lh anh lurk - wake forest university

8
' ... :,' Critics Commend College Tlleaier?s r . . Production . lh anh ' lurk Smetana Quartet Highly Praised By Music Critic . Page Five Page Three * * I .. 1/uJ <Jiue * * . . . VOLUME xLV Wake Forest College, . Winston-Salem, Carolina, Monday, Novembe'r 2, 1959 :NUMBER 7 ·Dan Jones Exchange Student Relates ln Ger:rpany . ' JONES'· .. Dan .JoDes, the fum Forest, to ·go to Germany uader the Colleges fJrBt e:x- change program, will be writing a o_f articles for : Old Gold and Black. -relating hiS experiences. Jones is a. junior •. Uldeh Zieten, now at Wake Forest, is the German: student to participate _in the program. This 'letter ·is the first of a 11eries which -will hereafter aplpear on the editorial page. My emotions were completely befuddled as I arrived at Frankftrot, Gernumy, Sept. 3, about 4,000 miles from home. Twelve hours· earlier at Idl-e'\Vood Airport, I liad said goodbye to them were :there for a vacation, but several were · there in preparation fO'l" a year of study in Germany as I was. There was 'class .inStruction each morning. More helpful, howeWI:, was our struggle to put con- versational German into praCtice while eating and liv.ing together. 1 . r All was not study, however. We took many ali-day trips t;}n:lough the surrounding' moun- tains an:d ·river ·valleys• · First Trip To· Goslar The first trip to Goslar in the Harz· Moun- tains. Goslar was one of the seats of govern- ment of the Holy Empire from- 1000 to 1250. There we were surrounded with medieval roiiUl.n- ticism in 'the Imp-eriai 'palace and the Rathaus. ,We had our dinners in an· outdoor restaurant 'one of Germany's largest reservoirs. The mountains were covered 'With fir treea plant- ed in rows. . . On one trip w-e went to Kassel where we saw . the Documenta, a huge display of ultra-modern paintings _and sculpture. We saw a baroque ·United States .. ·Awaiting me at Frankfbrt was Barnes, · cathedra.} in which one of the father a junior now at Wake Forest. He mtroduced me , monasteries for central Europe. Dominating every ibr1efly to the German atmosp.here anlj. helped town there is a magnificent ca:thedral. me settle down•for the mght in the ·youth hostel Included in the course was a trip to the Got- wheTe he was staying. .tingen theater, museum, art and several ·The next day we traveled to by moving pictures. Gottingen was· a beautiful place · trainr where I had arranged to attend·a language to get to know Germany. It is a city of almost study course. Mikal left the next day for New 10(),{)00 persons, yet it still functions as· a small-. York. !'remained at Gottingen for·the language town. · course at the Fridtjof-Nansen-Haus. . I quickly caught on to the idea of sitting in the There .I met about 60. stu:dents a.nd teachers sun, and got great pleasure from eating at the from 2() and every continent. ,Most of (Continued on 4J , I Novices Plan· For Debating. .Contest He're By SUE FULKERsoN The ninth annual Novice Debate Tournament will be held at Wake Forest College -Nov. 6 and 7. The Baptists May Approve Wake Forest Increase Freshman Law Class $316,260 tournament is open to college stu- dents ·who . have never previously T. · A k d participated in de- 'Edmundson Wins 'Office J.S s e ba1;proid.mately 120 colleges and Gene Edmundson of Stantons- 1 ' Bv Board universities of the southeastern burg and· Murray Greason of Win-. United States will be represented ston-Salem were victors in fresh- · in the Tournament. Debaters man law class runoff elections last ·When the StatE Baptist from Georgetown University, Wil- week. Convention con v en e s at . Edmundson is president and G Uam and Mary College, Virginia Greason is vice• president. reensboro this week, its Polytec:hnic Institute, Pfeiffer Col- . Involved also in the runoff race delegates will be asked to lege, Mars Bill College, Randolph· was: for president, Herbert Brown vote on an increase in the. Macon College, . George Washing· pi Huntersville; and for vice presi- amount. allotted for Wake oon ·University, University of Vir- dent, Charles Merryman of Bethes- . . . da, Md. Forest College.- girua, University of Richmond and All 29 members of the freshman The · General Board '()f the 1959 Duke University are expected to law class voted, in both the primary Convention has already :recommend- participate. and runoff elections. ed that the College receive $316,260 Other colleges and .universities _ Other year. officers, elected from the state's Baptists next year. . . m the prnnary voting, not mvolved The recommendation will be pre- entermg teams m . the tournament in the runoff, are secretary, Sonny sented during the Convention's are Gardner-Webb College, Howard Bell and treasurer. Gene McElroy_ meeting Friday tbrougll Saturday College, Bridgewater, University of The primary also the for its approval. South Carolina, ·Morehouse, Ap- voting for second and third year EDMUNDSON If the ·Board's recornmendation palachian· State Teacher_s c_ollege, year offi'cer.s are BI'll Ar· C b fs approved, the College will 'receive d Wak F t Th vice president; · or ett, sec- about $25,000 more than it is now an e ores · IS IS the rowood, president; Carroll Lowder, retary, and Gus Dav1s, ·treasurer. getting from the Convention largest number of schools ever .en- vice president; Cade Austin, secre- Class presidents are .members .of Cut Last Year · tered in the nine-year history o:f tary, and Robert Jones, treasurer. the Student Bar Council, the Last year the Convention's budget the Novice Debate· Tournament. Second year officers are Larry lative oody of the Law Schools aUowed Wake Forest College $291,- Thompson, president; Bill Aycoek, student government. 25 Teams A total of 25 teams will partici- pate in the tournament. .Three _____________ ...;_ __ __::.___-=-------- 200, or $56,000 less than the College had anticipated. Similar ct1ts were Ger.man c: rLOl•r w;: 1 •t/ Gt.Ve made last year in the all-c>cations to II W 4 the other Baptist-controlled colleges teams, each consisting of four de- in Uie state. baters, will represent Wake Forest Concer.t Here The Board will ask f()r $192,015 Coilege. 'J for Meredith College at R.aleigh, the The Novice Debate Tournament The Student Madrigal Choir of xt - el d 1. - d . 'ta only other senior Baptist college in. . e ens1v y an .u:as rece1ve mVI - the state. · was originated by Dr. Franklin R. the University of Munster, Ger- tions to such places as the Academy The entire budget goa'l amounts Shirley, Director of debate at Wake many will sing at Wait \Chapel at of St. Celillia. to $4,100,000. Last year's t()tal ap- Forest College_ The tournament is Wake Forest College at 8 p. m The choir has received praise proved budget was $3.6 million.· R A .b Mis iJ M · SP<>nsored by Wake Forest Thursday; f . . . Proposed money for other eel- s 'l . ass . sence S . e an: h t f Pi K D rom both. European and leges in the state are a:s follows; 0 ons: .. c o appa etta, nation- The choir Will vary its program newspapers. The Libre ,news- Campbell College, $135,540; Chowan , · - . . . . • · · .- , WiJI S . · k al honorary forensic fraternity. with natiye and foreign folksongs paper of Montpellier,. France has College, $99 396· Gardner-Webb Col- 1111".0:· "n' .. A;, 'fi'" : · ... ·-r< . ·a' .... •o:te'" ' ·. . . ' . ,' p.· ea .• ' Registration for the toUrnament and Bach chorals. said the chorus is "remarkable for lege $111sio.so'· Mars Bill College 1r.1.4 .::::;; will be held in Reynolda Hall from The choir is being sponsored by its musical abilities, $162;648, Wfugate College, $111,: . . . . . . . WeW.esday· 9 p, m. until noon Friday. Six the College Student Union ty strength. It 820.50. rQunds of debate, each lasting an . . . achteved a level Whlch enables lt The General Board met Oct. 12 By KELLEY GRIFFITH handed iD: withbl two weeks after hour and 15 minutes, are scheduled It 18 now on tts second American to Pt:r!orm large, d;manding and 13 at Raleigh. The StUdent Legislature, after the absence has ODiy ;R. A. Rodriguez of 'Western Elec- f-or the Temainder . Friday and tour. It will appear in cities all i>Ver reqwnng all the skills of a finished Parker To Preside getting in parliamentary those absences excused' by the tric Corp. will 'lU)eak at 8:30 m. early Saturday. the United States including New ensemble · · -" The Convention will be presided procedure:·'·made an abrupt about C'ollege will be excused by the Wednesday on the "Guidance of Debate Topic . York City, New Orleans, Chicago, The Taiesanyeiger fuer Stadt over again this year by Dr. A: face to pass a motion which had LeHslature. There shall be a Missiles" at the tl!.ird lecture spon- This year's question is Resolved: Sioux City Ciowa) and Philadelphia. und Kanton Kuerich newspaper of Leroy Parker, pastor of Ashebor() one hour be!ore been voted against standing committee on absences sored by the Student Union for That Congress should have the The choir has also toured Em:ope SWitzerland has said that although Street Church, Greensboro, who is by majority of those present _ consisting of the speaker, speaker school · . . power to. reverse the decisions of "nonprofessional the group is "re- in his second term as president of The Legislature met Thursday protem and the secretary Whose Rodriguez receJ.ved his Bachelor.of the Supreme Court. markably skilled and has a natural the Convention. 7 p. m. in the Student Government duty it shaD be to' investigate and Science from Pennsylvania Friday night a banquet will be feeling. for choral beauty, greilt Most o:f the Convention's business room of Reynolda Hall. . rule on Ole validity of &he sub- UmverSity and h_as as- held in the Ma&nolia Room for· the Old Gold Meeting rhytbm.ic ·abHity, an obvious under- will be carried out in Greensboro's The motion, wbich fell under the Inltted excuses. SOCiated with the engmeerrng de- debaters. FolloWing the banquet, standing for the form and ,content new Memorial Coliseum. Smaller beading of· "unfinished business." ' If a. Legislator is more tbaJ11 partment _of· Western Electric for Dick: Burleson; varsity debater, will An Old Gold and Black staff of the pieces ... " - groups, however, Will meet at the involved more than an hour of mix- five minutes late tO three meet- the past SIX years. lead a panel discussion on the de- meeting will be held today at The New :York Herald Tribune First Baptist Church of Gnensboro. ups in meeting procedure. ings. he wfll be charged: with oe .Rodriguez will speak on the im- !>ate topio. Two Wake Forest facul- 5 p. m. in the Old Gold and has said that the choir deserves host church for the 1959 meeting. The motion met mucl{ opposition imexcused 8seuce. . plications that missiles have on ty members who are specialists in Black office, Reynolda Hall. "high respect" for their ability to other than the budget action,. . at first. The main objectiop seemed After a verbal debate an amend.. society today and will show slides political science and laws \_Vill be Ali members of the news and perform Bach so "efficiently." The Wake Forest College is not .. · to be that a person'WOWd inevitably ment was passed which' some said to emphasize his points. Oll this panel sports staff will be present for Tribune also Said that the Choir's ed t& figure prominently in this: have to miss three or more meet- in effect nullified the ·ma: After the lecture there will be a At 3 p, m. Saturday, the results the half-hour meeting. . diction and pitch are "admirable." year's Convention, as it h.as in the . ings because of so-called inexecus- tion by saying the of what question and answer period. . will be announced and trophies will Assignments will be made at The choir sings in various Ian- last few years. able absences. tbe. motion said. The motion plus The will be held in the be; awarded to the top in that time also. guages including German, Englisb, The Convention is in its 129th 'The Motloa tbe amendment was passed by a East Lo11nge-of Reynolda HaiL the Tournament_ Latin and French. year. If a Legislator accumula&es majority vote. !!::" I K. . • t , T •- p . • d T . . t F 2 3 00 I with _iuexcasable neglect of duty the Legisla!ure nilim over what it 1ngs on riO rOVI es rea or · ll -:-as JD Statute 3, of the had done s1nce they had passed a · ' body oonstdut1on-aud , motion which. with its amendment , · · Wlll be subject to removal ._from contradicted itself. office by a maJority The Legislature discussed the · · " · · - : · · of the membership Of the Legis- ti d d .. ded t . - d th The Kingston Tno was Th-e trJO livened up theu- program people come to see us, we come to lature. mo. on an 0 rescm . e ed" ·by .an audience of 2,300 students 1 of musical entertainment with "oft entertain." All excuses mast be written ami of . i!t:W everr-ng and_ townfolk Thursday night in the the _cuff" ad libs and_ joke-telling. Members of the Trio . indicated -------------- 31! s ar over. e mo 10 nl Cohseum. . . _They sang the ht-t songs tha'f they prefer college audiences as Without the was P_ut on The was disappointingly made them ·famous. They s-ang the ltMlre appreciative of their type of Phi B fa T lk the and five minutes small as far as the Wake Fo:rest "Tom Dooley" song that topped the entertainment. e a was by 19-1 Student Union was but three million mark in record sales. They have performed before au- T . . LewiS, Morgan, of the adequately enthusiastic far The boys don't consider them- diences .as large as 18,000. People . :0 Be·· GI•VeQ. , Parents .. Day Committee, gave a as the celebrated Kingston Trw was selves folk-singers. They have what of all age groups. . committee report and suggested concerned. . is considered a "unique, imtyped" The booking .at Winston-Salem . 0 . . that the Legislature pay for the The popularizers of the "Tom style that fits them. . was one in a long series of one- D Thursday· banquet which was for; the Dooley'' legend applauded into _ Even the "oldies" are integrated night performances in rushed · ·. . ' freshmen parents Friday 01ght. a number of ovatwns, as the au- mto their own style. "hops" across the country. / . The motion was mads and passed. dience kept calling for more. "We never planned on being Plans include singing tours professor· em- Howard Bullard, chairman of the The Student ·union, which spon- second rate," Dave· Guard said abroad .. entus of sc1ence at Wel- Buses for Duke Committee, report- sored the appear.!lnce of the Triol·frankly, when asked if he had ex- Dave Guard .and Nick Reynolds. <lesley Will lecture at 8 P- ed th·at no prices on the cost of here, had expected -a . much larger pected the Trio to reach the top, have homes in California, Bobby m. Thursday 1';1 the- court room chartering buses to the Duke-Wake attendance. He added ·matter-of factly, "The Shane in Atlanta, Ga. the Law Bufiding. Forest .game had been received. The lecture '{s open to the public. Miss · Overacker will speak on , , "Changing Patterns of American IRC To Hear 'Politics." . She will be on campus Thursday ' · · and Frid.ay as one of nine scholars V er Ian Stahl sponsored by United Chapters of . ' Phi Beta Kappa :who Will be. making T lk 80 visits. to colleges and universities .a On peru this year She will als<> speak in ' two 'political science classes and will be guest at a luncheon at noon Friday. Miss Ovel'acker has been a mem- ber of the faculty at Wellesley College since 1925. At the time of her fetirement in 1957 she held the Elizabeth Kimball Kendall Profes· sorship of political science at Wei· .lesley. She is the author of five and numerous articles. Her mos' recent book, "The Australian Party , System," was published in 1952. Verlan ·H. Stahl, instructor in romance languages at Wake Forest, will give a talk at 7 p. m. Wednes- 1 day on Peru at the first format! meeting of the International Re- j lations Club o£ 'Wake Forest Cnllege, in Eu Hall.' Stahl received. his B. A; degree from the College of the Pacific and his Masters. in Spanish fr_om Florida State \University. He also studied at. the University of San Marcos in ?eru for two yem:s. David Hadley, president of the says that all those I!.eople in- in the I. R. C. may attend Coliseun1 Miss Overacker has served o• the ·Board of Editors· of the Ameri can Political Science Review anr· 'is a former vice president of th American Political Science Associa tion. · :he meeting. i ._ Stahl will show slides ·with his till:. THE· KINGSTON_ .TRio -pitts itSelf Its. music and .. thoroughly meets the approval of its audience. :STlJlJ.t.:NTS GIVE loud approval of the Kingston Trio at the 'Trio's performance in the Coliseum Thursday night.

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Page 1: lh anh lurk - Wake Forest University

' ... :,'

Critics Commend College Tlleaier?s

r . • . ·La~test Production . lh anh

' lurk Smetana Quartet

Highly Praised By Music Critic

. '· Page Five Page Three

* * I ·."(!~ .. 1/uJ f!~ .e~ <Jiue A(~"' * *

. . .

VOLUME xLV Wake Forest College, . Winston-Salem, ~orth Carolina, Monday, Novembe'r 2, 1959 :NUMBER 7

·Dan Jones

Exchange Student Relates Expe~iences ln Ger:rpany . '

JONES'·

.. Dan .JoDes, the fum W~e Forest, st~ent to ·go to Germany uader the Colleges fJrBt e:x­change program, will be writing a :a~ber o_f articles for : Old Gold and Black. -relating hiS experiences. Jones is a. junior •. Uldeh Zieten, now at Wake Forest, is the German: student to participate _in the program. This 'letter ·is the first of a 11eries which -will hereafter aplpear on the editorial page. My emotions were completely befuddled as I

arrived at Frankftrot, Gernumy, Sept. 3, about 4,000 miles from home. Twelve hours· earlier at Idl-e'\Vood Airport, I liad said goodbye to ~he

them were :there for a vacation, but several were · there in preparation fO'l" a year of study in

Germany as I was. There was 'class .inStruction each morning. More

helpful, howeWI:, was our struggle to put con­versational German into praCtice while eating and liv.ing together. 1 . r

All was not study, however. We took many ali-day bu~ trips t;}n:lough the surrounding' moun­tains an:d ·river ·valleys •

· First Trip To· Goslar The first trip ~as to Goslar in the Harz· Moun­

tains. Goslar was one of the seats of govern­ment of the Holy Empire from- 1000 to 1250. There we were surrounded with medieval roiiUl.n­ticism in 'the Imp-eriai 'palace and the Rathaus. ,We had our dinners in an· outdoor restaurant 1ove~looking 'one of Germany's largest reservoirs. The mountains were covered 'With fir treea plant-ed in ~rfect rows. .

. On one trip w-e went to Kassel where we saw . the Documenta, a huge display of ultra-modern paintings _and sculpture. We saw a baroque ·United States ..

·Awaiting me at Frankfbrt was ~~al Barnes, · cathedra.} in Corv~y which w~s one of the father a junior now at Wake Forest. He mtroduced me , monasteries for central Europe. Dominating every ibr1efly to the German atmosp.here anlj. helped town there is a magnificent ca:thedral. me settle down•for the mght in the ·youth hostel Included in the course was a trip to the Got-wheTe he was staying. .tingen theater, museum, art ~lezy, and several

·The next day we traveled to '~tingen by moving pictures. Gottingen was· a beautiful place · trainr where I had arranged to attend·a language to get to know Germany. It is a city of almost study course. Mikal left the next day for New 10(),{)00 persons, yet it still functions as· a small-. York. !'remained at Gottingen for·the language town. · course at the Fridtjof-Nansen-Haus. . I quickly caught on to the idea of sitting in the

There . I met about 60. stu:dents a.nd teachers sun, and I· got great pleasure from eating at the from 2() co~tries and every continent. ,Most of (Continued on pag~ 4J

, I

Novices Plan· For Debating. .Contest He're

By SUE FULKERsoN The ninth annual Novice Debate

Tournament will be held at Wake Forest College -Nov. 6 and 7. The

Baptists May Approve Wake Forest Increase Freshman Law Class $316,260

tournament is open to college stu-dents ·who . have never previously T. · A k d participated in int~rcollegiate de- 'Edmundson Wins 'Office J.S s e ba1;proid.mately 120 colleges and Gene Edmundson of Stantons- 1 ' Bv Board universities of the southeastern burg and· Murray Greason of Win-. J· United States will be represented ston-Salem were victors in fresh- · in the Novi~e Tournament. Debaters man law class runoff elections last ·When the StatE Baptist from Georgetown University, Wil- week. Convention con v en e s at

. Edmundson is president and G Uam and Mary College, Virginia Greason is vice• president. reensboro this week, its Polytec:hnic Institute, Pfeiffer Col- . Involved also in the runoff race delegates will be asked to lege, Mars Bill College, Randolph· was: for president, Herbert Brown vote on an increase in the. Macon College, . George Washing· pi Huntersville; and for vice presi- amount. allotted for Wake oon ·University, University of Vir- dent, Charles Merryman of Bethes-

. . . da, Md. Forest College.-girua, University of Richmond and All 29 members of the freshman The · General Board '()f the 1959 Duke University are expected to law class voted, in both the primary Convention has already :recommend-participate. and runoff elections. ed that the College receive $316,260

Other colleges and .universities _ Other ~irst year. officers, elected from the state's Baptists next year. . . m the prnnary voting, not mvolved The recommendation will be pre-

entermg teams m . the tournament in the runoff, are secretary, Sonny sented during the Convention's are Gardner-Webb College, Howard Bell and treasurer. Gene McElroy_ meeting Friday tbrougll Saturday College, Bridgewater, University of The primary also co~pleted the for its approval. South Carolina, ·Morehouse, Ap- voting for second and third year EDMUNDSON If the ·Board's recornmendation palachian· State Teacher_s c_ollege, clasThs~lrd- year offi'cer. s are BI'll Ar· C b fs approved, the College will 'receive

d Wak F t Th vice president; Leo~ · or ett, sec- about $25,000 more than it is now an e ores · IS IS the rowood, president; Carroll Lowder, retary, and Gus Dav1s, ·treasurer. getting from the Convention largest number of schools ever .en- vice president; Cade Austin, secre- Class presidents are .members .of Cut Last Year · tered in the nine-year history o:f tary, and Robert Jones, treasurer. the Student Bar Council, the leg1~- Last year the Convention's budget the Novice Debate· Tournament. Second year officers are Larry lative oody of the Law Schools aUowed Wake Forest College $291,-

Thompson, president; Bill Aycoek, student government. 25 Teams

A total of 25 teams will partici­pate in the tournament. .Three

_____________ ...;_ __ __::.___-=-------- 200, or $56,000 less than the College had anticipated. Similar ct1ts were

Ger.man c:rLOl•r w;:1•t/ Gt.Ve made last year in the all-c>cations to II W 4 the other Baptist-controlled colleges

teams, each consisting of four de- in Uie state. baters, will represent Wake Forest Concer.t Here Thur.sda~v The Board will ask f()r $192,015 Coilege. 'J for Meredith College at R.aleigh, the

The Novice Debate Tournament The Student Madrigal Choir of xt - el d 1. - d . 'ta only other senior Baptist college in. . e ens1v y an .u:as rece1ve mVI - the state. · was originated by Dr. Franklin R. the University of Munster, Ger- tions to such places as the Academy The entire budget goa'l amounts Shirley, Director of debate at Wake many will sing at Wait \Chapel at of St. Celillia. to $4,100,000. Last year's t()tal ap­Forest College_ The tournament is Wake Forest College at 8 p. m The choir has received praise proved budget was $3.6 million.·

R A. b Mis iJ M · SP<>nsored by th~ Wake Forest Thursday; f . . . Proposed money for other eel-s 'l . ass . sence S . e an: h t f Pi K D rom both. European and Am~ncan leges in the state are a:s follows; 0 ons: . . c ~per o appa etta, nation- The choir Will vary its program newspapers. The ~idi Libre ,news- Campbell College, $135,540; Chowan

, · - t· . . . . • · · .- , WiJI S . · k al honorary forensic fraternity. with natiye and foreign folksongs paper of Montpellier,. France has College, $99 396· Gardner-Webb Col-~.,~ 1111".0:· :_,t<z·o~:.·· "n' '· .. '· A;, 'fi'" : ~i-e'-· ... ·-r< fi~b-. ·a' .... •o:te'" ' ·. . . ' . ,' p.· ea .• ' Registration for the toUrnament and Bach chorals. said the chorus is "remarkable for lege $111sio.so'· Mars Bill College

1r.1.4 f,~ .::::;; Co~ will be held in Reynolda Hall from The choir is being sponsored by its musical abilities, it~ homo~enei- $162;648, -~d Wfugate College, $111,: . . . . . . . WeW.esday· 9 p, m. until noon Friday. Six the College Student Union ty ~nd strength. Te~mcally, It h~s 820.50. rQunds of debate, each lasting an . . . achteved a level Whlch enables lt The General Board met Oct. 12

By KELLEY GRIFFITH handed iD: withbl two weeks after hour and 15 minutes, are scheduled It 18 now on tts second American to Pt:r!orm large, d;manding wor~ and 13 at Raleigh. The StUdent Legislature, after the absence has oc~ed. ODiy ;R. A. Rodriguez of 'Western Elec- f-or the Temainder . 0~ Friday and tour. It will appear in cities all i>Ver reqwnng all the skills of a finished Parker To Preside

getting en~led in parliamentary those absences excused' by the tric Corp. will 'lU)eak at 8:30 p~ m. early Saturday. the United States including New ensemble · · -" The Convention will be presided procedure:·'·made an abrupt about C'ollege will be excused by the Wednesday on the "Guidance of Debate Topic . York City, New Orleans, Chicago, The Taiesanyeiger fuer Stadt over again this year by Dr. A: face to pass a motion which had LeHslature. There shall be a Missiles" at the tl!.ird lecture spon- This year's question is Resolved: Sioux City Ciowa) and Philadelphia. und Kanton Kuerich newspaper of Leroy Parker, pastor of Ashebor() one hour be!ore been voted against standing committee on absences sored by the Student Union for thi~ That Congress should have the The choir has also toured Em:ope SWitzerland has said that although Street Church, Greensboro, who is by a· majority of those present _ consisting of the speaker, speaker school ~ear. · . . power to. reverse the decisions of "nonprofessional the group is "re- in his second term as president of

The Legislature met Thursday ~t protem and the secretary Whose Rodriguez receJ.ved his Bachelor.of the Supreme Court. markably skilled and has a natural the Convention. 7 p. m. in the Student Government duty it shaD be to' investigate and Science ~egr~ from Pennsylvania Friday night a banquet will be feeling. for choral beauty, greilt Most o:f the Convention's business room of Reynolda Hall. . rule on Ole validity of &he sub- S~e UmverSity and h_as ~n as- held in the Ma&nolia Room for· the Old Gold Meeting rhytbm.ic ·abHity, an obvious under- will be carried out in Greensboro's

The motion, wbich fell under the Inltted excuses. SOCiated with the engmeerrng de- debaters. FolloWing the banquet, standing for the form and ,content new Memorial Coliseum. Smaller beading of· "unfinished business." ' If a. Legislator is more tbaJ11 partment _of· Western Electric for Dick: Burleson; varsity debater, will An Old Gold and Black staff of the sele~ted pieces ... " - groups, however, Will meet at the involved more than an hour of mix- five minutes late tO three meet- the past SIX years. lead a panel discussion on the de- meeting will be held today at The New :York Herald Tribune First Baptist Church of Gnensboro. ups in meeting procedure. ings. he wfll be charged: with oe .Rodriguez will speak on the im- !>ate topio. Two Wake Forest facul- 5 p. m. in the Old Gold and has said that the choir deserves host church for the 1959 meeting.

The motion met mucl{ opposition imexcused 8seuce. . plications that missiles have on ty members who are specialists in Black office, Reynolda Hall. "high respect" for their ability to other than the budget action,. . at first. The main objectiop seemed After a verbal debate an amend.. society today and will show slides political science and laws \_Vill be Ali members of the news and perform Bach so "efficiently." The Wake Forest College is not expect~ .. · to be that a person'WOWd inevitably ment was passed which' some said to emphasize his points. Oll this panel sports staff will be present for Tribune also Said that the Choir's ed t& figure prominently in this:

have to miss three or more meet- in effect nullified the ~riginal ·ma: After the lecture there will be a At 3 p, m. Saturday, the results the half-hour meeting. . diction and pitch are "admirable." year's Convention, as it h.as in the . ings because of so-called inexecus- tion by saying the op~te of what question and answer period. . will be announced and trophies will Assignments will be made at The choir sings in various Ian- last few years. able absences. tbe. motion said. The motion plus The l~cture will be held in the be; awarded to the top ~s in that time also. guages including German, Englisb, The Convention is in its 129th

'The Motloa tbe amendment was passed by a East Lo11nge-of Reynolda HaiL the Tournament_ Latin and French. year. If a Legislator accumula&es majority vote.

!!::" Y=":=~~~;e::~e.::e: th~~tu~=~~~er~u:~=~~ntth~~ I K. . • t , T •- p . • d T . . t F 2 3 00 I with _iuexcasable neglect of duty the Legisla!ure nilim over what it 1ngs on riO rOVI es rea or · ll -:-as JD Statute 3, ~cti~n ~· of the had done s1nce they had passed a · ' s~c;teut body oonstdut1on-aud , motion which. with its amendment , · · Wlll be subject to removal ._from contradicted itself. office by a two·t~ maJority The Legislature discussed the · · " · · - : · · of the membership Of the Legis- ti d d .. ded t . - d th The Kingston Tno was rece~v- Th-e trJO livened up theu- program people come to see us, we come to lature. mo. on an ~CI 0 rescm . e ed" ·by .an audience of 2,300 students 1 of musical entertainment with "oft entertain."

All excuses mast be written ami _en~Iret h:ppenm~ of . i!t:W everr-ng and_ townfolk Thursday night in the the _cuff" ad libs and_ joke-telling. Members of the Trio . indicated -------------- 31! s ar over. e 01"1~1 mo 10nl Cohseum. . . _They sang the ht-t songs tha'f they prefer college audiences as

Without the ~en~ent was P_ut on The audienc~' was disappointingly made them ·famous. They s-ang the ltMlre appreciative of their type of

Phi B fa T lk the ~loor and w~thm five minutes small as far as the Wake Fo:rest "Tom Dooley" song that topped the entertainment. e a was ,~ed by 19-1 v~t~. Student Union was co~ceqed, but three million mark in record sales. They have performed before au-

T . . LewiS, Morgan, ch~man of the ~as adequately enthusiastic ~s far The boys don't consider them- diences .as large as 18,000. People

. :0 Be·· GI•VeQ. , Parents .. Day Committee, gave a as the celebrated Kingston Trw was selves folk-singers. They have what of all age groups. .

committee report and suggested concerned. . is considered a "unique, imtyped" The booking .at Winston-Salem . 0

. . that the Legislature pay for the The popularizers of the "Tom style that fits them. . was one in a long series of one-D Thursday· banquet which was h~Id for; the Dooley'' legend wer~ applauded into _ Even the "oldies" are integrated night performances in rushed

· ·. . ' freshmen parents Friday 01ght. a number of ovatwns, as the au- mto their own style. "hops" across the country. / . The motion was mads and passed. dience kept calling for more. "We never planned on being Plans include singing tours

~se Ov~r~cker, professor· em- Howard Bullard, chairman of the The Student ·union, which spon- second rate," Dave· Guard said abroad .. entus of pohhc~ sc1ence at Wel- Buses for Duke Committee, report- sored the appear.!lnce of the Triol·frankly, when asked if he had ex- Dave Guard .and Nick Reynolds. <lesley College~ Will lecture at 8 P- ed th·at no prices on the cost of here, had expected -a . much larger pected the Trio to reach the top, have homes in California, Bobby m. Thursday 1';1 the- court room o£ chartering buses to the Duke-Wake attendance. He added ·matter-of factly, "The Shane in Atlanta, Ga. the Law Bufiding. Forest .game had been received.

The lecture '{s open to the public. Miss · Overacker will speak on , , "Changing Patterns of American IRC To Hear

'Politics." . She will be on campus Thursday ' · ·

and Frid.ay as one of nine scholars V er Ian Stahl sponsored by United Chapters of . ' Phi Beta Kappa :who Will be. making T lk 80 visits. to colleges and universities .a On peru this year She will als<> speak in

' two 'political science classes and will be guest at a luncheon at noon Friday.

Miss Ovel'acker has been a mem­ber of the faculty at Wellesley College since 1925. At the time of her fetirement in 1957 she held the Elizabeth Kimball Kendall Profes· sorship of political science at Wei·

.lesley. She is the author of five book~

and numerous articles. Her mos' recent book, "The Australian Party

, System," was published in 1952.

Verlan ·H. Stahl, instructor in romance languages at Wake Forest, will give a talk at 7 p. m. Wednes- 1

day on Peru at the first format! meeting of the International Re- j lations Club o£ 'Wake Forest Cnllege, in Eu Hall.'

Stahl received. his B. A; degree from the College of the Pacific and his Masters. in Spanish fr_om Florida State \University. He also studied at. the University of San Marcos in ?eru for two yem:s.

David Hadley, president of the ~lub, says that all those I!.eople in­~erested in the I. R. C. may attend

Coliseun1

Miss Overacker has served o• the ·Board of Editors· of the Ameri can Political Science Review anr· 'is a former vice president of th American Political Science Associa tion. ·

:he meeting. i ._ Stahl will show slides ·with his till:. THE· KINGSTON_ .TRio -pitts itSelf ·~tO Its. music and .. thoroughly meets the approval of its audience.

:STlJlJ.t.:NTS GIVE loud approval of the Kingston Trio at the 'Trio's performance in the Coliseum Thursday night.

Page 2: lh anh lurk - Wake Forest University

i ' . \

PAGE TWO Monday, Nov. 2, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK . .

Ocracoke Island Dialect BSUMeeting LITTLE MAN , ON. Town & . CanipZ~tS

To C?nside~ Howren To Read Paper BaptiSt Be[zej Dr. Robert R. Howren, assistant day at Atlanta, Ga .. nefore a meet-

Dr. Harold W. Tribble, president professor of English at Wake For- ing of the South At).antic Mndern nf the College, will speak at 6 p. m. est College and a linquistic ,spe- Languages Association. today at the second general meet- cialist, will deliver a paper Satur- Howren contends in the paper ing of the Baptist Student Union. that the Clialect of North Carolina's The meeting will be in Eu Hall. outer banks should be recorded on

Tribble's subject will be "The tape and paper before tourist travel Distinctives of Baptist Theology." through that area dilutes its dis·

Max Deal, president of the BSU, tinctive ,speech. · · says that Tribble will seek to an- j Howren is critical of the fact swer such questions as "How does ' that a systematic study of the current Baptist policy affect doc-! speech of the Outer Bankers was trine, and "What is the origin of not included in the Linguistic Atlas Baptist doctrine." survey. The Atlas is an· attempt to

Deal says that the "program has study regional speech in the United been planned to re-orient those who States and America. have been intimately involved in Although the final study has not the Baptist scene to a re-under- been publis-hed, Howren says a sur-standing of the conceptual basis of vey of the Southern states already this group." has been made without including

Deal says that because of 'the the outer banks and that it is un-extreme individuality of Baptist likely that any further work in this outlook, there is concern among area will be done. some persons for what Baptist doc- Howren's paper is an outgrowth trine actually is. Some wonder, Deal!· of research he did ~n Ocracoke says, whether "Baptist doctrine" is Island in the summers of 1958 and a misnomer, whether there is such 1959. The results include four or a thing as Baptist doctrine. HOWREN five. hours of tape recordings, ex-

Tribble has been a professor at tensive notes and the results of a Southern Baptist Theological Semi- Health Ser•"ce Nott"ce lengthy questionaire that a num-nary and at Andover-Newton Theo- •... her of the islanders answered. logical Seminary. Deal says that. . Freshmen and transfer students Howren believes his research is Tribble is as qualified as anyone in will report to the Student Health a basic beginning, but that it is the Southern Baptist Convention to Service next Monday between 2 "imperative" that a systematic speak on Baptist belief. and 4 p. m. for tuberculin skin study be made of all areas of the

The first general meeting of the tests and immunizations. outer banks for "they are becoming BSU, while only a "mild success A nurse from the Forsyth Coun- more and more accessible and more quantitatively" was a "positive sue- ty Health Department. will be on susceptible to outsiae linguistic in­cess" qualitatively, Deal thinks. He hand. Those stl!dents who have fluence." says he thinks the general meeting already had the tests and im. The paper points to "numerous will "take hold" and be "intellec- munizations will not be required points of usage which distinguish tually stimulating." ' to visit the center again. Ocracoke speech from that of the

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mainland." He says that in some respects the regional words used by the Ocracokers are the regional words of the North Carolina coast, espeCially the relic area which lies around Albemarle Sound.

Howren received the B. A. degree at Wake. Forest College, the mas­ter's degree at the University of Connecticut and the Ph.D at In­

·oo 0

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11 ~0 1 ~INAJ.L...Y l-IA\7.1'"0 !?RAW -nt'.L.IN~- 11

Thirty-Six Graduates Pass North Carolina Bar Exam

Thirty-six graduates ·of the Wake David Simmons Henderson <lf New Forest School of Law passed the Bern· and Frederick Strickland Jr. North Carolina Bar Examination, of Winston-Salem. it was announcerl recently .. The Others were Bobby Eugene James tests were ·held Aug. 4, 5, and 6 at of Winston-Salem, Jerry Lee Jarvis Raleigh, but a complete list of of Winston-Salem, John Co u n c i 1 those who passed was released only Joyner Jr. of Asheville, Willis Ed •. recently. mund Lowe of High Point, William

Fifty-one Wake Forest graduates Vance McCown of Tryon, Carroll tQok the test for the first time. The Haillip Matthews of Winston-Salem, percentage of those Wake Forest Renard Roy Mitchell of Winston­graduates passing the examination Salem, William Clarence Moore of was 71.69. Laurinburg, Joe Henderson Morris

Percentage for the state of North of Albemarle and Jack Morton of Carolina was 71.52. Winston-Salem.

In all 165 persons took the state Also Theodore Conway Prue~t of examination, 118 of them passing. Winston-salem, Robert Linwood Sat-

Those from Wake Forest passing terfield of Prospect Hill, Patrick

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Send Old Gold and Black To The Folks at Home Louis Augustus Burney of Wilmi~g- Stonewall Jackson Webster Jr. of t~n, Walter Edgar Clark Jr. of Ashe- Madison, Benjamin Ross Wrenn of VIlle, Harold Downey Cole~ Jr. of Reidsville and Frank Buxkhead Raleigh, Koy Ellis Dawkins of Rock- Wyatt of High Point. r::t:~rif:j]m:fg!:"J]frff:~f~~~?S)"~~~~\{2~~~~~-~~~~ ingham, Harold Mills Edwards of ---------------------------------------------...,:.:---=;..;;c For Tuesday Charlotte, James. Maynard Farris of Mayodan, Leslle Gray of Clem-mons and Alonza Hill Gainey Jr. of

Dr. Franklin R. Shirley, profes- Leland. ·

I sor of speech, will talk to the Also Rossie Gai"nett Gardner of Cullom ministerial. conference at 7 High P-oint, Ralph Everett Goodale p. m. tomorrow m Room 104 of of Winston-Salem George Almon !Vin~ate Hall. He will te~ the min- Goodwyn of Tarbo~o. Donald Brown . 1stenal students of the Importance Haskins of Winston-Salem J n h n of good speech for the minister. Marshall Haywood of Gr~ensboro

He will also talk on organization, ' delivery and the voice. ~-g..,. · · · "'

Dr. Edwin G. Wilson, acting dean 'Go'-7 A·nd Black' of the College, spoke to the group IU last week. He tnld of the number of freshmen who intend to be minis­terial students, but find that they can't reconcile their faith with their

Basketball Game Will Be Nov. 24

intellect. He .said that some feel that a The annual Old Gold and Black

college education destroys a per- basketball game between the fresh· son's faith. Wilson _said, however, men team and the varsity· team that a person can be educated, in will be played Nov. 24 at Memorial both an intellectual and Christian Coliseum. The event is sponsored way. He cited the examples of the each year by. the Monogram Club. seventeenth century writers Jolin Tickets will be 50 cents if pur­Donne and John Bunyun as two chased from a member of the ministers who were a m 0 n g the Monogram Club before the game . greatest intellects of their time. Tickets at the door will be a dollar.

Wilson said that the minister The game last year ended in a shoW"d be hard working and· dedi- victory for the freshman team. cated, yet intelligent and deep- The game will begin at 8 p. m. thinking.

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AOeoco If you saw a dinosaur roaming around the cam­pus, would you say, (A) ••Big, ain't he?" or (B) ··Where's'the movie play­ing?" or (C) "This place is sure out of date!"

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Page 3: lh anh lurk - Wake Forest University

, ..

Veacs Who A,.e Greeks ' By DAVE RA~EY

Greeks t~ok advantage of the second hdme game in as m:any weeks as. most . fraternities hel~. either open houses or parties Saturpay. Many alumm attended . the game. · . · ·. · ·

Two fraternities initiated men last week,, and several men b'ecaril.e pinned ·

· \ · Alpha Sigma Phi \ ·A dinner was lield at the chapter house for brothers, pledges, their

dates·and ·guests, .after the Carolina game. . . . . Delta Sigma Phi _ . . · •,

Alumni Jim Mohorn, Bill, Connelly and Gerald Tayl<>r visited the · chapter house Greek Week weekend. . . .

A semi-formal party w'as.-held ,at Rural H~l wrth the Furys proVIding the music. . • . , _ . Kappa· Alj)ha ...

An open house was held in the chapter room after the 'VU"~mia game Saturday. - ,

An informal party was held Saturday night at Brantley Booe s sum.

mer home. . .._ . · Kappa Sigma-

An oi>en hoUse was held at the house before the yirginia game. After the game brothers pledges and their dates had dinner at the El Cam Rey roon:_ ·of the Reynolds Building. Music for the dance: following the dinner was provided by the Rockolas.

. ,_.. . Lambda Chi Alpha . A party was held at· Mountain Springs \Saturday nigbt. Several P.¥ents visited ~be chapt~ last: week end.· Tom Roberts recently pmned Manlyn Miller of Long Islan~, N,:. Y. Alumni Johnny Cella, Charles Humphries, .Bill Yarb«Jrougb,' .Boots

· Mims·and Ralph Walker visited the chapter· recently.

Ml!:MBERS OF THE Smetana Quane& chat duii.ng intermission with some of their: audience, while one admirer gets ~n autograph from the· cellist.

Str~g Quartet Provides Fine Entertainment

. . Pi Kappa Alpha · An ope· n house was held after the game Saturday.· By DAVID HADLEY

t1 led ed A near-capacity a u d i e n c e was · · · Paul Cauldwell an(\ B.· H. Daniels recen Y P g · treated to an evening of fine cham·

A party was held in the house Saturday night. ber music Tuesday in the first pro-- .: · Sigma Chi . gram of the current series of the

An open house- was ·held Saturday, after th~ game. Wake Forest Chamber Music So-- A party was· held at the house Saturday rught. ciety. ·

- Sigma Phi ·Epsilon . . . . The Smetana Quartet of Prague, Don Phe_lps, Lloyd Gross and Ed -Cichewicz w:re rec~n~. Initiated., said .to be the first ensemble from· An informal party was held at the h.ouse Fnday mghL . behind the Iron Curtain to. appear

-Alumni Harvey Durham, Bryan Fall~.. Ron Guthrie, 1lob Stafford, in this country, showed themselves musicians of high attainment and

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brothers from Beta Pi chapter at Virginia attended. · their repertoire from memory only N 0 W ~ 2 Sf T S y · Doug Maxwell was elected president of the pledge class. Jack Thomp- enhances their . musicianship 'and / • -- ores 0 erve DU •••

son was elected vice president, and J.ohn Purpura, secretary. may serve to explain the beautiful R E.-Z ... C K, S D 0 W NT 0 W N . Theta Chi . . balance which they achieved. n

A par_ ty was held Saturday night after the Virginia game. Opens, With Haydn. 440 N. LIBERTY ST. -===============::;==========; The program opened with a D ;, major quartet of Haydn. '.Qlls work, RECO:RDS - INSTRUME;NTS - JEWELRY

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P ... :tts .11/l:o ... or Com'P_an'/ y· acteristic of "Papa" Hay9n's music. r • ., l,.IJ f,l '.11he second work, the D minor Quartet of Vladimir Sommer, pro· vided familiar ground for- the ·artists and was of especial interest to the audience because of the relative ob­scirrity of the ·composer to Ameri­can music ·lovers. Sommer, one of the younger set of Czech compos· ers, seems· to have emerged as a figure· of consequence only in 1948.

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The third and final work on the program, the Beethoven C major Quartet, Opus 59, No. 3, was for the reviewer a. portion of the nectar of Olympia. This is the third of the three "Rasoum<>vsky" Quartets of the summer of 1806 and, like the other two members of this set, con·

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The third Rasoumovsky is not as completely · forward looking, how· ever, as are the other two: Indeed, some critics have seen in its for• mality a curtsey toward the music of Haydn and Mozart.

The music soured to the heavens, . nonetheless, and· the musiciairsbip

and coordination of the Czech art· ists were nowhere more beautifully displayed than in its magnificent fugal-studded finale.

After this thrilling performance and prolonged applause the Quartet treated the audience with a portion of Dvorak's Quartet in F major, the "American."

Eu's To Meet "The Organ As Air Instrument"

will be the topic for discussion at the Euzelian Literary Society meet­ing tonight at 7 p. m. ·Dr. PaulS. Robinson will demon­

strate use of the organ to students. Students will meet for the business meeting in Eu Hall after which they will go to Wait Chapel for the

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Page 4: lh anh lurk - Wake Forest University

* * Wake Forest College • •

WINSTON·SAL~M, N. C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1959

A Play By Play Acc~unt The motion on absences was pre­

sented Wednesday night at a meeting of the student Legislature. The motion appears 011 page one. The teno.r of the meeting is captured in the report below. Probably, no,comment is need­ed.

The Legislature has been in ses­sion for about 15 minutes when Janice Priode makes a report for th.! com­mittee on absences, that three unex­cused absences constitute grounds fpr loss of one's office.

Dick Burleson: " ... I think there ,should be a hole somewhere in the

proposal." He went on to say that sometimes a student may be absent for some reason not recognized by the College. But in the case of some things, such as fraternity initiations, the Legislature should have a flexible rule which would allow such absences to be arbitrarily considered.

Pete Daniel: "Three unexcused ab­sences seem to be plenty. . . ." He said that special cases would be rare. Others agreed.

Burleson: " ... suppose I have two unexcused absences and want to go home to get my car for a week end. I would have to leave Thursday night and miss the Legislature meeting .... "

·"\Vhy couldn't you go Friday morn­ing? Oh. that's rig-ht, you live too far .... "

Willis Maddrey: "This is definitely not parliamentary!"

At this uoint an amendment to the motion was proposed which would give tl1e absence committee po1ver to excuse even those absences not ex­cw:;ed by the College.

The vote was 10 to 9 againts the amendment.

Bill Shepherd: "I'd like a revote." A vote was again taken. This time

the amendment passed by 11 to 10. Don Schoonmaker: "Doesn't this

amendment nullify the motion?" Maddrey: "No .... " Several: "Yes, it does." Shepherd: "Well, it seems to me

like. . .. " Maddrey: Someone:

tion ?"

"Point of order." "What was the ques-

Maddrey: "To coin a new phrase, 'Mr. Chairman' ... (laughter) there -are two forms of Roberts Rules of Order, the high form and the com­mon form. The common form would make the rules loose, but not as loose as they are now."

Shepherd: "Mr. Chairman, I think the amendment takes a hell of a lot of punch out of the motion ... but there needs to be some sort of leeway, and I think. . . ."

Someone: "I'd like a revote." Shepherd : "I merely want to know

what the motion is. That's all I'm ask­ing. What IS the motion?'" ,(laughter)

Buddy Young: "Mr. Parliamentari-an!' .

Schoonmaker: "Are you going to give a rulin'g, Mr. Parliamentarian?"

Maddrey: "I'm thinking about it, but I got lost about five minutes ago!.' (laughter)

Schoonmaker: "Wait a minute. A similar incident happened in my high school. .. - .'' (laughter)

Maddrey: "Let's table the whole thing.''

Several; "No-o-o-ooo.'' Shepherd: "Now wait. Listen.

(standing) Here, read this (handing original motion to Young) .

Young reads motion, and body })ass­es it.

Young: "Well, then, is there any other unfinished business?" · Schoonmaker: "This is going in the

paper. It ':~:ill seem that the Legis­lattu·e does one thing, then turns around and contradicts itself."

Maddrey: "Well, the amendment automatically deletes that portion of the motion that is contradictory. "·

Someone : "No, it doesn't.'' Burleson: "Yes, it does." Several: "Well, that's what I

thought.'' Schoonmaker: "We didn't vote on

.JOHN ALFORD Editor

it with that understanding.'' Several: "The motion needs to be

reworded." Shepherd: (standing) "See could it

be done this way." He rewords mo­tion.

Several: "Sounds like double talk to us."

Someone: "Let's start all over." Several: "What?., Motion to start over is made and

seconded. Shepher?: "Has that motion been

made?'' Young: "Yes, and secm1ded.'' Shepherd: "Well, I'd like to second

it." Young: "All in favor of ... wha~

was that word? " Someone: "Rescind.'' Young: "Yes. Everyone in favor of

rescinding everything that has taken place so far raise his right hand."· . Motion passes. _

Shepherd: "I'd lk~ to move that .we all go back to our rooms and think seriously about this thing and not come. here all hodge-podge .... "

Schoonmaker: "It was· presented , last week. Now is the time to,discuss it. . . .''

Maddrey: "Mr. Chairman, I'd like to move that the original motion with-· out the amendment be accepted."

Motion is passed, 18 to 1, the lone dissenter being Burleson.

Shepherd: "Since after our meet­ing there will be a lot of Monday morning quaxterbacking in our news­paper, I move that a member of the press, one of the reporters here or our honorable editor, be given the floor to make any suggestions."

George 'Pn1den: (Old Gold and Black reporter) "Yes, Mr. Chairman, I'd like to make a suggestion that everyone, immediately after spring elections, be given a course in parlia­mentary procedure· by a competent person."

Jones Reports On Stay In Germa"(ly

(Continued from page 1)

outside cafes. Most of our teachers came from the University of Gottingen which is the most important thing in the whole -city.

Summarize In German

.In the daily class instruction we read aloud and then summarized in German what we had read. We had some grammar review in order to improve our conversation. To help our pro­nunciation 1ye made tape recordings and learn· ed poems and songs. At times I felt as if I were back in kindergarten when the teacher would act out words, but most of the class of 12 agreed that it was a good way to learn with· out translating info French, English, Irish, Por­tugese, Flemish, Polish, Swedish and Spanish.

Meeting and dealing with the German people was a very interesting part of my introduction to German life. On my first day I was stopped by a school teacher who was very eager to know if a little song was properly translated into . English. .

People in the stores were very glad to help translate words and to help me with my broken German. I have learned to pay 50 pfennig for a

' coke and I also have learned that I am one meter and 90 centimeters tall and weigh 70 kilograms. Learning to change money has been a hard task and I still look twice when I see a man's suit priced at 2oO-marks of course.

I was expecting classical music as well as folk songs to play an important part in the course and I was not disappointed. We had several evenings of Bach and Beethoven con­certs, ' live and on recor'd. The entire group shared my enthusiasm ~or folk songs, and on our bus trips, we exhausted. our sources of German as well as of American music.

One solo that I sang in the kitchen while dry­ing. dishes got me elected as the "unofficial song leader." From that time on I had to lead the singing on the buses and hikes. "Carolina in the Morning" became quite a popular number. and by the end of September almost everyone was singing it.

BRENT FILSON Business Manager

FolDlded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black is published each Monday during the school year eKcept during examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

·Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by Na­tional. Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. Second·Class mail privi· leges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C.

Offices In Reynolda Hall 225-227 Telephone PArk 5-9711 P. 0. Box 7567

_< •• • • Extension 215 . Reynolda Branch Winston·Salem, N. C.

Pre-Convention Pl~nning .

CHIC FORBES

Back and Forth By "Doc" Maddrey

We are the ;future-the generation who can remember no evenings without television, no years without electricity, no long "hours of effort just to heat a meager meal, no skies free from airplanes, no morn­ings without a newspaper.

It is in these luxuries that our predecessors find the basis for their charges of weakness and degener­acy. They that believe this rubbish are short-sighted beyond belief.

I cannot bring myself to consider that this generation will falter. The · call to potential shall not go un­heeded.

Our challenges are from another direction. We certainly need not endure the arduous labors of the past. However we must retain the human dignity of work by direct ·application of our effort to the labors of the mind - that innate yearning in man for the acquisition and assimilation of his environment in terms he can comprehend and appreciate.

Today's Freshman . The freshman of today is sur­

rounded by comforts preposterous

Letters (All letters to the editor ~,!lUSt be signed; names will be with­held on request.)

To the Editor: This letter is in reply to your

editorial, "A Legislator's Duty,'! in last Monday's Old Gold and Black.

The article is well-written, and I for one sincerely am glad that the

. editor of this traditionally outstand· ing newspaper is concerned about good campus government.

. However, I differ with you in your view, and would appreciate your printing this letter in full as my defense.

You mentioned constitution and keeping it consisfent,' etc. Let's refer to the student Constitution and see how it defines the duties of treasurer: Article III, Section 4-Treasurer: There shall be annually elected a- treasurer of the Student Body whose duties shall be: (1) to have in charge all money which shall come intd his care as treasur· er of the student body; (2) to dis· burse it at the direction of the Legislature; (3J to keep a true and accurate record of the same.

You will plrr-se note that there is no mention o! Legislative mem­bership as a duty of the treasurer.

This far I have taken .charge of all the money that has come into my care, disbursed it as 'djrected and have a record which any stu­dent who so desires may see.

Now, let us deal with, the legisla- . tive part, which was the chief in· terest of your editorial. Article V, Section 1 mentions that ·one mem· her of the Legislature is the treasur­er. Please note this is Wlder com­position and duties of Student Legislature.

My contention is this: Financial necessity precludes my attendance at Legislature meetings. If the mo­tion you mentioned is passed, I will lose my place in the Legislature. However, my job does not preclude by exercising duties as treasurer as they are stated in the Constitution, not as interpreted by you.

I am anxious for the voters who put me in the office of treasurer to know that I appreciate the position and am fulfilling their trust and confidence to the best of my ability.

Jim Turner Senior Class

to even the richest just a century ago. One volume of any modern encydlopedia ~ill encompass more knowledge than was . available to the greatest minds of the past.

New vistas are open; new hori· zons await conquest; new hurdles · offer the challenge. The "Man of Thought" is ·in more demand now than -at any other time in the lrls­tory of civilization. Our times are dependent on mind-power, not man power.

The civilization which is our heri· tage is in such constant flux that the disparity between youth and experience grows wider each day. The wider the breach, the more vehement the criticism.

Easily Adapted Whereas a young man is easily

adapted to his surroundings, an old· er man is bothered by the seeming incongruities of what "should be normal."

We have seen so· many times that that which is normal is only what the human element makes it. There is no certainty in our society and therein lies its charm. The skilled and backward are in less demand than ever before.

One looking at the physical as· pects of our school feels a blush of pride in the beauty and solidarity of its · structu~e. One is thdllgd by the magnificence of the surround· ing· foothills, the radiant beauty of the fall forests-the wonder of na­ture.

Belong to Past But these things belong to the

past as much as to us. Buildings are not ne~-stone has been used for times fong gone. Nature has been enjoyed by man since his first realizations of his surround­ings.

What is new? It is the IDEA. The deep satisfaction of the origip. al thought-the expansion and de­\'etopment of an inquiring and ac­quiring mind.

Even as the frcntiers of new lands presented the challenge to the pioneer, the wilderness of science, humanities, and the arts demands the best efforts of the man of today to be. conquered.

We seek a universal spirit-it is here already. It is alive in the hearts of those men who seek no mediocrity. It is the pride of accom­.plishment by the individual- the feeling of achievement emanating from a successful solution regard-less of the problem. . ·

This spirit . should be ·all-encom. passing. The "never-ending ·search of the soul. for human dignity through knowledge." The belief that we shall be the instruments of pro· gress.

Let us bear the brunt of all on­slaughts. But let it never be said that we are weakening. The strength of achievement is our heritage. The potential of ambition our future.

Stud~nt Banquet To Be Attended By Law Students

The annual fall Bar Banquet will be at 7:30 p. m. Nov. 19.

The banquet \Vill be attended by law students and -alumni in the im· mediate area, Don Canady, presi· dent of the Student Bar Association, has said.

So far a speakt!r has not been de­finitely secured for the banquet. Canady hopes to have one shortlJT, however.

1 '

I MAGNO·L'IA LEAVES . By GEORGE PRuDEN

At the ball game last week one ing. an exiclting moment of the professor, who usually smokes a game <and· there· were 11ome) ·he pipe, was smoking a cigarette. Dur- put the 'lighted

cigarette in his coat pocket· out of ib: a b it. · Result: after smelling smoke and a fur­ious search-a hole burnt iri pocket.

Smiley -Satire Depicts Easy College Life.

F'arents of Wake Forest Coli* freshmen were told· Friday night .that the United States soon may have "grammar colleges which do what gramnun· schools used to do--

. teach grammar~ long division and • m1;1oke trips to the local_ dairies.''

'Dr. David Smiley, assistant pro- " fessor of history a:t Wake Forest College said this in/ 'his address Friday at a banquet for freshmen parents. The banquet was part of "Freshman Parents Weekend," a: , program in which about 150 mo· lthers and fathers were given · a glimpse of college life froim; the student view point. ·The plan was

·started last year. The parents were guests: of the

Student Legislature at the banquet and later were guests of -President and Mrs. Harold W. Tribble at their home., Saturday morning they attended classes witll their sons and da~ghters ·and the Wake Forest-Uniyersity of Virginia foot­ball game that afternoon. At 10:30 a. m. a coffee hour was held in Johnson Dormitory, sponsored by the Woman's Government. Associa­tion.

Smiley .told the g r o u p that America continues to ibe "overly concerned about doing things the easy way/' 1He said that the next step in the following of this trend 'will be "to start a· drive-in college because students are complaining about t!:le distance between the parking lots and the classrooms. .

This drive-in college can have paved areas, with posts or speakers and carhops from the snackbar. ~hen the old grads can, come back 20 years later and hold hands by the post where they met. This drive-in plan wili save the. cost of buildings, heating' · and air-condi­tioning. To give the place some •atmosphere, ivy should be put on ·the speaker posts. The school song will be "Dear old Drive-in, mother so true ... " '

Smiley also said concerning 'the trend to the "easy ·life" that "we will probably have te:&tbooks model­ed after comic books. There are already two column picture books with a thin ·ribbon of type artfully arranged around large pictures· on each page. These will evolve into books with only one picture on each page. One picture will probably have a balloon coming from the· character's mouth saying 'I'm George Washington.' "

Smiley attempted to answer the qu,estion "What is a college for?" by defending what he thought a liberal college is supposed to do.

He said that he hopes that the parents didn't expect a college to give a diploma based on· such "non- -academic work 'as sixth grade grammar, underwater basket-weav­ing, or horseback riding." He said that he wanted to think of the college as a "thought-factory, a constant fennent . Qf ideas which challenge the students to think."

"Wake Forest is a liberal arts college," he said, "and it is design­ed to give the student a chance to make a life rather than. to make a living." Education is for the lei­sure· hours, for ·that part of life

· which we live. "Boredom is the disease of our

Another nrofe.s· sional scholar was wal~g down the street. in town th~ other d:ay and was greeted with a cheery: ''Well, I ha.vent seen you since I flunked out."

----An English major suggested to

the writer of this column the other day that he should write a joke anthropology.

The. ultimate was reached a few nights ago: a student slept throUgb

·a date. ·---

One fellow was so exuberant at the ·Kingston Trio. "concert'\ that' he whistled and cheered even whlle they were perfonidng.

Greeks Climax Special Week,· . Trophy Given

Delta Sigma Phi fraternity won the overall Greek Week trophy as competition in, the Interfraternity Council-sponsol'ed event ended a week ago. 1 -

The trophy was the fourth over­·an Greek Week trophy won by the fraternity in four years.

The winner was determined by the total nmhber of points accumu­lated through participating in. various Greek Week. events.

Smaller trophies were awarded for first place winners in the events.

Kappa Aipha was fir'st place in field day competition; Sigma Cbi won the interfraternity sing; and Theata Chi took first place in de·

· corations. · Delta Sigma Phi placed second

in decorations and third in field day events. .

.Coed Jean Hobby was winner of the Miss Greek Week contest held at· the Greek Week dance at the Coli­seum. She represented Pi Kappa Alpha. . · , Th.e .. Greek Week: is an ·annual

. event sponsored by the Wake Forest · IFC and is one of the ·major events

in which all 10 of the campus soci::il. fraternities participate.

STUDENT UNION MOVIE The "Spirit of Saint ·Louis'' will

be the Student Union movie this week en,d. It will ·play at 8 p·. m. , Friday and Saturday in Room 14 · of the science building.

Chapter six of "The Spider's Web" will also be showing.

iime. 'Wake Forest aims at making , the student's after-work hours a. thrilling time- of growth rathe:r than a dull time of waiting to get to ·bed or back to work by filling those leisure hours with rewarding activity." ·

As 'for ·Christian· education, he said a "Christian college will help the people in its constituency to understand that faith -and reason must unito. Faith without reason is superstition. Reason must acknow­ledge its debt to faith."

SPE~~w~~Yl \

A local newspaper's sports page had a· headline last week that said something ·about Wake Forest lead­ing the ACCinoffense. These words could have a double meaning, for there has been ·a lot of talk ·lately · about the way Winston-Salem feels toward Wake Forest.

A prevailing viewpoint. seems. to be that though we have moved in on the Winstonians and the Salemites, we have not bee11· accepted as a member of the family. Coach Paul Amen, in a widely publicized news conference described us as being "like a poor l,ittle boy from across the tracks coming over· to fight the town idol" when we played · Caro­lina, and pointed out the fact . that Carolina was ironically listed as the home team for the first half.·

Not Loved? Is it true that we are not parti­

cularly '-loved here? Perhaps · so. What, then, is the reason for this indifference ? Ou:r students contri­bute .significant economical support to the city through its restaurants, its stores, its theaters and its other services. , .

Our faculty is a valuable addition to its citizenery as our program is to. its culture. Our· campuSo- is a

1 tourist ·attraction, our facilities are useful to the community, our ath-

1 letic events provide good entertain­. ment .and our very presence is a

source of favorable civic publicity. The fa~r is that though we may

tend to forget it,· we are newcomers to the neighborhood; and are still on trial. We are .still in this awk­ward position of Wiving . to prove

.~· ' . . . ' '. . ' ' . . . - . . . ..

'

ourselves, and the demands made on us are more stringent than those J.1lade on the older, lass imposing citizens. This situation is farther complicated by the comparatively small number of Wake Forest alum­ni in town.

Teams Giving All Certainly our athletic teams are

giving all they have to Yenerate us in the ·public eye and to enthench us in the public heart. But this is not epough. The administration, the faculty, the alumni ·and the student body have .failed to understand what it takes to make a city love a col· lege.

1

The greatest failure is that of the students. We who benefit most, con­tribute least. We have little or no

, contact with the civic clubs, the public schools, or the city govern· ment, and far too little with the

1 churches. We do not know the peo­ple,. support. the projects, or partici­pate in civic affairs.

Last year an · organization was formed to sell Wake Forest to the city and the state. It was called the Booster Club, but though it got off to a successful start in the spring, it has yet to boost, and seems to have gone the way of ·all good Dea­con organizations.

If this club remains defunct, then let us raise another in its place. We cannot continue to cry about not being "the town idol" until we do scm~thir.:g tangible to deserve be. ing raised to that stature. We are on the spot, not . in the spoWgbt. This is not the time for sour grapes. This !.s .-u~~ ti!ne for a<:tion.. .- .

..c] By 1

Prof J: (includin~ ilcs) _open' atrical se

· invigorati dition ~.of tome of .1. our teeth­.ordinated of compl tio~s.

. As for devout .a Wilder's 1 ever, CORC

found dip] a magni:l appointjnJ man; ·thE mensional nianding · pl!'l"· . What'\\

stu'dy..:...a 'the. digni man·. As·: GOlden .li l).qme.-

. The ,ae tered aro -an.ama sui"Viv:e t saurs. we the'Flo.od maid, Sal - 'Of.cou' day fami .chi~d (Cai sists :on ~ cold; and always ~·~

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Henry P

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.CriticS~ ·Praise 'Skin· Of Our Teeth' 1 • '~ ,

By DWIGHT PI~KARD . ·· wife. . By PAT WOODW,AJlD Prof James Walton and troupe · Bappl•y Ever After Miracles do still happen at Wake

(including. several prehlstOri~. ~~~ ~:Nevertheless, l with ~or . ad- F?rest ICollege-eS.IJeciaUy in the jcs). opened ·the··wak:e· Fo,est .tlle- justments, ·they aU manage to live ;theater. The Wednes~y·night pro­atrieal season Tuesday night witb "happily ever after." Tllat ·is with ducti-on -of Thorton Wilde:r's · 'The

·invigorating exeellen~. Tb,~ reJ?-: the exception of the dinosaurs who skin of our teeth' is a perfeet ex-dition ~.of Thornton Wilder's . ept~ !'re -extinct at· the play's end. . . ample of a real miracle. tome of .l.~gination-'The 'skin of James Kennedy, a new, :Personal- Judging from the Tuesday night our teeth~was a professionally-eo- lty on the!._Wake Forest stage, production· this play .eould well .ordinated delight, well-de5E!rving made himsett quite at ·home pro. have· ·been considered one of the of compliments and col;lgratula- trayJ.ng Mr. Antrobus. -He respond- theater's poorer attempts. No lions. ed very capably .to .the role and major character gave ·a consistarit

As for the play itself, I am no handled. it with discretion-always portrayal of his pir:t.'·The pl~y's devout ,apostle exclaiming ·Mr. convincing, as the family tcya.nt, pace was very sporadic. The ama· :Wilder's literary mer.l.t. I do, how- escapader, understanding. father, -turishness of the production was

. ever, coacede his ingenuity fo:r pro- respOnSible husband, and "soap emphasized by such things 1as ex­found dippings into piediocrity with hox".' orator. Especially commend- cessive noise backstage, aetors a magnifying kaleidoscope. Dis· able 'was his ·character break at peering at the audience through appointingly,· he doesn't reve~l· the play's elQs~. . the curtain, and 'people failing to man; .there is not. one . ~eal .. di- Lela Faye Coltrane as the ever- get on or off stage on time. The ~e~si?n~l cW:r~cter m a ~lVln¥, d-;- sturdy Mrs. Antrobus by :far .sur- play was reasonably entertaining mandmg · of hvmg, ~situation .lD ¥'· passed any previous performance. but it fell far· below the standard pl!'J'· . ' · . . · , : ! At. times · her stoic face made ih~r of the prev.ious ·three year's pro-. WJiaf we have·ins~d is a: social appear nii>re real than ;theatriC-al. ductions at Wake Forest.

,stuay--;-a . Gall.up :pon.....:.aff~J:I!Jiin~ · Nev~rlheless;. she ·was m.rmly · Magie Wand

far . less often in the theater last ~ear than in previous years. _

. The fact that a. ·large pieee of wall cracked and· fell seemed to sei"V'e.on1y as a challenge. to them. Tltey so effectively covered up this a ceident that much of the au.dience was not aware that -this was not a part of the play. ,...

James Kennedy as Mr. Antro­·bus, at times reminded one of a middle-aged and pathetic bafoon . His part, half comic and half ser· ~ous, was extremely ineonsis~nt so Kennedy can't be completely blamed for his uncertainty about ~hich mood should be used for which speech. Nevertheless, Ken· nedy turned in an. adequate per­fO'rtnance in a very difficult role.

The . part of ".Pappa's Uttle angel," Gladys, .belonged to Dee Shreve. Most of the time Mrs. Shreve gave a quite believable por­.trayal ()f first a child, then a teen-ager, and finally a young mother. ' One criticism of her performance

would ibe that although she re­aeted weH when she was speaking she failed to react to other action in the play unless the action was

The minor characters may be commended for playing subordi­nate rolls well enough to add rather than distract from the pro• duction. Two minor characters de­serve specia-l praise. Roger Burr as the telegraph boy and a con­vention delegate . gave a · well thought-through protrayal of his characters and seemed to be . really enjoying himself. Bill McDuffie as th-e stage manager gave an above par performance.

Could Have Been Better · Of a -reasonable emotional nature. It certainly'isn't easy to protray a chi-ld; Mrs. Shreve is .to . be con­gratulated .for -doing just that.

Stedman Kitchin's Tue~sday per-

__,..,..., ....

OLD. GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Nov. 2,. 1959 PAGE FIVE

WINSTON-SALEM DRIVE-IN

Is Now Playing For Entire Week

Blue Den:im WITH

Carol Lynley and Branden DeWild -PLUS-

MAN OF THE W·EST WITH

' GARY COOPER the. drgmty· and. perpej.uaJi.ty of striking as the gray-haired ~dish- ·Then someone •must have waved riuui. As for its· a;ilegory, read. the waj;ered: Mother,. intent · up~n ~ the .a power.ful magic wand because the Golp.en . Rule <>nee. and. ~tay·_ ~b welfare· ·0 f· childrep. · and family. Wednesday night production made l).ome... . . . . . Matron,ly ,elegant, Miss. Coltrane, the Tuesday show look .like a poor

. The . action . of . the play is cen- merited a ~other's bouquet. dress rehears~~· All the actors aid

. Angela Johnson as Sabina gave a , performance . which peThaps could have beeri better if she had depended more on ,her known tal­ent and less on contrived stage gi:rnicks. Miss Johnson, ·however, did a very good job with a difficult ro-le.

fo'rmlanci! left one ' wondering ~~~~~~~~~!::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ whether. the' part of Henry was -"meaty" enough to allow real emotions or whether Kitchin's con­ception of the character was so shallow that true emotions were out of .place. Wednesday night his portrayal of Henry seemed much deeper and more through. Only a hint of the "Dandy" he played in previous ·roles peek~d through. Kitchin deserves c'ongratulations for ··another good performance.

tered aroupd the Antrobus fanilly Always Channing . . a muc~ }'e~ter Job and they seemed -an amazingly stout group-who· Th 1 · · h . . An. .,_ to ~e eDJoymg themselves on stage;

.. ; . ~ . . e a ways · c ~1nmg geuo th" th h kJ 8Ul"V1Ve the. Ice .A~ when. din~. Johnson, -yrh,t)' played sabina, was lS gave e s ow a spar,. e seen saurs .were rna~ s · best fnenc,:t. a very . captivating · aittle Miss every situation. · th~. Flo.od,_ Noah s ark, a seductive Eternal Cleopatra. TMt wonderful · Garrott Was Adequate ~~nd, SabJ.na, and War~ womanly· fickleness and risque in- Betsy Garrott ~ was whiningly

Of cou:se there. are the everym- nocence was gracefully exemplified' 11 da_y famil __ y .w:orraes: a_ probl~ 'b'" her. !Characteristic of.Miss John.- adequate as the fcrtune te er;. the · hild (C ) la:d ll "' · part would · have perhaps been .c. . . am • ~young_ . Y~ w. 0 m~ son's versatility was the ease with much more effective if a .touch of sxsts .{)n growmg up, the eo:nmon which she handled Sabina's social prophetic vigor had been added. cold; and Mr. Antrobus w~o 15 n~t maturing, while retaining the But then again there are apathetic always ucandy and roses to lrls f . k" ss · " ·

rrs me . · · wizards.

Clip. This" Ad Out , For $2.00 Dandruff Treat· ment For $1.50.

At W.· 4th St. aarber

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.T

Mr. Wilder'.s chara~ter, Henry, a watered down version· of a Cap- Jan Hensley, the announcer, tain Ahab, James .Dean mixture, was tadioish ·enough to disturb me

because there was no conimercial. was well suited to· Steadman Kit-chin. Mr. · Kitchili's perf{)rmance Appropriately enough, Moses's was climatic and forceful; he made ·beard, as grown by George Parker, Henry a very integral part of the. \Vas a close facsimile to a well play, · 1' glued, artificial pharaoh's beard.

Henry's sister, Gladys, was de- Afier all, the old patriarch did lightfuHly played ·by new-comer have some say so in the Egyptian­Dee Shreve, Mrs. Shreve quite Israeli question. naturally allowed Gladys to grQW. Hats off 'to Roger Burr, the up into a very refined Mother, and telegraph boy; Andy Smith, the ·she was at , complete ease with Doctor; Lon Boggs, Homer (who

added solemitity with a minimum of gesture); Lionel Branscomb, the professor, and Bill McDuffie, Mr. Fitspatr.ick.

Elaine Byassee, Dottie Todd, and Luda Pollack mused quite weH. 1

David Allred as the Dinosaur and Mary Ann Copenhaver as the Mammoth were beastly good.

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Lela Faye Coltran may weil be proud of her excellent· portrayal of-Mrs. Antrobus. She handled well ·the difficult job of being the only non-comic characte:r in a "theatri­cal" comedy.· This · wa,s certainly her· best a.cting job in the .Wake Forest Thea.ter.

.. 4 ·r

ANGELA JOHNSON, as Sabina, begins her scheme of seduction. ~b. Antrobus, played by .JAMES KENNEDY, is the 'victim.'

H

Billiard Contests . To Be Sponsored

A '.billiard tournament and 'a mix­ed~ bridge tournament will ·be spon­sored by the Student Union.

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Trophies will be · awarded the winners and runners-ups.

Deadline for entries is Monday, Nov. 9. Entries for· the Billiard tournament may be made in the Student Union recreation room in Reynolda Hall, at the information deskin Reyno~dil I:all or at any of the fraternity houses.

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Page 6: lh anh lurk - Wake Forest University

PAGE .SIX Monday, Nov. 2, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

~WFDD

1 u50 On The Dial II:.!JS 11:00 li:Cl5 7:00 7:15 7:30 7:-45 1:00

10:00 10:15 10:30 12:00

MONDAY Sign 6n News Supper Club News G. I. Record Shop March Time Navy Swings Concert Time Sports Serenade In Blue Deaconlight Serenade Sign Off

8:05 7:15 7:30 8:00

10:00 10:15 10:30 12:00

Supper Club Oral Interpretation Cafe Boheme Concert Time Sports Army Bandstand Deaconlight Serenade Sign Off

THURSDAY Sign On News Supper Club News

Four .Meetings Left In BSU's. Choir Classes

' . The Baptist Student Union Choral Workshop has only four more meet.. ings scheduled this fall.

The WEJrkshop will not meet after the Thanksgiving holidays because of the approaching Christmas holi­days Joel Steball, BSU music chair­man, has said. -Tomorrow .at 6 p. m. in the Lower

Auditorium, Paul Snyder, ·director

Campus Representative By The Coll~ge Reeord Cllib To Earn $10~ (or more) In Spare '.l1me

COLLEGE RECORD CLUB, .· ' . . . Write for Information: P. :o.· BOx 1193, Providence 2, R. I.

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5:58 8:00 6:05 7:00 7:111 7:411 8:00

TUESDAY Sign On News Supper Club News

5:58 6:00 6:05 7:00 7:15 8:00

10:00 10:15 10:30 12:00

Weekly Forum Concert Time ~ports Pat &one Deaconlight Serenade

of music at Keynolds High School Spaghetti - Pizza - St~aks - Salada and minister of music at Calvary ~==========:================ Moravian Church, will be in cl:).arge _ of the workshop.

10:00 10:15 10:30 11:00 ~:00

5:S8 1:00

Supper Club Lawrence Welk Concert Time Sports Guest Star Cadence Capers Deaconlight Sign Off

WEDNESDAY Sign On News

'Maid Of Cotton' Judges Selected

5:58 6:00 6:05 7:00 7:15 8:00

10:00 10:15 10:30 12:00

. Sign Off FRIDAY

Sign On News Supper Club News Best Of Broadway Concert Time Sports Here's to Vets Deaconlight Serenade Sign Off

Students participating in the work­shop liave been practicing element· ary choral conducting under the direction· of music ministers and teachers. Primary emphasis so far has been oli hymns and the hymn­book. 'Next week Dr. Thane McDonald,

chairman of the College's music departme:11.t, will be in charge of the workshop. He will work ·mainly with intezpreting anthems, Stegall has said. ·

Men tentatively scheduled to lead Concert Time Mondaywillfeature 0 Oth Ca . the group for the spring semester

Bizet's Symphony No. 1, Beetho- n er mpuses • e • include Paul Peterson of Salem ven's Concerto No. 4, Chopin's College, James Hart of First Pres-

A New York fashion editor has Sonata in B flat minor and Haydn's . byterian. Church at Winston-Salem, been named chairman of the judges Symphony No. 92 <Oxford). University of Pennsylvania 1s to be granted, students must be Joe Stroud of the Music Department. who will select the 1960 Maid of Act m of Tristan and Isolde by An educational experiment "com- ready to accept the same social of the Ba)ltist State ·Convention and ;:=========~================. Cotton. Wagner will be played Tuesday. bining Plato and the panel.show" restrictions that exist on other cam- Dr. James A. Dillard of Winston-

Virginia Steele of McCalls Maga- Symphonie E.spagnole by Lalo, will be conducted during the last ptises. Salem Teachers College. zine will serve with six members Double ·Concerto in A minor for two weeks of each semester at the · of the cotton industry in choosing violin and cello by Brahms, and School of Communications at the a Maid of Cotton from 20 finalists Symphony No. 39 by Mozart will be University of Pennsylvania. Dec. 29 and 30 at Memphis, Tenn. heard Wednesday. The experiment is an innovation

The winner will receive a 43-piece, Thursday the prologue to Boito's in the school's curriculum, begun all-cotton wardrobe and will travel Mefistofele, Schubert'ls Symphony Sept. 28. All lecture courses with coast to coast in the United States No. 9, Mozart's Concerto No. 10, one ex_ception will be suspended and to Canada and Europe. and Bach's Toccata and Fugue in during the two·week periods.

To be eligible, a' girl must have F m~jor a~d Toccata and Fugue in ~stead of attending lectures the been born in a cotton-producing D nunor will make up the program. entire student_ body of the st;hool state, must never have been mar· Friday's program will be Grieg's a~d the media ~ellows ass?clated ried, must be at least five feet five piano Concerto in A minor, Beetho- With the staff Will meet With the inches tall, and must be between ven's Sonata in E flat, Cherubini's faculty. 19 and 25 years old. Symphony in D and Brahms' Con- Director of the School of Com·

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"Our purpose in these two weeks is to bring to the surface any latent contradictions which students may have discovered in the various ap­proaches to · the subject of· mass communications-approaches taken by different members of the facul· ty," he said.

Re said that the value o.f the ex· periment, "if it works," is that the students will know at least that faculty members recognize the exis· tence of different points of view. "H these viewpoints cannot be recon· ciled through the meetings, the dif­ferences will be . emphasized,'? he said.

He said that the student will be encouraged, through his OV'i'Jl later experience,?' to discover which of the judgments, principles or ap­proaches is the more valid."

North Carolina State College North Carolina State College may

exchange about 20 students with the University of Toronto.

The University of Toronto has had an exchange program with the University of Montreal for some time, but University officials felt that an exchange with some Ameri­can college would help internation­al understanding.

State College was picked, accord­ing to its student newspaper, be­cause of the "location, the well­informed student body and the high caliber technology taught and prac;­ticed here."

Stude11ts from the University of Torqnto will arrive at State College in December. Several State College students, representing different branches of the student government and student publications, will then journey in January to Toronto.

The exchanges will be for a week end. State ·College representatives will be chosen by the school's Stu· dent Commission.

Woman's College The ~student legislature at Wo·

man's College of the University of North Carolina has passed a bill giving seniors permission to remain out until 1 a. m. Saturday.

Tbe bill, before becoming law, will have to have the adrriinistra­tion's approval. The administration ·has said that if such a privilege

Women constitute seven per cent of all pharmacists in the United States, according to the University of North Carolina School of Phar­macy.

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After Amen la tainly g. · Hew~

to conce longed t

It has ference 1

. not to fo

. that Am · Officia office fo1 as well ·It was

they Wei guilty of the pare

It seer some Of .for.all o way of t

'One1w ·entire· co

a close ! a cill th

Often . counts, ·1:

Here's ciating. < an entirE

Freshn Bryant h

·Deacons, height.

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-a New Jt He and ~ starting .t

Much t

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The De starting p talented r 'two years Amen is nex:t year.

Bones season pr key sopho

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Page 7: lh anh lurk - Wake Forest University

· .... -

IT

-

s

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\

. '

.:VI EW'I NG ·._the DEAC

... Mter tfle North Carolina game Wake Forest's football coach Paul .

- Amen last week abandoned_ his customary soft-spoken attitude and cer-' tainly gave the press something to write about.· ·

He was "downright mad" at the game officials and made no attempt · to conceal his disgust. The press took his conun_ents and unduly pro­longed their coverage of the "feud" that never actually existed.

It has been an Unwritten rule for coaches in the Atlantic Coast Con­ference not to comment on game officiating, and when a coach sees fit

. not to follow this rule, it is' news. This writer-feels that the comments that .Amen made deserved to be made. · · Officials have been shielded from criticismby the conference's front office for too long. Constructive criticism shoqld be made to the public,

- as well as to the commissioner. ' -· It was not a.-question of Amen's doubting the officials' competence;_

they were merely guilty of an "off-day." For game. officials to be guilty of "off-days" with ·such an amazing unanimity as they were' 1~

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday. Nov. 2. 1959 PAGE SEVEN '·

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the ,Carolina game does tend to raise question,. however. --. · Luck of the Irish. • . •

NEAREST BARBER SHOP TO CAMPUS ·. : . DICK COLE, a Sigma Chi, sets a ne:w intramural 1~ yard dash record.

It seemed· as if Coach Jiiil Hickey of the:Tar Heels were borrowing some of- th!i luck of the Irishman, basketball . coach Frank McGuire, .for. ali of the questional?le calls at Crl,lCial times did' seem to. go the. way of the Greater University. . . ,

()ne \Who denies the facf that one Call of an !>fficial can change· the - entire· complexion· of ·an athletic contest has never watched a filin of

a close game. Officiating can change the outcome of -the· game -with a call that need not be in the closing minutes of a contest.

Often if seems that -it;s not whether the game -is ·won or lost that counts,· but Ws how the officials let the game be p!ayed. .

Here's hoping that Wiike Forest has seen enough- "{Iff-days" 'in' offi­ciating. Certainly there were enough in the ·Carolina game alone to last an entire football season. . • · · ·

Frosh. Cagers La~ Height • • • · Freshman basketball practice is in its third week,· and Coach charlie

Bryant has cut' down to a 15 man squad. To one observing the Baby Deacons, it.is obvious that the\ team's most 'critical problem is lack of height. -

,/ .Aside from stratospheric Bob Woollard, a giant at six feet, ten inclles, the Deaclets do not have another tall man by basketball stand­·ards. There are a handfull six feet, two inches or so, and the re-mainder stand at six feet or ~nder. , · . Impres.sive in early practice ses~ions bas been the play of Al Koehler,

-a New Jersey freshman who played at Bullis Prep School last year. He and Ted Zawacki, the squad's best' shooter, are slated for the starting. backcourt positions. . · •.

Much of the success· of the team depends on just -how well the reoounding load cari be carried by' big Woollard and the forwards. Re­

. bounding is a key ·to th,e success of any· basketball te~m. Bits of Praise . • •

The Deacs boast the conference's finest football ends. :ijesides the starting pair of Bobby Allen and Pete Manning, Coach Paul Amen has talented reserves in Bill Hull and Bill Ruby. Both of these ends have 'two years of eligibility after this season and, with .Allen also returning, Amen is assured of having exceptional strength in that department next year. . . . . ·

PiKa's Sweep ·]ri.tramurals . ' . ' - '

Track Events The Pi Kappa .Alpha's copped

four events to sweep the' fall track . intramurals.

Records were br.oken in all but one. event Tuesday, when the finals were l_!eld. One record 'was broken twice. PiKA Gary Bailey won the. 880-yard run in two minutes · 20 sec.:. onds Tuesday and . two minutes 15 seconds in the preliminaries. Both were better ~an any previous times.

Kappa Sigma finished second and Sigma Chi third. They took two first places. All scores except for the high jump are records.

In the cross country, Pi Kappa Alpha finished in three of the top four births to capture the event. Basketballer George Ritchie set a new record for the mile plus course with a time of five minutes 15 sec­onds. Alpha Sigma Phi finished second in the fraternity cross coun­try. Kappa Sigma was third.

Individual ~nners are as follows: 100 . yard dash, Dick Cole, Sig­

ma Chi, 10.6 seconds; ~220 yard dash, Charles Brewer,

Kappa Sig, 24..5 sec'onds; 120 hurdles, Charles Mei'I"YDl8Jl;,

Sigma ·Phi, 16.6 seconds;

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Bones McKinney's' basketballers have progressed rapidly in early season practice, and it looks as if Bones will have it this year. His key sophomores, Len Chappell and Bill Packer, are having. little diffi.

. culty adapting themselve~ to their varsity environment; they may give the Deacs a "Mutt -and Jeff" combination that will be hard to stop.

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Page 8: lh anh lurk - Wake Forest University

',, ' '

I

PAGE EIGHT Monday, Nov. 2, 1959 OLB GOLD AND BLA.CK Tackle Wayne Wolff CAROLINA' HOTEL

BARBER ··SHOP j

Hefty Kieke.- AP J\jd 'fo Vict(Jry By FRED W .ARDLAW . . . . .

Deacs Down Virginia, 34-.12, For Fifth Win

The Deacons. have. repeatedly ·Winless Virginia was no match the 38, then Parker threw a pass oome from behhld to- capture their

for Wake Forest's Demon Deacons to Bill Hull for the score. The con- four victories. The team often Saturday, as the Deacs easily version failed, and the game ended scored the first ta:lley of the eon­trounced the Cavaliers, 34-12. A with Wake Forest on the long end test and relaxed, relying on he Parents' Day crowd of 7,500 watch- Q£ the 34-12 score. big foot of ;t~kle Wayne Wolff. · ed the Deacons run up their big- The Baptist team has scored 95 gest score in winning their fin·al ~\fll!lrut.WZ.<tr:-ct~%WMW •~!lit ~ iii poin-ts, 43 coming in the final borne game of the seas-on. T H • quarter. Meanwhile. Wolff has 1

The Deacs were in command op arriers battered punting yardage for a, from the start as they won their 41.8 average. fifth game as against two losses. Are Outra d Wolff began kicking in h~-All three units saw considerable Ce school at Greensburg, Pa. He ra,n: action for Wak~ Forest, and each at fullback and quarterback. When took part jn scoring drives. Wake By Carolina he came to Wake Forest, Wolff was able to run the ball at will was shifted to the end position in against the out-manned Cavaliers his freshman season. Then Wolff's and seldom resorted to their double- Despite outstanding performances size, six :feet, two inches and 220 barreled passing offense. by captain 'Sam Jordan and War- pounds, led the coaching staff to

In the first half Wake Forest ren BloodSworth, the Wake Forest shift him to tackle. He was given scored three times and got a 21-6 cross country team w~s de_feated hjs -sophomore season ,to get used cushion which they protected sue- by a weH-b~a.nced Umvers1ty of to the position and -w2s he1d out of cessfully f<>r the remainder of the North Carolilla squad 'by a 25-33 varsity ·action. game. score. Last season was Wolff's time to .

Robinson Goes 39 For SCore Taking the lead from the start, come through. He moved in and · A 39-yard run by- halfback Bobby Jordan was never pressed as he took over. His ~unting gave him

Robinson gave the Deacons their sped over the muddy course in a the fourth spot m the conference. :first score after six minutes of play. time· of 28 minutes 14 seconds. Se- Wolff kicked 29 times for an aver­Wake Forest had gained possession cond place finisher Warren Bloods- age of 37.4- yards. after a pass interception by hal£- worth held off Carolina challenger This year has proved to be his back Jerry Ball put the ball in Bol> Everett with a fast finish best by far. He has booted 17 times Virginia territory on the 44. Full- that defeated :the visitor by 40 and averaged 41.8 yards. This back Neil MacLean went for five yards. · . mark plaees him a tenth of a yard then Robinson went all the way North Carolina's depth was ap- behind the number :ftlteenth punt-for the touchdown. parent as they captured the next er in the nation. This is the top

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TOP OOATS By Alligator 3475

MacLean's conversion attempt four positions. Wake Forest's Don averageintheAtlanticCoast Con­was· successful, and the Deacs led W<lod and Trent Wilson followed ference. The record is' 43.4 for the WAYNE WOLFF shows the kicking form that has put him out front by 7-0. This was the score at the the visitors in eighth and ninth conference. in punting· in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

AU WOOL SLACKS from 1495 end of the first quarter. positions. .Wolff's best kick, he recalled, 1----------------------------In the second quarter Virginia Results: was against Tulane, earlier this

CHAR GREEN, CHAR BROWN· OLIVE.- BLU~ BROWN, BLACK

came back and drove 60 yards for Jordan WF. 23.14 s;as8 <ln.dHe '~It. o:ftf alikkicktothki~tkwtehnt a score. The Cavaliers, relying lBloodsworth WF 25:04 yar s. JUS e c e !heavily on the running of halfback Everett UNC 25:0'7: long ~>nes," he said. H~ pointed out Tom Gravins, marched the dis· Sommers UNIC 25:29 that he is primarily the distance tance in 15 plays. Henry UNO 21:47 kicker for Wa.ke Forest.

Key play on the <irive was a pass P.elt~ UNO . 25:50 swunm· ers Se.lect interference call whiclt gave Vir· Sullivan UNC 25:50 _ ginia the ball on the Deacons' 11. Wood· WF 25:58 R d The Cavaliers' h a 1 f back Hunter Wilson WF 26:20 0 dy .Thompson Faulconer then passed to Ted Den· Weathers UNC 26:56 Coach Leo Ellison annoimced by for the marker. · Wake Forest has completed its

Virginia attempted to pass for home cross country schedule. The last week that Roddy Thompson has been' elected swimming team the extra point, but offensive inter- Deacons have one meet remaining captain for the 1959-1.960 season. ference nullified· the play and the in regular season competition, as zThe team ended its weight con­Deacons led, 7-6, with 12 minutes they go to Columbia, S. C. for a ditioning program :last week and remaining in the half. ,triangular meet with Clemson Col- be full tim re ti thi

Wake scored twice more in the lege ~nd the University of South 'w!::r.n far the ~f ~::: ~~h th! bali. The second score was spark- Carolm~ N<lv. 6. The Conference Citadel on Dec. 5. ed by three Norman Snead passes meet Will be held ·Nov. 16 at Dur- Ellis h s · ed hi · · · d h on a reiSSu s . mw.-Whlch covere 40 of the 61 yards am. t tio t t' · t in the c1r· a n o prospec 1ve sWJ.mmers o

!Ve. n· ._,.,.,..m•••·W>."P<"*"""'"''-"'"""'"®'."'~"'>;"'~ fry out f.~r th teom. The scoring play came on a Snead .,,.~,,<~,.,_.,._,,.;;;,,_,,;,.__,,,tj.«;,;.:o~~,"'''-·"'=":""""'~ · ~ e ~

pass to Bobby Allen. MacLean con­verted and the Deacs led, 14-6, mid· way in the second quarter.

Interference Aids Soore Therapy To Have Its {Jay

Quarterback Chuck Reiley led the Wake Forest's Women ·Physical Those women interested in Deac()ns to their final score of the Educati<ln Club is designating making a specific app()intment witli half. A pass interference call help- Thursda as Ph · a1 Th D Major Evans have been asked to ed the Deacs gain 40 of the 75 yards . Y . ysic _erapy 3 ! see Miss Major.ie Crisp. Major in this drive. The score was tallied and IS sponsoring American Medi- Evans will address aH physical by Joe Bonecutter with a minute cal Specialist, Major Nannie R. education majors Thursday, re­and a half to go in the half. Mac- Evans, on the ca:mpus for the day. gardless of voca.tional interest.

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Lean again converted and the half Major Evans, a Reedsville Va. The next meeting of the P. E. ended with Wake ahead, 21-6. · native, has been in active s~ Major's Club will be Wednesday I

After a penalty bad given Wake since· 1943. She will aeqW!-int col- night. Also on Wednesday the · . . Forest the ball on the Cavaliers' lege women with the career fields .Baptist Student .Union has invited . ~-n· . S'· -39 early- in the second half, the of occupational therapy, physical the Major's Club- to meet with. it Deacs went for their fourth score. therapy and dietetics. for its regular workshop. Snead's 17-yard run .headed the Major Evans· will also be able to drive which was climaxed by Mac- answer questions concerning the WEA TBERS TO SPEAK •.1 C.'!l.l QUe · ' · .-Lean's ?De-yard scoring plunge. The opportunities for training in the ~AI) a l1.1J ~ ~- . . OODVel'SlOn was successful by Mac- allied medical professions a.s of- Carroll w. Weathers, dean of . . o· f . a· '~-- . .. . o· . r~·. ·s· t. Lean and Wake's advantage was fered by ·the Army Medical Spec- Law School, will &peak at 6 p.m. Corner Liberty and 3rd streets now 28-6. ialists. · Wednesday :in the small Magnolia.

A blocked kick enabled the Cava- ------------- iRoo==m=to=th~e~C~ir=cl~e~K~CI~u,~b=·=:.=:·~~===~========~=~~~~~~~~==~~~===~~====================i liers to narrow the deficit to 28-la. ,...-----------Virginia gained control on the Dea- B con 13, and on the first play Gra-vins . circled end for the second A cavalier score. A two-point pass C play failed, and the score stood at R 28-12 at the end of the tlrlrd•quarter. A H

Parker-Hull Pass Play , B· Third unit quarterback Preacher R

Parker directed tbe Deacs .to their 0 E final score in the waning moments 0

· of t:he game. A 38-ya:rd run by Mac- T R Lean and a 24-yard run by Parker L led the Deacs t() the Virginia 18. Two penalties put Wake back on,. 1 E

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