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·i. ... Jericho's. Past . I *' VOLUHE XLIV Haddock Is To Address Lawmakers * * * Wilke ForeSt. College. WJDBton-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, ll4.areh 16, 1959 NUMBER 2t Honor .System May Ch·aD-ges This. Semester / Report Is Due, Says Chairman Mackie Heads Boosters. Club

2t Haddock Is To Address Honor .System May G~t Ch·aD-ges ... · James Walton and Prof. Julian work camp will be heidi May 28 Bun-oughs ... tlt~· exerc far It in was ·W 'the evaCI

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·i.

... Jericho's. Past

. I

*' VOLUHE XLIV

Haddock Is To Address Lawmakers

* * * Wilke ForeSt. College. WJDBton-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, ll4.areh 16, 1959 NUMBER 2t

Honor .System May G~t Ch·aD-ges This. Semester

/

Report Is Due, Says Chairman

Mackie Heads Boosters. Club

PAGE TWO 1\londay, l\larch 16, 1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Proposal Is Laboratory Production

Handed'No' Actors Chosen For 5 Plays By Facul~y

THE 1959 SUPER 'DELUXE 4-DR. SIMCA WHITE WALL TIRES

$395 Down BALANCE IN 36 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $50.60

Plus 1% State Sales Tax and License Plate

Matt Howell Motors 210 N. l\1ARSHALL ST. PA 2-6135

Speech Event Held The i:lhdrd annual North Ca.ro- The · festiVJal W21S begun hy the

Hna High School Srpooch Fes'tival College speedlJ, and dra:ma depal'lt­wa.s he.l.d art; Wake Forest Friday m€nt last year. Shlrley has indi­and Saturday. 'carted th~t i't -shoUild hecome am an-

Between 80 and 100 students par- nual thing. Ait last 'YI€m"s tOIIll"'lar tici.pated in the festival which men't, hel? rut 'Yake Forest Coll:e.ge, included a four-round debate tour- 'IIhomasville H1gh School wo.n fu·st nament and competiltion in o.ne-act p1ace overaiH honors. piays.

Other events· open for competi­tion were oral interpretaltiorn, origi­nal ora;tory, e~temporaneous speak­fulg, radio announing and after­di:tmer spealcing.

The festival wa~ directed by

Baptists' Work Camp Planne~

Prof. Franklin R. Shirlley. Prof. The third Baptis't Student Uni'OO'l James Walton and Prof. Julian work camp will be heidi May 28 Bun-oughs of the College srpeedb to June 5 at the North Carolina Bap-and dr.a.ma department. tis!t A>ssembliy' in Southpol'1t.

The C(}lle~e chaptJe~ of Alpha Psd The camp's purpose is'to provide Omega, naltional honorary drama- studenrlls of the stalte mth an op­ti~s fraternio/, met in connection opportunity to work, study and wor­Wltlb. the festival. The Elon CoUege ship together. Last year's group put chapter of the fraternity presented in 600 man hours. .

:n~~~otit~e~~e!:~:Ug~~C:~~ . ~e number of stud~ts "":ill ~be · · d d limited fu. 35. Se1edtron Wl!ll be petition wer-e Gras". Morehea an d ........ ba · f ..... _ "-te of

Tr rna e on 'WJ.e Sils o . ....., """ oy. . . . appldc.a;tion, and <lOOl!sideraltion wDl Debatin~ ·begwn Fnday mo:r.ning aJ!so he ,given 'to •a wide represen­

and ~orutinucl ~ough Saturd.ay I tati'otn. by colleges. mommg. The .fe&t1val ended w::iith A $2 reg:i·straltion !f'e.e wi:ll be the preseruta.twn of award;:; at required and will cover :insruroinx:e noon Sa'turdla,y. , Wake Forest per- for each camp,er · and the coslt of sonnel helped JUdge even:ts. study guides I{;(} be used :in th!e

EiJ.even h'i.gh sclhools registered study groups. Campers will be ex-for the festival.· pecJted to pay f(}r rtlheir own traJIJ!S'-

Schools entered were Reynold's portation to and from the assembly.

~=======~==================~land Gray high .a!lb.ools of Winston- The as5embey Will provi~ for all Salem, MOl'ehea.d High School of livilng =angements, mcludlng Reidsville, High PoinJt Senior Higib food.

And

CAFETERIA Your Kind Of Eating Place

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SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON AND DINNER

School, Tro.y, Ros-e lligh School in Two full-time Baptist Studienlt Greenville, Nor!th Davidson· :in Union directors James Oa.:nsler Davidson County, Cha~pel Hri:ll, Lee from the University of North Caro­Edwards in Aslhleville, My!res Park lilln.a, and James Grene of .Alppa­at Charlotte and Needham Br<lrug+h- lachiain. State Teacher's Coalege, ton. at Raleigh. will be m charge of !the camp.

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WINSTON TASTES GOOD, LIKE A CIGARETTE .SHOULD I , I ' ' \

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to evaOt f~e ~ ·"""'~tcuatic ~be· t J ... ,~ ~~ . .. ,AJthou·

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the traff: 10111 Driv• a.-••nop.' the cars 11!ctioll8," corning a

Some ( the cam.; the same

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It was far in ·W 'the evaCI Jieople. ·!Before

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it was , whoops c

. dents scu the cOeds along the ed up. It •

It was . dents eXC+E turn to a their appi expe.rinMll)

Officials evacuation without- pr have take. the event c ·cade woul• Elkin t instl the ~ege

Mili' lnst~ . J'un Tw

was instaU of· Scabbm ~lita:ry fr; ~r,:,

military . S( officer in F Other of

weekls cere 1st lieutena .lieutenant; geant. The sponds witl other orgar lst lieuten vice presid4 re8poncJs. "

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OPEN .TIL 9 FRID.AY NIGHT

. Pi Kappa Alpha social fraternity · is making preparations ·fori its an­nual Foimc:klr's Day event.

The local chapter at Wake Fo.rest : will celebrate ,the event with ·a ban- ·

quet in~ the Magnolia Room Satur· day night, at which several national officials wilf be present. . · The event will mark the twentieth anniver-sary of· the founding of the Wake Forest ch.apoor. .

'David C. Powers,· national presi· · dimt for the fraternity, ~ speak.

On the same program will be Pi Kappa Alpha National secretalrY L. A. McCall. ·

· Charter members and altJmni ol. the fraternity have been invited to attend· tbe celebration in Reynolda Hall. . • .

Dr. Cronjie B. Earp, ~ of the classical language ~

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n.welri. ~ccessorlea ac A Few Of McPhail's Hand· some Jewels. DesignEd To Please .And Priced To Aecomodate Every Budget •

McPhail's

OLD GOLD AND BLACK 1\londay, Ma.rch 16, 1959 PAGE THREE

Deacons ·Roost (Formerly The Varsity)

"LOCA~D IN THE SHADOW-·OF THE CHAPEL'"

PLATE LUNCHES SERVED II A. M. to & P. M. DaiiJ

NOW SERVING BREAKFASTS! Ope~ 1 A. M. D~IJ

A Geed Place Te Eat - Try Us Totlafl PHONE n 3-932.&

SHOP ANCHOR DAlLY 9:30 ~ 5:30 MONDAY,FRD.AY

. NIGHTS TILL 9:00

spring-:into-summer tWosome: our "social butterfly" print , matched oo its own: butterlly, peiarl and rhlnesrocme appliqued whlte orion ~:>Wea.ter ••• !uH skfrbed dress !in manes. fa.brics wash a:nd wear pl'!illted cotton • •. . in !turquoise/green print on :wh.:iite groWld or blue/:red on wiMte ground • • • sizes 8-15

14.98 ment, · Is chapter adviser to the 410 N~· S"'"uce St. ,. 264 S. Stratr«~rd _Rd. IS Setl in SeY8ftl8811 fraternity. Griffin is the .,....

chaprer · . He &~1~--------------~--~----------------------------~ _____________ ;ca;m;:p:us~eo:r:n;e;~~f;a:Shl:;"o~na.~hl~e~~~-n-d._ __________ __ ....................... ~ .• -·.:-~~ ....... ,_l!lll .... lllil ..... Bob attbatpost. ·•

®l!l ~nlb au~ illurk WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1959

·An Honor Code In Trouble The Honor Council has set itself a

seemingly impossible task, to make something extremely practical out of the most idealistic of schemes. Council members for five months 'have been figuring out ways that fue College's Honor Code can be m.ade to work.

The dhief trouble with the Honor Code is that students ignore one of its two main features. They simply will not report anyone whom they see cheating. It's a perfectly human and understandable characteristic but it !has contributed more than anything else to the present poor situation of the honor system.

Council members are toying wit!h the idea of doing several things about t!his. If the automatic suspension penal­ty for cheating is removed, some of 'the members feel, students will be more likely to tell on one anot!her. If someone who observes cheating could ask the cheater to turn himself in ra­ther than going to t'he · council, this would help, some of t!hem feel. Anoth­er, id~a is to get the whole'he'arted support of ce1·tain groups of students, who will let it be known t'hat they will abide by the code to the extent· of telling on c'heaters.

All of these ideas .have merit. They also 1have a drawback. Students have beco-me so used to watching the ceil­ing rather t'han the cheaters in class that even if the automatic suspension penalty were removed, they might not report. And if a student is a conscious, exp~rienced cheater, he will laugh at the Idea of turning 'himself in. . The council members probably rea­

lize these two drawbacks more 1fuan anyone else. If they institute a new program, they intend to accompany it wit'h such an intensive edulcational program t'hat students cannot fail to at least think of reporting. And they are contemplating" t'he idea that if an 9bserved cheater does not turn him­self in, file observer can turn him in within a certain length of time. This could be an effective incentive for turning oneself in, especially if the

penalty were made lig'hter for those who did so. .

Perhaps the most 'hope lies in get­ting a core of students who will let it be known that they will turx~ in cheat­ers·. They would not be policemen. or spies, but they woul~ simply be domg what every student IS supposed to do. There are enough responsible stu­·dents who are concern~d about ~he Honor Code to make th1s a workmg solution.

The council's committee studying the code emphasizes .that iJh~s~ a~e only ideas and not!hmg def1mte lS planned. The members :feel, thou~~· t'hat the code has reached a cr1s1s point and it must be changed or done away with. .

The abolition of t!he code must never happen on the Wake Forest campus. 'I'he system is idealistic, but so is the whole idea of a co111. college with a proctor system. canno+

. even be called a college in ifue true sense of the word. It is rather· a fac­tory for instilling knowledge and get­tin.g graded on the knowledge. W'hen an honor code exists, there also ~end to exist free t!hought, a de-emphasis on grades and an idea of what true edu­cation is ...

These things. admittedly are not always in evidence at Wake F?rest, but t!hey would be much ~ess _evident with a proctor system. Losmg 1ts code would be a step backward for Wake Forest from which it would take a long time to recover. It is easy to get a proctor system.; it is mudh harder to get rid of one. ·

And would a proctor system J;le more.efficient? We doubt it. If a stu­dent really wants to cheat he can cheat under a proctor system as well as under an 'honor system.

The council wants to keep the C"rl" T+ ·w;n ho ;,.,t,••<><!ti.,.,~ +n ""H'! what fl')lll-

tion it comes. un wit'h. Jt will alsn be vitally imnortant. Wake Fore<:t at times seems to have so few features of a good colleP.'e. The Honor Corle has been one of 1fuose :features, and the College must not give it up.

. Those Telepltones Again Wake Forest's deplorable 'telephone

system for independent men is back in the news this week, but this time it's not the system specifically but what 'has been done to the system.

Early last week some student or stu­dents cut the receivers off t!he ten telephones in the sections for indepen­dent men. They tookt!he receivers and hung them in the post office. To date fue telephones have not been fixed and they may never be fixed. The company would be perfectly justified' in removing the p'hones, though no statement has been made to this effect.

Destruction of property on campus is a Conduct Council offense. The only trouble is that most students view such actions as harmless pranks and will. not turn in any culprit they see ~earmg up property. Leaving the ma­JO;t"Ity of the campus' m.ale population Without means of communication is 'hardly a prank. Maybe doing without the telephones for a while will give 1fu~ students guilty a twinge of con­science. If not, maybe it will give' other students a realization of the dif­ference between nranks and wilful destruction and will persuade them to turn in guilty culprits. ·

There is one more point about the matter. Because of the curious manner·

HANNAH MILLER Editor

-

in which t!he men's dormitories are built, the telep'hones are on the outside of the building. They are easy fov pranksters to get at wifuout being caught. .•

If the telephones were inside an in­'habited part of the buildings, say in · the soon to be completed independent lounges, they would be less available to pranksters. And if they were in fue lounges, they could be manned by a paid student staff. .

The cut receivers are still not t'he most deplorable thing about the teleJ!hones. The worst part is that students still do not answer fue phones, and who can blame them.? They don't have time to trot down to the plhone and then trot upstairs to notify the person calied.

A paid staff of some sort still seems t'he best solution. If the administration could find some students who would be studying in the lounges at a certain time, the boys mig'ht be willing to take on t'he phone-answering job at those hours for a less-than-usual salary. It's wort'h a try, anyhow:.

This 'met!hod is assuming that the telep'hones are in the loung<es. They are not. But if they were m.oved in, we think both fue vandalism and the failure to answer calls would be help­ed.

BOB DE.MSEY Busines& Manager

Founded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Black 1s pulilished each Monday during the school year exeept during examination and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Boa.rd.

JOHN ALFORD, Managing Editor BOB YARBROUGH, Circulation Manager RAY ROLLINS, Assistant Editor FRANCIS FENDERSON, Circulation Assistant

WOODY PEELE, Sports &litor

'EDITORIAL STAFF: J. D. Alexand-er, Bruce Ayscue, Joo Chandler. Dan C'h:w.-ch, Dave Clough, Barbara Edward.s, Sid Eagles, Frank Glenn, Ann Griffin, Kelley Griffith, John Heydt, Roberta House, Marcia Jones, Judy Parker, Woody Peele, Dwight Piclmrd, AI Post; Dave Rawley, Don Schoonmaker, Bob Sitton, L:rnn-e SmatheTs, Joel Steg:a.U, Fred Wardlaw. · !:t 1

BUSINESS STAFF: Beebe Davis, Ca.mille .Tohnstc:m. Chuck Jones, Janet Lemona, Ann Ringley, Doris Smith, Jim Thomas, Charls Waldrop, Anne Watkins, Dan Webster.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by Na­tional Advertisillg Service, Inc. Subscription rate: *2.50 per year. Second-Class ma.il pri· vileges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C.

Offices in Reynolcla. HaU 225-556 ·

Telephone PArk 5·9711 P. O. Box. '1567 Exteaslon 215 BeynoWa· Brudl

Winston-Sale114 N. C.

.• . 'I.

~Maids On Tlie Hall' Mag:nolia.

'

Burns Favors Students' llelp In Fund ·Drive

By .GUS BURNS. LAST TJ:rtrn.SDA Y in chapel the

student body received information concerning the proposed building fund far a new science building. There is hope on the part of the leaders of this drive that the stu­dents will participate 100 per cent. I feel sure that the drive has not been met with any excessive en· thusiasm. I can guess at a few of the reasons for this.

SQme students undoubtedly feel that they are already paying more than they can afford to go to school and that they can ill afford any additional expense, however small. Others probably believe that we don't need a new science building, since the present one is still coin· paratively ·new. .And there are, although I hate to admit it, some who probably don't care whether we get any new building or not.

YET IN A REAL sense we need this building and we need complete ' student support. 'l'he psychology department, one oi the departments which will occupy the new building is now housed in what last year was the men day studentS' lounge. There is no laboratory space avail· . able. And certainly, as Charles Deane pcdnted out in chapel, be­cause ()£ the Russian threat there is no depaJ:tment which needs the increased emphasis as the science departments do.

DEANE ALSO pointed out the reluctance o.f Winston-8alem mer· chants and townspeople to contri· bute because they doubt the interest of the students. And wherever peo­ple solicit funds for .this, this question will be asked, "What did the students do?" "How do they :feel about lthds thing?" If the answer ro this question is 100 per cent participation the money will be much easier 'to collect.

The faculty and law school have already been heard from. I hope for once that th~ students will have the fores'ight to do the right thing. We should have llllanlln'OUS partied· pation and we might, but I don't envy' the solicitors their task. In a very real sense the . success of Ulls campaign is resting on o u r shoulders. Our res:p1J;nse is valuable.

Letters · (All letters to the editor must be signed; names will he with· held on requesp

Letter To Edito.r: We would like to invite eV!'ll'Y' stu­

dent , to attend the open house Sunday at 2-4 p. m. in the two newly-opened independent men's lounges; The open hou.Ses are being sponsored l>y the Social Standards Committee and the Student Legis· lature in an effort toacquaint in dependents, fraternity men, c,oeds and .faculty with the new lounges.

Refreshments will be served in the·.Ia:tmge of Davis Docinitory.

Barba!'a Hollield . . Social Standards Committe

Charles Deane ·Student Legislature

' .. !i~4 ... :~~~·:

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;#:!,;. .~\~"*~"~ ~ ·~'"'~' ,·:>it~·'· ~:~-··

ACPPoU

Leaves '· By ROY HUGHES. .

Dr. Thane MacDonald was late starting $oir Pl'actice thf' , ... !Jer ·day . and ·the choir started si:l:P::g "Old. MacDonald Had a Choir'' to siM!H him ·up. One eoed had . alrea~ ' · lustily joined the chorus when 'she' realized that she· was singing, "aDd in his choir he had some pigs." .·

One professor told a. that he . .waulch1't

. hold a class t h e evacuation for a dollar. This fact was tioned after· the class had waited about ten utes for him to begin the 'lecture. One· student eagerly inquired if it.were to.o late BUGDl!lS ·~ to take up a collection, but the· lecture proceeded.·

Be~riy .Wolter, ·art.s critic f~ the Winston-Salem . Journal' and\ Sentiilel, is well known t() both · audiences and actors at College Theater plays. We wo.nder if the 'power of the printed W{)rd" caused thi.s to hap~n at the first sh()wing· ·of "The Importance of Being Earn· est" last week. The entire audience was seated, everything was in read~ iness, but the lights had no,t yet been cut off. Miss Wolter entered,

'looked around; cleared her thrOat· and .took her seat. As if by magic, the . lights went oif and the play began. ' · .

. Dr. John F.~~. the Wbit· ney Foundation vi&ilting professor, . had troubles in one of his psycho!-. · ogy classes the other· day. He· couldn't g~t the .film projector to. work. Film kept spurting out in ali.; direcbions· and tangling itself as :fast as it came out of the macl$e .. He.' was heard, to mutter, '"!bey Call ~s thing a Bell. and Howell; ·it ought ~o be' a Hell and BI)Well!"

'Cheating Is Accep. ted·' . . .

The faculty had a dinner Tues­day uight to talk about the fund­raising campaign for the· new· science building. The Magn6lia Roo.m was transformed into a flowery haven for htingry intellect.s. Perhaps a .. raise · for the fa~ty would be more appropriate than a free meal when asking :for money.

Parade of Opinion, which is a review of college newspaper edi· torlals conducted by Associated C<lil.legiate PNss, recently noted in a discussion entitled "Cheating Accepted" that cheating on exami­nations is both prevalent and ac­cepted.

Tlre ACP gave particular empha­sis to an editorial in Wesleyan Pharos, West Virginia Wesleyan

· C'Qllege newspaper : which, , it said "typifies inany current articles in the coillege press on cheating."

The edit()rial is as follows: "Finals· are over, but stories of cheating aren't. Cheati.ng has be-­come commoopla~ among eollege students, .probably the result of an over-all breakdown of the old mQI'\al codes. A survey report in a recent issue of School and Society magazine showed ·that 57 per cent of the students ·questioned had cheated at some podnt in their -college careers and that 75 per

cent of the seniors had done so. · "Cheating is not only widesprea~. but is nQt condemned by the stu· dent body. Responses showed that oltly 12 per cent were willing to

·inform on a ·student that had, cheat· ed, and that 22 per cent were willing to entrust the class treasury ta a person know to bave cheated on an examination.

"The article concluded, 'Students are ()f a .sYstem in which the attain­ment ol knowledge has become · secondary to the completion of a prescribed course· which our culture demands. Examinations are part ol the process.· One passes or one does not depending on bis ability to beat the testing system. The

· system becomes a kind of game in which the professor has certam techniques and devices and the stu· dent has cc,unter-moves. Cheating has been used as one of these;' Those who hit h'Ome runs in' Jan­uary, however, may strike out next :May,"

- ' .·

At the faculty dinner several stri­, dents were asked to come in and · sing for the guests. They W()uld

have been invited to the dinner, too • but the· committee felt that they would be uncomforlable eating with the faculty. Maybe it was the other way around.

- The warm. weather . is inspiring to · . all. Last - Saturday· . about six coeds were seen skipping, nat• even walking, across the front lawn of the Babcock Estate. Two o:f them were guite embarrassed to have been recognized· at their little game. . .

, By JOHN ALFORD

It was a bad day from start to finish. Dawn barely · managed to break; two quizzes completely de­moralized ,him; the ram. began just as classes changed; lunch turned out to be a miserqble failure; he· was late to a class, and finally he staggered up to his foorth floor . room and found that the maids had . locked, him Otut.

Committee Of One

Blessed are the intelligent for they shall make Phi Beta Kappa. That time of year has come again when the "club'' is COtnveniently selected for us by a faculty· group. How nice! .Now we know who is in~elligent.

'Phi Beta Kappa is based on the assumption that college is some­thing of a wonderfUl machine, ·into which the student should be placed . -headfirst-in order to come Ollt refined and wrapped neatly in a diploma, proof Oif bis having met the requirements.

P.hd Beta Kappa is only aru>ther symbol or reward for a, student's having met the requirements; It doesn't guarantee anything.

As Dr. Edwin G. Wilson said at the beginning of last semesbar, "The student who makes gO!O() grades is, more often than not, a .good student." This is true • • • m()re often than not. But the sys· tem of electing students to Phi Beta Kappa is not a foolproof filter. There is the danger that some stq· dents think it is, including some of those who, have made and will make the organization.

The fraternity has become :for most people- a standard for intelli· gence. A student must have at least a 2.3 average fo;r membership. This

"' emphasis on graues has )lelped, as much as anything else perhaps, to warp st.zdents'. values. • Different Scale

The student with a 2.8 average is usually, considered to be more intelligent than one with a 2.0 average. The point system: is m~e: ly a different scale for intelligent qu~tia . . and not one-tenth: as ·

· accurab~. · · ·.'

In fact some students are so much under the illll5ii>n that ave­rages are· to one's intelligence that the questi()n is ·not always "who is he?" in "intellectual" circles but "what is his average?''

Some students have caiTied the emphasis to the ridiculous extreme

· of making a contest of grades. They have even figured out their averages to the thousandth ol a point, and their first· sentence Whed grades come out is "I..emffie see.. what you made."

There are some students who deliberately pilot their courses, tr\ving to get the "right" pro-fessors .and "crlp" courses, not simply to slide by, but to fillli.sh with an "A" in •the course. They are co.wards. · .

Same BoJJ()r So Phi Beta Eiappa talres the

student who has plotted, the coward; and gives mm { the same dubious hooor, in some cases as it gives to the earnest student.

The emphaSis is not 01nlearning a thing; it on following the rules. It thing; it is -on follow:ing the rules. It is not originality or creativity; It .encourages quardLative educa­tion.

This is no,t an attack on Phi Beta Kappa· but . a denial of what Phi Beta Kqppa is generally supposed to represent. Certainly a student · · should want ·to . be. singled out . for the honea'. ·. · .

But is should not be forgotten tbat . the honor doe:S not mean much '

more than that ·Pill Beta Kappa members had $20 for the initiation fee, that they attained ·a 2.3 average;

. and have the :right fu flaunt a Phi Beta .Kappa key later a.ir' eoilege

. prOCessors. :. ·, · · · ~-'·

I After seei~~t · actr~es and actors off and on all year with gray hair, we wonder if anyone ·eyer wrote a play. with young· Iieople in it.

. Dr. Thane McDonald has. a small · pioture taken of him during his college days. Barely discernable in· the shadow is a small mustache. ''Yes," he explained, · .. I grew that·. so I would look alder'; but then my hair tuTned white, so I shaved it off. to look younger.'' .

· The maintenance men must have some inside dope ·on the weather, . beoal!S'a they always know when to start cutting the lawns .. Maybe they operate on the power Oif suggestion, hoping that spring will come if they go through the motions of wo.rk connected with that seaso'n.

The lab was warm and pleasant, and the radio added to the general atmosphere of ·the evening. Every­one over there seemed to be enjoy­ing the study session. And then Navy beat Carolina. Several ex­.periments somehow were forgotten.

One student, feeling inquisitive, ·as~ Dr. Ora Bradbury just how long he had been teaching here ..

. The venerable biology professor immediately explained that there were several who had boon here longer that he had, and he wasted ·

. Ro time in exposing the others. <Dr. Bradbury has been teaching at Wake Forest for 33 years.)

"I got SQ frustrated with that · movie projector the ~tber day,'' the_

Jlrofess!)r comp).ained, · "tllat I al-. . most picked it up and threw it out· the windo;w." A few students' couldn't help laughing wften they: passed out .of' the class; past the :wastebasket which ·cOntained about .2o teet~ at, mm aiid a' bent · ~:

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'SyStem T~ Be Altered Or EIS~ . Thromi Away'

College Theater. I

Critic ~auds Matherly, Gattis

OLD GOLD AND BLACK . Monday, March 16, 1959 PAGE F1VB

Sitton Gives Appraisal Of Theater Production . (Continued from page 1)

before any aclion is taken. Also, the matter will . be presenOOd to . the student body1 for. a vote.

committee plans t-o ·emphasize that .tearing · up propenty is ·as much a breach of the code as is cheating_ 0111 a quiz.

By ROZELLA JEWELL Oscar Wilde's S8lti're on Eng­

llSih society, ".'rhe lmq:~ortamce of Being Earnest," tplodded. along rather slowly art: first d.n ·tbe pro­duction presented l~t week by the Colleg-e Theater.; In spite ofl thi~, interest :in the p~a.y ~ual­ly mcreaSed 11.3. actron progress­ed, and the outcome was ·an even­i.ng •of en'tertainmenlt but rwt one.

1 but.la.p<!ed into a. Southern accent wihich caused her to fail some-­what ·Ln her character poi'I:I:rlayal.

· . , Looked Part

fading out, and all of the stage areas were· not equ:aL!y Hg!hted, eausing cast members to ibe in s!OO.dow when tllhey n~ illumi­nMioi,l. The .set lef·t something to ·be des1red-pevh.aps ·higher and more extended wall.;;,

By BOB SITTON The OoHege 'Dheate1·' a re~nt

produotion of Oscar Wilde'~ com­edy. of manners, "'l'h-a Import­•ance of Behug Earnest", dk!llay­ed neiither ;the comedy nor the mann-ers Intended by its author. The poorlY' paced comooy drag­ged <ln as .the actor~ ropeatedl'Y' failed to "exploit" 'the hmnor in their lines. An <lVcr-::om:srn with how to s-peak tiheir lb~-eG b"ought wbout a C!"UCial r..eglec't of wha.t

in tlhe best performance, visually • of the pla.)'l; however, as with M.a-therly, proficient m:oe of tlla· vocal teclhniques of comedy were lacking.

Fitzgerald-- seemed to think tbat lt. is impossible for. the pre­·sent system to cootlinue: He said ~ it is lil!:ely the students· will. ' .be given ·the choice between •a reorganized system- or . the com­plete abolition of the: HollOil" Code. '!be latter case would mean some sort of. proctor gystem.

other ;meetings. with ~culty members, ' fraternity ·presidents

.:a}ld Stud~nt leaders have· been planned. Approval of the ':Honor QMlcil is, of ·•course, ~cessary

· to any plan the . oonunittee may <lOme up with. ' . . Other members of Fitzg~ald'J.

col11;lllittee. are ·Janet Binkley,. Firan Joyce, Judy Freeman, Jane H~ck; Tom dlrlton and Goorge Williamson. Carlton is ehainnan of .the council •

Meetings' have · alr~dy been beld with part otf the faculty and with student leaders, incl.udillg _presidents of the 10 fraOOrnities.

. Fitzgerald said that the ~ . mittee is trymg to oonvince facul­ty members, many of whom are dissatisfied with the system, that a change will be made. He added th:at the. group ' "is DDt ; askng them to support the pre!lent sys­tem" but is trying to. get their support for a new system.

. I

Refund Plan Is_ Success, Pro_ct9rs Say · · Want Cooperation .

"We want' to' make certain,'' he said, "that cooperation existS and that a student will not get an "F" until found guilty." Soi!lle professors now do oot abide by the Code, he said, staying in their class.rooans during quizzes and in other ways. .

The student leaders, he said are being asked for . suggestio~ ~d ~or support. If enough con­m~!fuus students will ,give their definite ' support,. be believes cheating can be lessened. a -eat deal. ' ...

·• "We don't intend to reform. the mveter.ate cheaters around here " he laughed, "but we want to C:rea1te an atmoSphere in which cheating wiU be frowned · UPO!Il." . The Councdl, he ~says, wants. to unpress UJ>I?n the st.uents and Iaculty that it consic:kn its busi­ness a preventiqn of cheating rather than simply punishment of cheaters.

Have-Separated Fitzgeraid aJso. mentioned that

students have come to sepeiate destrUction of property from the Honor System in their rilinds .. It's still a part Off the Hono; Code," he pointed out, . and ·his

Hont?rGroup's 'rapping Adds 18 Members

Sigma rie!Jila chapter -of Phi Sigma IO!Ja, ·.lh.lonorary romanoo language :fraternlicy, held iniltia.­tiun cerenromes Thursday nitgh't m tthe Magnolia Room.

The form:aJ initiation ·<Jif· new mern:bers took place innL7.ed!ia.tely · following a .banquet, attended by initiruties and 'Ine'lnlbers.

Prof. Vevllan stahl of tlhe modern ·language deparlment ad­dressed the. group, and· briefly 01t1tlined • the :t>urp.c>se . andl gOads Oif illh.e fratermty.

Sigma Dclta clla.pter organized dul'ling illhJe fall sen'lleSter. Meni­bership is based.on a high overall academic st&"lding, pa.T:ticul'ar1y ',Vith adbliever!!.e!nt and interest in ome of the l"'!manoo .langua.ges.

Tlle- if'ra'tiern'i.ty came on ca.mpws as a result of a. s:plit in the· old 'IIliOdern language fraternity, Sig­ma Pi Alpiha.

New. inductees rure: Ruflh. Sor­r.ell, Janet· Binkley, ~bara Br&Ilts()n, Bebty Bruce H~wardl D<>rotlhy •Bishop, Wayne Jo-rdan: Judy JeffTeys, Dwight Pickard, Silednmn Kiltcllllin, Mary Hen­d'rieks, Jan~ Greer, Jud!}>l Porter, Ftlorence Weaver.

I.lou Smith, Nancy Spry, K.ay W ats'On, Roy. Sorrell, and Ja.niee Allen.. , .

Jan Wilcox is pr.eaident. Other ()!'lficers are M.a.ey AnD. Maynard, Vllce-presidcnt; SMJru!lm Tucker, secretary-ttreasun:.r; a.nd Ml"s. Paul Robinson, adviser.

The next meeting of the organ­ization will •be lheltl the second ThurS'dayr iiln _ ~pri!.

Chem;istry Frat Gamma Sigma Epsilon, hOnor­

ary: chemistry :fraternity, met in th.e .science auditorium last week ' to. view slides and hear a dis.­cW!Sion iby! Dr. l'lhil1i:P Hamrick on chemical evOiluti'On. -

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tiated ·last month ·as a deterrent to da.ma.ged vending machi.nes is a. 51UCCess, agree ,students ap­p()in.ted to handle refunds.

One person in each of the foUr men's d:cd.m.itorieos ~a.s contract-· ed by Gallins Vending Machine Oom~y to aCit oo "prootor ," w!b:ose 'Primary dlllty' wonl(l be to refund money~ lost in 0. macmne. ~e rnJen also co!rtact company officials !in the eveiltt a mMhine is em.p:ty or oUJt..otr .!:ord!er and' to repom; any va.ndaWis.m. '

So far, vandalism has been re­'duced to a m.i.n:U!llliUimi. On~y mfinor <lama~ to Oille machine has been don~ since the .system went into effect::~·Feb. 19', Complaints of lost · money! !have •been , ilm.ndled w:i:thoiUit; difficulty.

52 Complaints . Witih!in , the first 22 ooys, the

four .Proctem ha.nd-100. approri­crnately 52 eomplia:ilnts of swdents having lost a combined totrul of a.pproxilmately $7.30. The iarges.t amount returned to any one stu­dent has 'been 25 cents.

Trhe sy~tem provides· ;tlh.al{; any student·who fails to get a.nzyrt;hing for hls money or :£ails ;to get Pl'Oipe'l" dh:a.nge from a :moohi.ne, Inra.Y' go . to. a designated room neal'!by for a l"e!fund!. The name aillid room number of the prooter is posrted on. each Gall:ins rrua­c!hine.

Has Book . 'J!h-e · proctor !ha.s a receipt­

ticket ·b-ook, in which he writes · t!he Jl!aiillie of ;the stude:rut and the amount lost. The student receiv­ing ~~:~>imbursement must sign the receliJit. Ne.itbJet: ()f tlllf! proe­'tors lfeetl ;thwt amy improper com~ pladnts: have been reg(is'fiered,

Earl Shaw, a proctor in Kitdbdn Doi'!lll:i.tory ·and spokes.. ~an -i'or the group, sa.i<li iiJbe Gal­lins COlllJPany officials are Wlell Pil'eased wirth. t'he effeeffivene&s of

· :the system and fuel'tha.t iJbe stu­·~nlts .are willing :to cooperate as long ·as they- can .get tthP.ir monev hack w:iilllQwt kicking a ma.dhin~.

Shaw 'no~cl also :flhat more complaints h:.1.ve .been registered about mone~, lo.31t in Coke ma­~es '"t!han all the other ma­chmes put together." 'llhe Coca ~l'a_: Company is not pru::t'icipa.t­~ lill rlih.e 17imbursem~nt system.

·.

Business Profs ProfEssor.s Leon Oook, Pawl

Hylton and Oscar Lewis of the Colle~ ·bu.sin&s school atte.ncted ·1Jhe eleve~tih annual meeting 00 tlu:· Amen~ Accoun.fiing Ass.oci­.ation ihe.ld at Fl:dda State Uni­versity March 6-7.

-of theater art. , · The · group chose a difficult

pl~" Like Shaw and Ibsen, Wiildie does a · lot of tallclng.

, ActiQns pleyed Jiititle part in last week's perform!llnce--Iiries were all impor.OO.nt. Becaua.e of this, a -critic ~v.ouldi questi()n the poo.si­bilittes Qif a good pl'Oduction 'of tlbe play, Lt milght be :betmer lefit under cover .of its Oinding to. be

' 21Elad for enj·oymenlt. lit lis more difficult to effectively present a . word comedy than it is to pro-

' du<Je a drama I ar tragedy with emphasis on liines.

·The e&ot, in the fimt act, had trouble .getting audience ?eac'tii.on Ito w!hat ·could lla.v.e been humor­ous parts. This seems due partly 1tq the arrange!I\ent of sta:ge propemes: soifas and chairs were

·placed to face the· aud.ieihCe, 'tibus !Jllll.kirug it Jiardler for cha:radlers 't;o have >hY'Play among them-selves. ·

';VhiS lack o.f -tion !to what was >ta:lcing rplace on the stage was a major· shortcommg of the play. Aclws arid actresses were £warie rtha.t_ rthey were on a stage, ·hut if1hley did nat seem conscious \of the ~et that others were there with · them, , saying words and doing .things to which they should react as if they were hear­ing and seeing them for the fi11st oti.me. More amma'tion and entih.u~ w-ould N>.ve a.dided a. ·~eart deal •to Ia:st ·.Vw"eek's produc-l:Jon. ·

Showed Experience Four .members of th€ ·cast

showed more eXperience in act­. ing .technique tha.n otlheis:; Je~' Ma,therly, Dilmh Gattis·, An:gela Jc!hnson and Mikal Barnes.'

ll'latherly was, an cnjo'ya~le Algern:)n Moncrief!: He often· ·1:-~!ghtened interest when he ap- I .peared on stage. 'Dhe character · he created was quite definite and :efreshing. It wo11ld' have helped if Matherly had learned how to eat and talk .at iflhe same time

Carol;yn Coggin, Wlho pi~ ~e ·part of Miss Prism, looked tbe role, but seemed to be re-· e:i.tilllg· lines. . . · Bill Horn was pleasant as Dr.

Ohasuble but was noot 0. eonvinc- -ing cellba.te:. '

Teclmicadly~ :the p1ay bad bath g()Od and bad aspects. Costuanes Wfll"e particillarly ·beautifuu; and make.,up was excellent. Lighting . wa.s ab'Vlllpt lin co:m1ng up and

There was· sQme good business in 1llie play, particulal"ly with the tea parties. The fh·st lmlf of A(!t II and the past part ·of Act' ill contained some nice st~g-e pictur-e<~. .

The pia'Y' was enjoyahle but . lacked' the polish necesSa.ry foc a coLlege production. .

.: .. ..-.::;

• Actor MATHERLY gets ready -for play •• , (Old Gold Photo by ROLLINS.)

Herbst Slates Talk To Frat

/ Berlin Crisis /1,o· Be Eyed

A repre..--entative o>f Wester:n

1

! A round-taL!e d'i.Bcussion of tl:e Electric Comp~ny will speak on Berlin crisis wiH be fcaltured at campus Wednesday at a meeting ti · of Kappa Mu Epsilon, honorary I a m~e n~ ~ the Int~rnational

. :ma.thema·tics fra~nity. . · Relations Clue Wednesday nt 7 The speaker is Dr. Rnbcrt Her- P· m.

bst of Winston-Sa:em wh() 11ill Dr. James O'Flaheriy, chair-discuss elec;r!c computing n1.a~ mi1111 ·of the Gct'lnan depar:mcn:;, chine<!. The meet.i:ng wiH be held will Pl1-'i"fidp-J:te. at '1 P· m. ·in ro()m 103, Reytni:Jlda He· wiU diiscuss the Berlh1 liall. · · Situation <as relart:cd to the ·Ger-

At ·that time, plans Will also be ma-n people. Hi.;; views will J:.e made for a tour of the Weste!l"ll based par.tJy on letters l'Cceive 1 E·leetric pi].ant in Wdnston~Salem. from a friend in Berlin, w.ho has

Various speakers have appear- commented on the sitt~a.tion in ed_ aJt meetings of ·the frateTni'by letters to O'Fia!herty.

they we:re saying. Studied ges­turea, predominantly slow move­ments, :and awkward enti.-<mces casrt a morbid ::"mdow acl'o::;s the irutended illusion <>'Z gai.ety. B-3-cruuse few of the :-,ctors appeared un:iillhibitcd enough t() enjoy thernselve.s on S:bge, the play :fell into ·lifelessnc~s.

The sparkling pc:t:formance of · Dinah Gatti-s as the pompous Lady Bracknell w::.s the ·saving grace of the show. H~r styHz.ed chara.eterization set a. standard never met by 'the other aoto~s.

Used Gestures As Algernon, Lady B~:~,cknell's

devilis!h nephew, Jerry. Matherly _made able use <Jf gestures .and facial expressions to, convey -an effective visu:-J imr:ression, but ir-ritating pitch vari1,':.ion :md

• uneven flow of d~livery marred his. iPt)rfOlll'lla11ce vocally.

Way;ne Gunn's · inte1"1Jretation of John W()nthing, who css.umes the name of Ea.l'llle&t in IW.s amor­·ous escapades, contri:but.ed great­Ly> to the static na"tm"e . of the play. Gmm moved slowly, spoke

· slowly, and. maintained what .seemed to be a single expressioo t.hroughou·t ohe play.

It ,.,as refreshing to watch Elaine Byasse as she played Cecily Co.rdew, rt;he ':}10tttllful ob­ject of Algernon'·s affeotions. The delightful enth.usia:;,m she brought to iher character was hampered onl~, by- awkward movements.

A.nige la .J oJmson created a plausable da~ghter o:f Lady Brackn1lll in her portraya-l of Gwedolyn. In her graceful move­ments and' g~stures, she turn€d

Butlers' Parts The parts <Yf the the play's .two .

butlers were a.bJ:y handled by Da~ Jones and Mik:al Barnes With special pla.udits going ~ newcomer Barnes for !his rarely , seen but effective characteri­zation of Merriman.

The humor brought· to :tihe · . character of Dr. Chasuble by Bill Horne was more a result of lhi.;; ·appayent uneasiness on stage . ra.cher tnan exploitation of .the comic nature inherent lin his. c!haract·er.

A similar remark may be made about Carol~m Coggi.n's po'lftrayal of Miss Prism. Her humor result­ed :ffiore from frequent lape; in­to southern Amer'i'Call. dialect ·than a communicati:on 'Of 'the .\vit ·Of Os.car Wilde.

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. without letting 'the eating aflfect: th~ rt:a.lking. His accent varied at .times fr.om higU1 British to Cock­ney to. some ·~e of Negro dia­lect hut h:is facial reaction.;; were s<>me1 of the :f.inest in the play>.

thi.s _yeaT. The:r were :i.n:v'i:ted by The Wake Forest IRC wiil President Phil Griffiths. Anrn 11epresenrt ·tJhe Unilted Kingdbm THE HAII~IHI~C?ni'!NJ:DS G~fin is secretary of the group, .at a model United Natrons meet- . il~·,ilBJ.;':.r\1~~ .... n

Miss Gattis also wa-s• quite g.ood •as Lady Bracknell, despite a .somewthat annoying backward le81n. She created a strong chm:­acter, showing her a.bil·ity Ito make use of iher voi>Ce and! of gestures with a lack ·of inhibi­tiQns . .Miss Gattis contributed! the finest acting of the evelling.

which is advise<! by Dr. Ivey C. ing in Cha;pel Hill April 9_11_ :--4-16_N_·._s.;.p_ru_c_e...;.S_t.. ___ o~p,;:,en;,;,.,;E;,v.;.e;;;.n:.:;i:.:;n:.::;~;;;:s__ Phone p <\ 424i J

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· Was Graceful !'[iss J:olhns-;m was extremely

•graceful in !her protrayal · af Gwendolym F1a'ir:f.ax. Her casting and tthat of Elaine By~.ssee as ·Oecil~' Carde.w was well done be­·cause both· of these actresses convincingly presented their con­trasting positions in the femiinline society o<f England.

M·r. Barnes' role of Merri.nta.n, •the butler, althoug-h a small pa.it . 'lva.s admi:mbly enacted.

Dan; Jones looked and acted -!•ike a butl·er.

Wayne ·Gunn as J:Ohn Wort1h1i.111g knew exactly wthat he was wp­posed to sa.y and did exactly w·hat he had been :to-ld to do. He ·sho1ved little intresrt; i-n the pla.y_

Elaine Byassee as CecUy Car­d~w w:is .p!'etty an~ charming

16 Men Enter Business Frat

, An honoracy fralte1mity on O!lllnpus has accepted 16 new pledtges into tJh-e o:r.ganimtion m il!itia.tion cerem()n!iM held las.t week.

Delta Sigma Pi accepted the "pledges at a I!lee:ting in Reynolda Halit 'last Wednesday, at which :time other business was also eaxried oti.t.

Delta Sigma Pi is an honorary ibusine.;;s· :fraternity at Wake Forest and makes pledges e-2ch s~ho()l sem€ster.

The pJ;edge pe11lod rwill las-t ap­,Pt.(}:ximately Qne mon11h. After .that period of time, proba:b1y :i,n April, :fUl'lther ceremonies :will be :held in orde<r to mitialte ilhe ·pledges formally. •

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PAGE SIX Monday, March 16, 1~59 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Veacs Who Are- Greeks By DAVE RAWLEY

Spring party season is almost !here aJ!d many social functions, both formal and informal, are being planned by fraternity men. Parties with novel names seem to be the latest fad among t!he Greek brethren.

Pinnings and serenades kept brothers busy last week. Alpha Sigma Phi

Jil:mrzy Sa.under3 has been elected president of the pledge class. J o.hnny MeB:rlde is vice president ..

B:ro,thers have started gTOwing beards f~r lthe Apache Pa.l'ty May 2.

Delta Sigma Phi . A.lunm.us J!im White recentlyt vrisited ;tlhe cbapiter. A party is plann­

ed for Saturoay afternoon a.t Tanglewood pa.rk. The celebmltion :will include games, :followed 1zy a. picnie supper. Thalt night the festivfilties

...

Dual Need Of School, City Seen

Dependence of the College and Winston-salem community upon

each other was stressed Tues9ay

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. night by th~ chief spealrer at a ~=====~===================;:~ College-community dinner. The din-ner was ' in connection- with the College's ,Development Fund cam-

Telephone PA 4·003% Or PA 4-9887

-El._ Ct;tm Rey 'Will be climaxed by a dance. "NO RABBIT EARS'!" ask LUTHER WALKER, junior from Fay-

~ Kappa Alpha etteville, and B. G. ALDE;I,lMAN, junior from Ha:aning, S. C., wllo

John F. Watlington Jr., president of the Chamber of Commerce and the Wacllovia Bank and Trust Co., noted the ·"feeling -of . interdepen­dence that has .existed these schools and the community." He was speaking of the citY's three college, Wake Forest, .. Salem Col· lege and Winston-Salem Teachers College. '

' RESTAURANT

Newly eleclfed officers· Willis Maddrey, Buck K.ttclrln a.nd John are examining one of the two new television sets which arrived last THE REYNOLDS BUILDING

, 4th & Main Sts.. W'JDSton-Salem, N. C. Oantrell have been insrt-.a.Hed. week for installation in the two 'independent men's loW!ges •. BOth

Janiee GrossmMI, pinned to Tommy Vaughn, was serenaded Mon- men were captains in co.llecling the· money pledges for the project, Yenr Place For: day night. ' and Walker has been named to take charge of the lo~nge in .. Taylor

A pa.1'Tty w.as held last Saitu:rdaJyl nig1brl; in the chapter room. Dormitory. The sets were ,'Ute first articles of fnndture~to arriYe. Winsttm-8alem. he said; "is not

a source of funds to· be when needed · 01r desired, a greater sense-is a foun·

PARTIES - DINNERS --:- DANCES-- BANQUETS

Kappa Sigma Painting was done in the two rooms last week. (Grigg Photo.)

Mike Gordon recently pinned Carolyn Brown, a student Bit W'Omall's -

eoueie. ·Two The a:nnua..l Kappa Sigma Disttrict Seven ·Conclave was held laat Musical Programs

Slated For This Week

tain of many qualities that contri­bute to. the satisfaction and well-being o~ your neighborboiOd­the campus."

T-owD Steak· Hous·e week end in 'Dryon. The meeting included ·bUISiness sessions and was highligihted by a banquet and dia.nce. Several Wake Fore.:;t hr•olthers a.iitended.

Lambda Chi Alpha Warren Bloodsworth is !the new Cross and Crescent coa:-respondent.

Fritts, Bies~cker lha.s bee;n named newsletter correspon.denlt. Brelllt Filion has been chos~m art:hletic dh-.ector and Maurice Horne will serve as ihi:storia.n.

Mike Steadma.n and Bill Laney have been seledted as delegates- to ltihe Lambda Chi; Alpha Col<>nial Ooncla.ve to -be !held here April 10-12..

Pi Ka.ppa Alpha Warren N~rma:n, Bryant Garner, Joo Helms, SonnY' .Aiycock,

Tommy Smith, He~bie Brown, J.im Martin, Ha:H Painter aDd Marcus ii:IeSter were ini:tialted Sunday a:titernOOill in Dav:is ChapeL

A "plumbe-:r's party" was held Saturday niglb!t. Music :was proVid-ed by J o Beck's Combo. _

Gamma Phi enjoyoo a basketball game with rthe mgh Point Col­lege PiKA's l.aslt week.

Tel'l'Y' Herndon and Ed Hyma.n reeently pledged the fra.ternity.

Sigma Phi Epsilon Bob McCrary recellltly pinned :uinda Moore, a. student all; tihe Un1-

'Y'eX>S:ity of North Carolina.. Harvey Dw-ham has been av.-arded "G1·eek of rthe Week" tiitle by

the chapter. AlwnnUJS Tommy Bridges visiJted tihe chapter laSt week.

Sigma. Pi The annual bridge tournament is n~w in pNgreas. John Heydt 1s

in charge. Plians .a.re ·being eompleted for lthe Orchid Bal'l to be beld April 11

e.t ltJhe El Cam Ray Ro<>m in :the Reynolds Blrllding.

Sigma Chi Stephen Crawley, Don Duncan, Ashley H<>gE'WOOd; Thomas Long,

Jim Martin, lewis Morgan, Frank Qua.tltromani, George Rlagl:a.nd·, Jack Tesh, R.ichard Filippi and Bill Hull were initiated rece:nrtly.

CoEd Jean Daniel, who iJs pinned to Da!rrell Denn'is, was serenaded Monday nigtht.

The Sweetheart Ball will be ·:·rid April 18. A Parls!i.en parly. WM ·

held recently at Shelton's Lake. · A committee has begun wor:~ on the Wake FQrest chapter'a first

Derby Da.y.

'Ibeta Chi A -:supper meeting will be h.~!:! -a.~ 'be house Thursday ~hit. A Hemando'-s Hideaway par:y "'-!!! be held Saturday nigbt

brothers. pledges and daites. for

IT'S TIME tG spTuce up for spring and Easter. Come in and see our 11L.or se;ect:on of Dacron and wool tropi~ls.

NEW SH/'.JJES, new patterns and new comfortable weights.

From $55.00 WE ARE alsn ll·escn'1!>g to ~-ou a:t extensiYe collection of Da­cron .:nu woc1 w;:.,,, a .. :.t ·,. e:!r sui!s-Cambri--eloth and poplans.

$39.95 Up YOU CAN_ se!ect from all shades of Olives, Browns, Gre7s an:d Navy.

To the city's businessmen, he pointed out, "Ow- day-,to-day de­pendence on the college is readily apparent. Our hope . is that you on

By JUDY PARKER · Season memberships is $7.50 per the campus feel that you need us Wake Forest students will have student. All membership resel'V'a- not just when you, need to build a

the opportunity this week to attend tions must be paid before spring new building o,r fill the stadiwn for two music events. vacation. a football game, but that you, too,

The first will feature three Wake The State Choir Festival is the feel a day-by-day need of the Forest students, Mikal Barnes, second event. It will be held Satur- nourishment that comes fro.m the Jercy Wilson and Gordon Williams day on the Wake Forest campus community about you.'.'

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and a faculty member, Dr. Thane and is sponsored by the Depart- Faculty members, townspeople Mcl)()nald. ment of Church Music of .the North and wives attended -the dinner on

They will sing with. the Civic Carolina Baptist State (;{)nvention. the campus. · Choral Society with the Winston- It will include intermediate, young Egbert L. Davis Jr., president of Salem Symphony Tuesday at 8:15. people and adult choirs. Atlas Supply Co. and a 1933 grad­The concert will be held in Rey- Paul Robinson, Wake Forest or- uate of the ~llege, said the Col· nolds Auditorium and will include ganist, will be one of the guest lege, said the campaign is a "rare the performances of five scenes conductors. opportunity" for the College mid from the o.pera "Boris Goudonoff," The public is invited to the fes· the community to accomplish ·their Mazart's Symphony No. 39 and A tival concert of 1,500 voices to be task together.

Patterson's Stratford Pharmacy

Toccata by Frescobaldi. ·held at 3:30 p. m. in Wait Chapel. mstory professor Dr. Percival Student memberships in the ,Registration for the event will Perry also .spoke. He praised

Winston-8alem Civic Music Asso- begin on the campus at 9:30 a. m. Winston-Salem, saying the city is ciation for next year are available The visiting .singers will eat lunch "achieving fame for its conscious now in Room 102, Wingate Hall. in the CoJlege cafeteria. effort to build the whole man.''

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7:00 News , 7:15 Campus Scrapbook 7:30 Forward March ' 7:45 Vespers 8:00 Popular Musie ·-9:00 Sports

12:00 Sign Off· j- · · · Saturday ·~:46 Pre-game lllusic 6:00 WFC vs. :McQ-ar:r

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Tuesday 5:58 Sign On 6:00 Supper Club 7:00 News 7:30 Pat Boone 7 :45 Vespers . 8:00 Popular Music 9:00 Sports 9:15 Classical Hour

10:15 Popular Music 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade 12:00 Sign Off

Wednesday 5:58 Sign On-6:00 Supper Club 7:00 News 7:15 Betty Bruce Howard 7:30 Here's To Veterans 7:45 Vespers 8:00 Popular. Music 9 :00. Sports 9:15 Classical Hour

10:15 Populal' Music 10:30 Deaconlight Serenade 12.00 Sign ·Off

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By JO JOLLEY The Wake Forest chapter ol the

Wesley Foundation was host when , the state Wesley Foundation con­vention was held ·at Maple Springs Methodist Church in Winston-Salem laSt week end. · ··· .

Approximately . 250 Methodists students from oolleges -and univer­sities throughout -the state reiister-ed Friday afternoon; . , -

On the· agenda for· the~. end were l«tures and group· discus­sions, along with an art exhibit hung in-the. Wesley meetiJig-place. The students had lunch· at_the col­lege Saturday and took a-tour of the campus. -

( - A new magazine- ta be p_ubJishe.d by the. local chapter will. be distri­buted to Methodist· students en

c.. · campus this week. Name Of the (. magazine· is "Choice." Jerry t Matherly, editor ot The Student c magazine, is editor of the :MethOdist o publication.

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party~nd all the other firsts. fD come.· 'iherlre captured for keeping on safety· film made with an oil-based

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PAGE EIGHT Monday, March 16,1959 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Happenings On Other

ROTC Cadets' Rani~ Changed For Semester

Temporary. promotions ior cadets in the Wake Fore3t ROTC program were announced last week. Ooo cadet colonel rank was given. It went to Murray Greason Jr., who is commander <>f the ROTC Battle Group. '

Tw-o cadet lieutenant colonels: were named. They are Larry Brooks and Joe Weston.

<ladet majors are Richa-rd Avery I and Frank Burleson Jr. William H. Olive Jr. was promo-ted to cadet captain.

other prom<ltions are as follows: Cadet first lieutenant: Robert

Demsey, Baron Elrod, Frank Geer, G&l'IUh Jenkins, Glenn C. Jo'!'dan, Nornk'l-n Kellum Jr., William Kirk Jr.. Bobby Lawrence, Darrell L. Lewis, Hughie E. Lewis, Paul Mat­thews, Heney C. Pace, Jack B. Pal-ey, Ja:ckie D. Phillips, Thoma3 E. Roy·Siter J1·. and Douglass Sas- , 6~::'. I

Cadet master sergeant: Ellis D. I Meares.

Bullard, Bostic Cadet Se1·geant first class: As-a

H. Bullard Jr., John Bostic, John H. Cantrell Jr., Kenneth E. Ferrell, John Ham111:-on, James 0. Hodge-a, Wiil!am Horne Jr., William P•aris I Jr., Wade Paschal Jr., John F. 1

Riley, William Stamey, Robe:vt

1

1

Yarbrough. Cadst sergeant: Jerry M. Ba1l,

Mikal Barnes, George Bell, Charles I Brewer, James Eagle, Sid Eagles I Jr., Ja:mes Edwards, Jamea Giger, I Charles Keller Jr., Bruce :Mc-1 Donald, Lowell McKinster, David Metcalf, Charles N'Orwood, Forrest C. Parrish, James R. Pbillips, Ced­ric D. Pierce Jr., Phillip Foe, Wil­liam Pope, Thomas F. Robe:r!t-3 Jr., Larry Sitton, Edmond V. Smith, Billy Stancil, Jerry J. Stephenson, Frank Teague Jr., Earl W. Thomas! Jr., Henry K. von Herrman, James H. Webb.

Cadet Corporal Cadet corporal: J il.mes Aber­

crombie Jr., Ogden Allsbrook, Wil-! liam Baker, Joseph Blake, Robert ji

Brown, Chal'les Chatham, Coleman Clark, Albel'lt Co-nover, Barry Davi-J aon, John, Dupree Jr., Donald Fhler, Gilbert Frank, Jerry Galehouse, J

Jerry Gause, James Graham Jr., 1 Harry Hull, Larry Hurst, Paul Ja-1 cobs Jr., Charles King, Ralph W. Knight Jr., J<Os.eph Luter III, Jef­frey MeArtlb.ur, Roger :Mc.A.v(ly, Ge<Orge D. Maier, J'Ohn D. Medl!in Jr., Bruce Nation.

Joseph Parker Jr., John Patton, James Pearce, Jack Pendergraph, i John ~lips, Charles Reiley, Bob-j -by Robinso-n, John Rogers, William i Skippon Jr., Dcmald Spoon, Joe i Turbeville Ill, William Turner, 1

·Ba!Tton Vaughan, Ja.meS Walker,! Charles W~lace, Craven Williams, I Donald Wilt and~Sidney Winslow. I

Private First Class ~t private first class: H-ero.ry I

Alley, Horace Bone, Reginald! Brown, Sanford Ens1nge1·, Richard i 'Filipp-i, William Flammer, Robert 1

Fulp, Slllockley Gardner, Bobby I Garwood, James George, Joseph j Gregory, Drewey W. Gunn, Johl+ N. Harrell, Arnom H. Harris Jr.,! William G. Haxris, Richard o.J Harrison, Thomas E. Hartm:a.n II, 1

Jerry N. Haas, Francis M. Haynie, , Jerry E. Baywood, Matthew P.l Helms, Texry M. Herndon, Ricilard I Ricks, Ashley L. Hogewood Jr., Anthony W. Johnson, •Charles D. Jones, -

Joseph G. Kerr, Larry G. Kirk, Rodger K:rakau, Willi= Laney, Harry c. Lewis Jr., Frank Loef-j !ler, Barton C. Marcy Jr., Paul . Mazrt;ineau, Hobart H. Mendenhall i Jr., J'Ohn Morrow-, R()bert Muller,! John Muse, Thomas C. McCoy, ! James·R. Nance, Cyril w. Norman, Johnny 'B. Ovlercash, · Frank A. Passa.relli, Tlwmas .A. Spencer, Newton R. Stedl III, Robert E. :Ward m, William c. Waynick.

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. - FOURTH 'AT CHERRY

The anlen will keep their tempor­ary 'ranks until the end of :fili.e se­mester. SOme of :tHle men a-re fresh­men and are reeeiving promotionsj tor the first time. Others. :w~ ar_e senior-s will keep their rank Wltil graduati-on, while underelas.mlen -

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Start talking our language-we've got hun­dre~s- of checks just itching to gp! We're paymg $25 each for the Thinklish words Judged best! TbinkHsh is easy· it's new words from two words-like those on.thls-page. Senct=-­you...-a to Lucky Strike, Box 67 A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclose your name. address, college and clasa. - - --

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The W a.ke ForeSit wrestling team dolllblw lits perfQrmanoo <l'Ver lasit )'ear lin .tihe Atlantic Ooastt Coorfter­enee wrestling, tQurna.ment at Cha:rrl"OttesviHe, Va., week end· be-fo-re last. ·

Entering eigllt men irn the · eon­test, W~e Forest -book two !le(:O'lld places, *'-vo tthird places and !two f·ourth places against. eomrpeti.tion from th!e UnivC!.'sity of Vh,ginm·.­the University of No:rth Caroliilla, Maryland and Duke University.

Secund places went to ThnunJY Ca1•1ton, · 123 lb-. divi&ion, and Ken H·un, 191 lb. ·division. ·Captain Jirh Morton, 147 .lb. division, and Way­lane} Johnson in the 130 lb. division both toak ~hird iplaces. In t.ilJJe 177 lb. cia,s-s and •the 115 ~b.: class, Johin Ashburn -and John Harnijton, in til'..a.t order, too-k fou..~h pl:ace hon­ors;_·

Maryland won the match. wi.th­·eight firSJt places. Both Duke and Oarolina go.t one fi-rst plaee.

Sergean.t C. C. Peters is coach of !the team. '

Aquatics 'Club Set~ Ptogran'~

The Maritimers Aquatics Cluo has announced . the dates fo-r its water show this spring. The shDIW is an- annual event for the swim­.mer's organization, which includes both men and coeds.

There will be .one production on each of the nights of Aprill7·18. The club has decided to call the pro· duction "Aqua Tour." ·

S~ND OG&B

to the

folks at horne ' \

"Aqua Tour" will feature as its theme a trip around the world, acted out by formations in .. the water.

The spring show oaach year also ·-------------------------.: features a beauty contest in which .;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::=================-=­fraternities enter a contestant. Other 'groups may enter contest­ants.

Winner of the contest is crowned "Miss Maritimer.': She is se)ected by the audience during the per­formance by. voting on ticket stubs.

The groups ·have named their entrants, which are as follows:

Wake Forest Laundry And DrY Cleaners

' . Peggy Tanner, Alpha Sigma Phi; Pat Butler. Delta Sigma Phi; Mar­lot Hayes, Kappa Alpha; Anna Ruth Current;· Kappa Sigma. ·

Also, Priscilla Hamrick, Lambda •~===;;;;;,_=;....;;;=================== Chi Alpha; Jean Hobby, Pi Kappa -------------------------. Alpha; Barbara Safiet, •Sigma Chi·

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Elga 'Loftin, Sigma Phi · Epsilon; Mar-garet D u t t o n, Sigma Pi· Katherme Treadway, Theta cw: An independent g:rroup is sponsor­ing Becky McCrary.

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!Junior Year I

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: An unusual on~- year 1 collef!e program

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1

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Mouday. March 16, 1959 PAGE NINB

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PAGE TEN Monday, March 16, 1959

Title Ready For Mural Champions

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

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Kissing BoothS, DanC(es .. Will :Be Part Of·Circus

A "gym circus" complete with appearance of a Ringling Brothers­clowns, gymnastics and a big top Barnum and Bailey show in the will be on lthe 'Wake Fo,rest campus coliseum. Students in charge' Olf the Thu~rsday. . . , . local event said "The acts may not

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Volleyball p!ay-o,t'fs will take place Thursday with Phi Delta Phi,

fraternity champiOn. ·::· law :fr~ternity, ~eeting the campus I ': •

Tl;le student-thrected Circus will not bear' rnuch resemblance to last set up i~s "big ~op'' in the w~men's week's show but we think students gymnasium. Side shoW\S will be will enjoy seeing their fellow stu-

pl.aced outside the big top and they dents P'~r:f<lrm." ~=~~=====~==========~=====~ will open at 6:30 p. m. ' ------------- _. Kissing boo.ths will be a feature r-----------:-----, - : ''

The campus fraternity champion ·" will be determined Wednesday in I fraternity league play-offs. Lambda Chi Alpha is the only social fratern­ity with a perfect record. Phi Delta Phi also is unbeaten.

~~l~:r:;:~:::.~ Women :Centrii-CarolinaMotors· The main show will start at _7

Leaders is the volleYJball league are Lamdba Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Phi and Sigma Chi. This is the fourth week of volleyball play.

p. m. in the big to,p. Acts will in- 1 ("'h t ·. elude weight lifting, dances, tight ln ..:1~ or. s· rope walking, gymnastics and a

trampoline act. Basketball players from Johnson

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226 N. M4BSBALL ST. P..\ 3-Diit The . play-offs Wednesday and Thursday will foDow games today and torno.rrow.

Intramural tennis and horseshoe team entries were handed in to the intramural department F r i d a y. Each team will C()nsist of fiv>a men, two doubles and <~ne single. There will not be any d11plications.

Tl~ere will be n~ charge for being A Dornrltory last week won top admitted t? 0e side. sho~, 'f)ut a honors in the girls' intramural small admiss10n _fee IS bei_ng charg- basketball tournament. Barbm-a ed for entrance mt?' the big top. Brown was captain of the winDing

Wake Forest's crrcus follows the team. ' ~::;;;~==;;:=========~~~~~===~;;;;;;~ .Corning in second was Bostwick :;

W k G -}£ B Dormitory. All fQUir dormitory . ·a ' ~ 0 ers sections were entered in the event,

A single elimination tournament will begin Friday.

which last several days ..

To·.·- Me-e. t Oh1•0 An honorary- varsity team will .. _ be picked .from . the dormitory

players. 'l'he team will play in a

In 'First Match basketball game to_ ·be l1eld ~ _ .. , week at Elon College. , The . game

is a feature of Sports Day at the By' JOEL STE.GALL school, and it will be held Satur-

•• • • QUA_~I'fY .PO~T~ITS COMPLETE WEDDING COVERAGE '

e . CUSTOM FRAMiNG e OPEN TIL 9 P. M.

MON .-THUR,S:~FRI. . ' G-Qlf for intramurals will 1·equire

a four man t•zam. Eliminations, however, will take place in a single elimination tourn.<unent. Gol£ en· tries were also handed in Friday.

"THIS IS SO 1\:IUCH more fun than te1mis!" think tennis co-c~ptains BILL HEINS and H. V. NELSON. They aren't victors yet but the~'re getting in practice at the victor's art ,of jumping the net. The two. are the onlv men returning to the squad from last year's tea~·­

Worli:outs h~ve been going on for some time, and the team will meet its first opponent this week at Guilford Colleg~. "I wonder," says one co-captain, ''how the nets at Guilford are for jumping?" (Old

The Deacon. golf· teain; ·winner day. .. .· . of last year's Atlantic .Coast Con· B~sketball has ended with t~e :·. P A 2-5742 ference title, will· open the 1959 plaYI~g o:f ~e to.urnan;tent, .an~ Its 1 • N orth~i~e SJ!opping ·Center

.Gold Photo by Grigg.) · season March 25. ·when they meet badmmton tune now. A badminton :...----------------~...;. _______ ..;;.,;; Ohio on the Old Town course. tournament· will start this week. ----------..,...----:-----:-...._,,...........:.. ____ ...:_ __ ._

The Scoreboard Cullen Will .Brighten, Deacs' Tennis Hopes~.

The t'<!am Wiil be le:ad by Phil Barbara Erown is manager of this :--------------;_~------------.... W' chman Ronnie Thomas and tourname~t.

The results of last week's games are as follows: Dirty Dozen VS· 'Celtics, 15-0 Cforfeitl ; Kappa Sigma vs. Delta Sigma Phi, 15-9 and 15-3; Sigma Chi vs. Alpha Sigma Phi, 15-0', (forfeit); , Kappa Alpha vs. Theta Chi, 15·12, 4-15, 15-10; Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Pd Kappa Alpha, 13-15, 19-14, 15-6; :Phi Delta Phi vs.

·:Dirty Dozen, 6:15, 15-5, 15-13; Sigma ·chi vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon, 15-1, '15-3; Kappa Sigma vs. Theta Chi, 15-6, 15-3; Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Alpha Sigma Phi. 15-11, 15-7; and Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Kappa Alph.a, 15-8, -15-13.

This Week's Schedule Today

Delta Sig vs. Theta Chi SPE vs. Lambda Chi Kappa Sig vs. PiKA Alpha Slig vs. Kap-pa Alpha

Tuesday Sigma Chi vs. Lambda Chi Delta Sig vs. PiKA SPE vs. Kappa Alpha Kappa Sig vs. Alp-ha Sig

- Wednesday-Thursday Play-offs

T~~Y ':s;elms. Coach Horace Sign-up · s~eets. have been pl~ce?­<Bones) · McKinney thinks ·these where th':· girls _mterested can-.mdi· three men equal or superior to ·any cate ~eu. desire to play. Th«:Y linkmen in- the -conference. must Slgn up before Thursday m

Three other players whQ will order to ~e inclu?ed ii: tournam~p.t lend support to -the team are Toin- play. :Jamce. Pri?<Ie IS defending

Prospects for the 1959 varsity fer the coming season, added on my Taylor, Bill Greene and Doug champiOn gomg mto th~ tourney. tennis t..:am have brightened con-I an optimistic note that "This year's King . - : Another tournament will also oo siderably, according to Coach All t'<!am will probably: at least equal MclGnney d esn't expect to have played. Shuffleboar~ . is getting Deporter, with the addition to the last year's record of sq wins and . 0 h d la under way and officials say the team of Bill Cullen. He is expected six losses overall.'' This ;record qUite 50 good a ~team as he a :'t :first game must be played by Fri­to fill the number. one spot, left placed them fifth in conference ye.ar, bec~use of lack of depth m day.' Grace Wallace is mana~ of vacant by co-captains Walt Connor standings last year. thiS years team. He does, . how· the tournament.

ever, expect a vecy creditable . . . and Will Allred, both of whom were "I re~i! that. that 1-ecord .~Y performance, especially from :R.Gn- Table te~ . Is also starting, lost by graduation last June. I not look lillpresSive to some, he nie Thomas who placed second in under the direction of Baroora God­

Cullen, rangy redhead from Con- said, "~ut. considering the size of last year's post-season tournament. win. The first match must be necticut, was one of Bones Me- the rnaJooty of the other schools The tournament this year will be played by Wednesday. FQrty en­Kinney's most de p e n dab 1 e and experience of their players, held at Chapel Hill and will be tries is the limit for the table st.'lbstitutes during the current bas- I'm more than satisfied with a :tnoved to a different schooil each tennis townament. The field in the ketball season. He is ranked high record like that. year. Last year the tournament shuffle.J;>oard tournament is limited among New England amateur Co-captains for t~s year's squad was held at Old Town course. to 30 garls. tennis players and is regarded as are veterans Bill Heins and Harry one of the ACC's better singles men. Nelson. Heins, six·foot .senior from rr---------------------------.

Also lost due to graduation were Sanford, has b>cen with the team Gary Daniels and Bob Garren, longer than anyone else, having number five and seven men re- played for the past three seasons.

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spectively. Nelsoo, a junior, is from Hunters-Is Optimistic ville and has two years experience

.Monday Through Thursday-

DePorter, reluctant at this point behind him. KATHY'O --with Dan Duryea to predict any long range results Also listed. on the squad thus far: --------------------------- Jim McLea!l, sophomore from- BADGE of MARSHALL BRENNAN~ Jim Davis !

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Griffin, Ga., one c£ the team's most promising players, and Al Hartness 'of Henderson. A complete roster is unavailable at this time, but will be printed later on. "There are still a few who haven't com.e by to fill out eligibility forms," DePorter explained.

It is hoPEd that weather condi­tions, the usual spring n-emesis, will improve during the next week to give the coach more time to work out some of the kinks before . the conference opener with the Uni­versity of South Carolina 01n March 19 and a ·match with Clemson the following day. Both of these g,ames, are tO! be p-layed away.

In the meantime a couple of warm-up m:atches have been sched­uled with Gllilford College this week on a home and home basis.

Added Attraction-(Wed. & Thurs.)-

ALL MIN'E TO GIVE - Cameron Mitchell Frida.y and Saturday-S FEATURES-

OLD YELLER - Fass Parker! Dot McGuire ALL MINE TO GIVE - Camero1 Mitchell UP IN Sr.!OKE -The Bowery Boys

WIHSTOR·SALEM DRIVE-II Just out N. Cherry St. Extension

NORMAN STOCKTON has the LIGHTWEIGHT

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Also See JIM THOMPSON, Senior At Wake forest - CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE ~

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