j. pi.~nnea lark - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu · the registrar's office has alsi> l.:ader will...
TRANSCRIPT
·.
· •.
..
. '
.. I
. J.
... ··college· PI.~nnea : ~~~~"~~~~ ·~~~'
Before Removal. >. ~ "'\ o:: ;,, '! '•• L ~ ,: 1 •" ,_..,.
.~age 2', /
lark * ·.'
·,. 1924 Grid-Team
To Be Honored
At Homecoming
Page6
VOLUME ·XLI Wake·Forest College, Wake ·F~i.~l'torth ~na, Monday, October 17, 1955 . ' ~ " , NUMBER. 4
'•
Marshilrd Will riay.
.Calen,d~~~ .Cb~~lge A»ow.s, SJ~;tdeti-s. 1\J.Qr~ BQJ~~~y~s: ·
·'· . Spri~~ . and ~nksgiving holl· _tra two weeks b~sjdes the r.~ula,r- · . days have been· added to the Col·, .Jy alloted ~o betw~en the regular· ·Jege calendar for· this ·year. . ~chool sess1oB and ,summer school
Th ·lt · · · meeting laat ;for the ·move to· Wtnston-Salem.
For Dance e facu Y, tn a · · :T 11 f. th 'tw · xt .. k t d t add :Nov 2:5 and o , a ow ~r e o e ra
wee •· ~ e, 0 • · weeks, ' the facuity cut down on 26; Frid~y and. ~aturday, to the holidays ·to satisfy minimum class-'
To Be- F e,._tUredAt lsi: IFC Affair
day already set aside for a Thanks· h. .. • .. .1
ti'• . f. th S th · · h. f 11 Th · s t · our regu a ons o e . o.u ern <Mving hohday :t IS a · e a " ·A · • t' · f · c ·11' · d · s · Wake Forest fraternity men .,. b f · d ·ssocta IOn o o eges an · e- , tirday and Monday e ore ·an d. · s h I · W'th th · dd d' and their dates will' dance to
· after Easter Sunday, March 31 and chonl'dary· tch 0t0 s . ." . I ' e a et 1· · . ·n · 'd mid se o 1 ays, a mmtmum may no music of Harry Marshard at the Apn~ 2, Wl proVI e. a, . - • be reached this. year, College of- ' ' mester bre~k. next sprmg. . ficiab said. . · . 1· IJjter-Fraternity Council's Home-
In the ortgmal College calendar, This matter was introduced at coming Dance -\·saturday ·night set up last ye~r by the· ~acuity, Monday's faculty meptng by Dr.'; ·Raleigh, . . . orily Thanksgiving . Day would be :Elton Cocke, ehairman of the fac- : A .·businesS'' partner of
.•· a class-free dayl; there were to ulty calendar conunittee, who said • : · · · , · :Monroe at a night club near ' h I'd · I THAD. EURE have been no sprmg o 1 ays. that requests from· student body 1 ton, Mass.; ,Marshard has playea
By cutting the days at Thanks· officials brought up the- subject. I • • Y-!JC speaker • '~ • . .mostly ·in debuta.nt and' collegiate giving, elemiilating those in ;the . Tommy Frank; student body· Th. d. E. . circles. His band has played for spring and cutting two days off. president, requested that single : a . . . u re the Boston Debutante Cotillion for Christmas holidays, the f?-culty class cu;ts. ·be gi~en }n lieu of 1 . . . . . . · the past 14 years, and his" appear-planned to move up graduation ~ Thahksgtvmg holidays and that: · . · · · , · ance at the Chicago Cotillion in May ·21. This would allow an ex· the matter of spring holidays be ' w: •11 s · · · k December will mark· his fourth
considered. 'The faculty decided: '· I · · pea year there. that with single .cuts·, class attend- ' · · · The homecoming Dance will be ance would be down and that holi- 0 c . . Marshard's third appearance in days might as well be given. . fl_ .· . · .. , .a .. m .. P. u.· . S_ North Carolina this year. Featur-
pla • M t . ing-Vaug:hn Monroe; he playet_i at . nnlng ee D · .. .f:. ,.,., a meeting of the North Carolina ~: . . . . . :: eJ erment ~ est· Secreb~_ry Of State Medical Society in Pinehurst last
-, Debate Te~~
· ~a~t~:te s!:~~!rfro:nth~o:;!: W7•ll. B .. ,; .G· · • .. To Talk Thurs~ay .. !:~~st~ :~:~e/1o! t~!er~o~~ \' .here Oct. 28 land 29 when the W ·1 . e lVen · Carolina Au'tomobile Dealers ·eon-
Wake "Forest chapter of Pi Kappa . Thad Eure, North Carolina vention. Delta, riationaf forensics fraterni;- Selective Service examinations Secretary. of· State, will speak at · Mai-shard has ~lso played for ty •. sponsors its· annual novice de- for consideration for draft ~emp- a meeting of the Young Democrats . . 1 · t' '11 b • N 17 d Club Th'urs"~y ni'ght. debutante balls in Pittsl?urg 1, bate .tournament. · . ton w1 e -gtven . ov; , accor - .- . .
· t th R · • Of"'' A graduate o. f the University of Clevelan'd and Detroit. Later this Only Stu·dents WI'th~ut· preVI·ous mg 0 e egtstrar·s .1.Ice. · · h '11. 1 t d b t t
~ '""- · 'd 1 1 North Carol1'na· and 1'ts law· school, season, e WI 1p ay a e u an e ·I·ntercolleooiat'e de.bati·n.,. experi- · ... ue tests are to provt e oca ff · · R' h d B. I · .,. "' draft boards· with evidence for con- Eure was first elected Secretary_ a airs .m IC mon • a timore
-ence· ·are. eligible for the · tourna- sideration of draft exemptions. of State. in l936 and has been re- and· Philadelphia. · ment. I t ted bta' ,elected to that office in. each In-collegfate circles, the orches-1 Th"e. TTni'versi'ty of Pittsburg, ·. n eres p_ersons may· 0 tn 1 u an appli~tion blank and a bulletin general .election .since 'then. tra has played '~ostly iii New Duke University, University ·of f 'nf t' t .1 1 bo d The 56-year old Democratic· England, at. Dartmouth; Harvard, South C. arolina,· and 'the University 0 1 orma Ion a any oca . ar • · '
. The Registrar's Office has alsi> l.:ader will speak "on the coming Yale, Princet~n ·and Cornell . . ~f'~19'ort~:C~I~na ~~ve al~e~dy ~c- announced. ~~t organizations and year's national elections. · Featured with Marshard and liis
c.e_pted 'ln?ta~torts. : clubs wishing to secure scholastic The meeting is to be at 8 p. m. orchestra will 0be ;Billy _:Qooley, au .· -~~~s; o~ .~he !V~ke }'ofest'averages for :members or·prospee~ in Johnson Auditorium. AU inter- ei;tertainer, rand <.Betty .A.n n e
". varsity team. ~11 help With_ ,:the ive members should have their re- ested p~rsons are invited. . Steele, ~Dtil recently 'With Buddy journament ~~.d~r the_.directi9~~ ot .<nJests in the Regis.trar's Office at Speeches by other of the State's' Morrow's band.· MiSs ·steele ·.re·Prof. Franklin· R. Sh1rley, de~ate least three days before. the in· hading Democrats, . including cords for the· ·Capitol !Recording
.,
co_ach. '· · .-< • ' . • • · . ·' . formation is ne~ed. , . i Governor Luther .Hodges, are plan- Co. ·and ·has seveml 'recordings' tu · Regist{ation will.. be held ;f:r:om ·All . ·requests· . for such in.for- ned:. for the· year by ~ohnnie R&:v be released si>On.< · · l:SQ-3:~0 'P•,. m. in ~he .lobby·. of matio:n .. -~hould ,list names. in: al- Hendren;· YDC. pr_9gram chai~ll. The Homecoming Dance is. to be the chapel. Friday,_ with the open· ph~b~~ical .o~er, and ~0 copies .. The "other national" polities Club :held in .Raleigh;s· Memorial.Audi-. i1ig round of. debate·beginning at should be submitted. . (Continued on p~ge 2) turium ·:from 8-12 Satu~ay night. 4:CO p. m.' · -.,...-.....:.-----::-------------,.--..:._--------.;...._--------'-~.,--
::~1-n~:ti=~J;~i Frate~nities Take 121 Pledges liver orations iiri both sides . <>f the debate question. .SPE Gets Most
, ~ ·• I, 7 : ,.. • : • ~ -
With 21 Frosh A .workshop ·will be held follow·
ing the banqu~t · for the participating debaters and ·faculty on the query . and on debating proceed-.ures. ·· · · · · · · · . Mimbers of ·the nine Wake
The,dinal rounds· of the debate For"tist social fraternities began io V.1ii be held Saturday with troph- relax a .little .. Thw-Sciay moril.ing iel'l going tO the top three team!!. after pledging a. total of 121 men '· Both debate teams meet at 3:30 the· night before. , each.Monday,-Wednesday, and Fri·. ·After more than five wee}ts of day· -in .the alumni Building. In- parties, smokers; handshakes ·and terested ·persons may . contact introductions, freshmen and transProf; Shirley. Several positions fer ID.ale .students 'relaxed a. little,
' are still open on 'both teams: too, after being reduced froni· the The varsity'!\ ·first debate will kingly· position of rushee to that of
be" at the "Carolina Forensics" a't .} tNhe U1nliversdity12. of South Carolina _a. 6~e~~=· total number that werl'
I • ov. . an • pledged Wednooday 'night, only 97 registered with the Dean's Office,
Frank Seen' which is requied of all fesl:unen. Upperclassmen do not have to notify the Dean "Of their choice,
Aplno;nt;ng 2 but may go, instead, directly to r II/ ..,_, ., the fraternity. houses. Two student government ap- The number ·of men pledged this
rointments . are expected t~ be year is considerably lower than made bv student body Presi'dent the 1S6 that pledged on the. reTommy ·Frank at· a regular meet.- quired night last year. ing of the Legislature Wednesday Alpha. Sigma. Phi
. . . PHOTO BY IRVIN GRIGG
New Pledges-:Bill.Pearce, Wendell.juni?r; ·Jeff, welcomes · · Lambda. Chi Alpha pledges Luther Ledford
and Bill ApPle after pledge night . ended the fall rushing season Wednesday night. Rod Beals, Goldsboro junior, right, presents Apple with .a new pledge button,. The scene was repeated many times _in each of- the nine fraterility houses Wednesday night.
night. ' . . Alpha Sigina Phf pledged seven The appointments wtll :fill vac- men Wednesday night, including Bill'. Apple, Wendell; AI Baker, Orlando, Fla.; Larrie Moore, Beau
. ancies existing in the Legislature Bill Barr, King; Bill and ·Bruce Colrain; John Cella, Raleigh; fort; Richard Odom, Ahoskie; Ed and Men's Honor Council. To be Ketner, brothers ··from Landis; Frank Clark, Siler City;. Phil Patillo, Burlington; :Qonald Prevalid, both must ·be approved by Wayne Poe; DUrham; Stewart Dle:ql, Charlotte; Robert Edison, vatte, ·Lumberton; Leslie Rucker, the Legislature.· · Roberson, Hazelwood; VirgU Ro- Wilmin.gton; Raymond Farrow, Tarboro; Chaffee Scarborough, · The ·Council last week suggested berts, Whiteville, and Bob SaWYer, Wilmington; Joe Furguson, Salem, Miami, ·Fla.; Jim Stubbs, Yeadon, to Frank three ,names, one of Hackensack, N. J. · . Va.; John Ladd, Pastonla; Luther Penn.; Robert Taylor, ·siler City, whieh' he· "is to app6irit as a :e· Kappa. Alpha. Ledford, Weridell; Murcus. Liles, and Curtis Williams,. Burlington. placement :for sophomore Jtm Kappa. Alpha. Order pledged 10 Monroe; Fred Sirilpson, Charlotte; Sigma Phi Epsiion Featherstone, member-el~ct who men Wednesday night and two and ~exander Tuten,,New Bern. Sigma Phi Epsilon top'"""' the (lid·not return to school this fall. during the previous week includ- Pi Kappa Alpha list ·m · b' f 1 ,.,;.: ""'~ ·' Jeff Helms, Tommy Bunn and ing Micky Anderson Tarboro· Pi K · AI h ·took 15 nu.m ers 0 P e...,.es W1th 21 Gl Cl k tb three sug • ' ' appa. P a ,.men freshmen and· six 'i.IIPper. classmen,
enn ar are e ; Dick Avey ·Morganton· Tommy into its pledge class including ·gest~d. to Fr_ ank by the Mens Carlton', Sali• 'sbury·, Gary• Daniels, ' . . including Don Bndges, Shelby; C 1 Robert Alphin, Weldon, James Ted Crooch Fil.yettevlll . John
is~~::t~~is!:!t;: ~Fai!i~P~:=e~~ =:~:,ro~:; · ~~~; ,g;::: =: Ra~:~irn!a~oy~=' =o~~~~n, ;~. Gc.; ative· owen Herring was elevated Wake Fo~est; Tommy Helms, Mor- mont• Jenjr Holleman Raleigl)· Y ' omas e, a.;
t o : t .... e student body vice presi- gan~n; NOJ;DlS.ll Kellam, New Charies Griffin Edent:,n. Gart;h Bryan Falls, Shelby; Jerry George. n ilmingto Jerutms, Fayet~ville; John Kiril· Appomatlx, Va.; Ronnie Guthrie,
dency. Tpe ·President may cho~se ~em; Danny Parham, W 0 • ball, Salisbury; Alex Marsh, Char- Republican Grove, Va.; Charles any qualified male or coed semor and Horace Stedman, Rockingham. lotte; ·Edg/J.r· Norfleet, Tarboro; ;fiorD.; Shelby; P~lmer HUffstetler, to fill Herring's seat. , The two men previously pledged Tommy Pappendick; Roanoke Ra· King s ~ountain, Carron Jordan, . Herring, "in ·his new ofiice and as ae John Glover; Wllson, and Jim .pids·, John '<">-ynold·s, wms· ton- ~t. atesville; Buster Led. ford, Shel-speaker of the Legislature, has· Greeri, Wake . Forest. """" .b B appointed Joe :Millsaps, a .junior, . Kappa s~ Salem; David Rawley, High Point; y; uddy McCorkle, Charlotte; as Parliamentarian ·for the law- Kappa. Sigma received 11 men Thomas SaSser Goldsboro ·and Bob OWen, Canton; H. C. Pace, niaker8. Herring had held the job last week, includlni 'Jim Adeoc~1 Fred Wells ~ City. ' · Leaksville;' Jack Phillips, Dan-bef<?re his e-levation and was also Cary; Ben Ave~tt, Oxford; Frank · · 's~Pna Chi ville, Va.; .Alec Poston,·~gsport, ch.a1rman of the calendar Com- Geer, Rutherfordtoll.; 'Bill Keith, Twenty men •Pledged Sigma Chi T~.; Bud Reeser, LeaksVille; .mittee. · · Elizabethtown;. wayne Lawe, Wednesday night, inclu~g Olin· Keith Sta.m~y, Lexington; Jack
A~other matter exp.ected to ~e Statesville; Henry Morgan, Cary; ~adway, Raleigh; ~eel ·camni- Tonney, LeXington; Alex Willis, constd~red by the Legislature thxs W. H. Olive-, Durham; Sam Ray- chael, New Bern; Caudell Clark, Jacksonville, and Winfry Whicker, week lS the l~ek of home ba.sket-lstn, Oxford; Fran k Skilirier, Mebane; Bob Daughtridge, Rocky Chin Grove. b:'~~ .games this _year and the pos- Smithfield; Jerry Stephenson, Mount; Robert Davis, SnOW" Hill; SPE upperclass pledges include sibillty of getting busses ~o the Smithfield, and Joe Weston, Darrell Demlis, A&leville; Bill ~yf!e Haigler, Pageland, IS. c.: N. , C .. State game at Wtnston- .. ~~· "'-1 . Geene Kingsport Tenn.; Du!Tow Carter Hedrick, . Rocky· :Mount; Salem m November. WlDSvvn-ot~o em. • • . • . .
At. its meeting ·last week the · · ~ambila Chi Alpha. . Hall,. ~lotte; . B~ll J~e~e. Willis Remmer, Charlotte; · Bill Men's Council decided to proeure· Thirteen men pledged- Lambda W~r. Md., Nomnan ~en- SIDg, Olia.rlotte; Frank Th'omp.Son, robes for its trials this year. Chi Alpha. last week, 'including zie; ~~o~~; ~ommy ~alct>mb, · · . (Continued ·on page 2) ·
Q4om, Jennette Win Top·. Freshmen Posts In Vote . . . , . . . . ..
Pre-Med Student Named President Richard Odom, Ahoskie pre-med
student, . wori the presidency of the freshman class last week in a run-off that filled the five frosh offices.
Bill Jennette, Westminster, Md., 'Was named vice president, Anne Cutter, Pensacola, Fla. was picked secretary, and John Cella, Raleigh, was elected Legislature representative .in the run-off race.
Ann Tyner, Leaksville, was elected treasurer of the firstyear class in the regular election.
Odom . won, 103-91, over Earl Shaw of Weldon in the second balloting. Jennette beat Rex McMilliam of Raleigh, 127-67, for the vice. presidency. Miss Cutter won over ·Leah Lee of Rocky Mount, 132-64, while Cella beat Vivian Morgan of; Greensbo;ro, 121-71 in the run-off. .
PHOTO BY IRVIN GRIGG
F rosh Officers-· _fn elections and a run-off held this week the freshman class elected five students
to act as leaders. Talking over their victories are Bill Jennette, vice president; John· Cella, Legislative representative;' Anne Cutter, see· retar';'; .Richard Odom, president, and ~nn Tyner, treasurer.
In the regular election Bill Avery, Robert Deal, Robert Fitzgerald and. Tommy Pappendiek were eliminated in the presidential race.
Don Bridges, Joe Ferguson, Robert Sawyer and Joe Stewart lost out in the fi+st voting for
~Q To Speak At BSU 1\J~.eting I~ ~r~~ns:boro
vice president. · Miss Tyner beat Sam Harvey of
Salem, Va., in the first vote. In the· legislative race, Tonuny
Helms·, Stuart Roberson, Robert Taylor and Gaynelle Walker were eleminated. in the first round.
The State Baptist Student Union convention, t 0 be hel!f in Greensboro, ·Nov. 4~6, will· feature 10 speakers centering their' programs around ·the convention's · theme, "God's. World· My Life Now."
Mrs .. Wealthy .Fisher, associate to Dr. Frank Laubauch of the World.: ... .:l.itemry Campaign, will speak on "God's World," at the opening meeting Friday, Nov. 4. Saturday morning's speaker will be Dr. J. P. Allen of the First Bap~ist Church, · Charlottesville, va·., speaking on "My Life-Re·deemed."
Jean Ray Bean, an associate in the North Carolina Baptist Convention's ·Student Department, will also speak Nov. 5 pn "My
Miss Deacon .c~lltest Slated
Life and Strategic Missions." Saturday afteroon's pro_gram
will feature Dr. Claude Broach, pastor of the St. J-ohn's Baptist Church, Charlotte, and writer for the Baptist Student, publication o.f the national BSU organization. His topic will be "My Life: A Missionary Enterprise."
The Rev.· Elmer West, personnel O.iJrector · of the Baptist Foreign Missi~~ Board, will speak Saturday evening OIJ. "Now." The program that night will also feature Tommy Canipe, fi;rst-year student at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine. He will speak on his experiences as a summer missionar~ to Corn Island, Nica;ragua. ---speaking in the Sunday school
Nov. 6. will be Dr. E. L. Spivey, Executive Secretary of the Bap
' tist Home Mission Board. Ector Hamrick, Wake Forest junior, will also speak Sunday morning, discussing the Listen Campaign.
In the first election 192 freshmen voted while 197 v~ted in · the riui~o!f. This· was· below 'norinal · voting, as last year, in a class ·of the same size, 277 voted in the ;first election. .
Freshman elections this year were held .under a new · set-up fro~ those of previous yearli, A legislative committee the Elections: Committee, was 'in charge of the. elections instead of the Student Council as in ·the past.
Also for the first :biine, elections! w_ere held before .fraternity pledge mght under the new Constitution rules.
Girls, Band~ Will Appear AtGame.
"Agape-The Impelling Motiva-Twelve College coeds have been tion" will lie the topic of I)r. Beauty queens from North' Caro~
entered in this year's Miss Demon Claud~ Brown, host pastor, Sun- !ina, Maryland and possibly FlorDeaeon contest to be ·held this riay morning. · lda will be among the highlights week by the Monogram Club. Prof. Garland Hendr:Uc, director Saturday of the last homecoming
Entered in the contest are Bar- of field work and associate pro. here. · bara Barr, Charlottesville, Va., fessor of Church Community Life In addition to the Wake Fore'"atsenior; Shirley Burris, Thomas- at Southeastern Seminary, will al- University of North Carolina ville junior; Vivian Butler, Salem, so speak in programs of' the con- ~·ootball. game, homecoming will
P vention. 1 d 1 b N. J., senior; Anne Cutter, ensa- me u e an a umni arbecue, high cola, Fla., freshman; Betty Cumby, In a business session of the school band day, social gatherings High Point senior; Aliene Hinkle, convention, plans will be discussed ~nd half-time appearances of the Thomasville, senior; Ann Kitchen, coneerning definite u£6 of Listen beau.ty pageant winners. Also apMaxton, junior; Barbara Ledbet- Campaign funds, as well as the pearmg at half-time will be Mise ter, Winston-Salem, junior; Hilda c;.mposition of the State BStJ Demon Deacon, a coed to be elect.. :Maulden, Kannapolis, senior; Joan Counci!. Under a proposed system, ed by the student body and to be Mauney, Spindale senior; Lorrian., alll<>cal BSU presidents will auto- named at the game. . Munn, Badin senior, and Barbara matically become Council mem- Flanking the activity will be a Stanley, ·Four Oaks junior. hers. . co.lorfully decorated campus. Prizes
Voting for Miss Demon Deacon Students interested in attending will be awarded to the fraternity ...1·11 be held 1·n the Recreati'on the convention should contact Ect ' · d d . ., Jlouses an ormttories with the Room, starting today, at a penny Christman, local BSU secretary. best decorations.
vote. The contest is to close Invitations have been extended Satu1~·d lav at noon. The winner· is to at least 12 high school bands tc be ·announced at half-time a't 6 WF CadetS to participate in homecoming. Col-the Wake Forest-North .Carolina lege Band Director Angelo Cap-game Saturday. H• h At c parella said the high school musi-
The. win~~r wil_l ?e entered in: Ig amp £ians will have an opportunity to the Miss Dixie Classic contest hela · tour the campus early Saturday in connection with the bas!tetball Standings of Wake Forest. ROTC morning before they gather at tournament by that name m Ra- cadets at last summer's camp ·at 10 o'clock in Groves· Stadiwn leigh, Dec. 29.-31. Fort Benning, Ga., were. recently where each band will give a five-
Jan Bell;·_-.. Spa:tenburg, , S. ?·• received by the local military de- minute demonstration. The. public former coe.d, was last years Win· partment, including a fourth-rank- is invited. Just before game time ner of tlie ·contest ing position by one College stu- the high school bands will mass
dent. · with the Carolina and 'Wake For·
Race Relations To Be Aired
A panel discussion on "The Minister's Responsibility in Racial Iitegratiori or Segregation" will h-ighlight a meeting of the Cullom Ministerial Conference tomorrow night at 1 o'clock.
Dr. David L. Smiley will serve as moderator for the panel, which will consist of Dr. S. A. NeWIDan of the Seminary.. Dr. Eugene Banks, sociology professor, and Tommy Funderburke, Asheboro \. senior.
.. The young minister's obligations in the light· of the legal and ·etb.i· cal questions confronting tochi:/'s society will be discussed.
Beverly Barge, Durham senior in esL bands to play the national · Law School, ranked fourth among anthem. Also in pre-game cer&the 1,289 cadets at the summer m<inies will be the College ROTt: training camp. Barge is now serv- drill team. ing as Cadet Regimental · Com· The barbecue and brunswick mander of the Wake f'-.rest ROTC stew luncheon to which all alumnl unit. and friends of the College are in·
Five other Coller·~ cadets also vited, will begin at 11:30 a. m. rankoo in the top 1 '} per eent of in Gore Gym. From 11 o'clock the performa~:ce srandings, in- until noon a coffee hour for alumRuffin Johnson, Smithfield; David nae will be held in Johnson DormSmith, Raleig:•; Jicnmy Cleary, itory. Following 'the game the North Wilkesb"'n; i<'1·ank Wyatt, Law School will hold a social hour Candor, and Robert. Simpson, in the Law Building for alumni Lilesville. · and their guests.
The ratings were ba:-ed on act- _Faye Arnold of Raleigh, Mis~ ual t•adet per.::orm:.mce. Considered North Carolina of 1955, and Carol in r~'!lkin~ the melt were charac- Jennette, Miss Maryland, will be ter, military. learning- and ap- honored at halftime along with peara.nce, attitude, C:·: ;-endabi1ity, the Miss Demon Deacon' selectiorr. ·. illingness to ac1!ept respom· •ili- · \t.Iisl't "'norida has been invited but t; , job perfc· :mance and phy .• cal'j l1as •. ot indicated yet if she will i.tness. 'lttend.
PAGE TWO OLD GOLD AND BLACK
---B:Y HILDA MAULDEN-------_;.. ....... -;
\-==-. Magnolia Leacv~s-=== c9lb 8olb anb Jtllatk • • Wake Forest College • •
Charles Newman Editor
Don Craver - Bob Jeffords Co-Business Managers
Monday, October 17, 1955
Organized Election
A freshman interested in pledging a fraternity wrote to his parents to see if they approved. -A reply immediately came in :the mail saying that his parents felt he should join at least one.
dances. Some outfits are certainly unique, but Joan Mauney topped them all last year. She went to the big , fo~al wearing a white evening· dress and green corduroy bedroom shoes. ' '
~
One night iast week a request The following was sent as a ~vas made on WFDD from the ·letter of application to the College: coeds to all Wake Forest men who "Dear Sir': · Freshman elections have come and ·gone. They did not
have the same scale of excitement that usually goes with fall elections, and they did not have the same number of voters that usually votes in freshman elections.
'date importS: "Donkey Serenade." I would like too know all about
The lack of excitement may have come from a lack of organization behind candidates. But it appears that some , organization was there. · j
There was only one slate of candidates drawn up this, year. It came in the f0rm of the names of five candidates· printed on one poster. Three of the five candidates won i their respective races, signifying that collective campaign-ing is effective. ..
Of course there is no law that prohibits five candidates from getting to·gether, pooling their resources and winning elections. But the fact that the three male candid.ates on the slate all pledged the same fraternity the night after elections, plus the fact that one of the two coeds has been seen around the campus quite frequently with a member of that same fraternity, may show the evidence of organized backing of all five.
Last spring the Student Legislature voted to set freshman elections ahead of fraternity pled·~ing to cut out organized backing. The promise of aid in .election is a good rushing drawing card. For this reason the Legislature tried to outlaw such actions.
It would seem that the Legislature failed in its purpose. It all adds up to the fact that the Constitution is still very much outdated.
As far as voting is concerned, this year's freshman class failed to uphold last year's standard of percenta~es. Last year approximately 73 per cent of the class voted. This year's record comes to a me·gar 51 percent.
It may be that student apathy is the cause of both problems: there may be other reasons. At any rate. freshman elections ar~ far from being what they should. The Legislature has a lot of work ahead, including some work on the matter of electing freshman officers.
A Matter Of Honesty
Unexpected Pleasure As a trite ~aying goes, "Orchids to the faculty." Praise
and celebration are and have been in order since Monday afte::noon when the faculty voted to ··return a shortened versH;m of the spring holiday to the calendar.
Usmg the moti:ve that with single class cuts, instead of double ones for the days surrounding a holiday, classes would be nearly empty anyway, the faculty went further than student body officers asked.
~owever, the fact remains that the faculty likes a hohday, too. Indeed, the drag from February to May w:ould be long and grusome without a break of some kmd-for faculty and students alike. . Several_ ~em.bers of the faculty did not like the Idea of g1vmg In so freely to students' wishes. But the fact that the holidays are now present shows that the fa~ulty had the same idea in the back of its collective mmds.
Only two problems arise from the newly acquired holi?ays: Why wasn't the Student Calendar Committee called m on t]:te deal? Last spring>, when the calendar cutting out ~ohdays was brought forth, the student body administratiOn sent ~P a howl in the form of a letter to the faculty, protestmg the absence of stttdent opinion ·on the matter. , . But, judging from the shouts of joy rendered by dorm students late Monday afternoon, no one seems to care whether or not student opinion was consu'lted.
The other problem that arises is that Old Gold will have to revise its publication schedule. The staff had. planned to take a holiday anyway during the week of Feb. 30-March 5 because of the long spring seruest{!r. News usuall~ comes slowly during that period, so that was a good time to take a break. . · ·
Now the editors will have to write to our advertisers and our printers and explain the new situation. ·
A few minutes our college. I would like too be a !ater a reply was 01' take a business course: r would played for the like too know how the people sleep, coeds. ·Strutting is it two in a bed or two then a With My Bar- Rest Room then two other beds. becue." I · would like all the books and
A senior was talking .to Dr .. Allen . about his brother;s partt
cular interest in Bach and organ music.
"Mike,"· he proceeded to tell the professor,"· even got in an argument with Dr. Robinson about Sl·me of Bach's compositions."
"Well," grinned the prof, "did he win or did he have to take it 'Bach.'"
Homecoming is just around the corner and the few coeds who are going are busy planning what they will wear to the parties and
Frats Take 121 Pledges
(Continued from page 1)
Chadbourne, and June Wolfe, Mt. Olive.
Sigma Pi
everything else I could have. Thank you very much.
41 Yours truely ... " Wonder if this girl was ac
cepted?
Dr. Poteat, deep in the middltl of a Latin 31 lecture, was. explaining Roman government to the class. He alSQ gave his opinion on tht United States government, 'Communism and Joseph McCarthy. Recalling that McCarthy had accused various big wheels in the army of being Communist'he saia it was "the second time in the history of the 'wor1d that an attempt was made to defeat an arm)' with the jawbone of an ass!"
But we don't mind that too much. In fact, it's a pleasure .. I
. .
It. Seems .To Me-. •'
By GRAY BOYETTE
;.- ' .
ETcE_TF;RA -By The· Ed ito; ·.
The Student MagaZi~e oeanie·out Friday afternoon-somewhat .. belated, but still out-with many new changes in its makeup. '
·Owen Herring, who divides his time between 'being co-editor· of the magazine and being student body vice president, studied the lay-Outs of air and any m'agazines h•J could get his hands.on all summer long. The result is a much better literary work than has been here in the past.
The Student's style is modern .iQ all respects, complete · with ·lower-case words where capitals ·used to be the rule. Perhaps the · only thing that is lacking is the use of. pictures. Old Goltl's pubrow neighbors may .. take this as criticism from a publication that. uses many pictures, but a few more illustrations might be ·in order. · •.
The only real gripe that Old Gold has about the magazine i:s that. the editors don't do justice to a fQrmer· Old Gold staffer, William Pate, who mailed in the lead short story to the magazine from Fort McClellan, Ala.
The editors, in a preface-like round-up of the _behind-the-sc~nes work on the Student, say 'that Pate was "a regular ·on Pub Row, working some for The Student; and as a staff member of Old Gold and Black." . . '
To our point of view, :friend Pate was more than just a &taff member. He was· the. mainstay of the Old Gold staff, who occasionly dropped a piece of paper in ·the box marked "The Student-Contributions Invited."
Old Gold Staff
Sports Editor ........ Lloyd. Preslar Circulation 1\lgr. . ........ Mary Ann
· Hampton Photographer ·-·---..... Irvin Grigg
Bu~iness Staff: Pat Barbour, Bob Gqerlich, Darlene Herman, Dan Lovelace, Joanne McMillan, Rick Medlock, Juanna Joy MitcheH, Tommy Pappendick, Billy Powell Mary Smithwick, John Wagster: Sue Weathers.
Circu1ation staff: Jo Butler, Dinah Cooke, :Laura Edwards, Margaret Feeney, Gloria Flippin, Lib Ham.,. rick, Alliene Hinkle, Sybil Hinkle Harriet Jane :Lewis, Louise Me~ Ilwain, Joan· Mauney, Vann Mitchell, Janet Parker, Marietta Perry, Carol Stroud. ·
Founded Jan. 15, lln6, and publishe<ll· each Mond~y during the school year except during examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.
M~mber of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service. Inc. Subscription rate--$2.50 per Year.
Entered as second class matter Jaaua.r,-22, 1916, and re-entered APril 5, 1943, at the post office at Wake Forest, North Carolina, lUlder the act of M3rch 3, 1879.
,,
The na to 11:
17~ '195&
"
47~Voic~ €hQir· w~ ri~present : WF This Y e~r
By MAB¥ :£LISE BRIDGER
Members of the 47-member college Choir were announced llist week by Prof. Thane McDonald, dli-ectot. -The group has scheduled several appearances for the- year.
The ChOir was chosen from members of the College Glee Club. James Good is- the accompanist.
Included in the plans for the year are appearances at Louisbw·g, ASheboro, Swepsonville, New Bern, Kinston, 'Laurinburg, Dum._berton and Durham. · · . :Members :follow:
and their sections
· . SopranoS: Dee H'Ughes, Dunrea.th Jarratt, Barbara Ledbetter,
:Marianne Long, Lorraine .Munn, · Virginia Pearson, Helen Smith, Virginia Tyson, Melinda Speas, Mery Joe Howard, Leona Lamm, Janet Parker, Mary . 'Smithwick, Mary Jane Strider, Susie Tweed.
Altos: Marian Cornett, Betty Cumby, Marcia Greenshields, Dot Hughes, 'Vivian t-!Ol'lgan, , Anne Be!!-tty, Carol Jennette, Janice Kell~r, Joyce Porter, Esther Seay,
Tenors: Richard HenderSon, Chester · Howe, Otis Sizemore, James Wal'd, Howard StUltz, Bill · · , · Avery, Frank aeer, Hugh'Maples- . Dance Sponsors--Wake Forest fraternity ~en'and their
. dates will listen to the rnusie of March-den, James P~well, Morris Britt. ard and his orchestra. at the Intra-Fraternity- Council's Homecoming
Bas$es: 'Junius· Gaffney, Don Logsdon, Bill Pearce, Fred Simp- Dance from 8-12 Saturday· night in 'Raleigh's Memorial Auditorium. ,., J Sponsoring the dance will ~ Jane Dunson, Durham, with Dave
son, ·Ronnie ~tone, C, , Benner, . 'I'ommy Bunn, Frank Crump_, · Ausband, ·Alpha ·Sigma Phi; Hilda Maulden, Kannapolis senior, with David Hirano, Hunter Stone, Don Gr~y Boyette, ~appa Alpha; An:n W'renn, Green.sbor-o, with RichTaWm, William'WiggiDs. ard Day, Kappa Alpha; Nancy Childress, Washington; D. C., ·with
Charles ~id, Kappa Sigma; Mary Ann J~nes, Laurinburg, with
-Fr.~nch Club M~ts
with Houston Curd," Pi Kappa Alpha; Mro;. Marianne Whedbee, Wake Forest, with Gil Whedbee, Pi Kappa Alpha; Mrs. Yulan Washburn, Wake Forest,· wit!t Yulan Washburn, Sigma Chi; Betty Forehand. C:olerain, with Alden King, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Edith. Forest, Lexin~ton, with Richard Whisnant, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Karan W alk~r Willington freshman, with John Thompson. Sigma Pi; !\-Trs.' .Jim Cleary, Wa_ke Forest, with . .Jim Cleary, Sigma Pi; Nancy Ga!lienne, Canton. with Simon Downs. Theta Chi, and Tweetie Holder Pickens
-S. C.,-- with Pat Price, Theta Chi. Not }rictur.ed are Barha;a Pisano: Newark, N. J., with Ralph Pellecchia, Alpha Sigma Phi, and Nancy Nutter, !\-loorestown, N. J., with Bill Powers, Sigma Chi. ·
PAGE TBREB
\ CJJeac~ ~!? B~!~ Greeks Members of the nine social fra- Several members Joined with
·ternities put their new pledges the N. C. State College chapter to work last week aa they took after the game Saturday night for a rest themselves after the wear !1. party in Raleigh. and tear of rushing. All the members will go back w work the next few· days, however, as they prepare their houses for the big home~ colp.ing week end.
Homecoming decorations will be the main problem. Sigma Chi won ;he contest last fall with a frontyard display showi.p.g the Deacons takin& over the Orange Bowl.
ALPHA SIGMA PHI Decorations are occupying much
Joe Currin and John Everhart are new upperclassm"an pledge.lj.
SIGMA CHI Alumni Bill <Boregarde) Wil
liams and Worley Creech recently visited the cha;pter.
The Singing Sigs sang at Vesper .services, t h e Ministerial Conference and the wedding of alu.m.nus Herb Korgney recently.
THETA CHI
time at the Alpha Sig house, but A party for the brothers retu..-rnthe men ha>e fnund time for a ing from· military service was held -bit of relaxation. Several followed at Gino's Oct. 7. Also, a part.v ~he football team to College Park, dance for pledges was held at Md., ·and Thursday afternoon the the house. chapter held open house for the Several brothers had week-end coeds. .:;uests at the fraternity house the
J. C. Turner, an alumnus of the la.<;t few days. · chapter, recently pinned Faye Glenn of Durham.
LAMBDA em ALPHA I Dr. I. B. Lake, Ed Ch1istman
WAKE INSURANCE AGENCY
.and John Riggs •>\'ere featured Representin~ Strong Mutual ,<;peakers at the Lambda Chi for- Fire Jn.cmrance Companies. mal smoker at the communit-y 2075 Wait St.·- Phone 5941 House <Xt. 5. The informal smoker -----~--------...!1 was held at the fraternity hou..:Je Monday. · Bob Dyer and Joe Ceres were ordered to tp.e showers recently. Dyer ~Pinned Jeannine Koonce, a junior at Winthrop College, and Ceros pinned Carolynne Harwell, a. junior a.t Meredith College.
Sandy Tuton, Al Baker and Fred: Simpson recently pledged the fraternity.
SHORT ORDERS AND SANDWICHES
DEACON'S ROOST "Young's Barbecue"
Winston Salem, N- c. "Near the. New Campus"
PI KAPPA ALPHA
The PiKA's have.received.second ·============== place in the service award gh:en by :-----..;..---------:~ their national headquarters. The award, called t h e President's Award for Community Service. was
Dr. Charles M. Allen rwUl show color slides of F:r8nce at a meeting <>f the French Club TUesday night. II'he meeting -will be ·held in room
---------~-----------------___:.:__ __ ---'-------------------------- given expecially for the local chapLike Wake; s S d G 0 · 1 it .I ter's Chrisbmas party for under-tU .Y . . _r~nts _ pen n 1r~exico priviledged children last year.
Buddy Page~ Kapp:a Sigma; Virgini_~ Pearson,. Wake Forest 'senior, with Rod Beals, Lambda Chi Alpha; Elaine Pierce Charlotte, with A. T. Austin, Lambda Chi Alpha; Mrs. Houston Cu~d. Wake Forest, Wake 'Forest
Florist u c ·.·Sets . Ru.sh .Rules . Nov. 1, 1955, is the closing' .dat-a Mexican -Governn'lent awaras are i-~ -------------. ~ for application for grnd~te fel- U. S. citizenship, knowledge of JeHtrds Mutual
- 2 of the Johnson Building at -. 7. o'clock' ..
FOREST THEATRE Week Of Oet. 17, 1955
Shows-Mon.- Fri. 3:15, '1:00, 9:00 Satnrday-Con~uous 1 - 11 Sunday-2:00, 3:(5, 9:00,
Monday -Tony CurtiS & Coleen Miller
--in"PURPLE MASK"
Cinemaseope · .. ·
_The weeks of Oct. 3-7 and 10-14 tive fraternities n.t the earlier date hllive been reserved for invitational will help raise the level of freshrushing at the University hf con- man scholarshiP and the opera..rieeticut under a revised fraternity tional efficiency of the houses. rushing program on that campus. It is beliveed that internal pres
.Instuj;utlon of fall rushing com- sure from the fraternities will help menced Monday, Sept. 26, with the pledges maintain the scholastic traditional IFC smoker. at wl'!ich requirements necessai-i for initiatime the 'general outline of the tion, and improvement o>er pre-
vious~ semester's pledging on midprogram and its rules and regu-lations were presented to the fresh- semester grades, which PrQVed a men. Tuesday; the following day, poor indication of freshman schol-
arship and. caused many pledges was a closed date,. with ri.o rush to be dextied_ initiation !Uld to. be fUnctions .in progress.
W dne.sd Th placed' on· an inactive status.
e ay and ursday, Sept; · · ' · t 28-29- signaled' the opening of the_ J;t was also hoped. that ·.he pro-
Tuesday & Wednesday official rolind-robin rushing, with gram could be ,camed out· before Mark Stevens & Martha Hyer freshmen 'required to visit a stipu- the first of the semester's exams
--in-"CRY VENGEANCE''
Jated number of houses, •· and re- were scheduled,. taking a· burden ceive n~tarization on the IFC rush- of_f · both rushees and br~hers, card for a minimum number of and allowing an oppo_rtUIJ,I~y for visits: Each house planned and al! ·1:9 more fully. ~artiClpate = the executed its i.lldividual rush pro- progn.m.
Thursday: & Friday it-am/which had· to be registered· --------...------ Bu:rp.pllrey Bogart & .. Gene Tierney With :the· IFC~ All three of the in~
-in- ·. . i eluded weekeruls were cloSed, with
.no freshmen- allowed in the fm' temity houses;
·:s·&.E-· "LEFT HAND e:F GOD"
Cinemaseope
Saturday &r:y Callloun & Julia Adams
-m-"TJJE LOOTERS"·
.Also Serial & Two Cartoons
Sunday WiUiam · Campbell & Marian C~rr
-in-"CELL 2455 - DEATH ROW"
COLLEQIATE.THEATRE. Week of October 17, 1955
Shows-Mon.- Sat. 3:15, 7:00, 9:00 Sunday 2:00,3:45,9:00
Monday & Tuesday Dick 'Bogarde & Muriel Pavlov
- I • -tn-"DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE"
Wednesday & Thunday Alee Guiimess & Joan Greenwood
...;.jn"DETECTIVE"
'Friday & Saturday · Dana Andrews
-in"WHERE~THE SIDE
WALK ENDS'•
Sunday R!>bert Newton & Glynis Jo~ns
-in''BEACHCOMER'·
The traditional silehce period -will begin on Friday, Oct. 14, a.t 6 p.m., and continue •anti! tapping, slated for Monday, Oct. 17. Bids to be extended had to be registered with the IFC by Saturday of that weekend at 2 p.m. Initiation of the new bothers will take place after semester marks have been an:. nounced when scholastic eligibility will have been officially declared.
First semester rushing was designed tO improve the procedure from . both the • fraternity and il'UShee . aspects of the situation. It is hoped that by integrating the potential brothers with the resPec-
Students
' .
.CLEAN£RS FOR
EXPERT SERVICE
We Specialize
in Cleani~g of Tux and E. vening Gowns
our
We .. have an a~an:gement. with
publishers that they will accept
our surplus books if we will return
them by October 25. Due to exist
ing conditions we will be forced to
comply with this offer. If you have
not purchased your book;s please see
us before the above date and we ' will hold them for you.
Many Thanks,
Book Store
Iowships for study in Mexico dur.~. Spanish, a good academic record fiftSUrance ·-·· f ulg_ 1~56, it was anno:unced recently a valid proJect ~r purpose an~ MI='.G iby Kenneth Holland, President of good health. Preference will be the Institu!e of International Edu- given. to graduate students, bat cation. undergraduates (juniors and sen
The awards. which are given iors) are also .eligible for awards. through the Mexico-United State-; Applicants may write for inforCommission on Culbtrral Coopera- mation to .. the'·u. s: student Deti<ln, are for the academic year ·partment of the Institute of Interoogin.ning _March 1, ·1956. national Education, 1 East 67.th
Eli!tibility requirements .for the St.,. New York. _ '
What young people are
Young-,·eng-ineer pioneers in d~sign and·- sales of new . _tiny. transistors.
· The germanium transistor..:.._some smaller than ·the eraser end of a pencil and able to operate on a few thousandths of a watt -i~ probaLiy·one of the most promising developments in the electronics field today. It opens the way to new midget radios, TV sets flat enough to hang on a wall and many other exciting possibilities.
One of the men who helped desi,"ll and perfect these tiny transistors-and the man who is now head of sales for all General
Electric germanium products-is James H. Sweeney, . Manager-Marketing, Semi'con
ductor Products Department.
Sweeney's Work Interesting. Vital As early as 1948, Sweeney was head of a group that studied the design .and possible uses of germanium products. He gained national recognition for his work in developing and introducing these products to other industries, and when a new Semicond~ctor Products Department was formed in 1953, Sweeney was a natural choice foe the job of marketing these products.
25,000 College Graduates at General Electric. When Sweeney came to General Electric in 1941, he worked in· many different depart
ments until l?e finally found the wo.rk he w·anted- to do. Like Sweeney, each of the
, 25,000 college-graduate employees is given the chance to grow, to find the work he does best, and to realize his full potential. For General Electric has long believed this:
.~:··.=. ' • ... ··:
. :. ~-
420 W. Fourth St. Winston-Salem. N. C.
Our Dividends Save You ?f!.oney
Gen«al_ Insurance
J. C. Jeffords ('50)
. :·•',
.ALL COEDS: On Sunday nights the movies will end by 10:40 p. m. The Short Features will be elimi· nated to make it possible for you to be back at .. the ·dormitories by 11:00 p. m.
College "ON THE CAMPUS" I
~-----J·
When fresh young minds are given the freedom to make progress, everybody benefits -the individual, the company, the country.
Call on us for all of your Flower
needs .Remember especially
MUMS for Homecoming·
PAGE FOUR. OLD: GOLI1 ~Jj. BLACJ( .
U _ Bands.-:·,Will -.colleg~ P.ro'fa~ _ . _
Piny At GaWe 8 Attelld -Baptist ·Meet~. ~: .
Seminary Sets New Cafeteria For Campus
The College Band will play hOSt -B:y' ~Ali MILLf:R !Mount Gilead. · to 11 high school bands from .. · - , Prof~rs of religion and the .across the state·, Saturday as a. Eight Wake Forest professqrs associations they visited follow:
Plans for a $100,IJOO cafeteria :for the Semin,.ary camptis after the removal of the College to WwsionSalem were announced last week by the Seminary.
part of HomeComing e;ents. represented the 'College last week The bands,:whiehlrepresent high, at Baptist associational ~tings ' Dr. J.' w. Angell, Blue Ridge
scbools from the ,~astern pa.rt of thoughout the state. . and Sandy 'Run Associations at North Carolina, l include Spring Marion and Forest City; Dr. Owen ·
Dr. Thomas J. Turner of the F. Herring,· North Roanoke A.ssO-
The new building, a part of the $600,000 renovation .program by the Seminary for the Wake Forest campus, is the only new buildmg yet appoved by the Scminay Board of Trustees.
~~ A~al · ~nto~. ~:dsor, Physics Depa.rtD:u;nt ~tte~ed a ciation at Roanoke Rapids; Dr. :· te_ · res • rook, meeting of the New South River George J. Griffin, South Roanoke
Roles;.'llle, Lowsburg, Oxford and Association near Dunn. D Gaines· As . t· t Rob . vill .
Architects' Drawing of Proposed Seminary Cafeteria
Tarboro • r. I SOCia 100 a erson e. A ma~-~d formation includ·-• M. Rogers, De~ _of th:e Sch~~ of Prof. Robert L. Ne~n. Bladen
ing all the visiting groups will be Business ~dministrati~n.- vlSlted Association. a.t Bladenboro, Dr. J. f t ed . h the Flat River Association at Ox- Allen Easley; Brushy Mountain
Construction on the new cafeteria is to begin soon after the beginning of next year. Building schedules call for it to be ready for use for the opening of the 1956-57 school tei'lll.
ea ur m a pre-game s ow f d d Pr f · ,.-------------------------------------------: before the Wake Forest-North or • ~ . o · Jasper Memory of Association at Hiddenite and South
Carolina foot'OO.ll Th c 1 the. Euucatmn Department was at Mountain Association at Connelly
WFDD RadioStation Log . 1eie and UniverJ:n~~ ~ll the Montgomery Association • near Springs. '
A site for the building has not yet been decided upon. but Semi;nary officials say that it will probably be built either on the groonds of the present cafeteria or on Wingate Street, across the street lfrO!!ll Gore Gym.
Other plans under consideration by the Seminary for the campus include a renovation of the Chapel ~to a sanctuary-like building, the conversion of the Chemistry Building into a student center, new reading rooms on the Library and Jllinor alterations on WaJ.t Hall. Renovation of the C3llllPIJS is set to begin soon after the College's move.
Six Associates, Inc .• of Ashev'ille is in chage of the achitectural details of the renovation.
For1956
MONDAY 7:00 a. m.-Alarm Clock Club 6:00 p. m.-Symphony Hour 7:00-News 7:15-Transcription 7:30--Tops in Pops 8:00---Lounging with Logan 9:00---Sports News 9:15-Music Miller Made 9:30---Juke Box Jamboree
10:00-Late Date-Part I. 11:00-News 1:1:05--Late Date-Part I 12:00-Late Date--«'art II 1:00--Sign of:f
nJESDAY 7:00 a. m.-Ala.rm Clock Club 6:00 p. m.--Symph,>ny Hour 7:00-News 7:15---Tops in Pop-S' 7 :45-BSU Show S:OO-Lounging with Logan
_Rhodes Grants Open Rhodes Scholarship competition I physical vigor," Dean Davl.Gc:n
for 1956 was announced recently .said. ·PY Dean W. C. Da.visOn of the Any unmarried man between 19 Duke Uni'Versity Medical Sohool. and 25 t~~.•bo l3 at least a Junior in
Dean Davidson is secretary of college is eligible to compete for the selection committee in North one of the awards which each year Carolina for next year's candidates sends 32 American men to study at for the two-year scholarships at Oxford. England's Oxford University. Ap- "The Rhodes scholar may choose plication deadline f01" interested studies in any of Oxford's 23 colcompetitors is Nov. 1, 1965. leges, including la.w, medicine and
"The selection committee is in- any of the liberal arts and sciences, ~in good all-around young "Dee.n DavisOn, himself a fonner men; ' that is, t h 0 s e who have ;Rh~ scholar, po~ted out. "The shown some definite quality of award ·may be extended to three
distinctlon in scholastlc abWty and years if the scholar's reeonl is
9:00-Sports News 9:15-Scuttlebutt
10:00--Late Date-Part I ll:O~News . 11 :05-Late Date-Part· I 12 :00-La te Date-Part . II 1:00-Sign off
WEDNEsDAY 7:00 a. m.-Alarm Clock Club 6:00 p. m.-Symphony Hour '7:~News 7 :15-Transcription 7:30---Tops in Pops 8:00---Lounging with Logan 9 :00--Sports News 9:15-Fashion Show 9:30--Juke Box Jamboree
10:00--.Late Date-Part I 11:00-News 11:05-Late Date-Part I 12:00-Late Date-Part II
1 :00--Sign off '
THURSDAY 7:00 a. m.-Alarm Olock Club 6:00 p. 'm.-Symphony Hour 7:00---News 'i:15--Tops in Pops 7:45-BSU Show 8:00--Lounging with Logan 9:00-Sports News 9:15-Scuttlebubt
10 :00--Late Date-Part I 1
11:00--News 11:05-Late Date-Part I 12:00-Late Date-P.aat II
1:00--Sign Dff
FRIDAY 7:00 a. m.-Alarm Clock Club 5:00 p. m.--Symphony Hour 7:00--News 7: 1&--Transcription 7 :~"'Toi>s' hi. Pops · .. ,.· .. ,.,-,..,,
. 8 :oo-Lounging with Logan 9 :CO-Sports N em
satisfactory," he added. privilege would be subject to severe A Rhodes scholarship is worth penalty. Persons supervising the·
!1:30--Juke Box Jamboree 9:15----Music Miller Made
10:00------Late Date-Part I 11:00--News 11:05-Late Da~Part I 12:00--:-Late Date-Part II
1 :00-Si_gn off
SATURDAY 7:00 a. m.-Alarm Clock Club 7:00 p. m.-News 7:15--Saturday Night -Dance
Party 9:00-Sports NeWS' 9:15-Hit Parade of Stars 9:15-Top 10 Tunes
lO :00-Late Da~Part I 11:00-News 11 :05---Late Da.te--->--Part I 12 :00-Late Date-Part II 1:00-Sign off
SUNDAY 10:00 a.m.-Church Serviee 2:00 p. m.-Music on a Sunday
Afternoon 6:00---Quiet Music 7:00---News 7:15---Transcription 7:30--To be announced 8:~hurch Service 9:00-Sports News 9:15-Make Believe Ball Room
10:30--Cavalcade of Music 11:00---Newg 11 :05----Cavalcade of Music 1.2:00--Sign off
put on the half-time pefoi'lllallce. Each visiting high sclwol band
will give a brief show -on the campus Saturday morning beginning at 10. The public is invited -to watCh each of the 11 peJ;"f~rma.nees.
' Does your hair style make you preUy! It must, to be truly smart. This year tJaere is JtG
one· . fad, no one length. Tlie fashionable head will be uncomplicated. easy to care for and good to look at according to the top national artists.
VIsrr
HORTEifSES BEAUTY SALOl
- for the styles and cold waves that suit needs.
Phone 5596
Good Home Cooking
,. -~., BREAKF AS_T- _ -.
6:30 • 9:08- >-· 2 EGGS. GRlTS. SAusAGE OR BACON, TOAST, JELLY, AND
COFFEE ···-··-··-··-··-···"""······· SOe
s1x hundred British pounds an- program' would reserve the right LUNCH and DINNE:J{
·a; apJlOinlment ourveyors of soap to !be fate King Geor1e VI; Yardley & Co., ltd. london ·
Yardley brings you I ·
months and months of shaving luxury.:.-LOndon style·_ ·
nua.lly, which will cover the stu- to check signout information at ll:30 _ 2 :00 5 :00 _ 7:(1()
dent'a complete expenses at Ox- any time. / ford, Desn Davison- pointed out. The llean's ofiice believes senior COMPLETE MEAL AS LOW AS.Ii&, INCLUDING From London, the world's center of fashions for men, comes HOlLOWELL'S "The Oxford school year com- girls are mature enough to be· HOT BISCUITS AND CORN STICKS thll Yardley Shaving 'Bowl. 'l)tis distinguished soap- im-prises three terms of two months t!Wlted, with the new privilege. ported from England and packaged in America -should give each, leaving six weeks vacation at It wa.s pointed out that the plan ·-,_WOOTEN'S HOMETEL . you up to six months of shaving luxury. The rich lather Christmas and Easter, as well as will be evaluated each year and . wil~ the beard, soothes the face and softens the skin in three months duri11g the Summer that the Associated Women Stu- wondrous fashion. At your campus store,' $1.25. Makers and FOOD
STORE to tour Europe," he noted. dents organization is free to re- LOCATED ON SOUTH MAIN distributors for U._ S. A., Yardley of London, Inc., New York.
Any interested student may ap- v_o_k_e_it_eac_h_:y_ear_. __ ....,.. _________ ..:_ ____________ .,._ _________________________________ _
ply either in the state in which he reside-s or in the state where he is attending · college. Application
WISHES THE WAKE FOREST
COLLEGE STUDENT
BODY
THE BEST
HOMECOMING EVER
may be obtained by writing to Dr. W. C. Davison, Duke University, Durham, N. c.
Colorado Girls Given Keys
Senior women at the University of Colorado will be free to stay out as late M they ;w.ish this year, according to a.r1 lW'LTIOUncement by Dean of 'Vomen Mary-Ethel Bail.
The propo.oa! has be~n approved by the Boar-d of Regents, the University Execv.t.h·e Committee and President Wm-d Darley.
Under the plan, door keys will be given to e-.ach s~:Uor, the cost being absorbed by lA- key deposit. Seniors would be requ:ired to sign out of their residence when they intend to be out beyond the re-gular closing hoW'S or overnight. Falsification of information on ·--------------1 signout slips or abuse of tlbe key
TODAY SE'E BEN ABOUT YOUR
TUX FOR HOMECOMING
When you,re: the star of t!£e play, The Big_Manof·the Day,
I ,.
You des'f1]e a b:oUquet-have a CAMEL!
...... ·MOM.,-ftta& raQtre!
It's a psychological fact: Pleasure helps your disposition. If you're a smoker,
remember- more people get more pure pleasure from Camels thon
from ony other cigarette~
No ether cigareHe is so rich-tasting, yet so mild I
• 8.11.-.. ~Co .. ---.-.c.
For Style, Quality, and Valu_e . .. . Shop The
B. & S. DEPARTMENT STORE, INC. Wake Forest, NoJ,"th Carolina
, ..
• I
. --~
. ,,
"
, ..
,.
--
- I·
,. l • y
'.. ''1 , .. ;. ·. " '. t
' sPORtRAITs··. . ;.By LLO'YD PRESLAR
Coach George. Barclay of the stiil imina~ur'e' Tar Heels said last week that his team wasn't as bad as it looked. against .. G~orgia, '1not by an~ means<' He was thinking mostly of. the blu~~ers hls sophomoreled eleven had made- and, we m1ght add, have been making all season. . . Qul;lrterbacking Caroliiia these days 1s Dave Reed, .. a· middle-sized. Pennsylvanian who handles the ball expertly, but seems to lack. enough wile· in the liuddle. Reed has potential and seems to be Barclay's favorite field general, but he's got a. lot to learn when it comes to mixing 'em·up.. . .
· Alternating with Reed is 19-year-old Buddy Sasser, smaller - yet and still· more inexperienced. Sasserr got a lot of publicity
.. while ·playing freshman ball last season, and the· Chapel Hil,l drum-beaters thought he'd be the starter after senior Len Bullock giLve up Sunday morning hea~lines for man-ied life and a safer year with the Playmakers. ,
Experienced Deacs Pass Better · Reed and Sasser, then,. along with veterans Ken Keller, Ed
Sutton and Don Lear, will be the big offensive weapons for Carolina come ·saturday, and the result could be this: Wake Forest, with a smarter sigmil-caller, better line (when healthy) and pair of' c<mference-leading pass' receivers can win.
Nick Consoles has proved his throwing ability-No. 2 Jmtionally last week-, and th~ Deaco~ quarterback . should be able. to outsmart Carolina's sophs· .. Jack Ladner ~l!d ~ill.'Ba.rnes ·are the. bi:g, men on the downfield end of Consoles's · throws. .
Carolina's Reed can pass, too, but he's had. hi~ share of troubles this•; season.' Before Saturday ' he had . completed six of 19, but five of the connections ·came in .one game. Reed'smain trouble against Georgia was- a "'eak line wh:ich yielded to Bulldog defenders' too often. And· that's where Bob -Bartholomew, Rocky Littleton and Joe Dupree ,will come in handy.
Biggest threats to a happy homecoming will probably be Wi~l Frye; Keller and Sutton. Frye gets his hands on the ball more often than'any end in the conference, though ,he hasn't caught many passes. He punts with ease, returns kicks and scored a
. touchdown in e11ch ·of the frst two games, recovering in the end zone both times.
Vets Recall Sutton's Running. Keller, who always gets' a post-game pat on the back from
Coach Barclay, is good for about three yards per carry. Sutton hasn't shown much this season, but Deacon veterans who chased him all over Kenan Stadium last. fall don't sell him short: · · ·
It should be a top-notch homecoming -game, and if 1he Deacs win, they'll be a dark horse at Clemson and have William· and
· ·Mary and Virginia on the defensi_ve. ·
: * * * * * Basketball practice will open two weeks from tomon-ow, ·and
a few Tuesdays after that Coach Murray Greason's. lads will be · at Winston for the annual tussle with State.· If the game hadn't
been switched from Gore Gym, it would be home game No.8 rot· the Deacs. Duke has 10 on schedule, Carolina has· 11 nC>me scraps and the Wolfpack will play at/least, .15 in1 Reynolds Coliseum, not counting the tournaments.
One· more bus ride shouldn't do us too much harm. . .
'· OLD. OOLD 4\Nn· BLACK·
-. -· ........ : <· P.AGE FIVE
Conioles To Barnes··
DeaCBatteryLeadScConference . Senior quarterback· Nick Con- week to bo~st his total offense Deac~ns in just al>out every other soles and ·halfback Bill Barnes mark to 353 yards for the season. department last week. The Landis dominated individual statistics in The Lynn, Mass., senior had con- junior snagged six passes at Marythe Atlantic Coas't Conference nected for 39 completions in 6o last· week despite the Deacons' attempts before Saturday and was land to run his total to 16 for the
· 2f::-7 defeat at the hands of Mary- second only to Joe Clements of s~ason and drew high praise from land. · Texas in that department. Cle- ~Iaryland coach Jim Tatum for
LOWELL (ROCKY) LITTLETON plays tackle opposite Bob B~rtholom.ew .
Rocky WonJfis Name As Game Sandlot Boy
By WESLEY KEITH and ever since, the name has stuck. If names have any meaning,
then a fellow called Rocky Little- Schoolboy Starter ton is proof that boxing is not the Littleton grew up with a love for only sport ·that can identify the footall and a rock-like desire to athlete with the game: play, and in his first three year:::.
Because L· 0 w e (1 Littleton of high school he was a starting matches up to just about every- E.nd for Haddonfield High in Ashth!ng ·his nickname implies, · no lund. other tab than Rocky could be 'He spend his senior year on a more appropriate for the husky strong Valley Forge Militar·y 208-pound tackle from Ashland, Academy eleven, gained from 18U N. ·, J. Football, including all its to 190 pounds and started think-bruising attributes, - i!>.. second ing about college football. . nature to Littleton. "After I had gained 10 more
Consoles, the Deacs' talented ments h:;td also completed 3ll his play against the Terps. field general,· ranked first in pass- to!;ses but had tried one- less thall F h" h lfb k B
Consoles and gained more gt·ound rom IS a ac post arnes . ing and total offense among the carried. 38. times in the :geacons' ACC clubs and was rated No. 2 by- pasing with 452 yards. passer in the nation. Clements High first four games for a 3.9 rushing .. Bar~iis, leading ground-gainer Clements was sixth in the nation average and a net yardage total for the Deacons, topped the ACC 1n total offense with a net gain of 147 yards. in p~ss receiving and was only of 437 yards, while Consoles He is also the team's leading 13 receptions shy of the confer- ranked 12th nationally in that scot·er with 1-1 points on two ence record prior to Saturday's division. touchdowns and t\vo conversions game at N. C. State. . A It hough Consoles' aerials out of five· attempts. , Consoles completed 14 passes placed him among the leadel'S in Barnes Nears Record fot· 126 yards at Maryland last nutional statistics, Barnes led the Barnes has an excellent chance -------------------------- of breaking ·the ACC record in
Wom-en In Shorts By JOANNE Pc;>WELL
Last year's softball champions, tiie Tri Pi's, had to be' content w:th secC>nd place in .the tournament this year as the Chi Sigs
Melville, Vann Mitchell, Jo Ann<= Powell, Gayle Privett, S a r· a h Riecke and Beverly SeawelL
came through to take the crown The Physical Education Majors by defeating every ·other society. arP planning a business meeting
Sandra Melville and Jo Butler, 'of all their 'alumni Saturday at se>fthall managers, said that 50 11:30 a. m. in the clubroom. girls participated in the games. Preparations are' being made to Ann Barlow, Mary Hawkins, Vann serve refreshments during th., l\Iitchell and .Jo, Anne Powell, meeting, and the room will be i,hysical education majors, were decorated. After the confab, the umpires i'or. the tournament. group will attend the barbecue
The scores: dinner to be served in the gym. Tri Pi 9, Gamma Tau 8.
pass recen·mg. The speedste•· needs only ·13 -more receptions to cr.-:ck the old mark set by Carl Brazell of South Carolina last fa.ll.
MEET ME AT
s s H Y'
0 T R
0, T H y•
s s Chi Sig 20, Delta Gam 18. Chi Sig 17, Tri Pi 8 .. Chi Sig 19, Gamma Tau 8. Tri Pi over Delta. Gam, forfeit.
. · EAST. SOUTH, WEST, or ~ORTH You Can't Find Better SeTVice
Members of the honorary softball varsity have been chosen. The girls will play an All-Star nine tCimorrow afternoon at 3:30.
Honorary team members a~ Ann Barlow', Shirley Danner, Nancy Evans,. Carol Guth, Mary Hawkins, Georgia King, .Sandra
Underpass Service Station
on~-~ The Deacon regular acquired po.unqs that year," Littleton says,
his nickname. long before he came "I felt .confident that I coula .. quick opening duties .. to Wake 'Forest. Wl_1en he was a n~ake. the grade in college foot- · Littleton, however, says tackling small . boy he played with the ball." i.;; his favorite chore. His breakroughest of the neighborhood Ro¥ Githens, a.. Wake Forest throughs against the Terps may gang. One aay, while :PlaYing with alumni and ·one-time football man- have saved the Deacs a touchdown
· ( Au.th·o;-oJ .. Bu#to'ot Bo11 ~fth Cheek,'' etc.)
some of .the heavier b_oys, spunky ag-er here, was·· largely responsi- or two. ~ little Lowell happened to butt ble· f()r Littleton's. coming to Wake Working toward a B. S. in 'heads with another fellow. · Forest. Githens began telling him physical education, Little~on plans
·.Contrary .'to. the ;xpectations of about the' school ·when. Littleton to gr~duate next' spring. He and the "big" boys, Littleton did not . began his liigh ·SChooi career. "his wife, formerly Jo Ann Till of ci:y .and .. ru:Q .49ill~·· In·;admirati~H1 Opposed,Bartholomew. ·Wake Forest, will move to Little-
·I THE PEN IS MIGHTIER THAN· THE SMOOCH
Back in my courting days (the raccoon coat was all the rage, e\•erybody was singing Good Morning, Mr. Zip, Zip, Zip and young BC>naparte had just left Corsica) '?a~k, I say, in my cou~ing days, the standard way to melt a g1rl s heart was to wr1te poetry to her. .
his ·playmates called hini' Rocky,_ . Littleton came here in 1952 and ·ton's hometown. where he plans -=-=------------------------;:_ ___ __:__..:.:,._:::_=====:::j;=:::;:=:=;= · ·was sWitched from a flanker tu to be a coach.
For the next few weeks, though, ·the tackle position opposite Bob Littleton is still a player. And as Bartholomew. The two men didn't
Young men today have abandoned this gambit, and I must say I don't understand why. Nothirig is quite as effective as poetry for moving a difficult girl. What's more, poems are ridiculously easy to write. The range of subject matter is end· \ less. You can write a poem about a girl's hair, her eyes, h~r nose. her lips, her teeth, her walk, her talk, her clothes, her ~h~anything at all. Indeed, one of my most lambent love lyr1cs Waif
~ _-..
We Make_ CoUege Easier I
The student who goes to college with a ·SOUTHWICK wardrobe gets a big headstart in ease and assurance. It is such an advantage to know oO:e~~\.clothes are really right. Suits from $7$~ Sports jackets from $55. Sla.cks from $19.95. · ·
Regulars, Longs, Ex-longs and Shorts.
...
-311 Fayetteville St.
'.:~.~ d~;:: ~;~;, .r;.·pr..- ~ tt ~
Raleigh, N. C.
know each other,· but both remem- ht says it, "Besides hunting occasionally, I'd rather play foot
her a game the year before. when ball than any other sport." Littleton, · playing for Valley Forge, opposed Bartholomew, who prepped at Staunton Military Play Golf· At Academy. CHEVIOT HILLS
Little .says the two main events Raleigh Road in· his college career occurred dur- Gr~n Fees - Week Days --,- .75 ing his sophomore year. First, Sat.. Sun., Holiday& --·-···· $1.50 "Playing • against .All-American We Rent Clubs . tackle Ed Meadows of Duke in !::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 1953 was enjoyable," he says; and second, he suffered his only major injury that year.
Despite his dealing with big :Meadows in the Duke game, Little· ton had no bruises. But in the North Carolina battle a few weeks later, lie broke his jaw; As a re· suit, he missed half the '53 season, b'ut came ·back the next fall to put the clamps on ~he right tackle slot pennanently.
Teammates think Littleton is a tough customer to go through almost four year of college ball with only one broken bone. "Nobody hurts him," a Deacon remarked recently. "I'd hate to meet him in
8ark alley." Also A Student
Coach Tom Rogers, who says Littleton is "a good student as well as a good player," singled him out for his work in the Maryland game. The ·Wake coaches descr-ibe him as one of the smartest men on the team, a good man for
JONES HARDWARE
STORE Wishes The
Football Team
The Best Of Luck
In Their H9me-
coming Game
Against Caro.lina
VISIT
..
co·LLEGE' INN J)nder New Management
And-
DICK FRYES' RESTAURANT
For The Best Meals
In Town At Reasonable Prices
called To Maud's Pencil Box. It went like this: «~
·· In your dear little leatherette pencil bo~ Are pencils of yellow and.red. And if you don't tell me ycm·zove me soon, I'U hit you on top of the head.
Honesty compels me to admit that this poem fell snort o(') success. Nothing daunted, I wrote another one. This time ~ pulled a switch; I threatened myself instead of Maud. -.
OTt, Ma.utl, pray stop this drivel And tell me you'll be miM, For my 11weetbreads they do skri1Jel And wind around my spine.
My heart doth. cease its beating. My spleen uncoil8 and warps. My Zive1' stops secreting. 8001& I needs be a corpse. \..
When this heart-rending ballad failed to move Maud, I eould only conclude that she was cruel and heartless and that I was \ better off wit~out her. Accordingly, I took back my Hi-Y pin, I bid her adieu, and have not clapped eyes upon her since. Last I ! heard of her, she was in North Scituate, Rhode Island, working as a clam sorter.
woa.W-Ikrvec~ndc.t.tt · ~~u.~·tz.7.1ttt· bectz·dr.;fte.l ,
But I did 'not mourn Maud long, for after Maud came Doris~\ Doris C>f the laughing eyes, Doris of the shimmering hair, Doris of the golden tibiae! Within moments of meeting her, I whipped up a torrent of trochaic tetrameter:
Oh, my sweet and dnlcet Doris! You're gentle as a Philip Mo·rri3, With its mild and rich tobacco And its uJhite and scarlet pack-o, Both in regular and king-size . Doris, tell me please your ring size.
WeU, of course, the poor girl couldn't resist a poem like thatwhat girl could ?-and she instantly became my slave. For the rest of the semester she carried my books, washed my car, and cored my apples. There's no telling where it all would have ended if she hadn't been drafted. r
So, men, you can see the efficacy of poetry as an aid to wooing. Try it soon. All you need is a rhyming dictionary, a quill pen, and a second-hand muse. · o¥u l!lllll.,.... 1~ss
The makers of PHILIP IJIORRlS, sponsors o/ this eolramn, gir;e you no rhrme, but plent:r o/ reason, /or smoking Philip Morris: lt•s the gentlest, pleasantest dgarette on the market today.
PAGE SIX
Deaclets Lose To Tar Babes ~yS~gleTD
"Terrific," Says Jordan
By DAVID HUGHES Carolina's Tar Babies nipped
Wake Forest's frosh,' 7-0·, Thlri"s~ daY night in a tough defensive struggle· at· Wilson. ·
The lone ·score in the ·annual Shrine game came in ·the second quarter · when · Carolina. quarterback Curtis Hathaway.' scampered over from the three yard line ·to dima.X a 33-yard drive;
The Tar Babies pushed the Deadets into a hole with a punt which went out of bounds on the \Vake three and later took over on. the 33 after a short punt by the Deac vearlings.
From there the Chapel Hillians pushed toward its score in sho~t rushes, the longest single gam being only nine yards. In the l~s't oc;uarter theY drove to t~e nme yard line before surrendermg the ball. h
In both the first and fourt <JUarters the Baby De_acs drove deep into enemy terr'•tory, ·.but I were stalled there each t1me. Carolina was also stopped short of pay dirt several times.
Despite their inability to score, certain pa1·ts of the Deaclet at•t.:ck loked sharp. The passing [ g-ame appeared especially promis- 1
ing and the running of Hamlet's 1
Pete Hornaday and Danville's Larry Brooks was impressive.
Drawing plaudits for defensive line play were tackle William Herdng imd end Jack Faley.
In spite of the Deaclets' unproductive season so far, Coach Don Hipps says his charges are showing improvement. They wi11 make their third attempt to break into the '\vin column Oct. 28 when
Compliments Of ·
K· and W CAFETERIA \YI~STON-SALEM, N. C.
"BetweE'n B:xs Station and Robert .E. Lee Hotel"
they take on Clemson's freshmen I at Canton. ~--------------------------------------------------------~
Grigg Studio
quality photography
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
1. SUPERIOR FILTER Only L&:M gives you the superior filtration of the Miracle Tip, the P.urest tip that ever touched your lips. It's white ••. .!ill. white ~ .• P.ure white t
The Scoreboard Games This Week
(First-listed ·games will be played o:ri . field no. 1, secondlisted games on field no. 2 and third-listed games on field no. S.t .
. Monday: Pi Kappa. Alpha vs. Sigma Pi, Theta Chi vs. Kappa Sigma, Sigma Phi . Epsilon vs. Kappa Alpha.
Tuesday: Alpha Sigma Phi vs. Sigma Chi, Colonial Club vs. Mama's Boys, Phi Delta Phi vs. Johnson Jets. ·
Wednesday: Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Lambda Chi Alpha, Sigma
. Pi vs. Kappa Sigma, Cullom Ministerial vs. Mama's Boys. . Thursday: Theta Chi vs. Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. / Alpha Sigma· Phi, Hunter Specials vs. Johnson Jets·. ·
2• 5~~-~~lpR TASTI! L&M's superior taste , comes £tom ·superior tobaccos - especially selected :Cor ~ter smokmg. Tobaccos that aro
' ~ tastier .. ~ and !!gh! and !!!ili1 ~ .\ .. :' / .
..•