·~coed~ to se.lect delta sig·. s join campus party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections...

8
r : ·McMntari while the Bob La.w- a.n of itY: player ies in last I:IIlph over .s. !1WJrers of xa.tion In- 2. he federal . pal·speak- 1. The theN. C. 'ake For- leCollege; 'avy's Of- Newport, a rour- lld orien- ' com.:mis- assigned_ · [(S '. , .. " lr ; ··,.:. Coeds Have .Their · Own .Den · . Under Dorinitories .: Page Two . . . : :t··.··(k····: ·. . ' . ' . . . * . ,,· ' . * Freshmen Always Freshmen, Senior Letter-Writer Says P-age Four VOLUME XLII " Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Mon4ay, ?.larch ·18, 1957 NUMBER 21 / To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· ,_PrexyTomorrow . -. . , -. - . . . ., ? Party· Meets By MILLER ' ' Wake Forest ·coeds tomorrow will select .the ;I957-5S occupant of their highest office, the presi- dency of' Woman's' Government Association. · I · J"oan Owen, a junior from·Can- ton, and J.ane Aycock, a junior from Winston,Salem, are the two candidates. They were . selected by a norninations cominitlee eleCted · by the · Both · candidates· said WGA Fails ·To · . . (they are supporting a petition be- ing circulated by present WGA officials and that they "feel that its success will result in . a more effective. way of handling coed offenses." would change Councils DayStudent (The petition calls foz; a &tudent · . body: vote on an amendment to· G- · · · G. · · the new which would roup's et enable WGA's E·xecu:tive Board to continue .as an ·honor council for concerning their views ·sP· Votes on the matter, the candidates de- cided to write. a joint statement. · Jn the statement they .say "elec- Stu&nt Party · officials have ti 0 ns which .concern only the .coeds scheduled ·their first meetin{fs of should not involve the· prejudices the 1957 ca.:mpaign and announced of party friction. Furthermore, a n_ew convention delegate oot, up the stated recommendation would reduce . to a minimum the inevit- '1\'ih.ich 'Will giv.e representation to Ma .. ·ny ·s)•g-·0. ers able coriflict between WGA and day stiudents. : .. . . · the Women's Conduct Council." . The new plan, drawn up 7:ifi.urs- An attempt to test the judicial And .their ideas· on the relation- d.ay by a Student Party EXecutive branch of student government -·in ship between WGA and coeds Commjttee, will. a.llQW day .stu- a vote of ·the student body seemed went like this: · Want Coope at;...n d·ents ll1wee of ·the 30 votes. in the to be dying·away last week. Coed r .... leaders circulating .a petition for "We ·hol)e th.at in the future a convention. The. committee said a proposed ·constitutional amend- more cooperative spirit wi11 pre- "the growmg number of ·day stu- ment reported Thursday they had vail between the coeds and their dents prompted the a.otion." · .. , only· about 280 signers. Woman's Government. It is· our desire that WGA will become a Actually, the.new plan is a: com- . It would take around 350 names · h ·· 1s th th rt . :,_., .;_a ·total of 20 per cent of the stu- ra er an apa . plete revision of that used in pre- d t b d t fo ce the t · The vious Student Party conventions, en o Y- 0 r vo e. They said also that if - - ·i petition wai originated two weeks ces "could. be intelligently and which· hav-e had only 20 voting ago after. theh Student · Legisla- .openly discussed, a better unller- delegates. ture ·voted againsJ the proposed standing among all coeds would Toliighit, each of the five fra- amendment. result." . \['lie . ·amendment would· The president,' .who will be elec- ternities ·in the party will elect WGA's. Executive . Board I serve ted by s'ecret . ballot· in the girls' delegates. Other. meetings also as_the' Women's' Honor Coun- dormitories, will serve as chief announeedi by party Chairman cil. Under the ConstitutiGii'adopted officer both of WGA and its · last spring;, tlie. W,omen's· ·Council Executive Board. . John Wagste! are: -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are <>ther . governinent Owen· have held WGA o-ffices be- . Independent men, tomorrow. at officers.': · '· . fore.· Miss Aycock. ha:.s serv'ed on 7. p.m. in 108'0f the Library; . :Unless 'the ·proposed, amendmEmt the· Social Standards East- Dormitory coeds, 7:30 p, m. .-passed . a._ elec.' and Miss Owen:· bas been a: repre- Wednesday; west . ·will :go· into sentative to the Executive coeds, 8 p. m. Wednesday: Coed . . ,day. students,.lWihO· w.l5h .to .be af- . _ Party h11-ve been ask-ed to' meet with the .DR. PERCIVAL PERRY chats with frenchm.an Cannelier 'Urges 'Stay Close Together' . East· Dormitory· coeds. The Executive Committee whicl;l established <the new 'delegate plan was up of one representative from each of f;he five fraternities and one' independent representa- tive. Student Party fraternities are Alpha Sigma Phi, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Chi, Sigma Pi and Theta Chi. Voting Run-Down Following is a run-down on how many votes each faotion will have in the .Student . F:r81ternities, 'three votes each; coeds, seven and one-half votes <three from East, three from West, one and one-half from day stu- ; independent men, seven and one-half votes) Cone and on.e- half of them from day students). One del-egate will cast one vote except in <the case of the day, stu- dents, where six delegates will cast one-half vote each. Under the old Stud-ent Party SY\Stem. each fraternity had two votes, coeds had six vg.tes and in- dependent men had four votes. In both cases, fraternities control half the votes and the other half are divided between coeds and in- . dependents. Runoff'Rides Made Definite An addition ·to the statutes of the Student body Constitution sets up definite rules for runoffs in student government elections. .. Student Legislature members voted unanimously Thursday to adopt the addition, which allows up to but na:t more than three The Secretary of the French France moved to free it tlwm- candidates to enter a runoof pro-· · Embas·sy in Washington said here selves. vided the two 1 to-p men do not have Friday tha-t the Big Three West- He ddended the act, saying a majority of the votes cast. ern Powers "must stay close to- that the Suez Company itself was The text of the addition: gether to solve the problem of an international organization and the Middle East." that Nassar had no' right to claim "In elections for student body Jean Le Cannelier, the Secre- it for Egypt. and class officers, the candidate tar:r speaking a.t a of the Also, he said, France and receiving a majority of the votes . and business professors Great Britain acted to ,"keep the cast for office shall be declared -of the seven North Carolina Bap-. canal open to international use," the winner. Runoofs will be held · tist declared that the and the action was tali:en "in com- in cases where no c.andidate re- , Middle East has .always been _an plete agreement with the , UN ceives a majority of the votes. The area of tense contact between the Charter," which calls for ''free two candidates ;receiVmg' the East and the West and that "the and open transit" in the canal. greatest number of votes shall en- present situation is an explosive As· to the pres&ing problem of ter a runoff. The third-ranking one." ' harmonizing the disturbed nations candidate shall also enter provided Le Cannelier ··emphasized that in the Middle East, he said, "No the combined v:otes of the first two in recent years' Russia has stirred one can rightly tell how the prob- do no.t constitute a majority o-f the up the Arab countries against lem will be solved," but the !Jnited votes cast. · West and encouraged Egyptian States has taken a step m the "In electio-ll!S for the Conduct Premier Nassar to seize control of right direction by getting the sup- Councils and Student Legislature, the Suez Canel. port· of King Saud of Ar.abia, who were ·th-ere are :two or more of- He further stated tha,t smce recently vi&ited this country. d'ices to· be filled, they shall be the United Nations proved weak Le Cannelier was introduced by filled-with the candidates polling in itS dealings with Nassar con- Dr. Percival Perry of the History the highest number of votes. A cerning the internationalization Department, who in charge of runoff will be held only when there o.f the canal, Great Britain and the meeting. ' is a tie." · MARTHA WILLIAMSTON downs EDIE HUDSON. in .new musical· Firs_t Amateur Run 'P8j3.IDit Opens Tonight By ED JONES The College Theater tonight will h.ave the distinction of becoming the first non-profeSsional group to produce the Broadway hit· musi- cal "Pajama Game." · It will run ·through Saturday night iR the arena theater, with performances scheduled each eve- rting at 8 o'clock and a matinee scheduled Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. ' Admission will be 60 cents for students and faculty members, and $1.20 for others. , Marinna. Long will have the rection of Barbara Ledbetter and Ba11bara Hill, Karen Wilker, Jean- Richard Henderson, and Glenn nette Cook an.d Phillip Ann Gard- Clark is choreographer. ner. Persons with speaking parts· in The dance team will consist of the play include Mary Elise ·Moonyean Wright, Jean Hobby, Bridger, .Bob Ceasar, Dinah Gattis, Linda Kinlaw, Phyliss Hedrick, Bill McDuffie, Fred Simpson, Mar- Jane Lev.is Glenn Clark and Bob tha Williamson, Roy Hughes, Ed· Taylor. ' die Hudson, Joe Richardson, Jim !Reservations may ·be made at Wiggins and Byron Wood. the information desk in Reynolda Chorus for the production will Hall or -with any member of the be composed of Chester Howe, College Theater. Tony Stone, Jim · Whetstone, "P.ajama · Game" will be the Carol Jennette, Vivian Morgan, fourth presentation of the theater Margaret Hazeltine, Jo Ann Mask, ;roup this year. · lead role of Babe in the musical, ]II_ d l s h l TJ while Ronnie Brown will take the lr..le lea_ c 00 .C.I.Ones part of Sid. r Plot of the play revolves around the new suJferintendent ·of the T'llO Get P J l A' •d "Sieep-tite" Pajama Factory and .1_ ..L' euera l one of his Some o-f' the more popular tunes in the show ar.e ''Hey · There," "Hernando's Hideaway'' and "Steam Heat." Directing the production is Prof. James Walton. Bill McDuffie is serving as assistant director and Marge Saunders· is production manager. . A four-piece combo will provide musical background for the show, with Gay Smith at the piano, Tol- bert Wilkinson on the drums, Garth Jenkins with the string bass and John Hasty on the gui- tar. Music will be under the di- To Speak Here Officials at Bowman Gray School of Medicine are awaiting· a nod federal authorities which would give the school nearly- $700,· 000 toward its proposed $2 million e.'\ipalliSion ' Reports from Washington last week said final acrtion on a Bow- man Gray application for $698,473 will take place this week at a. meeting a.f the National Council of the National Institute of Health, division of the Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare. -Bowman Gray, which is a branch of the Oo-llege, could la.wfully re- ceive a gr.ant from the Institute since over 'half af the :proposed addition would be used for re- search. · Even if the government decides in favor CYf a gif.t to the medical school, one obstacle will stand in the way. In 1949 and 1950 the Baptist state Con'Ventio-n refused .f.Q accept federal aid .at the Baptist _Okays Reading Day When spring exams come Wake Forest students will have an day in which to prepare for them. In. a meeting M·onday the faculty voted to dis-pense with classes o-n Wednesday, May ·22, the day be- fore exalllS begin. This decision came as a result of . a sugg1estion from the Inter-Fr.a- temity Council and others. Hoopital. Baptists of the state then raised the money needed through private. donations. This time, however, some Bap- tist leaders h<t-ve pointed out that the g'i(t would pro-bably be accept- ed since it would be for the pur· ·po-se of research. Officials of the medical school stated Thursday that "If the re- ques.t is appro-ved it will essential- ly permit the medical school to complete the total building pro- outlined." Each Party NowHas5 Fraternities Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity vo.ted late Friday night to affiliate with the Campus P.arty. The de- cision came after more than a wook of deliberation. The Delta. Sigs, revived on cam- pus this year after four years as an inactive chapter, will become the p.ar.ty's fifth fraternity. Until their status had been a que.sti-on mark in campus politics. Other fraternities in the party are Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Lam- Ma Chi· Alph.a and Sigma Phi Epsilon. · · · Each Has Five Addition of another group gives the Campus organization :the same number of fraternities as the Stu- dent Party. Party machinery was futher set in motion la.st week when an or- ganizational meeting of delegates was scheduled for this afternoon :J.t 4 o'cloek in room 108 of the . Library. The Delta Sigs must officially be voted into the party at today's . . meeting and a date for the nomi- . n":ting caucus probably will.be de-·. cided upon. Independent and coed delegates were selected at meetings called early last week, and: the· four fra- - ternities picked representatives Monday night. · . . . . Reapportionment of delegates will be necessary with the addition of the new ,fraternity. Under the old system each fraternity had three delegates, independent men had seven and coeds had five. To allow the Delta Sigs three delegates, independent representa- tion now ·;viii be l>oostetl to nine and coeds will receive one addition- al delegate. This keeps vo.ting power equal between fraternities and non-fraternity students. .Tack Grow, president of the Delta Sigs. irifonned party chair- man Jo-e •Millsaps of his gTOup's decision around· midnight Friday. The fraternity, which has 35 mem- bers and 22 pledges, was unable to reach a decision at its meeting Monday night. 'Proud' To Join Grose said after announcing re- sults C1f the special meeting that "DeLta .1Sigma Phi is pro-ud to be- crJ-me a part of the Campus Party. We hope to d'o ev.erything we can keev it strong and uphold its traditions." Delegates chosen for the party o:onvo?ntion are: Kappa Alpha - Walt Ward, Charles and Jim Powell. Kappa Starling, David Hughes ·and Joe Westc>n. Lamhda Chi Alpha-Joe Mill- Fre-d Turnage and Johnny Cella. f:igma .Phi Epsilon-Bill Barnes, P. C. Barwick and Bc>b Stafford. Independents, Coeds · Ind.euendent men-Earl Shaw, (Continued on page 4) Dr. F. L. Atkins, presil;lent of Winston-salem Teachers Col- lege, will speak Thursday in a regular chapel service. Dr. At- kins is a native of Winston- Salem and has been at the Teacl!ers College for 37 years. He was educated at Ltneoln Uni- versity. in Pennsylvania and at Columbia University in New York. In voting for this reading day, .the :faculty members did not com- mit themselves a.s to whether or not it would be continued in the future. The results of this year's experiment will decide what is to be done in t.!he next school year. JOE MILLSAPS (left), chairman of the Campus Party, shakes hands with Delta Sigma l"hi President .Tack Grose late Friday night . after the Delta Sigs voted to join the campus party.

Upload: others

Post on 10-Jul-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are ther . s~udent

r : ·McMntari while the Bob La.w­a.n of th~ itY: player

ies in last I:IIlph over .s.

!1WJrers of xa.tion In­~Mareh 2. he federal . pal·speak-1. The In-~ theN. C.

'ake For­leCollege; 'avy's Of­Newport, a rour­

lld orien-' com.:mis- • assigned_ ·

[(S

'. , .. -~ "

lr

; ··,.:.

Coeds Have .Their · Own G~mbling .Den ·

. Under Dorinitories .: Page Two

. ~ . . :

:t··.··(k····: ·. .

' . ' . . .

*

. ,,· ' .

*

Freshmen Always Freshmen, Senior Letter-Writer Says

P-age Four

VOLUME XLII " Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Mon4ay, ?.larch ·18, 1957

NUMBER 21 /

·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· ,_PrexyTomorrow . - . . , -_· . - . . . ., .· ?

St~dent Party· Sche~ules Meets By HANN~<\H MILLER ' ' Wake Forest ·coeds tomorrow

will select .the ;I957-5S occupant of their highest office, the presi-dency of' Woman's' Government Association. ·

I

· J"oan Owen, a junior from·Can-ton, and J.ane Aycock, a junior from Winston,Salem, are the two candidates. They were . selected by a norninations cominitlee eleCted

· by the coeds~ · -· Both · candidates· said Frid~y

WGA ~Petition Fails ·To G~t ·

. .

(they are supporting a petition be­ing circulated by present WGA officials and that they "feel that its success will result in . a more effective. way of handling coed offenses."

would change Councils DayStudent (The petition calls foz; a &tudent · .

body: vote on an amendment to· G-· · · G. · · the new Cons~itution which would roup's et enable WGA's E·xecu:tive Board to continue .as an ·honor council for

coe::~ed concerning their views ·sP· Votes on the matter, the candidates de-cided to write. a joint statement. ·

Jn the statement they .say "elec- Stu&nt Party · officials have ti0ns which . concern only the . coeds scheduled ·their first meetin{fs of should not involve the· prejudices the 1957 ca.:mpaign and announced of party friction. Furthermore, a n_ew convention delegate oot, up the stated recommendation would reduce . to a minimum the inevit- '1\'ih.ich 'Will giv.e representation to

Ma .. ·ny ·s)•g-·0. ers able coriflict between WGA and day stiudents. : .. . . · the Women's Conduct Council." . The new plan, drawn up 7:ifi.urs­

An attempt to test the judicial And .their ideas· on the relation- d.ay by a Student Party EXecutive branch of student government -·in ship between WGA and coeds Commjttee, will. a.llQW day .stu­a vote of ·the student body seemed went like this:

· Want Coope at;...n d·ents ll1wee of ·the 30 votes. in the to be dying·away last week. Coed r .... leaders circulating .a petition for "We ·hol)e th.at in the future a convention. The. committee said a proposed ·constitutional amend- more cooperative spirit wi11 pre- "the growmg number of ·day stu-ment reported Thursday they had vail between the coeds and their dents prompted the a.otion."

· .. , only· about 280 signers. Woman's Government. It is· our desire that WGA will become a Actually, the.new plan is a: com-. It would take around 350 names · h ·· 1s th th rt

.:,_., .;_a ·total of 20 per cent of the stu- ~::! o~!:.~~Ir ra er an apa . plete revision of that used in pre-d t b d t fo ce the t · The vious Student Party conventions, en o Y- 0 r vo e. They said also that if - - ·i petition wai originated two weeks ces "could. be intelligently and which· hav-e had only 20 voting ago after. theh Student · Legisla- .openly discussed, a better unller- delegates. ture ·voted againsJ the proposed standing among all coeds would Toliighit, each of the five fra-amendment. result." .

\['lie . ·amendment would· ~ave The president,' .who will be elec- ternities ·in the party will elect WGA's. Executive . Board I serve ted by s'ecret . ballot· in the girls' delegates. Other. meetings also as_the' Women's' Honor Coun- dormitories, will serve as chief announeedi by party Chairman cil. Under the ConstitutiGii'adopted officer both of WGA and its · last spring;, tlie. W,omen's· ·Council Executive Board. . John Wagste! are: -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are <>ther . s~udent governinent Owen· have held WGA o-ffices be- . Independent men, tomorrow. at officers.': · '· . fore.· Miss Aycock. ha:.s serv'ed on 7. p.m. in r~ 108'0f the Library; . :Unless 'the ·proposed, amendmEmt the· Social Standards ~.Com~ittee, East- Dormitory coeds, 7:30 p, m. ~s .-passed ,'i~ . a._ ca,ni~~s:..wide elec.' and Miss Owen:· bas been a: repre- Wednesday; west Donnito~ ~iqn,: . ·will :go· into sentative to the Executive coeds, 8 p. m. Wednesday: Coed eff~t . . ,day. students,.lWihO· w.l5h .to .be af-

. filia~.;:::¢th,·:;th~ _ ~tuc:le;p"t· Party h11-ve been ask-ed to' meet with the

.DR. PERCIVAL PERRY chats with frenchm.an

Cannelier 'Urges We~t 'Stay Close Together'

. East· Dormitory· coeds. The Executive Committee whicl;l

established <the new 'delegate plan was m~de up of one representative from each of f;he five fraternities and one' independent representa­tive. Student Party fraternities are Alpha Sigma Phi, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Chi, Sigma Pi and Theta Chi.

Voting Run-Down Following is a run-down on how

many votes each faotion will have in the .Student P~rty·convention: . F:r81ternities, 'three votes each; coeds, seven and one-half votes <three from East, three from West, one and one-half from day stu­d~tS) ; independent men, seven and one-half votes) Cone and on.e­half of them from day students).

One del-egate will cast one vote except in <the case of the day, stu­dents, where six delegates will cast one-half vote each.

Under the old Stud-ent Party SY\Stem. each fraternity had two votes, coeds had six vg.tes and in­dependent men had four votes. In both cases, fraternities control half the votes and the other half are divided between coeds and in­

. dependents.

Runoff'Rides Made Definite

An addition ·to the statutes of the Student body Constitution sets up definite rules for runoffs in student government elections.

.. Student Legislature members voted unanimously Thursday to adopt the addition, which allows up to but na:t more than three

The Secretary of the French France moved to free it tlwm- candidates to enter a runoof pro-· · Embas·sy in Washington said here selves. vided the two

1 to-p men do not have

Friday tha-t the Big Three West- He ddended the act, saying a majority of the votes cast. ern Powers "must stay close to- that the Suez Company itself was The text of the addition: gether to solve the problem of an international organization and the Middle East." that Nassar had no' right to claim "In elections for student body

Jean Le Cannelier, the Secre- it for Egypt. and class officers, the candidate tar:r speaking a.t a m~eting of the Also, he said, France and receiving a majority of the votes

. hi~ry and business professors Great Britain acted to ,"keep the cast for ~n office shall be declared -of the seven North Carolina Bap-. canal open to international use," the winner. Runoofs will be held · tist colle~s, declared that the and the action was tali:en "in com- in cases where no c.andidate re­, Middle East has .always been _an plete agreement with the , UN ceives a majority of the votes. The area of tense contact between the Charter," which calls for ''free two candidates ;receiVmg' the East and the West and that "the and open transit" in the canal. greatest number of votes shall en­present situation is an explosive As· to the pres&ing problem of ter a runoff. The third-ranking one." ' harmonizing the disturbed nations candidate shall also enter provided

Le Cannelier ··emphasized that in the Middle East, he said, "No the combined v:otes of the first two in recent years' Russia has stirred one can rightly tell how the prob- do no.t constitute a majority o-f the up the Arab countries against ~he lem will be solved," but the !Jnited votes cast. · West and encouraged Egyptian States has taken a step m the "In electio-ll!S for the Conduct Premier Nassar to seize control of right direction by getting the sup- Councils and Student Legislature, the Suez Canel. port· of King Saud of Ar.abia, who were ·th-ere are :two or more of-

He further stated tha,t smce recently vi&ited this country. d'ices to· be filled, they shall be the United Nations proved weak Le Cannelier was introduced by filled-with the candidates polling in itS dealings with Nassar con- Dr. Percival Perry of the History the highest number of votes. A cerning the internationalization Department, who w~s in charge of runoff will be held only when there o.f the canal, Great Britain and the meeting. ' is a tie." ·

MARTHA WILLIAMSTON downs EDIE HUDSON. in .new musical·

Firs_t Amateur Run

'P8j3.IDit Game~ Opens Tonight By ED JONES

The College Theater tonight will h.ave the distinction of becoming the first non-profeSsional group to produce the Broadway hit· musi­cal "Pajama Game." ·

It will run ·through Saturday night iR the arena theater, with performances scheduled each eve­rting at 8 o'clock and a matinee scheduled Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. '

Admission will be 60 cents for students and faculty members, and $1.20 for others. ,

Marinna. Long will have the

rection of Barbara Ledbetter and Ba11bara Hill, Karen Wilker, Jean­Richard Henderson, and Glenn nette Cook an.d Phillip Ann Gard-Clark is choreographer. ner.

Persons with speaking parts· in The dance team will consist of the play include Mary Elise ·Moonyean Wright, Jean Hobby, Bridger, .Bob Ceasar, Dinah Gattis, Linda Kinlaw, Phyliss Hedrick, Bill McDuffie, Fred Simpson, Mar- Jane Lev.is Glenn Clark and Bob tha Williamson, Roy Hughes, Ed· Taylor. ' die Hudson, Joe Richardson, Jim !Reservations may ·be made at Wiggins and Byron Wood. the information desk in Reynolda

Chorus for the production will Hall or -with any member of the be composed of Chester Howe, College Theater. Tony Stone, Jim · Whetstone, "P.ajama · Game" will be the Carol Jennette, Vivian Morgan, fourth presentation of the theater Margaret Hazeltine, Jo Ann Mask, ;roup this year. ·

lead role of Babe in the musical, ]II_ d • l s h l TJ while Ronnie Brown will take the lr..le lea_ c 00 .C.I.Ones part of Sid. r

Plot of the play revolves around the new suJferintendent ·of the T'llO Get P J l A' •d "Sieep-tite" Pajama Factory and .1_ ~ ..L' euera l one of his employ~s. Some o-f' the more popular tunes in the show ar.e ''Hey · There," "Hernando's Hideaway'' and "Steam Heat."

Directing the production is Prof. James Walton. Bill McDuffie is serving as assistant director and Marge Saunders· is production manager. .

A four-piece combo will provide musical background for the show, with Gay Smith at the piano, Tol­bert Wilkinson on the drums, Garth Jenkins with the string bass and John Hasty on the gui­tar.

Music will be under the di-

To Speak Here

Officials at Bowman Gray School of Medicine are awaiting· a nod fl'~m federal authorities which would give the school nearly- $700,· 000 toward its proposed $2 million e.'\ipalliSion pr~gram. ' Reports from Washington last week said final acrtion on a Bow­man Gray application for $698,473 will take place this week at a. meeting a.f the National Advis~>ry Council of the National Institute of Health, division of the Depart­ment of Health, Education and Welfare.

-Bowman Gray, which is a branch of the Oo-llege, could la.wfully re­ceive a gr.ant from the Institute since over 'half af the :proposed addition would be used for re-search. ·

Even if the government decides in favor CYf a gif.t to the medical school, one obstacle will stand in the way. In 1949 and 1950 the Baptist state Con'Ventio-n refused .f.Q accept federal aid .at the Baptist

~acuity _Okays Reading Day

When spring exams come Wake Forest students will have an e~tra day in which to prepare for them.

In. a meeting M·onday the faculty voted to dis-pense with classes o-n Wednesday, May ·22, the day be­fore exalllS begin.

This decision came as a result of . a sugg1estion from the Inter-Fr.a­temity Council and others.

Hoopital. Baptists of the state then raised the money needed through private. donations.

This time, however, some Bap­tist leaders h<t-ve pointed out that the g'i(t would pro-bably be accept­ed since it would be for the pur· ·po-se of research.

Officials of the medical school stated Thursday that "If the re­ques.t is appro-ved it will essential­ly permit the medical school to complete the total building pro­~ram outlined."

Each Party NowHas5 Fraternities

Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity vo.ted late Friday night to affiliate with the Campus P.arty. The de­cision came after more than a wook of deliberation.

The Delta. Sigs, revived on cam­pus this year after four years as an inactive chapter, will become the p.ar.ty's fifth fraternity. Until Fr~day their status had been a que.sti-on mark in campus politics.

Other fraternities in the party are Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Lam­Ma Chi· Alph.a and Sigma Phi Epsilon. · · ·

Each Has Five Addition of another group gives

the Campus organization :the same number of fraternities as the Stu­dent Party.

Party machinery was futher set in motion la.st week when an or­ganizational meeting of delegates was scheduled for this afternoon :J.t 4 o'cloek in room 108 of the . Library.

The Delta Sigs must officially be voted into the party at today's . . meeting and a date for the nomi- . n":ting caucus probably will.be de-·. cided upon.

Independent and coed delegates were selected at meetings called early last week, and: the· four fra- -ternities picked representatives Monday night. ·

. . peleglil~. ~!UP.. . . Reapportionment of delegates

will be necessary with the addition of the new ,fraternity. Under the old system each fraternity had three delegates, independent men had seven and coeds had five.

To allow the Delta Sigs three delegates, independent representa­tion now ·;viii be l>oostetl to nine and coeds will receive one addition­al delegate. This keeps vo.ting power equal between fraternities and non-fraternity students.

.Tack Grow, president of the Delta Sigs. irifonned party chair­man Jo-e •Millsaps of his gTOup's decision around· midnight Friday. The fraternity, which has 35 mem­bers and 22 pledges, was unable to reach a decision at its re~lar meeting Monday night.

'Proud' To Join Grose said after announcing re­

sults C1f the special meeting that "DeLta .1Sigma Phi is pro-ud to be­crJ-me a part of the Campus Party. We hope to d'o ev.erything we can ~o keev it strong and uphold its traditions."

Delegates chosen for the party o:onvo?ntion are:

Kappa Alpha - Walt Ward, Charles Sni~es and Jim Powell.

Kappa Si.gma~Bill Starling, David Hughes ·and Joe Westc>n.

Lamhda Chi Alpha-Joe Mill­-<t~s, Fre-d Turnage and Johnny Cella.

f:igma .Phi Epsilon-Bill Barnes, P. C. Barwick and Bc>b Stafford.

Independents, Coeds · Ind.euendent men-Earl Shaw,

(Continued on page 4)

Dr. F. L. Atkins, presil;lent of Winston-salem Teachers Col­lege, will speak Thursday in a regular chapel service. Dr. At­kins is a native of Winston­Salem and has been at the Teacl!ers College for 37 years. He was educated at Ltneoln Uni­versity. in Pennsylvania and at Columbia University in New York.

In voting for this reading day, .the :faculty members did not com­mit themselves a.s to whether or not it would be continued in the future. The results of this year's experiment will decide what is to be done in t.!he next school year.

JOE MILLSAPS (left), chairman of the Campus Party, shakes hands with Delta Sigma l"hi President .Tack Grose late Friday night

. after the Delta Sigs voted to join the campus party.

Page 2: ·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are ther . s~udent

PAGE TWO Monday, March 18, 1957 OLD GOLD AND BLACK-

Debaters Seek Place In West Point Meet

By MARGIE WOODALL

Wake Forest debaters will be seeking a berth in the 'Vest Point Nat;ional Debate Tournament Fri~ day an<.l Saturday when they com­pete in Sixth District Eliminations at ~Iercer University in Macon, Ga.

Ten schools will be represented at 1\'let·cer and only four will earn the right to enter the West Point de­bates April 24-27. National clebate

Tri-Beta Club Wi.ll Convene He1·e Friday

"' The local chapter of Beta Beta

Beta national honorary biological societv will be host this week end to visiting Tri-Beta members from several southeastern states for an Eastern District convention.

Visitors from the University of Miami, Stetson,· Florida, Southern, Mercer, 'Winthrop, Appalachan State Teachers College and the Womans College of UNC will ar­rive Friday and Saturday. A ban­quet will be held Saturday night.

Included in the program are the reading of student research pa­pers and a guest speaker. Tenta­tive plans have been made for a tour of the R. J. Reynolds To-bacco factory. ·

Dick Lavender of the local chap­ter i~ president of the Eastern Distl'ict of Beta Beta Beta. Charles McCall is president of tl;!e local chapter and Dr. Elton C. Cocke is fa<:ulty advisor.

Haw-thorne Pharmacy

Inc~ PRESCRIPTION SPECIALIS'l;:;

champbn is determined at West Point. Repr~~enting 4Wake Forest for

the affirmative and negative argu­ments will be Marjorie Thomas and D2vid Hughes.

Prof. Franklin Shirley, debate coach h~re, is chairman for the eli­rrrirllatkn tournament this week end. He is the only person in the touma1:~ent's history to be selecied chairm::m for more than one year.

'Vakf' Forest <iebaters have ao­peared in the Vv"est Point tourna­ment, k-1own as the "\Vorld Series" of collegiate debating, for se,•en. straight years. This is the 11th year of the event and teams from here have entered for nine years.

Teams to be represented at 11er­cer are Alabama, Kentucky, South Carolina, Florida, :!\1iami Univer­sity, Duke University. Vanderbilt, Emory, and David Lipscomb Col­lege.

.. District six covers Kentucky, Tenn€ssee, Georgia, Alabama, Mis­sissippi, Florida, South Carolina ann No:·th Carolimt.

Nex:t event for Wake Forest will be the Cherry Blossom Tourna­mel1t 1\h.rch 29-3(} at Geor~etown Un.ivers'tv in Washington, D. C.

National debate topic this year is "Rel"?lved: that the Uni.ted States s11·ould discontinue economic aid to foreign countries."

StudentsAsked To GC Dance·

Sam Donahue, former director of the Billy May Orchestra and now lead~· of his own 16-piece baru:l, will .play at Greensbo1·o Col­lege Friday for an afternoon con­cert and eYening dance.

·Men students have been invited to the informal dance from Wake Forest, the University of North Carolina, Guilford College, Hig·h Point College, Elon College- and Duke University.

The dance ·will be from 8:3(} p. m. to 11:30 p. m. in the Main Building ()f the college. Bids may be obtained for $2.75 on the Wake Forest campus and at Greensboro C<>llege in t.he office of the Dean of students.

An afternoon concert in Odell Auditorium will begin at 4:30 and wi.ll be open to the pu,blic with

103 S. Hawth.orne Road

Winston-Salem Phone 2-1568

I tickets selling be!fore the concert and at the door for $1. T11ere will

~-------------.: be no reserved seat.>.

No fuss, with

no bother

old-fashioned laces ...

FLORSH E.l M

_./

Florsheixn slip-ons have made shoe laces as obsolete as an automobile crank-for today, men everywhere prefer

' the easy-on, easy-off slip-on for street, business and leisure wear. We have them in new leathers, new colors,

' new combinations-authentically styled in new slim, trim patterns that are smart as they are comfortable.

Simmon's Shoe Store,lnce 418 TRADE ST.

MARTHA EVANS and ELAINE NANCE try their luck

DormitorySn~ckBar

Is Coeds' Las Vegas By HANNAH lHILLER dimes and quarters is heard

constantly. An occasional dull tlJ.rd means that a coed is kick­ing an uncooperative machine.

.s~vey Shows U. S. Students Cheat A Lot

A survey of college students across the natio'n has indicated that "systematic cheating on ex:- 1·

amination~ is the cust9m rather than the exception" at many larg€ colleges.

But in contrast to what a report on the survey called "generally low standards in regard to academ­ic honesty" were findings about college students' standards of sex­ual morality.

"Despite the boldness of colle~ talk, dress and outward social con­duct," it said, ". . . in personal

I practice and fundamental belief students generally hold to stan­dards which are thoroughly con­ventional."

Professor Made Survey The survey was~ conducted . by

I PhiLip E. Jacob, sac.ial science pro­~t-"Ssor at the University of PelUl­sylvania. It was delivered earlier. this month to the 12th National Conference on Higher Education in C11icago.

Jacob cited two S'Pecific studies which he said "point up the pre­\·ailin!! student code. of sex mo-rality." .

At the University of Chicago \ "an intimate discussion of moral

issues with a group of freslunan women showed tli:at the. girls . . • were more orthooox than was at-

planning a formal? '

Our Complete Formal Reritai.Service. Will Cut· Your Expenses! · CJ TUXEDOES

e FULL DRESS ~. DINNER JACKETS

ct . ALL ACCESSORIES.

All Garments Freshly Cleaned ' And Pressed

TOP CLOTHING CO. 419 N. Main St. . Near Reynolds Bldg.

. .

Ph. P ,\ 4-9226

Edward'sMen 's·Shop . New Spring Merchandise _ ·

IVY SPORT SHIRTS., long and. short sleeves $1.98 up

IVY SLACKS, Khakis-:..Cords-Flannels __ $3.95 up

·-IVY JACKETs: Cords-~oplins _.. _________ $5.95 'PP ' • • • • • ' ' ' H ..,. • ~ •'

YES, we have that new IVY SUIT 100% All Wool Flann.el __ _....: ONLY $42.50

EDWARD'S, Inc. - 12 EAST 4TH ST. - OPPOSI:rE REYNOLDS· BLDG. Since the move to the new

camprns, Wake Forest's coeds have graduated from bridge to slot machines. They are rapidly becoming ac:complished gambl­ers in their own miniature casi­no.

Secluded Atmosphere The atmosphere is quite se­

cluded, too. The windows have been smeared wiJth soap . by hou..o.emother.s, who were perhaps on the ·lookout for the cops. So far, though, both police raid­ers and ·panty raiders have missed the place, and the only outsiders allo"A·•ed in are the men who refill the machin~.

trtbu.ted to them by .their fellow:-----------------------------------: students and that talk may be

Las V:egas is the name the girls have given to the room which houses their soft drink and food machines. The name as_ one coed expressed it, comes from the fact that "you put your nickle in, pull the lever,. and it's a gamble whelbher an)~ llhing comes Otlt or not.".

Bright L1ghts, Girls Opening off the tunnel be­

tween the two girls' dorms, the room has practically -ever;ything the original Las Vegas has. It is brightly lighted untii the wee hours of the morning and food and scantily-clad girls are pre­sent at all times.

The food, though, is the

Only1 two things are lacking in Wake Forest's Las Vegas: smoke and floor shows. Even with these, though, the girls' casino would still differ f·rom the ori­ginal, for ·no self-resPecting Nevada pinbali artist would leave a note on the machine giving his name and address and the complaint tha.t "this machine owes me 10 cents."

more libertarian at a place like Chicago than practice," J acolbs said in his report. ·

'Chastity Unimportant At Cornell University, Ithaca,

N. Y., ''students by and large ... attached little importance to chastity as a criterian for choos­ing a mate, yet few of them would justify a life of promiscuity." The majority "evidently found the can­ons of chastity U!ppro·priate to govern their personal lives," the study found.

"The main- over-all effect of higher education upon student values," Jacob said, "is to bring about conformity to a body of standards ·and attitudes of the colleg~bred man or woman of the American culture. .".

DELICATESSEN . CATERING

SAMMIE'S Ii.ITCHEN Thruway Shopping Center Phone 5~5364

SFECIAL ORDERS

THE

VARSITY GRILL

Corner Polo Road And Bethabara

Open Daily 10:00 A.M.- 1 A.M.

Featuring

Pizza - Sandwiches - Short Orders

machine kind. And the girls are I the lface-cream and ha.iir-in­pincurls kind.

The .sound, .at least, is au­thentic, for the clink of nickels,

~--K_o_s_h_e_r_F __ o_o_a_~ __ I_rn_p_o_rt __ e_a_.c.h.e.es.es ____ s_an __ d_vn.·c_h_e_~ •. __ L_un_.c•h;~B~=o~x~e·s:-:-:-=:!::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: l APO To Reopen

Book Exchange Alpha Phi Omega's book ex-j

change will be open tomorl·ow · afternoon so that students can pick up books or money left there following last month's sales.

The exchange, located in South­east D<>rmitory facing the Gymna- 1

sium, will be open from 2 until 5 p.m.

APO Vice President Matthew i Styers say,-; there are still ''ap­proximately 50 books and around I $50. If )IOU a.re interested in your books or money, please c=e by and get them." He said tomorrow will •be the last time this semester the exchange will be open.

Blouses TO PEEK PRETTILY

.FROl\1 A SUIT

Designed \\·ith your siJring suit in mind. Softly de­tailed with bows, tucks, bib yokes, ruffles, appli­ques, embroidery and other such niceties.

Sizes 32 to 40

Choose Froin A Big Assortment

$2.98 to $5.98 (SPORT SHOP)

• Mother

and

Daughter Fashions

CORNER LIBERTY AND THIRD STREETS

. -· ESSO RESEARC,H works wonders with oil

,

Smoothing the way for your call

;) .. __ ... ! .. · .... · ... • : .... :.: __ ..... ,,,,,._.,,,.,·.,,,,;,.,,~'·'······· ... , ....... : .. ,.:,: .. ,.,,.;;;_ .. ,,.,; .. ,.,,,.,,,,., .. :,,·~~·"~'"'·-·····'·-'·····'·'·""''"'••···':;."J

Important calls like this go through quickly and surely, thanks to an elaborate central switching mechanism.

A special lubricant developed by Esso Research keeps it working. Delicately brushed Of!, it helps the. mechanism

make split-second connections. Because it stays on for many months, there·s less chance

of a breakdown to interrupt your call. Again ESSO RESEARCH works wonders with oil.

,.

b .,

Page 3: ·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are ther . s~udent

-

26 -

)

0

-

-

\'

\'

1'

. ,, . ~ ·.•

A -·a.·

.I.· 0 L u

·Rock Hudson - Movie Coming In 25c Series ·

'.<:Ma:gndflicent Obsession" will be ~he next .l;lresentation of ·the Cam­pus Movie s~ries ·Friday and Satur­day . in the auditorium of the Science Building. _

Adapted from a novel of the same title by Lloyd c. , Douglas, the movie stars Rock Hudson a.nKl. Jane .Wyman in .1~. roles; ·· .,-

11J,e Physjcal Ed:ucation Depli'_rl:­. :ment is s-ponsoring' the . nm:Vi'e .series, now ·i.Ji, 'its fi£th week, each Friday and saturday nights a.t 7

·o'clock. · ln ·this week's presentatioli Hud­

so.n . plays :the par.t of a young surgeon who, after years of un­certainty, f·inds a new philosophy

. of life and a wQIIIlan he loves.

4 Companies Plan Senior Interviews

Representatives of four· com­panies will l)e on campus this · week to interview seniors· as pros­pective employees.

Schedules for interviews re-' ~eased by the Placement Office follow:

Tomorrow - Burroughs chines.

Wednesday - Prudential Life Company.

Thursday - General Shoe Cor-poration. ·

Friday-Nation a 1 Security Agency.

· AWRitiNr •• : Wf.fi NAViN: A­-r~s,. TOPAV!! SURMISEI?

(JIAW-IIAW) ···AN' ir COUNTS HALF YE"R G-KA~ ... {/IAW·HAIII.) ·EAt )'OUit MfAATS C)U1'!

,....----- WFDD----------"-__..;..-,

550 -O·n The Dial Today ·• 7~00-News

3:00!P .. m.-Santa Claus• Jamboree 7:15-Record Show 4:00-Varsity Club •7:.30-The News and You 6:00-E·upper Show 8:00-Classical Hall nf Fame 6:2.5-Even.ing Vespers 9:00-Tangents in Jazz 6:30-Campus Scrapbook 9:30-J<Oin the Navy 7:00--News 9:45-Sports News 7:15-Musically Yours 10:00-News 7:30-Blue Monday Jamboree 10:05-Deaconlight Serenade 8:00-Classical Hall of Fame 11:00-News 9:oo..:...Tangen.ts in Jazz 11:05-Deaconlight Serenade 9:30-Serenad-e in Blue 12:00-Lounging with Logan

· · 9 :45-Sports News 1:00-Sign off 10:00-News Friday ....

Coeds Commissioned- Jean Hobby, who .reigned over Saturday night's Military Ball,

receives an honorary, commission as colonel in the Wake Forest ROTC unit. She and the nine other dance sponsors received the com­missions Tuesday. Presenting the commission is CoL Wythe Peyton. head of the' ROTC unit here. Walt Barge is Col. Hobby's escort.

10:05-Deaconlight Serenade (with S:OO[p.m.-Santa Claus' Ja.mbOTee WAIR) 4:00-V.arsity Club

11:00-News 6:00-~upper Show 11 :05-Deaeonlight Serenade 6 :25---Evenilllg Vespers 12:00-Lounging with Logan 6:30-Campus Scrapbook

•1:00-Sign off 7:00-Lucky Strike News Tomorrow 7:15-Ad:ven<tures in Music

3:00[p.m.-Santa Claus• Jamboree 7:30-Music In Modern 4;00-Vars.ity Club 8:00-Classical Hall of Fame 6:00-:':·u.pper Show 9:00--Tange.n.ts in Jazz 6:25--Even.ing Ve5pers 9:30-Inside Deaco.nland 6:80--Campus Scrapbook 9:45-Sports' News 7:00-~ews 10:00--News 7:15-Record ~hop 10:05-Deaconlight Serenade 7:30-The BSU Show 11:00-News 8 :00-Classical Hall of Fame "'-. · 11 :05-Deaconlight Serenade ' 9:00-Tangents in Jazz 12:00-Lounging with Logan 9:30---Guest Sitar 1:00-Sig:n off 9:45-Sports· News Saturday

10:00-News (N.o p::-ograms Scheduled.) 10:05-Deaconlight Serenade Sunday 11:00-News , 2:00 p. m.-Music for You 11:05-Deaeonlight Serenade 4:00-Paris Star Time 12:00-Lounging with Logan 4:·30-Classical Hour 1:00-Sign ·off '6:00-Supper Show

Wednesday 7:00-News 3:00 \l).llll.--Santa Claus' Jamboree 7:15-French in ;the Air

TWO SALONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE Seniors Asked 4..09-Va.rsity club 7:30-E·unday serenade 6:00--Su.pper Show 9:00--Campus Carrousel

T Ch k L• 6:25--Evening Vespers 9:30- Proudly We Hail

0 > ec . Ists 6:30-Ca.mpus Scrapbook 9:45- News and: Sports Roundup • 7:00--News 10:00-Deaconlight Serenade

Seniors who plan to graduate in 7:15-Soda Shop Quiz 12:00-Late News Final June have been asked to check 7:30-Hit or Miss 12:05-Sign off ga-aduation lists posted on bulletin 8:00-Classical Hall of Fame -------bo.ards in Reynolda Hall. 9:00-Tangents in Jazz

Registrar Grad;y s. Patterson . 9:30-Here's to Veterans ,Thruway Shopping Center - Ph. 5-8081 sasis each senior Sh.Oul·d see his . 9:45-Sports News

Mezzanine Ro~t. E. Lee Hotel- Ph. 8620 and Gi61 name is spelled. correctly on the 10:00-News .

Opera To Be Phi Program

i~~~~;;~;:;~~~~;;;;;;~~~~~;i~~~~~~ sheet and that he is liiSted ·for 10:05-Deaconhght Serenade tbe proper degree. 11:00--News ~=~~~~~.#"~..o=oc~OOc:lc:lc:lc:l~- Any omissions o:r: irregularities 11:05-Deaeonlight Serenade Grand o-pera, its "beautiful

should be repo'l"ted immediately to 12:00-Lounging with Logan music" and its "ridiculous plots," WELCOME WAKE FOREST STUDENTS the Office of the Registrar,·Pat- 1:00-Sign off will he the sUJbject of a program

terson said. Thursday to be given tonight a.t a meeting

N. A. KING'.S ESSO· SERVICE

I TIREs --. LUBRI~ATING - RECAPPING Book Store Urges

AAA ROAD SERVICE I Orders Be Made

I WE GIVE STAMPS Juniors and seniors who want . · 8 to receive. class rings ibe:fore June S Phone: Park 5-9355 Near Baptist Hospital' 1510 W. First St. S should plaee their orders immedi­Jl . R ately at the College Book Store, ~DCic:ICCOcccxr.#'"~~Ac:lc:ICOOCCOc:ICc:IC=~ acconding to an announcement last

3:00 p.m.-Santa Claus• Jamboree of PhiloiW~~the&ian Literary Socie-4:00-V.arsity Club ty. 6:00--Eupper Show David Hughes, who is in charge 6:25-Evenirug Vespers of bhe program, says tt will cen-6:80-Campus Scrapbook ter around "La &heme" by Puc-------------- cini. Hughes says ;the opera "will week by Everet.t Snyder, manager be treated satirically on the theme of the store. tha.t Grand Opera has the world's

The rings are made in Indiana- most beautiful music set in the polis, Ind., and co.st $30. June de- wQrld'.s most ridiculous .plots." livery cannot be promised after The meeting is sch€>duled for 7 the neld f~w days, Snider said. p. m. in Phi Hall.

You smoke refreshed

Anewideain smoking ... all-new Sal m

• menthol fresh • ~ich tobacco taste

• most mo~_ern filte.r

Created buR. J.Riivn.olds Tobacco Companv. ·:.:·:·, ;w:-

Think of a Spring breeze blowing over fresh, green grass and· you'll have a good idea how refreshing all-new SALEM Cigarettes taste. The freshest taste in cigarettes flows through SALEM's pure white filter. Rich tobacco taste with

. _new surprise softness .•. menthol-fresh comfort. Try SALEM-you'll love 'em..

Salem. refreshes .your taste

OLD GOLD AND BLACK M<olnday, March 18, 1957 PAGE THREE

SINCE 1929 STUDENTS MEET AT

MORRIS SERV.ICE 401 W. FOURTH STREET

SANDWICH·ES- SODAS -SNACKS NEXT TO CAROLINA THEATER

THE FRIENDLY JEWEI.JERS

BYERLY and STEELE 418 WEST 4th ST. PHONE 3-1939

"Where Quality Is Paramount"

"Quality for Quality We Will Not Be Undersold" I

• EXPERT REPAIR DEPARTMENT •

STEAKS- SALADS -SPAGHETTI UPTOWN .or DOWNTOWN

IT'S ALWAYS

THE

PICCADILLY RESTAURANT

IN THE H1EART OF TOWN For

DELICIOUS FOOD

SWEET TOOTH? BE SURE TO TRY OUR

ICE BOX PIES

• LENWOOD AMMONS A. C. MOTSINGER. JR.

AMMON'S ESSO Servicenter Welcome Wake Forest Students

And Family

Emergency AAA Service ROAD SERVICE

TIRES - ACCESSORIES - BA TTERiiES 1200 Reynolda Road Corner Robin Hood Road

PHONE 5-2681

* By appointmont purvoyora of 10ap 10 the 11.11 King Georgo VI, Yardloy &. Co., Lid,, london

FOR A CLOSER

ELECTRIC SHAVE Cortditions beard; helps tauten skin, counteract perspiration;

makes it easy to get a clean, close shave. $1, plus tax.

this E

before

this!

YARDLEY OF LONDON~ INC •

VanlieY proclucW Tor Amorloa are creolod In EtGIMII ..... llnllflod In the U.S.A. from the oriGinal EnQIJII fonllvfM, eomblninQ imPOrttd and do-I~ Yanlley of London, Inc., 61!0 Fifth Avenue, N.Y.C.

Page 4: ·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are ther . s~udent

-· * * Wake Forest College • •

WINSTON-SALE!tl, N. C., MONDAY, l\IARCH 18, 1957

Politics, Platform·s And Plans Before the candidates are named platforms can generalize about

and the si:gns are painted Old Gold strengthening the honor systein and would like to get in a few words establishing some sort of Phi Beta

Kappa for business students, . and ab,out. th~ upcoming political cam- everyone ·will stay happy. pa'ign. As we have contended pre- But iust in case some candidate vio'usly in thesetcolumns, student gov- should have a worthwhile idea-and ernment stands on the grink of be- if this someone is willing to ·break a coming something worthwhile. Not 19:qg-standing tradition of campus every challenge has been met this ;Q:~Q~itics--we hope he'll give our sys-. year; not every office-holder has tern a try. If his plan-whatever it' shown any concern for the duties of ma:y be-is good enough to get him his office. some extra votes, he'll have a chance

But there have heen inpications tQ carry it out and give student gov­that pro·gress is possible and that per~ · ·'f!fffment an extra boost toward the sons on both the student and faculty power it should be. leve-l~ .. -are interested • enough in the ·_ And if ·the pla·n doesn't pull any workmgs of student government to votes he'll at least have the satis­make t~at progress possible. The :facti~n of being able to say what so faculty' is listening and. not_ always · · immov~ble. J.ust last week it respond-ed. to a 'request- by the Inter-Frater­nity Council that a reading · da.y be established-something that · h a s been in political platforms for years.

And that brings us to the matter of platforms. \Ve recently looked over last year's proposal in the hope of making a report on how well the Campus and Student Parties have ac­complished what they promised. We found almost nothing concrete in the platforms; they -..vere apparently written with uncertaintv and non­commitment as their goals.

Everyone talks about mud-slinging, party loyalties, hero-balloting and all the other faults of campus politics. "What we're looking for is the candi­date-and the party-who will take a step toward changing things. Some­time between now and April 16 we want to hear just one candidate take a bold stand on some issue or an­nounce his plan for a project he knows he can carry out.

We are waiting- ea·gerly for some politician tc say "I'll ride the Athle­tic Department until every student gets a decent seat!" or "Here's how we can make the Homecoming Dance an all-campus affair and a successful one."

We probably shouldn't really ex­pect any sort of campai~n like the one suggested above. Candidates, after all, are usually too busy think­ing ·about banne.rs and dormitorv visits ·to bother about what t"ey'll be doing after election day. _Party

The Averages Seven of Wake Forest's 10 social

fraternities fell below the all-men's · avera·ge of 1.270 du:dng the fall se­mester, according to the report of the faculty Committee on Fraternities.

Fraternity averag'es also were com­piled last week at nearby Duke Uni­versity and N. C. State College. And a comparison proves quite embarras­ing for tqe \'7ake Forest frat man. 1 At Duke 17 of the University's 19 fraternities 'were above the all-men's standard. Furthermore the all-frater­nity average was considerably higher than the all-men's mark.

At State, all but one of the school's 17 fraternities placed above the all­men's average. And 10 groups sur­passed the all-fraternity average, which. in this case too, was hi'gher than the all-men's average.

All fraternities regard high scho­lastic attainment among their pri­mary objectives. At these two schools, this obiective is actually fulfilled­as evidenced by the above-average work of the fraternity man.

But it seems Wake Forest frater­nities are slipping far below that which is expected' of them.

The all-men's ratio improved l;:~st fall. We hopP. to ·see the fraternity. avflrage at least match it in the sprin~.

-B. c.

Yes, But Whose Athletics? (From The Winston-Salem Journal)

· The slashed tires at State College last Thursday night, the broken windshields, overturned cars, pro­fanity and open disrespect for offi­cers of the law do not add up to a very pretty picture. Riots seldom are pleasant to look at. And they seem especially ugly when they erupt at the level of intelligence usuallv as­sociated with, a college campus. ·

• 1 HQwever, stuff-shirted outl~age or

pious preaching from these quarters will hardly make the State Co liege boys rue their ;deeds·. or mend ·their ways. That's a job best left to the government. Anyway, the b·oys who were fined and given suspended Gen­tences for their part in the riot no doubt learned a lesson for them­selves. Anybody who tries to take the law into his own hands is apt ·~o get burned.

Out of the incident, thou'gh, -there bas come the genu of a thought worth pondering a little.

Apparentlv the whole thing at State :;;tarted \Vhen students became irked because cars of fans attending the Atlantic C o as t Conference basketball tournament blocked en­trances to student parking lots. That within itself seems a relatively minor

LLOYD PRESLAR Editor

misdeed, certainly a common one. Motorists, frantic for a parking space at some big event, are likely to _leave their cars in the first spot they can find, no matter how much trouble they cause others. And traffic offi-

_,cers, many times too few for the traf­fic, are often hard put to keep up with where and how everybody is parking.

Yes, the l1og parking the other night was an. infringement on f;tate students' rights, and obviously they felt it strongly. It could have been, in a \vay, the same sort of feeling Wake Forest students had last fa1l when they protested their seating at Bowman Gray Stadium. They said tl-iat alumni and others were given all the p-ood seats, while they were relegated to sections close to the end zone ..

It all makes you wonder a little if, in our growing enthusiasm for col­lege athletics, we have usurped the place of the student. It's still his team, after all. It's still his campus. We're still only the interested visitors, sub­ject to the rules and courtesies of our host.

There must have been times lately, though,when students have been ,made to feel that it's the other way around.

JOHN WAGSTER Business Manager

Founded January l<i, 1916. as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold end Black is published each Monday during the school year exceRt during examination and holi­day periods as directed by the· Wake Forest Publications Board.

• BILL CONNELLY, Managing Editor JO BUTLER, Circulation 1\-lanager

EDITOIUAL STAFF: Dottie Braddock, Vicki Brinegar, Bob Demsey, Charles Duncan, Rob~ ert Fitzgerald, Leon Gatlin, Bob Goerlich, Ann Griffin, Mark Hawthorne, Carter Hedrick, Edie Hutchins, Ann Julian, Hannah Miller, Reta Peoples, Charles Richards, Earl Shaw, Jim Turner, Fred Wardlaw, Margie Woodall:

BUSINESS STAFF: Darlene Herman, Billy Powell, David Rawley, Joe Richardson, Ginny

.,Stephens, Gerald Taylor, Roland Thomas, Anne Torrey, Sue Weathc1·s.

CIRCULATION STAFF: Libby Finch, Jea­nette Haywood, Barbara Hill, Jane LewiS', Penny May, Joyce Odom, Judy Rice, GayneUe Walker, Reid Crocker, Barbara Williams. .,.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Intercollegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Winston-Salem, N. C.

Offices In Reyno Ida Hall 225·227 Telephone PArk 5-9711 P. 0. Box 7567

Extension 215 Reynolda Branch Winston-Salem, N. C.

By Jane Aycock ·Dr. Speas was praiSing .the

basketball team · the other day in P.hysics' class. -- ·

''Yes sir," the ·gOOd professor concluded, "I'd sure like to have Jackie . Murdock. for a wat<:h. charm!"

'---.--Mr~. · O'Brien

had this poetic notice tacked. on the gtrl!j' tin board~ with two SlDaU · white. gloves· nailed alongside:· .

:•s 0 m e little kitten· has lost her mitteri.s and

· · doesn;t. k n ow where to find them: ·; ·. ; ·--

.:.•wm ~pu pl~B:se tell tier <where they' are?" . . --. . : .·

' f I , •,

One aspirlng young. male :~litl~ -cian is all ready for elections tbis

. · ~!iiig, :a'e :Sen:t off,- and -·got: -a~ -•<tgpooner's ··nc.ense" , so· he' could 'get t~e coed :vote •• ~ :

' • \ . '._ • J·· ••

, ·- The .~ollege Choir 'wa.S having some" out-of-town: gU.esta Thu_rsda-i from a neli.r-b}<flchool. PrO'C Me.; .. Donald suggest~ thtit ·both iroubs·· meet ·together for dinner ,at the cafeteria.

"What are you trying to do.'' - inquired a tenor, "kill off oul'

competition?"

A senior boy was tryiiig' to ap:. pear. studious by ca.rcyi.ng five books around with him every MondaY!. Wednesday and Fl'iday.

''Areri't you impresSed?" he asked a f-riend.

_:----__...:-------, --' · "Nio', those .are .the same courses

you've been taking since your, freshll)-an year."

Cognito _Urges College Be 'Big-Time' School

By CHARLES RICHARDS "We must not lose .sight of our

goal," said I. N. Cognito la.&t week. "The bru>ketbi:l.ll season is over, but Wake Forest must make its place in the world .. It's up to the . baseball team now."

·The second-yea.r man said he wanted to make one thing clear before the athletic sea.son is over ..

''There is .some confusion aboUJt the university-type organization used here.'' he said. ''Let it be un­derstood that the two cars were given to the Department of Ath­letics. But it is also important to know· that they will be used by the ·Department of Football.

· "That's because there are so few coaches in that department that they need ca.rs to maintain contact with the many many stu­dents enrolled in that part of the university."

Has Personal PrQblems ;But I. N. Cognito was .not so

British Actor Visits Campus

An Englishman visiting the campus Friday iill-pressed a num­.ber of students with his reading ability and knowledge of Shake­speare.

Daniel Moynihan, a member of the London Old Vic Company, England's classical theatre, was in Winston-Salem visiting friends.

While here he gave readings at Salem and Wake Forest. He also watched "Male Anamil," a pro­duction by the Pierrettes at Sal­em and the Wake ·Forest theater's dr~ss rehearsal of ''Pajama Game."

While here Friday he held two discussion periods with students and faculty. Professor James Wal­ton, director of the theatre here, sai-d: he ,thought- ''Mr. MoynihiiJI. knew what he was talking about when he spoke of the theatre."

The Englishman gave his opin­ions on acting theories and the

· place of classical works in the theater today.

L_etters (All letters to the editOr must be signed; names will be with­held on request.)

Senior Has Maxim Regarding Freshmen To the Editor:

Freshmen are 11lways :freshmen, whether jn law school or under­graduate school.

John Roberts Senior Class :

concerned with big things like football last week. He had per­sonal prot.·lems ..

''I have been cdticized for using the tei!'lll 'university' when refer­ring to Wake Forest," he said. He went on to explain, "Although the tobacco companies and local news­papers have not .officially recogniz­ed us as such, we are big-time. And I warllt to be the first to give Wake Forest the credit it de­serves.

''Since w·e have as much to of­fer as Duke Univ-ersity, the Uni­versity, of Chicago and Yale Uni­versity, I think we should. be as highly recognized as they.

''Wny, I'm sure we could beat the University of Chicago's. foOot­ball team."

liis Rights Questioned Cognito's right to give advice

and 0$1inions has also been ques-· tioned. In reply, he has said, ''Stu­dents spend hours every day· listen­ing to scholars say things w~thout b~i.s. and they accept those ·things as facts just because they must be repeated on test papers. '

..-'Students are not testect on what I say," he continued. "They, are not even asked to believe what I .say. <But they1 usually are. in­telligent enough to do so any­way. I only ask that theY' read. what I have •to say."

The y_oung expert on student affairs was asked to comment on the government situation on the campus now.

Student-Not A Coed "I am not a coed. I am a stu­

dent," he said. "Theref~re, I am under student governmen:t and the Constitution.

''Ftuthenn.ore," he continued, "I have nothing to do .with WGA. As I have just asse1'ted my right to express my o:pi.."lions, I also deny another the right to keep me from speaking for any period of time."

The political problems of Cog­nito increased rwhen he became

- eligible for graduation this June. "I will not be able to accept any Sltudent positions," he said.

Someone suggested that the Col­lege might wish to retain him as an adVisor. "No," he said, "I rath­er think they'll get someone from Duke."

Car Would Help But Cognito added later, "If

tflhe university would give me a five-ye-ar contract and a new car I might help out in running the place.

"I particulal"ly would like to be · connected with the Department of ExtraclllTicular Aetiviltlies. In a. liberal arts ·school like -this these professional phases of Wake For­est are so practical and specializ.. ed.

. ''What we need around here is some training instead of so much edU~tion."

Campus Party -.Sets· Delega~es To Convention

(Continued from page_ ,D , ,, .. _, . ' . . ~· . . ' . . . ..... -':: ':"""'"

Bob Hartsell, Lloyd Preslar;· Sty­ron Harr.is, Larry Ingle; David Hirano, Oscar Jones, David Foster· and Leon Gatlin. · :

West Dormitory coeds-Dottie Braddock, Reta Peoples and Lynn Laughrun.

East · Dormitory coeds---...'1\Iarth Lou Haywor:th, Banbara Hill and Mary Elise Bridger.

Delta .Sig delegates had nO't · been chosen Friday, but will be 'picked bef~re party meetings 'be­gin.

Began In 1951 The Campus Party has been coni­

posed rYf only four fraternities .since .the .present political system began in 1951. At that time, four ·gr(}ups tpulled out of the old Pro­gressive Fraternity Party.-

Six fraternities, including Delta Sig:ma, then f-ormed tli"e Student Party. But the Delta Sigs went inactive that -year, leaving five ·groups :in the Student organi2;ation and If our· in the Campus Party.

Moravian Will Speak The Rev. Jay Hughes, pastor of

H(}me Moravian Church of Win­ston-Salem, will speak tomOrrow at 7 p. m. at a meeting of Cullom Ministerial . Conference in Wingate Hall. ·

Riflemen Set Match Wake Forest's rifle team Satur-­

day will be host to marksmen from ROTC units at N.-C. State College and the University of Maryland in a shGulder-to-shoulder match. at the d~le range in the. Gymn.a.s-ium.

In ~egislaturre

, Dr. Earp and-~ .. Brown were impatiently awaiting the elevator· in the basement of· bhe Li:bratir.· They kept pushing the buzzer. l:iut nothing happened. After what seemed like a long 'time,. the· door ·of the· elevaJtor ·opened, and ·a bearded 'KA .Stepped· out. .

~·well!" exclaimed Dr. Earp -aS he studied t:he young man~s faCe. "I kne'W these elevators were slow-but I didnt lolow they, w~re. that .slow!" · ·

- ' The· stu~e~ts:~o'r .:~('~~~'iin:'~~t freshman EngJlsn were trYm~':-bo persuade ,their professor just to give them a cheek for lni.d-oomest-, er.

"For how much?." 'the prof-essor asked drily.

"Are you prepared for the pop we'l'e going to have today?" the coed asked a fellow student.

''Sure, I am~- Why, I'll make a. 100 ·wdthou,t even going to class!'' he confiden~ly bra.gged. .

''How in the world could you possibly do that?" she asked.

"Because you've got :me confus­ed with my twin brother. l'm not in your class."

And he really does .have a twin, tt wasn't just. wishful thinking. .

The campus barbershop still hasn'.t learned. They cut one boy's · hair · so short .on top that his friends have started calling him Yul Brl·itmer. ·

It seems that the Adminstration is •tightening down on. the rules ab-out "not having food in <1ne's xoom." For, after all, food at• tracts worms and bugs.·'

Several of the gi'l"ls have been complaining loudly ·aoout ·the 1m­reasonableness of it· all, but' the boys really have· a better ·a:rgu.: ment. · ,, '

After all, by the time th-e ~onns crawl all the way up to the fourth floor, they.',re too tired <to eat .any-' thin!!' anyway.

2 Have No Absences. Two Student Legislature mem_­

'bers, juniors George Braswell and Mary Britt, have perfect atten­cance records for the 13 meetings >(}f the Legislature so far this year.

Each of the other 21 legislators has at least one absence, and S(}me of the a:bsences -run as high as five. .Some members, however, have been excused from absences .by a special Absence Committee set up in the Legislature.

A-ctually, 15 meetings were scheduled by the Legislature. On: two occasions not enough mem­bers :were present , to constitute a quorum.

Absences Listed

\ Following is a list of the Jnem­bers and their a:bsences:

(Party designations, where kn(}wn, are as of the Jas·t election. A:bsences from the JWn-quorum meetings are -included and: the figures are taken from the roll book of the Legislature.)-

N(} absence!!I-Bra.Swell (SP jr), Britt (SiP jr).

On-e absenee-Jean Hobby (fr), Paul Killian (CP sr); Don Scalf (SP sr), Earl Shaw (CP soph).

Tw-o absences-Do-ttie Braddock (CP jr), Mrs. Joyce Broadwell Kingman (CP sr), .Mrs. Ann lGt­chen Le.e ( SP sr), Bill Williamson (CP fr).

3 Through 5 Three absen~es--Joh11 Cella (CP

soph), Ken. Hill (CP s.r), Bill Starling (OP sr), Bill Tucker (SP sr). TGm Ward (CP fr).

Four absences-Dickie Newsom (SP jr), Dickie Odom (SP soph), Walt Ward (CP sr); Joe Weston (CP soph).

Five absences--George Austin (CP jr), Marlene McLamb (CP soph), R(}land Thomas (CP jr).

The following have had one absence excused:

·Shaw, Miss Braddock, 1\Irs. Lee, Cella, Hill, GrUbbs, , Odom, Miss McLamb and Thomas.

Phone

I I•

T

Page 5: ·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are ther . s~udent

.the lay in

:... -t·,

fessor have

wak.h.

iVher.e

:lOliti:- . s tbis . .­~ot a· could

avini· rsdiii ·.M,c7·:. roup.s ~ the

do,"' our

> ap­five

every ·iday.

he

urses your·

"· were vator· Tatir.· ·.~t what door

1d ·.a

l>as faee._ were were_

.,'~,~:~~~ n~.Of: tg":':io ;t to lest-

essor

pop the

ke a. !SS!"

you t. lfUS• ~not

;win, lg •.

still XJy's·

his him

Ltion :ules Jne's

at-

been un­

. the rgu-

)l'll'l3

urth any-

jr),

:fr), :calf

:lock well K.it­lSOn

(CP Bill (SP

SGnt ph), ;ton

stin (CP

one

Lee, diss

i•

{•

~ f :, ~

.. , .. ;_ :. ;, . • • ' •' • :, '.• ,, ' • • ' ' : ' I ~ '

' ·~

, '\' , , I. , - -, ;·_,: ',, : • . 1--· -.-. ; ;· :~

,: Unity A·nq·lndliStry-

'

Old Sai~Jn 'lias Had Long Life . .

(Rober& Fitzgerald con~mues of German ingenuity. in the center'· of the town the his series ·of articles concerning_ The ·early Moravians kept settlers built· a combined mar-points in and around· Winston- complete records of their work ket and firehouse. Salem.)• · and progresS." The people who It was not long before Salem -

By. ROBERT FITZGERALD. made up 'the village were spe- became a center of trade and a Salem Villa-. had a iong cially-picked laymen from the prominent travellers' stop. The

.,~. M-oravian settlement in Beth- tavern-which can be 'seen to-life. -In fact, it never .did quite lehem, Penn. They were sent day-was constructed in 1784. die. Many descendants~ of the · to the Wachovia ·settlement .to · Served , -2 Classes Moravian Germans who_ came h h I d'

. • d preac to t e n Ians and ·the LI'ke· m. ost tavern· s of 1·ts day, · to' Salem in 1766 remam to ay 1 1 ' f h 1 h' to ear Y. Negro saves.- l•t was constructed to an~mmo-to tell. the-.sbl!Y-.O t e r Is ry. ~

And. tpat'_ s~ry is closely re- The Motavian Church had · date twD classes of travellers. lated to the story_ Gf Notj;~. Ca.r~ purchased 100,000 acres of land The south side colder and loss at-

. ·lina today; it is B-'•story of um- from Lord Granville, one of tractive, -Was kept for common ty :and· industry. . . . - ~.North . Carolina's eight proprje- travellers, and the north" side · In . .-1950. a number of Winston- tors. This was the Wachovia was reserved :for the well-tcH!o. Salem · citizens got .together_ and tract. ' Reserving northside accommoda-

. decided that America should not . Bethabara Came First tions meant having a private forget_ her ·early'.:«Jays ,$S ·they In· -1753 the ·first settlers bed and being serv'ed with china were lived in. Salem.· Old Sal- made temporary abode at Beth- instead of peuter ware. em Inc. was:- foi:uled, . and the ahara, seven miles ·. north, of The Boys' School was erected village is beiri:g.·restored.-· · Salem. ·Thirteen years .later . in 1794. Boys made their homes

· Of .the 60 buildings that once . .- Salem was- founded. The first . • there and learned a trade and lay ·poocefully. on Wachovia hill-<- buildings -erected were ·the re- . how to live a settler's life. Car­side south of downtown, 40 re- ~:·gular mid-European brick ·struc- penters, a gunsmith;. a clock-main standing. Eight have been tures-plain, square and strong amker, ' printers · and others . restored to their. original form, lif~ the Moravians themselves. took the boys into their homes and···two .are in the: proces~. of Most of the building, materials when they ~ere ready to. liecome ·being restored.. ~-were, p"roduced "by 't1ie . .-settlers;. apprentices. ·usually the·. trades-

- · Open Today for members ·of the Bethlehem men used sections of their homes· - Three of the . buildings-.,-the. Chur~h had been careful to for their work. . : . Boyrs School, the _Tavern an_d send down only the best work- Judging from the remains of the John. Vogler House--are e1·s. their labors, the settlers were ope_~jo trl~- p_ublic::a~. examples The Yillage WaS laid out in evidently never idle :for long. of :*-··waY.. 9f'.'life that. once was~ the form of a great wheel with ·And because of their industry These ·and tlie Wachovia Mu- _ 16 blocks running from south they lived b~tter than many fam-seu~' are- fiile~-' wit1i the ~;r9ofs . to north. Near. the spring pump .ilies of today.

B{r'd-Watching - I '

-Witll.Buie ByTomBuie

THERE- HAS BEEN much dissatisfaction among ·students

· this ·year,. ·especially the upper-, classmen, There have even been whispers of an underground movement to return to the ~ld campus. Because: of this, many students. are . not aware that there. are: changes taking place here •which ··promise ·,to become Traditions ·::.:.._- Traditions which will fully r!i!place those which

· '\vere prese_nt on the old campus. Now, for the first time, male

students are gathered en masse in dormitori-es - dGrmitories, moreover, which are veritable fortresses.

It Is evident that a great deal of foresight was possessed by those who planned the living quarters for men; anyone with an eye for functional design will recognize that they were built by men who were in total sym­pathy wjth sueh wholesome ac­tivities ~s riots, water - fights and panty raids.

THIS HAS HA.D its p.art in creating an embryonic form of tradition among Wake Forest students. In fact, one has but to stroll around the - plaza or through the dormitories to see and hear eviden<!1!s of -.the new spirit awakened in the heart's of students.

Wending his way through the sodden 'plastic- bags left over :from last night's strategic exer­cis-e, one realizes. that students are beginning to take advantage of the opportunities on' the new campus.

At last the Wake .Forest stu­dent can feel free of the stigma of being a part of a small and relatively sedate school. At last he can resemble the classical conception of the College·. Man.

BUT LET US look at some of the habits and attitudes which are coming to typify the Wake Forest student:

Water fights-Here is an an­joyable -pastime: There is· no thrill quite equal to that of r-e­turning from a _ date'· wear.ing your new suit and suddenly find­ing. yours~l:f the target of wild­

. ly whooping students clad in

This is good. ·But let us be­ware; alr-eady forces are at work in an attempt to de.stroy the well-deserved complacency of the Wake Forest student.

THERE IS ONE more in­novation which should be in­cluded. This is the ·religion of High Fidelity Sound Reproduc-tion. . _ _

Many students haYe become proselyt~s of· the new' sect;- and_:. worship services are usually held from 12 midnight until,­sometime -in the morning. But it is the Early Morning High Fidelity .Listeners Association that has ·taken the lead in the-

. new sect.

.. Beca~se of the Associat-ion, and because of the unique de­sign of .living quarters, you. can now drift off to sleep at 3 a. m. to the. soothing strains- of Shos­takovitch's F if tn Symphony · played at 110 decibelS: or-:to the

-lilting melody Gf FatS Domino's pastoral "Saturday Morning."

Who ,will deny that this is a step in the right direction, a step toward the adaptation of Culture and Art among stu­dents?

* * * These are just a few Gf the

changes taking place. at the new Wake Forest, but .they will suf­fice to demonstrate the adapt­ability of the student t6 his conditions. And they will prove to the most pessimistic that the student is indeed beginning to find himself in a New World.

Monday and Tuesday-"5 STEPS TO DANGER"

with Sterian Hayden & Ruth Roman

also "REVOLT OF MAMIE

STOVER" with Jane Russell

Wednesday and Thursday­"LOVE ME TENDER"

with Eh·is Presley & Richard ,Egan

also "BENEATH THE 12 MILE

REEF'~ with Robert Wagner

_ ,und.eiwear: _or· raincoats.- and pelting you_ with plastic bags. filled -with water.

Starts Friday-. ".MEN IN WAR"

MARGARET TINE and LONNIE SMITH inspect Old Salem

Bursar Asks Students Pay Fall Deposits

Each student now enrolled .. in school who intends to t<eturn -!n Septe~ber must- pay· a reser­vation deposit of $25 April 22-23, -the Bursar's Office announ- -eed last ,week.

Thi~ deposit, which is credited to the student's cotlege charges in the fall, may be. paiQ. Gnly·on the specified dates.

Pre-regis-tration for the fall semester · is scheduled May 2-9 and_ no studept will .he allowed to register ·unless the deposit is- paid. Each -. student will re­ceive, a let*r about April 15 giving details as to _the deposit.

"There ~as- some misunder­standing about this last year," Assistant Bursar J. B. Cook Jr. ·said, "a~d we wish plenty of notice to be given."

Orders Prepared To Take Out NEW ASIA RESTAURANT

(Incorporated) Winston-Salem, N. C.

Our Chinese Family Dinners are the talk of the Town

W. D. Tarn, Manager Phone 4-1356 315 W. Fifth St.

FOR THE BEST IN

Program To l~nprove Food Service· Begins

A student-faculty "trouble­shooting" committee last week was given ·assurances of im­.proved,, f~ services on campus and better seats for -home foot­ball games in the fall.

Studies by tha conunittee re­vealed tl)at ·prices in the Col­lege Chleterial are approximate­ly the same as other non-profit establishments. But other stu­

. dent complaints as to service and menu selection were pre­sented to Mrs. Ruby Sheridan, director of food service's.

A ·program to determine just what students want in the cafe­teria has been begun by Mrs. Sheridan, and the Soda; Shop ·will remain open on a trial basis each night until 11:30,-beginning April S.

Football Seats Athletic Director W. H. Gib­

son assm~ the committee, ap­pointed by the student legisla­ture and faoulty executive com­mittee, that football seats next year will begin on the 50-yard line and extend to the goo.l.

While the committee found the cafeteria lead meats "an average of 10 cents 'cheaper'' than downtown restaurants, and vegetables, salads and desserts

"generally reasoi!able" it called . attention to several faults in. selection of food.

"Fault is found with the choice of lead· items,"- they re­ported. The group felt "not enough solid items were pre- -sented" and that there is too much emphasis on c_;~sseroles and such items.

_. Plans a Steps Mrs. Sheridan plans to take

the following steps to determine what items the students desire:

(1) Check on what items the students buy most consistently.

(2) H.ave forms prepared, with extensive list of foods in­cluded, for students· to select dishes they prefer and thereby provide a guide to be followed in preparing menus. This will be done within the next two weeks.

(3) Efforts will be made to improve table cleaning, gen~ral appearanc£- and other asp_ects of service in both the cafeteria· and soda shop.

VARSITY SHELL SERVICE

. Cherry St. at Polo Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C.

Phone 5-9231

THE COLLEGE INN RESTAURANT Half Way BeLween T~wn And Campus

On Reynolda Road

Only then can you realize the real value of the balconies run­ning around the dormitories. 3

Panty raids - Wake Forest has unblushing pride in the fine generalship exhibited by some ·of her sons. Despite polke,inter­vention and exploding :flash­bulbs these courageous souls pushed forward to procure an object which has become as sig­nificant to them as was the Holy Grail to the Knights of the Round Table. -

What better training could one want before entering military service? And with weekly panty raids, students would be assured of a liberal education-in the finest meaning of the 'words.

GRIPING-THIS promises to devehpe into a fine art here. Never before has there been such concerted action by a stu~ dent body, never before such sharing of beliefs as has been exhibited the last f-ew months .

It is possible that griping will become a tradition which· will enable the student body to re- · discover and maintain the unity which it has feared lGst.

Head-in·th-e-sandism - This is not new to Wake _Forest, for many students have long been proud of the fine old philosophy which allows them to spend their four years· in absolute isolation from the outside world.

with .. Robert Stack .. and Aldo Ray

"GREAT DAY IN THE MORNING"

CENTER THEATRE

SEE

·uNDERWOOD JEWELE-RS

106 W. 4th St.

When Selecting Your DIAMOND AUTHORIZED

leensake DIAMOND DEALER

PRICED

From $50.00 up WATCHES

Elgin-Hamilton-Bulova Tissot-Eterna-matic

From $33.75 up COMPLETE WATCH AND

JEWELRY . REP AIR DEPARTMENT

Use Our Convenient Charge Account or Layaway Plan

THE REAL

STORY .REALLY

TOLD FOR THE

FIRST TIME!

Stripped of All

Fiction, Legend,

Lies!

STARTS ·SUN. MARCH 24th

Carolina·· Theatre

OLD :GOLD AND BLACK . Monday, ~larch 18, 1951' PAGE FIVE

. CAROLINA HOTEL BARBER SHOP Individual Hair Stylists - It ·Pays To Look Well

LOWER LOBBY CAROLINA HOTEL- PHONE 2-3615 OPEN DAILY 8 A. M. - 5:45 P. M; - SAT. 5:30 P. M.

, Reznick's fore Records Jazz- Classical· Popular- String

Musical Instruments And Supplies,-- . C- G. CONN BAND INSTRUMENTS

GIBSON STRING I~STRlJMENTS

440 N.,lliherly·SI.-- ., ·.Dial2-1443 . ~·~·: '-"i.~

J C~ARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED

''·

TOWN SJEAK HOUSE 107 Lockland Ave.

Phone 2-0005 \

Winston-Salem's Finest Restaurant

Famolis For Quality Food And Service

(Author of "Bcrefoot Boy With. Cheek," eto.)

ADVICE ON ADVISORS

Recently I made an extensive tour of American cam­puses; interviewing students and selling mechanical dogs, and one of the most frequent complaints I heard from undergraduates was, "My faculty advisor doesn't really care about me."

Everywhere I went I heard this same cry. (Indeed, at one university I found 15,000 students jammed in the field house chanting it a cappella.) But I am bound to say, dear friends, that you are wrong. Your faculty advisor doe.<J care about you, The trouble is; he doesn't know you. And no wonder! How do you expect him to know you when you see him. once or so a semester?

I •

Get to be friends with your faculty advisor-like, for example, Alpine R. Sigafoos, a sophomore in timothy and silage at Texas A. 8t 1\L

Alpine R. Sigafoos appeared one night in· the living quarters of his faculty advisor (whose name, by a cu1:ious· coincidence, was also Alpine R. Sigafoos).

"Good evening, sir," said Student Sigafoos. "I am come so that you may get to know me better and thus help me solve the vexing problems that trouble me."

"And what are thqse three packages you are carry­ing?" asked Advisor Sigafoos.

"This," said Student Sigafoos, holding up the first of the three packages, "is a carton of Philip Morris Ciga­rettes, which come in long size or regular, and without which I never stir. It is, sir, a smoke beyond compare-. full of fresh, natural, unfiltered flavor that delights the taste, salves the soul, and hums the whole world into

-one long vista of peace and greenery. Try one, sir."

"Thank you," said Advisor Sigafoos, lighting a Philip Morris Cigarette. He puffed appreciatively for an hour or two and then said, "And what is in the other packages you are carrying ? "

"I am rat·li"er a complex fellow," said Stu'dent Sigafoo~. "and I don't expect that you will get to know me in a hurry. So," he said, holding up his second pack­age, "I have brought my bed-roll."

"I see," said Advism· Sigafoos, not entirely pleased. "An~ what ·is this third package?"

"Well sil·, I know that occasionally you will be busy with other matte1·s and will therefore be unable to spend _ time with me. So I have brought along my gin rummy partner, 'i>Valter M. Handzlik."

lp the next two years Advisor Sigafoos, living cheek­by-jowl with Student Sigafoos, got to know all of the lad's personality traits, his hopes, his fears, his drive>;, his quirks, his aspirations. At the end of that time, armed with true understanding, Advisor Sigafoos con­cluded that Student Sigafoos's basic trouble was that he was not really college material.

So Advisor Sigafoos got Student Sigafoos a job with ~he North Star Hockey Puck Corporation where today he Is head of the puck-packing department and u happy man.

Advisor Sigafoos is happy too. He has time again to pursue his studies of T1'ichobatraclms robn.~tus, the hairy ft·og. At night he plays gin rummy with Walter M. Handzlik. -

@Mm< Shulman, 1957 Our advice to stndents-and to /acu1t;y too and to an~·botly else roho's looking /or a sr11eetheart of a smoke-is to try ne1o _natural Philip iJlorris, made by tlte sponsors of tltis column.·

-~

Page 6: ·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are ther . s~udent

; -~

PAGE SIX Monday, Mardi 18, 1957 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

~eacs ~ho Are Greeks By PLATO BARWICK

With the Ides ·of March drawing near, fraternity men are turning to the spring formals which are now gettin·g underway. Several of the fraternities will car­ry memories of their sweetheart balls. with them dur-ing ·che spring holidays. ·

. . Delta Sigma Phi Fteld Rerresentative Ken Knopp visited the chapter last week.

Wlth Knopp were several Delta Sig pledges from N. C. State, where a Delta Sig group was formed recently.

Ginger Greene 'a freshman coed pinned to Olin Broadwav ·was sei:enaded Wednesday,Ly Beta Lambda. • '

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler ·.- Theater Sets New.One-Act Play Tryouts

The College Theater has an­nounced tryouts today and tomor­row ·ror four new one-act labora­tory productions.

Production ootes for the plays has been set for Thursday and FJ'iday, April ll-12. They will be directed by1 foaT students - Bill McDuffie, Linda Willard, Marge Reyn<Jlda Park was ~e scene of a weiner roast Friday night. An

informal party at the house followed. • . Saunders ~·and Dinah Gattis. Plans are und-erway for the traditional Delta Sig Sailors Ball

scheduled for April.

Kappa Alpha Bob Hedrick has been elected as the fraternity whip during the

spring political campaigns. A party was held in the chapter room Friday. The chapter selected Charles Snipes as captain of the fraternity

volleyball team. ' Kappa Sigma

A bermuda party was held at the house Friday night. Ben Aver:itte recently pinned Joy J3urw.ell of :woman's College.' John Eal'!e has been named alun~ni -seaetary :for the chapter.

Lambda Chi Alpha · H. F. Wilkins, Winston-Salem freshm!ln, and Joe Jack·McEvory,

Waynesville freshman, recently pledged. .

The weekly pledge-brother dinner was held Tuesday. Ed Christ-. Bapti•st Group Urg·. es man, fratern'ity faculty advisor, V.·as the speak~r.

Clara Hunt of Winston-Salem, pinned to Harvey Eden, and coed Beth Hurst, pinned to Bob Musg1:ave, were serenaded Wednesday. I

Brothers and pledges attended the Colonial Conclave at Chapel H • h p f s I e Hill during the week end. Lambda Chi chapters of North Carolina tg er · ro a aries and Virginia, were l'epresented. Theta Tau official delegates were

Eight male actoi':S and six coeds wdi1 be needed in the four pro­ductions. Tryouts today .are sche­duled for 4 to 6 :p. m. Tomorrow they will la~t from 3:30 until 5:30.

Three o! the plays are by Eu­gene O'Neill. The other is Tennes­see Williams' "'Illle Glass Men~-gerie." .

Williams' play will be directed t-y Miss Saunders. It requires two female and two male actors.

The O'Neill plays ai:e "Anna Christie,"_ "lie" and the "Home­coming" scene from ''Mourning Becomes Electra." McDuffie will direct "Anna Christie," which in­c~udes one female and two males.

Miss Willard will be in charge of "De," with a cast of one fe­male and two males. The ''Home­coming" scene will be directed by Miss Gattis, who is looking for two female and two male actors.

Bowen-Matthews . Mo~ors,. Inc.: YOUR DESOTO - PLYMOUTH DEALER

i~

Good Selection Of Used Cars

638 West Fourth St; , Phon~ 2-03'71

Gins· FOR AU OCCASIONS . WATCHES·- DIAMONDS· SILVER

LUGGAGE • CHINA . GOLD JEWELRY FOR MEN AND WOMEN

410 North Spruce St.

EXPERT ,WATCH REPAIR SERVICE . \

MoP HAIL'S Thruway

S.hopping Ce~t!!l' .

SEPARK MUSIC COMPANY 620 W. FOURTH STREET

All Published Sheet Music And Boo~s

DISTRIBUTORS OF KING AND SELMER BAND INSTRUMENTS

Phone 3-2241

t

Johnny Cella and Freddy Turnage. Alumnus Bob Hayes recently visited the chapter.

Pi Kappa Alpha . Higher salaries for professors

at Wake Forest and the state's six other Baptist Colleges were recommended recently by a special committee of the Council on Chris­tian Education.

$8,222; for associate professors r---.... - .... ---------~ ;.==~=~~~==========~~~=~~~~==~I from $4,007 to $6,089; for assis· BARGAINS Sammy Stilwell and Dave Leopard, brothers at the University

of South Carolina, visited the chapter dm·ing the week end. Sigma Chi·

Delta Nu was host for the 'montHly meeting of the Winston-Salem alumni chapter Wednesday.,

Carol Jennette, chapter sweetheart, was serenaded Wednesday. The Robert E. Lee Hotel Ballroom was the scene of the~ annual

Sweetheart Ball Saturday night. Highlighting the evening was the crowning of the 1957 Sweetheart.

Sigma Phi Ensilon The Sweetheart Ball will be held in the Balinese Room of the

Robert E. Lee Hotel Saturday night. Bob Stafford has bC€n named pledge trainer. A visit with the High Point chapter will be highlighted by a

basketball game between the two chapters Friday afternoon. Theta Chi

Attending the Mason-Dixon Jubilee at Duke and the University of North Carolina during the week end were Jim Brown, Simon Do·wns, Boo Edison, .JetTy Keeter, Dan Lovelace Frank Medford Mike Price, Harvey Squires and pledge Dickie M:X,re. The Jubll~ :is the annual regina! convention of the Theta Chi chapters in North Carolina and Virginia.

Glenda Pressley, Meredith student escorted by Dan Lovelace, rep­resented Gamma Omicron as the regional Dream Girl at the conven­tion.

After studying salary scales in state-supported schools and con­sidering the national average, the committee reported that salaries at ·wake Forest are "somewhat below those paid in state insti­tution~."

The Council is· an agency of the Baptist State Convention and has its offices in Raleigh. On the reporting committee were James W. Mason, E. F. Mathis, W. J. Burton and James R. Lane.,

WF Pay Scales Pay scales here provide from

$4,800 'for an assistant professor to $8,0(}() in the fourth year of a full professor. These salaries are for 12 months, with summer school teaching required every other summer.

In North Carolina the average salary for a full professor in state institutiolls ranged from $4,900 to

Local Firm To Begin Learn-And-Earn Plan:

If Your Hair Is Naturally Wavy

~ ~ -=-~

~)~,~ . . . yet it needs just a little more cur 1 in some places- you should like the help you'll · g e t from a

A training program combining ·study with practical wo·rk ex­perience is planned by the College in co-operation with Sears Roe­b~c.K and Conrpany.

week by the Placement Of.fice, •dll enal)le a !Student .to gain experience in retail merchandising by work­ing 16 to 30 hours each week in the local Sears store while enroll­ed in Wake Forest.

I

The program, announced last

Flat-Tops and G. I. Haircuts our Specially.

5 Experienced Barbers Open 9 Till 9

LeVAN BROTHERS BARBER SHOP

Nearest Barber Sh~p to Campus Comer Polo and Cherry Sts. ·

Students chosen for the pro­g·ram will carry through a three­lEar period and rates of pay will increase each year the student is enrolled. · ·

It is designed to permit students ·to gain experience in the overall operation of: Sears, the largest retailing organization in the wo·rld.

Also tt will be a training ground for men ""ho may be prospective employees of Sears in the future.

Students interested in the pro­gram have been asked to contact Bonnie Wiggs, assistant director of the Pla.:::ement Office.

Silver ·seal Pin Curl .

Permanent

~he cost: $2.98 for material plus $2.00 for your sham:r:-<Jo and set.~ Haircut if you wish $1.75 additional. ___ ._, ,.

The HAIRDESIGNERS BEAUTY SALON

Dial 4-2411

WAKE fOREST LAUNDRY AND ClEANERS ·

OFFERS YOU THE

Quickest Service Available We Are Equipped To Give You The Best And Quickest

Service Available. Our Modern Laundry Is Located

For Your Convenience In the Basement Of The N. W. Men's Do:rmitory. Let Us Prove That We Can Give You COMPLETE Satisfaction.

QUALITY SERVICE AT REASONABLE PRICES

WAKE FOREST LAUNDRY

tant professors from $4,062 to $5,- IN UNREDEEMED 028; and for instructors from $3,- PLEDGES 420 to $4,201. These are for nine months. Typewriters

Recommendations of the com- R d" mittee suggested the College "con- a lOS tinue to be alert to the increase Luggage in salaries of teaching personnel · C in state institutions" and to "an- ameras ticipate the increases which seem Watches to be assured in the near future."

State Pays More Rings The figures for Wake Forest CJ thi

and for Meredith College in Ra- 0 ng leigh are approximately 30 per Guns cent below those paid in state institutions.

MONEY TO LOAN ON A:NYTHING OF VALUE

Committeemen also reported sal·· aries in the five two-year Baptist sch.ools to ·be "altogether inade-

quate." CAMEL Members of the committee also stated they felt low compensation for the services of professors p s· h could lead only to "teaching per- awn· op sonnel which would leave much to be desired." The quality of Home Of Low Prices

/

POLO GRILL And Restaurant

CORNJ!:R POLO ROAD AND CHERRY .ST. EXT.

Specializing In ,_· Steaks- Fried Chicken·- Seafoods

~ountryHam

WE ALSO SERVE THE BEST

Sandwiches And Short Orders instruction, they reported, would 16 E. 4th St. Phone 2-4470 be "adversely affected." :...-..;.;..-.;.;;..,;,;.;..._ .... .;;.;..-,-.;.;.;..;;.....: :.----------------------------1

'\ .J/ -~:: ,.,..~,

WHAT IS A POOR BIRO'S HOMH

A. £UOENE GRAVELLE. Parrot Garret MINNESOTA

WHAT IS A SLOVENLY FLOWER? ~

ROGER GROSS.

U, OF OREGON Sloppy Poppy

(SeE PARAGRAPH 8£/.0W) . ,..._ ___ _._.

BASIC TRAINING for R.O.T.C.' men. When the talk turns to tactics, remem­ber this: troops who don't get a Lt;~.cky • break soon become a Sole~n~ Column! Why? Any private c~ ·tell. yo~: Luckies ·outrank ·~mall when it 'comes to· taste~ You see, a Lucky is all cigarette . . • nothing but fine, mild, good-tastin~ tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better. On the double,. now! Light up a Lucky. You'll say it's the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!

Q . STUDENTS! MAKE $25 _ Do you like to shirk work? Here's s<Jme easy money -start Stickling! We'll pay $25 for every Sticlqer

"'"' we print-and for hundreds more that never get used. Sticklers are simple riddles with two.-word rhyming answers. Both words must have .the same number of syllables. (Don't do drawings.) Send _your Sticklers with your mime, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N.Y.

WHAT IS A MAN WHO PAWNS THE OLD fAMILY CHAIRi

···:·-:.-::·:·.:: DRYC£ NOLEN, , Rocker Hocker

OKLAHOMA A a II

WHAT IS A MAN WHO CLASSIFIES SNAKESi

J~D JACOBSON.

JOHNS HOPKINS Viper Typer

CIGAR-ETTES

·:···.· .

WHAT IS A HAUNTED WIGWAM?

BOB MCKINNEY

KANSAS

Creepy Tepee

WHAT IS A CHINESE BOAT WITHOUT ABOTIOMi

GENE MYERS, Sunk Junk LONG BEACH STATE COLL

Luckies Taste Better "IT'S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER ; • ; CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!

®A. T.Co. 9-.D'_~.~-·.- f'L ___ t;:?! ___ ----.-PRoDucT OF c/~ __ V~ AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARET'l'~

. (•

Smi~ of botl

~~fi~~i~l fancy r<

teams f~ .. Wake ·of mald

Yet tl \~ a new e

_, The ·v member: 'to enter

··\ Thing experiell

· terest a try.ing •

.fore the A big

;North ( salesma1 courage:

Barn Footb:

quarterl Phi Eps national Horn an

While \• lina's T

won th~ Tar I

week tl Nationa· more.th

The q meets· is fathers

1, - recognit

•'

I•

Last which , Wake a

The.! · of any c

one schc

Trac Coac~

are wor most of

The c if more received member

Senio dan's sq Ladner ence.

Amon and·sopl three h~

We cal and del

c. B G1

Cor, Bt 20 .

j

Tires,

' l.

Sp

an

Su

Cc

Page 7: ·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are ther . s~udent

... : ..

.•.

lCe: \

-

~~ 2-0371

''

-

t

\ I

: Ce~t~

' ..

It .

~

;

'AM?

y Tepee

ITHOUT

zkJunk

'. ' ..... '.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, March 18, 195,7 PAGE SEVEN

·By· CARTER HEDRICK ·,,

PiKA;s. Los~, 41-24 \ \

Swim .Tea~, Coach Laudecj For Efforts Bashful Ladies Capture Title

The 'unbeaten Bashful Ladies weren't timid at all Tuespay night as· they .ramped to a ;41·24 victpry

Sminiming. Coach Ralph Steele received the praises .over· Pi Kappa Alph~t for the all-of both swimmers and faculty Wednesday night at the campus intramural championship.

-first annual banquet of the Maritimers. Led by Hal King's 14 points, the · •t ·• • Independent champs turned the :: While neither the freshman nor varsr y swJmmers compiled a heat on the Fraternity king~ins · ':fancy record, the College cari be justly proud of the coach and in the scond half after command­teams for their efforts· this year. . . ' ' ing only 14-11 at intermission. The

· .. Wake Forest never had a· t~k team until this year and th~ odds' PiKA's previously were unbeaten. :.of maki~g a showing were heavily stacked against the Deacs·. Both squads literally smothered

Yet the tankmen splashed through the difficult season to begin opponents in their leagues· this •: a new era in Wake Forest athletics·. year, and both are stocked with

· · The varsity team. o:Perated throughout the year w.ith only four former intercollegiate and high ·members while the frosh had six. At least eight men are needed school starB~nton Gets

11 'to enter a meet on equal terms with the opposition. · Bob Benton, a fr~shman player .:~ Things· will _be better next year for the Deacons with a year of., here in 1955, followed King in the

experiem:e but coach Steele is to be congratulated for keeping in- Ladies'· scoring spree . with 11 · terest at ~ high pitch throughout the se~son. It's hard to keep points, while Bob Lawrence, a trying when the opposition is given forfeits jn half the events be- beaclet last year, contributed

. fore the meet begins. , . eight to the winning cause. A big morale booster during the year was former University of . Tops :for the PiKA's was Rex

_;North Carolina-swimmer Steve Osborne. ·O.sborne, a Winston-Salem McMillan who bucketed seven. points, while ila~y · mne~ ~cored

salesman, voluntarily attended practices and off~red tips and en- six and Charles Landen hit for. couragement. ' five. •

B. arne' s Honored NIT Play Actually the title contest . was ~ .; •· · . decided at the free throw line.

Footballer Bill Barnes received more honors last week. He and The Ladies sank 17 charity throws quarterback Charlie Carp-enter ~;ere chosen to the 1956 kll Sigma · and 12 field goals·, while the :frat Phi Epsilon fraternity team. The· squad, chosen by the f.raternity's men were ··-awarded only four national magazine, 1 also gave honorable mention to guarqs Jim points at tbe line and hit 10 bas-Horn and ;Bruce Smathers and quarterback Pete Barham. kets from the floor.

C Ch The Bashful Ladies whoop it up after their victory Tuesday night over ampus amps-- Pi Kappa Alpha for the All-campus intramural basketball championship.

Tennis Play Opens Here DePorter Named To Coach Netters

By BOB GOERLICH The Wake Forest tennis team

will open its season March 23 at · Clemson College.

The first -home match, to be played on the cotl.rts alongside Reynolds Gym., will be March 30 again"st Maryland.

Only three lettermen and several. reserves are returning from last year's squad which compiled a 6-7-1 record.

Coach Al DePorter has eight·­prospeets at present, ' but Gary Daniel, Spindale ju:ri:i.or, suffered a broken arm last >veek during practice. He will be out for about fh'e weeks.

The p,resent :roster lists Walter Conner, .Joe Burt, BOO Garren, Bill Allred, Bob Moure, Gary Daniel, Bill Heins, and . George Cox.

DePorter says "Practice is com­ing -al-ong slowly," but plans to .<':pick things us next week and be­gin to concentrate -on getting a s.tar;ting six ready, for our first meet."

The :netmen have scheduled nine matches to darte and six more are e:J..-pected to be added soon to round out a 15-game schedule.

The present schedule includes: While the Deacon- basketballers 'attempts to defeat North Caro- Fouls Hurt \• !ina's Tar Heels were futile in the ACC tournament, their efforts ' With the Ladies employing a

won the admiration of al( wh•o watched. · slow, deliberate style of play simi-

Back row, left :to right, are Hal Kilig, George Austin, Bobby Lawrenc~:, Doc Moser and Don :McNair; front row, Bob Benton, Dorrell ·Wilson, Monk Pittman and Bob Morgan. The Ladies finished the sea­son witlt an 11-6 rec•;,rd: (Photo by Larry Auatin)

March 23-Clemson, away; 30-Marylanct, home.

I•

l \(

. lar to the Deacon varsity, the Tar Heel coach Fran}< McGuire told newsmen in ·New York last PiKA's accumulated a number of

week that the Wake Forest squad would have won this· year's second half fouls that enabled the National Invitation Tournament if the Conference rules allowed winners to pull ahead in the :final more' tlU~:TI one tea"m to enter- post-season tou~aments. . minutes.

The questio·n of. allowing more than one team to enter the national Prize for the perfect season meets· is due to· come up at the Confei·ence's next meeting. The ACC will come at the end of the school fathers should allow more than one t_eam to gain further national year when the Ladies will receive

the all-campus trophy as well as , -recognition in the tournaments. · the Independent League award. 1

Last year Carolina, Duke and Wake Forest compiled .records Last year's all-campus winner which would have earned t~em invitations to the tournaments. was Phi Delt~ Phi, law fraternity, Wake again earned a chance this year. also an Independent ~;ntrant. The

The ACC is reputed- to have some of the strongest competition Legal Eagles reached the finals of any conference in the country. Why let it be represented by only of the Independent playoffs this one school in football bowl games and basketball classics? year before losing~to the Bashful

Tracksters Needed •.. Ladner ~edi:!as~~~ their only defeat of

Coach Bill Jordan of the track squad repm·ts' that about 20 boys 'are working out daily at the Reynolds High School field. However, Babv Dea· cons

most of these are freshmen. J The clndermen will have a hard time winning meets this year 0

if more traeksters' don't turn out for practice. Some help will be pen Tuesday· received when football , practice ends Saturday allowing several members of that squad to· go out for traCk. ·Coach Don Hipps' freshman

' Senior Jack Ladner will probably score the most points for .Tor- . 'baseJball team will get its first dan's squad this year .if he continues.-where he left off. last Spring. test of the season tom·orrow across

- · · town at Hanes High ·School. Ladner is rated as one of th_e best javerlin. thrqwers in the confer-· Thursday the B:;i,by Deacs will

· ence. travel to Oak Ri-d'ge Military Aca-Among the runners·, senior •Carroll Ferrell, junior Dick Frazier demy to meet the Cadets, and·

and ·sophomore Bill Jeanette should lead the squad this spring. All Monday Oak Ridge v.rill play here three have been doing well in early workopts. as a preliminary to the val·sity

contest with Virginia Tech.

We call for and deliver

Road S~:rvice Dial 3-5531

GULF C •. E •. Motsinger, Mgr.

Buen~ ,Vista Gulf Service

Cor. Buena Visita & R~ynolda 20 Years Experience ln ;'

Automobile Work -' Tires, Batteries, Accessories

Sociology. Spin a platter ••• have some chatter • : •

and sip that r~l great taste of Coke.

Sure, you can have a party without

Coca-Cola-'-but who wants to!

Bottled under authority of The Coc:a-Cola Company by

\viNSTON COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.

,

Hipps, optimistic over 'the Dea­clets' -chances this year, calls his men "a promising ·bunch of boys . . . considering we ·gave no scho­lm·ships."

The young Deacon mounds-men are touted as the most promising frosh pitchers in, several years. L:.st year's· freshmen lost only th1'ee games.

Frats Hear Businessman George Fl-ing, branch manager

of Burrough's Crop. of Winston­Sal-rn, Thursday night outlined: the .history of . the business- ma­chine industry and its P-lace irr American industry at a joint meet­ing of Wake Forest's two business fraternities. Members ()f both Al­·pha Kappa ·Psi and Delta Sigma Pi fraternities attended.

Four gorgeous sisters and the

millionaire on a holiday

co-starring

ANNA MARIA ALBERG HETTI

EVA BARTOK xi· STARTS SUNDAY . -1< .:;

1\'IAR. 24th -¥

WINSTON •

Women In Shorts . By CARYL GUTH

An honorary varsity girls bas·r A shuffleboard tournament will ketball team has been announced be under way Boon under the b~r Basketball Manager Mary I direction of Beverly Seawell. Hawkins. Entrants also began signing up

Chosen on the honor team for last week for badminton and table outstanding team work on the tennis events which are scheduled hardwood were Ann Barlow, Febe j to start in the next t\vo weeks. Broadway, Sylvi~ Gilley, ~ryl Gloria Flippin will serve as Gut~, Mary Hawkins, Helen Hicks, ping pong chairman, while Helen Sybil Copeland, Betty Jean Hoi- Hicks will direct the badminton lifield, Jill Laughridge, Janice rounds Priode and Patsy Wilhelm. ·

Winner in the coed dormitory Intramural Manager Ann Bar-tournament was West "A", while low has requested that entrants the Gamma T.aus ·captured the in any tournament play matches

Basketballers Drop Tourney At Charlotte

Wake Forest will not enter the Carrousel Basketball Tournament at Charlotte next December, Ath­letic Dirctor Bill Gib.:;on an­nounced last week.

The Deacons, who have won the Carrousel championship. for the past two years, \vere forced to withdraw , bcause of a new 23-game limit placed on college teams by the NCA.A...

at the specified time to · avoid society tourney and Jill Laugh- schedule COoiiflicts. ridge's team won the op-en tourna-

·wake Forest would not be able to compete in the event without giving up other regular season

T·he Euzeli'!ln and Philomarthe- contests. ment. ·

sian Literary Societies, oldest stu- Coach Murray Greason's cagers The coed recreational program dent organizations on campus, defeated Clemson for the tourna­

.now will turn from team.sports to .were ·begun in 1834, the year 'the 1ment crown in 1955 and won over

individual events. Collegoe was establis•hed, · 1 Auburn in this year's derby.

• 1ve odern!

April 8--North Carolina, home; .!.6-Sou.th Carolina, away; 19-University of Cincinnati, home; 20-N. C. StaJte, away; 30-Virgin· ia, home.

.May 6--Duke, away; 16-N. C. State, home.

REYNOLDA GRILL 853 Reyholda Rd.

Phone 5-9351

PIZZA PIES WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS

ARE OUR SPECIALTY

8 ITALIAN SPAGHETTI 8 WESTERN STEAKS 8 REGULAR DINNERS e TOASTED SANDWICHE ...

We Have Delivery At 'The Campus For

PIZZA PIES Every Night At Nine

Pick the Pack that Suits You Best!

+ ~-· DM

FILTEFlS ,l&M', ~- '

~ . !I . ~ : ....... -.. :-....

Smoke modern L&M and always get

full exciting f.lavor ••• PLUS THE PURE WHITE MIRACLE TIP

01957 L!ceETT_. Mnas,Toucco Co.

FIL.TERS

With L&M ••. and only L&M •.• can you pick the ~that suits you best. And only L&M

gives you the flavo~ ..• the full, exciting flavo~ that makes L&M AMERICA'S

FASTEST-GROWING CIGARETTE '

Page 8: ·~coed~ To Se.lect Delta Sig·. s Join Campus Party· · -ivm be: chosen· ·in direct elections Both Miss Aycock and Miss Independents Tomorrow as ·'are ther . s~udent

PAGE EIGHT 1\'londay, March 18, 1957 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Amen Sets Grid Game As Finale_

B~· CARTER HEDRICK 1last season, are recovering from

Coach Paul Amen ,..,-m display I operatiollfl. . · his 1957 edition of the Wake For- First unit for one sq~tad e.st football team to the pul~·lic consi.st o~ ends Eddie Latld Saturday in the annual Gold and Ban·y Hmes, tackles Ball Black intra-squad game at Bow- Tom Swatz.el, guards Bru~e ~~:a~h· man-Gray stadium. er.s and Ntck Patella, cen.e1 Edme

. Moore. Dalrymple at quarterback. Sponsored by the Wake Fc,rest ~l n· "" . t f lib. k d halfbacks

M ~ . Cl b tl b ttl . . an me a u ac , an on"g1 am u · · le a .e 18 Fete Barham and Larr Brooks.

f;chedule:! for 2 1:)'clock. Admission Y ·will be $1 for adu!ls and 50 cents Another squa.d will have ends for student.<;. Leon Lewis and Ralph Br~wste1·,

tackles George Johnson and Angelo The game will climax 20 days Des:mone, r:~urds sam Butler and

of practice for the squad. Hught;e Lewis and center K:arl "We're way ahE•ad of where we Munn. In tl1.e backfield, Parker at

were last y-ear at this time," sg,ys quarterback, McClean at fullback. l1.men cf the squad, "and I think anct halibacks Pegram and Nei! we will have a better balanced Hunt. team. But oo course that may be -counterbalanced by the loss of Bill Barnes," he added.

Coaching one of the teams will be Bill Hildebrand, Gene Gi'bson. Elmer Barbout· and Gea.rld Huth. Handling the other squad will be Ken Wable, Jim Hirtickko, Bo

Swim Stars Get Honors

Claxton and Nick Consoles. Amen By FRED \VARDLA 'V ·will be redu-:ed to specta·tor status. Three of 'Vake Forest's out-

:'~ '"{..:-:<~~ <' ·., .' :'.' • <' • '

.. ' ' ~

' ·. .., . . ·:

Pfl!,iffer- ·coming Vo!feyb3.ll Will Begin Baee~all .Tun.e~ Up Set..

Wake Forest's baseball Deacons Catching remained a question

14 -Teatns Enter ll'Itiral Leagues·

will entertain Pfeiffer College in mark,. 1with sophomore Olin Bl'oad­a practice game W·ednesday as a way and Marlon Miller competing ··un·e-up for next Monday's season · · " for a ·starting slot. Basketballer

Intramural volleyball play will begin today with 10 Fraternity League teams an-d, four Indepen­d'ent squads entered in the race, 3.cco;ding to Intramural Manager

opener with Virginia Teoh. Game· time will ,be 3:30 p_ m. at Ja.ckie Murdock is expected to re- I

Ernie Shore Fiel-d: located near port for th,e p001tion thls week. ME-morial Coliseum. All students Baker Reports and Deacon fans have been invited Al Baw, junior inf:ielder, re-to attend.

Don Averitte. ported for work early in. the week

afte~ recupe.rating from. a case of · flu. ·

Cooch Gene Hooks reported his • men a.s looking "pretty fair" Frl­

Games will be played each after: day but fears they; have· "a long noon Monday through Thursday, way' to go"· before t:he season "We still hav~·t set our first at 4:30. opens. team," Hooks sayiS, "and right

The Fraternity League this year Delayed By Weather no~ i:t's hard to :tell just what it will be llplit into two divisions of We've lost a lot of practice will be." .. '· five teams each. hours because of the weather re- ~iiiiiiiil·iiiii~iiiiiiiiliiiiij

When . the regular· season is cently," he said., '.'but ·I think if 111 coanpleted, the two. top clubs in we have a good week we \vill be each league will play a .single ready for Monday's game." · elimination tournament for the coaches know little of Virginia championship. Then the. winners Tech'~- Gobblers, who will open · of each league .will meet for. the· against the Deacons here Monday. all-campus champi'onship. ··r hear they have . a good ball

In Div.i.sion "A" of the Frater- club,'' Hook says, ~'but we don't nity loop are Alpha Sigma Phi. really know much about· them.!' Kappa Al'Pha, Theta Chi,. Lambda Only two intra-squad games have Chi Alpha, and ~~gma Phi Epsilon. !::een play>ed thus fRr, but the Des-

PRINTING •••• D,IAL . 5-3511

'~PETE" KEIGER · . . PRINTIN~ COMPANY

;,

410 Brookstown Ave •. Division "B" will consist of cons were . particularly impressive

Delta Sigma Phi, Pi Kappa Alpha. in a scrap last week. Three sop­Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi and homore prospects 'Unloaded 'home

Sigma Pi. It'1'U~n~s~in~t~h::e~p~r~a~c~t~ic:e~se~s~sl~-o~n:·_~· j~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~ Independent I.f-!ague entries are :...: Phi Epsilon Kappa, Sigma Chi "B," Pi~ "B" and Alpha Kappa Psi Bluebloods.

0\·er 100 high school and prep standing sw'..w.mer.s were honored coaches will toe here this week end Thursday night by the Maritimers also for a two-day football clinic Aquatics Club at a banquet in to be conducted by Amen and l1L'i Reynolda Hall. assistants. Bill Lovingood, cu1.going presi-·

The clinic, first ever staged by dent of the Maritimers. was pL·e­n Wake Forest cooching,staff, will sented a trooh:v as "Outstanding begin Fliday afternoon at 2 o'clock Maritimer," -while Ernie Marsh­and conclude with ·the Old Gold burn was named top varsity swim­and Black game. mer and Chris Glenn received the

Divisions in leagues were neces­sary. cLue to the limited number of pla.ying days availa·ble for the sport. Each divisional team will play a round robin schedule.

. IT'S FOR REAL! by Chester Field

''Since most of our coaches are award for outstanding freshman new to this area we want to know tankman. the high school coaches a little Lovingood's trophy was present­better," Amen said. Also it gives ed b}l Dr. Harold Barrow of tpe the high school coaoh an excel- Physcial Education Department. lent opportunity to learn other who .said the a>vard was "emble­.!:ystemE," he added. matic of this boy's persevel·ance,

CARROLL fERRELL • . . Deacon speedster

Ferrell Starts Last· Track Season Here

Showing well in recent practice work, sacrifice and co-operation." By P. C. BARW!CK 1 place· finish in that 'event last have been tackle Ronnie Ball, Marshburn and Glenn received A little senior trackster whose year against a strong University l.1:anning and McLean according their ·trophies from Athletic Di~, only injury came f·rom slipping on of Richmond team. to Amen. rector Bill. Gibson. a potato peeling will be making "Maryland," he readil~, predicts,

Seven men heavily counted on Both the Maritmers and swim- his last appearance for the D\!acon "will win the Atlantic Coa.ost Con-for next ~·!€&' will be watching the ming :team. gave Coach Ralph track team this spring. ference title this spring." They game from .sidelines due to in· Steele gifts of appreciation "for And he will be relied on heavily have more overall balance than juries. End Henry Martin, and his unceasing efforts and hard when the Deacons open the cam- Carolina." !he says, "and their tackles Jim Horn and Frankl work for the advancement of the paign at Clemson, March 27 . second and third. place finishes Thompson, who saw regular adion tlVI'O organizations." Carroll Ferrell, a slender speeds- could win it for them.

ter from South Boston, Va., has "Jimmy Beatty of Carolina," he =----------------------""!""-----. · says, "is the best I've run·against." ranked among coach Bill Jordan's

VOGLER'S JEWELERS Diamonds, Sitverware, Jewelry EXPERT WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRS

416 W. 4th Street

A member of Alpha Sigma Phi, best in both cross cotmtry and Ferrell 'has been offered a la-w track for two years. ,

I He served as captain of the sc_hola·=sh.ip to the University of

harriers in the fall and of the win. Vlrgima next ~!ear, but has not ter trackmen. decided whe.h.er he will accept.

·Freak Injury j Only once in his years with the

Deacs ~as ~he slightly-bunt Ferre~l Softball Play =----------------------------:been s1delmed. And even then 1t · .

For The Sharpest Colle.ge Fashions IT'S

Puritan And Jantzen Sweaters IN BOTH CREW NECK A:.tl'D V-NECK STYLES

CAHILL AND SWAIN, INC. Cor. 4th and Cherry Sts. • Winston-Salem

was a freak injury. While working in a Wake Forest Entries Asked

restaurant last spring, he slipped on a potato peeling and a serious sprain kept him out of competition for several weel<s. Still he finished as No. 3 man on the team.

Ferrell, who transferred here in 1954 from Virginia Military In­stitute, was forced by conference rJles to wait until his junior year before· competing. · .

Jordan. who calls Ferrell "a real hustler" says his team cap­tain has perllap.s shown more im­provement in the past two years

Entries are now open f<J.l' intra­mural softball and table tennis entries must be in today, accord­ing to Intramural J14anage.r Don Averitte. 1

Sof.tl~all entries are due FridaY. and play will get underway .April 3, while all table tennis entrants must be registered at the Physi­cal Education Office today and play will open Saturday.

than any man on the squad. n l • '7'1 •

I Favorite event of the f1·iendly rrac lCe .1. enntS

pre-law student is the two-miie, and fans will remember his fir.st Match Arranged'

Guilford College's tennis team

The Scoreboard ' Games This Week

<First. tw'O games listed will be played in Gym 1, courts 1 and 2 l'espectively: ISe-cond-li.s•ted games in Gym 2, courts 1 and 2 respec­tively.)

Today Kappa Alpha vs. Sigma Phi

Epsilon; TheM· Chi vs. Lambda Chi Alpha; Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Sigma Pi; Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Chi.

Tues~ay

Phi Epsilon Kappa vs. Alpha Kappa Psi Bluebloods; Sigma Chi "B" vs. PiKA "B"; Sigma Phi Ep­silon vs. Alpha Sigma Phi; Kappa Alpha VIS. Theta Chi.

Wednesday Deita Sigma Phi vs. Sigma Pi;

Pi Kappa. Alpha vs. Kappa Sigma; Alpha Sigma Phi vs. Lambda Chi Alpha; Phi Epsilon Kappa vs. PiKA "B".

\ ,Thursday

Delta 6igma Phi vs. Sigma Chi; Alpha Kappa Psi vs. Sigma Chi "B".

.. VICE VERSA* OUt after a deer? . . Of course you know

You must get a license Before you go!

Oh! After a dear. Then it's reversed •

Never mind the Jicense.:­Catch too' dear firstt

MPRAL: Big game hunters, attention~ take your ple8sure BIG! Smoke a regal Chesterfield King and get mOre of what you're smoking for. Majestic length-plus the smoothest nattmd tobacco filter. Chesterfield-the smoothest tasting sm.9ke today

-·because it's packed more Sm.oothly by ACCU•RAY!. Like· your pleasure BIG? Chederfleld King hUEverythlngl . 0$50 goe; to Jerry A. B;ys, Coe Colle#, far, 1aia CheBIN Field poem. · • $50 for eoery pl!i!o:wphical verse GCt:epted for pul!liDtJ­tion. C/ulsterfield, P.O. Bo" 31, New York 46, N. Y •. 0 IJueU A JI7Ua Tohaceo Co.

ON BEAUTIFUL REYN.OLDA ROAD

Near The Entrance To Wake Forest College . I'

fi~'C\tot of

will oppose Wake Forest here to- Under The Personal Supervision O:f. morrow in a practice· match on

wlnslon-salem tile Reynolda Gym courts. LAWRENCE STALEY And KEN. CH•EEK

Friday, the Deacons ti-ed the Quakers, 5-5, at GuilfQrd in anoth- S er exhibition session. S · · M T"ll 11 p· M

Winning in singles m.a,tches for I Conti~uous Sel"Vl.·ee From 11. A. ' . . I •. • Wake Forest were George Cox, _ Bill Heins and Robert GM'ren.

Losing were Walter Conner,· Joe ~ Phone PArk 3-8631 . .' Burt, Will Allred and McCall. .

I I-s

In doubles Garren and Cox, and S ' Burt and Allred were. triumphant. S,._,...,...._,..~_,..;--o•c;.._,_,.._,.,_,..~~-'-'..co""J_,....ICCO""_,_,...,.._,..IO'"..co""/..4""J.#'~CICICI~-'.co'"~

's LUorld

• now zn our new quarlf!rs . ..

IMOREJamous labels:

Campus Togs Clipper Craft Peso PJum.a North cool English Stetson Haggar

Majer Arrow Bartlay Puritan Wings Weldon Hanes Hickok

Swank Shields Buxton Esquire Camp Jantzen AlltgatQr

SEE INTERESTING EXHIBITS

------:--------on the 1957

tlQYAJ; portable

'WITH TWIN-PAK 'THE ONLY QUICK CHANGE

~IBBONI ------------Carolina Business Machini Company

618 W. Fourth Street

1 DAY SERVICE Dly Cleaning-- Finished Laundry-- Shirts

WASH FLUFFDRY

HAND IRONING Our ·spec·ialty: Shirts -Dresses -Blouses

HAWTHOR:NE. LAUNDRETTE Corner 1st St. and Hawthorne Rd.­

Telephone Park 2-0444

!•