olfl nub iblark · the smart, sassy, saving chevy ii novas and the other sensibly sized, sensibly...

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ates of Ina did :um of me. tlf of his If and rs late , most scored >ints. 1n and clock, t free three iiately Larrow !Hull tnvert- point ·Wake 1 from tlame- - , - - r ... r. . ,•. Barnard Visitors Like .. Of Wake Students. · Pare Two . YOL'UME XLVD * * olfl nub iBlark . ' * Wake Forest College, Wii:lston.Salem, Carolii:la, Monday, February 12, 1962 Deac Adventurer Salls And Cycles On Summer Trips Page Five NUMBER 16 King, Sutherland Win Solons Cancel Conference r. '·' f• '·· ;YRCElects Two Students To Offices The Magnolia Queen and her court will be elected by the student body tomorrow in chapel. Each student will be· handed a ballot with a list of names from which the Baker Announces queen and her court will be .chosen. ! .• ·-· . Theore wm be two attendants from Toledo Convent1on each of the four classes. The Maid of Honor and the Magnolia Queen AI Baker, president of Alpha are to be elected from the senior Epsilon Delta, national premedical class. This is a change from pre-' honor society, announced Friday vious years when the Maid of that the 14th national convention Honor has been selected from the will be held at the Univeorsity of junior class. Toledo, Toledo, Ohio. The conven- There will be no afternoon pre- tion will be held April 26-28, 1962. sentation of the queen, instead she Gamma Chapter, the local chap- will be presented at the Magnolia ter, expects to send a delegation to Ball. the convention. , Coeds Chosen ,. ..... Time Element And Refusals Are Reasons Given; Conference Purposes Reviewed

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ates of Ina did :um of me. tlf of his If and rs late , most scored >ints. 1n and clock, t free three

iiately Larrow !Hull tnvert­~ point ·Wake

1 from tlame­~%.

-,

--

r

... r. . ,•.

Barnard Visitors Like Friendline~ .. Of Wake Students. ·

Pare Two

. YOL'UME XLVD '· * *

olfl nub iBlark . '

"e~ <J~ e~ ~ike <J~ Af~" * Wake Forest College, Wii:lston.Salem, ~orth Carolii:la, Monday, February 12, 1962

Deac Adventurer Salls And Cycles On Summer Trips

Page Five

NUMBER 16

King, Sutherland Win Solons Cancel Conference

r.

'·'

f•

'··

;YRCElects Two Students To Offices

The Magnolia Queen and her court will be elected by the student body tomorrow in chapel. Each student will be· handed a ballot with a list of names from which the Baker Announces queen and her court will be . chosen. ! •

.• ·-· . Theore wm be two attendants from Toledo Convent1on each of the four classes. The Maid of Honor and the Magnolia Queen AI Baker, president of Alpha are to be elected from the senior Epsilon Delta, national premedical class. This is a change from pre-' honor society, announced Friday vious years when the Maid of that the 14th national convention Honor has been selected from the will be held at the Univeorsity of junior class. Toledo, Toledo, Ohio. The conven-

There will be no afternoon pre- tion will be held April 26-28, 1962. sentation of the queen, instead she Gamma Chapter, the local chap­will be presented at the Magnolia ter, expects to send a delegation to Ball. the convention.

, Coeds Chosen ,. ~~ ~~- .....

Time Element And Refusals Are Reasons Given; Conference Purposes Reviewed

PAGE TWO Monday, Feb. lZ, 196Z OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Barnard Girls Visit Yankees Praise Hospitality And Space

Telephones Succes~; . Coinpany Takes Over

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TOWN STEAK HOUSE Two Locations

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Into• periods Recons advent!. dozen a

"Alth ho:LdiiJ.g Clay ib nent of the Ne cause l slavery sion ar ished.

In pll of the 1 the pra mics, s Southla oppositi pati.onj an!l fou

"But and stu anti his of.iJoli1 play ar beoome campai Lillcoln !For~

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venture ratic pe at the armed: his ma: is said, illegitill stay, a girl alt 1

It is, well-res study, J

has :bee of lege: same t siderati< ment oJ antislav

Dr. S Mississi

· gree · fr 1947, g: also re< Vlillh ho In 1950, the un:

The fl .assist an at Wake associ111t

This s is teach ty of W

This' i ~au tho of the l a book e l'ican Hi

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OLD GOLD AND BLACK Mollday, Feb. 12, 1962 PAGE TBKEE

Student Union Plans '

Spring Bermuda Tour The Student Urii.on Travel Com- trdp. Facilities will be available for

........,.~ ~~ ~~ ~}--

1DDDLI ROUSE

mi<ttee announced at a meeting last tennis, golf, bicycling, calypso, lim- ii============:::; Tuesday afternoon 1plans for the bo, and surf swimming. trip to Bermuda, which is sched- The travelers have been sched­uled fiJl" the Spring Vacation. uled to return to New York by

According to FTank Lord, junior plane on Alpril 23 and then drilve to of Richmond, Va., and chairman Raleigh and arrive on April 24. of the committee, the itinerary was The cost of the trip is $132. A de­presented :to approximately sixty posit ·of $60 must be made l!o the students. He added that anyone else Wake Forest Student Union in the who is interested in the trip may Dean's Office 'by February 15. The obtain information on it from Mark deposit is not reiundable. Reece, Director of Studenrt: Affairs. Duxing the past seveval years the

The Wake F-orest participants on Student Union has sponsored a thea-ter tDi.p to New York City over

the trip will be joined by students Thanksgiving and trips to Nassau from North Carolina State, Wo- during the Easter Holiday. Medusa was once heard to rave: man's College, East Camlina Col- -------------­lege, Carolina, Peace, and Queen's :------------­on April 19 in Raleigh. They will then travel by bus to Idlewild Air­port, New York and fly to Hamil­ton, Bermuda_

The grotljp will spend April 20-23 at the Sunset Lodge Hotel, on the 'beach near Hamilton, Bermuda. The hotel will provide breakfast; however, the. price of other meals is not included in the cost of. the

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C., MONDAY, FEB. 12, 1962

A Gift To Be Thankful For The generous land grant from the

Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation adds an additional 100 acres to the fast-growing Wake Forest campus.

The new property comprises about one-fifth of the total land now owned by the college, land which stretches from Polo Road to Reynolda and Coli­seum Roads.

The College now owns the majority of the land in this area, with the ex­ception of the Reynolda Woods resi­dential area, the land on which the Ba;bcocks reside, the golf courses, and one or two sites still owned by mem­bers of the Babcock family.

The Old Town Golf Course, which makes up a large section of this pro­perty, is being held in trust for Wake Forest and will be deeded to the Col­lege at some future time.

The new property cannot be used for athletic contests or other forms of

amusement facilities, but is to be used for the expansion of the Reynolda Gardens. The grant provides the Col­lege with a fine opportunity to further beautify the Gardens and to create centers of cultural interest.

To some degree, the College-owned land will serve as a deterrent to any further proposals for a parkway ex­tension, since any roadcutting across this area would now run through Col­lege property and cut off a large por­tion of the campus.

The College, thanks to the Babcock Foundation, can now look with more definite and optimistic views toward future expansion, without having to face the big question "Where to Ex­pand?''

College officials can act more de­cisively in making decisions which af­fect the growth of Wake Forest Col­lege as an educational institution.

-R.S.

College Students And Their Goals We have noticed two general types

of students. The first type is composed of those who study in order to prepare themselves for the attainment of a career.

The better they do, the more they hope to gain by it later in material reward. They hope to get it all back in another form. They consider their years in college as hardly more than a period of training, as a sort of or­deal. And the more short-cuts they can find, the better.

The second type of student studies for the attainment of wisdom because something inside him cries out to know. Yet he realizes that he will never know or understand all. In fact, the more he studies, the more he realizes how very much he does not know. One can say that he receives nothing for his labor except the chal­lenge of always more labor to be done.

This is a gross oversimplification, we know, and in many cases these two types overlap. There is even a third group cluttering up colleges who do not study at all and don't care. But we needn't call them students at all. Still perhaps the two types can help explain a short dialogue heard during exams:

Speaker No. 1: How did you do? The grades are posted, you know.

Speaker No. 2: I donne. I haven't looked. Not going to.

Speaker No. 1: Why not? Speaker No.2: What does it matter,

the grade? It's what I've learned that matters. How the course has modified my way of thinking, my way of look­ing a;: things. Understand?

Speaker No. 1: No. • Speaker No. 2: I'd try to explain, but l'm going to study.

Speaker No. 1: Study? But the exam's ove~·!

Speaker No. 2: I know.

Sound fantastic? Well, to be honest the conversation was a hypothetical one'.

As long as our performance in a course is measured, however, by a grade, derived from a few quizzes and a final test administered under du­biou"s conditions, we can't really ex­pect students to react in any other way but in respect for that goulden grade.

Could the system be at fault? Could it be modified so as to produce more students of the second type, interest­ed in the pursuit of wisdom for its own sake?

-C. S.

Study Space Effective last week, the library will

be open for study until 10 p. m. on Sundays. The switch to longer hours made it necessary for the library to hire more student assistants, but enough applications for jobs were received so that the move could be made.

The change will alleviate some­what the cramped studying condi­tions which exist over the weekends, but students will still have difficulty finding places where they can study in small groups. The rooms on the third floor of the Library and Win­gate Hall, which are locked over the ·weekends, could be utilized for such a purpose if they were left open.

"\Vhen the social sciences and hu­manities building is completed in 19-63, the problem should be largely solved. Until then. however, the lack of sufficient study space will probably persist unless further provisions are made.

-C.O.

Why The Conference Failed What went wrong with the Wake

Forest Conference? It's failure is partly due to inexper­

ienced leadership in planning for and securing prominent figures to address the conference. The failure to allow students with positive connections with government officials to contact these officials and arrange for their appearance at the conference was a contributing factor to the conference postponement.

The conference had, and we think still has, a large reservoir of student and faeulty good-will and support. This good-will should have been put to better use by using the abilities of the students and faculty to better ad­vantage.

It is significant that two of the speakers whom the committee did se­cure were recommended to it by a member of the faculty.

The other mistake in planning the conference was in not disclosing the developments to the student body and faculty as they occurred. Refusals to disclose information resulted in a wide-spread misinformation and lack of information on the part of the stu­dents and faculty.

When an undertaking as large as this one is pursued, it needs all the public sympathy and understanding it can get. The students needed to feel that they were an integral part of the conference effort.

It is our hope that the experiences

this year will help rather than hurt the conference. w·e have always support­ed its basic purpose. We think it is a significant idea, and most of the credit for the idea should go to the student body president.

But several lessons have been learn­ed.

First, it is true that plans should have started earlier. If plans for next year ,are to be made, a committee should be formed now and work should begin soon. Those who con­tributed a great deal of unselfish effort to the conference should be en­couraged to continue with the support of the student body.

Second, the conference should not be run and controlled by one person. It is too big for that. The conference should try to seek out and use all the available talent in the student body and on the faculty.

Third, it should try throughout its planning stages to explain itself to the student body and secure the sup­port of the students.

In addition to these criticisms and suggestio11s, we add a final note.

From its beginning, the conference was billed as an experiment to dis­cover whether or not such a confer­ence would s·u c c e e d. With this thought, p e r h a p s the conference should not be written off as a failure; rather, it should be considered in the light of the groundwork which has been laid and the lessons which have been learned.

LYNNE SMATHERS IRVIN WILLIAMS Editor Business Manager

Founded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black is published each Monday during the school year except during 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 mall privi­leges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C.

THE SHADED AREA shows the recent 100 acre land grant given to the College fay the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation. Lake Katharine, better known as Reynolda Lake, now belongs to tbe College, as well as the surrounding land which is to be used for the expansion of Reynolda Gardens. The 19-acre Babcock residence area did not g~ to Wake Forest, nor did The Bam or tbe immediate area around The Bam. The dotted area alongs.,de Wake Forest Drive and Reynolda Road already was College property, along Reynolda Road are the famed Gardens. The grant increased the College property to some 500 acres, st.retching from Polo Road to Coliseum Drive. (Sketch by Erkil Guner)

One Moment Please By JIM MCKINNON

Staff Columnist The warm weather of last week­

end brought warning that spring is not far in the future. Soon will be gone the early sunsets, the ice, the chilly winds, and snow sculpture on the Plaza!

All this will be replaced by late sunset, tennis, golf, trips to Shel­ton's Lake, afternoons at the Tavern (for Par 3 of course), and afternoons and nights at the Chalet (not :or golf).

,Intermingled with all this extra­academic activity on campus in the spring will be the annual appearance of campus politics. Yes, politics will soon begin, and

for a while disrupt life here at sleepy Deacon-hollow. You can see the beginning of the "political season" when little groups start gathering in the snack shop and cafeteria talking about who their "man" is and why he or she is the "logical" person for the job.

One soon realizes that logical usually implies ability to get votes 'rather than ability to do a certain job. Then the coalitions will begin, we'll suport so and so if you will run one of "our" boys for such and such.

By the time of the Party cauceses, the campus will begin to split. Old friends will have to become

enemies for a while, because cer­tainly it would be bad oo be friendly with the opposition! Anyone in the United Party that associates with a member of the Progressive Party more than is absolutely necessary for the carrying out of daily activi· ty is labeled a traitor! I

Then the actual campaigning will begin. Everyone may rest assured that if he never had a friend before in his life that by the end of elec· tions he will indeed have a multi· plicity of them.

The big game on campus be­comes "name that man." All candidates try their utmost

to call everyone by their first name because this makes them feel that the candidate really has an interest in them and their welfare.

So, if at present you are for any reason unaccepted, rest easy, bet· ter days are ahead.

The Party platforms will be drawn up. These will probably be the most logical part of the whole affair. Many good suggestions will be brought up by these platforms because this is the part of the election that goes down in black and white, and is also the part that the winning party can be held re­sponsible for.

The Plaza will be littered with posters proclaiming the supposed worth of candidates. All sorts of brochures will greet

students each morning as they get up, for some ingenious master of politics has placed under your door, a blotter, book mark, leaflet, or maybe even a piece of candy or package of cigarettes with a parti­cular candidates name on it.

Finally election day comes. Funeral tents are set up, and

Slater goes into a momentary fi· nancial slump caused by all the free food that is given away under these tents, food usually used for more dignified purposes.

Students stand around looking at each other like hoods on a down·

Student Staff Improves Office

Under the supervision of George Cleland, business manager, the staff of 'The Student' is redecorat· ing the office on the second floor of Reynolda Hall.

Fish nets, paintings and cartoons done by staff members and travel posters have been put on the wall. New drapes are in the process of being made for the windows.

New equipment has been added to facilitate the creation of the campus magazine, including a fil· ing cabinet and an electric type.. writer.

Library Lighted The library, normally dark, .

will be lit up until 10 p. m. on Sunday nights, effective begin­ning last Sunday night.. More students were hired for the lli.nger hours, but there were enough applications to fill the positi11~,

town street corner! Many busy themselves scurrying

back and forth to the dorms pulling those who couldn't care less to the polls oo cast their "unprejudiced" and "intelligent" vote.

Then there is election night. AD sit around and wait for results. The announcement comes. Victory and defeat reign in the

same ·room. The winners make their speeches of victory and shal· low thanks oo their supporters, while the losers sit at the other end of the lounge muttering a con­glomeration of four letter words estimating how bad the student government is bound to be for the coming year.

Then comes the aftermath of all this. Friends gll'adually 1become friends again, and students in gen­eral ·usually so find their momen­tarily lost set of values.

It is true that the above esti­mation of campus politics here is somewhat exaggerated. HGwever, there still remains the fact that campus politics have gotten out of hand.

This year the one thing that could add more to Wake Forest during spring semester than- any­thing else in the realm of extra­curriculars is a clean, intelligent political campaign.'

Keeping a show of power out of this campaign would add much to the vitality of the campaign. The results of "coatail 'riding" can be seen in the results of last year's election.

The United Party won a resound­ing victory, and yet victory was bitter sweet, because many quali­fied persons had been left out of office simply because they were not in the "right" party, and many unqualified people were given po­sitions of 'l.'espGnsibility because they were in the "right" party.

This must not happen again. When we elect people to responsi­ble positions in campus life without first considering their merits. soon the vitality and effectiveness of campus politics is lost, therefore, let's consider the individual as well as the party this year so that the truly best man may win.

Students To Celebrate St. Valentine's Day

By JO DE YOUNG Staff Reporter

When we were seven or eLght years old, Valentine's Day was heralded i:n by pencilling question marks on /the backs of mountains of cards bought at the dime store or painfully pasted togetheT at home the night before.

At schooi, it meant a box gaily decorated with red and white crepe paper, burned opening of cards, lt'apid comparison with one's neilgh­bor to see who collected the most, and, Qlften, time off frOOllJ class for a party.

Although cards are now fewer and less anonymous, although peek· ing in Sweetheart's mailbox has replaced open comparison, ·and al­though a dance has long since replaced the class·room party, com­binations of silliness and sentiment still mark the entrance of Feb. 14.

Red hea11ts daintily decorated with doilies pasted on a door in the girls dorm ... The carnation that sits on the desk in the parlor next to a ibook filled with love poems . . . a big red cupid on the housemother's door ... decora-tions in the cafeteria ... Chaco-

late-filled satin hearts of all sizes ·gua'l."anteed to thrill the gilrl who receives them . . . Romantic cards adorned with lace . . . These are remains of a sentimental Valen­tine's Day.

"Get LOSit," "0-U Kid," "Stay Away," "I Love You ... " Mes­sa,ges on the tiny orange, a;>:ink, green, or lavender hearts that are almost too hard to eat are still aTound.

Valentines in the Book ·Store, laughed 8Jt by many before they are sent, lend theilr off-beat hum.or to the day. Proclaims one (on front 01£ which is glued a "gold" key), "Here's the key to my heart -use it before I change the lock!"

"Yes!" screams another, "I Wiill be your Valentine·, and what's more -1 admire your ;taste." Threatens a third, 'Be my VALENTINE or I'll terur my heart out . . . cast myself into a den of hungry lions ... and drink a six-tPack of vat­poison and . . . if that doesn't work, I'll kill myself.';

The clincher is pmvided !by a gorgeously decorated "Message for you on ValC'Dtine's Day ... only 225 shopping days till Christmas."

A 'Dear John' Valentine, eltP·

Off~·B:eat. By F. BRUCE BACH

Staff c_:!olulllllist - '

I Have you ever been tO the zoo?

The zoo is really . a pretty nice place. The animals are very con- . tent and Ve'I.'Y quiet. If' something· happens that they don't particular­ly like, the animals might growr and scratch a bit, but they do little else.

Actually they can· not be expect-·· ed to do much else because they··_, are only animals. ·

The· animals in the zoo that I go to are very well trained animals. There are a lot of things that the animals do not understand and like. No matter ~?-ow many times the traine'I's explain these things to the animals, the animals still do not understand them.

One thing that seems particu­larly odd to the animals is an ancient practice of herding an of the animals into one big cage twice a week and reading to them in human talk. I understand that in most zoos

this practice was abandoned years ago, but in the zoo that I go to they still do it.

Everybody knows that animals can not understand human talk.

The pan:ots do not even really understand this talk, but they learn to mimic wh:11t the humans say and this makes the humans very happy.

.At first there were nothing but parrots in this zoo but soon the trainers started letting other ani­mals into the zoo. This was very good because everybody thought that it was a much better zoo with all kinds of anim-als in iot.

The old parrots who had left the zoo a· long time ago never quite got used w the idea that there were other animals in the zoo b.esides parrots.

They kept on reading human talk an of the time and herding all of the animals into the one big room twice a week and hop­ing that the animals would learn to say the right things and may­be even become people someday. Animals are animals though, and

they can never become people ex· cept in fairy stories and such. I guess that animals are an impor­tant part of the world too and it would seem a· shame to· me if aU of the animals became people.

I do not think that there is much of a chance of this, however, be­cause the animals can't understand and they just sit there and look around and don't listen.

Every now and then- they think about getting up and walking out all together, but they never do be­cause the trainers feed them and they like their zoo very much even if they can not quite understand everything that goes on there.

Week Seeks Question Of Force, Farce

"Christianity-Force of Farce?" is the theme for the th'ree days ·of seminars and lectures during re­ligious emphasis week. The two regular chapel periods will also be a part·of the :program. Kelly M. Smith, pasoor <Jf the First Baptist Church, Nashville, Tenn. will ad­dress chapel on Tuesday.

Smith is a graduate of Morehouse College and Howard University. He has done graduate work at Vander­bilt and has served his present pastorate fO'r the past twelve years. He is president of the Nashville Ministerial Association and presi­dent of the Nashville chapter of the NAACP. · In addition to speaking in chapel Tuesday, Smith will participate in a conversation-type seminar with Dr. Robert Handy of Union Theo­logical Seminary, New York, on the subject, "Is the Church Obsolete?"

These discussions will be held Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons at 4 p. m. in East Lounge.

Handy, a graduate of Brown, Col­gate-Rochester; and the University of Chicago will speak to the faculty on Tuesday in the Magnolia Room on the subject, "No man Can Serve Two Masters - How Can a Col­lege?"

A member of Phi Beta Kappa, Handy is active in various histori­cal societies and is a member of the World Council of Churches Commission on Faith and Order.

The third speaker will be Dr. Herbert Gezork, president of An­dover Newton Theological School. He will speak each evening, Tues­day through Thursday in Lecture Room A in Winston· Hall on the fol­lowing subjects: "The Crisis of Belief," "'11he Crisis of Morals," and "The Crisis of Society." Tues­day and Wednesday these lectures will be heid at· 8 p. m. while on Thursday at 6:30.

Cullom Conference Meeting Cancelled

The Cullom Min"isterial Confer­ence will not meet tomorrow, due to the fact that Religious Emphasis

:week is ,: co.nductirig its· opening meeting at a conflil;tiilg time: . This ·week the Conference enjoyed the lead.ership of Dr. L. H. Hollings­_ worth and Russell Jlrantley in a 'discussion on the ministerial image.

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in Ameri~ Ca'l.'olina 1: ence of SE

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·such "soc federal sul federal con . Golden ac

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socialistic E Golden tl

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t 'No Pat .4_nswers' .Says Golden. Goncharoff Makes Plea For ~eace

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday. Feb. 12, 1962

Ashcraft Adv'en.tures IIl Babamas, Mexico

PAGE FIVE

. ' . . '. . .. ' .

Author Debates Issues - Dr. Nicholas Gonc.haroff, the Di­rector o(_Jnteriiational Educ.ation'' for the International YMCA gave ' '.. '.

By WALT .PETTIT f~uhder~ did, but·. rather with the Staff Reporter methods of keeping Negro children

Harry Golden, author of "Only from going to school. in America"· and publisher of the · The P'rimary issue beneath the Ca'l'olina Israelite, spoke to an audi- problem of segregation is one of ence of several hundred people in' 'physical death, according tD Wait Chapel last Thursday even- Golden. He substantiated this belief ing. Golden's appearance was.:Spon~ with figures indicating -that the sored by the Student Union Le,cture Negro mortality rate is five times Series. greater -than the- white. rate while

Golden's lecture centered around the rate of death at childbirth is his interest in ideas and social bet- three 'times as' great. This situation, terment. This theme was evident :iJi his opening remarks about the

. . conflict between East and the West. ,, '"·· Golden prefaced these statements

by -saying that we will have to live. in a world of unpleasantness 'for a while since there are no "pat" answers to the political conflicts in the world. · ·

Those statesmen who would look the answers "on a silver plat­

ter" are seeing the modem world through an antiqll!ated perspective. Golden added that while in his younger days the question was that of who would be the alderman, now the problem is th-at of who is the· ruler of the nation 8000 IIJlli.les away.

The distinquishing factor between the liberal and the rightest is that the liberal is aware that his sights must be centered on the world view while the rlghtest is still concerned· with the local pro-blem of the alder­man.

The next matter with which Golden dealt with was the compari­son which the rigbtest William Buckley has made between the Roman Empire and America. Golden said that the key to the fall of Rome is the "dilator."

Everyone in Rome was a dilator or prosecutO'C 9f his fellow citizens since anyone who turned· a. person

· in was rewarded with 'one-third of the possessions of the dispossessed person.

The problem in America .is not . the same, due to our police power, according to Golden. We must not, however, allow ext'reme vigilantism

~ .' 'iO grip our country, he added. This idea led Golden into · a· dis-

HARRY GOLDEN, lecturer, au­thor, and editor, spoke in Wait Chapel last Thursday night CJon­cerning world problems. The Charlottean, who edits the Car~

·lina Israelite, spoke before a. crowd of' about 300 persons giv­ing his opinions about the present tensions confronting the globe.

·The· Student Union sponsored Gol­den's visit · to the campus. He came comPlete with his now fa­mous cigar which added to his joviality. His wit constantly de­lighted the audience.

. his Wake Forest audience an in-G_old~n . ass~rted, is the result of I sight into the ever present problem discrtmmabon. ·. , · of unde·rstanding oth~r . people of By PETE BILLINGS

The problem· of· segration is also -the world during chapel last Thurs- · Staff: ~epoi1er , an economic one; ·according to day. The experiences I::st summer of an adventuresome Golden. The :normous number of Goncharoff, who ·grew up in the Wake Forest ·junior, Barr Ashcraft, motivated him Negroes leavm? the South causes So-viet Union and spent. three imd a to spend the fall sem_ester in Mexico. ·~e spent the social burdens m the form o~ aged half years in her univ~rsities, said summer working as a crewman aboard three differ­dep~ndents on the s~ate, While re~ that the average Russian. does not movmg a grat potential work force. believe communism holds all of the ent ships that cruised to the Bahamas. .

Golden'-s solution to the problem. answers for the world. He said that The first mate on one of these cruises was Julian lies in the removal of what he calls pe>rsecution has only served to Harvey, a man whose name appeared in the news "my~s." The image of all Negroe~ purify Christian beliefs there. last fall·in connection with the sinking of ·a chartered as b1g fa~ creatures or as p~ple When preparing to ·go to Russia ship. Harv';Y allegedly went berserk and murdered characterized by body odor Is a th tr Go· h ff the passen<>'ers who were all members of the same .. yth" or. any o er coun y, nc aro ."" • . .

roTh · t . -t d . suggested that the American stu- family, w1th the exceptiOn of a young gl["I. She

d. · .et grefah ISsue ofA hteh ay rtlshthef dent learn the heritage of the coun-' escaped and told the story of the hO'I"ror that sup-Igni y o umans. s e wo o .

_the Negro is increased, his social try, the la?-~uage of the count'ry he posedly took •place ~board the sw.t>. The ·alleged practices will also change. ~Ian~ to VISit, and the sti·ucture of mul'lderer later committed suicide.

Golden concluded this part of his life m that country. Ashcraft sailed wi1th many men from other nations lecture by stating that the Negroes Be.cause many foreigners express of the world, and they interested him a great deal. are writing a great chapter in their emotions and ideas in ways "I met so many different people from fDII'ei!gn na­history as they assert themselves which we and others fail to under- tions on the cruises, I decided that if they were going as individuals. stand, many.misunderstandings oc- to come and see my courutry, I was going to see

The next area of attention for cur. Golden was juvenile delinquency. He said, "We want knowledge He feels that the broken home is a rather than extension of informa­main cause· of delinquency, but that tion. We have a right to be afraid it is not the P!"imary one. only if we do not believe in what

The ·factor of insecurity and self· we preach to ourselves." ·consciousness is the main cause. We should seek to give other An individual cannot stay on the countries respect for our ideas, but periphery of society and remain not force them to accept those a well-adjusted person. ideas, Goncharoff said.

Golden seemed to- summarize his ·kaleidoscope of world prDblems with a consideration of his own re­ligious concepts. He stated that

PR .Pledges while Rome and Greece gave great S · [ t G •rl cont'ributions to. mankind, it is a u e ., s Judea that has given the gift of the importance of human relations. I Persing Rifles pledges wound .up

The theme· of human relations pledge training last Thursday with led Golden into his conclusiDn with a two hour stint of guard duty at the importance he places on ideas. the women's dormitories, a tra­What the world needs, Golden feels, ditional Persing Rifles project. is a balance between the wonders The guard was reviewed by Miss of science and the power of !human Linda Sutherland, "Miss Demon kindness. Deacon," before taking their posts

In addition to ·"Only in America" at the dormitory doors. Golden has written "For 2c Plain/' Pledges were ordered to main­"Enjoy, Enjoy," and "Carl Sand- tain military bearing, but some burg." He plans to publish his !found this a difficult task, especial­latest work "You're Entitle" in ly when coeds tickled them with July of this year. paintbrushes to make them laugh.

their's." With this objection in mind, he de()ided to start

with Mexico. He left Winston-Salem for Mexico City shortly before the fall semester ibegan. For fourteen days he jockeyed a motorcycle over the 2700 miles between the two cities.

The most exciting part of the trip, he observed, was the encoUDiter he had with a hurricane that hit the Texas-Louisiana area. It took him ten idays to travel four hiundred miles duriDJg the storm. He was forced to spend two nights in jaU cells, out of choice, because of lack of facilities in the devastated: area.

After arriving in Mexico City, Ashcraft enrolled at the Univers:ilty of Mexico. His curriculum included three courses that were taught in the English language and three that were taught in Spanish.

'Trade Policies of Latin America and the United States' was O'lle of the courses that was taught in English. The course dealt mainly with the Anlti­American feeling in the Latin American nations, and·_ the causes o-f the feeling.

Summ_er. Jobs Are Available

"I feel," stated Ashcraft, "that the greatest pro­blem with o~ policies toward. these nations is our attitude. We attack the Co-mmunists and try to point out to the people the deficiencies of the Co-mnumist

· system. ·But this does not interest them, for they want material wealth. They are interested in food and such material things, which the Communists are giving them, and nOit preaching.

Two courses that Ashocaft included in his studies involved field • work. 'Mexican History and Culture' was a course that examined the histories of the Indian tribes thalt are found in Mexico.

"The Indian !Population was defeated iby the Span­ish, but they were not conquered," said Ashcraft. "They still !I"etain.many af the traits they had when.

. the Spanish arrived in their country. "Language is a good example. There were over

one hundred -and fifty different dialects of the Indian· language before the Spanish cacrne to Mexico. The Spaniards gaJVe them their lang.u:age, and many of them adopted it. But there are still filly-four dialeCts officially recognized.''

Ashcr:aft lived with the Indians on weeikends, ~ having discussed them during the week in the class­room.

While spending weekends in the. villages, Ashcraft and his fellow students excavated bones and burial gifts .firom underneath churches and from grave­

_.y,~rps. ':Dhese ma.terials were used in fulfilling the -~'requirements of an archaeology class.

Many differences between the University of Mexico and Wake Forest Co-llege were noted 'l>y Ashcnatt.

The classes met regularly, as is do-ne here at Wake ~OI"est, but very often the class would get together outside the classroom for further discussion. A nigbt clUJb or a private home were the meeting places for the IWlScheduled discussions. They lasted anywhere frRp;l one to five hon:rs.

There were no tests given during the semester. according to Ashc11a<flt. Class participation and the ,gr.aJde from a term paper comprised the final ,grade in the course.

(Author cf "Rally Round The Flag, Boys", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gi!tis", etc.)

cussion of the role of the-rightist in the United States. While the rightist protests the forms of socialism which he associates with federal aid to education and medical to the aged, he praises the virtues of

Plebes And 'Aggres$o~s' Fight: Summer jobs in Europe are now

available to thousands of American college t;tudents.

The American Student Informa­tion SeTvice <ASIS> has more than 3,000 summer jobs in its files await­ing applicants.

HOW TO BE A BWOC

· such "socialistic" measures as federal subsidies to farmers and federal construction of airports.

In Make Believe Maneuvers This coming summer thousands of EurDpean employers will prov~de summer employment for American college· students, in order to make it possible for young Americans on a limited budget not only to see Europe, but also to "live it."

· Golden addressed himself to those critics of socialistic tendencies iD

1, ,:,government in bis statement that !'the areas of the least amount of

· communist infiltration .. are where socialistic economies are practiced.

Golden then turned his attention to the problems of the South and especially the Negro situation. He

'• bemoaned the fact that the modern South has not concerned itself with the world-view, as its colonial

In the night quietness of a peace­ful countryside, nothing was heard save the distant barking of some restless dogs. Although the stars were shining, it was dark and hard to ::;ee in the dense woods. ,

A-- young Pershing Rifle soldier peered from his post behind a tree, strained to catch a g1imJpse of movement, a lurking shadow; listened for a snapping twig · or rustling leaves which would signal the approach of the enemy.

"Flowers_ For Every Occasion"

At

BUD SIAITH'S FLOWERS-

THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER.- PA-5U489

FEB. 11th -MAGNOLIA ROOM CANDLELIGHT SUPPER

FEB. 14th - CAFETERIA DINNER

"SWEETHEART SPECIAL - BUILD YOURSELF A SUNDAE" - 21c

Cliff Hill, Dir. of Food Services

HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY

LENWOOD AMMONS A. C. MOTSINGER. JR.

AMMON'S ESSO Servicenter Welcome Wake Forest Students

·And' Family

ROAD, SERVICE Tires - Accessories - Batteriea

Comer ~'bill B~ ~

·.··.

Suddenly, without warning, the air was filled with yells, explosions, and brilliant orange flashes spitting from agressor rifles. AC'l'oss a creek, the enemy was silhouetted by the light from, the gun flashes.

Reacting instantaneously, alert soldiers returned the fire, loading land firing rapidly, cursing at jammed rifles and precious seconds wasted in fixing them, fir­ing steadily at the flashes and shadows across the creek.

Moments later, as quickly as if had begun, the firing ceased. Little was heard, except for buried rustle of leaves and grass as men changed positions; a muffled cough, a man working the bolt of his rifle.

A lone shot was snapped off, and then again all became quiet.

* • * The ammunition was blank and

the combat simulated, but it seem­ed very realistic to cadets of Per-. shing Rifles as they participated in tactical maneuvers- Saturday, Feb. 3.

On a farm some 12 miles north of Greensboro, Pershing Rifles Lt. Tom Spencer of Winsto-n-Salem planned the action and maneuvers which sent pledges through woods and un-derbrush so thick they had to crawl as they followed a com~ pass course in the dark; through muddy fields which caked. boots and clothes with the red clay; and through more woods and briars to attack positions held by the bro~ thers . . From one problem to anotha-,

Spencer and his assistant, Lt. Bob Ward, moved the pledges, keeping them busy throughout the afternoon an"d late into the night.

Not to be outdone by the "agres­sor" brothers, the plebes staged a surprise attack while the brothers P!"epared for the evening "mess."

Both brothers and pledges took the maneuvers seriously, When a platoon of pledges charged up a hill to attack an area held by the

WGA Dance Set Hearts and cupids will be float­

ing about at the annual WGA Valentine dance to be held Fri­day, from 9 p. m.-12 midnight.

The dance at the YWCA gym­nasium will feature the King Bees. The dress will be informal. Girls may obtain bids from any member of the social standards committee or at the information desk. The bids will be $2.50 each.

l Clip ~d ::e=to::-sbier I I Buy~!~!!e !~e!~!ce-( 1-·Get one for your "Buddy" FREE

1 Offer good through March 15.

I farmers 1 I dairy bar 1

brothers, ·the charge of the scream· ing, shouting pledges was convinc· ing enough to drive the outnumber­ed brothers off the hill.

And there was humor too, as Jobs include factory work, resort everyone felt like "hamming· it up" work, construction work, farm for the benefit of a WSJS-TV pho- work, hospital work, child care, tograpller who braved mud and camp counselling positions, and briars to film the maneuvers for a many others. Students will receive television· newscast. the same wages as the Europeans

Riding back in a bouncing army with whom they are working. truck, the mud-smeared faces of .In the past four years, ASIS has -the pledges managed to smile and successfully placed thousands· of joke about the day's actions, realiz- American college students in varied ing that under the gaiety Df the summer jobs throughout 11 Euro­event they bad learned a little of pean countries. tl1e seriousness of combat; and, if For further information and com­ribbons for the action were award- plete details on the summer work ed, the pledges felt as if they had program, inquire at the Old Gold surely earned them. and Black office.

POLO GRILL.AND RESTAURANT Fine Foods

And Sandwiches Corner of Polo and Cherry Sts.

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TYPEWRITERS • • • • $29.95 up PORTABLES AND DESK MODELS

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STALEY'S STRATFORD RESTAURANT

-Offering you efficient CURB-SERVICE around the clock and a variety of delicious HOME-COOKED MEALS served in our dining room. Good meats and vegetables prepared just the way you like them and worth a few minutes drive.

S. Stratford Rd. Just beyond the Thruway Shopping Center

Phone PA-29118 "We Neyer Close"

. ' P~~~~--5-2881 I No~::.::~~t~d~enter_j L.------------------~--_;~----------~----~~--~------~ ,._... ---- ---- --- ---- ~ .......... ~ ............................................ ~

Ladies, let me be fru.nk. The days of the college year dwindle down to a precious few. And some of you-let's· face it-have not yet become BWOC's. Yes, I know, you've been bu~y what with going to class and walking your cheetah, but really, ladies, becoming a BWOC is so easy if you'll ouly follow a few simple rules.

The first and most basic step on the road to being a B'\~lOC is to attract attention. Get yourself noticed. But be very, very careful not to do it the "Tong ''"ay. I mean, any old r;irl is bound to be noticed if she goes around \\ith a placard that says, "HEY! LOOKIT ME!" Don't yo1t make such a horrid gaffe. On your placard put: "ZUT!. REGARDEZ MOI!" This. as you can see, lends a whole new dimension of tone and dignity.

Once you have been noticed, it is no longer necessary to carry the placard. It will suffice if, from time to time, you make distinctive noises. If, for instance, every three or four minutes you cry, "Whippoorwill!" you cannot but stay fresh in the minds of onlookers.

We come now to clothes, a vital accessory to tl1e BWOC­indeed, to any girl who wishes to remnin out of jail. But to the BWOC clothes are more than just a decent cover; they are, it is not too much to say, a way of life.

This spring the "little boy look" is all the rage on campus. Every coed, in a mad effort to look like a little hoy, is wearing short pants, knee sox, and boyshirts. But the B\VOC is doing more. She has gone the whole hog in achieving little boyhood. She has frogs in her pockets, scabs on her knees, down on her upper lip, and is followed everywhere by a clog named Spot.

All this, of course, is only by day. When evening falls and her date comes calling,- the BWOC is the very picture of chic fem­ininity. She dresses in se.-ere, simple basic black, relieved only by a fourteen pound charm bracelet. Her hair is exquisitely coiffed, '\\ith a fresh rubber band around the pony tail. Her

daytime sneakers have been replaced by fashionable high lwelecl pumps, and she does not remove them until she gets to the movies.

After the movies, at the campus cafe, the BWOC undergoes her severest test. The true BvVOC will nemr, 1!C1'er, never, order the entire menu. This is gluttony and can only cause one's date to blanch. The true BWOC will pick six or seven good entrees and then have nothing more till dessert. This is class and is the hallmark of the true B\YOC.

Fin:.~ll)', the BWOC, upon being asked by the cigarette vendor which is the brand of her choice, will ahY~lY~=' reply, "j\Iarlboro, or course!" For any girl knows that a I\Iarihoro in one's hand stumps one instantly us u per~on of taste and di;;ccrnmcnt, as the po~;,:c~sqr of an educated palate, as a connoisseur of the finer, loftier pleasures. Tlds :!'d:ulboro, t-his l1adge of savoir~fnire, comcH to you in flip-top boxes that £ii1, or in soft. packs that are soft, with a filter that .filters :mel a IlaYor that is flaYorful, in all fifty states of the Union and Duluth. © 1962Ma.xShulman

BlWOC: Buy "lfarlboro On Campus. Buy tlzem downtown, too. Either place, you get a lot to like.

. .. . ~ .... . . .

PAGE SIX Moada~. Feb. lZ, lKZ OLD GOLD A!Ot &LACE

DALTON-lmGE, INC. iS NOW

Electronic -.·Wholesalers, Inc. Chinese Sam's, Art, Deacs Entertain l(angaroo, Rooms, Are Features; Loren And Jones To Take· Leads

Variety, Formality Lacking In Interfraternity Weeke~d

Hi Fi and Amateur Equipment and· Suppllil ; ... · KIT FORM OR FACTORY WIRED

938 BURKE STREET WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.

• VISIT OUR SHOWROOMS • By CHARLIE WINBERRY which closes Tuesday and is not is a top-notch flic. By CHARLES STONE Van.n, Vice-president; James Smith,~===============~===========~ Entertainment Columnist worth its salt. "The King and I" plays until Staff ColUmnist Secretary; and Randolph Rucker, :

"Eastside, westside, all around Mones Wednesday and Thuxsday. Then the Mine is only a whispering voice Treasurer. A the town" say the lyrics of a once Yul Brenner cGntinues in his Winston begins a long run of F. against· a conflicting roar, ~ I A party was held in the house A . A IJ()pular tune. While exploring both roles of the Siamese King. Too bad, Scott Fitzgerald's celebr.ated story realize it., is a question of taste Saturday night. the eastsirle and the westside of isfn·~.libe't, that hethTef~esthto be Kinth' g J"TenderJ Is ThRe bNigdsht. "J J ennifJ' er which is usually considered alien .. J~ep ~~ e ~ ~ e s have completed , the home for all "us" transients, o ... J! t, but at lS e way e ones, ason o ar • ll"., oan to reason, but I think it only fit- .. ee.a.. we have come across a very inter- ball bounces. Brenner and Deborah Fontaine, and Tom Ewell take the ting that social :fraternities should Delta Sigma Phi . .

Kerr make up a star-studded cast leads in this movilllg and thrilling t t th 1 A serenade was held Wednesday . 24 a..... Wr-... Lu·· Sirw.·ce· esting place. ge oge er at east once a year night for Kay Doenges· who is pin- .. _.,-., Well off the beaten path and far in a particularly fine motion !PiC- picture filmed against the bac:k- for a really nice, Als ~ ' I ~· • d B d W k

tirom the noise of the busy city is ture that well deserves your atten· drop of the French Rivera. It is a sane "high class" ned to Frank Walker. 0 .anara . apmr an . I y or the quiet and superb little hon:ky- tion. It is an original Roogers and lovely story ·to which Hollywood weekend of social . A party will be held at the Front· tonk known to all those engaged Hammerstein musical with Rita has done grreat credit and one you,· activities. 1cr Sup~r Club ·Fetb. 17. . P. • 11.1. · c . in the T~bet studies group as M()reno thrown in, all in color. It once a.gain, should not want to miss. We ought to Fra.nc1s Fenderson, a past pres1· .L' r1tts l,~otor om'Panv "Chineese Sammy's" or the hang- learn if ~ d n't dent of the cha!Pter, visited us last . 'J

A 'eo week. · out foc those of the beloved land rt Is P.leasinu already know, . 967.BROOKSTOWN AVE. PA 3-1877 run by Communists, Birchers or 0 how to dress up Kappa Sigma ~;:;::::;;:;;:;;;;~~;;;E:;;:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;~=~~~~~=~ zealous Baptists. put on our best .A serenade was held ":'cdnesday ;"

Sam, ns he is known to the lpeD- How-ell Mal~es Sense manners (which mght at Woman'sCollegemGreen~-ple of Tibet, is a very odd tJIIpe of don't have ito be b~G lfor M:u-garet Swart who lS ·p H E L p s person who dresses in American stifling) sur- pmned to J1m Nance. . . · clothes to fool all those who think round our~elves Ro?m BDI?ne was elected public he is an alien, which he is. The By ANGELA JOHNSON I chose this exhibit. Claude Howell with tasteful things, alttend to aes- relations officer. . menu is light on the stomach and Arts Columnist is an outstanding artist of this theically stimulating entertainment, A party :-vas held m the house

heavY on the poc~eli?okok bs.erlved I first became acquainted with section whose work is worth know- and ebnljoy it. It shoul~ re?J-ciin me· Saturdai.a~i~ Cbi Alpha S·HOE·· s.H,·· .•. o-p with overgrown tootu1p1c s; 10 ogy Claude Howell as a painter in the ing; it is also good to see a "live" mora e as a nearly Idyllic college j A "B tn. ., rt h ld . __ _ lnb rags grace the windows. llome of Kal· Jurgenson, then a pro- exhibition of paintings on the cam- week end. th h ea lC pa Y was e m

C nf • D But ho\\•? We have Ii~•ted funds ' e ouse Saturday night. 0 usmg ecor £cssor of dramatics at the Univer- pus. · "~ '' Pledge h 1 t d "h 1

The decor is very confusing when sity of North Carolina. Jurgenson, But I like Clau~e Howell's work, limited places available ;to use, and· week" as 1 .. ~Yc comp e e e P

one considers that Sam competes of Scandinavian origin as the name not because he Is a Nor.th caro- conflicting tastes. We have limited c ~Vlies. "A Service For P-articular People" -~.-· for the T1betian trade and the Tibet- might suggest, took .great care to lina artist o~ even. a Southeastern tiJme to devote to preparation, and Th' f n PI _Kappa. Alpha

1 t 1148 WEST 4th ST. PHONE PA 2-llU

ian PQ:Pulation in the Twin City is ""l'nt out a painting of Claude How- North Carolina aa:tlst but because limited imagination. So year after d Ceh o kowmg offlcer~dwere Belee • ~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::~ tly t o-S d hi t li .-v I year we are almost £~reed to have e :. uc. Rowe, presi ent; and exac w = an s pe ma ell's in his home. he has a pleasing style all his own. ~ Plruitt · B y 1 The back :room is really the high the same ol' sort of thing each , 1V1ce-pres1dent; otb e ton, ,..

spot of the whole trip when you In his opinion, Claude Howell was so much like the Goes !befor;, they treasurer; . and Thomas Mllllidy, r-------------------.;... ______ .__._,. visit Sam's. There amidst the nets the only contemporary painter who all sort of blend together when we pledge master. . fGr Tibetian ants and the pin ball made sense. "You can tell what On Other think back over them A combo party was held Saturday machines imported straight frGm he's painting," he told a group of Some, observing our ·past efforts, at Tang~~-Pbi E il Myrtle GTove, (a retreat for devot- students. have watched the frenzied dancers &&ma. ps on ed sandlappers on the SlO!PeS of a The painting was a tree, in the _Campuses stomping around in harmony with .. The Pled.~es have COlD.!Pleted snow-capped hill in his native land) same sweeping geometrical figures a primitive sounding beat, and they He]jp Week.Th t Chi is a real live kangaroo. that can be seen in the ·exhibit shook their heads sadly. "Degene- e •

Kangaroo As Host. .h.U:Og in the library this week, for By LEON SPENCER [r::-tion!, screek the moralists along Plans ue being made for chapter The Kangaroo can not only do exaDliPle, Number U, Blue Moss or Staff Reporter with the sociologists attendance at the MaSGn-Dixon Ju-

the .twist, the bunnyhop, and yell at NUllllber 17, Cyjpress and Azaleas. . . . . But others scoff at ·the sufllgestion b~ee to be held at the University of the inhabitants therein !but can Since then, I have seen many Compla~ts .con~ernmg mnumer- to have a formal more "mature" R1chmond March 16-18. also ta!ke you to the next, next Howells, sometimes in the Cottage a,bl~ ttaf;flc Vlolahons and the re- affair ' The Pledges recently finished back room. Here the secrets of the Lane Art Exhibit in connection sultant tickets perhaps would not As for surroundings, th~ is a "Help Week." Tibetian Order for the Preserva- with Wilmington's Azalea Festival, be _a~ fre'!-uent if. ~tudents were potentially beautiful ballroom on --------tion of Joyous Living are explained in different galleries, such as the familiar Wlth conditions. on other the third floor of Reynolda Hall al· to all of those who dare listen, espe- Winston-Salem Fine Arts Gallery, calJliPuses across the nation. ready. But then the Baptist con· cially those involved in the study af and even in my favorite beach Evangel ~liege of Springfield, vention and the business school~ higher archeology. joint (! don't have to give the Missouri is particularly severe on yeah, all that. <H it can never be

Enough, my friends, enough, our name). violators. For the first time lthis used, why don't we hock those

WF. Young Demos Commence Drive To Add Members B.S.M. degree has been earned in I have seen the Mullet Seiners in year, fines for PaTking violations magnificent chandeliers fGr much

lfull order so that now we can pro- real life, as well as the City Mar- were l'aised ft'om an accepted 75c needed funds instead of raising tui· The Wake Forest YDC is current-ceed to the finer things in our :!lair ket, and finally in the Celebrated to an "exorbitant" $5. tion?> ly involved in a membership cam-city such as movies, and mGvies Dock at Calabash. Howell has An indignant student wrote a Can't something be dGne? paign·. The drive, being conducted and combos, and the Polo and mO: caught this genre very well, very letter to the editor of The Lance, And why don't we try sometime, by all members, is aiming to sur-tion pictures. significantly. the school (paper. "If the fine is just for ikidks, having an interfra· pass the membership of last year.

Weekly Combo Sea Oats, NUllllber 20, parlicular- meant to prevent a repetition of ternity weekend that is both stianu- Approximately 300 students were The Polo under the very qualified ly pleased me because of its fragil- an offense," he stated, "it will be lating ·and enjoyable? associated with the YDC last year,

management of the infamous Mr. z ity as well as the memories of a achieved because the person will Kappa Alpha and each is invited to re-afflliate. is •going whole hog every week now childhood on the beach that it re- have to drop out of school or auc- Tera Frizzelle, who is !Pinned to Many of the College Democrats once a week, to provide a CGmb~ calls. Pamlico Sound, Nll!lnbea:- 15, tion his violating automobile." Brent Mudd, was serenaded Wed- have membership cards available, for the twisters and others, if there with the channel markers has a Most certainly our traffic poll- nesday ni!ght. and contact with any of them will are any. Take a gander out to the similar eiffect. cies have reached no such extre- A ;party was held Saturday night result in current membership. Polo and enjoy the music and other The sea figures in many of How- mities. at Glenwood Lalke. The Ascots pro- Besides the right to participate things provided. ell's paintings, Calabash Trawlers, Maid Service vided music. in local YDC functions, the $1 fee

Miss Sophia Loren stall's in "Two Broken Pier, Nets, the Mullet se- Many of the male students on Alpha Sigma Pbi will entitle the member to receive

K and W CAFETERIA . l

Your Kind Of Eating Place

* *· *

Women" which begins Wednesday ries, Blue Wharf, Sand and Sea, campus, adapted to the practically The following officers were elect- all state correspondence, including

at the Carolina. The picture has etc. The Sand and Sea, Number 5, colll(plete maid service availa!ble, eeld:::~J_:am~e:s~R~a~c~z~,~P~r~e=s~id~e=:n~t:_; ~L:u~th~er~t~h:e_:s~t:a~te~n~e~w~s~p~a~p:er:·~----_!~==~~=~==~~::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::: acclaim froon all across -the globe. has an interesting perspective. The seem to accept such a service as if -Miss Loren was selected as the painting has a depth beyond the "there were no such thing as 'do it ibest actress in the Cannes Film ~regular two dimension. yourself'." The men of Mars Hill Festival, a very high award and The collages, Number 18, View of are faced with a different situation. quite deserved for her fine per- Wilmington; Number 2, and Num- The Hilltop, Mars Hill's news· formance in this picture. ber 19, Homage to the Printed Page paper, revealed the information in

The story is set in Italy during I liked less, also Num!ber 9, Myoko- a feature interviewing one of the World War II and concerns the ex- nos, which seems a departure from dormitory hostesses. The hGusemo­IPloits of a mother and her young the Howell I iknow. My favorite was ther had two "suggestions" to make daughter and their flight and ad- Number 10, The Ladder, which first to the residents. ventures from the ravaged and struck me because of rthe brilliant The housemother claimed that war-torn lands of that section. ~rose and pink coloring. "the fellows do not devote as much

The awards this mGvie has re- A chartreuse-yellGW which is seen time to dusting and washing the ceived are due and we recommend in some fishing scenes was not an floor .as they shoUld," a regular highly this picture featuring not accompanying color in this show- chore for Mars Hill men students. Miss Loren as espeically Miss ing. The brightness of color in The entire revelation that Gther Loren but Miss· Loren as an act- Numlber 3, Open All Night, sug- students must do for themselves ress. It begins a long run at the 'gests neon lights. seems naturally :to convey the pic­Carolina following "Black Sunday" It is good that the Stude!lt Union ture of Wake •Foresters with m01ps

I:WFDD-AM & FM

1 -:~ On The Dial Monday, February 12 10:30-Midweek StPorts

5:00-Evening Concert 10:35-Deaconlight serenade 5:50-Basketball Game 12:00-Devotional 8:00-Reynolda Hall Lecture 12:05--Sign Off

Series . Thursday, February 15 9:00-International Classroom 5.00-E ening Co rt 10:00-Interlud~ 5;50-B:sketball ~~-:ne 10:30-Deaconlight Serem1de Duk w k F t 12·00-Devotional l:l vs. a e ores 12:05--Sig O£f 8:00-Yale Reports

· n 8:30-Toward Peace Tuesday, February 13 9:00-Grcat Decisions

5:00-Evening Concert 9:30-Cartoonist's Art 7:00-QPERA of the Week 10:00-Interlude

10:00-Interlude 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-Devotional 12:00-Devotional 12:05-Sign Off 12:05-Sign Off

Wednesday, February 14 5:00-Evening Concert 1:55-News 7:00-Germany Today 7: 15-Washington Report 7:30-Behavioral Science 8:00-Development of the

Individual 8:55-Busine:~s Review 9:00-Music from Wake Forest 9:30-Best of Broadway

Friday, February 16 5:00-Evening Concert 6:55-News 7:00-Consumer Question, The 7:15-Washington Report 7:30-Universe of Space 8:00-Classical Drama 9:00-Mwk Twain Special

10:00-Interlude 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-Devotional 12:05-Sign Off

REYNOLDA FLORIST AND GREENHOUSE • Flowers for all occasions • Owned and operated by W.F.C. • Specializing in football mums and

corsages

and dust cloths in hand, scrubbing and cleaning the floors and tables; it also conveys another feeling of relief that such a fate is not ours.

Vic Mature Stars The Student Union Movie Com­

mittee has scheduled "The Robe" for this Friday evening at 8 p m. in Room 14, Salem Hall. The film's stars are Richard Burton, Jean Simmons, and Victor Mature.

There's No Secret to producing fine photoengravings. You simply take generous amounts of experi· ence, skill and conscientious attitude and combine them with the best mechanical equipment available today. Piedmont Engraving follows this fonnula on every job.

Let Piedmont seln pur plate prDblems fer publicaUant. llrocbiii'IS. color-prociSI prlnUnJ. ·

"Whatever your major, ma.ke sure to include a course in 'people'!"

W. Em/en Roosevelt, President National State Bank, Elizabeth, N.J.

''If my college adviser had prophesied that studying psy­chology would some day help promote my career in bank­ing, I'd have scoffed. Yet that is exactly what has hap­pened. And when I think about it now the reason seems obvious. The facts and figures of banking, or of any other field, are mechanical devices. They take on real meaning

only y.rhen related to people. ~'Good psychology is also the basis of all teamwork.

And, since most of today's business and scientific prob­lems are too complicated for 'one man' solutitl)ns, team­work is essential. I£ you want to be a valuable team player, and a likely candidate for captain, be the person who understands people. Learn what it takes for people to work together in harmony. Learn how to win trust and confidence. Learn basic human psychology.

"Bear this in mind, too. World tension, community tension, business tension, even family tension are the facts of everyday life. The more you know of human behavior, the better prepared you will be to deal with these problems.

"So, if you have the chance, take a course devoted to 'people.' Your class adviser can probably help you fit a psychology elective mto your schedule. I don't thirik you'll regret it ... I know I didn't"

W. Emlen Reosevelt first became a bank president while still in his early thirties. Today he heads still another bank and is a leader in New Jersey financial circles. Em's been a CAMEL fan ever since his undergraduate days at Princeton.

If flavor is your major satisfaction in smoking •••

Have a real cigarette-Camel THE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE

·?

WAKE FORES

',,-:.

: __ ~

V -1 ·E.;W ·I· N' G the DEACS

BF .JACK RA~ -....-AKE APPEARS_ TO HAVE INS-IDE TRACK

a"Q TOP SEEDING IN ACC TOURNEY....;. · LA.s the l96l-32 :Atlaiitic Coast Conference lb~etball race thunders

IDito··the home stretch; the big -question in everyone's mind concerns the' top seeded team in the .tournament.

· \. Last ye~~~r at this.time.the ibJ.g p!lZzle around the conference was who 'would get the bye in :the first round of the tounJ.ey. · '' Carolina, due to disciplinary action on the part of the NCAA, had :Voluntarily Withdrawn from the tourney, leaving only seven teams. lit was subsequently decided !by Jim Weaver to give the. team finishing the regular season in first place, or in secollld tplace :If Carolina was first, an opening round bye. ·

Wake Forest, on the virtue, of two victories over Duke and South Call"Olina and the strength Of Uipsets of Duke by N: C. State and Mary­land .and the Blue Devils' overtime loss to Carolina, slipped in rvia the bacilt door route to the bye. ·

From that point Wake .Forest was Olff and runniDJg, !taking !Victories over MaJrYland and Duke in Raleigh, st: John's in New York, and St. Bonaventure in Charlotte ibefore IMUllling out of gas in the contest With St. Josetph's in the regional finals. .

But this season the story is a little different. Carolina is back in the good gra~es of the NCAA, and come March I, all eight ·teams in the ACC will take to the hardwood of Williann Neal Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh for the opemng round of the conference cage tourney.

Which.ACC squad will get top seeding in that three-day classic? Ph-om this vantage point, our Deacons appeu to have the best chance of anybody in the conference.· '

The Duike Blue Devils, currently riding atop the pack in the Ace by the skin af their ieetb at this WT'iting, have five more Atlantic Coast Conference games to 'Play before the end of the season. : FQur nf these coJite$ are away; c;m Monday of this week the. Blue

Dukes take on Maryland in College Park and on Thursday /they face ' W~e Forest in Winston-salem. Next week: Virginia a.od carolina will

entelr!tain the Blue Devils. · · Due to this scheduling Duke appears to ibe in a vunerable position. !he Terrapins ot Bud :Millikan·have been rough.on Big Four competi­~on at College flllik: all season, Jm~king off Waate Forest !by 17 points, ~ N. (!. S~te in overt.iine, and· wallapdng Carolina by 19. They ~'\lid, ~ake .a clean aweep in the Big. Foor'witb a victory over Duke.

Playing Virginia at home will be no .picnic for the Blue Devils ~ther, for the, Cavaliers ~ways. see~ . to be tough when pli!YfDg for lthe hometown fans. · Add to Duke's seheduljng problems the reeent iujury in the South Carolina game to scoring ace Art Heyman, and a prognosticatOr could ))l'ediot a not-too-rosy future for the Biue Dukes.

On the other hand, the current second-place holder, Wake For~. ~peii!I"S to have . a somewhat better chance of taking the top spot in the Ace duriiiig the regular season.

Unlike the Blue DeV'ils, who are now onlY .028 percentage points ahead of the Deacs in :the cage race, Wake Forest has suffered llo serious injury.

IVersatile.RookieFrank Christie "' , ' ' -

Boosts D-eac's O:ffensive Threat· A sophomore with good hands

who can shoot well, pass accurate­ly, play defense effectively, re­bound viciously, and hold his own again,st most big men on the hard­wood is surely destined for stai"­dom before graduation. · ·

Such a sophomore is Wake · Forest's Frank Burton Christie. Christie is indeed one of the several bright sophomOl"e prospects play­ing in the Atlantic Coast Confer­ence this yeaT.

In 16 games with the Demon Dea- · ~nS !the brown th!atched forward has hit on 43 of 90 field goals for a .478 shooting percentage from the flODl". He bas also made good 37 foul tosses in 50 attempts for a .740 per­centage and a total of 123 !POints. Ohristie owns a per game average of 7.7 for Wiake's fourth leadmg scorer.

Frank's shooting has come as a surprise to most Deacon fans this year. Last winter the six-foot; four­inch Marietta, Ohio, product was the third leading scO'l"er on the frosh quintet.

Says Wake Forest assistant coach Charlie Bryant, ·however, "he's just begun to play llk:e he's capable of'playing. He's not surprised us a bit." Bryant was refering to Chris­tie's fine play of late, particularlY a 22 point effort against West Vir­ginia on their home court.

Christie attributes his improved shooting this year to the ·many hours he practiced last summer.

Wake's FRANK CHRISTIE (40) connects over Duke's Jeff Mullins (44) in Wake Forest's game with I>uke in Greensboro, January 29. "I worked on my pivot a lot last

summer and I realized I had to de­velope a, (outside) shot," Christie monster forivards and centers with was after him," says Marietta confesses, "but I didn't think I'd be whom he must trade shoves, el· teammate and Deaclet footballer on the star.ting team this yeai." bows, and blocks. · · Phil :.liner.

Many Deacon followers think that At Marietta High School the mus- How did he come to choose Wake Christie could score more H he got cular Deaeon earned ten letters in Forest? "Coach McKinney had a chance to play more. Carlton football, basketball, and track. He more influence on me than any­Byrd, sportswriter for the Twm- was only the· third boy in Ohio thmg else," says Christie. . City Sentfuei; in pick!nii his an.:ACC history to receive All-state honors Wake Forest fans can expect a team says,, "there' is one Wake in both football and basketball. He Jot otit of this fiery sophomore in Fore~t playe~ who eould be high received over 60 scholarships offers the future. As columnist Byrd puts on the list if he had played mOI"'e from colleges. "It seemed as it, "He'll be the Deacon to watch this season - sOphomore Frank though every coach in the country during the 1962-63 season."

Chrislie." ;==============:::::::::::::::::::::::::::; But much of the shuffiing in and out McKinney does with Christie is Frank's own fault. His pugWstic nature gets him into early foul trouble. ~'He could be too aggre­sive," observes Byrd, "because he seems to get in foul trouble much

Northside . Shoe Repair "The Finest In Shoe Repairing"

CHAPPELL GOES ON SCORING BINGE- too early when he starts a game." All-American Len Cha:r:well, eX!Periencing another one of his patented Shooting is but one of the phases WE FEATURE A COMPLETE LINE OF

SHOE POLISH-SHOE LACES-SHINE KITS 1 te of the game at which Christie is so a season scoring c1nd rebounding explosions, is proving more con- proficient. Passing is another.

cretely with each game. that he is definitely an ·All-American. ~'His passing has improved a . And the Deacs,-followmg the lead of Chappell, who has averaged lot," says Bryant. He also has «the 35 points and a little over 17 rebounds a game for the last three con- best peripheral vision of anyone.on

I' :. tests, appear to be on the beam again. . · the dub." This cinemascope-llk:e

Open Mon., and Fri. 'Til 9 P. M. Phone PA 2-1744 Northside Shoppinc Center

OLD GOLD AND BLACK MoDdll~, Feb. 12, 196! PAGE SEVEN

RW ASt1 IIEITIIWIT, IDe. adal!tl8 ~ers Tlu~t A.re The Talk Of The Town

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IN THE COLLEGE IRAND.ROUND·UP

PRIZES: 1st Priz--Webcor..Ste~eofonie Concole Phonegrapb ' 2nd Prlz-Phileo <FM) Table Radio

WHO WINS: lst Prize will lte awarded to IIDY grouP., fraterD­ity, ·sorority or in.<Uvidual aceumulaful&" Ule hidtt!st nmaber of points.

RULES: 1. Con~t opell to all students. !. Eae~ empty paeka&-e submitted· oa :Marlboro,

Pa~llament or Alpine will have a "t'alue of 5 po~ts. Each packa&-e submitted. oB'PhWp MorriS Re&'Ular or Commander will hay~ a yalne of 10 points. . . •"'

3. Clos~ date, time and location where emPb' packa~es. must be tun;_ed in Will be indicated Ia campus newspaper.

4. Entries will not be accepted after closing time. Empty packa&-es must be submitted in bundles o~ 50. Separate your 5 and 10 point packages.

Get on the BRANDWAGON ••• it's lots of fnl ,,

Marlboro

1 The schedule •also favors a late-season up.surge on the 'Part of the ·1 visi~m. is. one of th~ reasons th~t Deacs. The men of Bones--McKinney have six ~remaining ACC en- Chnsti~ xs such a fme passer. His counters (the Carolina game on ·Feb. 10 will ·be history lby the !time ha.~ds IS the oth~r reaf!on. this column appears in print) with f ur f th tho Bones has said that he has· one

• • • 0 o em a me. of the best pair of hands of any Three times thiis week. th~ _Deac~ meet conference foes in Memorial ballplayer he has ever seen,·~ says

·• Coliseum here, facing Vll"gmxa tomght, Duke Thursday, and Maryland manager Jack Budd.

THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: NORM SHERER

Saturday. Christie plays perhaps his best :nxe following Wednesday Wake journeys to Rlaleigh to do battle game under the boards. "The key

With Everett Case's cha11ges. 'On Sattllrday the regular season ends to his success," says Budd, "is how . with a contest against the South Carolina Gamecocks here rugged he is. He is so rugged that ·• Bones McKinney could very well wake 1.liP on the morning~ March! he c~n take any punishment dealt

and discover that his words at the close· of th 1 st Duke ,t out m the ACe.. He _could take b e a encoun er almost ·any man m the conference ~ve prove~ str.~gely !Prophetic .. At that time Bones predicted that and do .a job on him in the pivot." ~ team .~~gilt nse to the occasxon du:ring the home stretch like 11- "He's - a fierce competitor,"

cyclone. · . agrees Bry.ant. Christie, at 195 ButN. C. State and Carolina aJre not to be counted out of the picture. pourids, can handle m~ of the

The Wolfpack, alv.-ays tough on their hGme court, entertains Carolina ·t- and Wake Forest m- Raleigh during the waning days of the season.

Then Pun.ger, Rolhoff, and Co. travel ·to Charlotte for ll>ack-do-back games with South Carolina and Clemson. Conc~iva~ly either the N. C. State or Carolina could finish up the

campaign m thaJt top slot, but :lirom this corner neither one of them appears to have the potential that Wake and Duke possess.

To SllDl UiP, any one of four teams could be the top seeded team in ':• the ACC tournament, come tourney time. I east my :vote in favOil" of

the Deacs. lif Wake can capitalize on its home court advantage during the home stretch, I feel that they will be in.

During these home 1games this :week and next, all of us Deacon ·? followers can take a ibig hand in helping to create Bones' hqped for

"cyclone." Let's make the Coliseum sound as if a cyclone has hit it. The Deacs proved a couple of Fridays back that they were not quit.

ter~ when _they fought back· from an. almost insurmountable 17-point deficit agamst South Carolina in ColUDI!bia, S. C., to •go on to victory.

\• As fans, let's don't be quitters either. ~any of us have been critical of ·the Deacons in the past few weeks.

Let s show them this week that this criticism has been only cQD.­structive, not destructive. Let's give our cage team that nine-point home court advantage.

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Cage Alumni To Battle Frosh Tonite

By ERNIE ACCORSI Wake Forest basketball fans will

have memories of past glory _days recalled Monday evening when a star studded Deacon Alumni cage squad meets the freshman team at 6:00 P. M. in the Coliseum.

The Alumni corps includes All­American Dickie Hemric and Jackie Murdock, plus the names of those men which molded Wake Forest basketball history in the past decade.

Some of the other Deacon cage greats who are scheduled to be on hanct Monday night are: AI Deport­er, Billy Lyles, Lefty Davis, Jack Williams, Olin Broadway, Dickie Odom, Ken Cox, Twig Wiggins, Jackie Jensen, Jerry Mitchell, Jerry Steele, Bill Tucker, Jim Gil­ley, and Tom Patton. The squad will be coached by Bones McKinney and the freshmen by Gene _Comp­ton.

The return of Dickie Hemric high­lights the colorful contest. Hemric is considered by many national basketball writers as one of Ameri­ca's all time greatest players. The former All-American held the in-

(See Hamric, page 8)

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informed on advances in telephone service and equipment Norm Sherer of the Ohio Bell Telephone Company, and

other engineers like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country, help bring the finest communica­tions service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America.

@ BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES

PAGE EIGHT Monday, Feb. ·12, 1962 0~- GOLD AND BLACK

Demon Deacons Top Tar Heels, 87 To 80

Wake Forest's Demon Deacons, In a .iJFelimlinary game to the led by the 36-poin!t, 14-rebound ef. varsity contest, the Carolina frosh fort of gigar:tic All-Americ-an Len turned back a scrappy Deaclet five, Chappell, built up a 10-;point lead 83-70. in the ffirst half ·and then staved off The gap finally widened to a all O:Jirolina rallies to whip the seven1P(>init spread. Tar Heels in band box Woollen Gymnasiwn, 87-80.

Ch81Ppell, the man-mountain from Pennsyhnania, was just rtoo much !for the Tar Heels as he connected <m 16 of 24 field goal attempts and four of five chadty tosses for a

Deaclets Bow J

To Va. Tech total of 36 markers. Seventeen of A. T. Walthall, a 6 fuot guard Chappell's points came in the first f!:om Gloucester, Va., went on a 12-period. The 6-8 gia!lit also led !both point scoring binge in the closing teams in :rebounds. minutes of the Virginia Tech fresh-

Hot First Half men's cage battle with the Baby But Chappell was not the only Deacs of Wake Forest College to

Deacon big .gun. Shooting-wise, the spark his team from the throes of entire Wake quint eXIperienced one defeat to victory, 81-75. of its best afternoons of the sP.ason. The game, a preliminary to the During an eruemely hot fiil"st half, varsity contest between the two the Deacons seldom missed, con- schools last Thursday, was played necting on 20 of 34 shots from the n VPI's not-yet-completed coliseum floor for a 58.8 percentage. in Blacksburg, Virginia.

Intermission ~dn't cool off. the Until the time of Walthall's scor­Deacons much either as they hit 17 ing explosion it appeared as if the of 32 for 53.1 per _cent in the final Deaclets were on their way to their half. For the . ent!l'e game, Wake sixth victory of the season as they shot a scorching 56;1 percentage. fought back from a 24-10 deficit I

Coach. Bones McKinney _not only midway of the first half to capture got scoDmg punch from _his gentle the lead after several minutes of behemoths; the two nuce of the the second stanza squad, wee Dave Wiedeman and ·

Wake Forest's DAVE WIEDEMAN Virgin,ia Tech's CALVIN JACOBS. KELLER ( 24) looks on. -·

(23) scores over Gobbler BUCKY

Billy Packer., contributed 14 points The first Period upsurge o'n the apiece to the Wake cause, hitting part of the Deaclets was due main- v p I T . . B k on six of eight and six of 11 from 'ly to the SCO'l'irig 'of center Richard I u . . s' . c the floor, respectively.· Hel'!ing. Dur~g on_e stretch in the • · ·. e e rn - a

UNC Hot Too period, the b1g Pivot man from J

Carolina also had a hot shooting Winston-Salem - pumped in 11 w ~- F 8 7 81 afternoon, sinking only five less straight mark~rs. I ·a z-e Orest . baskets than Waike Forest for a Walthall was high man in the I ::.... . ' - .

Chappell, Packer On Deacon Career'' lOOOPoinfCage ClUb"

· By PAT WlLLIAMS ~~en to participa~.bacldn 1952 andlif he scored at a mte more l!apid The other day while browSJing 53. than rabbits multiply he will' over-

through the h a 11 ow e_d JIOOks of Hemric's prodigious scoring ef-, take Ranzmo •and then move into ''Skeeter" :Fr.ancis' off i c e, we forts !Place him seco~ on •the list Of the hallowed and. rarified a!r. of thought it wo¢d be interesting to all-time major college poiDt~gOtters. the "2000 · Point Club." dive in to the record books and see Hiis ~87 piOiinJts led all challelllgers LeDDle will have- to score at a how many Deacon ba_sketball play- for five year.s, but ·then the fiarbulous clip of 31 a game to accomplish er~ ba."e had a career total of 1000 Oscar Robertson of .. Cincinnati tbis and the Deacons must keep potints or IDK>re. . swooped .down to rack :uiP 2973 winning through the ACC tourney.

All-American Die<kie Hemric, who markers m three ye~s a~ take Only time will tell. owns more school records than over the top career total. radio station WFDD, easily leads However Hemltic's 905 successful the !PArade with 2587 points. free throws is a na'tdonal record ZJ:em ... ;C

Current glamour !boy, Len Chap- that Win stnnd for many years to D t . ' ., pe~. -who stood fifth on the list come. · · · (Continued f~m p. ·7) pnor to this season has overtaken Murdock also holds an NCAAj dividual record for most total Jack Murdock, Jacik: Williams, and record. He hit on 465 of 542 foul. points scored in a career until1960 Lowell "Lelflty" Davis and now shots ·for a three-year percentage I when Cinoinnati's Oscar Ro~ st~nds behind Hemric with 1722 of .858. · broke Hemric's mark of 2,587 pomts through the Virginia Tech Chappell is in excellent position points. He now stands a strong game _of Fe~ .. 8. to add ~ore scoring prestige Ito his second with no one in reasonable

Davis, Williams, and Murdock meteonc ~areer. A Herculean ef- sight to remove him from his po­(current Wake Forest freshllllJan f~rt 1l>y the Big-Un in the rell1Jaining sition. cage coach) follow ChaPiPell with eJ.ght .games of the season (I'm In four ears of varsit co · · •guard Billy Packer sixth on the ~ounting on ~t least an appearance tion Hemric ·ver ged 21 ~5 ;:pitid chart. m the ACC fmals, men) could push 27 po· t a a . • • • an

Packer entered this season with the .gigantic Pennsylvanian <to the years _mT~e ~o:!~~em respective 87~ !tallies but has scared 214 points num~r four position on the list of scored 49 points ag;{· Nt ~- ~e~t t~s ~ear to date .to overtake Ernie Atl~tic Coast Conference c_areer in 1955 for an all-t'm ~ k ~gmt~ W.1ggms and Dave Budd, who now scorm.g leader.s. record .

1 e a e ores

stand m the . seventh and eighth The tqp scoring list ;reads as fol- Deaco~ a:!:O~e samedye~ setha slots respectively. lows: . . .. recor. w en e · Wig;g·ins teamed up with Murdock pulled _dow:'- an mcred1ble 36 re-

in the backcolll'lt on Wake's fine PTS bounds agamst Clemson. teams.of 1955-57 while Budd played Hemric, W F (1952-55) .......... 2587 Wake Forest compiled a four from 1958-60. and is currently see- Hamric, W F: (1952-55) .......... 2587 year record of 68 wins and 46 ing spot' duty with the New York Wilkinson, Virginia (1953-55) .2233. IIos~es during Hemric's career. Knicker:bockers of the NBA. Rosenbluth, UNC (1955-57) ... ~ 2045 . While he was writing his name in

It must be noted by an astfirisk Ranzino, N. c. State. (1948-51> 1967 the Deacon. record books Hemric (there's .thaJt word again, Mr. Groat, Duke (1950-52) .............. 1886 was facing head on with such pivot Frick:) that both Hemric and'Darvls Shavlick, N.c. State (1954-56) 1761 men as La Salle's Tom Gola, Rio were able . -to _!!>lay foUl!." years Of Chappell, W F (1960-62) .......... 1722 Gr~de's Bevo Francis, Pennsyl- · varsity competition since the old Chap~ll should catch Shavlik v.arua'~ ~ob MllkVY, George Wa~­Southern Conference allo·wed fresh- and Groat iby toumament time and ington s Joe Holup,. St. Josephs

_ Matt Gookus, and Seton Hall's 51.6 percentage as practically the point parade for the winners with : · · · entire team sank jumpers from all 9 points, followed closely by center The Virginia .T~ch Gobblers utiliz·j Gobbiers scored seven points be-l over the forecourt. Eddie Bodkin with 18 and guard ed the 31 and 24 point efforts of fore WaLke could scra<tch and then

Lal'll'Y Brown and Jim Hiudock led Bill Heavrin with 17. McDade tal- their one-two .scoring punch of built up a 12-3 advantage before the

Deacon "1000 Point Club'~ Walter ·Dukes. Dickie's record G FG FT- TP . _ AVG bears out th«: fact that he pEir.form- ~

*Dick Hemric (1952-55) -.............. 104 841 . ,..905 2587_ 24•9 ed well agamst such foes In per-

the scoring parade for the losers Ued 11. Bucky Keller and Howard Pardue Deacs could hardly blink. with twin 21-point performtllllces, · For Wake Forest Herring was and a hot shooting touch in the · while ?onnie Walsh added 13 more tlie big gun with 23 points, high fo_r second to whip the Wake Forest Wake Forest appeared to get go-

d J D h 11 both t H t 17 f th ing then, however, and began to an 1m 0'!10 ,ue, : . eams. e go 0 em i'll Demon Deacons in an intersectional whittle away at the lead. With 8:13

Burt; Carolina s sconng effort was the ·first period. cage clash last Thursday night in just not enough to thwart the not-to- Guard Anderson, experiencing I Blacksburg Va 87-81 - . on the clock Chappell canned a Jbe-denied Deacons. BLgLennie gave possibly his best night of the year, ' ·• · . . jumper from the left side after a fair warning early in the contest tallied 18 markers on nine field I Pa~ue, a hot-sho_t scormg ar?st feed by BillY Packer to give the that -the Tar Heels were going to goals, mosUy driving jump shots. who I~ ~rom Jonesville, N. C., Dick Deacs the lead for the first time have a hard time stopping him as The 6-0, 177 pounder from Water- Hemnc s homet?wn, ga':e the Gob- at 26-25. he scored on a lay-up and a jump-~ ford, N. Y., was all over the court ?lers a substantial le~d. ~ the clos- The advantage then changed er from the left of the circle before for most of the night, continually mg moments of the rrutial stanza. hands once before the Deacs ex-the encounter was a minute old. harrassing the enemy and sinking Then Keller took over where Par-~ tended their lead to 34-26 on two

Deacs Go Ahead crucial baskets_ Lozier contributed due left off and practically single· buckets by Chappell and a layup The Tar Heels managed to tie 15 points and 15 rebounds to the handedly fought off all Deac ef- by Tom McCoy. •

the score at 24-all with 9:07 left Deaclet cause and Smith added 10. forts to wrest the lead from Tech But at this time Pardue and Co. in the initial period. But after the The Deaclets actually outscored during _the final perio~. He canned went illto action. Cal Jacobs and Tar Heels had taken a slim two- the VPI frosh from the floor 33 21 of hrs 31 markers m the second Barry Benfield sank two buckets point lead, Wake Forest came back field goals to 31 for VPI. Virginia period. to cut the Deac lead to two, and to knot 111:e _score again at 28-28. Tech's advantage came from- the To maintain their lead, the Gob- Pardue canned a turn-around jump­~ank Chri~tle then gave the Deacs foul line where Tech hit on 19 of 27 biers had to come up with a fine er to tie the game with 2:08 re­the lead Wlth a charity toss, and for the game to Wake Forest's

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shooting night, and they did, es· maining in the first period. Wake was never :behind again. nine of 16. peciall;v in the second half when Pardue began to scorch the cords

they hit 15 of 27 from the floor for 1 as he scored six of his team's last

PiKA's Win Frat Water Polo Crown

a 55.5 percentage. eight points of the period to give I Wake Forest, on the other hand, VPI a seven point halftime adva'n­

was not experiencing one of its tage, 42-35. The Gobblers never better shooting nights, hitting 01i relinquished the lead again. 35 of 85 for 41.2 percentage, as the Twice during the second half Deacs missed quite a few apparent- Wake Forest drew within striking ly easy shots. distance of Virginia Tech, but each

Bland Pruitt's goal in the second too low. Big Len Chappell and wee Dave time the other half of Tech's !high overtime period climaxed a rough The PiKA's started off with a Wiedeman provided the scoring scoring duo, Keller, put the quietus defensive battle as PiKA defeated bang in the second overtime period, punch for Wake Forest, but it was on the rally. · Kappa Alpha, 1-0, for the intramur- which was a "sudden death" over- not enough to overcome the jump al watE!'r polo championship. time. They shot five times at KA shot artists from Blacksburg. Chap-It was a defensive duel an the goalie Smith before the KA's could I pell led both teams in scoring with UNIQUE IDEA

way Both teams had trouble get- do anything. 32 points, and he also headed the When Maryland played Clemson ting good shots at the goal, but the This pressure on the KA defense rebounding department with 16. in football this past season, the PiKA's were able to keep the pres- finally paid off as Pruitt fired a Wiedeman, playing his best game student body at College Park came sure on more and get more scoring hard shot from the left which of the season in a losing cause, was up with a unique idea. Since the chances. barely hit the left corner of the secohd high for the Deacs, pumping · game was being played at Clem-

Fred Smith turned i a fin . b goal after being deflected by Smith in 19 markers, most of his points / son the students decided to bring as the KA goalie, and P~ul Cal~~~ll for the ~nning tally. com:ing on jumpers. Wiedie also the gan;e ~ College Park via and Ed Leinss shared the g ali The PiKA basketball team, which was all over the court on defense closed crrcmt TV. position to produce the PiKA ~hu~ has yet t_o be defeated,_ is still in and hauled down 9 rebounds. . The game was viewed in the out. The defensemen on both teams the lead m .. the Fratern1ty Basket- The Gobblers demonstrated right basketball fieldhouse. The cost of were outstanding ball League With a sparkling 7-0 at the outset of the game that their the operation amounted to $7500;

Th ti 11

d : th gul • record. Sig Ep is the closest chal· shooting game was definitely on. I therefore the Maryland Student e ac 0 urmg e r_e ation lenge- with a 5-l mark. Connecting on their first five shots Government charged $1 admission

g~me w~~h fas:e and furlous, but The PiKA B. team is holding from the floor without a miss the for students and $2 for the public. w en ne1 er . a_m ~as able to down first place in the Red League 'f;lreak the ~conng ICe, lt WaS forced with a 6-0 record. :mto overtune. -In the Blue League PEK Gold ~ the f~st overtime, a three and the Sixty-niners ~re tied for

mmute penod, both teams got off the top SP.9~ with 6-0 slates. three or four good shots, but none Standing ·at the top of the White were successful. Fred Bronough of League is PEK Black with a 7-0 ~ got one past goalie Leinss of mark. The Eagles are in second PiKA, but it was just a little bit place at 5-l.

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***Len Chappell (1960-62) ................ 73 776 506 1722 sonal duels. *Lefty Davis (1953-56) .................... 99 582 430 1594 :·~ Wake's other All-American who

****Jack Williams (1953; 1956-51) .. 82 531 491 1453 17:7 ;m k be ~n hand ;or .,:te ~a~e ::

***~~ ~:~::k(~~:_ss;;> .. :::::::::::::: ~ ~ :! -~:: ~::: w~~ fs0~ow :: co:~h ~f th: .:a~; Ernie Wiggbis (1955-57) .... :......... 83 391 255 1037 l2.5 .For~st freshmen. Murdock . was Dave Budd (1958-60) .................... 75 s19 376 1014 . . . 5 chosen on the All-ACC team in both

*Played four years of varsity competitiDn 13

" 1956 and 1957. . **NCAA Record Murdock was rtbe leader of the ***Total is only through VPI game of Feb. 8 1957 Deacons whic~ is considered ****Spent 1954 & '5S . th Ar d S . one of Wake Forests greatest ath-seasons m e me ervaces lletic clubs.

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