the fact that students, faculty I said, "It's spring." gr~up be made to. the socletle~! and a?ministrators could sit down I Varous opinions were immedi­~hich now control all such selec I and discuss mutual problems, and ately expressed· on the subject. tions. . . , , further agree to meet regularly, J One observer held the view that

T?e mtroductwn of Abe_rnathy s. indicates that ·we have made pro- the incident was not likely to en­:mobon to change the reqmremen~s 1 gress toward our goal of improv- dear the girls to upper circl<!s. for student government candi- i ing all aspects of our community Another bystander wondered nat~s came near th~ end of the life." whether or not the early bid for :sessiOn whe? only eight members I freedom from shoes would result of the Legislature were present. . . . · Th f b . 1 ft h"l Ivy League Colleges I m pneumoma. He put his questiOn • ree or . our mem_ ers e w 1. e

1 to the three girls.

"he meetmg was Ul progres~ m B s· . p ,. "'Ve"re tough," said Miss Driver, •Order tO attend other me_etmgs. an prnig racdce 1 "besides it feels good tO get your ·Tb.<e vote to table the motion by I f t · 'th 1 d b • .:toernathy was carried seven to There will be no spring prac- if e~.e~n, e c over an go are-·one Abernathy opposing the wait. tice in 1953 for the football squads I 0 s"h ' . I d h t h · ' · · · f th I G f 11 • Th" e wigO' e er oes as er Kay Arant mti·oduced the tablmg o e vy roup o co eges. 1s . . "' .

•· "b t f wa" di<:clo«ed recently with brief' mten ogator went away shakmg ro.o.ton ecause mos o us are - - - · . , i h"" he d

_l'n;;m.gry." Chairman Joe Mauney announcement of the meetmg of· I.. a · . . . 0'

poin.ted out that only a few mem- L~e presidents of Brown, Colum-1 Ah. truly this Is sprm.,. hers o;,l the group were present. bla, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, I STUDENTS MORE SERIOUS

Pennsylvania, Yale and Princeton. . A'ED G 1 d "On the matter of spring foot-: . The colle~e student _of today ~.M roup n ucts ball practice, no action was: IS more seriOUS than hiS grand-

s S taken," said the announcement.\ father .w.as 50 years ago, states

·~ even ophomores "The pl·esent position of the I Dr. Wilham. L. Prager who has , . . I group was reaffirmed." I taught chemistry for r1; half-cen-' .Seven sophomores ?omed the The presidents also reaffirmed. tury at Colleges of the C1ty of New _-:ranks of Alpha Epsilon Delta

1 the present policy of the eight in-~ Yor~. He says that student.s 50

~uesday afternoon, March 17. A stitution" which rules against years ago were far more botster­~'B"' . ~verage in _sc}ences is pre- partidpation by ath!etes of the ous. Presen_t-day college students :equlsite to enter:ng the pre-med- schools in post-season charity a:r:e less naive and appro~ch work ':lle".t.l ha·uorary society. games. w1th greater strength of purpose.

The new members are Thomas In the realm of eligibility, the :SV. <?asey from G~anite Fa_lls, Ivy Group agreed to add the fol­Carwlle LeRoy, of Ehzabeth C1ty, lowing paragarph to the existing Robert F. Mani_I from Enfi~ld, agreement: "In no case shall a George T. Morns from Rale~gh, student play in a ninth semester Donald C. Roberts, from Re1ds- or thereafter." Thus the athlete ville, and James G. Taylor of who for one reason or another Snow Hill. . · does not qualify for his degree in I Un~er the gmdance and spon- the regulation eight semesters, or

sorship of Dr. 0. C. Bradbury, a II who refrains from competition for :p r o g r a m centered on heart a semester or year while remain­diseases was prese~te_d by Earll ing in college, will not be eligible Parker and Ken Phillips. . to compete after eight semesters

Tentative plans are now bemg j' in college. made for the annual banquet on --------------J.fay 5. Election of officers for Ph I h T the coming year will be held at 0 ograp ers, 00 the gathering. It would be a strange Howler

indeed if it contained no pictures. Wake High School Yet somehow, last week when

the story concerning the remark-PupilS Gel Honors able progress of the Howler staff was published, the names of the

The Capita!' Regional Music ever faithful photographers were Festival, held recently at Meredith omitted. ~ollege in Rale~gh, ~warded S?- Editor Ken Grigg gave the Old perior ratings 1!' plano to SIX Gold reporter the names of the Wake Forest Htgh School stu-1 h -" Th c 11 Barnes photographers; so t e error was .. ents. ey w_ere arr? ' on our part. "I could never have Boger Chastam, Benme Adams, put the thing together without the Emiiy Becton, Frab~es Speas and photographers;, said Grigg last MaTryh Ann. s::tterwhttlel. t ratJ"ngs week (after h; avidly read the en-

ose wmmng 1:!XCe en . · h "d t 1 ) • · St 11 Forrest Walt tue story, Wlt eVI en gee • 1n p1ano were e a • . d Barnes, Carolyn Barham, Mary S?, JUSt to ~et the. recor Grace Lyon, Nancy Mitchell and strat~ht, and ~o give c:edi~.~here Peggy Patterson. . . cr~dit, acc~;dmg to Gngg, JS cer-

Mrs. Emmett w.·Hamrick, p1ano ta~nly due, Howler. photographers instructor at Wake Forest High tb!s year ~ere Leslie Fox, Wayne Scliool, is the music teacher !4Jr Kmser, _J1mmy Andrews and the· gToup. B4Jyc~ Miller.

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Group .wants Employm~n~ And Athle~ic Boards, Student ~Authority

. .

might. appear to be direete,d at the present Camp-q.!! Party candidate

formation to students about local for the presidency 'of the student jobs ;was approved as a part of party, Ken Bridges, who. is a law the platform. It was suggested student. that such a program could be ad- The 'plaCing of was1sjng. ma­mJAi~tpl."ed. by·· a!)., · or~api~ation. ehines in- the-dormitories was also such .as Alpha 'Phi Omega. , rejected as a part of the plat-

(Continued From Page ()ne}

The group decided to include in form. Members of the group said the pl~tform ~he inst~llation ·of that private companies would in­~ele}'l!Sion sets m the g1rls' ·dorm- stall machines -if asked to do so.-Itories. It was proposed that the T)le PI E · girls- could- ·take -a· collection . to - .. .. - -· -· -- - !'t.-~-~-- . - - - • provide money for the sets. A dis- The final and complete draft of cussion ensued as to how those in the platform was· made by the authority at the dormitories should committee, after approval of the be approached concerning the various planks was given by those matter. at the open meeting. ..

Continued support of the honor The objectives of the lparty as system was approved as one of the stated in the platform text are: platform provisions. I. To gain. for student govern-

w-·h•" g M h"n . ment a reasonable amount of -n ac1es h" d"fl . d . aut onty an m \lence lD _e-

A potent1al platform plank call- ciding issues which directly con­ing for prohibiting_ students v?th., cern the student body. degrees . from. runnmg for . offices II. To utilize fully the authority was rejected. Members of the ·of student government group said that law stude~ts, for III. To make chapel "attendance example, do not ha-ye the time and more appealing to the students by are . too far removed from aca- the presentation of more interest­demic school an~ that the law stu- ing programs and increased stu­dents w.a~t to Withdraw from cam- I dent participation. ~us politics. The proposal was o~- IV. To establish an athletic Jected to on t_he grounds that 1t board, with stud-ent respresen­

Blackerby Moves William Ca:rroll Blackerby,

tation, to govern varsity athletics. ·v. To install television in the

girls' dormitories.

former football quarterback · at Wake Forest Colle.ge, has been named head football coach at Roanoke Rapids High School.

VI. To establish a student em­ployment , agency to provide ·in­formation concerning local job opportunities. ,

VII. To continue support of the Honor System, With emphasis, on individual responsibility and un­d-erstanding.

Bl~ck~;by, a native of. Besse· mer, Alabama, will take over the new job August 15, according to High School officials.

.. VIII. A solemn promise to ac­hieve to the-fullest possible extent all of the objectives herein con­tained.

· He is now in his second year as coach of Williamston High School.

..

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