political activity gets hotter activity gets hotter stuffing the box . • • and locking away...
TRANSCRIPT
Political Activity Gets Hotter
STUFFING THE BOX . • • and locking away campaign secrets are the big five oi the BPOC Party. Party Chairman Jerry Baker
-PHOTO BY WINSTON holds a key to something, while others hope it unlocks success. L to r, Mike Ray, Butch Pate, Chip Cooper, and Kay Sutton.
!By RALPH SIMPSON ty's formation. 1 tions in the girls dorms for ASSISTANT EDITOR He said studenJt interest in' F.riday, Sa,turday, and Sunday
One political panty died, one rumning for office !With party af- afternoons. was born, and one ;planned its filiation and desdre "to revive TNP Reciprocates first birthday celebmtion last and insure the healthy siltuation week as election time 1966 drew of two-party system" spurred TNP has reciprocated though, near. the movement. •by pllanning serenades for rthe
Next Monday's campus elec- While all this was going on, girLs dorms, election day bands, tions will pit two ..almost com- the Better Politics On Campus oa,nd TNP Girls. plete slaltes against each other !BPOCl Party decided to create Kitchrln House, under he spandespite the recent diS\olution of a lively campaign featuring roal- sorship of Dr. Don Schoonmaker, the Student Party. lies, receptions, and radio spot housemaster, plans a public de-
The Studen.t Party's unani.- broadcasts. bate Wednesday at 5:30 p. m. mous vote on March 22 to dis- The highlight of their activi- in the Kitchin Quad, where presiSOlve the party ovganizJation ties will be Wednesday night I iderutial and vice-presidenVal could have been predicted after from 8 - 10:30 when the Fabu- candidates will speak and be last spring's sweeping BPOC vic- lous Five Combo will play for questioned by housemen. tories. a "combo l'!ally" on the Rey- Last Friday, BPOC released
Three days after the party -nolda Terrace. its platform, which Baker called died, students determined to Jerry Baker, sophomore of ".idealistic and ambitious", ood keep a two-party ·system at Kwmapolis and BPOC chair- TNP will issue its platform .toW,ake Forest met to organize man, said lt:he purpose of the day, vice-chairman Ralph Simpfor rthe approaching elections. rally is to "provide a good time son, sophomore of Charlotte,
According to Henry Bostic, during election week. said Sunday. sophomore of Elizabethtown, "There will be a few speeches, Based on the party slogan who ,was elected chairman of but not more than two or "Get your $1,000 worth," the The New Par,ty <TNPl, there rth:ree," lle said. BPOC plia!fiorm tells students are ;two reasons behind the Par-· BPOC has also planned recep. that !tuition has soared during
au * * * Golden Anniversary Year 1965-66 * * VOLUME LI Wake Forest College, Winston-salem, North Carolina, Monday, April 11, 196&
--~------------------------------------------------ NUMBER 24
Greek Week To Have \L~gislature New Twist This Year Gzves OK
To 2 Bills By HENRY BOSTIC sk1g will be held in Wait Chapel.
StadiuiD Contributions Pass Half Million Plateau Friday
ASSISTANT EDITOR Each fraternity Will sing two Th al G songs as hol h f t · By SUSANNE BENNETT By BONNIE WRIGHT working." / tee of 40 from all over the state,
e annu fraternity reek a w e, eac ra ernl- STAFF WRITER STAFF WRITER · Garrity said rthere are 10,720 appoin:ted by the board of trus-Week will have a new twist ty will also have a small group 1
th II · A stitu"'' a1 ch to prospects :throughout the state, tees of the college and headed il:hi.s year when the activities get at w. smg one song. The fra- con •w.On ange The football stadium fund 1 dd tud t not counting young a umni of re- ·by B&t Bennett and Joe Branch, under way Tuesdia:y afternoon, ternities will be judged on the a a new s en government I drive reached $594 948 in con-
ff. e.d w dn sd ' cent years. Of this number, meets to review the ,progress of according tGl one Inter-Fa-aterni· basis of performance, organiza- 0. lCe .was pass e . a ay tributions and pledges last Fri- about 85 .percent of the pros- 1he drive and decide on its re-
ty Council Representative. lion and originality in each di- mght m the last meeting of day mornilng, according to M. pects still have not been re- commendations to the board. The new twist WI'll be two-fuld v:sion. tihis year',s bgilslature. The new Henry Garrity director of the ted b th . th
-an open bouse at eacih :fu:oater- Societies will sirug only one position is Jbhat of a co:r:respond- College's Alu~ni and Develop. por on ' y e campalgners. On e basis of this repor.t, the
the past five years, "making .the students pay for whrut the Baptist State Convention has deprived the College of: the opportuni,ty to provide adequate faculty salaries."
The BPOC's lead plank ralls fur "remodeling student gover~ me11t into a student gO<Vernment association, in which all major campus organizations w:uld be fused in order to 1attack" CETtain -college problems.
Sneial Vacutm1
Among t.:1ese prc•Jlems BPOC plans to a: tack are "administration a:1d cc.··!Vention conflicts, i.he o·.renvheln1ing s:J-c.al vaccuurn, and 8c.:tiv:.ty conilicls."
The pl,::!tfcrm also calls for a "comple:e re•evaluaticn of L'le College's expansion program, placing interest on the following neglected unde::-gra:tua~e M~eu;,. a college student center, in-creased scholarshlp ~rants to
'llllldergradtt,ates, and an outside professional study of the coLlege residence facilities."
Ana1her plan:Jt in the platform pledges "support to the Men's Residence Co<uncil in the establishment of a house organization."
Steve Burns, junior of Charlu~te, is TNP presidential candidate, whi·le Bu:tch Pate, juniozl oJ D~mn w!ll seek the top offi::e for BPOC.
Seeking the v:ce...presidential s:xt are Suzy Bowles, jundor of Thomasville, TNP, and Chip Coc{)er, so;::homore of I:oanoke P.ap1ds. BPOC
Roy Blanlk, sophomore of Dis~ •trict Heights, Md., TNP, and .Yllll:e Ray, BPOC, junior of Ral~ c,gh, :r~e oo•npeting for the pos·tion of trea.su.>er of the student L·ody.
Kay St:.tton, junio1· of Wilson, a:;d the BPOC cand:date for _ ~ cretary, is U:lOP:POSed.
--PHOTO BY WINSTON PRESIDE'l'."''IAL HOPEFULS . . . nominated for class offices by the New Party map out the work to be done before April 19. Vying for Sophomore Class President is Mike Ganter, with Dean Walters seeking President of the .Junior Class.
Gunn Places First To Win WGA Post
ing ·~ecre"'ary separate from t Offi Man" ~f the prospects may trustees. will. • determine h_ ow ni:ty Tuesday from 4:30-6 p. m. song as a group and a small "' " • men ce ., ~. ""'e elec"'-d student body ·"ecre- · have .been conta~ted and the1'r soon bu_ilding the new stadium Andy Gunn, J··un •. ;-or of Atlanta, for faculty, non-fraternity men group will sing one. They will •u ""' " "This money represents 1,055 ~ 'u
and coeds and increased parti- be judged on the same points. ·.ary, to be appointed by 1lhe gifts," Garrity said, and is ap. rePQII'ts just not turned in, Gar- can begm. Ga., was elected president of Alton, Ill., who defeated Marcia Black, junior of Arl.in®t<>n. V~.
' M' H 1 f Tr · be president from :members of ""-e r1'ty s~•d """!he campa1'gners Started Feb. 22 the .. W. oman's Government ru-cipa.tion by the societies. J Iss e en o oy will uu proaching aJbout one-fourth of "" · ... , Don Holland, sophomOil".e of 1 cro:vned :r'hu.rsd3:y night. Each legislature: the total ·goal of $2.5 million. It just haven't completed their sociation last Friday. She de-
Chosen class representatives were Susan .Rabenhorst, junior of Lomsville, KY.. over Rose Hamrick, junior of Shelby; Sarah Umsted, sophomore of Newportt News, Va., over Karen Swartz, sophomore of.B.e.tbesda, Md., and Janet Bowiker, "fresrr.o· man of Bethesda, M.d., over Liz Waitt, freshman of Atlallllia, Ga.
Gastonia and social chairman orf soc1ety will nommate one con- The leg1slature also passed is encouraging that, up to this calls." Moreover, he said, some Officially, the stadium fund feated Jen':ly Henderson, junior ~ the JE1C, said .the open house! J,~s.tant and each fraternity will the recall bill to ~tablish. a time, we've had only 116 re- of the campai~ers are con- drive started FebiTUary 22, al- of Jacksonville, Fla.
1\ya& an effoo:t on the ·part of the : have ozu: vote. I sy~em of recal:l or_ ~ffective f~als, he said. tacting people who in turn have though there have been kickoffs Coeds !\>Jill choose a secretary IFC .to strem;g:then relationships 1 ?,n · Fr1day · the' field. ev':nts ! off:cers, a consti.tntkinal change The drlve is "scheduled 'to-wind to contaat. industries and cor- in counties all over North Caro- in a runoff e!ecti ·m Tuesday be-
.. between the fraternities and the Will be held on the b1g f1eJ?. i Wiluch •reva~ps student go~~rn- up April 30, although there will P6rations which· in turn musfl 1iria since thart: time. tween Wendy Fa!'mer, sopho-rest of the college communtty.! across the stree~ from DaviS! T?-ent comzz:rttees, ~d a VlStta- still be some soliciting done in contact ,their boards of trustees Two areas, Gastonia and Lex- more of Virgin'!l Beach, Va.,
"The IFC," he continued, "has House. Eve.nts will inclu~e the I tion resolutiOn urgung v~its ,to the months to ,come. lit isn't like- before a report ~an be ~ent iback ington, have far exceeded their and Sherry North. sophomore of grown in the past two years . Char.ot !race, the ob~tacle .course otfuer sclhools ~ see llllrerr gov- ly that the goal of $2.5 million to the community chrurman to I goals, Garrity reported, and [ Louisville, Ky. K1ocked out of from a mere :Ei:gure-head OI'gani-~ an~ .~e :tu~-of-war:, ill which the ernn:ent operations. will be reached by ifhat time," ~e p-assed on to the Alumni Of- Greensboro is now approaching r t~~ race was Susa 1 ;aivenbark, zation .to one with rmuch power . societtes will ~articipate.. Chip ~ reopened the Garrity said, although he ad- f1ce. its goal. Repord:s are not com- 1 sophomore of Greens Jcro. and it realizes the growing need I . The fraterruty th:~t wms the Commumst spaaker ilssu.e. He mitbed that it was possible. "All this takes :time," Gar-' plete covering Forsyth County's Bar:::ara Braz 1. fre>hman of
WGA vice president will be elected at a later dalte, along with the house presidents, and a third election will ibe scheduled •to choose ha11 counselors. Each counselor bas in the pa51t, been nominated oby the girLs on her hall, with the final selection made in the Dean's Office. Under :the IJei\V -system, only tihe coun~elors lfor freshman girls in Johnson Dormitory will be a.p-o pcinted by the Dean of Women.
for good relations between fra- I smg and the fraternity that has reported that his oommittee "We're hoping to have at least rity said, "and we're .trying now 2,500 prospects. Potomac Md., defeated Pam ternities and .the other segments lli:e -best. over-all. performance had contacted thTee members $1.5 million by the rtime the to get the campaigners :to turn Hawkins, of Charlotte, for the of camp\15 life." w1ll rece~.ve trophies. of tihe Russian Embassy, but College board of trustees meets in partial repo11ts day by day so treasurer's posd:.
tolley lhad declined the inviJta- on April 22." we ca-n tally the results faster." wake's Men Next year's ch:lirman of the Best Ali-Arnund Ch [ 1 ~ This year the societies will be ! a te nge
judged, just as fraternities are, ! tion to Wake Forest. "We'r·e not pushing the panic "We are now in the buggin-g social functions committee will
The purpose of secooing a button yet >but we're a little stage," the Alumni Director N w d be Betsy Schulenberg, junior of
for the b':'st all-round perfor-; Head Seeks mance durmg Greek Week. The winner will receive a trophy for ' sl P-H G its •best performance. Areas in (X;. rant which fue societies will com·
1
pete are the Greek Week sing, i A formal request for a grant
Hthe1 tugf-<!_war, ant dt the M.ss : 1ta be used to help finance Chal-e en o .uoy con es . : 1 , · b High point of all the activi- ; enge 67 Will go efore. the
ties will be .the dance Saturday , ~oard o~ the Sperry-Hutchmson · ht · th Sil c k p k Foundat.on on Wednesday.
rug m . e as ree ar • According to Mike Andrew, way Nati?'nal Guard Armory. junior of McLe•ansville and . Ente~tamment f9r the even- chairman of Challenge '67, the mg will be prov1ded by two . bl'g proble n · tt' f' d T · m ow IS ge' rng I-
grt. 0t~ps, the Tams an the emp-~ nancial support and if the grant a IOns. · ded th ' ill 0 Wedn d ft th 1 1s awar e symposmm w
n es ay a er e open be on its way. h9uses.on Tuesday, ~ach.frater-1 The first Chanenge was held
, mty Will play a society m soft- in March, 1965 al:Id explored :the b~ll and after the game the two "Emerging World of the Ameri-will have a cOOikout. can Negro." After the tremen-
Thursday Events dous success of the initial sym-Thursday there will be the an. 1 posiurm, it was decided that the
nual GTeek Week sp-eech chapel, . symposium be held every odd presentation of last year's tro-1 year to correspond with the phies, and he annual Plaza Carolina Forum held at the Uni"500" tricycle and skate race. i versity of Nol'l!:h Carolina at Cha-
That night :the Grleek Week pel Hill every even year.
speaker was originally ·two-fold: concerned about the slow re- said, "and we are bugging or ot orrie io combat the Speaker Ban Law sponse from the 2,000 volunteer proddmg people as politely as and to promote educational campaigners," Garrity said. "In possi-ble :to get results." About Draft? purposes. As .thE) fh,st purpose fact, you might say we're run- Review Progress has been fulfilled throug'h the I :ruing scared, aLthough we do attempts made to lh.·ave. a spe_ak-
1
have enough indication .that our There will be another repo.rt er d th li"tl ti ,., Wake Forest men seem ;to be • a~ as. ere 15 " e me people (the campaigners) are, on April 20, when the commJI•-left m this school year, the :.__: _____ _::_::.._ __________________ worried about the draft, but l~gislature voted to let the new ·the draft test is a different mat-legislature act on iihe issue. Small 7\.J:umber o•-r T7oters ler.
J. l' j 'J Y 4 With the deadline for applica-Extra Secretary El • tions for the .test coming up
The new •Secretary will be in Turn Out For cu ectlon April23, the College Book Store dJa:rge of answerin,; all legis- stocked Barron's "How to pre-lative correspondence as well est's need for a College Union pare for the Draft Deferment as initiating corr,espondence wibh By SUSANNE BENNETr Test," but has sold only one
STAFF WRITER building, Hemric said "It seems f other sc:hools. '!opy so ar. preposterous to me that a col-
As this is presenrtly the duty A !Small percentage of Jth.e lege aspiring ·to university stat- Test Gives Evidence of the student body secre1tary, student body marcihed rto the us shou1d. not have one." How"it !has made things very diffi- polls Wednesday to elect Clay ever, "like •the !house and th.e The test, which will be adcult," President Jerry Pavtney Hemrick, junior of Burlington, home, you've got to have a ministered three times this remarked. 'Ilhe office now re- College Union presiderut. Hem- good home to put in the house." spring (May 14, 21, June 3), will eeives about four letters a day, rick defeated John Barr, junior Consequently, he wants Jto first provide evidence for local draft and "virtually none of them of Danville, 302 to 225. "make Jtih,e program strong boards coosiderin:g reclassifica;bave been answered," Partney The margin was more notice- .enough to warrant having a tion of studen.ts who now hold said. An additional secretary able in ;tJhe vi~residential building." military status 2-S (deferred for "will greatly facilitate our com- slot with Jeff Kinc!heloe, sopho- education). munication," Ann Hunt ex- more of Rocky Mount, receiv- Revamp Committees Mrs. Helen Folks, ·head of the
(Continued on page 5) ing 335 votes Jto iflb.e 186 votes Immediate plans include re- Book Store's paperback departof Jim Gerni.ch, sophomore of vamping rthe eigih-t committees, ment said, "I ·believe they are Bethesda, Md. Austine Odom, "•the most important part of seriously worried. about the sophomore of Mal'ltinsburg, W. College Union." He feels tihe draft itself, but evidently. they Vn., •edged by Sharwynne Wil- committee stru~ture will have have taken so many tests of this kins, junior of Durham, 263 to to be eJC!)anded to take care nature before that rthey are not 255 for :secretary. of the e:lOtra money tihe College overly interested in this ooe."
'Seriously Concerned'
I Talent Show Winner May GoOn ABC I A camrpus rtalent show spon
sored by WGHP-TV, channel 8, of High Point will be pres~mte<L in the College's Prosenium Theater at 8:15 p. m. Friday.
In a small junior class turn- Union will be able to spend. out, Sam Gladding of Decatur, He intend!s to form a College Ga., be~t Georgia Looney of Union Building Committee to Kingsport, 'Denn., 73 to 66 for be in charge of correspondence class rep-resentative. Other class with ·other .schools concerning representatives are rising jun- their ideas for building blueio.r Barbara Butekunst of Sel- prints and programs. lersville, Pa., victor over Steve Out-going president Larry Wilson of Leakisville, 108 to 57, Robinson believes that though and: Pam Hawkins of Char- the election .ttunout was small, lotte, c!hosen sophomore repre- 1Jh.ose who did vote were really sentative over Carol Talbott of interested.
Said Dr. David Hills, head of ·the campus Psychological Services Center, "The boys we have interviewed here seem to be seriously <:oncerned over the increasing draft quotas.
Men interested in ~aki.ng the test may get a Bulletin of information an an applica.tion at any Selective Service local board.
--PHOTO BY WINSTON FOOTBALL QUEEN VS FOOTBALL • • . is the ease to be tried in Moot. Court next Thursday. Mer ley Glover smiles merrily as she identifies the ball that brought her suit before tblt jury.
Each college in North Carolina will conduct such a talerut show, selecting one student to rep. resent them in a televised show on channel 8 May 14.
The winner of the North Carolina finals will ·be sent to audition for the ABC Television Networl!: in New York at a later date. A grant to the student's college or ,university will be
given to the winner. Friday's .talent show on cam
pus is open to all Wake Forest sin,gers or instrumentailists in folk, jazz or popular music fields.
Students interested in :participating in the show have been requested ro meet at Walton's offlee on ·the seventh level of the Library at 7 tonight.
Burlington, 132 to 42. He echoes Hemrit:k by saying Positive Approach the "most critical tihing in Col
lege Union is to improve its In his chapel speech Tuesday, program, making the College
Hemric pledged "a positive ap- Union iihe popular thing to do." proach" :in a year wlhich he Concerning the future of the believes "marks a <turning point College Union, Robinson said, in College Union." Als next year "I 'bbink that if the College must be a year of improve- Union continues to develop its ment " Hemric will ,strongly program and !the students conemphasize entire .student body tinue to accept it, it's going participation and cooperation. to grow and grow and snow-
He "looks for a lot more ball." cooperrution with IFC and MRC "My feeling is that it ought to eliminate conflicting pro- to devote itself to filling in the grams," hoping to make Col- gaps, fulfilling the real social lege Union for everybody, not needs of the campus as a just independents. whole, not just iiJhe dndepend-
Commcnting on W.ake For- ents," lhe added.
Gladding Wins BSU Presidency
In a run-off ballot, surprise candidate Sam Gladding of Decatur, Ga., was elected Baptist Student Union president Friday night after being nominated from the floor.
A junior transfer from Stetson University, Gladding was chosen over Pat Pond of Richmond, Va., and Royster Hedgepeth of South Boston, Va., both rising seniors.
GUNN HIT HER lUARK • • . as she aimed for WGA President. Andy Gunn will succeed .Joy Brumbaugh in the top coed executive position.
Graduation Site Is Set
.4 Changes iAre Decided I !By Students
The student body voted Thursday in Chapel on four constitutional changes involving the duties of .two officers, the establishment of a cabinet, and re~
, quirements for becoming a leg-
1
1 :sia::or. Three of the four changes re
volved around the establishment ' of a cabinet composed of Stu-den.t Goverrunent p:l'imary committee chaixmen and student body officers. 'I1he vice presi~ dent of the studenrt; body would preside over the cabinet .
The fourth change would require a legislator ;to serve on at least one Student Legislature standing committee during the te.rm for which he was elected.
Results of the vote were no-t available at press time.
For Outside .PBKLecturer It's officlal-graduation will I I s h d } d
be h~ld outdoors this year. Pres- S C e U e ident Harold W. Tribble okayed 1
the idea, and handed it over' F •d N• ht to the d~a:Js, who pronounced ri ay Ig U1eir approval.
The pl:ice has 111ot been pick- Dr. Thomas Hanna will ad~ ed; the choice is between the dress the Phi Beta Kappa plaza and the Magl!lolia Court. candidates on "How to be a Sue~
Also definitely on the schedule cessful Phony" at 8:30 p. m. \for seniors il' a picnic to be held Friday in DeTamble Auditorium. at Hilltop :Stables May 17. A The lecture is open to the pubcharge of $1 will be used to help lie. · defray expenses of the picnic. He will also spealt Thursday and other activities of s~nior a.t 8 p. m. in DeTamble in a weekend. lecture sponsored jointly by
Activities with still uncertain the College Union and the Reli~ st'l.tus are a night at one of the gion Department. His topic will local tlleaters either free of be "On .the Writing of History
charge or with a minimal charge and the Writing of Novels." and a dance at :the Country A native of Texas, Hanna r&-Club. ceived !his Ph. D. from the Uni-
A tea given in Reynolda Gar- versity of Chicago and taught dens by the deans and a buf- aJt Hollins C'.ollege for several iet dinner after the commence- years. He is now the head of the ment exercises completes the Philosophy Department at the list. University of Florida.
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Power Rival-Congress?
1Newsman By SYLVIA PRIDGEN
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
A North Carolina native who has worked on six different newspapers and written as many novels cited the noo:l for greater Congressional influence upon executive decision-making in an address in DeTarnble Auditor• ium last Wednesday.
Tom Wicker, chief of the New York Times' Wiashington Bureau, told an audience of predominantJ:y townspeople that the thesis for scholars today is how to make Congress better balanced against the President.
"Congress still regards itself as a power rival to rtlhe President," the newsman said. "But it is no suclh rtlhing. The trend today is toward a Congress even more responsive to presidential desires, with the effect of more power to rtlhe executive."
The program of the Great Society has enabled the president to expend power usefully while collecting more power
through the delivery of the goods
II to the vc.ters, Wicker said. Mass media and the development of communication through television has enhanced the image of
Questions Kitlorhynch Hunt Is
Power On Prof's Schedule A professor, wlho spenlds a lot I gins wants to find more speci- 1
of his time soouring Dcean bot- ID&IliS of kinorhynchs, and anitoms in search of a micro- mal that was considered exsc~c animal, will continue· tremely rare until HiggiJliS dethai project >tlhis summer of£ vised a new tec!hnique of di.sbhe western coast of South
1
. covering iffilem. It provided lhim America. · with more •tlhan 10,000 tdur.ing
Dr. Robert P. Higgins, as- the three months he spent in sistant professor of biology, has' 1964 dredging in 11he Indian looked in many U. S. coastal Ocean as part of tlhe Int&naareas and in the Indian Ocean tional Indian Ocean Expedition. for specimens o£ a tiny animal!' His teclhnique involves scoopcalled a lcino:rlb.ynch. He'll hunt ing the top inch off the. ocean for more specimens for a month ' bottom, Wlith a dredge, mixing this summer when ihe join.;; the this witth water until th-ere is Southeastern Pacific Biolog·ical a soupy consistency and 11hen Oceanographic Program. bubbling air into :fJhe soup to
The program is sponsored by force · the tiny animals io the 1
!1he National Science Foundation. top. to provide ·the opportun~ty for I Higgims ISaid kino:rlb.ynchs are investigarors to carry on stu- bhe first step in a food chain dies rela,ted to the Humboldt i that eventually results in seaCurrent and adjacent waters food. off 11he South American coast. The Anton Bruun, Which was
The program's researclh ves- named after the Danish oceansel, the Anton Bruun, is mak- ographer, originally was the
· ing a series of eight cruisc•s in presidential yaclht Williamsburg the area. '.Dhe one Higgins will' until it was given to the NSF go on begins June 12 and will by the late President John F. be devoted to ihe study of bot- Kennedy. tom fauna in five deep basins In adclition to his month's rear trenches off •t:ht:- Peruvian search on the A11ton Bruun, and Ohilean coasts. Higgins Higgil!S will study in marine said he and the 13 other scien-. laboratories at Callao, Peru, tists in iihe cruise will be dredg-! and Valparaiso, Ohile. He also
.ing tlhe ocean bottom in wa,ters i will visit iihe Oceanographic In- •
h ' ' -PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY
12,000 to 24,000 feet deep. I stitute at San Paulo, Brazil be-
the President as e mamtams A PRESS CONFERENCE . . . of his own Times' Washington correspondent are Jim his position in the center of at- I t
I is a switch for Tom \Vicker, bui he played Arrowwood and Walt Harlow, as Dr. E. E. _ - .. ·------· -·--·-----
ention. th I ll L" t · t th f th F Ik k k d i~L::>.~~c:J?[i: . .r._.'f~_':'Ji~.f~C!f2J21"._.-c!Rli?,~~~ "Television makes Johnsc-rr e roe we . •s emng o e answers o e o eeps an ear coc e .
1
__
the. :znaster and creator of th? and effectively captured the at- forum. "But rt:..'J.ere must be can do about it," he drawled. · · · 'II
Each of 1Jhe scientists will ' fore returning to 1Jhe United have !his own pet project. Hig- States.
political atmosphere. The Pres, ! tention of the audience with his I strong leaders who can shake "Wiho's going to say the Presi- r/J dent .Is the acknowledged star: fas~-p:~ced analysis of the con-I the present attitudes of Con- dent is wrong?" ,r::; of this d,~am~, as. well as the' petition between Congress and gress." ~~ producer. said Wicker. I the president for power "W h h p 'd t' 1 ,r:.l,
Wednesday Star · e av; enol!g r~s1 en Ia 9=i 9 Wicker was obviously the star:. The answer .to Congressional pow~r. Le! s b_e~:;n to think about TimeS Jab ~~
of the Wednesday production mfluence. he suggested, is not copmg Wlth 1t. 'cJ ~~~~~~~~~~4~4~$~~~*~'~~-~!~*~.-~G~~A~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~ ~~~ At~k 1'1
WC!'k to devise legislation. w lC er i,
He quoted ;the late President Wicker peppered his entree .LJ L L. ·~ f "' Kennedy as saying the heart wtth amusing digs at the poli- B I
i.. .DC'OUltt.~ I ,-.... ,: of the Presidency is the choices ticians •and the President. The oomerangs ~~ SnAK HousE'
' - he makes. "Let the President reporter, awarded the Pulitzer . COLLEGE PHARMACY R choose," Wicker suggested, "but prize for his coverage of the Torn Wicker wasn't too dis- I COR. HAWTHORNE & LOCKlAND · · let Congress raise, press, and Kennedy assassination, listed the turbed by Time Magazine's jab I
Phone 723-1867 WINSTON SALEM, N.C clarify issues. Congress should- Hayes rules for politicians, at him and :the New York n't give up any of its powers I which included: 'Never use one Times last week, althoug!h he now. "But should it rely on word if five will do; always be admitted nobody likes ·to be cut I these established powers alone, strong for something nobody down. IJ
Congress with influence of dan- can be against; and when in Time's .tribute to the Times gerously small proportions may doubt, do right, was promoted by an article be 'tih-e likely ·result. When asked about presiden- by Wicka- on 'tihe 198 sciholars'
Witlh a realistic appraisal of :ti~ pressuring of the. press, statement calling for more U. S.
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11he changing concept fo power, Wicker clucked th~t his arm policy toward Communist Chima., Congress should attempt to has :rever ~~ twiSted by_ the (One of the signers was Wake make its voice heard before the President. Its all th~ little Forest's Rober.t Gregory of the
1 President reaches decisions, men ,who ~orne to :twiSt my History Department.)
said Wicker. Joint committees arm, he qwpped. Time quoted its own experts li.~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ may be a step toward more in- In the half-humorous vein that as saying only one third of ~ fluential power, if they achieve spiced ·the entire lecture, Wicker Wicker's "experts" could be
~::iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiibieittieiriistiaitu;s~a;n;d~~gr~eater detailed a private conference considered expems, and as cal-with the big chief. The strange lim•g Wicker's article "factually sensation arises when "in the inaccurate."
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goodness of your heart and the greatness of your intellect, you Wic~er ,cast a few reflecti~ns I f':): .. :·.-;: ::-~. know what he's saying can't be on Times accuracy, saymg . k-··.· , ... , · .... ':,;.':
I true. But there's not a lot you Time only used one of ;the state- · , · ... ··.: <:·· ·. ·,
ments he made in a 30-minute- ,
For Campus News
READ
0 Ci & B
plus interview. ~. '· ' 1 Time's method of operation, t·: : he explained, is :to receive full- [: .. ' length a11ticles from their men- i · .. '· · ' on-the-spot, then write the point- t · - .,_ · ;::
bound article in the central <:>f-~j· :. ' flee, utilizing other i!llformation. '
1' The method usually works ~
. pretty well, he said, as long as one can overlcok the illtentional
i Time bias. . But .the reporters who work in r·: · the newsmagazine's system are ~ .... ::· ... ' not always saJtisfied with the re- , sults: the one who interviewed i :·· .- '·:
him for last week's article called : : .. <·· I up and apologized.
i ' '.l1hirty-five states, 11he District . of Columbia, two U. S. Posses-
EVERY WEEK sions and nine foreign countries
: are represented in ·the University of North Carolina at
'-------------· Ohapel Hill's freshman class.
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SPENDING changing hi: er's paradol
Thr AV
Poetry IDUl and traditio: Stephen Spen in the last l€~ Institute of ing Tuesday 'fiow crowd i: torium, Spen poets must, able us to :se< the lig..lJ.t of
Spender de, of litis lectur iihe form of • thew Arnold he discussed oonfronting tl
Arnold's c was whe'tiher in modern poetry of T. Pound is an
Shelley's id .was "tharl: ·tl: ledge ·(IOf sc1 envU'onrnent 1 wlhat we ar Shelley, imag individual to the world.
Al
·• The poem: creative act' "a way we 1 ourselves as difficult task
inldividt sidered rnerel: whole.
The philosc poets are sy! them to accj of integration world, Spend· cause their "hypothesis," them, may we must "be rtlhat depa,rts What is impo of modern PD• Pound is not but ·their vis
Spender sp students abou
in thE
''When' '
afford t sharpen
with I
:ntIs lule· td more specl- 1
nchs, and aniconsidered extil Higgill!S defrmique of di.s-1 provi<loed lhim
10,000 during 1S he spent in in tlhe Indian >f llhe Int&na:an Expedition. involves scoop-off th& ocean
lredge, mixing until 1Jhere is
mcy and 1Jhen > tlhe soup to mimals to the I
inomynchs are a food chain
:-esu1ts in sea-
un, wlhich was Danish oceanally was the t Williamsburg 'n to the NSF ddent John F.
1is month's reA.TJton Bruun,
dy in marine Callao, Peru,
Chile. He also anographic In- • ulo, Brazil be:o iflhe United
'i
lter
Rd. . c.
TISERS
Poet Wants CU's One-Man Art Exhibit OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Aprilll, 1966 PAGE mREB
--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY SPENDING TIME WITH STEPHEN • • • i.s a student exchanging his views on literature with the visiting poet. Spend• er's paradoxical lecture was received, well, .••
Improved B · . · Translations oth Conventional, Modern
StJephen Spender has an office By J. D. WILSON I fJve presentations of tlho tower 'i s!hort span cf Ibis professional in :tlhe LiOO'ary of Co:1gress, but STAFF WRITER represent five media: collage, nt't career, his work has been little to do. He is t.'1e library's The College U:tion's cunrent
1
. oil, :-va.tercolor, polymer, and I nccepted in juried exhibitions poetry consuLtant, a position one-man nrt exhibit in De- dirawmg. spanning the United States. he says should be- more cleat'- Tamble Auditorium is conven- Other paintings in tlhe collec· , His paintings are included in ly defined.. tiona! enough to satisfy factual tion range from a work in oil· several mlliSeum collections and
Wlhile he was at the College people, but close enoug'h to: entitled .. Tideland View No. 2," have brought !him numerous lam week, the Br£tish poet also modern art to be appreciated: valued at $25, to an oil collage awardJS in both national and expressed lhis disappointment at as suc!h, according to A. Lewis; valued at $2,100. This most ·ex- regional exil1ibitions. the lack of response· to one of Aycock of tlhc Ex:glish Depart-' pensive painting on exhibit is In North Carolina, his works his proposals. ment. a sev·en-panel mural entitled have been presented in exhibi-
Ayc(}~k, who teaches the "The Creation." j ·tions at the North Carolina Wlhen he first became poetry Co!legc•·.; art history courses, Numerous Awards State Museum, Greenville Art
consultant, Spender suggested pomted out WaLter 'Illuift's A sc·lf-taught artist, '11l1rift 1 Cente-r, and Wilmington Col-that tlJ.e Library of Congress :•Tower of ~ab€1" series as be- turned to painting as a full- lege. In Winston-Salem his sponsor an international con-' mg of spec1al interest. 'Illhl-ift's time profession in 1958. In the works lhave been sJJoV.:n at ference for writers and trans-lators. Spe:·nder, who himself Salem College and the Win-has transla-ted some worl~s into PuhHshi~ Profs ~;ton-Salem Gallery of Fine Art. English, said that many non- His awards and prizes include English wrilters are not satis- the A:ssocia:tc·d Artists of North fied with translations of 1Jheir Schoon ~aker 's j'Ol•d Cnrolina 1962j63j65; tlte Dixie
" work, which of.ten emerges llllllt Jf..J Annual ·in 1962; the Piedmont more as the translator's tlhan Purethase Award, Mint Museum, '
the poet's poetry, T.s German notz•t:cs 1962/63; and llhe Winston-Salem Spender lhad expe:-cted .that .1_ ~ _r ~ .J.. Gallery of Fine Arts Annual
someone at tihe library would 1961-65. t lh . • . , I 'I1hrift's work is represented
Th h S d commen on IS proposal to 'Preparing lectures and grad'- was mte_rested m.. in •the following permanent col-
roug Pen er-m improve this situa-tion, but he ing blue books are only a small These mclu~ed f1rst, an effort leoctions: North Carolina State said lhe had n(}t gotten any part of a Wake Forest profes- to. _ democ.rabze the German Museum; RCA-Pittsburgh·, In-reaction at all. sor's work For f It 1 d · many acu Y CIVI service, . an second, an diana University Foundation;
A V • Of p Spender has spent much of members, additional hours are attempt to bnng about salary Thallteimer Foundation; Hum-
·' I:ivering lectures in 1lhe area ous, time-consuming prepara- In. addition,, ~e German Fed- State College; Chesapeake Bay
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if she doesn't give it to you .•• -get it yourself!
JADE EAst·
-JADE Et\51 :. r.ror: t ~~ ~"r .r ... t:
lew Oetry !his year in WaiSlhlngton de- spent in study m- in the ardu- reforms.. . ble Oil Co.; North Carolina
without charge, one cf the du- tion of matc.rial for publica- erabon of C1v1l S2rvants agi-! Bridge-Tunnel Commission. and Colosne. 6-.. $4.50 Poetry must be both modern positive in public about his ties of !:tis office. tion. Beginning wi·tlh this arti- tated . for such things as be<t~er ! tlhe Gordon Hanes Coll~ction An. Shewe. 6 -.. S3.SO
and traditional, British poet wotrk, he said of one poem In past years he has ranged cle, the_ Old Gold n':d Black vaca~:m leaves, better working I here in Winston-Sal€·m. Deodorant Stlcll. S1.7B Stephen Spender said last week "Wfuether it (.tlhe llheme) i~ far out of Was~hington-lle was I would like ::0 recogmze t_ho.se cond~·hons, and better public Thrill was born in High Point Buddh8 Coloane Gift l'ecllap,llca., in tlte last le-cture of this year's cloo.r or r::ot . . . maybe I introduced to Ibis lecture audi- ~rofessors who are ~?w either relation~. Sc~nm~ker also in- 1 in 1922 and now lives in Vir- =~= $4.00 Institute of Literature. Speak- should write it all over 1:gain." I ence in DeTamble Auditorium m the ~aces: of wntmg books cl~~ed m lhiS iffilesis a general ginia Beach, Va. His paintings Colo..-, 4 oz.. $3.00 ,~g Tuesday niglht to an over- • . Tuesday night as a "roving or wlh'O have JUSt recently com- cntJque of ·ti.'Ie approaches used will be on exhibit until April After Sta.ve, 4 oz.. $2.50
flow crowd in DeTamble Audi- Wlthm Language ambassador of modc•rn letters." I pleted ·tlhem. by the pressure group, as well 28. ·-----------------------..;;;... to · s d 'd d N t t · tin h' * * * as a summary of its successes. ----------------· num, pen er. ISai mo,,ern Spender insists that the .,....t•s o res nc g lS activities, Dr. Don ,
.. -~ to Scuoonmaker, in- Now that the seom·ngl d i--------------------------------------==::. poets must, lik!e Yeats, en-, meaning should be contained poetry, Spender was one o! ~tructor of politi 1 . 1 h f - 1 Y en -able us to :se€• our own time in I wHihin the language of ·the poem the authors of "The God that , £· . bed · ca science, ess ours o reser~rch, organi-tlte ligtht of historic time." 1
1
itself, and considers Blake's Fniled." In recent .Ye:::trs ih:. !has I ~nis his . doctoral di:sserta- zation, typing, writing, and re-Spender devotC'd the first part poe'try a violation of !!hat cri- been lecturer, ed1tor, critic. I ~•on fDr Prmc:ton University writing are completed, llhe ·
• 1 m J~anu3.ry of 1tlh1s year. Writing young political science pro:fes-o£ !his lecture to tradition, in 1 te:·ria. ! H& !has g1yen encouragement , about a German pressure group sor can finally take- a little · KETNER'S CAFETERIA
Reynolda Manor .Shopping Center :e fo~ 0~ vie~s ~l~ b~ Mthat-1 Spender's dislike of criticisrn to young writers-among then;. I d~g tlhe post-World War II' time to res't on !his laurels. : heoe~. no d ~n · e ey 't en· which leaves the poetry itself Dylan. Thomas. And among his periOid, he included in his dis- Wihen asked if lh~ would sub- I eo f Isc~sse th e waJ' poe s arlde. for an investigation of the poet acquamtances he numbers W. sertatian an invc·stigation of tlhe mit his dissertation for publica-'
n ron ~g e mo ern wor. · 1 leads Spender to condemn the H. Auden, ~·. ~· Forster, and ta~ics and tedhniq~es used by ti~m. he laughed and said, "It's: Presents An EXTRA SPECIAL W.F. SPECIAL
Arnolds conc&n, he IS~ld, P3YC'hological approach to lit- tlhe late Vrrgmia Woolfe. tlh1s group ·to achieve i.ts de- under consideration." was whetlher art could survive tur . . d WAKE FOREST STUDENT -PROFESSOR . d d't' "Th era e. In a d1scu'Ssxon ove-r man s. m mo ern con I. Ions. e lunch, he said tlhat when people "I looked into both the in-poetry ~f T. S. Eliot .~nd Ezra J discover an author has neu- Higgins To Edit ternal and external politics of Pound 'lS an answer. , rosis, !they tend to deprecate the period to see if ilihere weore
Shelley's idea, said Spelllder,J1ftle author's work. Actually, Biology Journal any connection between them," .was "that ·~e abstract know-
1 Spender doubts tJhat someon& ~ Schoonmaker explained.
led~e ·(IOf science) creates our with no neurcsiJS can produce . . . . As a pnrt of lhis reseaTch, enwronment bwt doesn't tell us I nrt--<tlhe artist's neurosis gives l Dr. Rooort P. Hig~ms, ass~st- tfu.e 1959-1960 Wake Forest .stu-wlhat we are." According to, him insight. 1 ant professor of b•o1ogy, lhas dent body president interviewed Shelley, imagination enables IJhe been n:::tmed to the board of cdi- "30 or 40" leaders 'Of the party individual to ,relate himself to . For that matter, n_o cr~ticism, tors for "The Trall!Sactions of in Germany. "They call 1Jhemthe wcrld. 1s helpful to. tlhe artist ilumself,' ~e A~erican Microscopical So- selves the German Federation
Spender sa1:d. The PQ'e¢ ih~s c1ety. of Civil Servants," he said, A Fraction done theo best, he can, and if , The journal is issued quar- , adding tlhat one of his major
·• The poem is "1Jhe supremely someone say.s _he !ha~. not done te~ly ~?d is o.ne. of tlhe. oldest interests in preparing Ibis 1Jhesis creaifive act" and poetry is . ~ugh, lhe !Still can t do any scientific penodicaliS m ·tlhe had been a comparison of tlhe "a way we build a world for' er. I country. As an associate editor.! party in the post-war period ourselves as individuals .. a . Spender did . say tlhat criti- Higgins will edit papers printed
1 and the ·activities of the:- group
difficult task in an age 'when c1sm of technical aspects of by tlte journal in tJhe field of I' in tlte perioo from 1919-1933. inidividual is often con- ~s pooetry was helpful wlhen invertebrate zooiogy. Inverte- "I inveS!tigated two issue
sidered merely a fraction of tlhe 1: came from a fellow profes- ~1 brates are animaliS witlhout j areas." !he said. "I followed wlhole. s10nal suclh as Auden. backbones. , tihe main proposals 1Jhe gr.oup
The philosophies of modern poets are systems tlhat enable tltem to accomplish this task of dntegration into ·tlhe modern world, Spender said. But because tlheir philosoPhies, or . ''hypothesis," as Spender called' them, may become outdated, we must "be grateful for poetry tihat departs from hypothesis. • What is important in the work of modern poets like Eliot and i Pound is not their !hypothesis but ·tlteir vision.
Spender spoke to about !::\> students about h1s own vision
the day. None too
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-NOTICEProspective Teachers I!ETNER SPECIAL
e Your Choice 0£ Any Meat Up To SSe Value
GOOD APRIL 11, 1966 TO APRIL 16, 1965 ONLY
A reoquired meeting for all · sophomores who plan to ·earn ' a teacher's certificate will be' held at 8 p, m. Tuesday in · DeTamble Audit(}rium. Any stu- j dents who plan to take iffile : education "block" during ifue I aca.diemic year, 1966-67, and· who lhave not been screened I are required to aJttend also. I
e Your Choice Of Any (2) Two Vegetables ••• c 8 Bread and Butter •
0 Coffee or Tea . • •
ABOVE SPECIAL GOOD ONLY WITH TIDS COUPON!!
At the meeting students will : makie application br ndmJssion to the teacher education PTD- · gram and will be informed con- . CCTning the screening procedure.
Monday I. I E
Tuesday L!E
Wednesday LIE
Thursday L I E
KETNER'S CAFETERIA
Friday L ! E
Saturday LIE.
With this one exception, GT &E holds the lead in remote control We leave it up to the dexterity of youth to manipulate slot cars. But concede nothing to anyone in the matter of making machines act as they should without human intervention ... even if they're sepa- · rated by hundreds of miles.
The lead is supplied by two of GT&E's family of companies.' Automatic Electric manufacture .. the control systems, and Lenkuri\ Electric the equipment to trans-' mit the .control signals over wire
liries or microwave radio. In combination, the systems are used to automate gas and oil pipelines, electric utility complexes, and the operations of railroads.
The CoNITELTK 2000 supervisory and control system-new from Automatic Electric-can report the status of 180'-devices in as lit-tle aa .290 second&. ~
Lenkurt's new Journal Data 'Iransmission transmits "hotbox" information instantly so railroad controllers may stop trains before costly accidents occur.
Automatic remote control is just one of many ways GT&E is serv-; · ing the national interest. Our total activities are covered in a booklet you can obtain from your place-'· ment office, or by writing General Telephone & Electronics, 730Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017.
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1ilurk An All
***Wake
--------· -------WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, APRIL 11, 1966
---------------
CU -Corporate Disinterest The 2300 stockholders in
College Union have evidently turned over their share in the $40,000 plus program to 527 people.
It certainly seems unusual that 1500 students would sell out their shares in a corporation whose dividends keep increasing.
College Union has deserved the praise it has received this year. It merited as well the vote of confidence the students offered that dou'bled the budget. It does not deserve this indication of the lack of interest demonstrated by more than 80 per cent of the student body.
If College Union decided to match the number of its ac-
tivities to the percentage of voters, the results would be deathknell to what social activities this campus does have. Lectures, lawn concerts, homecoming, Magnolia weekend, combo parties, and ski weekends would all be a thing of the past were it not for the initiative of some College Union officers who think people want entertainment whether they show it or not.
If anything of merit should result from this lack of interest, it should be ability to work without criticism next year. If the College Union fails to satisfy or the corporation stock goes down, 80 percent of the stockholders can't complain.
Why Is Attendance Poor? Student attendance at this
year's Institute of Literature lectures was markedly poorand should anybody wonder why? Word gets around.
The word has gotten around the Institute lectures are terribly scholarly, consistently confusing, and frequently fumbling. Contrasted with the lecturers of the first Institute, among them V.l. H. Auden and Gilbert Highet, this year's parade wasn't exactly Easter.
It is difficult to lay the blame at the feet of anyone except the lecturers themselves. Their qualifications seemed impressive enough on paper and their inability to establish contact with students only sho·wed up at the podium.
In at least two instances, lecturers w'ho put most of the student members of their audiences to sleep were lively conversa.tionalists. Somewhere between informality and formality they lost their ability to communicate with the less learned, and we expect it was in the belief that thev were expected to be scholarly.
While there is a place for footnote scholarship, that place
is certainly not on the lecture stage. Lectures must be even clearer than conversational remarks, because the listener has no opportunity to stop the speaker and ask him what he's talking about.
And lectures must certainly be clearer than essays, which can at least be reread for as long as the reader's patience holds out. The practice of publishing lecture series has obviously been a mistake: most scholarly lecturers now seem to prepare their lectures ·with print in mind.
The Institute would do itself and students a favor by informing speakers that most student members in the audience care little for minute scholarslliu in a,ny form, and care less for it 1·'in the spoken form.
Far more meaningful to students- and perhaps even to professors- are lectures such as that given by Hhrhet: lectures that invite the interest in literature from which scholarslliA; mrr.st grow-not lectures that make scholarship and scholars seem dull, and. ultimately assign the same fate to Iiteratu~~·
Praises For Little Things "The time has come," said
the Mad Old Gold and Black editors, "to talk of many things."
Such as daffodils and art shows.
Kudos to Mr. Pete Moore, who plants daffodils to win a girl's heart, even though he admits shrubbery is more practical. llmpractical yellow trumpets announce the arrival Qf spring more effectively than 50 cedar bushes.
Congratulations to the cast and student director of "The Fantasticks," and may it ever get good reviews for an overwhelmingly fine production of professional merit. The cast would be doubly applauded if it would consider an()ther showing or two for those who missed the extraordinary performances during the prebreak rush.
The men of Poteat House rate a round of applause for
the novel sidewalk art show. Such exhibitions lend a touch of Village atmosphere while enabling students to add to their own art collections without overtaxing the pocketbook.
And to the members of TWBIEOTC, a WOGAAFAFE. To Those Who Believe In Education Outside The Classroom, we offer a word of gratitude and appreciation for a fine effort in enlisting students for discussions of current literature.
A blue ribbon award should be given to those who secured the work of William Thrift for exhibition in the art gallery. The response to this collection should be evidence that Wake Forest students do appreciate art if they recognize it as such.
Those who work to achieve a measure of success deserve a measure of praise. Bravo, ole, and hoorah.
OAROL OLAXON and SHERRY PRYOR Co-Editors
TROY STALLARD Business Manager
sYLVIA PRIDGEN, Assoc. Editor DICK PAVLIS, Sports Editor SUSIE MEMORY, Feature Editor BILL NELSON, Assoc. Sports Editor HENRY BOSTIC, JR., Asst. Editor BILL GORDON, Advertising Mgr. RALPH SIMPSON, Asst. Editor H. A. TURNER, Circulation Mgr. IAN WUERTENBERGER, Soph. Ed. STEVE BURNS, .Junior Editor
EDITORIAL STAFF: Michael Anderson, Jan Wuertenberger, Steve Burns, Susan Barlow, Ann Lewis, Walter Beale, Jain Rice, Pam Hawkins, Charlie Kirkland, Ka1Jhf Woolley, Bonnie Wrlght, John Stone, Joanna Rollman, Roger Rollman, William Ray, Susan Beck Bill Ameen Marbha Gentry
. Becky Ross. ' ' '
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Bill Vernor, Jolhn Dauehtry, York Winston.
*emu ber ot the Associated Co!legu,te Press. Represented for National Advertfsing by !.'..!. ognal A
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.....-•• e P ... lnston· a em, N. C. Form 3579 should be malled to Box '7587 WlDaton·Salem, N. C. 27106. Printed by The Nashville Graphic, Nazhv1lle, N. c: l!'ounded .January 15, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College Old Gold and Black 1s publlshed eaeb Monday during the school year except dUrtng -•m•natloa and bolic!ay periods as directed by the Wake l!'orest PubllcaUons Board.
-:'·· ..!t ..
.•. :..or:.
= - =
--tODAY
.·,
,·
The Election Was Wednesday?
Economic Principles And Problems Underlie Everyday Choices, Action
By THADDEUS F. S. KINGA GUEST COL.UMNIST
If someone told you that almost all your actions involve one or more economic principles you might not only doubt the validity of the statement, but if you a,re one of the argumentative persons, you migihit also seriously assail !him for saying so.
You might ask ihow this could be ·the case if you had never stopped rto !think about th-e teachings of economics.
In reply to this protest of yours, your opponent might inform you that it is not absolutely necessary to formally study economics to aot according to economic principles, th<>ugh he would certainly go ahead to qualify this statement by saying that, given the same opportunities, the chances are. that a person who has formally studied •economics will more easily understand economic problems.
There is no doubt ·11ha.t economic motives play a great part in our o11dinary life. The problem is how to understand the <implica-tions of 11his .statement.
Economic Choi-ces
Let us, in the most fundamental way, see how far 11he above assevtion fs true fn practice. I am sure you can recall that, upon your graduati{)n from high school,
Whimsey
you !had to make a choice between going to college and seeking immediate employmeDit.
You, no doubt, ~realized that Iti.m.e is scarce and that you had to use ilt one way or tihe other. You chose cto come to college.
Why? Because, among other factors, you realized r!Jhat this qualification will :raise your utility (your ability consequent upon your acquired skills) and JSO raise the prospects of your earning a lhiglher income. Underlying your decision and many other dec]sions wlhich you have made and will make is the concept of opportunity cost or a1ternative cost.
Leaving .the personal problem of choice aside, let us rtlhink of 1ihe world around us. Y<>u must have ·realized that most of the newspapers we :read daily place a lot <>f emphasis on economic problems, magazines abound in news concerning economic issues ·even when they are apparently repol"ting political incidents.
Pressing Problems
Surely we cannot afford to miss so much of the fun tlhaJt could be derived from intelligent .reading of these news media.
You have certainly been reading of our balance of payments problem, of the gold
Misery Is Having Tim,e To Think About Misery
problem, :of population explosion, of inflation and ljjhoe effects of the war in Viet Nam on our economy, of the unprecedented economic growth of ~e past 57 montlhs, of the problem tobacco farmel"s face if !the cancer issue becomes acrute, of the world liquidity problem.
You m"!lst have .read that the dollar is worth less than it was ten years ago. You are no doubt awar.e of tihe New York transpol't worker's .strike, of the steel industry's confrontation with the Administration, of the Federal Reserve Boaro's action and iihe reaction from the Administration.
You are no doubt aware of the Republican Party's recent -decision to use inflation as a central issue for t!heir 1966 eleC!tion campaigns.
Vital Issues
'IIhese issues concern us very intimately. Perhaps we may remind ourselves once more that these are the central issues with w!hiidh. economi.sbs deal. 'I1hey particularly concern themselves with the concellltrati.on of resources (factors of production), production and distribution of goods and services.
Thus we ·recQognize the relationship be·tween our lives and economic principles. We need •to hav-e a nodding knowledge of these principles. We lhave both !the capaciJty and 1Jhe acute need -of knowing rt:hem. Perhaps the best way to gain !llhis elemenJtary knowledge is to discuss the world problems as :they touch on economic principles. We need to discuss rbh.-ese pr{)blems as freely as possible. If you feel like doing so you have a very willing companion in me. Feel Eree .to conrt:act me and let's nse \Some of our free time in endeavoring to understand t!he world arounid us and wlha:t actually concerns lliS intrlmately.
LEITERS. (All letters tAl the editor must signed; names wtn be withheld on request. Spelling and punctuation are the writer's own.)
Explosion Is A Dud T<> the Editors:
The comments in Pam Hawkins' article on the contemporary wt .ex!hibit were cei'tainly indicative of •the modern intellectual's mind. Mr. Robinson called tihe ·art "an -explosion of !the mind," wlhicih Js very il:rue. It is an explosion straight olllt of the rational 1ihought and reason, an explosion rthat Shows man !has regressed instead of progressed in iihe field of art. Literature, namely in the recent form of '11ruman Capote's novel, is another example of the 1
cultural disintegration dn America. When an author has to play on lhuman d<:•pl"avLty wi1fhout making any moral decisions except t!hat we should .feel sorry for .such people, he has certainly lost ,1fue ability Ito use creative work for positive purposes. 'I1he same thing ~s true wlhen an artist slops down a few •scribbled lines oand calls it great art. The worst part of it is !that · people will buy tihe junk, display it in tfil.eir homes for Jthe .express purpose of impressing their friends, and tillon cla•im to be part of the revolution In thinking. Once before, humanity slipped into a period <Jf n'Onreason and non-progress, ,tfue Dark Ages, and apparently, once again, it is going to do 1fhe same thing. The only difference is' tha•t the f~st ;trip <down the dark road was on foot and horseb~ck and this one is by jet an-d automobile. A true "explosion of t!he mind" is tal'ling place, but othis time will we be able to recover the pieces?
J.olhn Simpson Class of '68
Sneaky Politicians To the Editors:
I realize ·that freShmen are not expected to be well infQormed abowt most of the political facts of life, but I w1tm\S>Sed an occurrence on !the campus last week ·that I question as c<>rresponding to otfue polii.tical1 understanding of the "Infl}rmed" upperclassmen.
It !has been my custom rto study in the East Lounge this yeal!", and beca\.liSe of ltih1s, I was on my way there last Tuesday night when I noticed illhat there was a m-eeting in progress in the lounge. Since ;there was • not an unusually large group in attendance, I stepped in the back door to ]Ji:sten. It seems !flhat one of the candidates for public office was admessing a gathering of young politicians. I was just ·in ·time to heoa.r !his closing remarks, whiclh were very impressive. Thougih he appeaored rt:o !h-ave •S<>me trouble reading his ISpeec!h, his com-' ments seemed· to be weU organized ; and well articulated. As he finiShed, he expl"essed his willingness to answer any questions from lbhe audience. My amazement continued and grew as he handled • each of the questions with appareiDI: ease and ·the clha.rm of a •seasoned politician. I was particularly impressed at !the ingenuity in turning Wlhat would have been a dif:fficult question into a v.ery appropriate joke. Only rthe last of ltihe questions caused him any degree of difficulty, and 1ihen after looking to someone at 11he front of the room, di~ be manage a somewhaf disappointing answer.
Seeing that a reception was to follow, I went to the library rtx> :li.inish my studying. Some few hours later, I returned to my favorite clhair to review for tlhe next day. As I .sat down, I noticed: -a piece of paper in the chair with typing >On it. To my astonishment, I found that 1Jhe question pl'inted on the paper was the very question which had been asked earlier in the evening, lhad been so well answered, and !had been a lead-in to his joke.
As I said, I am only a freshman and I guess t!bis is all part of a pol.Wical eampadgn. But !alter I began to wonid'er, U suoh as this happens in so insignificant a meeting as ilb.e one on campns last week, how will this \Same person conduct lhdm-~ self in the functions of Ibis office. Will there always be someone rto .tell him crucial answers or even rto ask lhim tihe crucial questions? Will !his reliance on such crutches now tie him to unetlhical commitments
(Continued on page 5)
The Confucian sages of third floor Babcock A, with four years of vast experience of various varieties, easily concocted a list of the miseries of a coed. The only one missing, other than the unprlntables, ls ·the dateless Saturday night. But dateless Saturday nights provide opportunities to decide what misery is.
Misery is getting 428 shower invitations. Misery is ge1rt:ing your ears pierced and
having everyone remind you that it causes blood poisoning . . .
Misery fs going to the ihospital for blood poisoning . • .
Misery is having your fiance make 69.4 on the draft ltest
Senior Quizzing Is Time Of Pain And Puzzle~nent
Misery is having time to find out what misery fs.
Misery is being 22 :illd still asked for your ID when you vlsit tb.e alphabet store ...
Misery is being 24 and still a freSh-man ...
Misery is finding out your boyfriend •has mono .
Misery is finding out that you gave your boyfriend mono . . •
Misery is having to wear Buster Browns when everyone else is wearing Weejuns.
Misery is the way you feel after your 369th cigarette of tbe day . . .
Misery is watching SaJturday Night aot the Movies, with the girls ...
Misery is when you've spent your last 35c for a tall Bud and you knock it off the table ...
Misery is when everyone on your !hall gets pinned except you .
Misery is when everyone on your !hall gets a diamond except you
Misery is when -everyone on your hall gets married except you • • .
And Misery for a boy? (Written by a boy)-
Misery is being the fiance who made 69.4 on the draft test • • .
Misery is finding olllt your blind date is the campus judo champ • • .
Misery is winning a date with th.e campus beauty only to find out that !b.er boyfriend is coming along • • •
Misery is not being able to pin your date -even one of three falls • • .
Misery is either nine A's or Viet Nam. Misery is eight A's and a B • . • Misery is a jug of wine, a loaf of bread,
and a beautiful girl, a fireplace-and wet matches . , •
Misery is too many jugs of wine . . , Misery is taking dex and reading the
wrong c!hapter • • . Misery is 3.2 bt>er in Nootih Carolina . . . Misery is learning that your favorite
Playmate of the Month is married and has three kids • . •
Misery is getting your seatbelt hung during the Roman orgy scene . . .
If you asked any senior What kind of test !he'd just finished when the five o'clock whistle blew last Thlll."Sday, !his amwer would have been a toss-up between a mental brainwash and a physical endurance test.
The test to determine what Wake Forest College seniors have learned informed :!Jhese same guinea pigs !how much they hadn't. One exhausted pencil-pusher moaned, "I could have done just as well taking that test the day I stepped olllt of higlh scbool."
The general test included music, archltecture, sculpture, and aJI't, but little math and English, according to one informant. If you 1Jhink you are a music conoissettr because you know the difference between Bach and Handel, you lose.
In flhe area :bests, 1Jh,e questioning process was often a matter of potluck. If you knew pllilosophy from 0-1700, you grinned and laughed at the snaps on Sartre, Camus, and TJllidh..
"There are two .types of biology exams," elucidated a major. "There's ecology and
Physiology, which I know nothing about.• and the other, mostly clhordate and evolu,. ·tion, wlbiclh. I 1lhi.nk I know something aboult. And guess Wlhat I got?" No one asked.
When the test-happy quiz kids weren't concentrating, they were laughing--hysterically. There were so many people in Salem and Winston that sufferers of claustrc~
phobia promptly passed out. Tennis fans in tlle gym had an oUJt looking out the window and soon became more interested in iihe rackets outside than the racket inside.
The momentous occasion of the wlllole day-the finish line-received no !Shouts or applause. Before illhe senior •slaves could orecover from the bomba:rdment of questions. they were ihanded a long questionnairo with juicy tidbits like "How do you thdnlc Wake Forest has prepared you? If you !had it to do over again, would you come t•> Wake Forest?"
With a little ingenuity, master plO'Ilters devised a fool proof emergency escape plan. To each intense question, the t!hinker ·, scribbled, "Yes and lliO.''
A AI ·su
Sixtyfor a · HQouse's and Sal•
Sixtyknown lhiblted patio. ~ rto final lby PotE
The 1 color an $2 to !from J.; to anim donated such a Davis, erty, M 0. G. l er's, E. Sev&al ings ba at S60.
The J sale fim out su:p Poteat men. A -chard's -combo also be•
Chucl Wins tOil
Poteat was " boys ill :art tiu
"It v "to givo tunity .collecti<
"Man bought howeve
The ·< first in event, eduled illext y ander.
t: Fresl
will pic grades from · meetinl tion. 1l
N
[
LLC
4Dud
£awkins' article Jhibit were cerlrn inlllellectual' s i the ·art "an :fu Js very rt:rue. lit of the ration-
explosion rthat instead of proil'lt. Literature, ·m of 'I1ruman example of the , !\m:erica. When 11man dt•pvavtty iecisions except or such people,
ability Ito UISe purposes. The
an artist slops 's >and calls it : of it is il:hat · splay it in r!lheill" ose of impres.slaim to be part g. Once before. period of nonfue Dark Ages, , it is going to ly difference is' dark road was this one is by
~ "explosion of , but rthis time er the pieces? Jihn Simpson lass of '68
~cians
I wLtnE\SlSed an last week ·that to ltfu.e poliitical1
:ormro" upper-
to study in the becaUISe of r!lhis, t Tuesday night was a meeting
Since ;tihere was • p in attendence, or to ]Ji,sten. It ldates for public bering of young lme to hear !his .vere very imea!red rto lbave peec!h, his com-'
organized : and i.niSh.ed, he ex;o answer any ce. My amaze-as he handled •
1 appll:l"eillt ease ;.oned politician. sed at the in·ould have been a v.ery approof Jtihe ques·tions E !difficulty, and one at the froiJJt 1ge a somewha.ti
was to follow, i.nish my study·, I returned to !W for the next ;iced: ·a piece of yping on :ilt. To
that the ques~ was the very asked earlier in well answered,
o his joke.
t freshman and a pol.iliical cam-. to wond'er, if so insignificant mpus last week, n conduct lhdm- ~ )ffice. Will there en him orucial him the crucial on such crutch
al commitments page 5)
•• Illle
nent nothing about, •
~date and evolu,. something abowt. No one asked. liz kids weren't aughing--hys~
people in Salem ~s of claustro~
mt. Tennis fans looking .ourt the more interested
:han the racket
n of the w!hole red no \Shouts or •slaves could re
ent of questions. 1g questionnairP. ow do you think you? If you lhad
ld you come .tc,
master plo«ers tergency escape ;tion, the t!hdnker ·, ·J
A Poteat Art Sale ·Succeeds
Two Clubs Get Formal Recognition
Easter At Wake Is What You Make It
OLD· GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Aprll 11, 1966 PAGE FIVB
ENJOY A REAL. TREAT! Sixty-four :paintilllgs were sold
for a total of $400 at Poteat House's first annual Art Show and Sale last Tuesday.
Sixty-seven painltings l:iy wellknown local ·artists were exlbibited on the Reyno1da Hall patio. The profits will be UISed rto finance activities sponsored lby Poteat.
The padntings in oU, watercolor and woodcuts sold for from $2 to $15. Paintings ranging !from .landscapes in watercolor to animal paintings in oils were donated from the collections of such a:rtlsts as Mr.s. Egbert Davlls, Jr., Mns. James O'Flaherty, Mrs. H. K. Saunders, Mrs. 0. G. Freund, Mrs. Hugh Rogers, E. Evans and R. Bauer. Several of Mrs. Davis' :paintings had origin•ally ibeen priced at $60.
The money gained from the sale financed a hamburger cookout supper Thursday l!light for Poteat House non-fraternity men. A party •at Dr. K€ith Pritcllaxd's house •and a hayride and combo party in the quad have also been scheduled.
Chuck Alexander, freshman of Winston-Salem and governor of Poteat House, said the art sale was " to raise money for the boys in Poteat and to spread :art throughout the campus."
"It was intended," he sadd, "to give the students the opportunity to stavt their own ar.t collections with good pieces."
"Many of the paintings were bought by faculty members however," !he commenrt:ed.
The ·art sale, which was rthe first in what is to 'be an annual event, as been tentatively sch· eduled for around Homecoming next year, according to Alex· ander.
--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY A REAL FIND • • • for Pete Moore is the work he proudly shows off after llm·chasing No. 36, Bee-Stung Horse, at the art show last Wednesday. The sidewalk sale was sponsored by Poteai House.
Debate Team Travels To Miami And Reno
BY J. D. WILSON STAFF WRITER
An! u.nisucce9sful slhowin:g at the regional tournament laM month has n01t cut off th!e Wake Forest debater's iacltivity. Since the team's fifth.-plaoo showing in Atlallllta, Ga., :March 17-18, it haJS traveled to Miami, Florida and R:eno, Nev.
Jerry Partney, senii.or of Miami, Fla., and Ken Godwin, sielllior of Charlotte, performed
much work" and the upcoming trips to Miami and RJe.no would i[lterfere with !his studies.
However, four Wake Forest debaters were !in iMi!ami last week to participate in :the Southern Speech Association Tournament.
In this tourney :the team of Phyllis McMurry, freshman of Shelby, and Irwin Coffield, junior of High Point, was awarded a rating of excellent with a 4-2 record.
Coeds Debate UNDERCLASSMEN! for the lalSt ltime as 18 team as Coffield aiso won first place in
Freshmen and sophomores tbley tied for fifiih place with the division of extemporaneous will pick up tiheir mid-semest& the UniV'€rsity of Kentucky. speaking. · grades Tuesday during cfuapel Godwin Resigns Caroly.n Hauser, freshman of from their advisors in 'llheir After the Atlanta 1rip, God- High Point, and Wanda Radforo, meeting 'l'OOms of fall orienta- win resigned from the team be- freshman of Cliffside, N. C., tion. Atmendance is required. cauSJe dEibate "required too represented Wake Forest in ------------------=---------------------- women's debalting.
YAMAHA These students remained in
Miami after the dose of the speech tournament Wednesday
The two new girls' societies
By S. D. WILSON STAFF WRITER
may not have 'been in existence What is Easter at Wake Foras long as the other :five socie- est? How do Wake Forest stuties have, but they· have been dents observe Easter? busy ca1Jching up with their "Easter at Wake Forest," companion social groups in the remarked one student, ".is just past few weeks. another weekend."
Officers have been elected, He explained that we lhave constitutions written and approv- classes (including religion class) ed, and the name, colors, and on Good Friday just as though flower' of each society selected it were any other Fl'liday, so in the meetings held since the w!hy Shoulidn.'lt Easter weekend idea of •the new societies rook seem like any other weekend? form at the beginnimg of the "Ea:ster Sunday," lhe said, second semester. "l!s just another Sunday to \Sleep
The Cameos, formed mostly of· late, and <tihen study for Moogirls who did not join one of the I day's classes." five older societies during rush, · But for those who cared. last Monday elected Martha there were opportunities to obA.ndrus, freshman of Winston- S(ll'Ve Easter and the preceding Salem, presidelllt. Holy Week.
Other officers are ;ran Magee, Last Monday night a Lenten fres!lunan of Oxon Hill, Md., reading was given by Mrs. vice prooident; Gail Detty, Harold Tedford, wife of a Wake freshman of Salisburg, secre- Forest ;speech professor. On tary; and Kay Steigerwald, Tuesday night Melvin Williams freshman of T:rrace Park, Ohio, Wake Forest Class of '65, gav~ treasurer. Gall Jordan, sopho- a student's view of Easter. more of Wilmington, and Sylvda Roualt',s "Ghrist Mocked by the WeSJt, freshman of Kinston, will Soldiers" was presented Wedrepresent the Cameos in the In- nesday night, wdth comments tersociety Council. by Ed Christman.
Final Steps I . . OrJgmal Version The constitution of the new
society was passed by the ISC Thursday in chapel Dr. Claude last. week and went ibefore the · U. Bronch, minister of St. student affairs committee Satur- John's Bapitist Church, Charday, thus completing the final ------------------steps •toward the recognition of the group as an official society.
T.he Petales, ·the society recently fromed of women day students, !has made e q u a 1 p r o g r e s s on the ;road toward being a full-fledged social group. Molly Frost, sophomore, was eleoted president; other officer-s are junior Lynn Co1>ple, vice president; junior Bonnie W.:right, secretary; and sophomore Meldene Layton, treasurer. All are of Winston· Salem.
Their ·constitution was also approved by the ISC and went before the student affairs committee last week.
Both societies will participate in Greek Week under the same regulations as now govern the oldell" societies.
Letters ..• (Continued from Page 4)
later 1n his public life. I am not .sure .that this is tihe type of person fur whom I would vote for any office.
Charles P. Singleton Class of '69
Required Attendance
,to pa~;tidpate in a student con- Method Set gress Thursday and Friday, April 7 and B.
Another team of debaters, Jose F Cabezas of Hialeah, Florida, and Or Ousting Jerry Partney left Saturday for Reno, Nev. to participate in the L Off• IDelta Sigma Jllio-Tau Kiappa. ax- · Jeers Alpha National Debate Tourna-
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lotrte, N. C., presented his original, modern version of the I Easter story.
As be neared il:he end of his i story, with Jesus approaclhing
1
the meditating Mary in the garden, ,soft organ music could be heard from 1Jhe pipes in the Chapel. I
Broach concluded <!lhe story by saying, "And that is why' we lhave Easter."
The music of the organ. swelled and broughit to an end j'
the only Easter service some ,students attended last week. I
Thursday evening a music meditation and Lord's Supper 'I
were held on campus. A tall, blood-red cross stood ,in front II
of lllhe pulpit in Wait Chapel. Wiltlh ilhe dool'ls of the Chapel opened, the red brilliance / of <llhe eross could be seen by students coming firom Reynolda Hall, and perhaps reminded them that the approaching weekend was, after all, more 1ihan an ordinary weekend.
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PAGE SIX Monday, April 11,1966 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
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A student must learn to be apathetic, and there is no better teacher !than an environment in whic!h apathy and pessimism are the accepted norm.
Poteat and Kitchin House men, however, have little time for pessimism. The Poteat House art show and salewhich, incidentally, will be a twice a year event - provided a profit of over 400 dollars for house funds, while enabling stu. dents and faculty to acquire good art works at reasonable prices.
24 HOUR SERVICE 2803 REYNOLDA ROAD
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On Easter Sunday, Kitchin House held an easter egg hunt for faculty cihildren, and - not to be outdone - for its ow11 house men. 'l1he !house is also
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Fraternity News
For example, fraternity men are well represented in all :facets of campus politics. Of the top
12 class and student govern- ~========================:! ment offices which were held r by men last year, eight of these I offices were held by fraternity i men. Fraternity men are also ! well represented athletically as well as scholastically.
Avid Supporters
Sigma Phi Epsilon l stalled. They are: President, Steve Hall senior of St Al- ~dlow Barker, junior of Hunt-
• · 1ngton W V · · "d t bans, w. Va., recently pinned 1 • • •• :'~·,. Vlce-presl en , Ann Leak of Charleston W Mike Lewis, Jumor of Winston· Va. Richard Beavers, juni~r of ~al~m; secretary, Shane Cox, Gret.'nsboro, !has pinned Linda JUmor of Falls Church, ~a.; In Lathan, al:so of Greensboro. ?-easurer, Coll!ad B~rrows, JUD· fact, fraternity men have
10r of Greenville, Miss.; pledge distinguished themselves in 1 marshall. Bob Plank, junior of every ~acet of ,campus life, and : Pi Kappa Alpha Kings Mountain; alumni sec- fratermties are perpetually a-1
yal Valentine, s~nior of Ra- rctary, John Cooper, junior of mong .the most avid supporters leigh, recently pmned Becky SoutJh Cha·rleston, w. Va.; so- of campus sponsored programs. Kellam of the College of Wil- oial c:hairman Lawrence Nick- I do not believe with the faculIia~ and M~. Jim P~rtin, I ols, sophomo~ of Hickory; his- ·ty and administratlo~ t:hat ~ese jumor of Edinton, has pmned fiorian Jean Fitzsimmons soph- students have distingwshed Joanne Cline, sophomore of omor~ of Tallahassee ' Fla . themselves either independently
. Falls Church, Va. I chaplain Stuart Veich' juni~~ of fraternity influence or in spite Ronald Shillinglaw, senior of of ch~lotte; libraria~, Bob' of it. It seems evident to me
Blacksburg, S. C., has become George, soPhomore of RoCihest- that many of these men beengaged to Libby Faucette, sen- er, Fa.; house manager, Wade\ come distinguished as a direct ioc of Raleigh. Haybert, junior of Center Val- result of the competition and
Sigma Chi ley, Pa.; firSit guard, Joe Mount, I value system which exists sophomore of Columbia, Ind., amon·g fraternities and fraterni·
The following brothers have and second guard Ric!hard ' ty men on campus. been elected or appointed as Lyle, junior of J~cksonville, I understand the anti-fra•terniofficers: Monty Hogewood, con· Fla. ty band wagon is an easy one sul; Jim Byrd, pro consul, Jim Dean Allen Walters sopho- to jump on, since all one has Byrd; Tom Irwin, quaestor; more- of Silver Spring, Md., was to be able :0 do is to mournfully Bob Sumner, annoltator; Jerry recently pinned to Lorraine shake ones head and piously Baker, magistor; Dave Bow- Cowall, junior Qf Bethesda, Md. cluck one's tongue at the mere dish, historian; Bill Hutton, Officers of this spring's pledge sound of a Greek letter. tribune; Hank Goehrig, editor; class were recently elected. They However, I would still like to Julian Rainwa-ter, house man- are: president, Buzzy Shuford, s~e the faculty and a~tra· nger; Tom Steutzer, junior freshman of Kings Mountain. Uon at least take a qwck look board representative; Lee Bet- vice-president. Dan Shea, soph: at the fraternity coin before tis, senior board representa- omore of South Orange, N. J.; they r~trict the actual center tive; Tom Steutzer, kustos. secretary, Dave Taliaferro, fresdl- of therr campus support com
man of Center Cross, va.; treas- pletely out of existence. urer, Stu Ours, freshman of
Dick Owens, senior of Roa- Vienna, Va., and social chair- Fraternity Adds 9 nok~. Va., recently pinned Mar- man, Marry Storosnider, fresh-garita Ware of Daytona Beaclh man of Mt. Jackson, Va. Alpha Kappa Psi, business
Sigma Pi
Fla. ' Lambda Chi Alpha frater~ity, recently pledged the The fraternity recently sere- followmg men: Durward Jones,
naded Penny Palmer, of Stat- Lester Butt,. so?homor: of i s?phomore of Zebulon; David ford College, penmate of Charles ! F ~lis Church, V a., IS lavaliered , Siceloff, sophomore of LexingBlanchard senior of Wallace j to Becky ~tevenson, sophomore ton; John Meredith, junior of
Pre-ston • Cole sophomore ~E. coe~ of Hickory. Richmond, Va.; Steve Hagey, Holliston, Main~, won the Cairo I Bill Tucker, S?PllOmore of s~phomore of ~ou?erton, Pa . .; Invitational Golf tournament' Greensboro, la.valiered JIJiart.l-Ja. Btll Crothers, Juruor of Charlast week in Cairo. Ga. Gomor of Balti_mo:re, Md. , lotte; Richard Henning, sopho-
Nan Bt;ll. JUntor coed of more of Garden City. N . .J.; Hamptonville was selected to Larry Cooke, junior of Aulander· Cresent Girl. Miss Bell is pin- Bill Freeman. junior of Dobson'
Officers for tl!lC coming year ned_ to Mark Greene, junior of and Phil Wainwright, junior of were recently elected and in- Elkm. . Seaford, Pel.
Theta Chi
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... , ......................................... . VIEWING
the DEACS By DICK PAVLIS
SPORTS EDITOR
.............................................
A New Leader The climax to a mixed-up year for the Wake
Forest basketball team occurred on March 23 with the announcement of the hiring of Jack McCloskey as the new leader of the Deacon roundball fortunes.
McCloskey, a 40 year old former professional base,ball and basketball player was given a four year contract at an undisclosed salary. One of many who was contacted by Athletic Director Gene Hooks, he was immediately impressive to Hooks, who stated, "I was sold on him the first time I met him."
The new Deacon coach comes to Wake Forest after ten years as the head basketball coach at the University of Pennsylvania. During his tenure at Penn his teams had an overall record of 146 wins and 105 losses (.581), and in Ivy League competition they were 83 and 53 (.621). However, over the past six seasons his teams compiled a 100-49 overall won-lost record (.671) and a 63-21 Ivy League mark (. 750). ·
Last Year Was Best His last club at Penn compiled an overall record
of 19-6, equalling the best previous mark established by the 1963 team. And, the 1966 five won the Ivy crown with a 12-2 record, but did not compete in the NCAA playoffs due to an Ivy League dispute over the NCAA's 1.6 minimum grade requirement.
It took him three years to build a winning team at Penn. These seasons produced tw·o losing teams and one just wbove .500, but once he got his own players into action he did not lose again. Since 1960, he has never had a losing season, nor finished below third in the conference.
McCloskey first heard about the opening through a friend, and after preliminary talks with Hooks, he made his first visit to the campus on Sunday, March 13, and said he "liked the atmosphere here."
)-'' ••• To Be The Best • • • '' The new leader stated that the major moto
vating factor in deciding to come to Wake Forest was "basically an opportunity to be the best in
" the country." He labeled' the ACC the "best basketball conference in the country" and added that "if a team can win the ACC championship, it isn't far from the top position in the country."
. '
.,
McCloskey's initial efforts will be aimed at rectifying the woes that have befallen the recruiting aspect of the basketball program. He estimated it would take approximately three years to get the Deacs back into high gear, and said it will take "several years of good recruiting" to improve the basketball situation.
His first goal, he pointed out, is to bring in a quality freshmen team, though he admitted he was "starting a little late."
In describing the attributes he looks for in a player, McCloskey said that first he'll look for "the intangibles--hustle and desire. Then I want ball-handling ability. If a boy can't handle the ball well, he won't be much of a shooter. He must be able to catch the ball and pass it."
Positive Approach Perhaps the outstanding trait the Deacons'
new mentor possesses is his positive approach to the situation confronting him. His emphasis is on what could and will be done. An aggressive and spirited coach, his ideas and attitude will hopefully lead to the restoration of Wake Forest to the status of a major basketball power.
His past record shows he is capable of building a successful team. A positive outlook did wonders for the Wake Forest football program, and more of the same is needed in the basketball environment.
Some aggressiveness and spirit perhaps will rejuvenate a stagnant program and generate once again successful basketball campaigns.
There can be no denying that a dynamic program is needed to restore a once proud winning tradition. The new coach appears to be the type who will work up this new attitude. Let us hope so.
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Deacons Streak Both Ways By DAVE ROBERTS Jimmy G:r.imsley accounted for of the order did most of the hit-
STAFF WRITER five tallies, but another problem ting, The Deacon baseball team opened :the d:l<lr .to defeat-de- The pitchln!g and defense
committed two errors in one game - he committed only four in 29 last season.
swept into the Deep South with fense. Second baseman Gerald should improve as the season three consecutive victories to Boyles and shortstop Joe Kraus progresses, for several of the open .the 1966 season but their ea·ch committed two errors, errors and some poor mound momentum faded as they lost which led to seven unearned ! performances were by players five of the next six games, in- runs. Two of the errors came who did well consistently last eluding two to ACC foes. i.n .the seven-run sb.:th inning. year. For example, the ACC's
South Carolina and Clemson, Sti~ Another P~obl?m _ outstanding center fielder, Cole,
Wake Forest teams always play better at home, and the Deacs will have the opportunity to close :the season with a rush since nine of fue last 12 games are at friendly Ernie Shore Field.
the class of the league <this The thtrd problem Is pltchmg; ~-----------------------season, administered 12 to 5 and 1 an ave~age of se-:en runs cannot 7 :to 3 defeats, respectively, to 1 be attnbuted entirely to ~efen·
add ·a dismal finish to the Deacs' I! siVe weakness. However, 1n depreviously successful spring tour. •
Pascal Renn and Steve Wrenn, Wake's two top pitchers, had little success against the hardhitting South Carolina clubs; Renn was knoc-ked out in the sixth inning <by the Gamecocks, and southpaw Wrenn allowed 11 hits and five earned runs in eight innings at Clemson.
Wrenn, Cole Star
Wrenn, who plays first base when he isn't pitching, and center fielder Tommy Cole con-tinued to hit well, but their bats weren't enough ro overcome leads by the opposition in one big i·nning. South Carolina scored seven times in the sixth inning, and Clemson pulled away wHh a four-run seventh,
The wins were the seventh for the Gamecocks and the eighth for the Tigers, and both clubs are undefeated.
-VERNOR PHOTO
COACH STALLINGS
Troughout the Florida State tournament and rthe entire rtrip Cole and W;renn were the outstanding batters. Cole had 17 hits in his first 28 at-bats, including nine consecutive safeties in one streak, and Wrenn blasted six home runs in the fense of 1Jhe ihurlers, it should first eigbt games. be pointed out that the teams
The trip opened with a 6 faced on the road trip are prob· to 12 at Georgia Southern, as a~ly the toughest the Deacs will sophomore Larry Cain threw a play all year. five-hltter in his first varsity For example, Clemson broke start. In the first two tournament numerous school records with a games, Michigan State fell to crushing 27 to 2 win over the the Deacs by scores of 7 to 3 Citadel, and they also defeated and 7 to 1, but then the prob- Duke 11 lbo 0. lems arose. In addition, CoaC!h Jack Stal-
First, Wake ~lew -a four-run lings was taking a long look at lead and lost to host Florida his second-line pUching on the State, 14 :to 12. Then they gave trip, often testing hurlers he up five runs with .two out in the probably wouldn't depend on ninth :inning to lose a 9 :to 8 de- for a c?nference encounter. cision to ·the Spartans in the Despite these early-season final tournament contest. · fla~s, the outlook for the re-
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After journeying northward to m~mder of the year is encourAuburn the Deacs rallied be- a·gmg. The attack did account bind Wrenn's pitching :to beat for better than six runs per Florida Sta·te 4 to 3, but the game, even though the middle fullrnmmg day Auburn ove~- ----------------------~-----------------------------------------------ered them by a score of 12 to 5. The two conference losses then dropped Wake's overall record to four wins and five defeats.
Several problems became apparent in the opening series of games. Early on the tour, the entire lb111tting order contributed to fue attack, enabling the Deacs ·to score plenty of r·uns. Later, however, almost all .the batting punch came from .the middle of the lineup.
At South Carolina, ~orne ::uns 1 by Cole, Wrenn, and pmch·hitter I
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PAGE EIGHT Monday, Aprilll, 1966 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
''A Realistic Goal'' -----------------------
Tate Eyes lst Division
"'JET" JOHNSON shows how to "hit 'em low, hit 'em hard" in spring practice workout.
Jordan Resigns As Deac Track Coach
By RUDY ASHTON STAFF WRITER
Bill Jordan, the dedicated and industrious track coach of Wake Forest College, resrig:ned last week to accept a position at the University of RiC'.hmond a~ aS!Sii.sta.rut profCSISor of physical education.
Jordan, who has served Wake Forest with devotion for 11 years. stated upon res~gnation,
"It is not something I want to do, but something I feel I have an obliga-tion to do for the future benefit of my family."
Jordan further explained that he accepted the offer fer ti:JC position at Richmond, his alma Ends String
mater, because of the greater Ends should be one of the chance for advancemciJ1lt and th:cl BILL JORDAN strongest positions. In addition possibility of returning to gradu- ! . . . . to the five lettermen strength ate school to work for his doc- li.Jercfc-re penruhtmg more 111- and depth will be provided by torale, a pursuit he hasn't had cl!h·idual ossistanee for each run- Bob Brenner, who led the frosh time for as ·a coach. uer. Also, distance running ib-e- with 16 catches for 217 yards,
A succei.Ssor has not yet been i?g his sp·ccialty .. ~.e is excep-~ Rick White and John Menamed to fill Jordan's position, tionally well qualified to under- Queeny. prompting him to say, "I don't stund the mcnital as weH a:s tlhe' The tackle situamon has been know who will be track coach physical difficultres of hilS run- helped by moving Nesbitt from noext year, •bt.it I hope he will be ners. his guard spot to !help Snow
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Y:our Car someone who loves track as I Much Effort Given and Grnnt. Nesbitt, a good bet much as I do. Whoever it is, he for all-star honors, saw some will be working at a great insti- Although Bill Jordan has action as a linebacker last year, ,...--------------------------, tution and wiith a dedicaJted imany fond memorites of Wake but is expected to concentrate group of athletes." ! Forl"St, he has suffered count- on the tackle post Jthis fall. Dan
(AFTER 6:30P.M.)
In 1955 Jordan came to Wake I less setb3cks and disappoint- Ferezan and Bill Graves, l!ittle Forest as head track coach, ments in building a solid track used reserves last year, and and proceeded to develop a re- and field program. Even after sophs Bill Scheib, Howard Stanspeotable track arnd field pro- '!the construction of •the track in back, ·nick Critz and Hank gram. He did not have a track 1958, it has taken much time Hames ~ve this position pretty for his team until 1958, and be-l and effort to put it in its pre- good depth. fore that time hi:s boys ran any- s-ent condition. Both the center and guard where they could find space. I Another problem whJch has posiuons slhould be in capable Since 1tha.t time, and mostly I hampered Jordan over the years hands. There are two lettermen. ~ough the efforts of the deter-1 has been his lack of funds. aJt each position, and both have mmed coaoh, the Deacon tra~k I Working on Oll!ly two scholar- some good non-lettermen and bias become orue of the best m ships for both croSIS-counJtry and soph Jimmy Clack are the top the ACC.
11 track, the only rewards the men behind Oplinger at center.
Excellent Cindermen great majority of the team gets Dick Hessler and Bob Perretz,
11s personal satisfaction. Consi- who saw some Varsilty play last
During ibis years at Wake Fo- dering the long hours of hard year, and soph Mike Blasiole rest, Jordan has coached many j work required ood 11he scant re- back up Hensley and McMurry excellent cindermen m both cognition received in track and rut the guard spots. cross-country and track. First ! field, it is no wonder that many Tate still hasn't decided whetwas Dave Turner, school record: good a!Jhleotes have ltttle desire her he'll start the season with holdler in the mile aJt 4:12.5 and ·to participate. platoon are not. Over the past unofficially in the half mile at I Since he first came to Wake two se1asons most of the pl~zyers 1:52.8. Forest in 1955, it has been a have gone both ways with the
Then there was Jack Ladner 1Iong, uphill struggle for Coach only specialists being lineback;;he javelin thrower and Jordan's i Bill Jordan •to build a respect- ers and defensive backs. only ACC champion. At present, I able cross-country and track The Deacs have one new Jordan :is coaching such poten- program. All of the accomplish- coach in Bob Lord, who takes tial standouts as distant runners ments in these areas are due to 1 over as defensive line coach reAl Viehman and. John Hodson, his initiative, dedication, and placing Ken Karr, who'll handand' high· juin):)er and hurdler determination to improve the le ·the freshmen. Tom Fitch. sports he loves. Wake Forest The schedule includ€5 six
Jordan has ihad the most sue- College will not soon forget this ACC foes along with Virginda cess with cross-country because man who best exemplifies Wake Tech, Auburn, Memphls State it only requires 10 to 12 men, Forest track, and Florida State.
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Richard F1a Tenn., will tal ship of The St Woolley next f of Aiken, s. Carol Claxon in Old Gold position. Fay Point will fol ·'SS editor of tl
Business n Winn Boileau ' of The Studer Rome, Ga., of Boone of Rol Howler.
All the new are rising se: don, who is o;;
They were student memb. Board and ap] culty publicat
Miss Prid~ science major editor of Old < year's !feature
Fallis, who i~ lish, has work· since its resw ago and is DO\
Miss Setzer, jor, is now m the Howler.
Boileau and •··lfm·;n.,. in psycl:
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