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' ,, SGO By BETSY GILPIN Assistant Editor icials at Odds Over Constitution proposals should stand until the legislature voted otherwise. v. The proposed new student body constitution 1 ·was presented to Student Government at a "It's basically a matter of order," she explained. "However, uie committee should not have the authority to rewrite the article unless the whole legislature recommends it. If they're going to rewrite the whole thing we should just have given the committees the articles and told them to write it." committees following a gener&l outline provided by Ms. Daniels. She explained that the statues are a part of the constitution itself. However, the legislature can change the statutes while the student body must approve also have the right to appoint committees within the legislature when necessary for legislative actions. No provision Is made in the new constitution for assumption of the presidency if a vacancy occurs. The new legislature would have the power to charter student organizations and to supervise the selection of students to faculty and trustee working committees. The old constitution does not specifically define the student duties and powers of the legislature. recommendations and decisions concerning charters. student price reductions, com- munity projects, and publicity. The legislative branch would also include advisory committees for athletics, food services, health services, and psychological services. 1 special called session Monday night amidst i(' considerable disagreement concerning the constitutional changes. . The new constitution is shorter than the old one and includes significant changes in the executive and legislative articles. It also defines the role of students in university govermnent. The secretary would serve as chairman of the Secretariate Committee in addition to the old responsibilities of this position. The treasurer would serve as chairman of the Student Budget Advisory Committee. The proposed constitution also defines six standing legislative committees, including the Committee on Committees which would recommend student faculty and Board ·of Trustee working committees to the Legislature. It would slso have the authority to replace any student who did not fulfill his ·!1.' to make changes in the : The constitution was sent to the committees concentrated study. Ms. Danie1s said she fee1s the articles should represent the wishes of the entire legislature Instead of only a smilll group. Under the new constitution the secretary and treasurer wonld also have voting !l'ivileges. The new constitution would provide for the election of students from the sophomore, junior, and senior classes to the Student lJfe Committee. These students would represent any strictly class business. Three at-large Student Life Committee representatives would be elected, and they would also serve as legislators. President Marylou Cooper said she feels that the committees do not have the right to make changes in the original proposals. -.On the other hand, Vice Frank Dew said, "As I interpret the by-laws, the committees do have the right to change the articles they are studying." The new constitution Is complete except for the . article concerning the judicial system and for the statutes. Ms. Daniels said the judicial article would be ready for presen- tation within two weeks. The executive branch would include the offices of president, speaker of the house, secretary and treasurer. In addition, it would include two executive committees. The two executive committees would In· elude a cabinet made up of the chairman of standing committees and a Secretariate responsible for all clerical work. duties. . · Dew told the legislators that the bills would stand in the form which the committees approved but said their reports should also include ·the original form. · Bunz Daniels, chairman of the· constitution committee, suggested that the committee show recommended changes, but she added . . that she felt the original constitutional The article has been slowed by recent question concerning the effectiveness of the honor code. "However there have been some trials so maybe it is starting to work," she said. She also blamed the controversy con- cerning the minimum and maximum penalties for the judicial section for the delay. The president's authority would be ex- tended to include membership on several committees. The president would serve as chairman of the Cabinet and the Committee on Committees. This officer would also serve in a non-voting capacity 'on the Student Budget Advisory Committee and the Board of Trustees. The legislature would be reduced by twenty members under the new constitution. Unlike the old constitution, which provides for representatives from each of the ten fraternities in addition to independent representatives, the new constitution would provide representatives-at-large elected by residence houses instead of fraternities or class. The Student Budget Advisory Committee would also be a standing committee and would make recommendations about the student activities fee. With the leltislature's approval, the committee would devise and recommend a budget for the dispensation of the fee to the University Budget Committee. The Student Govermnent treasurer would chair the cormnittee, which would also in- clude a representative from each class, three appointed members, and the president. The Committee on Committees would select one voting and one non-voting student to serve on eleven faculty committees, including Admission, Athletics, Buildings and Grounds, College Review Board, Curriculum, Executive, Honors, Library Planning, Publications, Scholarship, anL42 .. .. " Education. Six students would also be cu ... to serve on the Traffic Commission. ' " ' .. ! II I I .l I. The statutes will be written bv different The speaker of -the house would serve in virtually the same capacity as the vice- p-esident under the old constitution. He would Other standing committees would make The students would introduce Student Continued on Page 2 TODAY INSIDE *GRAFFITI *FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT VOLWWE LVI n ·.·. . . ' an Wake Forest U:idverslty, Winston.salem, North caroUna, Friday, November 3, 1972 Open Honor Council Trial at TODA V EDITORIALLY *A SHOT IN THE ARM *ANOTHER QUESTION NO. 9. Freshman Acquitted of Oteating Otarge By BETSY GILPIN Assistant Editor After deliberating about fifteen minutes, a jury acquitted Dexter CUmberlander of a September 29 cheating charge in the year's first Honor Council trial Monday night. About forty students attended the open trial for Cumberlander, a freshman from East Orange, N.J., who was charged with cheating on a test given in Religion 112. Dr. Robert Dyer, assistant dean of the college and associate professor of religion, teaches the course but was ab- sent on the day of the test. Cumberlander was defended btCamille RIISSell, a -sei:iiot from Wlnston.salem. Assistant Dean of the College · Toby Hale, who administered the test in Dyer's absence, was the first witness called by prosecuting attorney Lindsay ,..,.,'h rr. d •t [ E Yancey. Hale said he observed .J.. J e .l ra l zona -- r • • • possible cheating on three separate occasions. defendant's yellow notebook when Hale returned to the room. "caught my eye." He said the Miss Russell asked Alexander notebook appeared to be in a why he chose to tell Hale of the position perpendicular to the incident instead of telling floor "where it would have been Cumberlander that be had seen possible to see it." him cheating. Hale said the other two in- "I was pretty sure he'd seen stances occurred when he what happened," he replied, returned to the room on two "and I didn't want him to think I separate occasions. The first was part of it." time, he said, he had gone to Q: Why didn't you approach Check the other room. Dexter? Why didn't you tell him, "When 1 returned I Jl&W the "You were cheating, turn student turned in his seat." yourself in"? ''The second time the same A: As part of the honor code my appearance met my eye. The responsibility is to talk to Dexter student was turned in his seat,'' first but I chose to speak to Dean he said. Hale and Dean Dyer first." According to Hale's testimony, Bill ·Stewart, Honor Council tiie deferidailt was in the seeond chairman, attempted to clarify seat from the back in the second , the line of questioningfor the jury row. ·by reading subsection "b" of the When cross-examined by Miss honor system as stated in the Russell, Hale said he could not constitution: "The Honor System tell if the notebook in question provides that it is the duty and was open. He also said that he did responsibility of every individual not observe any talking on the stUdent, not only to obey and part of the defendant. uphold the system himself, but Q: All you saw was Dexter upon seeing someone else vio]flte turned around? the spirit of the system to con- class with Robert Wright, a friend, and that everyone had sat a seat apart. He maintained that the first time he had turned around after receiving the test he had said to Wright, "This test is a bitch." He denied talking to Alexander during the test. Cumberlander said that he had his notebook in his lap when the test was passed out and that it was not open. "I know how I bad my notebook-it's my notebook .... The notebook was clean." Miss Russell then submitted Alexander's and Cumberlander's tests as evidence. Cumberlander made a 17, which is failing, and Alexander made an "A" on the test. Comparing the two pages in question she pointed out that Cumberlander's last page was blank and Alexander's was complete: the defendant's second page had a large number of mistakes and Alexander's did not. The prosecution maintained that CUmberlander was unable to read the writing on the paper. Yancey referred to the last mimeographed page and com- pared a drawing which appeared on the tests. of both students. "I submit he could not make out the writing. The drawings are identical." "It is not clear if the first time Tom was on the first or second page," he continued, and then compared the first page of both tests. "The first two answers are identical and the writing then becomes much smaller." The defense requested the tape be replayed to Alexander's first statement of where he was when the alleged incident OC· curred. Alexander said, "I think I was on the second page - I'm not positive" concerning the first time and ...... "I was working on the· back of the teat-on the discussion," concerning the second incident. In closing, Yancey emphasized that the honor code includes attempting to cheat as a violation. He submitted the testimony of Hale and Alexander as positive evidence. ""There is only one possible conclusion," he said. Miss Russell maintained that her client was the "victim of circumstance." She pointed to the fact that Hale had not seen Cumberlander's notebook open and that Alexander did not ap- proach the defendant himself. "If he can say it to someone else, it's his responsibility to tell Dexter," she said. "All that's been shown Is be had his notebook on his desk and that be put it down as soon as tbe test was passed out. He could have turned around for a number of reasons. We have all been caught in this circumstance." After the jury returned, Stewart read the verdict and dismissed the defendant. This year's homecoming queen, Debbie French, gets a Hale said the first instance took hug instead of the traditional kiss from this year's plac.e he returned to RO?Jil Student Government president, Marylou Cooper, at last :r Saturday's football game. Photo ev Hiestv the test. He told the court the '6-10 Under Observation" A: Yes. front the violator by asking him Q: Is there any other reason he to report himself to the proper could have been turned around? authorities ..... " A: Within the whole realm of In response· to further possibilities there could have questioning by the defense, been another reason, but if he Alexander told the court that he was sick or if he needed to be was not afraid to approach excused, 1 hope be would have Cumberlander but "I just chose asked me as the acting professor. to tell Dean Hale." Committee Named to Study Campus Animal Problem ·Marijuana Arrest Made Q: Do you think he could have Re-examined by Yancey, been picking up his pencil? Alexander said he felt the A: Yes, I guess he could have. defendant knew he was cheating Yancey then called Tom and should turn himself in. He Alexander, who turned Cum· said he did not feel obligated to berlander in to Hale. Alexander tell CUmberlander because it was said the defendant, who was "so obvious." Student Govermnent President Marylou Cooper told the SG legislature meeting Wednesday night that she has been appointed to a committee which will study the problem of animals on campus. A Wake Forest student was charged Saturday night with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, following the university's first campus drug arrest. The student, whose name is being withheld on request of the arresting officer, was arrested in his dormitory room at around 11:30 Saturday night. The county narcotics detective who made the arrest said he had obtained two search warrents for dormitory rooms that night, but that only one warrent was served because the occuparits of the other room were out. He said he and three other plain-clothes policemen searched the one room, after being admitted by the student, and found in a desk drawer eight hand-rolled cigarettes of a substance tests "showed to be marijuana," plus a very small additional amount of the same substance. The student was released on a verbal · agreement to appear at a hearing Nov. 15. The officer said "six to ten" students are currently under observation by the county narcotics division. · sitting in front of him, had turned Miss Russell recalled Hale as around to him twice during the the first witness for the defense. test. Hale said that he did not see the defendant hand his paper to "The first time he turned and Alexander, adding that he was mumbled something and sort of out of the room. ·looked down." Alexander said the Cumberlander himself then second time Cumberlander took the witness stand. He said handed him his test and "aSked that, contrary to ·Dean Hale's me to fill it out, and I said I testimony, he was in the third couldn't do that." seat from the back." "I ought to He added that both times the know where I was sitting." defendant turned back around He said he had entered the "It has become a real problem in Reynolds and in the Pit," she said, explai!llng that -university Vice President Gene Lucas has expressed a desire to try to solve the problem before setting a definite rule. "None of us on the committee want to get riif of all the animals," Ms. Cooper added. "However, something must be Faculty Feelings on WT Paradoxical professors felt this to be the case, poorer students. "Courses which cent reported meeting less than same number said they had at- By JOHN ELLIOTr Editor . with nine per cent disagreeing. cost are not in the democratic once a day but more than twice a tempted to use instructional Paradoxically, however, 70 per tradition of _Wake Forest," one while virtually all the rest methods more applicable to a cent of the respondents thought professor 88ld. "They should not sa1d they had met their classes month-long course than to a the winter term had been a be offered unless financial aid is four to eight times during the regular semester course. vacation period for many available." · winter term. The "aspects of campus life" done." She cited the problem of cleaning and health factors as main causes of concern. Lucas, who was unable to at- tend the meeting, will present his plan at the meeting next week. - In other action at the meeting, which was called primarily for p-esentation of the proposed new SG constitution (see story above), legislators approved an addition to the by-laws requiring . that the sponsor of a bill or a person representing him be present at the committee heariilg or the bill would be tabled. Spencer Watts presented a bill which would provide for an all- night study area. The bill was referred to the physical facilities committee for further con- sideration. Andy Mann recommended that the Student Govermnent advise the College Union to ban block seating arrangements at all CU concerts. His resolution stated, "College Union concerts are for the cultural enjoyment, educational benefit, and of the Wake Forest community'and are funded by the student activity fee. All members of the com- munity should be treated equally and justly in respect to seating at the concerts." The bill was sent to the com- mittee on student services for study. A bill which would provide that two file boxes be set up at the information desk in Reynolda Hall with information concerning transportation for both drivers and riders was introduced by Bunz Daniels. The bill was sent to the committee on student ser· vices for study. Columnist Anderson (Note: The Curriculum- calendar Evaluation Committee, appointed last year to evaluate the 4-1-!1 system and recommend to the faculty whether It should be continued, has reported to the faculty the results of a questlolliUIIre of faculty mem- bers taken last spring. In a previous article, Old. Gold and Black examined the results of the first section of the questlolllUIJre, which dealt with last fall semester. The following article is an analysis of the second section, dealing with the winter term). professors surveyed last si>ring said they had been enthusiastic about their first winter term course and their students seemed to take the course seriously, almost as many also felt January had been a "vacation period for many students." students. One of those in the Other comments urged closer About an .equal number · which faculty members had majority commented that the screening of students for responded that there should be noticed during the winter term rro situation was about the same as seriousness of purpose and with more consistency among winter were generally negative ac- .l in the regular semester, while a regard to their being good term courses with respect to time cording to those who respo'nded Talk Wednesday While a large maJority of SJB Two students have received formal reprimands from the Student Judicial Board for violations of the regulation banning firecrackers. If another offense occurs In the 1972-73 academic year, the students will have to vacate their dormitory rooms. A copy of the reprimand has been sent to their parents. Eighty-five per cent of the 138 respondents said they had been enthusiastic about the course they offered, although a few reported that their students had dimmed their original en- thusiasm. The largest number of those claiming no enthusiasm was in the science and mathematics, where one professor said he had 16 in- dependent study projects to supervise and another said his department chairman had "rejected three courses I wanted to teach and assigned me to what he wanted done." Another l)rofessor in the same division said, "Courses offered in our department were of a superficial nature." The sciences, however, had the largest percentage of Instructors reporting that their students took the winter term course seriously. Overall, 77 per cent of the p-ofessor among the 18 per cent representatives throughout the and work required ahd that the with several making remarks u; who answered "no" said too world. consistency question was hard to the effect that "the silence was many instructors are afraid One professor felt it was judge. deafening." Some professors students will enjoy learning. "morally reprehensible" for As to the innovative quality of cited a need for more cultural Apparently influencing the students to have to pay for winter term, about three fourths activities, with many noting that answers on the "vacation period" faculty expenses. of the faculty said both their own students seemed bored and question were independent study Half of the respondents felt that and other departments had been unable to use their free time and overseas courses, two areas winter term courses are not as sufficiently innovative in their wisely. which received a great deal of demanding as semester courses, winter term offerings. About the A number of respondents, on criticism. Sixty-five per cent of while ten per cent considered the other hand, said the winter the instructors felt that in- winter term courses more Passports termhadgivenstudentsachance dependent study should be made demanding. A fourth of the to relax from the usual pressures more rigorous, _with many . respondents said the two types and get to know professors specifically urgmg closer are of equal value.. A representative from better. screening of project proposals In a question, fifty per the Forsyth County three-fourths felt that and closer faculty supervision cent 881 d their winter term court will be available most wmter term courses should However, 63 per cent felt that course could n?t have . been w e d n e s d a y a n d to be offered on a pass- independent study should be open taught as effectiyely durmg a fail baslS. As to how many winter to all students. term, wtth 41 per cent Thursday from 2 to 5 term- type courses should be Similar complaints about 8 replymg that the course could p.m. in Room 202 required among the 35¥.1 courses deflcient'Y in academic content have been as effectivetv taneht Reynolda to process required for graduation, 48 appeared in comments on over the period. f cent of the respondents sald A major1ty. (58 per cent) .o passports for students three; 17 per cent, two; 12 per overseas courses, along with those had met wtth going overseas during cent, none; and five per cent, frequent statements that these their wmter term class oncP. nr t four .courses discriminate against more a day. Twenty-three per the winter erm. · Jack Anderson, syndicated columnist who gained nationwide attention for his role in the m controversy, will speak in Wait Chapel Wednesday at 8 p:m. The lecture will be free and open to the public. In the past, Anderson's Washington Merry-Go-Round column helped convict three congressmen for kickbacks, led to the resignation of Eisenhower aide Sherman Adams and helped to discredit Connecticut Senator Thomas J. Dodd for mishandling government funds. Anderson's column also published secret government documents in January, 1972 concerning the U.S. govern- ment's role in the India-Pakistan war. Anderson's speech is sponsored by the CU Lecture committee. JACK ANDERSON

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' ,,

SGO By BETSY GILPIN

Assistant Editor

icials at Odds Over Constitution proposals should stand until the legislature voted otherwise.

v. ~ The proposed new student body constitution

1 ·was presented to Student Government at a

"It's basically a matter of order," she explained. "However, uie committee should not have the authority to rewrite the article unless the whole legislature recommends it. If they're going to rewrite the whole thing we should just have given the committees the articles and told them to write it."

committees following a gener&l outline provided by Ms. Daniels. She explained that the statues are a part of the constitution itself. However, the legislature can change the statutes while the student body must approve

also have the right to appoint committees within the legislature when necessary for legislative actions. No provision Is made in the new constitution for assumption of the presidency if a vacancy occurs.

The new legislature would have the power to charter student organizations and to supervise the selection of students to faculty and trustee working committees. The old constitution does not specifically define the student duties and powers of the legislature.

recommendations and decisions concerning charters. student price reductions, com­munity projects, and publicity.

The legislative branch would also include advisory committees for athletics, food services, health services, and psychological services.

1 special called session Monday night amidst i(' considerable disagreement concerning the

constitutional changes. . The new constitution is shorter than the old

one and includes significant changes in the executive and legislative articles. It also defines the role of students in university govermnent.

The secretary would serve as chairman of the Secretariate Committee in addition to the old responsibilities of this position. The treasurer would serve as chairman of the Student Budget Advisory Committee.

The proposed constitution also defines six standing legislative committees, including the Committee on Committees which would recommend student faculty and Board ·of Trustee working committees to the Legislature. It would slso have the authority to replace any student who did not fulfill his

·!1.' ~:rs~~ommittees to make changes in the : The constitution was sent to the committees f~r concentrated study.

Ms. Danie1s said she fee1s the articles should represent the wishes of the entire legislature Instead of only a smilll group.

Under the new constitution the secretary and treasurer wonld also have voting !l'ivileges.

The new constitution would provide for the election of students from the sophomore, junior, and senior classes to the Student lJfe Committee. These students would represent any strictly class business. Three at-large Student Life Committee representatives would be elected, and they would also serve as legislators.

President Marylou Cooper said she feels that the committees do not have the right to make changes in the original proposals. -.On the other hand, Vice Presiden~ Frank

Dew said, "As I interpret the by-laws, the committees do have the right to change the articles they are studying."

The new constitution Is complete except for the . article concerning the judicial system and for the statutes. Ms. Daniels said the judicial article would be ready for presen­tation within two weeks.

The executive branch would include the offices of president, speaker of the house, secretary and treasurer. In addition, it would include two executive committees.

The two executive committees would In· elude a cabinet made up of the chairman of standing committees and a Secretariate responsible for all clerical work.

duties. .

I~. · Dew told the legislators that the bills would

stand in the form which the committees approved but said their reports should also include ·the original form. · Bunz Daniels, chairman of the· constitution

committee, suggested that the committee show recommended changes, but she added

. . that she felt the original constitutional

The article has been slowed by recent question concerning the effectiveness of the honor code. "However there have been some trials so maybe it is starting to work," she said.

She also blamed the controversy con­cerning the minimum and maximum penalties for the judicial section for the delay.

The president's authority would be ex­tended to include membership on several committees. The president would serve as chairman of the Cabinet and the Committee on Committees. This officer would also serve in a non-voting capacity 'on the Student Budget Advisory Committee and the Board of Trustees.

The legislature would be reduced by twenty members under the new constitution. Unlike the old constitution, which provides for representatives from each of the ten fraternities in addition to independent representatives, the new constitution would provide representatives-at-large elected by residence houses instead of fraternities or class.

The Student Budget Advisory Committee would also be a standing committee and would make recommendations about the student activities fee. With the leltislature's approval, the committee would devise and recommend a budget for the dispensation of the fee to the University Budget Committee. The Student Govermnent treasurer would chair the cormnittee, which would also in­clude a representative from each class, three appointed members, and the president.

The Committee on Committees would select one voting and one non-voting student to serve on eleven faculty committees, including Admission, Athletics, Buildings and Grounds, College Review Board, Curriculum, Executive, Honors, Library Planning, Publications, Scholarship, anL42 .. ~ .. " Education. Six students would also be cu ... ~. to serve on the Traffic Commission.

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The statutes will be written bv different

The speaker of -the house would serve in virtually the same capacity as the vice­p-esident under the old constitution. He would Other standing committees would make

The students would introduce Student Continued on Page 2

TODAY INSIDE

*GRAFFITI

*FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT

VOLWWE LVI

n·.·. . . ' an

Wake Forest U:idverslty, Winston.salem, North caroUna, Friday, November 3, 1972

Open Honor Council Trial

at TODA V EDITORIALLY

*A SHOT IN THE ARM

*ANOTHER QUESTION

NO. 9.

Freshman Acquitted of Oteating Otarge By BETSY GILPIN

Assistant Editor

After deliberating about fifteen minutes, a jury acquitted Dexter CUmberlander of a September 29 cheating charge in the year's first Honor Council trial Monday night.

About forty students attended the open trial for Cumberlander, a freshman from East Orange, N.J., who was charged with cheating on a test given in Religion 112. Dr. Robert Dyer, assistant dean of the college and associate professor of religion, teaches the course but was ab­sent on the day of the test.

Cumberlander was defended btCamille RIISSell, a -sei:iiot from Wlnston.salem.

Assistant Dean of the College · Toby Hale, who administered the test in Dyer's absence, was the first witness called by prosecuting attorney Lindsay ,..,.,'h rr. d •t • [ E Yancey. Hale said he observed

.J.. J e .l r a l zona - - r • • • possible cheating on three separate occasions.

defendant's yellow notebook when Hale returned to the room. "caught my eye." He said the Miss Russell asked Alexander notebook appeared to be in a why he chose to tell Hale of the position perpendicular to the incident instead of telling floor "where it would have been Cumberlander that be had seen possible to see it." him cheating.

Hale said the other two in- "I was pretty sure he'd seen stances occurred when he what happened," he replied, returned to the room on two "and I didn't want him to think I separate occasions. The first was part of it." time, he said, he had gone to Q: Why didn't you approach Check the other tes~g room. Dexter? Why didn't you tell him, "When 1 returned I Jl&W the "You were cheating, turn student turned in his seat." yourself in"?

''The second time the same A: As part of the honor code my appearance met my eye. The responsibility is to talk to Dexter student was turned in his seat,'' first but I chose to speak to Dean he said. Hale and Dean Dyer first."

According to Hale's testimony, Bill ·Stewart, Honor Council tiie deferidailt was in the seeond chairman, attempted to clarify seat from the back in the second , the line of questioningfor the jury row. ·by reading subsection "b" of the

When cross-examined by Miss honor system as stated in the Russell, Hale said he could not constitution: "The Honor System tell if the notebook in question provides that it is the duty and was open. He also said that he did responsibility of every individual not observe any talking on the stUdent, not only to obey and part of the defendant. uphold the system himself, but

Q: All you saw was Dexter upon seeing someone else vio]flte turned around? the spirit of the system to con-

class with Robert Wright, a friend, and that everyone had sat a seat apart. He maintained that the first time he had turned around after receiving the test he had said to Wright, "This test is a bitch." He denied talking to Alexander during the test.

Cumberlander said that he had his notebook in his lap when the test was passed out and that it was not open. "I know how I bad my notebook-it's my notebook .... The notebook was clean."

Miss Russell then submitted Alexander's and Cumberlander's tests as evidence. Cumberlander made a 17, which is failing, and Alexander made an "A" on the test.

Comparing the two pages in question she pointed out that Cumberlander's last page was blank and Alexander's was complete: the defendant's second page had a large number of mistakes and Alexander's did not.

The prosecution maintained that CUmberlander was unable to read the writing on the paper. Yancey referred to the last mimeographed page and com­pared a drawing which appeared on the tests. of both students. "I submit he could not make out the writing. The drawings are identical."

"It is not clear if the first time Tom was on the first or second page," he continued, and then compared the first page of both tests. "The first two answers are identical and the writing then becomes much smaller."

The defense requested the tape be replayed to ch~k Alexander's first statement of where he was when the alleged incident OC· curred. Alexander said, "I think I was on the second page - I'm not positive" concerning the first time and ...... "I was working on the· back of the teat-on the discussion," concerning the second incident.

In closing, Yancey emphasized that the honor code includes attempting to cheat as a violation. He submitted the testimony of Hale and Alexander as positive evidence. ""There is only one possible conclusion," he said.

Miss Russell maintained that her client was the "victim of circumstance." She pointed to the fact that Hale had not seen Cumberlander's notebook open and that Alexander did not ap­proach the defendant himself. "If he can say it to someone else, it's his responsibility to tell Dexter," she said.

"All that's been shown Is be had his notebook on his desk and that be put it down as soon as tbe test was passed out. He could have turned around for a number of reasons. We have all been caught in this circumstance."

After the jury returned, Stewart read the verdict and dismissed the defendant.

This year's homecoming queen, Debbie French, gets a Hale said the first instance took hug instead of the traditional kiss from this year's plac.e wh~n he returned to RO?Jil Student Government president, Marylou Cooper, at last :r ~~b~% =thS:.,te;'~~ Saturday's football game. Photo ev Hiestv the test. He told the court the

'6-10 Under Observation"

A: Yes. front the violator by asking him Q: Is there any other reason he to report himself to the proper

could have been turned around? authorities ..... " A: Within the whole realm of In response· to further

possibilities there could have questioning by the defense, been another reason, but if he Alexander told the court that he was sick or if he needed to be was not afraid to approach excused, 1 hope be would have Cumberlander but "I just chose asked me as the acting professor. to tell Dean Hale."

Committee Named to Study Campus Animal Problem

·Marijuana Arrest Made Q: Do you think he could have Re-examined by Yancey,

been picking up his pencil? Alexander said he felt the A: Yes, I guess he could have. defendant knew he was cheating Yancey then called Tom and should turn himself in. He

Alexander, who turned Cum· said he did not feel obligated to berlander in to Hale. Alexander tell CUmberlander because it was said the defendant, who was "so obvious."

Student Govermnent President Marylou Cooper told the SG legislature meeting Wednesday night that she has been appointed to a committee which will study the problem of animals on campus.

A Wake Forest student was charged Saturday night with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, following the university's first campus drug arrest.

The student, whose name is being withheld on request of the arresting officer, was arrested in his dormitory room at around 11:30 Saturday night.

The county narcotics detective who made the arrest said he had obtained two search warrents for dormitory rooms that night, but that only one warrent was served because the

occuparits of the other room were out. He said he and three other plain-clothes

policemen searched the one room, after being admitted by the student, and found in a desk drawer eight hand-rolled cigarettes of a substance tests "showed to be marijuana," plus a very small additional amount of the same substance.

The student was released on a verbal · agreement to appear at a hearing Nov. 15.

The officer said "six to ten" students are currently under observation by the county narcotics division. ·

sitting in front of him, had turned Miss Russell recalled Hale as around to him twice during the the first witness for the defense. test. Hale said that he did not see the

defendant hand his paper to "The first time he turned and Alexander, adding that he was

mumbled something and sort of out of the room. ·looked down." Alexander said the Cumberlander himself then second time Cumberlander took the witness stand. He said handed him his test and "aSked that, contrary to ·Dean Hale's me to fill it out, and I said I testimony, he was in the third couldn't do that." seat from the back." "I ought to

He added that both times the know where I was sitting." defendant turned back around He said he had entered the

"It has become a real problem in Reynolds and in the Pit," she said, explai!llng that -university Vice President Gene Lucas has expressed a desire to try to solve the problem before setting a definite rule.

"None of us on the committee want to get riif of all the animals," Ms. Cooper added. "However, something must be

Faculty Feelings on WT Paradoxical professors felt this to be the case, poorer students. "Courses which cent reported meeting less than same number said they had at-By JOHN ELLIOTr

Editor . with nine per cent disagreeing. cost are not in the democratic once a day but more than twice a tempted to use instructional Paradoxically, however, 70 per tradition of _Wake Forest," one w~ek, while virtually all the rest methods more applicable to a

cent of the respondents thought professor 88ld. "They should not sa1d they had met their classes month-long course than to a the winter term had been a be offered unless financial aid is four to eight times during the regular semester course. vacation period for many available." · winter term. The "aspects of campus life"

done." She cited the problem of cleaning and health factors as main causes of concern.

Lucas, who was unable to at­tend the meeting, will present his plan at the meeting next week.

- In other action at the meeting, which was called primarily for p-esentation of the proposed new SG constitution (see story above), legislators approved an addition to the by-laws requiring . that the sponsor of a bill or a person representing him be present at the committee heariilg or the bill would be tabled.

Spencer Watts presented a bill which would provide for an all­night study area. The bill was referred to the physical facilities committee for further con­sideration.

Andy Mann recommended that the Student Govermnent advise

the College Union to ban block seating arrangements at all CU concerts.

His resolution stated, "College Union concerts are for the cultural enjoyment, educational benefit, and entertainm~nt of the Wake Forest community'and are funded by the student activity fee. All members of the com­munity should be treated equally and justly in respect to seating at the concerts."

The bill was sent to the com­mittee on student services for study.

A bill which would provide that two file boxes be set up at the information desk in Reynolda Hall with information concerning transportation for both drivers and riders was introduced by Bunz Daniels. The bill was sent to the committee on student ser· vices for study.

Columnist Anderson (Note: The Curriculum­calendar Evaluation Committee, appointed last year to evaluate the 4-1-!1 system and recommend to the faculty whether It should be continued, has reported to the faculty the results of a questlolliUIIre of faculty mem­bers taken last spring. In a previous article, Old. Gold and Black examined the results of the first section of the questlolllUIJre, which dealt with last fall semester. The following article is an analysis of the second section, dealing with the winter term).

professors surveyed last si>ring said they had been enthusiastic about their first winter term course and their students seemed to take the course seriously, almost as many also felt January had been a "vacation period for many students."

students. One of those in the Other comments urged closer About an . equal number · which faculty members had majority commented that the screening of students for responded that there should be noticed during the winter term rro situation was about the same as seriousness of purpose and with more consistency among winter were generally negative ac- .l ~ in the regular semester, while a regard to their being good term courses with respect to time cording to those who respo'nded Talk Wednesday

While a large maJority of

SJB Two students have received

formal reprimands from the Student Judicial Board for violations of the regulation banning firecrackers. If another offense occurs In the 1972-73 academic year, the students will have to vacate their dormitory rooms. A copy of the reprimand has been sent to their parents.

Eighty-five per cent of the 138 respondents said they had been enthusiastic about the course they offered, although a few reported that their students had dimmed their original en­thusiasm. The largest number of those claiming no enthusiasm was in the science and mathematics, where one professor said he had 16 in­dependent study projects to supervise and another said his department chairman had "rejected three courses I wanted to teach and assigned me to what he wanted done."

Another l)rofessor in the same division said, "Courses offered in our department were of a superficial nature."

The sciences, however, had the largest percentage of Instructors reporting that their students took the winter term course seriously. Overall, 77 per cent of the

p-ofessor among the 18 per cent representatives throughout the and work required ahd that the with several making remarks u; who answered "no" said too world. consistency question was hard to the effect that "the silence was many instructors are afraid One professor felt it was judge. deafening." Some professors students will enjoy learning. "morally reprehensible" for As to the innovative quality of cited a need for more cultural

Apparently influencing the students to have to pay for winter term, about three fourths activities, with many noting that answers on the "vacation period" faculty expenses. of the faculty said both their own students seemed bored and question were independent study Half of the respondents felt that and other departments had been unable to use their free time and overseas courses, two areas winter term courses are not as sufficiently innovative in their wisely. which received a great deal of demanding as semester courses, winter term offerings. About the A number of respondents, on criticism. Sixty-five per cent of while ten per cent considered the other hand, said the winter the instructors felt that in- winter term courses more Passports termhadgivenstudentsachance dependent study should be made demanding. A fourth of the to relax from the usual pressures more rigorous, _with many . respondents said the two types and get to know professors specifically urgmg closer are of equal value.. A representative from better. screening of project proposals In a r~lated question, fifty per the Forsyth County Abou~ three-fourths felt that and closer faculty supervision cent 881d their winter term court will be available most wmter term courses should However, 63 per cent felt that course could n?t have . been w e d n e s d a y a n d CO!!tinu~ to be offered on a pass-independent study should be open taught as effectiyely durmg a fail baslS. As to how many winter to all students. seme~ter term, wtth 41 per cent Thursday from 2 to 5 term- type courses should be

Similar complaints about 8 replymg that the course could p.m. in Room 202 required among the 35¥.1 courses deflcient'Y in academic content have been as effectivetv taneht Reynolda to process required for graduation, 48 ~r appeared in comments on over the lo~ger period. f cent of the respondents sald

A major1ty. (58 per cent) . o passports for students three; 17 per cent, two; 12 per overseas courses, along with those r~sponding had met wtth going overseas during cent, none; and five per cent, frequent statements that these their wmter term class oncP. nr t four

. courses discriminate against more a day. Twenty-three per the winter erm. ·

Jack Anderson, syndicated columnist who gained nationwide attention for his role in the m controversy, will speak in Wait Chapel Wednesday at 8 p:m. The lecture will be free and open to the public.

In the past, Anderson's Washington Merry-Go-Round column helped convict three congressmen for kickbacks, led to the resignation of Eisenhower aide Sherman Adams and helped to discredit Connecticut Senator Thomas J. Dodd for mishandling government funds.

Anderson's column also published secret government documents in January, 1972 concerning the U.S. govern­ment's role in the India-Pakistan war.

Anderson's speech is sponsored by the CU Lecture committee. JACK ANDERSON

PAGE TWO Friday, November 3, OLD GOLD

For Your Convenience

IN BY 9: A.M. READY BY 5: P.M.

Deans Warn of Academic Suspensions By JIM APPLE

Staff Writer

AC'aclemir irrt>spoMil>ility, which is reflected by a student's excessive absences from class or by his continual failure to complete assignments, can result in inunediate suspension from the tmiversity, according to Dean of the College Thomas Mullen.

He said students need to be reminded of their academic responsibility even though the students' obligations are set forth in the catalog. "We in the Dean's

office and the executive com­mittee need to do all that we can to see that students understand these obligation," he said.

No Effort To Work "I think it would be fair to say

that neither the executiye coaunittee nor the faculty m general believes that it is right for a student to stay in school when he is making no apparent effort to do satisfactory academic work," he contended.

However when a student begins to f~ter, Mullen said the

'Like Your Napkins'

Dean's office wants to find our .. It there is some circumstance that necessitated this lack of work or lack of attendance on the part of the student." He said where there is illness or other uncontrollable problems, an effort is made to find some kind of accommodation between the student and the university.

If a student is having problems beyond his control, he may be allowed to drop out of school or to drop out of certain courses, without penalty. Also, the professor might be asked to

assign an "incomplete" in order to allow work to be made up later, Mullen said.

Mullen said that a student who is not going to class or completing assignments because he has no "active sense of purpose" should also go to his advisor or to the Dean's office and talk about his situation before it gets to a point where it cannot be corrected.

Mid Year Suspension

more extreme than it has been for a long time."

In Mullen's judgment, "there is no evidence that this policy has created a great deal of tension among students." He said that others on campus have given the same appraisal.

"It is not the intention to build anxiety among students. The executive committee wishes to let students know they must function as students to continue in college," he ·declared.

When 25 students were Also, last year's mid-year suspended last winter for suspensions caused some faculty academic irresponsibility, there members to think that there was were also others suspended who a sudden change (If policy. But

cording to Mullen. However, sometimes after working or staying out for a while a student matures and is allowed to re- ' enter, he addep. !

Dr. Robert Dyer, asilociafe 1

\. dean of the college, indicated that ~ there is a difference in academic .~ t failure and academic ) irresponsibility. "We are harder on the one who is irresponsible/' he said. ·

Dyer. added ~at a stude~t w~_o is sincerely trying but fails wi!J not be suspended at mid~year.

Serious Students

Pit· Gathering Suggestions appealed to the executive Mullen said that an already- In contrast with the problem of committee and were placed on existing policy was just being academic irresponsibility, Dyer )ll"obation. . more rigorously implemented. noted that "students are now

These mid-year suspeDSlons Mullen said that he could think more serious than those we had came as a mild shock to the of no faculty members who mi~t four or five years ago. The student body because there had be against any academ1c percentage on the dean's list is up

By ANNE DENSON Staff Writer

"I want to know why you don't put any lemons on the condiment counter outside the serving area. P.S. I like your napkins."

'!'his complaint, written on a paper napkin, is typical of those put in the suggestion box in the Pit, according to Knox White, chairman of the Dining Services Committee.

The committee was established this year to help the students relay their complaints to ARA Food Services. White, said that "every comment put in the suggestion box will get back to Slater."

He added that it is intended to be more than the usual suggestion box since responses to many of the complaints will be posted on the bulletin board behind the box.

The committee is con· centrating on providing a vari~ty of ways of fixing the food. White noted "the students are tired of the same thing fixed the same way all the time."

The committee will distribute another survey sheet in the near future. These surveys will go through a computer and the group will compile them to determine student preferences. Pictures of the management posted in the Pit will identify them so students can take

complaints to them personally. Slater has also reached an

agreement with the College uiuon tO conuDue the present system of operation of the snack _ shop. Slater will be in charge of the food, while CU will take care of the other aspects such as music and facilities.

According to Manny Cunard, director of the College Union, this decision stemmed from the fact that it is easier for Slater to take care of the food. At one ~e. it was suggested that CU take charge of the entire operation.

Some of the suggestions for the snack shop include a greater variety of food and improved methods of service. The com­mittee has placed emphasis on both these problems, but, White said, "The snack shop is not intended to be a full-time restaurant. Many of the suggestions indicate the students want it to be another Pit."

One of the main problems in the snack shop is the lack of space and the unwise use of the space available, according to Cunard. This limits severely the variety of food and the speed of service, he said.

The committee has in­vestigated other cafeteria systems such as the K and W to get ideas for innprove01ents. David Harris, one of the mem­bers, represented Wake Forest at a meeting ~ ~ the schools that

A It

been so few of this type in the suspension. and the percentage on the use Slater's food service, October past. problem list is down," he said. 17. But Mullen said at the time, Try Another School He attributed this to the win-

White said that the committee "The evidence of students not ding down of the Vietnam war is still open for new members and going to class, not talking . to Of those students suspended, which had forced male students interested persons should contact &rofessors, not doing anything many are advised to try another into college who were really not him. was probably more obvious and school and do not return, ac- interested in learning.

~li~.W.~.,

~l1l~m WFDD Thi. s Week ~lll~lll M $ I m Friday, November 3

5:00 PM ALL THINGS CON· SIDERED

6:00 PM MUSIC AT SUNSET • Gershwin: Porgy & .Bess: A Symphonic Picture; Mozart: Sonata inC; Franck: Sonata in A maj. for Violin & Piano; Sibelius: Night Ride & Sunrise; Mozart: Horn Concerto No. 3 in E flat min.; Ohana: Concerto for Guitar & Orchestra.

7:55 PM ARTS FEATURE 8:00 PM EVENING CONCERT -

Haydn: Symphony No. ~; Hindemith: Symphomc Metamorphosis of themes of Carl von Weber; Mendelssohn: Trio No. 2 in C min., Op 66; Mozart: Symphony No. 34 in C maj.; Liadov: Baba-Yaga, The Enchanted · Lake, Kikimora.

10:00 PM RADIO SMITHSONIAN 10:30 PM JAZZ REVISITED 11:00 PM DEACONUGHT Keith

Young

Saturday, November 4

2:00 PM SATURDAY OPERA MATINEE - Tristan and Isolde-( Wagner) . .

6:00 PM MUSIC AT _SUNSET -Brahms: Piano Quintet in F min., Op. 34; Copland: Two Pieces for String Orchestra.

6:55 PM ARTS FEATURE 7:00 PM DUTCH SOLOISTS 7:30PM BRAVO! BRA VA! 8:30 PM MUSIC FROM

ROCHESTER 9:30PM EVENING CONCERT·

Gabrieli: Eleven Canzons & Two Sonatas; Bach Seven Partitas in F min.

10:30 PM NOCTURNE 11:00 PM DEACONLIGHT Keith

Young & Jon Hale

Sunday, November 5

11:110 AM WAKE FOREST BAPTIST CHURCH 12:30 PM AUDITORIUM ORGAN

CONCERT 1:00 PM CONCERT OF THE

WEEK - The Academy National Youth Orchestra, Willis Bennett & Eugene Kassman, pianists; Maurice Peress, conductor. Monteverdi, Penderecki, Mozart, Berlioz. Beverly Sills is the featured soloist.

3:110 PM COMPOSER'S FORUM 4:00 PM COLLECTOR'S COR­

NER - Czerny: Variations for Piano & Orchestra; Men­delssohn: Fingal's ·cave Overture; Scriabin: Poeme Satanique, Op: 36; Prokofiev:

Monday, November 6

7:00 AM RENAISSANCE Bill Beery

1:00 PM CONCERT HALL • Shostokovich: Symphony No. 10 in E miil., Op. 93; Schum11nn: Synlphonic Etudesi'kodaly: Variations on a Hungarian Folk Song; Bartok; Concerto No. 1; Beethoven: Grosse Fugue in B flat Illaj., Op. 133; Puccini: Arias from "La Boheme" and "Turandot"; Bach: Italian Concerto in F maj.; Grieg: Sonata No. 3 in C min.

4:55 PM METROCAST 5:00 PM ALL TIDNGS CON­

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6:00PM MUSIC AT SUNSET­Selections fronl Carnuna Bur ana; Haydn: Sum phony No. 93; Beethoven: Piano Trio inC min.; Mozart: Quartet No. 17 in B flat maj.;

7:50 PM FOCUSING ON THE ARTS

8:00 PM GAMUT - Benjamin Britten: War Requiem.

10:00 PM REYNOLDA HALL LECTURE - NPR Special:

· Every Four Years 11:00 PM DEACONLIGHT Jay

Banks Tuesday, November 7 Ten scenes from the Romeo & Juliet Ballet; Schubert: Music from Die Zauberharfe.

6:00PM MUSIC AT SUNSET­Ives: String Quartet No. 2; Nielsen: Three Piano Pieces, Op. 59; R. Strauss: Cello Sonata in F, Op. 6; Men­delssohn: Piano Concerto in A flat maj. for Two Pianos &. Orchestra; Bach: Grosse Fugue in B flat maj., Op. 133.

8:00PM MORE FUN WITH THE SCHERZO

8:30 PM SHOWCASE Winston­Salem Symphony Concert of Oct. 10 •. · · ·

9:30 PM EVENING CONCERT -Beethoven: Violin Concerto in D. Oo. 61.

10:30 PM NOCTURNE 11:00 PM DEACONLIGHT Bill

Beery 8:00PM EVENING CONCERT -

Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No.2 in Cmin.; Handel: Organ Concerto No. 1 in B flat, Op. 7; Kachaturian: Armenian Dances; Borodin: Overture to Prince Igor and March from Prince Igor; Gliere: Russian Sailors Dance; Shostakovich: Polka from "The Age of Gold"; Batok: Piano Concerto No. 3.

10:00 PM FIRING LINE 11:00 PM DEACONLIGHT Wally

Boyd 7:00 AM RENAISSANCE Joe

Rappoport & Jim Tindall 1:00 PM CONCERT HAl;~ . -

Strauss: Highlights from D1e Fledermaus; Poulenc: Sonata for Two Pianos; Debussy: Quartet in G min., Op. 10; Milhaud: Suite Provencale;

Prokofiev: Symphony No. 6; Handel: Oboe Concerti-No. 2 in B flat maj. & No. 3 in G min.; Bartok: Quartet No. 1 in A min., Op. 7; Franck: Sum-. phonic Variations.

4:55 PM TOPIC: _NORTH CAROLINA

5:00 PM ALL THINGS CON· SIDERED

6:00PM MUSIC AT SUNSET­Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 3; Brahms: Quartet in C min; Haydn: Symphony No. 83 in G min.; Germiniani: Con­certo Grosso No. 1 in D maj. & No. 2 in D min.; Bach: Preludes & Fugues in D maj., G maj. & E min.

7:55 PM ARTS FEATURE 8:00PM EVENING CONCERT­

Placido Domingo sings Romantic Arias; William Schuman: A Song of Orpheus; Bondon: Concerto de Mars for Guitar & Orchestra.

10:00 PM SPECIAL OF THE WEEK.

10:30 PM SHOWCASE V

CLASSICAL

11:00 PM DEACONLIGHT Drew Joyce

. Wednesday, November 8

7:00 AM RENAISSANCE Keith Young

1:00 PM CONCERT HALL -Johann Strauss: Polkas, Waltzes, Quadrille; Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde; Bach: PartitaNo.2inCmin.; Haydn: Concerto in C; Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 2; Scarlatti: Sonatas inC maj., in E maj., in E min., in D Illaj., in D min.; Chopin: Piano Sonata No. 2 in B flat maj.

1:30 PM MYTHS AND LEGENDS

1:45 PM MEN AND MOLECULES .

4:55 PM EXPLORING HEALTH 5:00 PM ALL THINGS CON-

SIDERED . 6:00PM MUSIC AT SUNSET -

Tchaikovsky: Francesca da Rimini; Sibelius: Symphony No. 3 in C; Mozart: Rondo in A min; Brahms: Symphony No.3 in F maj., Op. 90; Bach Prelude & Fugue in D.

SG Officials At Odds Continued From Page 1

Government actions to their committees and report business of their committees to the Committee on Committees ..

A student member for each of the Board of Trustees working committees would also be chosen by the Committee on Com-mittees. .

The proposed constitution eliminates the election of class officers although one student from each class would serve in a secretarial position as a member of the legislature. ·

If the constitution is ratified· while the officers are still under direction of the old constitution, they would be allowed ~ CO!D­plete their tenns. The mterim procedures which would define their duties would be automatically excluded when their term ends.

Other changes in the con­stitution include the omission of an oath of office for student government officers, con­densation of the judicial branch into one article, the omission of a !»"eamble, and the inclusion of a Bill of Rights.

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SERVING QUALITY FOODS AT POPULAR PRICES

Slnclwlchea Lunclln •• Sttlkl 7 YlrletleG of .. IIICIICII Se1foocl · lt1J11n Dlshfl Broiled Foocll

I. ~.! :r'J.

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·Wake For1 regularly on ' tower.

unt By CARLA I

StaHV

Evidence that and purpose of tl is obscure to rna apparent in a Chaplain Ed Chr morning in Reyr

The open disc1 · by about 60 studt faculty member! effort by the C8II urge students ar -examine the ho~

The role of th• within the honor of the questions 1

·often. One stude: see how the Ho: much to do l system. Peopl1 students won't c :don't."

Role of

"Their problE derstanding the 1 Council," anoth•

·She added that tl not only judge o

· serve as a cou . students who fell ·cheat.

Someone el stating that, students is a t

"pgychorogical cer Honor Council. ,_ Ken Coley, a

Film . The College Ur the conclusion Browning Retr~ film in its contl musicals, and ar Japanese classic DeTamble Audit

A double fe Browning films tonight at 8 p.m.l most famous ~ "Dracula," and' the following Y• stars Beli I "Freaks" fe Baclanova and 1 freaks.

Tomorrow nil

Howler] Students i11

of the univ :have not : pictures tak · 1973 Howler Monday fron to noon and f

: · 6 p.m. in t . office, R· •neynolda

·~ a p p o'i n t n ·: necessary.

(

For th•

REYNC Reyn•

s owever, tlng or student I to re-

s8oclaf.e lted that ~ademlc ademic 1 harder nsible,"

ent wh.o ails will ~year.

•blemof y, Dyer re now we had :o. The list is up on the te s8id. he win­un war 1tudents ally not

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. . ·. '." . •" .. ,. , . Sex on Laundry Wall

PAGE THREE Friday, Nove~ber 3, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Campus Graffiti Not 'Up to Carolina's . ;

' I ! ; (·' l j . ,

'l'

.•

.: 1

1(;, .,.. I ..

· Wake Forest students express their sentiments :regularly on walls and, for the brave ones, on the water :tower. Photo.s by ~appaport

'' .· ... '

By HELEN TYREE Managing Editor

A plain, white surface usually doesn't stay a plain, white sur­face very long if it's In a pubHc place.

People usually find it, and as soon as they do, some of them gather paints, felt markers, Bic bananas, or just plain pencils to express their feelings of the moment on that big, plain, white surface.

Wake Forest has its share of graffiti, but, strangely enough, there ~ some white spaces. Graffiti here seems to be collected In certain areas of the campus, rather than being

' ...

written on any available surface. Admittedly, Wake Forest rest

rooms, particularly In Reynolds Hall, aren't terribly conducive to graffiti (who wants to write on a tiled wall?) and some of the "creative expression" has been painted over (witness the trash cans), but there are places on campus where graffiti flourishes.

The old standard show-off place, of course, is the water tower overlooking the campus, which boasts a huge Theta Chi insignia, among other things.

Physical plant director Pete Moore said the university doesn't bother to paint over the tower -since it belongs to the. city -unless a piece of graffiti is of­f41nsive to a person or group on campus.

But the city has been cracking down on penalties for painting the water tank; so participation In graffiti- writing there bas gone down a bit. ·

Some say the graffiti In the Taylor House laundry room has gone downhill too. "It was much better last year," one launderer complained, reading the walls of the laundry:

"The Editors of the spring version of the laundry wall open it for entries."

''Topic: mini-skirts; method of research: look it up."

A lot of references to Wake Forest, the powers that be, politicians, and sex.

Sex is the most popular subject

unction of Honor Council Debated

I • '

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By CARLA GARDNER Staff Writer

Evidence that the structure and purpose of the honor system is obscure to many students was apparent In a forum led by Chaplain Ed Christman Tuesday morning In Reynolds Lounge.

The open discussion, attended · by about 60 students and several faculty members, was part of an effort by the Campus Ministry to urge students and faculty to re­·examlne the honor system.

The role of the Honor Council within the honor system was one of the questions brought up most

·often. One student said, "I don't see how the Honor Council has .much to do with the honor system. People assume that students won't cheat, and most :don't."

Role of Council

.Student. Judicial Board, said that he thought honor is brought in by the students. The majority of the student body, not merely the Honor Council, should be the source of leadership In honor.

Councn vs. SJB

Coley later tried to clarify the role of the Honor Council by distinguishing between the Council and the SJB. According to Coley, the Honor Council tries cases specifically concerning moral honor, such as cheating, stealing, and lying. Violations of rules set down by the university, such as breach of room contract or intervisitation, are dealt with by the Student Judicial Board.

Students are obligated to reprimand· others In matters· of honor, but they have no obligation to the SJB Coley said.

The role of honor in the honor system was also discussed.

"Their problem lies In un· "You've got to hope that people derstandlng the role of the Honor ·are basically honorable. You Council," another student said. can't legislate morals," one

. She added that the Council should student commented. Another not only judge offenses, but also suggested that organizations

·serve .as a counselling aid for such as fraternities, societies, students who felt the necessity to and houses should provide cheat. leadership In eml>hasizlng the

Someone else disagreed, importance of honor 14;1 students. stating that, "Counselling · Ba);!tist <;:haplain Richard studenis is a oroblem for the McBnde sa1d that the honor

"jisychoJogicalcenter,"notforthe system was not emphasized Honor Council enough to be effective at Wake: '" Ken Coley, ~ member of the "There is low visibility to the

honor council here." Students are lnfonned of the system upon entering the university, but he believes it is soon forgotten.

To stress the importance of the system, McBride advocated methods such as requring in· coming students to sign a statement In agreement to uphold the system, and use of the pledge on every test.

The alternative of a proctor system was also considered. Miriam Glover, assistant to the chaplain, tjUked about her ex­perience under the proctor system as an undergraduate at Duke University. In summary, she said, "Sometimes the proctors made me nervous, but it was worth it to know. th&t·.P,!!!~Ple weren't cheating." .· · · ... '· ·

" .· · I I "• ". i·l

FooltheProetor · Generally, students did not

seem to favor the proctor system. Some argued that it Invites cheating by adding the Incentive to foci the proctor, and that it could be effective only for short answer tests, not for papers .

Wendy Clark, a jUnior, was concerned about the ability of the honor system to facilitate in­dividual development of honor within the student. "If we drop the honor system and turn to the rroctor system, we won't see the honor that could be there," she said. "We're fighting against a 'who

Films to F ~ature Browning . Th Coli g urn· on will present Brownm~ Retrospective con- night's film at 8 P M. is the Frimlt . e e e eludes With "Mark of the Vam ' ~e conclusion of the Tod pire , 'th ·B H L i d Carra classic, "Mr. Deeds Goes Br~~ Retr~pe~tive, ~other Lionel ~o~e, f~:ed by to Town." G~ <?,!>Dper and Jean film. m 1ts continwng senes of "The Devil Doll," also starring Arthur star m .~1936 comedy mus1cals, and an American_ and Lionel Barrymore masterpiece. Peter and the Japanese classics thiis week In Sunday's film iS the an-star Wolf," a dassk Walt D'.sney DeTamble Auditorium. musical, "Ziegfeld Follies," to be short, will be shown before the . A d_ouble feat~re of Tod shown at 8 p.m. Filmed 1n 1946 by feature.. . Browrung films will be. shown, Vincente Minnelli "Ziegfeld The highly-acclaimed "Tokyo tonight at B p.m. featuring his two Follies" is an elaborate Tee- Story t filmed In J~pan In 1953 by most famous works: the 1931 nicolor re-creation of that YaSUJII'O Ozu, will be shown "Dracula,': and "Fre~," mad~ legendary stage show, featuring Tuesday at ~· If>ng hailed as a the followmg year. Dracula acts by Fred Astaire, Judy work of art m 1ts own country, stars Beli Lugosi, while Garland Gene Kelly, Lucille "Tokyo Story" has just recently "Freaks" features Olga Ball and Fanny Brice. Monday been released In this country, Baclanova and a cast of actual r--'---------, freaks.

Tomorrow night at 8, the

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cares?' attitude toward the honor system," said Lee Knight, a senior. "Maybe we should talk about where we should derive honor." He suggested that pride in culture, tradition, or Individual morals should be the basis for urging students to be honorable.

Christman said that in· addition to the forum, the Honor Council is planning seminars to educate students about the system. Also, faculty members have been requested to read and discuss In class the section of the Student Government constitution. con­Cerning the honor system, which states that students are obligated to approach a fellow student about his violation rather than immediately. turning him In to the Honor Council. , · Many students Indicated that class discussion of the system has not taken place In most of their classes. Betsy Kahn, a sophomore who said the system was discussed In all of her classes, remarked ... I think it was helpful because many students didn't know how the system was supposed to work."

Dr. Ben Seelblnder, professor of mathematics, indicated that further class discussion may occur In the future. "I'm waiting until I have the next pledge work. assignment."

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of graffiti all over campus, but other topics vary from place to place.

Nearly all graffiti centers contain frequent Nixon-1\!cGovem references, and, of course, there's an ilimiense amount of "X loves Y" • type graffiti.

A new trend In the "Ah-so" line; things such as: . "Man who drop watch In concrete have hard time."

"Man conceived In back seat of. foreign car is shiftless bastard." The university assumes that

graffiti does not contribute to its decor, according to Moore, but he said the tunnels In the giriB donns are seldom disturbed.

The two tunnels - between Johnson and Bostwick and bet­ween Babcock and the new dorm - are the largest centers of campus graffiti, but nobody seems to know who paints it ... or when.

more varied... everything from "coed living feels good" to quotes from Marat- Bade to a Socrates quotation.

Moore said the tunnels are left alone unless complaints are voiced and dorm hostesses ask that specific items be painted over, in which case they are.

"We had a concerted request by a group of girls during last summer's renovation that we not paint that (the tunnel graffiti) out. .. so we ciidn 't," he said.

A few students have voiced disappointment with the quality of Wake Forest Jn"affiti, some

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saying that the gli-ls' graffiti is better than the boys', others saying that none of it holds a candle to graffiti at the University of North Caronna.

One person noted the absence of continuous graffiti here -graffiti started by one person and answered by others .

Only one example of such graffiti could ~ found In a quick

sesrch of prime graffiti areas. It was written on the Taylor laundry wall, along with a Charlie Brown character:

"WFU? Why the theological implications alone are staggering."

"Stifling is a better word." "I agree, even though you are a

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The Johnson-Bostwick tunnel is the most written-on, so much so that most of the graffiti is very difficult to read. Just about all subjects are covered, primarily love interests and names, but the wall includes commentaries on life, and a few Hnes such as "The Golden Avalanche" that appear to be inside jokes.

Interest In children aged 11-1f\. •••••••••••••••••••••• The purpose of the program is to

' The tunnel between the new dorm and Babcock is less covered with graffiti, but the subjects written on it seem to be

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Those interested In helping with the program can contact Clement Brown at 725-2525 or Eugenia Eckard, at ext. 513.

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PAGE FOUR Friday, November 3, OL~ GOLD AN~ BLACK

I lark NANCY ANDREWS

Associate Editor JOHNEW01T

Editor HELEN TYREE Managing Editor

BETSY GILPIN Assistant Editor

ALMOORE Business Manager

DEBBIE GRIFFITH Assistant Editor

Wlnston&lem, N.C., Friday, November 3, 1972

A Shot in the Arm. After many long months of study,

revision, writing and re-writing­months which must have seemed even longer to her than they did to us--Bunz Daniels and her committee have taken the wrappings off a proposed new Student Government constitution which looks as if it would be a great shot in the arm for a much-maligned organization.

In procedural matters alone, the new constitution would put SG on a far more efficient basis by con­tinuing Vice President Frank Dew's policy of establishing standing committees to handle matters which often in the past were fought over unnecessarily in the legislature. The proposed cabinet, headed by the SG president and including the chair­men of the committees, would also help communication and coor­dination greatly.

Another striking feature of the document is its frequent reminders to members of various groups to report back to the legislature or other groups which need to be in­formed of their actions. Lack of information would not be a problem under such a system. Even more importantly, the new constitution would extend SG powers in a number of areas. If the faculty approves, the Charter Committee would assume the function of granting charters to student organizations and revoking charters of organizations which violate their own or SG rules (a clause which needs some further clarification). In another proposal which might have far-reaching implications, the Student Budget Advisory Committee would recommend each year to the

university Budget Committee how the $400,000 raised from the student activity fee should be distributed among student organizations.

Students would have one voting and one non-voting representative on all faculty com­mittees (if the faculty can ever muster a quorum to vote on the last two) , and, with trustee approval, a representative on each working committee on the Board of Trustees. Committees make the recom­mendations which are usually followed by the larger bodies, and this step would be as significant as gaining an actual student trustee.

We certainly agree with the proposal to put representation in the legislature on a more equitable basis, but reducing the size woUld perhaps be not so necessary if the committee system works ~fficiently. Students, after all, are not going to feel very much a part of a Student Government which consists largely of a small legislature and a complex bureaucracy. And why do the SG secretary and treasurer and the "secretarial representatives" need to be voting members of the legislature?

But these are small complaints, indeed. We congratulate Ms. Daniels and her committee for producing a good solid document, we pause respectfully at the thought of their time and effort, and we wish them success in steering the constitution through Mr. Dew's committees, the legislature, the student life com­mittee, the faculty, the student body and whoever else is found to have to approve it.

_ Another Question After the open Honor Council trial

this week, it's obvious that the Council has corrected the procedural problems which un­dermined its legitimacy and prestige last year. The trial was a model of legal decorum, with every prescribed detail followed to the letter, down to the last tape­recorded word and cross-examined statement.

The trial left unanswered, however, the central question of whether student attitudes will support the careful procedure-­whether enough students have enough commitment to the honor system to make it work. The Council

The Flip Side

will try to answer this more difficult question in the coming weeks as it sponsors "seminar parties" in the women's dorms, both to inform students about the system and to get an idea of their feelings about it.

We hope students will take ad­vantage of this chance to let Council members know what they think­that the honor system is worth preserving, that it is hopelessly idealistic and should be replaced by proctors, or that other possibilities such as a return to trials by Council rather than juries should be con­sidered. If there is no response to this call for discussion, it is fairly obvious which alternative is best.

Letters to the Editor

'Send Harper Back to the· Valley'· There are three things that every man feels

he can do better than any other man: char­coal steaks, make love and coach football. Coach Harper is about to realize the truth of the last of these. After seven weeks of mediocre performance, It is obvious that he cannot do the job.

But why is it him, and not the fault of the players? The answer is obvious: individual honors (all-this or all-that) are earned by the players themselves, based upon superior individual perfonnance; team superiority, based on the joining together of the in­dividuals into a functional group, is the job of the coaches. Reading a list of post-season recognition of our freshmen and transfers (not to mention those of our upperclassmen), one would be amazed at the number of ob­viously superior players on our campus. It is readily seen, then, that the staff has failed.

They have failed in two ways: Improper use of persormel ("experimenting to find the right combination"), and failure to gain the respect of the players ("bad morale"). To realize just how mentally beaten the players are, ask one. Ask John Phillips, whose love of the g!IJile, as intense as it was, was not enough to keep him from giving up in the middle of the season; ask Gary McCoy, our own "free spirit," whose quickness in the defensive backfield was wunatched, but whose spirit was killed by constant personality conflict; or ask Chuck Ramsey, perhaps the most naturally gifted athlete in the area-good enough to play for Coach Stoll • but whose self confidence and desire have been destroyed by Oval Jaynes.

Yes, the morale is indeed bad. As for playing the right players, there are many examples of poor decisions. We will illustrate only a few. The big flap has been over a quarterback. If the offense type has been decided (veer) and if Chuck is not a veer quarterback (Stoll thought he was), then the battle is between Kit Basler and Jim Ryan,

At Right Angles

Jim was given, we believe, only one "chan-· ce", against SMU, when we were hopelessly behind. He has superior leadership capabilities, quick feet 8!ld hands, and can throw. Andy Carlton will undoubtedly be a good QB some1iay, but with people like Cbuck and Jim on the bench, you don't play an !!ighteen-year-old.

The rest of the backfield has a1so suffered.

Lest we be unfair to some members of the coaching staff, not all deserve blame. Primarllv it is the "coordinators" who are at fllult. Most of the players like and respect Coaches Bocko, Mitchell, Feathers, and perhaps others. .

This week we go to S('uth caroUna, where Coach Deitzel is having perhaps his worst year ever. (It will probably improve Saturday night.) But Coach Deitzel is In no danger of being fired, because his personallty and reasoning are such that "the people" believe in him. (Read the article In Sunday's J&s.) Coach Harper does not project· such a per­sonality, nor does he offer sound reasoning.

military, industry, and the trade deficit? McCovern has the leadership qualities of a dead dog, a fact which. is demonstrated by his treatment of the Eagleton aHair, Mayor Daley and the Democratic party. 1

When you vote for these men, you are in 1 (;

fact giving them a mandate to play silly games witli us. Voice your discontent; don't vote, or write In your vote for Teddy Roosevelt, Grace &lick, or Congollus Snark. StartJng with KeMy GarreU, who has had

both physical ahd mental problems in overcoming that knee (no refiection on Ken, as anyone who has ever hurt a knee knows) and ending with Steve Colavito. Frank Harsh is obviously going to be a superior performer, but right now Frank Harsh is not as capable ~ Rocky- he is not as strong, not as fast, and most Important of all, not as experienced. In addition, he is not as mentally mature as Rocky, which is another way of ~ Rocky's attitude is better. In concluding a discussion of the backfield, ~ offer these questions, without answers, as thought IrOVOkers: Why was Gary Johnson moved to flanker after being the team's third leading rusher for two years? Why hasn't Jim Mc­Mahen (quickest and fastest man on the squad) been given pass patterns which would have utilized his ability? Why hasn't Ron DeBenedetti, whose style complements that of Colavito, been given a chance? (We wonder why a person like Hugo Hlldeb;rand would be selected to go to SMU and Roimie be left at mme.) Wbatever happened to Ken Griffith?

We call on the students at WFU to do three Ullngs. First, support our team this week. Give them a big sendoff. Buy tickets (seven dollars, plenty of good seats In an excellent stadium). Come to Columbia with us (an easy drive of three hours.) Second, start the movement to send Harper back to the valley. Hang him in effigy like they used to do with Coach Tate. Make signs. Write letters. Make }ilone calis (but be respectful, don't call his home after 1 AM.) Third, and last, encourage II football player. Be sincere, his spirits need boosting. He wants to win and as ·Coach Harper would say, "it's hard just to put on a unlfonn."

It is y!)Ul' obligation not to vote, if you don't honestly believe Nixon or McGovern to 1te the best man for the job; as all you are doing is fostering mediocrity, or worse, in a position that demands the best of men. Please think about it; our future Is at stake. What khid of world do you want your cblldren to grow. up

.. , --:.=: 'i ::_ 'No Debate' 'l

A group of 3 disgruntled stadellts, 2atbletea aud

2 former football players

After reading the article on the "Nb::on- :'; McGovern" debate in last week's Old Gold . and Black, I am sorely pressed to find the

1 _ . ,

logic in Debbie Griffith's analysis of it. · ·.-.·. Pianist Lo1

Slmilar discussions could be offered on most of the other phases of the game. (Hugo Hildebrand- four of seven extra points, three blocked. Let us know if you ever see him P"acticing.) But these should illustrate the ineptness of the staff. It is a sad thing that not only have they destroyed our season, but they have ruined the chances of some of our players, professionals. chances, especially those of Gary Johnson and Ken GarreU.

Evaluation Book The langusge in the Course Evaluation

Booklet was far too vague to be of any use to a student in helping her form any conclusions about the courses evaluated. To me tl;le booklet seems as absurd and useless as this letter.

Sfocerely, Jean Bomes Murdoch

Don't Vote

Conunenting on your article concerning the student debate, "McGovernites 'Win~ Debate", I want to correct a small mistake · you made. You referred to a dissatisfied student who, "in the heat of the disagreement," stated, " 'I don't think I'd vote for either one of those clowns.'" As the aforementioned dissatisfied student, what I said was closer to, "What we need is honest leadership, and personally, I wouldn't vote for either one of these clowns." ·

I do agree with Miss Griffith's comment 1

that President Nixon would probably refuse to appear in a debate with Senator McGovern if it was like the one on campus. The reason for my agreement Is that in a debate it is usually assumed· that both parties initially present their viewpoint. The "debate" last week started off with the Nixon represen­tatives presenting their viewpoint for ten minutes, but when. It came time for the McGovern people to present their side, they

· instead used their time merely to refute what the Nb::on people had just sk~. 1 AnyQne can attack someone else, but the more important thing to do is to present a better alternative solution which the McGovern representatives never really in­formed us of. ut me ask, is this a debate? If a "debate"

where McGovern supporters only argued against Nixon's policies and in doing so neglected to give their candidate's plan, then I certainly hope President Nixon would refuse to appear in a' slmllar debate with his op­ponent.

I certainly hope that the Old Gold and Black does a better job in substantiating its analyses in the future.

Bob Nix and 'I other student!!

Band Music My intention In writing is not to nitpick, but

rather to state an opinion, which was only intensified and not created by the Ineptness of I'd like to suggest to the Wake Forest the student representatives and the short- marching band that they play more popular comings of their candidates, as the article stand music. The band is great, it sounds Implies. · great, and the half-time shows have been

·- ·'- Let·.me· explain my :position. Nixon is a .original, but I can't understand why such a '·'',.-· criaiifull, ~. :•-·my eyes. He deceived us on· .p-omlslngorgimiZationshouldsticktotwoor

·'' Viettmril; f~rced such radical measures as threeout.datedsongs.andplaythe·Sariletbree Phases one and two on us, actions un- at every game. It is much like a comedian t;recedented in peacetime, and followed a with old jokes, or a talented film star trapped course of governmental deception rivaling with a bad script. Hyou can't play new music, that of "1948." let's at least have more of a variety! Thank

McGovern offers us salvation in Vietnam you very much. after nine years of horrible governmental folly, but who can tell me what his programs are concerning taxation, the budget, the

DfaDa Mansfield Class of "78 ,

~: ... ·.-·' ,: ·. .. ' ,, .· ..

11 BySQSAl Foreign(

--::.:· MADRID­·: to have an ele4

:.::democracy." · ". All right, Al ·. Forest. That's ·made today . Irofessor of P<

· : was address · ' Americans wl · over the UnitE

·: ' this .year at · Madrid, Spain'

• e higher educati The same:pr

· ' high rank m · Faculty of Poli

said during "Russia has el4

··coLUN.

.Of 1 ByWAI

Education 1 ,:; tltiilg.;;;;;espe• ~·' Fi>rest:cBut it' -_ • thing when we ' :' seriously. :· :· Many peo ~ ··example, tha

solve all the ' and still have E

_,,.'play JeopardJ '· Being unusuall

competent las1 - all over the wo

how much tru assumption tlu educate people be a better pi~

Nixon and 'The Exasperated, Turbulent Decade' One of my

··: young, starvlni "Hello, fat

insisted. "I'm 1 human body~ that are involv' received it fr1 By GARY AND .US and

WARREN ANDERSON

This column comes at a time when most of the students have sent in their absentee ballots and since the only substantive poll taken at Wake Forest showed President

Nixon with a three to one lead (Old Gold and Black, Oct. 21) perhaps this column only serves as an articulation of the conventional wisdom.

The best way to justify our exuberance lit looking forward to the next four years is to review the past four. Perhaps, at the same time, we can help reconcile those weary supporters of McGovern that there is a definite positive future for America if the President is re-elected.

operate on a quota system, it has more people under 30 than any time in our history.

President Nixon, after !nberitilu!: the fl.&r­based economy of the '60's, has been wormng hard to transfonn it into peacetime IJ'OSperity for all Americans. During the P'evious eight Democrat years, the increase in real income-after inflation and taxes ar~ taken into account-rose only 1 per cent an· nually, and remained unchanged-stagnant­between 1966 and 1970. In contrast, since the President's wage and price controls began in August 1971 the rate of real income has been

the Warren era did. The New Federalism is closer to a reality

now that the revenue sharing bill, pushed so strongly by President Nb::on, has been passed, Washington is now giving billions of dollars back to the states and cities where the money was raised in the first place. . .

Richard Nixon is probably -the most m­fluentlal man iri world affairs. This week's 1

Life magazine endorsement of the President states the case well:

··:education prog , .. - ;help me under ~.- ·the world. It • · ·program beca~ :.~'to understand

starving to de~ "That's grea

· .-·~··."butdotheyse1 :_· .. that are able t

"Yes, but I . have already

Maybe A Time For Collectivism? On the always controversial subject of

Vietnam, where responsibility goes back two decades, President Nixon must be given credit for reducing an aimy of over a half million men by over 95 percent, reducing casualities by 99 percent, and cutting spen­ding more than half in a war which had ab­solutely no end in sight in 1968. Furthermore,

3.8 per cent. . . That means that for nearly five years any raise In a worker's salary was eaten up by inflation but today, as a result of new leadership in an expanding economy, a salary increase means an increase In spending power-a real gain in the standard of living.

"In most· respects the Nixon record in foreign policy is excellent. The celebrated journeys to Peking and Moscow have initiated a new fiexibllity in international diplomacy. That the Russians are now out of Egypt, that the North and South Koreans are talking to each other, that central Europe is moving toward settlement of old differences, that China and Japan are easing tensions-all ·. these owe something to the Nixon lidtiatives. '' ·

· . apologized. "& :. _· .. can make you - ·. "No one knov , .Smiled. "I wish : the world in yo~ · he was unable t

·; .·he had passed : · · · · copy of the intE ~ ' ... alphebet and 1

By MARK HOFMANN

Nearly two weeks ago, a bold attempt was made to bridge the conununications gap between the students and the administrative­trustee powers that be. Among the interesting topics on the agenda were the role of the ph~si~al plant and libr~ hours. One glaring onuss1on from the off1cial set of topics was that issue which is near and dear to most of our hearts: the question of intervisitation. It seems as if a great many people figure

that Wake students have a one-track mind. Every Wake student sits around cursing the invisible powers, these people think, because he-shiO' can't use his-her rilom for all manner ·of licentiousness. They figure that the genitals must control the brains of the average student and not vice versa while overlooking that rooms have other uses than the one-night stand.

Mr. Davis gave an interesting in­terpretation for the one-track mind (lhenomena regarding intervisitation. As near as your anything but humble narrator can figure out, Mr. Davis feels that this in­tervisitation upon the brain is due to the "collectivism of youth." This means, gang,

that the major reason that intervisitation is desired by you is because your roommate or your best friend or some dude you were drinking with decided that intervisitatlon was thing to fight for. You finished your beer and agreed with the dude without thinking about it and started screaming lntervisitation.

If I may be so rash as to make a suggestion I humbly submit that the intervisitation IS only collectivist in nature, if it indeed is collectivist, because the students have been forced into that position. Intervisltation is an !Jldividual matter logically to be dealt with m an individualist manner. I can make the accusation that the American public is collectivist in nature because they most always limit their choice between the Democrats and Republicans because that's what their neighbors do. Such a statement would be laughed into the ground as the idea of collectivism regarding intervisitation should have been.

But maybe it is time for some sort of collective action, as much as this writer hates the idea. I have no idea what tact to pursue although I feel it's safe to assume that violent Irotest a Ia Berkeley would be an exercise in futility. Even if we were compared to little kids asking their mothers "Why? Why?

Found!!d Jan!'ary lS, 1916, .as the student newspaper of Wake Forest University, Old Gold and Bla.ck 1s pu.bhshed ~ach Fnday during the school year except during examination, summer and hohday penods as dore~ted by the ~ake Forest Publications Board. Mailed each week. Membe_rs of the Ass!'~•ated Ct!llegoate Press, Represented for National Advertising by National Educatoonal Advertosong Servoce, Inc, Subscription rate: $5.00 Second class postage paid, Win­ston-Sale!", N,C. From 3579.should be mailed to Box 7567, Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109, Pronted by Commun1ty Press, Incorporated, King, N.C.

Why?" perhaps we should keep asking until we do get some rational answer. The answer that when we're older we'll change our minds is worse than no reply at all.

· at the time of this writing we all anticipate an honorable peace in this Indochina conflict.

The Nixon administration has been tremendously responsive to America's youth. The President began right away by holding the first-ever White House Conference on Youth. It is hard to imagine that before 1969 young men had no way of definitely knowing their draft status throughout a seven-year period. President Nixon overhauled the Selective Service system, reintroduced the lottery, and straightened out Wlfalr and ambiguous draft defennents. The most Im­portant accomplishment is the all-volunteer army to be established next year.

One thing is certain, if the student returns to complacent apathy, acting as idiotically smiling yes-men, no progress will occur and we might find ourselves backsliding. Become a new "silent majority" without the guts or desire to ask what th~ Watergate Affair was all about or why McGovern changes his positions every time he faces a different audience, and you'll find yourselves under somebody's thwnb.

Or on the receiving end of a rifle.

'y./'rtAT'S TilE AN'SWU fOR.

NUMBER SI'X?i

"'

W'tJ.AT GOOD \,JJOUI..D IT 00 '{ou IF I

~A?

Although the White House staff does not

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The Nixon Administration ·has made giant steps in many other domestic issues. In the area of ecology, the President established the Enviromnental Protection Agency, the first federal agency ever set up to defend our quality of life. For education, the President has spent. 4 billion dollars more than ever before in his quest to make It possible for every qualified person to attend college who wants to.

The President's excellent appointments to. the SUpreme Court have helped balance our highest tribunal. The new justices have looked on their role as one of interpreting the Jaws rather than writing their own views into the Constitution as the. "supeileg!Slature" of

!>ONT '/()IJ . REALIZE. T"AT CHJ;.ATII~& ONL~ I

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All in all lhere is much to be praised in President Nixon's administration over the last four years in which he has been in the White House. This column has attempted to give an outline of the many gains made by a President who took office in the midst of the exasperated and turbulent decade of the 60's. The next four years leading to America's bicentennial will be a time in which President Nixon can build on the firm foundation he and his administration have established, and the t;rospects are better now, more than ever, that a generation of peace will become a reallty.

Staff Jane Lewis Carla Gardner Lisa Hamrick Mark Hofmann Tom Piillllps Wally Boyd Uz Lantter Darian Smith Pam Graham Deborah Richardson Thomas Keener 1\falcolm Jones

Gary Gunderson Connle Cole Craig Pleasants Ed King Beth Hammond Ann Williams Cynthia Bennett Jim Apple Sylvia Mnldrow Brian Eckert David Elliott

Mary Stewart Lindsey

: ·"Republic" in < · · and was soon < , . , Before long, • : :· Vietnamese 1 . · .amidst bombs, , . ·.fire, and rock• , ··asked her ho · 'education had

"Ohmy, we a -·· .now," she Vi4 ' : example, see tl . at us there? w~ , an illusion. l

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ixon represen-9pllint for ten time for the

heir side, they !rely to refute :1 just sk~., efse, but the

s to present a n which the wer really in·

1 H a "debate" 1 only argued I in doing so 1te's plan, then 1n would refuse ;e with his op.

Gold and Black stantiating its

Bob Nix and 1 other studellts

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Wake Forest more popular eat, it sounds ws have been ' 1d why such a stick to two or ~·SaJile'three ;e a comedian n star trapped ay new music, ariety! Thank

laDa MaDsffeld Class of '78 ,

rde' 181' to a reality bill, pushed so )n, bas been ring billions of :ities where the ; place. . • ·the most ID­s. This week's' f the President

z:on record in l'lie celebrated v have initiated nal diplomacy. ; of Egypt, that are talking to

ope is moving ierences, that g tensions-all · .. on hiitiatives." be praised in

1tion over the liS been in the s attempted to los made by a 1e midst of the ade of the 60's. to America's

·hich President ndation he and lished, and the lre than ever, rill become a

1 Gunderson de Cole g Pleasants King 1 Hammond Wllliams

tbia Bennett Apple ia Muldrow ID Eckert id Elliott

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PAGE FIVE Friday, November 3, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Holla,der: An Emotional.Encounter

-.-,-.Pianist Loren Hollander performs in Wait Chapel • :· ,, · Photo by H. Jones

. ByTOMPRUJ.IPS performer and sensuous listener,

tbe. evening came off as Different musical experiences memorable. Hollander per-

require different respoll8e8 to formed the Brahms Piano Sonata those experiences-the listener 1 In F minor, the Chopin Ballade in when attending must both .,.; I G ~or, opus 23, the "Gaspard aware of the sin&uJar ez:pertence · ·de Ia Nuit" of Ravel, and, as (beyond mere delineations of encore, Prokofiev's · last form,as, 88y,opef'!lasopposedto movement to his Piano Sonata symphonic performance) and· · No. 7, with a spirit and seJlSIJality accordingly channel his thoughts, · which, while certaiilly lacking in his sensate responses, and even , places the technical proficiency his own fiber of experience, . required for accepted critical before he can fully understand or "mastery" of · the pieces (par.

A..a-te iclan' ttem t ticWarly with several sections of appr""'"" a mus 8 a P • ;the Brahms), nonetheless This supposition, or approach,

· if yoti will, was fully borne out in .aclJieved a mastery of thought and "oneness" with the music

pianist Lorin Hollander's per that was beautifully alive and formance last Tuesday evening in w, it Cha 1 Any high in new. More than any other per-

a pe · • former that I've ever heard, tell~tual frame of mind would . Hpllander played with a fire and have been met with disap· ...,.,.,10n_ that could onlv be e"'­polntment m:~d even anger, for· .....- J ""

Hollander Is not a "classic" plained as a necessity to play, a pianist with respect to style, musical mandate for the soul to bearing, .or approach. He express the feeling and the demands an encounter with the mystery of· great music without senses in order to be fully un· ibOugbt of reward. -derstood or even explained. · That he played more out of and

Hone, then, accepted his music for emotion than from technical through the ertlotioDS, througb a austerity was certainly most srecarious, though finally lasting evident in the· Brahms. The first dialectic between sensuous ~d last movements, allegro

maestoso and allegro moderato. respectively, both pointed up a few weaknesses of technique which a pure (or possibly more experienced) critic would have deemed deplorable. Not that Hollander doesn't have a typically modern, sometimes astounding facility (this was well used, effectively drawn out In the Prokofiev encore;, but it may speak for a certain lack of in· tellectual maturity, musically, in his playing.

I choose, however, to place Hollander in an entirely different light -namely, that the wish for technical expertise was placed subordinate to the man's own dictates of how the music should be played in terms of expression. In that sense, the Brahms became an unspoken bat­tleground for expressive fulijllment, and the second An· dante movement, particularly, showed us just what an exquisitely sensitive and per· ceptive pianist Hollander is. To me, here was someone who, to quote an often used saying, "never let the music get in his way." He was at times very

The Prof Says Russia Has Elections Too ' ,, 1: ·, democracy." . By SUSAN GILLETTE

Foreign Correspondent After managing to recover their senses and shut their

": .,. MADRID- "America Is going mouths, the American students . to have an election. America is a demanded a definition of

.; :demOcracy." "democracy." It was· carefully · ~. All right, Americans at Wake explained that a democracy, ·. Forest. That's the charge. It was since the Greek times, Is a state · made today by a Spanish whose people vote in electioDS, . professor of political science. He gover:ning themselves either -was addressing a class of directly or through selection of · Americans who came from all representatives.

· over the. United States to study But Russia isn't really like the ·:' this .year at the University of U.S.A. The lecturer explains that

· Madrid, Spain's largest center of the Constitution of the United · ~ higher education. States of America guarantees

The same professor, who holds . continuity of the democratic ·' high rank m the university's situation through separation of­. Faculty of Political Science, also powers and "declaration of

said during her class hour: ·irrevocable individual liberties.'' "Russia has elections. Russia is a The American anguish fades.

. ·cOLUMN AS I SEIZE 'EM

And the crowd almost crows over the next judgment. "Russia's top rulers can use their power to end the democracy, by suspending electioDS at almost any time."

Still, those who smile 8re smiling weakly.

:rhat was a scare. It was also a good lesson, the students agree after class, as they review the day's lessons in the English language and from their American perspective.

"You know what matters the most to tbe Spanish?" said one girl. "Just to have an election, to get to vote."

Yes, in this situation, the ballot is the key to the Spaniard's outlook.

.Of DeBd Sea Scrollness

Elections in Russia and the Tuesday. United States form an "equals" Before they try, these students sign which Spain can set between should know how badly some the two nations. And the Spanish Americans abroad feel because ~tionrivetsitseHeasilytothe they didn't bother to vote by ~ot, forgetting the polarizing · getting an absentee ballot at the characteristics of the two Embassy. nationa. To students here in Madrid, the

Centuries of polltical life best reasons for not exercising without a ballot have caused this the privilege of casting a ballot, fixation that surprises foreign even the heartiest apathy, are students. Monarchies were paltry in comparison with succeeded by dictatorships. reasons a Spaniard could claim. Republics settled questions by Spanish history Is a 2000-year battles as frequently as by ballot. indoctrination toward the at­Some scholars in Spain today litude, "What is an election good insist that Spain's history bas for: anyway?" deprived her people or a nearly Most Americans are irked by a universal passion for the vote, for question like that. And it doesn't self-government. . matter whether the mad

These teachers say Spain ogles American could answer the foreign nations' electoral question. His anger results from systems as novelties which are the indoctrination of his own merely curiosities, not a upbringing. Spanish ambition. What the Spanish have, in a

How many Americans can word, Is aprovecharse. That's imagine not wanting to vote? doing the best you can for Probably not even the Americans yourself within the existing who usually don't vote, or who situation. And if a Spaniard

'bo b " b bettersitdown,whiteboy,ahsew won't vote November 7, can misses an opportunity to ; . ByWAU..Y BOYD ealmbonessib,.,.., you see, ut it not a them •m for you." comprehend the Spanish aprovecharse, he can only blame

- r. , m · ..,.. situati himself. That's the rule of the .. Education can be a &. • ....., .... ., ••• ~.Ah a :$tu.il<>nt !If fthn""n"hy. ~ .He .. went~~{' explain to me • . OIJ.. , , .. """'' . • •• ~WUiJ', ·. . ' ... -~-r,~.. • ~~ • ,, hb "-" 'n'h''' ~ th j b of 101 . TUesday many Americans····~spo..... ., . . .

•·· tltmg ···-·especially---at·· Waite··- .no.doubt ''" 'c" ·.···" ·~ ., .. , '"' · ·"'" W,JJIJ:J~- · e 0 wor..,.. stu. '"'-ts t th '"fir t A ... _..,..~4...,~.:So~the Spaniard J'umps·to •a' n·y .,... · · · . "Yes" shephilosophised "and dolriin&tionM!l become becauu m:n -ge ell'' s ·QJCUA.-.::-w·'~"'·"" •· ••. ~·'Forest:" BUt it's an even funnier it has ~lved nearly all ~ our , . of advanced education learned. ·vote in a nati()nal election. Many oppo!tum ti.es., T~:~esd.ay

.. : :. ~u:J~~n we ~ to take it too problems here." from the States. The day was will stay on campus, go . to Amencans Will be. JUmp~ng :·;. Many people think, for She didn't talk long, however, coming when we could have the classes, and watch the election toward. five. dollarthb~ whia1kch

· because an illusion possessmg· most intellectual war in history, returns - unless they need to they nught ~d on e. s1dew . ~ :.example, that education can "bulletness" caused her to he happily told me. And after all, study that night. . That go~s Without saymg. .

solve all the world's problems, possess "deadness". isn't that what we are striving To these students, the elec~ons The~e s a lot mon; ~ • m _,.,·,::Ystpe:;;~no~cele~o~e:e:. Next I visited a military for? aren't attractive because Nmon Amm:1ca • abo~t whos gomg to J' Being unusually industrious and complex in the heart of Red I was indeed glad to return to is a pushover, o~, there's. a step mto a ~~g~~·l ed

competent last week, I traveled China. I was introduced to the States where our problems chemistry test, or, W~ll, I JUSt H the Sparuar t ~am · all over the world to find out just general Wang Dang Do are insignificant because of never got around to writing home the value of the vote, his cen-

"Ah so" he uttered si,ly adequate education. I came back for that absentee ballot." turies of meager existence under =~'h'! ~~ ifth: c!t~ 0~; "Gee,•'• I romanticized·. "I more convinced than ever that DoubUess, any American with absolute governmen~ h~ve educate people, the world would never knew that Chinese really educating the people is indeed the the college board scores to get n~ed a natiofinal trrut '!hich

said 'Ah so.' " answer, but I'm a hit confused into Wake Forest will come up might _be of ~Je!te t to Amencans beO~ebe:rJ~ac~ta~r!· was a "Only when stupid American now as to what the question with a better, more personal plannmg their schedules for

·: young, starving Indian boy: come with hole in pants. You should be. excuse if he doesn't vote ·Tuesday. "Hello, fat American," he

insisted. "I'm studying about the hwnan body and the processes that are involved in starvation. I received it from an American ·Scott Powerful in 'New Centurions'

• · :education program that tries to ·-··:help me understand myself and >'the world. It is a very useful '· 'program because now I am able .:.~·to understand just why I am

starving to death.'' "That's great," I encouraged,

· .- :--... but do they send you other books :_·,.that are· able to help you?"

"Yes, but I am afraid that I have already eaten them," he

. ' apologized. "Sometimes learning : __ ·_can make you awfully hungry.'' - ·. "No one knows that like me," I , · . Smiled. "I wish you all the luck in : the world in your studies". At this · he was unable to respond because

: .·he had passed out. I left him a : ····.copy of the international phonitic :·' .. alphebet and a copy of Plato's : ·"Republic" in case he recovered,

By MICHAEL TRIMBLE

Anyone who has seen "Adam· 12," the television show, will have a general idea of the format of the movie, "The New Centurions," which opened at the Reynolda Cinema last week. Botb are about the Los Angeles police depart­ment, and the problems police encounter in their day-to-day work. But here the similarity ends.

Based on Jospeh Wambaugh's best-seller, "The New Cen­turions/' the movie becomes more than a story about police. Director Richard Fleischer has taken this "police story," arid used it merely as a vehicle for an

intense cbarBcter study on the once was. The long hours of work type of Jierson it takes to be a take their toll not only on Keach policeman in this day and age. · but on his family, also. It is ironic

George C. Scott and Stacy , lhat a man wlio thoughi he could Keach are the focal points in this find happiness in a job is moving character study. Scott Is destroyed by that which he so the old veteran of twenty some · much wanted to succeed in. odd years who bas seen not only · Intermingl~d with this the role of the cop change but has character study Is enough action also seen himself change. Keach, to please anyone. The movie is on the other hand Is the young fast-paced and at the same time rookie out to change the world. highly emotional and well-acted.

We see how Keach changes as · Keach Is the star of the show.

retirement from the force is for him the ending of his life. He appears to be happy in his r.etirement, but his experiences from these years have drained him, much as Keach is drained.

In the end Scott Is a sad, lonely man. He had built an outer barrier of calm, but beneath he churned. Police work was his life. He retires, with nothing left to live for. Scott's final scene is one of the best pieces of acting I have seen lately.

H you like action, drama and sadness, you have your chance. It can be found at the Reynolda Cinema this week.

he encounters new perils day by As Keach's mentor, Scott is day; the disappointments, the extremely powerful even though heartbreaks, and problems that ; he is not on the screen that much. constitute a cop's day. With Scott , As the fading veteran, Scott gives as his mentor, we watch how the a powerful performance. His once-vibrant rookie changes and . .---------------------, becomes a sbadow of what he

· · and was soon on ~Y way. · r • Before long, I was talking to a : :· ·Vietnamese peasant woman . · .amidst bombs, guerilla sniper­- .. fire, and rockets' red glare. I

Drug Study Topic of Talk Now Offering -

Banio Lessons -:·asked her how receiving an · education had changed her life.

· : "Oh my, we are much better off ,·. ,now," she Vietnamesed. "For . : example, see that bomb coming · .at us there? Well, that is merely

an illusion. It may possess

Dr. Alfred Burger, professor emeritus of chemistry at the University of Virginia, will speak on "The Future of · Drug Research" at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in Room 14 of Salem Hall.

The lecture, Is sponsored by the

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adept at conveying some measure of technical proficiency, but that was not, to me, his ultimate end. His goal was personal union with music and instrument on an entirely different human level - the emotive level.

The Chopin and the Ravel both further verified this need for and ability to play from the senses. The Chopin, being less deman· ding technically, offered less an interference between objective and goal, and Hollander played It exquisitely. The bent form (we­cannot help but acknowledge a further deviation from customary routine, that being Hollander's garb - plain black suit and boots) narrowed over the keys and poored out such a delightfully delicate touch that the audience was momentarily silenced at the Chopin's con­clusions. Very deserved silence, I might add.

The Ravel "Gaspard de Ia Nuit" was fitting cli.max to the evening, showing Hollander's finesse at pulling off such a conglomerate of ordered beauty and chaotic nervousness. Hollander played the second movement, based on Bertrand's poem, "Le Gibet," with an authority of control that only

contributed to an already won­derful piece of music. And the final, third movement, taken from. Bertrand's "Scarbo," only confirmed our suspicions.The raucous intensity of Ravel showed us what a stwming musician Hollander is. He per­formed the daringly difficult "Scarbo" very well, but we saw tbat he was not really performing in the traditional sense. He "performed" because had had to, because the voice within the man required some outlet. The Ravel told' us what an interesting and complex: man Lorin Hollander is.

After the ferocious encore (Hollander stated, before playing, that Prokofiev had written the Seventh Sonata as "a statement on war"), the Wake

Forest audience responded, as expected, with a standing ovation.

I have been variously incensed and humored, in recent months, by the seemed lack of discern­ment on the part of Wake Forest audiences. Indeed, a friend of mine, upon attending the belated comic speech of David Frye's, heard one male student say, "H he (Frye) doesn't come soon, I'm not going to give him a standing

ovation." I lament such a lack of critical

appreciation, be it speech, drama, or music performance; and yet, in Hollander's case, the response was very deserved. I would only hope that the response was equivocal to the per­formance, that the audience appreciated and understood-not in a five minute Prokofievan dazzle, not even in any of the occasional technical brilliance exhibited, but more in the spirit of the man-the uniqueness of style that gave the finer senses such a treat.

For it was unique-all musical performance Is unique-and it behooves us all to decide, for

. ourselves, what is "good" or "bad," and why. But then, asswning that music's highest goal is personal enjoyment, I cannot speak too harshly. The response is dictated by the amount of enjoyment, be it at an opera or symphonic rendition or a piano recital.

I can only wish, for all in at­tendance at the Hollander ex­perience, some form of en- . joyment, in whatever area of sensation, somewhat com­mensurate with my own. It was an exciting, emotional evening, and very rewarding.

Let ~m put it all together. /" ...... ....

. -·/, ~i . r:

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••••••o•••••••••••••••••••••••••

By LARRY LYON Sports Editor

Tom Harper takes his strife­torn squad to Columbia, S.C. Saturday, where it will find another squad beset by problems, the once-proud Gamecocks of South Carolina.

After last week's 31-0 debacle at the hands of Clemson-"the all· time low", in the words of Har· per-the morale problemS the Deacons are having have become quite well-publicized in the local papers, and rumors have been scattered about concerning a host of players quitting. ·

Only two of the players-Randy Cox and David Bartholomew· among those who have dropped

BULLETIN

It was learned last night that David Bartholomew has rejoined the football team. He will not start Saturday though.

off the squad since the start of fall practice are noteworthy cases.

Cox, a 6-2, 230 pound senior defensive end from Monroe, was a starter last year and through most of this year. Two weeks ago he lost his regular job to junior college transfer Neville Davis, who played an outstanding game agaiiist ·Clemson.

"lt1s just a highly personal thing," Cox said last night. "It has nothing to do with the team's performance or record or anything like that-1 think it's a good team with a lot of good athletes on it."

He would not go further into his reasons.

Bartholomew is a 6-4, 230 pound sophomore who has started at defensive tackle all season. From San Diego, Calif., he was recruited to Wake by his uncle­Bob Bartholomew, a former Wake All-American gridder who is the president of the Deacon Club.

Bartholomew reportedly said he no longer wanted to play

·l'-l'''

The dearest choice for a generation Wh S? hMcGovern can't win, eh? ernment itself as the employer of Administration is "the most cor-

ele a~ey~uhe~rd thatbef~re? lastre_sort. rupt in our history." The late

th ti,n thhe P. nmanes last Sprmg, Ntxon started his campaign Robert Kennedy called George

a s w ere "th $10 "]1" · B · . . WI mi wn m secret mont<y. McGovern "the most decent man ut you fooled the pohhcal McGovern's campaign is financed in the Senate "

lexpk~r.t~, and m~llrote the history almost entirely by contributions MeG over~ wants the million-JOO s. 10u provided the manpower of $5 t $25 f · th I · and w . , · .0 wm e peop e. aues and the large corporations to . t~m~nrow 1~ for the largest, . N1xon has nominated conserv- start paying their fair share of 3:0°0 es "t· oug he_st vote-canvas- atiVes and mediocrities to the taxes. Nixon wants to maintain smg opera Ion t Is country had United States Supreme Court. thestatusquo ever seen. 0 · · · N "t' t" t . . . ne or two more Ntxon appomt- Get an absentee ballot if you And t~~~ .~ 1 8 t~:U~ ~ .~0• It a gam. ~ents _if he is re-elected, and you'll need one. Get some money to-. t - J J 18 a 1~ even more hve With a heavy-handed Nixon gether to help us make get-out-~1_por an~ ~Icihe cho~cc between court for the rest of your life. the-vole phone· calls. And get to-

11xonh ~n cl ovhern IS the clear- McGovern has pledged to appoint gether with your lo~:al McGovern es ·. c mce vo ers av • h d f d · , . t. · e a or a a woman an members of ractal Committee to find out how you gcner,l .ton. d th · · ·t· d "11 M . , . an e me mmon 1es, an w1 ap- can help. hom b~~~ovet ni h3s o~posed t~e point highly qualified liberals. You started this campaign. It's

N.

1 ". 0

1. n. o~h1_na, whlle Ralph Nader says the Nixon up to you to finish it.

1xon ws u:en mfhct.mg the ex-plosive equivalent of 7 Hiroshima atom bombs a month on that al­ready devastated area.

Nixon believes in putting peo­ple out of wor], in order to hold down prices. His policies have put 2 million more people out of work. McGovern believes that there ~hould be a job for everyone who wants to work, with the U.S. Gov-

Help us get-out-the-vote.

Wake Forest students for McGoverJ~ 448 N. Main St., Winston-Salem, .f\'

We need you now more than we ever did. Please contact the city headquarters:

723-1548

Give an hour. Give a day. Give yourself now.

Authorized and paid ror by concerned Wake Forest Students ror M~Govern, Tom Cooper, cha~r- 1an

"The funny thing about this whole catastrophe," says Toni Harper, "is there is no problem."

football arid had never liked playing it. He has a girl friend in California, and apparently plans to return there and get married.

He could not be reached for comment.

Twelve other players have dropped off since the start of fall practice, all for fairly normal reasons considering their status.

None were or were expected to contribute much to the Deacon }rogram, other than linemen John Phillips and Bob Carroll. Carroll was lost because of an eye injury, and Phillips managed to flunk out for the second time in three years.

Harper spent a large portion of this week talking to newspaper reporters, who flocked to his office to find out what is plaguing

the Deacons. . "The funny thing about this whole catastrophe," Harper said in reference to the quitting, "~ there is no problem." He thought Cox and Bartholomew both have just tired of football.

Considerable speculation also grew this week about the status of Harper, whose team has won only one game in his first year as head coach. The Old Gold & Black learned from several sources that pressure to oust the 40-year old Harper is already beginning to mount.

If so, Harper will have something in common to talk about with his coaching foe this weekend, Paul Dietzel.

"Pepsodent Paul", who came to South Carolina in 1966 with

visions of building a national power, has found life mosi un­pleasant this year.

His Gamecocks have won only two of seven games, and the two wins came agailist . very weak owostion-Appalachian State and Memphis State. Since the Gamecocks were only 4-6-1 in 1970 and 6-5last year, discontent in Columbia is boiling over.

There is a GROD-Get Rid of Dietzel-faction growing in numbers with each passing loss. The former l8U and Arniy coach felt so maligned last week that he issued a strong letter to the press,

. defending his record. Thus the game will match two

teams and two coaches badly in need of victories to quell the grumbling at home.

South Carolina has been rated the favorite, if for no other reason than that the losses have not been

· quite so embarrassing. Unlike the Deacs, the

Gamecocks have managed ot put some ooints on the board, mostly

Continued on Page 8

The criticism is · already beginning to mount against Tom Harper

This state, this country.

North and South, East and West, Young and Old, Rich and Poor, Jew and Gentile, Black and White and Brown and Yellow and Red This town, this city, this state, this country bleeds a little every do;

Open your heart. Empty your hands. And roll up your sleeves. With The American Red Cross.

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advertising contributed for the public good ·m• , "our~c.•"'e

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, Harper Headhunters Should Try Some R;;t;,;;;;;·iii:YBIACK · IN A _BIG-Til\IE college athletic program, losing can be a disease.

Once it starts, it spreads fast, until' it is affecting everyone concerned with the program.

Coaches become uptight, and down on the players. Players become uptight, and down on the coaches. ·Alumni start grumbling, and .wonder what their ·

money is being used for. Students start grumbling, and want their money back.

Sportswriters become critical, and they all begin their .. searCh for problems which probably don't even exist ..

And everybody- everybody- becomes the cynic. The ~· losses become jokes. And 1once the players start :: regarding them as jokes, a joke a week is provided. :.. EVENTPALL Y, and it is never very long, everyone ;·. looks at the coach. It is never a very pleasant look. ::·· Such is the case at Wa~e Forest.

Viewing The Deacs

By LARRY LYON Sports Editor

Tom Harper, hailed as the "players' coach" when he was hired last January, has now become the original burn. ·

The same people who were so eager to hire Harper after Cal Stoll abandoned us last winter are now the same people saying "Harper? - Obviously he's a good assistant coach, but head coach? Dump him."

BEFORE WE HANG Harper, allow the Old Gold & Black to insert a touch of rationality into the debate.

It should be evident to everyone now that while we are busily shakin2 our heads in awe of the wonders Cal Stoll

was working,-Cal Stoll was sitting over there in his vinyl· chair busily accepting our congratulations. In other words, he didn't bother himself with recruiting, ala Jack McCloskey. · · ·

And the wonders he worked were with players brought here by Bill Tate, Stoll's predecessor.

And once tliose players tised up their eligibility, Cal Stoll was suddenly gone, counting his money in Min­nesota.

Meanwhile, back at Baptist Hollow, Tom Harper was left playerless. So he went out and recruited- and signed by far the most talented group of freshmen to enroll at Wake in vears.

His· only veteran quarterback with a smattering of ability-Kit Basler-was injured in the first game and still is not 100 percent effective. He was left with two talent-shy veterans- Chuck Ramsey and Jim Ryan­and a freshman, who a year ago was pitching passes at

16-year old kids in Leesburg, Fla. His best running backs- Rawling Smith and Ken

Garrett-· were crippled by knee injuries before the season began and ·have not recovered. And the list goes on and on.

Players who hadn't had an inkling of college game experience were supposed to be winners immediately. But it just doesn't work that way.

So go ahead and fire Harper after one year. Then we can start another of those new eras.

Only there will be one change in the next new era. Instead of dying off the players Stoll brought in, someone will be living off the players Harper brought in.

OF COURSE, THIS whole situation and column reflects a fanaticism with winning-- at all costs.

Maybe that's where we are all wrong.

Referees: The Policemen of Football fii9'hth;~,~,~ G~ii1 i I • Ask The Ones That Eat' With Us -

(Editor's note _What follows is ref's decision, the policemen's ward progress of the ball. minor (or five-yard penaltY) or a the third Installment of OG&B team (the Mod Squad?) can Thelinejudgeistheoneyou've major(or15-yardpenalty).Some sportswriter Tish Johnson's spark as much hate as the blamed many a time when Wake penalties also carry a loss of attempt at expJalnlng the game Tar heels. missed a first down by inches. He down. of football to the less Informed. The football police squad directs the men running on the One of the easiest penalties to Her series will continue 1n a consists of six men. The captain side of the field with the orange detect is offsides. The official will couple of weeks with a look at the of the squad is the referee. He is signs and the chain. face the stands with his hands on men behind the scenes) the "chief" in general control of The back judge is the his hips and penalize the team 5

the game and has final authority policeman in charge of the yards. By TISH JOHNSON over the decisions made. He can territory at the outside of the A spectator can detect off sides

Staff Writer be found in his position behind the field. He will "put the handcuffs" if he sees a lineman rush forward offensive army. on a player for pass interference. across the line of scrimmage

In addition to the offensive The referee has 5 patrolmen He can be found down the field while everyone is standing still anny. and defensive fort, there is working with him. The umpire's where the passes are caught (and before the ball is snapped. a third team of men on the field main concern is the conduct of dropped). Alsoinv.olvingthemovementof for every game. These are the thl pl:l:dsy. player will "get In charge of timing the game is bodies before the ball is snapped officials, or policemen. who the field judge. His partner are two more five-yard penalties. enforce the laws of football. busted" by this policeman for an patrolman is the clock operator illegal motion happens when a

Although it would not be illegal play. He's the real in the press box. The field judge rwming back can't wait for his pOssible to conduct a game _disciplinarian of the gridiron. signals the clock operator by big chance and dashes toward the without the officials, every Wake The umpire is in place behind the "winding up" his arm to start the line too early. The official will let fan can think of at least one game defensive unit: clock. He blows his whistle to stop him know by bending his elbow

h The line judge "walks his beat" th 1 k his chest th w ere the Deacs could have done e c oc wlien the- ball is dead. across en outward like better without them. When the at the line of scrimmage. Isn't Those red nags lying on the a patrolman controlling the Wake. fans don't agree with a that logical? He marks the ror- field mean one of two things- a direction of traffic.

If a man goes in motion ·anywhere else before the ball is snapped, it is called illegal trocedure. The official will make a rolling motion with his arms (like singing "this Old Man Came Rolling Home" in grammar school). Between many of the penalties, there are only very fine shades of difference.

Delay of game is a fourth five­yard penalty. This happens when the conversation gets so in­teresting in the huddle that the team forgets they only have 25 seconds to put the ball in play. The official will signal by crossing his bands over his chest.

Several more serious penalties set the team back 15 yards. One of these is a personal foul. The football policeman will wave an extended arm up and down like he is doing jumping jacks. Two examples of this are when a

player has hit an opponent that was already out of bounds or has piled on a player already tackled.

An official will look like he is brushing dirt off the back of his knee when a player is guilty of clipping. This means that an

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r-------~------~--------------~------~ STAFF STAFF

RICK LAYTON TISH JOHNSON Basketball Tipoff: < ><

First Baptist Church Four Weeks Away .

ALFRED MYATT WARREN STEEN . JEANBQTLER LANE

DAVE SHOT.)VLIN ALDERMAN

IRA PODLOFSKY MARK GERLACH

PETE TIM BARNES LARRY LYON DILLENGER RICH SEYBERT TIMMY CROAK

Amidst considerable new enthusiasm and confidence, Wake's basketball squad is concluding their third week of tractice in preparation for the

Assistant Editor Sports Editor Associate Editor BRUCE BRUCE GARDNER HARSHBARGER Nov. 3, .1972 BILL WATSON . season's opener with Florida L--------L--------~-:------:-----L-----..J Southern four weeks from

tonight, ·Dec. 1.

Basler Keeps Confidence Despite Deacon 'Troubles·

At this stage of practice, new Coach Carl Tacy considers conditioning and a review of fundamentals as his basic goals. He says he is pleased with the team's effort thus far, calling team spirit and hustle excellent. The team's attitude is evident to anyone who has watched prac­tice. By ALFRED MYATT

.. StaHWriter

"It's hard to say what is wrong with the team. If we knew what it was we could correct it."

So says Kit Basler, the sophomore quarterback who, against Clemson, played for the first time in seven weeks since suffering a dislocated shoulder in the opening game against Davidson.

Basler entered the game in the second quarter, after freshman starting quarterback Andy

KIT BASLER

Carlton had trouble moving the team. Mter piloting the team to a first down, he threw an in­terception in his first pass at­tempt.

He later added another in­terception, and Carlton rePlaced him midway through the third period with Wake trailing 23 • 0.

Speaking realistically of his Clemson performance, Basler said "I was only one for four (in passing) with two interceptions, but it was hard to be really disappointed or pleased because I didn't play very long.

"My timing isn't completely back yet but I expected that."

The Evanston, ill. product refused to .use his healing shoulder as an excuse, saying "The shoulder is not lQO percent yet, but it's healed enough to play. I don't believe I was trying too hard, either, although there was a lot of pressure to do well."

As for the criticism Coach Tom ~r has been receiving with the mcreasing number of losses, Basler said, "I think he's a fine coach and a fine gentleman.

"I don't think there is anyone on the team who dislikes Coach Harper. This is his first year and I think he should be given a chance."

"I have faith in myself and teammates that we can still have a good team," Basler said, looking at the rest of the season . "Morale is down- it's no secret.

"We've lost our last six games.

daX.e. lhs~ .b1'0tf"l y;u.. al1awet.~

a1td fl!J d'l_

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Something woUld be wrong if this didn't have an effect on the team. We want to win. We work hard practicing and making plans in meetings and it's disappointing not to do well.

"With a completely positive · attitude, we can beat South Carolina. It's no good to argue and criticize right now - the most important thing to work on is team unification."

· Tacy says he has no idea which players will emerge as the s~~g five, ~d ll.e sa~ com­petition will be stiff and everyone will be given a chance. . The search for a guard to direct

the offense is still going on. Senior Eddie Payne and junior Bobby Dwyer appear to be the leading candidates, but almost

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any guard in the Deacon surplus could win the job.

Tacy expects the JV team to be very strong, and he will not hesitate to promote to the varsity any player he feels will be an immediate help. ·

6- 8 sophomore Randy Adams and 6-5 freshman Henry Hicks, along with 6-7 walk- on freshman Alfred Myatt, will form the back­bone of the jayvees. A center may be dropped down from the varsity later.

College Gr~up 9:45

Worship 11 :00

Bus Leaves Johnson At 9:30

OUr foods come· from the nation's best suppliers. We demand top quality in all our foods. And suppliers go to any lengths to meet our requirements. At any campus location- The Pit, Mag Room, Snack Bar- you get the best possible food for the

lowest possible cost. Check it out with any other place 1n town. By the way, have you tried our seafood lately? r-!:;)

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PAGE EIGHT Friday, November 3, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Harriers Race For Fifth By PETE DILLINGER

Staff Writer meet.

In an attempt to get his runners healthy for Saturday's ACC championship meet, Coach Harold Rhea kept his Wake harriers out of last weekend's North Carolina Championships.

Duke won the N;C. Cham· pionships with N.C. State second and North Carolina third.

Rhea feels Wake will be ready for the ACC meet, since the I'UIIIIers have worked hard the last few weeks. He praised his team for possessing "great spirit • the best in the last four or five years."

Standouts Tom Rae and John Gulledge were battling colds, so Rhea decided to rest them rather than have them run through the cold and damp, risking further complications that could have kept them out of Saturday's

He expects the Deacons to vie for the fifth spot in the meet: "with all five rwmers having good days, we can beat Virginia and Clemson." The Deacons

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Many of th""e magazines are tree only to thon "in the know". 'l'helr other rerular readera J>GII for their aubocrli>Uon. But lhlll'l'l a ,.ay you can ""t them abaolutol:y free. And we'll und you oompJtt• dot­tall• along with an Indexed Uet ot the publlcaUon• . , • tOI' vnty ,2.0()-at our rlllk I Whatever your lntereoto or hobblea, ·)'o\1'11 tlnd m&pslbfla .,.,u'll want hert~. Som& of th&rn are mode1t, Jlmlted: clnruJation pu6flci .. tlons. But many are plush, beauUfully printed m-ln61 &ftd DIWI• letter•. publlohed by somo of the moat respected name~ In eaOh · partlculor field. You'll reoo~r~~lze lntemattonally·knowli ..,le11ttac a.nd profe11lona 1 aoc.letlea . • • bu!linee.!!, and trade usociatlona Important government departmenu •.• corporations with ,.,j.je: w1de access to Jmportant specialized lnrormatlon , •. tamoqa re­••arch lnalltutlono &nd aocletloe , , • and more, Aild 7'111 tail bo put on tho regul&r malllntr llot for any of tbt publication• Hated­and keep on recelvlnr them free, a.s long u you wllb, All It costs you Ia the J%.00 for our Invaluable directory. On!er now . , , and eo.loy 1. lltottmo o! tbe I"!Rdln.: You want • , , FREil'

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finished in a distant seventh place last year, when UNC edged Duke for the title. ~s year Maryland is favored

to wm, followed by Duke, State, and Carolina. Rhea cautioned that predictions cannot be cer­tain, however, since any team can surprise when the balance of the season Is decided in 30 minutes.

The top 15 finishers in Satur· day's meet qualify for the All­ACC cross country team. Rhea feels both GulledRe and Rae have

excellent chances to make all­conference honors.

Rhea is already looking for­ward to next season, when he espects a better showing with a more experienced team.

His present team consists of four sophomores: Rae, Rick Barfield, Mike Shrader, and Mack Roebuck, along with Gulledge, a junior. With these five men returning, a healthy Jon Schrock, and some freshmen, Rhea feels next year his runners "can move up a few more not­ches" in the ACC standings.

P .E. Efficiency Exams Set the week of Nov. 6 • 10 are as follows:

Golf, Nov. 6; Bowling, Nov. 6; Soccer, Nov. 6; Wrestling, Nov. 6; Paddleball, Nov. 6.

stu.dents wishing to register for Physt~al . Education proficiency exammations must sign up in room 212C of Reynolds Gym­nasium not later than 24 hours Jrior to the test. Registration is set for 2 to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Friday.

Further information may be obtained by contacting Dr. R. Case in Room 212C of the gym. Tests will be given through Nov. 17.

t'f'_ '":"'

The written tests being given John Sykes grabs touchdown pass for Taylor House between t~o Sigma Chi def~nders. in tramural championship. Sigma Chi won 19 - 13.

last week's in­Photo By H. Jones

Deacs Dominate Big Four Remember By MARK GERLACH

Staff Writer·

Completely dominating both singles and doubles, the Wake tennis team showed its powerful potential last weekend in the Big Four Tournament at Duke.

All the rmalists in both the singles and doubles, the . Wake tennis team showed its powerful potential last weekend in the Big Four Tournament at Duke.

All the finalists in both the singles and the doubles were Deacons, although players from three other schools- Appalachian State, N.C. State, and Duke participated in the tournament. Defending ACC champ North Carolina passed up the test.

Wake's Dean Mathias won the singles competition, downing teammate Garry Cooper 6-7, 6- 4, 6- 5 in the finals. Mathias, a senior, reached the finals with big victories over Keith Richardson of Appalachian and Duke's Niles Rathlev, a transfer from Denmark.

Cooper defeated highly­regarded sophomore Mike Meyer of Duke in the second round.

Several other Deacs also turned in impressive per­formances.

Unheralded Sammy Martin, a freshman from Raleigh, shocked N.C. State sophomore Randy Merritt 6-3, 7-6 in the first round. Merritt plays number two singles for the Wolfpack.

Veteran Wake players Peter Pospisil, Bob Koury, and Eddy Pribyl also played well before losi.nR.

Doubles Undetermined

A doubles champion was not crowned, due to a lack of time. But both teams in the doubles finals are from Wake, and the championship will be decided here sometime next week, probably on Tuesday.

Cooner and Pribyl will play Mathias and Posol.sil for the

championship. Cooper and Pribyl beat Meyer and Ratillev of Duke in the semifinals 6-3, &-4, while Mathias and Pospisil downed teammates Joe Westervelt and Martin 6-1, 6-1 in their semifinal match.

Leighton Surpaised

Coach Leighton was surprised and pleased with the outstanding performances turned in by his players. He was vecy surprised when Wake placed three teams in the doubles semifinals. . The team is showing great improvement over last year's squad. But the victories last week were dulled somewhat by the absence of Carolina, which once again figures as the chief roadblock between the Deacs and an ACC championship.

The Deacs will see action next on November 17 - 19 in the Sugar Mountain Invitational, which annually attracts some of the top players in the Carolinas.

Dean Mathias won the Big Four singles

championship

r;Jltl!i·::tiJ -IIIli CllDll.U:I!· -· v'=n'Dl.til:'i :•1-r:lill ili.!!ll" ~-·· ttllD:I!l I )[;; ICD!U-JJ I hlillllll t:GillU CJHLLE Dli!!ll liE Dmr Cooper Forecast

I·~ £ ear ess .l' Qrecast : ,, 'I, .·I Student:Goyernment President , 1' ·Mary Uiti' E:ooper iS this week's ~ guest fearless forecaster, the

LA(5~N) B(:=) SEYBERT LYON COOPER I first woman to try matching the

I (50-26-4) (47-29-4) Old Gold & Black's best Wake at South Carolina So. Car. Wake So car So. Car. SoG · CarT ch. ,_ JrOgnosticators. Ga. Tech at Duke Tech Duke · • Clem. UNa.C e I· Ms. Cooper, a junior from

I~· North Carolina at Clemson UNC UNC Tech Duke .Wilson, is a fairly avid football · N.C. State at Virginia State state :~ state State fan. she even ielephoned the

MaN brylankd att Pce1nn Sdtate Pennb St. Penn st. Penn. St. Penn. ·st. ~:n St. I SthigmaChi0,rl co~chto last. weethk af~r . e ras a a o or~ o Ne . Neb. N b Colo. · e s VIC ry m e m-

1~ Va. Tech at So. Miss. VPI VPI V~I· VPI VPI tramural championship, ala

Auburn at Flolfeda . Aub. Aub. Aub. Aub. ~~ Ri;!~d Nix~~· t histo

i'<a~~~t ~t ~~:ri ~~uri ia~·St. Tenn. ~er:.·st. Miss~uri a JX'Of:sso::V~~. ~a!~e~ey, w?s ~IG·:t 11 mme mm u=ni•· ; ii:ll-1111· 111!--mKan·m:~~· .st •. l!:l'll\1" fll:8_ar:u.1ru m~ &-4 in his selections.

Wake Tests Gamecocks In Columbia Con~ued fr~m Pag.e ~ . . yards per game. .

through the aJI'. TheJ.r runnmg 5·10 sophomore Dobby game has averaged less than 100 Grossman is the Cocks' auar·

Women Dealt Twin Losses Both Coker College and UNC-G

dealt the Wake women's volleyball team losses Tuesday night, witlt the Deacons going down each time 2- 0 in the Wake gym.

The volleyball team will play

Guilford and Elon Wednesday at Guilford in their next action.

Wake's field hockey team knocked off their cross-town archrivals, Salem, 4 • 1 last Thursday. The team plays in the Deep South tournament this weekend.

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terback, and he has enjoyed relative success since winning the regul.Sr job from V1.rginia transfer Bill Troun a month ago.

He has thrown for 637 yards and seven touchdowns.

Harper will once again start two freshman in the offensive backfield, quarterback Andy Carlton and fullback Frank Harsh. Soph signalcaller Kit Basler (see related story on page

ONE'LL

7) will be available, but lt -is uncertain whether he will play.

Carlton twice drove the Deacs inside the ten-yard line against Clemson, but both times they stalled. Wake has not scored since the first quarter of the N.C. State game, which is now eleven quarters ago.

l£a Allen, a S-3, 230 pound sophomore from Fayetteville, will start in Bartholomew's place at defensive tackle. He has seen very limited action this year.

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Mon., Nov. 6 Tues., Nov. 7

1963! · The current miserable football season Wake is suffering tbrough has evoked a lot of memories for a lot of the less-youthful Wake followers.

This is not the first time Wake has agonized through such a season. Many are recalling 1962, when the Deacons lost all ten games. · But the Old Gold & Black would rather remember 1963. It was in 1963 when the Deacs, after losing their first eight games ( t9

run their losing streak to 18), rose up and lambasted South Carolina 20 -19.

The 1963 Deacs had been shut out in six of their first eight games, and had scored a total of 17 points before the South Carolina game. They had given up 267.

After trailing the Gamecocks 19 - 7 at halftime, it was that most legendary of all Deacons, Brian Piccolo, who sparked the Deacs' second half comeback and who kicked the winning extra point.

Of such stuff legends are created. Never mind that the Deacs reverted to form the following week and

lost 42. o. · The 1972 Deacs'play South Carolina Saturday. Need we say more?

1963 1972

Wake Wake 10 East Carolina 20 26 ·Davidson 20 0 Virginia Tech 27 10 SMU 56 0 North Carolina 21 6 Tennessee 45 0 Florida State 35 0 Maryland 23 0 Army·;_ 47 ·-·-~% ... N.C. State 42

Maryland·· -- ' North Carolina 21 0 f ~·~ '1!' )~ ;c.J.fr .._.,

0 Clemson 36 il; :o:,·~ Clemson 31

7 Duke 39 •20 South Carolina 19 0 N.C. State 42

Penalty Markers Can Spoil Action

Continued From Page 7 offensfve player has hit a defensive player from behind. It will set the team back 15 yards.

Roughing the kicker takes place if an opponent interferes with the kicker while he is in the act of kicking. It is legal however to hit a kicker before or after his ~c}l:.

When a ref grabs his wrist he is signaling illegal use of hands,. (this signal is useful for stopping illegal use of hands only while the players are on the field). This situation happens when an of­fensive player grabs a defensive player instead of merely blocking him. If the sides are reversed, the penalty is called defensive holding.

Two penalties involve the passmg game. An illegal forward pass is one that is thrown after the quarterback crosses the line of scrinunage. A lateral pass,

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however, may be thrown anytime from anywhere. The difference in the two may mean 15 yards.

When a pass is thrown, both the defense ana offense are-given an equal chance to catch it. H the defense hits an offensive player before he catches the ball, it is a pass interference penalty.

It has been illustrated to Deac fans, however, that an opponent's defensive player can prevent a successful pass by grabbing for the ball himself.

A survey of official's signals would not be complete without including the score signal of both hands raised overhead, a rare signal this year for Wake.

Football spectators should not forget that there are three teams necessary for playing a football game - the offense, the defense, and the police squad! The of­ficials are a team of their own -though fans often think they are playing in favor of the other side

The most beautiful touchdown play can be spoiled by a lone red flag lying on the field. Watch the running back travelling down the field in a burst of speed. The policeman may have caught him for running a red light.

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PAGE TEN Friday, November 3, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Text of Proposed Student Government Constitution student members shall 1) in· troduce in their committees any appropriate Student Government actions and 2) report the business of their committees to the · Committee on Committees.

meetings as non-voting mem· hers; work with the previously selected members, and report information back and forth between the Student Government and the Student IJfe Committee and remain legislators.

(Note: The following articles, comprising the major part of the proposed new Student Government constitution, were presented to the SG legislature Wednesday night and referred to committees lor study. Article IV, dealing with the Honor Council a&d Student Judicial Board, and the statutes of the constitution have not yet been com­pleted. A summary of the proposed constitution and how it dHfers from the one now in effect is on Page 1 ).

ARTICLE I· BILL OF RIGHTS

Section 1- Every duly enrolled member of the undergraduate student body of Wake Forest University shall be a citizen of the Student Government with right to vote in general elections and the right to be represented in the various branches of that government

Section 2 • No student shall be denied his rights for reasons of race, religion, sex, class or beliefs

Section 3 • The judicial bodies of the University shall not take disciplinary actions against any student without prior notice of the alleged violation and a fair hearing and trial by a student jury

the legal limits of the University.

ARTICLEll· EXECUTIVE BRANCH

Section 1 · Members of the Executive Branch and their rights and duties

Subsection a • The President shall 1} call and preside over meetings of the student body 2} appoint such committees as are necessary for the im· plementation of Student

Advisory Committee Section 2 • Executive Com­

mittees and their functions Subsection a. The Cabinet shall

consist of the chairmen of the standing committees and any temporary committees and be chaired by the President for the purpose of coordinating all Student Government actions

Subsection b • The Secretariate shall consist of one elected secretarial representative from each class and any volunteer members and be chaired by the Student Government Secretary for the purpose of handling all clerical work for the various branches of Student Government.

Government actions 3) serve as chairman of the Cabinet and the ~egislature's Committee on Committees 4) serve as a non­voting member of the Board of Trustees and 6) be granted in· formation about University ARTICLE m _ decisions concerning students LEGISLATIVE BRANCH and shall assist in its distribution.

Subsection b • The Speaker of Section 1- The Legislative the House shall 1) call and functions and composition. preside over meetings of the Subsection a- The functions of Student Legislature 2) appoint the Student Legislature shall be committees within the to 1) charter student Legislature necessary to im· organizations 2) articulate plement legislative actions and 3) student wishes for the ex· assist the President of the penditure of the activity fee 3} to Student Government supervise the selection of student

Subsection c . The Secretary members of faculty and Board of shall1)serveasavotingmember Trustee Working COmmittees 4) and keep the records of the to promote, organize, and fund Legislature 2) be responsible for programs of benefit to the s t u d e n t G o v e r n m e n t student body and community and correspondence and 3) serve as 5) to represent the interests of chairman of the Secretariate students in social and academic Committee matters.

Subsection d • The Treasurer Subsection b - The Student shalll) serve as a voting member Legislature shall be composed of of the Legislature 2) have charge forty- two members: the Student of all Student Government money Government Secretary and and disperse it at the direction of Treasurer, one secretarial the Legislature and 3) serve as member for each class, three at­chairman of the Student Budget large members of the Student

.----------------------.. Life Committee, five

Section 4 ·No student shall be denied the right to establish organizations and groups within

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representatives from Poteat • H•1ffm,.n fivp representatives from Taylor • Efird, four representatives from Kitchen, four representatives from Davis two representatives from Bostwick, two representatives from .Johnson. three rl'presen­tatives from Babcock three . . representatives from New Dorm and five representatives from off: campus. . S~!cti~o 2 •• Standing

Legislative Committees and their functions. Subse~tfon 11 - The Committee

on Committees, chaired by the Pr~sident and composed of legts~ tors, shalll) publicize and explam the functions of available faculty and Board of Trustee Working Committee positions 2) solicit, interview, and recom­mend prospective faculty and Board of Trustee Working . Committee members to the Legislature 3) relay iiiformation and relevant actions between Student Government and student members of faculty and Board of Trustee Working Committees 4) shall organize material from the various faculty and Board of Trustee Working Committees and relay it to the student body and 5) remove and replace any student member not fulfilling his duties.

Subsection b • The Charter Committee, composed of legislators, shall 1) review the constitution and by-laws of any student group seeking recognition as an official Wake Forest University organization tO see that its purposes do not conflict with Univer!lit.v

Student Government reguliltions and that it does not discriminate on the basis of race or creed 2) recommend the recognition :of reviewed groups to the Legislature and 3) revoke the

. charter of any previously ap­proved student organization which deviates from its accepted regulations and conflicts with University or Student Govern­ment rules.

Subsection c - The Student Budget Advisory Committee chaired by the Student Govern· ment Treasurer, and composed of one elected Budget Representative from each class, three appointed members, and the President shall 1) examine and publish the appropriations of the student activity fee 2) determine the wishes of the student body with regard to the spending of the activity fee and 3) with the Legislature's approval, devise and recommend a budget for the dispensation of the ac­tivity fee to the University Budget Committee.

Subsection d - The Urban Services Referral Bureau, headed by a director approved by the Legislature and composed of students and staff members shall 1) coordinate volunteer services of students with community projects and needs and 2) promote student interest in community affairs.

Subsection e - The Student Economic Board, chaired by a

legislator and composed of at least one student from each class shall 1) seek and publicize student price reductions at

Outnumbered Mrs. James Hodgson, wife of the Secretary of Labor; Mrs. Richa.rd Kleindienst, wife of the Attorney General; and Mrs. Herb Stein, wife of the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors.

community business establish· ments 2) work for better prices and services at the on-campus facilities and 3) promote any programs which will provide needed goods at economical prices for students .

Section 3 • Legislative Ad· visory Committees and their functions.

Subsection a - The Athletics Advisory Committee shall 1) research athletic practices for Student Government and help carry out Student Government actions which pertalli to athletics and 2) work with the Faculty Athletics Committee in discussing policies for the athletic program and represent student opinion in such matters.

Subsection b -· The Food Services Committee sball 1) research procedures and policies of the University food services company and help implement Student Government actions which pertain to food services and 2) work with the food ser· vices company and promote projects which will improve service to students.

Subsection c - The Health Services Committee shall 1) ·research the procedures . and policies of the University Health Clinic and help implement Student Government actions which pertain to health care and 2) work . with the University Health Clinic in promoting better health services.

Subsection d The Psychological Services Com­mittee shall 1) research the procedures and policies of the University Psychological Research and Testing Center and help implement Student Government actions which pertain to psychological services and 2) work with the Psych Center in promoting better services.

ARTICLEV· STUDENT IN

UNIVERSITY GOVERNMENT

Section 1· Student members of the Student Life Committee and their duties

Subsection b - The Committee on Committees shall select one student member for each Board of Trustees Working Committee, and that student member shalll) introduce in their committees any appropriate Student Government action and 2) report the business of their committee to the Committee on COmmittees.

ARTICLE VI· STATI(TES

The statutes which follow this Constitution shall be established to regulate and order the specific functions of Student Government bodies.ln order that the changing needs of the Student Government may be met, these statutes shall be subject to addition, amend· ment or abolition by a two-third majority of the Legislature provided the Legislature has published the proposed change one week before the vote.

ARTICLEVH· AMENDMENT

The Constitution of the Student Government shall be amended or revised only with the consent of a majority of the undergraduate student body as expressed on a secret ballot. In order to be considered for adoption, the proposed change shall either be passed by the Legislature or p-esented to the President in petition form with twenty percent of the student body supporting the change.

ARTICLEVlll· RATIFICATION

The articles and statutes of this Constitution shall become im·

2) All class vice- presidents shall remain legislators and shall -assist the clasS presidents in relaying information to and from . the Student Life Committee.

3) All clasS secretaries shall remain legislators and provide clerical services to legislators of their· respective clacses.

4) All class treasurers shall serve on the Student Budget Advisory Committee lU1d begin work on the student activity fee and continue serving as legislators.

5) The President shall turn over the appointment and supervision of student Faculty Committee members and student Board of Trustee Working Committee members to a Committee on Committees elected from the legislature which the President shall chair, and those students serving will be responsible to report their ac· tions to the Committee on Committees.

G)·The President shall serve on the Student Budget Advisory Board and appoint its three non­designated members.

7) the Vice- President shall chair the Charter Committee whose members shall be elected from the legislature and this committee shall handle all petitions for charters or com· plaints of charter violations.

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Subsection a • The Student Life Committee representatives elected one from the sophomore, one from tbe junior, and one from the senior 'class shalll) introduce any Student Government action which needs the Student Life Committee approval2) represent their classes' interests in social and academic matters handled by the Student Life ComMittee and 3) coordinate any necessary business of a strictly class nature.

· mediately effective upon the majority approval of the un­dergraduate student body as expressed by secret ballot. If the decision on ratification comes at string election time, the old Constitution shall be nulllfied and the new one be completely in effect. However. if the ratification decision comes while officers are still under the direction of the old Constitution, they shall adhere to the following procedures until they finish their terms. Upon completion of the terms of these officers and an election of new officers as specified in the new Constitution these interim procedures shall automatically be stricken.

1) All class presidents shall attend Student Life Committee

Joel Rappoport

Subsection b • The three elected- at- large Student Life Committee representatives shall 1) introduce any Student Government action which needs Student Life Committee approval 2) represent the interests of the student body in general, in social, and academic matters handled by the Student Life Committee and 3) serve as members of the legislature and relay pertinent Student Life Committee actions to that body.

Section 2 • Student members of Faculty and Board of Trustees Working Committees and their duties

Subsection a • The Committee on Committees shall select one voting and one non-voting student member for the following Faculty Committees: Ad· missions, Athletics, Buildings and Grounds, College Review Board, CUrriculum, Executive, Honors, Library Planning, Publications, Scholarship, Teaching Education, and six for the Traffic Commission and these

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While showing the wiv~s of three high Republican officials around the campus during their brief visit Tuesday, President James Ralph Scales, a stauch Democrat, un­doubtedly didn't try to argue politics. From left to right, they are

Debate Team Takes Third at UNC

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Wake Forest debaters reached the semi-finals of the University of North Carolina's "Tarheel Debates" last weekend.

Freshmen Bob Burchfield of High Point and Roger Solt of Bowling Green, Ohio, competed in the semi-final rounds, while a second Wake team, Marc Ethridge of Madison, Tenn., and

Becky Armentrout of Thomasville went to octa-finals.

Burchfield and Solt were 6-2 in preliminaries and ranked twelfth in the acta-finals, where they defeated West Georgia College. They defeated William and Mary in quarter-finals before losing to Northwestern University in the semi-finals.

Ethridge and Armentrout were 7-1 in preliminaries and ranked third in acta-finals, where they lost to Cornell University.

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