8
:lurban Itt .. _ )T mter TiB 9 FridaY tE SE. 110 ' mler J:. EWAY p.m. ,y M. ,, Deacs Give Heels Hell! 3-0! Twice In Row! Clemson Is Next! Students Working On Plans For Parents' Week End, Carnival n au at College Union Has Low Priority In Building Program Page Two * * .eihe <Jtw. * * Page Three VOLUME LII Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, Oct. 24, ,... '! . JJJ) ,. TWELVE ••• of the 15 Homecoming Queen candidates are Rhonda Hefner, Julie Davis, and Jenny Henderson <seated), and Jane Lasley, Nancy Carol Bost, Nan Bell, Sally Ann Whitehurst, Austine Odom, Jeannie Pfister, Nancy --PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY Yonng, Jo Ann Eskridge, and Diane Baldwin. All 15 of the campus beauties will be presented in chapel Thursday. Student Organizations Preparing For Homecoming This Weekend By LINDA LEVI STAFF WRITER All segments of the College, from the dorms and frater- nities to the Marching Deacs and ·the College Union, are in action to make Homecoming a success this weekend. Fraternity p a r tie s are scheduled Friday night to be- gin the weekend: No classes will be held on Saturday, but cuts before and after the weekend will count as two for freshmen and three or four for upperclassmen. Love Me," and "Baby I'm Yours." The Coasters, another group scheduled, have ·such hits as "Charlie Brown," "Search- ing," "Along Came Jones," and '"Love Potion No. 9." Bobby Moore and the thm Aces, the third group, have recorded "Searching For My Love." · Casual Dress Queen will be presented and voted on in Chapel Thursday. The Queen will be announced and crowned during the half- time entertainment at the game. ,. Forensic Frat Sponsors .. Wake's Novice Tourney · The College will hold its 17th annual novice debate tourna- ment Thursday through Satur- day, with 25 teams represent- ing 22 colleges and universities expected. Par·ticipants will register Thursday afternoon, with first round debates set for that night. Debating will continue through Friday wi>th the final round Saturday morning. Ferrum Junior College at Fer- rum. V<L, Centre College of Kentucky. George Washington University, High Point Col- lege, Mary Washington Col- lege of the University of Vir- ginia, Mount Olive Jnnior Col- lege. Washington and Lee University. Western Carolina College, Wingate, the United States Milit:1ry Academy, the Uni·ted States Naval Academy. and the Universities of Geor- gia. Maryland, Pittsburgh, South Carolina and North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 1966 NUMBER ll Hill Nantes Five Trustees To Search For President A five-man trustee commit- tee to select a successor to re- tiring Wake Forest College President Harold W. Tribble was announced Saturday by trustee president G. Maurice Hill of Drexel. Lex Marsh, Charlotte real- tor and mortgage banker, will be chairman of the group . Other members are the Rev. Carlton S. Prickett, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Burlington; Dr. George Pas- chal, Raleigh surgeon; and Tom Davis and Leon Rice, both of Winston-Salem. Davis is president of Piedmont Avia- tion, Inc., and Rice is an at- torney. To Work With Others Hill said the committee will work closely with rthe faculty council, the alumni council and the student groups before making any recommendation to the full board of trustees. "Obviously," Hili said, "I have selected these men with the idea of including represen- tatives of different walks of life. It is equally obvious to me that these are thoroughly capable men who will give this task the conscientious consid- eration it deserves. I am, of course, grateful that they have consented to serve." Marsh issued a statement in which he said: "We are aware that the job of college presi- dent is a particularly demand- ing one. We; are anxious to get 211 educator and adminis-trator who will have the respect of our· own acndemic community ::md the academic community at large. We know it will be well for him to be skilled in f>.rnd raising and public rela- -·uous and that he must be app1'cil>itia.tcl;Y.:;·mindful of the College"s tics with the Bap- ti•:t.s :tnd \\·ith its nlumni. Ob- viously we are look ing for an t'mtsual man but he has an tlllttsual position to fill. It goes without saying that he must be a Baptist. On Oct. 14 Tribble, saying he was very tired, asked to be allowed to retire June 30. He has been President of Wake Forest since 1950. Marsh holds the law de- gree from Wake Forest and has been engaged in real estate and mortgage banking since 1924. He has been pre- sident of the college's board of trustees. He is a life dea- con and former ohairman of the board of deacons of ·the Myers Park Baptist Church in Charlotte. Newspaper reports through- out the state have listed four men as possible candidates in early speculation. Dr. Harry M. Philpott, 49, brother of the late Lt.-Gov. Cloyd Philpott and member of the "well-known and high- ly-respected" Philpott furni- ture family of Lexington has probably received the most mention. Auburn President Since 1965 Philpott ihas been president of Auburn Universi· ty. Dr. James R. Scales, 47, dean of arts and sciences at Oklahoma State University since 1965, and former presi- dent of Oklahoma Baptist Uni- versity, is also a possibility. Dr. Pope A. Duncan. 46, president of Georgia Soutiliern College, and former professor at Mercer University and Stet- son University has also been mentioned frequently. The fourth possibility is Dr. William H. McEniry, a S:tetson dean since 1958. Rumors around campus this weekend also included .such men as Dr. Sam Hill. profes- sor at the of'N{)rbli Carolina at Ohapel Hill. and Dr. John W. ChandlC>r, deoan of Williams College. The rumor that circulated widely last spring that former North Carolina governor Terry Sanford was being courted for the job is still being talked about by students. Marsh pointed out this weekt-nd, ihowever, that tlhe president must be a Baptist. Sanford is Methodist. ••• LEX MARSH ••• 'Old Gold' Wins Honor The Old Gold and Black last Friday received its twen- ty-sixth All-American Honor Rating out of 27 semesters of competition. The All-American rating, which was for the spring se- mester, was the second such rating .to be awarded to a represerutative of Pub Row within a week. Last week The Student, the campus literary magazine, re- ceived its All-American. Carol Claxon and Sherry Pryor were co-editors of the 1965-66 Old Gold and Black. Judging is done each semes- ter by the Associa:ted Colleg- iate Press. Decorations Judging Bids for the dance scheduled for Saturday from 8:15 p. m. ·to 12 p, m, are on sale at the information desk and the book store for $5.00. The dress is casual. The following coeds are can- didates: Becki Stevenson, jun- ior of Hickory, representing Alpha Sigma Phi; Jane -Lasley, junior of Kerriersvllle. rep- resenting Alpha Phi Omega; Jo Ann Eskridge, freshman of Burlington, representing Sigma Chi; Sally Ann Whiltehurst, freshman of Bethel, represent- ing Kitchen House 'and; Diane Baldwin, junior of Salisbury, Md., representing Kappa AI- Participants will debate the national query which asks if the federal ·government should substantially reduce its for- eign policy commitments. ---------------------- Decorations for the girl's dorms, the fraternity houses, and the MRC houses will go up this wee-k. All will be judged with prizes going the best in each dormitory. Poteat House, instead of dec- orating, will present a partio art show before and after the game on Saturday. Steve Kelly, chairman of the major functions committee of .the College Union, predicts a "better Homecoming" as fa·r as Saturday night's festh.ities are concerned. Kelly said that the commit- tee "went through every Col- lege Union survey that had been taken and found out everything that people didn't like about Homecoming dn1 previous years." Refreshment Stands "We have •tried to correct all of them. We will have more refreshment stands set up, a better amplifier system, and the band located in a better pos1tion. "We've also contacted a lot of alumni in the area who !have donated various mate- rials and ihelped out in several ways." According to Kelly, the dec- orations will be the best they have been in years. The theme this year is football and the decorations include a large backdrop and streamers cov- ering the area. "The three groups of enter- tainers look good," Kelly com- mented. Barbara Lewis is one of the three "groups" scheduled for Saturday night at Farmer's [Market. This member of a show business family made her record debut with a smash recording of "Hello Stranger." Since then she lhas turned out "Puppy Love," "Would You " Pictures f1 Graduate students, law lJ n students, and seniors •will [·;; t')i be able to order tiheir pic- ['i w tures through the studio 1:; 1 '' representative who will n be in the Howler office [i on October 26-27-28 from n 9:30 a. m. to s:oo p. m. H i1 Underclassmen will be l Rl notified at a later date : =: [;$ about ordering tiheir pic- ; , tures. ;' Candidates for Homecoming Continued on Page 5 Freshmen Class Chooses Sam Long For Top Post Sam Long, of Elberton, Ga., defeated Larry Melton, of Gas- •tonia, 168 to 153, in a run-off election for freshmen class president Friday. The two competed in run-off after squeezing out Lee Furr, of Wilmington, in Thursday's general election, which drew 66 per cent of the freshmen voters. Paul Cale, of Albemarle, won .the vice-presidency over Lucky Robinson, of Gastonia. Charlottean Beverly Shaw defeated Suellen Anderson, of Jacksonville, Fla., in run-off election for secretary. Two other candidates, Dennis Goins, of Mt. Airy, and Katie Holliday, of Charlotte, com- peted in the Thursday election. Three candidates opposed each other in Friday's run-off for treasurer. In that election, Kristen Vaughan, of Kingsport, Tenn., defeated Marian Scherrer, of Cincinnati, Ohio, and Joyce Trigg, of New York City. Other freshmen running for treasurer were David Meech. of Statesville. Scott Reed, of Greensboro, and Alex Wyche of Whiteville. Carl Hibbert, of Altlanta, Ga., Robert Umbelx, of Po- land. Ohio, and Bek Howell, of Gastonia, were elected freshmen legislators. Others running for the three legisla•ture positions were David Hall, Morris Hartis, Larry Marshall, Linda Moore, Ann Peale, Laura Wall, and Dayle Wihilte. Mike Gunter, sophomore class president of Gastonia, who was in charge of the elec- tion, reported that there was a .total of 27 candidates, a 66 percentage voting in the gen- eral election, and 48 percent voting in the run-off. Campaign posters went up midnight last Sunday, and the candidates began the four days of campaigning. Although most of the vote- seeking was door-to-door, newly elected vice-president Paul Cale and his combo gave a campaign party in the for- mal parlor of Johnson Dor- mitory. And while most of the cam- paign promises were more or less run of the mill, one brave Cor unconfidentl candidate promised free beer at the Tavern if elected. --PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY FRESHMAN CLASS . • officers elected Friday are Sam Long, Kristen Vaughan, Paul Cale, and Beverly Shaw. Purpose of the tournament is to serve as a debut for new debaters. Participants must not have taken part in i!llter- collegiate debate prior to the current school year. Trophies will be presented to the •school wHh the best over-all score and to the top teams in :the tournament. Awards will be made at the event's concluding luncheon Saturday. Sponsoring organization is the Wake Forest chapter of Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha, honorary forensic fra- ternity. The College and two other schools, the University of Richmond and West Georgia College, will enter two teams. Other schools, who will enter one each, are Duke Univer- sity, East Carolina College, Debaters Tell Of Tourney's Preparations By BECKY ROSS STAFF WRITER If you do not think a student could add eight to ten hours of research, wrdting, and rehear- ·Sing speeches to a regular 16- or 17-hour academ1ic schedule without ruining his grades then chances are you have not become acquainted with any of the debate team mem- bers. The regular club members, although a few dn number this year, do manage to take time out from their regular. aca- loads for debate pre- paration. They prepare a detailed argu- ment both for and against a controversJal current i•ssuc, practice deLivering these argu- ments in vigorous and time- consuming meetings three times a week, and meet othc1· s c h o o 1 s in tournaments throughout the year to ex- change tlheir arguments and rebuttals in a brisk but logical manner with other debaters equally well-prepared. A month of such research, supplemented by numerous debates among the team mem- bers themselves, will be cli- maxed for the College team in the Novice Debate Tourna- Continued on Page 5 Comic jJiasterpiece By Moliere 'The Opens ToDiorrow By J. D. WILSON STAFF WRITER The Wake Forest college theatre will open its 1966-67 season in the arena theatre tomorrow night \l'lth Moliere's comic masterpiece, "The Mis- anthrope." "The Misanthrope" will be presented ·at 8:15 p. m. tomor- row through Friday. A special Homecoming per- formance will be given Satur- day night at 7:30 rather than the traditional 8:15 Jn order to allow the audience to at- tend other Homecoming acti- vities. The college theatre 1\"ill pro- duce the play, written in 1666, in modern dress, dra\\ling on contemporary customs and contemporary designs !in at·t and clothes to show that 1m- man nature has changed very little in 300 years, Modern innovations on the set deSJign will feature the popular look of "op" art. The floor of the arena theatre has been designed with the •·op" art technique and the furni- ture has been constructed to suggest modern fcatut·cs 111 furniture design. The female characters will lbe dressed .in costumes of "haute coutrc" created from rich brocades and velvets and making ample use of ostrich plume trimmings. "The Misanthrope, •• cred by many as Moliere's best work, deals with a society o.f wealthy independent people who are able to spend thcil· afternoons and evenings in gossip and dn pursuit of the insignifcant. This society centers around a fickle and flirtatious 20 year old w:idow, Celiminc, portray- ed by Marsha Cannada. sen- ior of Durham. Dra\\11 to her beauty and supe1·fic·ial charm is Alccstc, played by Robert Finn, sop- homore of Annapolis, Md. Jn the P'lay, Alccstc feels it personal obligation to speak the truth no matter what the situation might hc or who might be offended. Alceste, who has fallen un- controllably in love with Ccli- mine, finds it difficult to ac- MANNERS • • • haven't changed in 300 years insists Flora Hoffman, as she and 1\>larsha --PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY Ca1mada prepare for tomorrow JlliJti's ing of Moliere's "The Misanthrepe." ccpt the other sutors she man- <Jges to keep on the string. Throughout the play Al- cestc attempts to extract from Celimine a promise that she will be true to him, but finds that each time the convcrsa· t ion becomes serious he is in- terrupted. These humorous lions arc reflections on so- ciety's continual interruptions which prevent men from achieving basic understanding with each other. After failing in ltis mission to secure Climine's promise. Alecstc departs fm· "a desert place" in order to escape the f<llsity of society. While this action might seem scvc,·e, "a desert place" to the Parisian in Moliere's time \\'<IS any large estate more lh<m 50 miles fmm Paris. Oth('J" charnctc:·s in the play include Or<mte, played by Den- nis S<Jyers. junior of West- mont, Ill. Orontc is •a \'ain and pompous poet, whose sonnet provokes Alcestc to such ticai honesty that Oronte sues him for his criticism. Philinte, an honest and trust- ing friend of Alcaste, represent- ing moderation as opposed to the extremes found in the other characters, is played by Moyer, freshman of Blooming Glen, Pa. Alceste is greatly admired and loved by Celiminc's sweet and honest cousdn, Eliantc, played by Martha Andrus, soP- homore of Winston-Sa·lem. Arsinoc, the prude who ltns her eye on all of Celiminc"s suitors and is quite willlng to forget her prudery to draw them away from her, is por- trayed by Flora Hoffmnn, sen- ior of Chillum. Md. Acaste and Clitandre arc two vain, foppish marquises who spend their time in idle gossip and in pursuit of tihe fickle Celiminc. Stanley Whit- ley, freshman of Southern Pines, plays Acaste, and Charles Harrill, freshman of Sanford, plays Clitandre. Other characters include Cclimine"s pert and pri•ssy maid, Basque, played by Jen. nie Lynn Boger, sophomore of Concord; Alceste's confused and bumbling old servant, Du- bois, played by CalvJn String- field, sophomore of Hickory; and an Officer of the Court, played by Dan Shive, senior of Monroe. "The cast has taken to the comic style of Moliere excep- tionally well," rcmMked the play's director, Dr. Harold Tedford. He added "This is not an easy task for actors to work in this style, but they have proven to be quite adept." Members of the student pro- duction staff for "The Misan- Continued on Page 5

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Page 1: To Search For President

~wear

:lurban

Itt .. _ )T

mter TiB 9

FridaY

• • •

~E tE

SE.

~ 110

' mler J:.

EWAY

p.m. ,y ~. M.

,,

Deacs Give Heels Hell! 3-0! Twice In Row! Clemson Is Next!

Students Working On Plans For Parents' Week End, Carnival n au at College Union Has

Low Priority In Building Program

Page Two

* * ''e~ '7~ e~ .eihe <Jtw. .M~" * * Page Three

VOLUME LII Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, Oct. 24,

~

,... '!

. JJJ) ,.

TWELVE ••• of the 15 Homecoming Queen candidates are Rhonda Hefner, Julie Davis, and Jenny Henderson <seated), and Jane Lasley, Nancy Carol Bost, Nan Bell, Sally Ann Whitehurst, Austine Odom, Jeannie Pfister, Nancy

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY Yonng, Jo Ann Eskridge, and Diane Baldwin. All 15 of the campus beauties will be presented in chapel Thursday.

Student Organizations Preparing For Homecoming This Weekend

By LINDA LEVI STAFF WRITER

All segments of the College, from the dorms and frater­nities to the Marching Deacs and ·the College Union, are in action to make Homecoming a success this weekend.

Fraternity p a r tie s are scheduled Friday night to be­gin the weekend: No classes will be held on Saturday, but cuts before and after the weekend will count as two for freshmen and three or four for upperclassmen.

Love Me," and "Baby I'm Yours."

The Coasters, another group scheduled, have ·such hits as "Charlie Brown," "Search­ing," "Along Came Jones," and '"Love Potion No. 9."

Bobby Moore and the Rhy~ thm Aces, the third group, have recorded "Searching For My Love." ·

Casual Dress

Queen will be presented and voted on in Chapel Thursday. The Queen will be announced and crowned during the half­time entertainment at the game.

~-,

,. Forensic Frat Sponsors ..

Wake's Novice Tourney · The College will hold its 17th

annual novice debate tourna­ment Thursday through Satur­day, with 25 teams represent­ing 22 colleges and universities expected.

Par·ticipants will register Thursday afternoon, with first round debates set for that night. Debating will continue through Friday wi>th the final round Saturday morning.

Ferrum Junior College at Fer­rum. V<L, Centre College of Kentucky. George Washington University, High Point Col­lege, Mary Washington Col­lege of the University of Vir­ginia, Mount Olive Jnnior Col­lege. Washington and Lee University. Western Carolina College, Wingate, the United States Milit:1ry Academy, the Uni·ted States Naval Academy. and the Universities of Geor­gia. Maryland, Pittsburgh, South Carolina and North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

1966 NUMBER ll

Hill Nantes Five Trustees To Search For President

A five-man trustee commit­tee to select a successor to re­tiring Wake Forest College President Harold W. Tribble was announced Saturday by trustee president G. Maurice Hill of Drexel.

Lex Marsh, Charlotte real­tor and mortgage banker, will be chairman of the group . Other members are the Rev. Carlton S. Prickett, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Burlington; Dr. George Pas­chal, Raleigh surgeon; and Tom Davis and Leon Rice, both of Winston-Salem. Davis is president of Piedmont Avia­tion, Inc., and Rice is an at­torney.

To Work With Others

Hill said the committee will work closely with rthe faculty council, the alumni council and the student groups before making any recommendation to the full board of trustees.

"Obviously," Hili said, "I have selected these men with the idea of including represen­tatives of different walks of life. It is equally obvious to me that these are thoroughly capable men who will give this task the conscientious consid­eration it deserves. I am, of course, grateful that they have consented to serve."

Marsh issued a statement in which he said: "We are aware that the job of college presi­dent is a particularly demand­ing one. We; are anxious to get 211 educator and adminis-trator who will have the respect of our· own acndemic community ::md the academic community at large. We know it will be well for him to be skilled in f>.rnd raising and public rela-

-·uous and that he must be app1'cil>itia.tcl;Y.:;·mindful of the College"s tics with the Bap­ti•:t.s :tnd \\·ith its nlumni. Ob­viously we are look ing for an t'mtsual man but he has an tlllttsual position to fill. It goes without saying that he must be

a Baptist. On Oct. 14 Tribble, saying

he was very tired, asked to be allowed to retire June 30. He has been President of Wake Forest since 1950.

Marsh holds the law de­gree from Wake Forest and has been engaged in real estate and mortgage banking since 1924. He has been pre­sident of the college's board of trustees. He is a life dea­con and former ohairman of the board of deacons of ·the Myers Park Baptist Church in Charlotte.

Newspaper reports through­out the state have listed four men as possible candidates in early speculation.

Dr. Harry M. Philpott, 49, brother of the late Lt.-Gov. Cloyd Philpott and member of the "well-known and high­ly-respected" Philpott furni­ture family of Lexington has probably received the most mention.

Auburn President

Since 1965 Philpott ihas been president of Auburn Universi· ty.

Dr. James R. Scales, 47, dean of arts and sciences at Oklahoma State University since 1965, and former presi­dent of Oklahoma Baptist Uni­versity, is also a possibility.

Dr. Pope A. Duncan. 46, president of Georgia Soutiliern College, and former professor at Mercer University and Stet­son University has also been mentioned frequently.

The fourth possibility is Dr. William H. McEniry, ~0; a S:tetson dean since 1958.

Rumors around campus this weekend also included .such men as Dr. Sam Hill. profes­sor at the Urii~ty of'N{)rbli Carolina at Ohapel Hill. and Dr. John W. ChandlC>r, deoan of Williams College.

The rumor that circulated widely last spring that former North Carolina governor Terry

Sanford was being courted for the job is still being talked about by students.

Marsh pointed out this weekt-nd, ihowever, that tlhe president must be a Baptist. Sanford is Methodist.

~

••• LEX MARSH •••

'Old Gold' Wins Honor

The Old Gold and Black last Friday received its twen­ty-sixth All-American Honor Rating out of 27 semesters of competition.

The All-American rating, which was for the spring se­mester, was the second such rating .to be awarded to a represerutative of Pub Row within a week.

Last week The Student, the campus literary magazine, re­ceived its All-American.

Carol Claxon and Sherry Pryor were co-editors of the 1965-66 Old Gold and Black.

Judging is done each semes­ter by the Associa:ted Colleg­iate Press.

Decorations Judging

Bids for the dance scheduled for Saturday from 8:15 p. m. ·to 12 p, m, are on sale at the information desk and the book store for $5.00. The dress is casual.

The following coeds are can­didates: Becki Stevenson, jun­ior of Hickory, representing Alpha Sigma Phi; Jane -Lasley, junior of Kerriersvllle. rep­resenting Alpha Phi Omega; Jo Ann Eskridge, freshman of Burlington, representing Sigma Chi; Sally Ann Whiltehurst, freshman of Bethel, represent­ing Kitchen House 'and; Diane Baldwin, junior of Salisbury, Md., representing Kappa AI-

Participants will debate the national query which asks if the federal ·government should substantially reduce its for­eign policy commitments. ----------------------

Decorations for the girl's dorms, the fraternity houses, and the MRC houses will go up this wee-k. All will be judged with prizes going ~o

the best in each dormitory. Poteat House, instead of dec­orating, will present a partio art show before and after the game on Saturday.

Steve Kelly, chairman of the major functions committee of .the College Union, predicts a "better Homecoming" as fa·r as Saturday night's festh.ities are concerned.

Kelly said that the commit­tee "went through every Col­lege Union survey that had been taken and found out everything that people didn't like about Homecoming dn1 previous years."

Refreshment Stands

"We have •tried to correct all of them. We will have more refreshment stands set up, a better amplifier system, and the band located in a better pos1tion.

"We've also contacted a lot of alumni in the area who !have donated various mate­rials and ihelped out in several ways."

According to Kelly, the dec­orations will be the best they have been in years. The theme this year is football and the decorations include a large backdrop and streamers cov­ering the area.

"The three groups of enter­tainers look good," Kelly com­mented.

Barbara Lewis is one of the three "groups" scheduled for Saturday night at Farmer's [Market. This member of a show business family made her record debut with a smash recording of "Hello Stranger." Since then she lhas turned out "Puppy Love," "Would You

r""'i::;~~=···. ·~ " ~ ~ Pictures 1~ f1 Graduate students, law lJ n students, and seniors •will [·;; t')i be able to order tiheir pic- ['i w tures through the studio 1:; 1'' representative who will n [~ be in the Howler office [i ~ on October 26-27-28 from k~i n 9:30 a. m. to s:oo p. m. H i1 Underclassmen will be l ~ Rl notified at a later date : =:

[;$ about ordering tiheir pic- ; , ~ tures. ;' ~~~::~~::~·:::;:~-~::::~~:::;~~~~:::,;~~=::~::::,-x:-:~

Candidates for Homecoming Continued on Page 5

Freshmen Class Chooses Sam Long For Top Post

Sam Long, of Elberton, Ga., defeated Larry Melton, of Gas­•tonia, 168 to 153, in a run-off election for freshmen class president Friday.

The two competed in run-off after squeezing out Lee Furr, of Wilmington, in Thursday's general election, which drew 66 per cent of the freshmen voters.

Paul Cale, of Albemarle, won .the vice-presidency over Lucky Robinson, of Gastonia.

Charlottean Beverly Shaw defeated Suellen Anderson, of Jacksonville, Fla., in run-off election for secretary. Two other candidates, Dennis Goins, of Mt. Airy, and Katie Holliday, of Charlotte, com­peted in the Thursday election.

Three candidates opposed each other in Friday's run-off for treasurer.

In that election, Kristen Vaughan, of Kingsport, Tenn., defeated Marian Scherrer, of Cincinnati, Ohio, and Joyce Trigg, of New York City.

Other freshmen running for treasurer were David Meech. of Statesville. Scott Reed, of Greensboro, and Alex Wyche of Whiteville.

Carl Hibbert, of Altlanta, Ga., Robert Umbelx, of Po­land. Ohio, and Bek Howell, of Gastonia, were elected freshmen legislators.

Others running for the three legisla•ture positions were David Hall, Morris Hartis, Larry Marshall, Linda Moore, Ann Peale, Laura Wall, and Dayle Wihilte.

Mike Gunter, sophomore class president of Gastonia, who was in charge of the elec­tion, reported that there was a .total of 27 candidates, a 66 percentage voting in the gen­eral election, and 48 percent voting in the run-off.

Campaign posters went up midnight last Sunday, and the candidates began the four days of campaigning.

Although most of the vote­seeking was door-to-door, newly elected vice-president Paul Cale and his combo gave a campaign party in the for­mal parlor of Johnson Dor­mitory.

And while most of the cam­paign promises were more or less run of the mill, one brave Cor unconfidentl candidate promised free beer at the Tavern if elected.

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY FRESHMAN CLASS . • officers elected Friday are Sam Long, Kristen Vaughan, Paul Cale, and Beverly Shaw.

Purpose of the tournament is to serve as a debut for new debaters. Participants must not have taken part in i!llter­collegiate debate prior to the current school year.

Trophies will be presented to the •school wHh the best over-all score and to the top teams in :the tournament. Awards will be made at the event's concluding luncheon Saturday.

Sponsoring organization is the Wake Forest chapter of Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha, honorary forensic fra­ternity.

The College and two other schools, the University of Richmond and West Georgia College, will enter two teams.

Other schools, who will enter one each, are Duke Univer­sity, East Carolina College,

Debaters Tell Of Tourney's Preparations

By BECKY ROSS STAFF WRITER

If you do not think a student could add eight to ten hours of research, wrdting, and rehear­·Sing speeches to a regular 16-or 17-hour academ1ic schedule without ruining his grades then chances are you have not become acquainted with any of the debate team mem­bers.

The regular club members, although a few dn number this year, do manage to take time out from their regular. aca­dem~e loads for debate pre­paration.

They prepare a detailed argu­ment both for and against a controversJal current i•ssuc, practice deLivering these argu­ments in vigorous and time­consuming meetings three times a week, and meet othc1· s c h o o 1 s in tournaments throughout the year to ex­change tlheir arguments and rebuttals in a brisk but logical manner with other debaters equally well-prepared.

A month of such research, supplemented by numerous debates among the team mem­bers themselves, will be cli­maxed for the College team in the Novice Debate Tourna-

Continued on Page 5

Comic jJiasterpiece By Moliere

'The ~Iisantl1rope~ Opens ToDiorrow By J. D. WILSON

STAFF WRITER

The Wake Forest college theatre will open its 1966-67 season in the arena theatre tomorrow night \l'lth Moliere's comic masterpiece, "The Mis­anthrope."

"The Misanthrope" will be presented ·at 8:15 p. m. tomor­row through Friday.

A special Homecoming per­formance will be given Satur­day night at 7:30 rather than the traditional 8:15 Jn order to allow the audience to at­tend other Homecoming acti­vities.

The college theatre 1\"ill pro­duce the play, written in 1666, in modern dress, dra\\ling on contemporary customs and contemporary designs !in at·t and clothes to show that 1m­man nature has changed very little in 300 years,

Modern innovations on the set deSJign will feature the popular look of "op" art. The floor of the arena theatre has been designed with the •·op" art technique and the furni­ture has been constructed to suggest modern fcatut·cs 111

furniture design. The female characters will

lbe dressed .in costumes of "haute coutrc" created from rich brocades and velvets and making ample use of ostrich plume trimmings.

"The Misanthrope, •• cons.id~

cred by many as Moliere's best work, deals with a society o.f wealthy independent people who are able to spend thcil· afternoons and evenings in gossip and dn pursuit of the insignifcant.

This society centers around a fickle and flirtatious 20 year old w:idow, Celiminc, portray­ed by Marsha Cannada. sen­ior of Durham.

Dra\\11 to her beauty and supe1·fic·ial charm is Alccstc, played by Robert Finn, sop­homore of Annapolis, Md. Jn the P'lay, Alccstc feels it hi~ personal obligation to speak the truth no matter what the situation might hc or who might be offended.

Alceste, who has fallen un­controllably in love with Ccli­mine, finds it difficult to ac-

MANNERS • • • haven't changed in 300 years insists Flora Hoffman, as she and 1\>larsha

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY Ca1mada prepare for tomorrow JlliJti's open~ ing of Moliere's "The Misanthrepe."

ccpt the other sutors she man­<Jges to keep on the string.

Throughout the play Al­cestc attempts to extract from Celimine a promise that she will be true to him, but finds that each time the convcrsa· t ion becomes serious he is in­terrupted.

These humorous interrup~ lions arc reflections on so­ciety's continual interruptions which prevent men from achieving basic understanding with each other.

After failing in ltis mission to secure Climine's promise. Alecstc departs fm· "a desert place" in order to escape the f<llsity of society.

While this action might seem scvc,·e, "a desert place" to the Parisian in Moliere's time \\'<IS any large estate more lh<m 50 miles fmm Paris.

Oth('J" charnctc:·s in the play include Or<mte, played by Den­nis S<Jyers. junior of West-

mont, Ill. Orontc is •a \'ain and pompous poet, whose sonnet provokes Alcestc to such cri~ ticai honesty that Oronte sues him for his criticism.

Philinte, an honest and trust­ing friend of Alcaste, represent­

ing moderation as opposed to the extremes found in the other characters, is played by 1'imoth~· Moyer, freshman of Blooming Glen, Pa.

Alceste is greatly admired and loved by Celiminc's sweet and honest cousdn, Eliantc, played by Martha Andrus, soP­homore of Winston-Sa·lem.

Arsinoc, the prude who ltns her eye on all of Celiminc"s suitors and is quite willlng to forget her prudery to draw them away from her, is por­trayed by Flora Hoffmnn, sen­ior of Chillum. Md.

Acaste and Clitandre arc two vain, foppish marquises who spend their time in idle gossip and in pursuit of tihe

fickle Celiminc. Stanley Whit­ley, freshman of Southern Pines, plays Acaste, and Charles Harrill, freshman of Sanford, plays Clitandre.

Other characters include Cclimine"s pert and pri•ssy maid, Basque, played by Jen. nie Lynn Boger, sophomore of Concord; Alceste's confused and bumbling old servant, Du­bois, played by CalvJn String­field, sophomore of Hickory; and an Officer of the Court, played by Dan Shive, senior of Monroe.

"The cast has taken to the comic style of Moliere excep­tionally well," rcmMked the play's director, Dr. Harold Tedford. He added "This is not an easy task for actors to work in this style, but they have proven to be quite adept."

Members of the student pro­duction staff for "The Misan­

Continued on Page 5

Page 2: To Search For President

PAGE TWO 1\londay, Oct. 24, 1966 OLD GOLD AND BLACIC

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~~ Part Of Advisory Board ~11 U For Challenge Is Named~ M 0

By LINDA LEVI STAFF WRITER

A partially filled Board of Advisors and a campus-wide publicity drive in llhe plan­ning stages are two of the lat­est developments reported by the chairman of Challenge '67.

Jerry Baker reported that from the approximately 25 requests sent out to men througQJ.out the state, tfi ve 'have expressed willingness to serve on tfue Board of Ad­visors for Challenge.

The present members in­ciUide: Gordon Hanes, Presi­dent Qf Hanes Mills; Rich­ardson Pryor, former guber­natorial candidate from North Carolina; C. A. McKnight, editor of the Charlotte Ob­·server; Irving Carlyle, former president of the Board of Trustees of Wake Forest; and Wallace Carroll, editor and publislher of the Journal-Sen­tinel.

Of the seven wlho replied 1Jhat they could: not serve, several have sent letters of endorsement £or the sym­posium. According to Baker, "We are still waiting on re­plies from many of them."

The functions of this board are three-fold.

"We feel that we need a certain amount of prestige

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Next week a campus-wide publicity campaign will begin. According to Baker, there will be one student for every suite or ihall, available to ex­plain the aims Qf Clhallenge and to answer any questions.

"It will be- an att-empt to get the .stul:lents fired up early about Challenge," Baker said.

In regard to the money ·Sit­uation, Baker said that an appointment with the Bab­cock Foundation illas been arranged, and !he hopes too meet this week witlh the Reynolds Foundation.

He expressed the hope that all the money needed lor Challenge could be raised within the .state.

The tooting service at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill IWit only tests and counsels students but also lhas, unde-r a contract with 1lhe Vet­erans' Administration, lhelpe!d to vocationally test and counsel more than 10,000 veterans.

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Student Preparations Are., Developing For Parents' Weekend, Fall Carnival

BY GRAY LAWRENCE It lookls like November 4-6

is gding to be a big weekend all aa-ound. At that time, more than 400 parents will converge on the Wake For­est campus. On November 5, the jun!ior class plans to initi­ate a new tradition with its Carnival.

Jdm Martin, sophomore of Virginia Beach, Va., and Mir­iam Early, sophomore of Greensboro, head thl!s year's freshman parents' weekend.

Due to tan oversight last spring, no students were ap­pointed to take charge of the upperclass parents. Never­theless, "plans for the fresh­man weekend are boomling," according to Martlin.

Over 400 parents have al­ready mdicated that they will be comi'ng, and a schedule both interesting and informa­b!ve has been arranged. The parents will arrive Frid·ay ev­en'ing and Saturday morning and will register at the in­formation desk, where they will receive programs con­cerning the weekend.

The reg,!strati'on fee is $3.00 per parent.

"Saturday morning, four pro­fessors will speak on the pur­pose and approach in the teaclhing of their field," Miss Early sa:id.

At IMlOJl, parents may pick up a box lunch at the Ar­mory, across from Bowman Gray Stadium, and then walk across the street for the Wake Forest-V.P.L game at 2:00. At 6:00 Saturday even­ing there will be a banquet for freshmen and parents; Dean of the College Edwin G. Wilson WiJ.l be the speaker.

Nothing has been planned for Saturday ruight because of the Junior Class CM·nival lii!kewise, parents may spend Sunday with sudent.s.

On Saturday, November 5, from 7:30 to 11:30 p. m. at \Magnolia Court <between the Humanlities and Law budld­ings), the juni(}r cl-ass will "skyrocket with the greatest extravaganza ~n campus his­tory, its Fall Carn.i'Val," Day­na Tate, junior cl-ass vdce­president and chailrman of the carnival, said this week­

end. For dnstance, she said, the

Flying Dutchman of WTOB and hlis wife, Queen Kong, will sell kiisses and related items at the Petale booth. For a nominal fee. you may ob­tain a !handshake; for in­creasing fork-outs, you might

receive a peck on the cheek or ta reaa.Iy consclientious ef­fort. "You mfght even get to take them home," Miss Tate said.

The Fideles wm take you back to the days of the Zieg­field Follies wHh a minstrel show of theur own. Poteat House will offer horse rides, and Alpha Kappa· Psi will sponsor a "Noose the Goose" booth - "if you don't under­stand, come and £ind out,"

FALL CARNIVAL . • . committee cbainnen and junior class officers met Friday to check on plans for the Nov. 4-6 extrava·

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY all chairman Dayna Tate (left) are J. D. Wilson, John Gretes, Sandy Hutchens, VIcki Campbell, and Dean Walters.

ganza. Discussing arrangements with over-

they exhort. APO servdce fra­ternity will hold an ugly man contest; BSU wtll sell home­made bake goods, supplied by 30 loc•a[ churches.

The Strings society will have a fortune-telling booth and - get this - the Cameos will run a jai:l house. Phi Al­pha Delta promi'ses a differ­ent klind of entertainment with dts "Ring the Girl's Leg" game. They're gi'Vling garters as prizes, naturally.

S.O.P .H. has invitde stu­dents to try thedlr psychologi­cal sklills - your opponent is a trained rat. The Les Soeurs will offer a skill game involv­ing balloons and a handwrit­ing analysS!s.

Delta Sdgma PM will im­prove the sad state of :your coordin•ation with a nickel throw.

Lambda Chi Alpha W1lll try to do the same thing with Its egg throw. The sophomore class has a booth having some­thing to do with 4 girls' and 4 boys' colleges, but no one is able to fUnd out exactly what i:t ~-s yet.

At any rate, pri'l:es will be supplied by members of the sophomore class. Taylor House will sponsor a booth with the perennial darts and balloons.

Sigma Pli: Wlill provtide you · with water balloons, w!li'ch

you will try to plop on the he-ad of someone whose head is sticking out from a curtain pa~nted witl:J. a gobbler - no small alluslion to the game Wake plays that day. The popularity of Sigma Chi's "dunk the professor" booth l·ast spring has tempted them to bring it back this year, only Without the professors.

If you alre overcoiDJe by pent-up frustratlions, Kappa Sigma has just the thdng - a car smash.

The CoHege Union will have the "CU Showboat," with a freshman group providing riv-

erboat and jazz tunes. There will be a paddle wheel with comling to Wake Forest thls year; a picture oi a certain group will be tat the top of the paddle wheel.

When the wheel is spun, if the name of the song stops at the picture of the group who sings tt, the Wlinner col­lects a prize.

There will aloo be two tic­ket booths and two big re· freshment booths, special!izing in cotton candy. In all, there wtrll be 30 or 40 booths pro­viding entertainment of every k.ind, not to mentdon the Wake Forest students, she said.

the names of songs by groups The "fund and fun-raising J

project" representiSI the com­bined efforts of many juniors. Dean Walters, of Silver Springs,

Md., is d.n charge of tdckets; Sandy Hutclhens, of Mount Airy, publlicity; Don RD.'ordon, of Fort Pierce, Fila., layout; J. D. Wilson, of ·Mount Sterl­ing, Ky., refreshments; and Jeter Walker, of Morganton, • informatlion.

Junior cloa~Ss ofrucem are Tom Ginn, of Lakeland. Fla., president; Vicklii Campbell,. of MaTili:nsv.ille, Va., secretary; John Gertes, of Norfolk, Va., treasurer, and :MiSs Tate.

WF's Role In Model UN To Be Discussed Thurs.

Janice Crosswhite, head of Wake Forest's delegation to the Model United Nations' General Assembly, announced that a meeting of all in­terested stuldents will be held 'llhursday at 6.30 p. m. in the Student Legislature room.

The Model UN will be iheld at East Carolina College, April 5-8, and Wake is ex­pected to have 11bree k:iele-

-gations again . this year. · -.. -The meeting, · .l;,ccoiXllilg to -~Miss·-Crosswhite,'' h'as · several .

purposes. Each school is al­lowed to ask for the countries it wishes to represent and possible choices will be dis­cussed 'l1hursday.

Representation at the Model Security Council held at Hol­lins College each year and pla-ns for holding the Model UN at Wake Forest in the future will also be discussed at the meeting.

Wake Forest sent delega­tions II'epresenting Iraq, India and South Africa to tfue Model UN held last year at Duke. Mike Andrew, senior of Mc­Lea·n:sville, won the Best Speaker award, servi'llg as a

member of tfue Soutlh African delegation.

Miss Crosswhite urged all interested students, d.ncluding freshmen, to attend the meet­Ing. "You learn as much in those four days as you learn In any class on the UN in a semester-and !have a lot more fun."

Young Republic~n SuppoJ1;. Is .Urged

State Y o u n g Republican chairman spoke to the Wake Young Republican Club Wed- • neSiday night, emplhasizing the need fur YR support of Re­publican ca-ndidates in the forthcoming election:s.

Jim Culberston, of Win­ston-Salem, announced that a "5th District Chicken Stew" political ·rally will be !held on October 29 at 1:00 p. m., in Kernersville. House Repub­lican Leader Gerald Ford will be the guest speaker.

FOR ALL YOUR PORTRAIT N-EEDS VISIT •••

The following officers were elected at the meeting: chair­man, Joe Holbrook, sopho­more of Statesville; vice chair­man, Fred Morgan, junior of Ft. Myers, Fla.; recording secretary, Linda Scorgie, ·sen­ior of Murcysville, Pa.; cor­responding secretary, Susan McLean, senior of Coatesville, Pa.; and treasurer, Bill New­man, junior of Rockville, Md. ·, §~~9 ~tudio

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Page 3: To Search For President

I BY DAUGHTRY eft) are J. D. Elntcheus, VIcki

songs by groups and fun-raising>

~sentJS the com­of many juniors. of Silver Springs, arge of tlickets; ens, of Mount •; Don Rdt>rdon, e, Fila., layout; of 'Mount Sterl­reshments; and

of Morganton, •

s offll!cers are Lakeland. Fla.,

klii Campbell,. of Va., secretary; >f Norfolk, Va.,

M-.i!ss Tate.

!l UN hurs. e Soutlh Mrican

vhite urged all ients, !including ,ttend the meet· rn as much in •s as you learn on the UN in nd !have a lot

ublican .Urged

n g Republican :e to 'lfhe Wake can Club Wed- • ~mpbasizing llhe support of Re· lidates in the lection:s. ·ston, of Win­nounced that a Chicken Stew"

will be !held at 1:00 p. m.,

. House Repub­erald Ford will speaker. g officers were meeting: chair­•lbrook, sopbo­ille; vice chair· rgan, junior of 'la.; recording a Scorgie, ·sen­;ille, Pa.; cor­:retary, Susan · of Coatesville, 11rer, Bill New­Rockville, Md. ·,

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'Hopes Aren't Too High For CU Building The Swiss Chalet B:r PAM BAWKJNS

STAFF WRITER

In college union campaign ·speeches last spring, attention was momentarily focused on .the pressing need for a col­le~ union building. ) : ·The talk was loud, and the 'enthusiasm iln.dicative of stu­doi!J:at mt;erest. Elections took p:Jace. Sclhool was recessed. ADd so did talk about a col­lege union building.

Now, talk of builrling and Deeded funds revolve around the stadium. Next come the fine arts building, the busi-

' ness and mathematics build· ing, I(Jhe health services and PbYscology building, di>rmitor­tes and a church recreation bulldl:n.g, in alternating ranks of priority.

16 em not be denied that Uaese buildings in their own lndlvidual respects are cru· cfally warrented, but no men·

'Uon Is made of a student ceuter.

~ Cauble, president of the stu­

·dsnt body, "We just outgrew ,our old building," Cauble said, . "and so action was taken by the student government in

. conjunction wital the admi:n.ls­tration to secure a more -ade­quate !Structure."

Other colleges might have succeeded in their strug-gle for an activities center but, in the overwhelming demands and necessity for other buildings on the Wake Forest campus, a request for a college union structure seems to be dwarfed both in probability and possi­bility.

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Dr. 'Ilhomas Elmore, Dean of Students, expressed pessim!lsm on the possibilities of a col­lege union building taking pre­cedence over any of the build­Ings on the aforementioned builid:ing agenda.

College Union Wake Style: Reynolda Dungeon Pool Hall Hold that crease?

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· "ReY'OOlda Hall," Elmore · said, "was originally intended

to serve as a student activi­·ues and administration build­Ing."

· 'llhe business and math de­partments monopolize moot of the space on the second and third floors of Reynolda Hall, and Administration offices are cramped on first and second floom.

The e315t lotl!llge makes a comfortable substitute for a library study space. And in tihe basement of this central building is the only tlhing that

by 'Dhalhimers in Taylor dorm would be to assess each stu­dent $25 per semester and was offered to him.

"Before ihe announced his intentions to use it as mer­chandising space, tihe college union offered him equivalent or better storage. space in Reynolda Hall where the for­mer pool room WaJS operating.

"The materials he wanted to store were primarily for use lin Reynolda Hall," Hem­ric said, "and so we offered to relinquish to lhim that space rent free with tihe adjacent preposal that the College Union should take over the empty area he had (Thal­himers) and pay t!he required rent.

"It was our idea that we resembles any kind of activity could then m'Ove the pool center, a pool room. And it tables to the ·ground level Is currently unavailable· be- where they would: be apt to cause of table repairs. dr. aw more people.

''When the business and math departments move out," "Instead of taking a step Elmore commented, "and it toward us, as Clay has made

, appears that they may ihave overtones that he is willing to ' · some priority over a college do,~' Hemric said, "they went

union buDding, then the area the other way. here will be released.'' "l don't know whether there

"Tihen it is just a matter was pressure on him from of waiting and iseeing if this the treasurer's office or not

. space would be adequate for since the profits of the book · the union's needs. If not, pos- store go into a general College

sibly another idea may be fund," Hemric commented. entertained." Clay reitterated his stand

'llhe alumni office, which for a college union building was housed iii Reyriolda Hall that'Cl(e e)l:i)re!isetl1"at"'tlle1:end ·: last·' ear 'has: hai:i·-'ro 'm~e '' of'1'ast'''''.ar:~"r~iWs w~avor ,. off c~m~s because of lack . (, 'o"i' ~' coftfge uhioi(iiJUudii)g or . :of space for their expanding a student "l.mion builrling, and 'program and needs. I felt tlhen" as I do now· a

'llhey want to come back definite need for it." on campus. And in the event "If it Should coii).e to pass Of the academic offices mov- that a tStudent activities cen- · mg !into a new builld:ing, their ter and the book store could bid will be among the :fir!st jointly occupy a new· building,

· for the relinquished space. I tb.ave expresseld -the proba-The administration offices bility .of the book store !help­

.' _ which have been divided and ing by financing the mainte­. subdivided by temporary walls na:nce of such a building. _ are functioning under strained "I don't know the problems

and cramped conditions. If the administration !has con· space becomes avallable, it cerning tfhe building of such 1!11 almost inevitable that they a structli!I"e, ami that is not

- - wDl capitalize on that oppor- my problem, but :if something ·"! tunlty to expand. should come up, financing 1Jh.e

"If the 181dministration and maintenan~ would be a major the college acti v.ities center contribution. ever do jointly occupy one Cla:r said that he had been buildlng, ·it will be a unique advised through the business 'Situation as far as I know," office that they were not in

· · Elmore said. "And any move tbe position to postnl.ate pro­.. ,· l.n this direction will be a posals for the buflcling since

while coming as things pre- it was not even being seriOII!l­·senUy look," lhe commented. ly contemplated at tbe pre­

"There is no definite time sent time. table for buildings," Elmore "I don't think il:t's a matter str-essed. of their not wa:nting us to

Alternate possibilities for stu- have the buillddng," Clay spec­·cJent activity space have peri· ulated, "It :is ju.st a matter of odlcaUy reared their heads other tihings seeming to be only to be crushed when put more important at the time." In competition with money Hemric estimated the cost making endeavors. of a UDion buDding that would

••Last year, Richard Clay, adequately meet the needs operallQr of the College Book for 3000 students to be from Store~ asked for additional one and three quarters to two >Storage space," Clay Hemric, million dollars. president of the College Union 'I1b.e only ll.'emaining alterna­said. "And the space vacated tive as Hemric .outlined ~t

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take out a federal loan. "It .seems IDOW that the­

only way that we coulld ever get a union building would be wit!h student money," Hemric said.

"The students have not UJ.· dicated a willingness to aossess themselves $50 a year," Hem­ric commented.

But no vote has been taken. No questionnaires have been drawn up.

.. The climate doesn't seem right to take a vote," Clay estimated.

But the climate lhas not been analyzed.

Clay ibases ihi.s presumptions on the facts that there was a College UniO'll lounge dn Reynolda Hall five years ago wlhose furniture was destroyed through stUdent negligence and vandalism and tlhe "malicious damage" !Suffered by the pool tables, broken cue sticks a:nd stolen balls.

"If the students are so apa· tlhetic that they didn't apprs­ciate or take care of the fa· cilities that were offered them, !it would seem to <indicate from t!he same standpoint that they would not levy the addition­al financial strain on tlhem­selves," Clay said.

Clay also indicated tllhat the

federal loans had tightened up. "But they have not ceased," he said.

Hemric reasoned that since Wake Forest had not re­ques~ that Inany federal loans to his knowledge, then the College would stand a bet­ter chance of receiving such a loan.

"It would be three to four years before a College Union building could be built if the vote to as·sess the students were passed tomorrow," Clay said, "and ths upperclassmel) are not going to be willing to assess themselves for some­tihi.ng that tlhey will not be realized during their term here."

"If •students want a College Union building within tihe next five years," Hemric said, "we must have the student initia­tive and the student money now."

Other colleges have man­aged to construct student ac· tivity buDding's in the past few years, and although many of their problems have been similar, they have worked out tbe initial down payments from federal loans and then established se~nester assess· ments per student.

Rosa Veaudrot, president of

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the student body at Queens College in Charlotte said tlhat tfhe. students paid a $50 a year activities fee, $10 of which went to the building fund. The student body of approxi­mately 850 are meeting eacih of their i.JI!stallments on the building and getting full use out of its facilities.

Ths three story building, which was completed in 1962, !houses the organizational meet­ing places as we-ll "as student government offices, newspaper ·~lloll;qlilfl ... and annual offices. A tele· vision and card lounge plus separate rooms for stereos and hi-fis listening occupy the sec­ond level. The ground floor contains a day-student lounge and -snack shop.

The University of North --~~:;::"' Carolina at Raleigh has re· cently built a three and one half million dollar student union building on a similar 11-·~,..-,

basis to that of Queen's Col· lege.

The College took out a forty yeacr federal loan and the students are assessed $10 per semester according ·to Mike

in collegiate slacks, look to

~-- "_What :you do on ____ _ ,,:···-=octotier 27 : ·

may affect the rest of your life!

That's when the IDM interviewer will be on campus. When he'd like to talk with you­whatever your areil of study, whatever your plans after graduat~on.

You'll find job opportunities at IBM in six ma­jor areas: Computer Applications, Program­ming, Finance and Administration, Research

an·d Development, Manufacturing and Mar-~ kering.

Some of these areas may not mean much to you-now. Bur just let the IBM interviewer explain a few of them. One may. be just the career you're looking for. It could be the stan of something big-your future with IBM.

Whatever your: immediate commitments, whatever your area of study, sign up for you~ on-campus interview with IBM, now.

I

If, for some reason, you aren't able to arrange an interview, drop us a line. Write to: Manager of College Recruiting, IBM Corporation, Room 810, 1447 Peachtree Street, N.E., Atlanta, Georgia 30309. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Page 4: To Search For President

1Jlurk ***Wake

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, OCT. 24, 1966

Choosing A New President When Pl'esident Tribble an­

nounced his l'etirement, G. Mau­rice Hill, very capable p1·esident of the College Board of Trustees, prarnised that the "advice and counsel of faculty and alumni will be sought" in the selection of Tribble's successor. Later he was asked by reporters if stu­dents likewise could participate in the decision. Hill quickly as­sured them that the trustees had discussed student participation and had ag1·eed to Jet students participate. "Students" were sim­ply overlooked in writing the statement, Hill said.

We commend the trustees for their open-mindedness and confi­dence in students. In light of this solicitation of student participa­J-ion by the trustees, ·we urge the Legislature to immediately name the student committee to work with the other presidential se­lection committee.

The five-man student commit­tee should be made up of one graduate student, one law stu­dent, two senior undergraduates and one junior undergraduate. The committee would then have a two-fold purpose: to channel

student ideas and opmwns about the new president, and to work with similar committees of the faculty and alumni in order to give a voice to the students in the all-important matter.

Two points must be stressed. The first is that, although it will be the tru~tees who make the final decision, the more ideas expressed by interested and con­cerned parties, the greater the concensus on the making of the president wiJI be. Secondly, it is in deference to maturity from both experience and age that we suggest only graduate students, seniors and a junior, to man the committee.

We strongly insist that student gove1·nment from the beginning see that this ::;tudent right and responsibility receive all the at­tention it merit:;. \:Ve suggest that the student body president. Butch Pate, name a committee similar to our proposal.

Thi::; matter should receive top 11riority at the Legislature's Wed­nesday nigllt se::;sion. Few items of ·business have ever before called for more genuine concern on the part of students.

Updating The Raincoat (Christian Science Monitor)

American college youth, as well as their elders, have long accepted the conservative British style of raincoat as normal wet wearther wear. Indeed, so great is the appeal of the simple, tai­lored tan topper that in recent years it has been virtually a campus uniform.

How, then, are Americans to stand the shock of learning that a pink cotton raincoat for men has appeared in England? And not only pink, but light blue and gold also. And not only that, but the Menswear Association of Britain has awarded an Oscar statuette to the firm that broke the color barrier.

It is somewhat reassuring to read that Charles Ling, who ac­cetped the Oscar for his com­pany, insists that the new flashy models will not replace the firm's sober, established line. They will only supplement it.

That is all right. But how far will the Carnaby Street influence go. What if the London gentle­man's bowler hat ·were to give way to a sombrero, or his neatly­furled umbrella to a multi-colored parasol. If that happened, the world that follows London's men's fashions would surely copy. And then where would we be?

It is the responsibility of Great Britain to see that the brakes of

. !he fashion d'omain are applied m time.

Pacesetter For Progress The following is a corrected reprint of

the editorial, Tribble Pacesetter For Pro­gress, which appeared in the October 17 edition of the Old Gold and Black, but due to a printer's error, part of it was omit­ted. The complete, corrected editorial Is printed below for the record.

In view of the significance of Presi­dent Tribble's announcement last week, it should be recognized that the Old Gold and Black str0sse<l the use of the proper term for the President':s action-retire­ment. In every inch of copy where til:le word resignation was used. the misnomer was sera tched an>d replace-d with retire­ment. For in the choice of words lies the philosophy of the President. Harold W. Tribble does not quit.

Perhaps til:le most outstanding feature or t1Je administration of this man is that his greatest advances on behalf of th0 College were made immediately after critical attacks on his administration.

The attacks were unrelenting- and they came- from all sides. They came from the four groups that make up the cornerstones of the College -from the alumni. from the convention, from the trustees, and perhaps most discouraging, from faculty and students. The-y were attacks that might have driven any man other than Harold Tribble to, indeed, resign.

Tribble could 1have been finished as a college president b0fore he had really begun.

Less than a year after •his inaugura­tion, he was criticized by indignant alumni who begrudged tho resignation of Coach Peahead Walker_ Tribble re­fused to offer Walker a raise without equal compensation for the faculty. But under the constant distrust of the alumni, he pt>rsisted in his effort to move the College to Winston-Salem.

The groundbreaking ceremony, a token of victory in 1953, was followed by another a thlctic feud in 1955. He wa.s ·hung in effigy by the student body who shouted, "Tribbl<' should be ~ung from a sour apple tree." The campus fracus was followed by discontent among the trustees, \\'ho instituted a probe of the

administration and :reported "low faculty morale and gcnet·al discontont among the alumni regarding !lhe future of Wake Forest." And two months later? The in­defatigable Tribble, wit:h a staunch re­fusal to be downtrodden by his critics, announced a $515.000 Ford Foundation grant for faculty salaries.

And he- made the move. The campus \\"as dedicated. The President was champ­ione:l. And then N1c move was attacked. A group of alumni distributed a pamphlet that disparaged Tribble with suggestions bhat his administration lacked the confi­denc<' of the alumni. Less than a year later, a drive for a science building was oversubscribed by $100,000.

By 1963, Tribble \\'as working on even more grandiose plans. His blueprint for advancement included a $69 million dol­lar program which would move the col­lc·gc to university status. His search for a vote of confidence in 1Jis vision-a vote of confidence in ~he future of the College -was defeated by the 1963 convention as the delegates turned down ihis proposal for non-Baptist members of the Board.

"We have not been defeated, we ihave been delayed." And de-lay was followed by another delay, another setback in 1964. "But one way or another, we will move out into the future."

For his staggering display of perse­verance, ihis stolidness in his philosophy of excellence, and for his undeniable concern for the future of Wake Forest, Harold Tribble will be remembered. For making a contribution that would havo been regarded as impossible by many other men. Harold Tribble cannot be forgotten.

The students and faculty of the Col­lege can repay a debt of gratitude to this man by acc<'pting his Clhallenge to move out into the future. For t'he vision and the leadership of this man have made his statement something more than a beautiful platitide. Because Harold W. Tribble 11as be-en president of Wake Forest for the past 16 years, "We. Can move out into the future."

SYLVIA PRIDGEN BILL GORDON Editor Business Manager

This Edition Edited By Ralph Simpson And Henry Bostic, Jr.

RALPH SIMPSON, Associate Editor BILL VERNOR, Sports Editor

HENRY BOSTIC, JR., :Managing Editor DAVE ROBERTS, Assoc. Sports Ed.

-· -------·--~--------- --------- -· ·-PHOTOGRAPHERS: Bill Vernor, York Winston, John Daughtry

EDITORIAL STAFF: Susan Barlow, Pan Hawkins, Bonnie Wright, Becky Ros'>~ Susanne Bennett, Linda Levi, J. D. Wilson, Steve Burns.

:----:--Mef!lber of the. Associ:-~t.cd Snllegt;t-~.--Pre~;.-·Rcp;c~c~t~-rf- fo~ ---N;tional-Ar1~;t-i~-ing In~ NatiOnal ~ducntz_onal _Ad\ erll!:>lllt:" Ser\"tcc. Inc. SUh:'cr·iption rate: $2.50 per '\·ear Scconcia Cl:1ss pos .. n~e p:url. '"'hn~ton·SaiP.m. N. C. Form 357~1 slwulcl be m:-tiled to Tiox 7567 ·Winston-Salem. N. C. 27101). Prmte<l.!'·'· The Nnshville Graphic, Nashville, N. C. ·

Found~d .Janu.ary 15, l!ll6, as the stud;;;-,t·,,.,~,.s,;-;;.;cr -<>f W~k;,- F~re.st Colleg·~;-Old ·G~Id and Bla_ck IS p~blJshecl c.ach l\.1rmda.v durmg the school year except during examination and holiday periods as clirected by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

AJ)MINI~TRATION ,, .... 'Ia . "" ·.- ' .

'1"HE FuroR£

Johnson~s Pacific Trip Could Set Trend In Southeast Asian Policy

By BALKRISHNA GOKHALE PROFESSOR OF ASIAN STUDIES

President Johnson's 25,000 mile swing through tlw Far East may be viewed in two ways. One is to call it a cavalcade of American assumptions. The other is to describe it as a quest in scarCih of peace and firm basis for the American presence in Asia. However viowed. the journey will be significant both for the Pacific Area and the United States.

Statistics can be informative and may also be impressive and they aro cer­tainly that in the present context. For the first time, in the history of many areas, in tJhat part of the world, an American President will be on a state visit, and also. pm1haps for the first time. in the post-World-War II epoch an American President is journeying to Asia to attend an Asian summit instead of in­viting Asian leaders to hasten to Hono­lulu or Washington at an Americnn beckoning.

Ohina casts a menncing question mark. American economic aid may provide a much needed balast to the drifting eco­nomit>s of Southeast Asia; it may even help lay the foundations for a growing and prosperous Southeast Asia through such imaginative projects as the Mekong and the Asian development bank. Mili­tary aid may help shoro up fissures in the defensivE> enpabilities of regional powers for a while. But only a persever­ing and meaningful American diplomatic presence in the area will help find last­ing solutions to regional problems.

The Johnson trip, in sud1 a context. may turn out to be the beginning of a trend.

Some of its atlvantages arc obvious. A meeting in Manila is clcal'ly preferable to consultations in Hawaii. It may turn out to be preaching to the converted, but U1c- symbolic effect cannot be ignored by the non-aligned and tile hostile. Each of the participants may go there in search of his own special interests but the meet-

The other advantage may be that the Manila meeting and the Asian journey may encourage regional thinking and planning in the place of restricted na­tional interests.

The dominoes need to be tramsformed into a bastion. The South East Asia Treaty Organization attempted to do this but, has not been conspicuously success­ful. An informal meeting such as that in Manila may prove to be an initial step leading to the creati~>n of a group of nations, including the United States, Which will be better able to undertake activities Wihich the SEATO could not attempt. The age of miracles may be long past but the need for patient and painstaking effort will always remain.

For good or ill, the United States has began to establish its presence in Asia and the present Presidential quest may put a new meaning into it, more signifi­cant and far-reaching than tentative mili­tary pacts or fitful eronomic atd.

Whimsey Wake Coed Develops Theory For Learning

:By CHERRY WARD STAFF COLUMNIST

As a veteran of many a course, I !have over the years acquired a familiarity with the ways aoo means of !higher education, and I have developed what I call the Ward Learning Theory,· which in no way resembles any respectable psychological or sociological learning theory. It consists of a few basic con­cepts, borrowed freely from my science courses.

1. The Scientific Method. The scientific method mu:st be applied in every course except science courses. This has been empirically determined by course stu­dies; thus, scientific method in art appreciation, b11t not in p1hysics. 'I1he scientific method consists of indication and deduction, which are high-sounding terms for blind guessing. trial and error, and application of the fudge factor.

2. The Bohr Concept. This relates the magnitude of boredom to classroom fac­tors. The attention span of the average female student is directly proportional to the amount of sleep Sihe got the night before times the square root of the prof's sex appeal minus the number of days till the next quiz.

3. The Uncertainty Principle. Accord­ing to this principle, the probability that you lucked up on a quiz times the un­certainty in your answers is equal to zoro, which means you just can't win.

4. Negative Reinforcement. On this, I take the Dimm view (after Lucius Dimml, which postulates that the grade you receive on a quiz is proportional to one half the prof's golf score minus his wifo's age. In no way is it related to the amount of time the student spends studying.

5. The Law of Partial Pressures. The pressure exerted by one's parents plus the pressure !!Xerted by one's profs plus the pressure exerted by one's draft board is greater than the student's motivation. Total pressure equals motivation only at infinite time.

6. The- Free Energy Expression. The amount of free energy available for. work decreases steadily with decreasing amount of sleep and increa-ses witil:l in­creasing numbers of quizzes. mt>etings, and parties. Free energy is at a maxi· mum only during vacations.

7. Ohm's Law. There's no place like ohm.

Pearl Harbor brought home to the United States that it had a Pacific 11s well ns an Atlantic responsibility_ '11he Korean Conflict made Red China one of tilie major problems of American For­eign Policy and now Vietnam has landed the United States on the mainland of Southoast Asia.

ing will at lcn~t demonstrate that these c e • s '1) Z'L • ' separate interests mny best be secured rztzc a~v.'S . r rtlVa~u~ by collective ddibcrntions and planning. J ' • '0 ~

Secondly. the Pmsidcntiul visit will

demonstrate effectively American ln"t~l:_:··:' .. 7\Tot. De' r-pe~ ct,· E· ntertaz·n,·ng est Ill and COO Cern for the small and 1 '. r ~ struggling powers. 1n the course of his

These have raised intricate problems concerning the w·hy and wherefore of the American presence- in the Pacific nnd Indian Ocean Asia and the Johnsonian journey is a natural and inevitable sequel.

The Pacific peregrination cannot solve any problems, at least not just yet. The prohl<'m of Vietnam will be solved in Vietnam, on the ground or at a confL'l'­ence table. But if and when that problem is solved, the larger problem of ti!C' meaning and purpose of tl1e American presence in Asia will remain. For long Europc·an responsibilities have dominated policy planning in Washington. The mili­tary and political frontiers in Eu1·ope have been stabilized. at any r<1te. for the present.

The Asian ~ituation is dangel'ously fluid and the United States must assumc responsibilitic·s there is its own national interests. So far. the effort to indicntc awareness of these responsibilities han· been mainly in the form of economic and military aiel. ThcsC", at best, may be palliatives.

Southeast Asia now lives in a power vacuum over which the shadow of Red

journey, PrC'sident Johnson \\'ill makG direct and."or indirect contact \\'ith as many <JS 220,650.118 people living in an area of 3,618.216 sqtwre miles. which is larger than both the area nnd population or the United State~. In terms of the much abused phrase. "public relations." this is by no means <m insignificant gain.

Much more importnnt than his appear­ance will be the manner and c·ontcnt of the' Pre.,idential pronouncements. If these will asHtrc the nations visited t-:tat th<' United States is in Asia to sta~·. not just to engage eomnHulist imperialism mili­tarily, but more .,o as a partner in South­cast Asi;:Jn stnhility and progress. a vital purpos<• of the Anl('ric<m prl'sencc \\'ill IJ<• SC'I'\'l'd.

The United States needs to declare be­yond all doubt_ to all concerned. that it is in Asia <IS " Pncific po\\'er and wants to build l;"ting fril'ndship an~l partner­ship ll"ith n'ginnal po\\·ers fot· mutual bcnPfit. Nothing ean demonstrate this hettC'r thnn frequent and sustained politi­cal and diplom<Itir contacts .. on a basis of C'quality and mutu;tl respect. among ~he Asian nations and tlw United States.

~======~-------------------

--~HOTO BY DAUGHTRY

LUCKY wasn't elected vice-president of the freshman class, but in losing. he certainly messed up some of the buildings of the College. Enthusiasm in seeking a political ofricc is to be commended, yet enthusiasm should not be allowed to overcome one so much that one defaces school property. There arc regulation!! for such in the Student Body Constitution, and Student Government should in the future enforce these regulations.

By HAYES McNEILL GUEST COI..UMNIST

Epic seems to be getting better. "Dr. Zhivago," an International Pro­

duction, has assembled many actors, spent much money, and been successful. The dramatically packed life-story of a doctor-poet around tJhe time of the Rus­sian Revolution is full of Dickensian coincidence. but tloc-s not overly dwell in types, nor try to spear us with a moral.

"Zihivago" is beautifully photographed lbut then again. so was "The Sound of Music"\. Now "Khartoum" is a gQOd epic, or a different sort, and well worth seeing if one does not compare it un­justly with "Zhivago." For Zhivago" bas all the prerequisites: lust, evil, purity. pathos, humanity, struggle, idealism, bloodshed and lotsa love. But they are usually handled rather well. A family-type picture.

It is difficult to criticize much of l!he acting. Julie Cristie is sometimes in­definite but is always exceedingly beau­tiful. in a cameo-ish, yet very contempo­rary way. She is not as effective as an actres-s as she was in "Darling," for which she won many awards. For in that movie slw was perfectly strangleable and ruthlessly insensitive (a successfully oharilcterized modern phenomenon) in "Zhivago.. she. or. is trying to bt>, just the opposite. And because si1e is beau­tiful it seems. in a rather juvenile way, unfnir to criticize her acting-it is like finding fault with a Botticelli painting because the- llairstyle is not right. Her performance, though. is especially at first when she looks no more than 17 than Natnlie Wood's 15 in "Inside Daisy Glover." is not gt·eat. but it by no means ruins the movie. ·

Omar Sharif in the title roleo is hard to gripe about, too. His oharacterlzatfon of the Pasternak, if it sacrifices slightly to public understanding, is excellent. Possibly all bhat Sharif needs for a per­formance arc l1is eyes. Swoons are in order from the 13-17 year female ,set. Glowing praise for Sir Ralph Richardson and Alec Guiness, two pro's who know just how, and at just the time to inward­ly shudder with emotion, or mere-ly show a trace of feeling, respectively. And with­out regard to what the screenwriter has !crt them, both put in poetic perform­ancC\s: Old Russian (with an English accent l and New, Commie Russian (also with nn English nccentl. Oharlie Obap­lin's daughter. Geraldine. does a reput­able job as Zhiva~to's wife. but mndonnas just don't look right when very pre~t­

nant. Rod Steiger -docs woll with a diffi­('lllt pn1·t. Any man who can do "Pawn­hl'OkC'r" and "Loved One" can't be nll had. Fortunately. there were no bosom shots which had to be cut ont to defend pmvincial morality. Aodultry. yes. but tlut! is a small thing. not like bosoms. Tom Com·tnacy was also be-lievable as the int('l!cetnal-turned-psyohotie. tootling

along in his steam engine red armored train. But there are numerous small masterpieces; for instance tht> Russian general who gets beaten to jelly witJh rifle butts. and Sherif's son's portrayal of the young Zhivago, and the geriatric love-scene in the boxcar going from Mosc<>w.

Most of the bad things are the fault of technique. Sam Spiegel and David Lean made such winners as "The Bridge on the River Kwai," and "Lawrence- of Arabia." "Zhivago" is directed and pro­duced by Carlo Ponti, \Vho is a good friend of SOphia Loren. Frenchman Maurice Jarre wh(] did the music for "Lawronce," •has done an at times unpleasantly intrussive soundtrack for "Zhivago," simply substituting the bala­laika for the drum. The movie makes a lot of racket anyway, this being neces­sarily involved witll tille rhythm, which Is also imperfect. Sure, it drags in spots, but any three hour and twenty minuto film will. fhe trouble being that the director seems t() want to lull the viewer into a false sense of security and then shatter it witl1 a furious episode. A fine idea, once or twice. but not the \Mole movie; he must change pace fre-. quently. But it is amateurish to do it the same way every time. Wben we boor thco amphlified thundering of the earth on Zhivago's mama's coffin it is effective, but even Hitchcock who perfected llhis device cannot sustain a movie with it. It •seems that Mr. Lean is torn between maldng his movie appear to the oval­faced, open-mouthed masses or to re-­bellious adolescents who want to reel things. This is perhaps an overstatement, but ·Lean only seems to underestimate his audience in terms o£ technique. And U1is is disregarding abominations like the ironing scene and the "Zhivago?"-"Yes" lines.

A word about the photography. When it's good it's very. very good, but when it's bad it's mediocre. "Zhivago." willh its excellent European~style color photo­graphy, is a cameraman's dream, but what did Mr. Young, who took the pic­tures. have to eat before he took the last part? In this second half. ·too many exteriors look like FinniSih travelogues and Hallmark Christmas Cards. But 'he is very very good sometimes, tracking a train blowing up snow. or inside a buried casket, or with lovers walking amid a swirling blanket of yellow leoaves. The batte scenes are nothing compared to those in "Khartoum," and Lean is afraid even to try the sabre scene thai Eisenstein rilmEXl to perfection 50 years ago. Consequently the camera frustrating­ly Tefuses to look at it. choosing ratiher to unsuccessfully re,!lister lihe \horror on the faces 0 r the onlookers.

So the film is not perfect. but one is rarely concious of the three lhours and twenty minutes passing. If a director can do this. he has made an entertain­ing film. See it.

R.

,,

Page 5: To Search For President

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY

R. B. CRAWFORD, ••• retired Winston-Salem industrialist, discusses his current main

interest, the Wake Forest stadium campaign.

R. B. Crawford To Supervffle Construction Of WF Stadium

By BONNIE WRIGHT SPORTS WRITER

Retirement has not afforded the usual over-abundance of leisure time for Robert B. Crawford, Jr., chairman of the stadium building commit­tee:

Better known to his friends and associates as R. B. Craw­£ord, he is the kind of man who

stays constantly involved in community projects. and he is usually at the head of them.

Although Crawford is not an engineer, he has had many years expcl'icnec supervising

of Reynolds Auditorium, the school area of Centenary Metl!odi::;t Church, and the Ro­bert E. Lee Hotel and the con­struction work for the North Carolina School of the Arts.

He also supervised construc­tion of Old Town Club, Red Shield Boys' Club, and the Children's Home. "l've been looking after the contruction of buildings since 1936," he said.

than one might think," he said.

Crawford seemed to enjoy talking about some of the fea• tures of the new stadium that will make both the spectators and the press more comfor­table.

According to Crav.rford, the stadium will contain 15,000 \Seats on e-aCih of the two sides. The f:i.eldhouse will be on the northwest end of the feld. The other end o£ the horseshoe will be graded and planted and will have no seats.

Research Only Beginning Of Work, Debaters Say

<Continued from page 1) ment being held here Thurs· day through Saturday.

Under the direction of Dr. lfu'anklin Shirley, Debate Club advisor and professor of ospeeclh, the Debate Team be­gan preparations for the tour­nament even before the regi­stration lines formed.

The national debate topic for tll.is year lis "Should the United States Substantialily Reduce Its Fore-ign Policy Commit­ments."

Much in the manner of pre­paring an English term paper, a debater begins his research by gathering material from prointed sources and sorting ac­cording to whetfrler it defines, supports, or attacks the con­dition being debated.

Periodicals are generally the star~ing point for research, as the topic of debate i•s almost always one of current news interest.

For this ye<~r's subject, much of the material used came from government docu­ments and Senate hearings. Debaters have the two-step task of determining first ex­actly what our foreign po•Iicy is and then gathering enough information to both defend or attack :it. Considered especi­ally "good finds" for debaters are the op-intions of influential men or authorities in the sub­ject.

Basic Duties

(lies a student can get into," Shirley continued, "and for a school with this calibra of

students, we would like to havl' more on the team than we do now.''

Members of the te<~ms to represent Wake Forest are Laura Abern<~thy of Kings­port, Tenn., Duke Wilson of the Panama Canal Zone, Cald­well Day o.f WinstonSalcm, Roy Pettyjohn of Denver, Colo., Dick Leader of Wayn<?, Pa., Bob Williams of Newport News, Va., George Spencer of Kannapolis and Bob Anderson of Ocala, Fla.

Participation And

Dedication Needed

Fo1· Social Work An Ep•iscopalian rector and

cast Harlem social worker told a Wake Forest audience last week that "to be ·a good Chris­Han you have to be a politi­cian.''

Speaking in Chapel Thms­day, Dr. George W. Webber, of New York City, emphasized the need for constructive ac­tion to replace wh!lt he des­cribed as the usual "descrip­tion, proclamation, and excla­mation" of religious endea­vors. "You've got to shut up and get involved with what is happening," he sa~d.

Dr. Webber based most of hds remarks upon his exper­iences in the ghettoes of east Harlem, an area of 210 square blocks and 230,000 inhabitants. The-population is one-third each Negro, white, and Puerto Ric­an, and according to \Vebber, the influence of the church in the community is negligible.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Oct. 24, 196& PAGE FIVE

Actors Prove Adept At Working

Within Comic Style Of Moliere (Continued from page 1)

thropc" in the costume depart­ment are two sophomores. Virginia Jones, of Richmond, Va., and Karen Re-iss, of Muplcwood, N. J.

The building foz·cmen are Stephen Searle of Shippens­burg, Pa., Hoy Grant, sopho­moz·c of Home, N. Y., Charles Harrill and Robert Finn.

The lighting crew is com­posed of Harriet Hardee, sen­ior of Greensboro, Lisa Ru­benstein, freshman of Beth­Psda, 1\Id., Jasper Horne, sop­homore of Ple<~sant Garden, Timothy Moyer and Robert Finn.

Thomas Case, sophomore of Mayodan, is the stage man-

go "where the action was," Webber said, "Until you're willing to live next door, until you're willing to be a neigh­bor, you might as well forget it."

A native of Des Moines, Iowa, Dr. Webber is a grad­uate of Harvard University ami the Union Theological Seminary, where he formerly served as Dean.

:1gcr, and Wayne Hoover, ju­nior of Hoanokl', Va., is in charge of sound.

The faculty production staff is composed of Dr. Harold Tedford, director, and Martin Bennison, assistant director who has been in charge of lighting and set design.

llcscrvations can be made by calling the box office from 1-9 p. m. any day this week at 725-9711, ext. 265.

According to Dr. Tedford, a new ticket policy this year has been inaugurated by the college theatre th•is year. Rc­servahlons can be picked up in room 412 on the 8th level or the Z. Smith Reynolds Lib-

GETTING MARRIED?

Do you have a portrait to send to the papers with

your announcement?

rary any afternoon thi•s week. "This will allow the theatre­

goer to avoid a long wait in line to pick up tickets :at the theatre," Tedford sad.

1 WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDSI

METRO·GOLDWYN·MAYER PRESENTS

A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION DAVID LEAN'S FILM

OF BORIS PASTERNAKS

DOCTOR ZHiVAGO iN PANAVIS!ON• AND METROCOLOA

Mat. <Wed. Sat. Sun.> 2:00 p.m. Evenings 8: 00 p m

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WINSTON THEATRE

11 various construction programs.

Much of Crawford's time is spent working with the other commun·ity organizations or serving on various advisory boards and committees.

The entire stadium will be built on a slight curve whlch will allow better viewing. There will be 64 rows of seats made o·f anodized alumdnum (a per­manently polished and slick­looking surface). The seats will be 10 inches wide and llave backs.

One of the basic duties of a debate club member, a begin­ner soon finds, is his require­ment to turn in thirty pieces of research each week. The debate team dn Hs tri-weekly meetings then assimilates these notes, and puts the most significant and most pertinent on note cards. These cards are stored dn what could be called the debater's "bread-<~nd-but­ter" box - a Jii!le box taken on all debate trips - which serves as a quick reference to all materoial gathered, espe­cially essential in rebuttal speeches.

"Protestant churches don't exist there," he observed.

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He was recruited by Irving Carlyle, pr~st president of thl!

Vari1'd Civic Interests

Boa1·d of Trustees of the Col- He is currently president of lege-, to supervise the building the N.C. School of the Arts of the new stadium. Foundation. He is also a mem-

Crawford made it clear th:tt bcr and past president of the "this is purely a voluntary Rotary Club, Twin Oity Club, job, part of one's civic duty" and Old Town Club. Press Box and not the result of any prior He is a member of Forsyth connection with the College. Country Club, on the Board of The press box will be :partly

With a sort of mischicvious Directors of the Chamber of canter-levered (the front ot twinkle in l1is eye, he said that Commerce, officer of Hotel it projecting outward without he was ncithC'r an alumnus of Hobert E. Lee, pao;t chapter visible support. "We believe Wake Forest nor a Baptist. "I chairman of the Red Cross, the . sports wniters facioLities, graduated from U.N.C., <~nd and past cha·irman of the: Of- televsion, and film facilities I'm a l\Iethoclist," he said. ficial Board of Centenary will be as functional and com-

UNC G 1

t Methodist Church. fortable as it is possibi11 to • . ". ~a,u~ ... e ... •. 7,. ···~· ''"t>~l~~of <;r .. '-:~J:~~,c.t.~ r~~e th~m:'.' c;rwford:~·'ll~· .

After his graduation from', ' vifiC's and. scrV1Ces coUld go Shll talking .!lbout the new UNC in 1922, Crawford went on and on, but aside from his stadium, Crawford said that with Hanes Hosiery "as an oc- work-related and civic inter- the scoreboard would be on top £ice boy." He moved up the csts, he is also a family m<~n. of the fieldhouse. The field· ranks holding about every title He and Mrs. Crawford live house ·w:ill have dressing rooms to be held. lie was purchasing in a large and cozy home, for both teams, sleeping quar­<>.gcnt 11928\, secretary and beautifully situated on Arbor ters for the WF team the memer of the board t1931), Road. Their daughter, Mrs. n:ght before a game, an alu· vice president (1938J, presi- Frank Sohmer, and their four mni lounge. and· a meeting dent 11954\. Chait·man of the grandchildren live in Winston- room for i11terviewing the board 11958!, and. in 1965. vice Salem. A son, Edward, is a press or instructing the team. chairman of the board o£ the securities analyst in New York Crawford's work witih the new Hanes combine. He re- City. stadium construction is a part tired in December of 1965. Crawford's only hobby, when of what he feels ds his civic

Before his retirement from he l1as time for it, ~s farming. obligation. "I'm interested in the Hanes Corporation, Craw- He o"·ns Ash Tree Farm which anything that is progressive ford had presided over seve· is in \\·estern l'orsyth County. and good for Winston-Salem," ral construction programs the zealeous builder and within the com!J'any. Emphasis On Stadium prominent industrialist sa;id.

A few of the other major Tllc thing Crawford has supervisory jobs include build- spent more time on recently ing of the James G. Hanes though is the stadium. "There .Community Center and the j,s a great deal of deta.U to a Twin City Club, the renovation project of this kind - more

However, even after all the research is completed and the ordinary researcher could fin­ally call himself finished, pack up his typewri.ter, and turn in a paper that would mel'it an "A-" or "B-," the debater has only passed the first stage dn rn•s work . ... Any speaker learns quickly that an interesting and con­VIincing presentabion of his ma­terial is li!S important as the actua11 material, and in the debater's world this ~s espe­cially true.

Need More Debaters

Dr. Shirley emphasized strongly the need for more de­baters on the team. "We had better debate records before we moved to W~nston-Salem because, even though the school was smaller, there were more students participating ·in debate," he ,said.

"Debating is certainly one of the most dntellectual activi-

Nick Galifianakis To Speak Tues. To Phi Alpha Deltas

"A truly adult love slory!

Democratic Congressional candidate Nick Galifianakis

will address the Timbcrlanc Chapter of Phi Alpha Delta · Law Fraternity at a supper meeting tomorrow at 6 p. m. an the Little Magnolia Room.

The Durham 11ttorncy is ex­pected to snccced Rcprcsen-

Students Prepare For Homecoming

(Continued from page 1) pha.

Other candidates arc: Nancv Young, j.unior o£ Wilkesbor~. representmg Delta Sigma Phi; Rhoda Hefner, sophomore of Franklinton, representing Sig­ma Phi Epsilon; Jenny Hen­derson, senior of Jacksonville, Fla., representing Sigma Pi; Nan Bell, senior of Hampton­ville, representing Lambda Chi Alpha; and Nancy Carol Best, sophomore of Hickory, rep­resenting Theta Chi.

Austine Odom, junior of Martinsburg, W. Va., pre­senting Poteat House; Sherry Allen, freshman of Charlotte, representing Davis House; Rosemary Golightly, of Win­ston-Salem, representing Pi Kappa Alpha. Julie Davis, sophomore of Nashville, Tenn., representing Kappa Sigma: and Jeannie Pfister, junior of Monroe, representing Taylor House are also candidates.

The Marching Deacs will present the half-time enter-

·l 1tainment at the game with a new arrangement of "Night Train" and Bugler's Holiday," which will feature the major­ettes and 20 trumphet players.

tadve Ralph J. Scott, who is retiring in January. Galifiana­kis, whose district will include Winston-Salem and Forsyth County, won a hard fought pri­mary for the Democratic nomi­nation.

Galifranakis is a graduate of Duke University and its law school. Following his service in the United States Marines during the Korean conflict, he returned to his native Dur­ham and entered the practice of law.

For the past three years, he ha·s been a member of the faculty of the Duke Law School 1n addition to his law practice.

Elected three times to the North Carolina General As­sembly, he served as chair­man of the House Judiciary Committee tin the 1965 session. While in the lc~islaturc, be introduced several measures dealing with ~mprovements in the area of mental l!ealth.

Galifianakis, born of Greek immigrant parents, was clited tin 1965 as the "Outstanding Young Man of the Year" by the North Carolina Junior Chamber of Commerce.

His speech will be the f.ii·st of a year-long series sponsor· cd by Phi Alpha Delta !15 a pnrt of the·ir profess•ional ac· li\·itlcs program. It is the pur­pose of the p·rogm m to relate prac!Jical experiences of the lawyer to the lessons of tli<' Cl!lSSroom.

The fraternity plans to bring in one speaker each month.

"Altogether it is a stunnzng ptcture, a compelling picture! A frank and uninhibited exposition of the on-rush of physical desire. One after another scene expands upon the brash techniques of courtship and the clamorous fulfillment of desire!~~"'"'" C'.aw<l ... ,. N.Y Tom"

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To remedy this situation and to resolve the peoples' anta­gonism toward the clergy, a parish W!lS recently establish­ed in cast Harlem on an inter­denominational basis. Work­ers at the purish, including two \Yakc Forest graduates, have been faced "·ith total cultural differences in a so­dcty where "traditional un­derstandings'' do not work. Webber commented, "Any white man who looks at all clean Is by definition a crook."

The parish's solution to this dilemma is, simply, participa­hlon - willingness to become a part of the community in which one ~s working.

Citing ChrJst's readiness lo

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October 29, 8:15-12 P. M.

Bids $5.00 At Information Desk And College Book Store ............................................................................................

Page 6: To Search For President

OLD GOLD AND BLACK PAGE SIX Monday, Oct. 24,1966

Wake Forest College Barber Shop

• • • Who are GREEKS By Doug Stokes

ing.A.Rewarding Pledge Program

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manding pledge training may be realized at several levels in the .fraternity. A thorough pledge training brings the brothers into a more activo participation in the fraterni­ty. At the same time. the integration of pledges into the 'house and ~he fuller ~~p­prcciation of the pledge. fo1· the house arc more fully brought about by an exacting pledge program.

Certainly an inactive pledge will not make an active bro­ther, nor will estCX'm for the fraternity be fot·thcoming if brotherhood and its privileges and responsibilities arc gained too early.

'11he zeal for initiating a re­warding pledge program must not, 'howev~r. overstep the boundaries of those several restrictions which the ad­ministration has placed upon pledge activities. The fra­ternity .syst~m can ill afford at this time to allow itself to come under administrative "fire" concerning pledge prac­tices. Also, the extent of pledge training must be in direct proportion to thC' aca­demic fortunes of the pledge.

The fact that a "C'' aver­age must be obtained in order for the pledge to be initiated is no less important than tho fraternity academic average which depends, in part, upon pledge grades.

Certainly, the degree to which pledge training is pur­sued is of gr~at importance. However, 1 believe that the importance of "degree" is yet subordinate to the importance of the "direction" in which the plooge program is car­ried. That is to say !:hat pledge training s·hould divorce

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itself from razzing and utaz­ing of plc<lgcs :~nd move more toward a conslructi ve pro­gram of pledge activities on campus.

The homecoming decorating for tile wc·~k end and the fall car·nival of the following week afford excellent oppor­tunitks for pledge participa­tion within the realm of fra­ternity activities in campu:;­\l'ide endeavors. Leaving tho immediate realm of fraterni­ty life, participation in cllm­pus politics, botl1 on the stu­dent body and c:lass levels, should l.Je strongly su!!geste~l to pledge~.

Pl(\dges \\ho un: athletes should be given encourage­ment to stick witlr it. Pledges should also be encouraged to take an acti\·c part in pro­grams such as "Challenge·• and other of the various dubs and commiltL•cs across campus that arc-. as stullcnt body president Butch Pate said in chapel l~st week, in such dire nc·:od or man po\\·er.

I believe, indc·cd, that pledge training should cvoh·c into ! or ratl1cr out to! a program with a hn·ger scope in n'g<Jl'd to campus activitks. I be­lieve, also, that grooming campus leaders would not be injurious to the individual fra­ternity and most Cl•rtainly it would strengthen the position of the fraternity system as a whole on this campus.

Fraternity News Sigma Chi

Buddy Sizemore, senior of Okelchobee, Fla., has recent­ly become engaged to Charlda Carroll, of Melbourne, Fla.

Lee Bettis, senior of Grocns­boro, recently lavalicred Sara Hunt, sophomore of Salem College. John McGinnis, soph­omore of Knoxville, Tenn., lavaliered Pam Young of the Unive-rsity of Tennessee.

Grover Smith, sophomore of Kannapolis. lavnliered Cyn­thia McGinnis of Kannapolis. Randy Saunders, sophomore of Malvem, Pa., lavaliered Mary Peterson of Narberth. Pa. Jerry Baket·, junior a·r Kannapolis, lavaherod ·cassan­dra Martin, junior coed.

Tom Irwin. junior of Lyn­don, N. J., recently pinned Janie Williams of Winston­Salem. Jerry Costner, sopho­more of Greensboro, pinned Nancy Coble, sophomore of Salem.

Sigma Phi Epsilon

Recently ploclged arc Bruce Alan Humphries, sophomore o£ Ft. Washington. Pa., and James Boyd Hood, sophomore of Huntersville.

Brother Larry Taylor lava­liered Milly Daughtridge, soph­omore of Salem College.

By SUSAN BARLOW STAFF WRITER

An impromptu apprecia­tion program was quickly plannC'd and executed last Tuesday to express to Harold W. Tribble the gratitude of the students and faculty for sixteen yc·ars of service at thE' college.

Dean Edwin G. Wilson b~gan t:hc program by sug­gC'sting that now is not the time to evaluate Dr. Trib­ble's record as President of Waite Forest Collt>gc. "He still hn~ a busy year ahead of him, and we will bC' hearing from him often and constructively bctwC'en now and next June 30," Wilson said.

"Nor is this the moment

Frater11ities'

Scholarship

On r"fhe Rise College fraternity se~holastic

a vcragcs in almost two-thirds of tire nation's higher institu­tions where chapters aro lo­cated exceeded the respective All Men's Averages for the previous academic yoar, ac­cording to an analysis releas­ed by the National Interfra­ternity Conference.

A total of 295 institutions witlt fraternity chapters re­ported comparative figures for tim academic year 1964-65, the highest number since rec­ords ·have been accumulated by the scholarship reporting service of the Conference. During the year, 62% of the reporting institutions showed campus fraternity averages above the All Men's Aver­ages, involving 3,159 individual fraternity chapters.

Average Rises

The campus-wide fraternity scholastic average lead ihas been going up steadily over the All Men's Average .in re­porting institutions for the past decade according to the analysis. The previous two years, the lead held at slight­ly over 59 ~t, of the institu­tions reporting.

; When ·;(lompared on an in­dividuaLc)rapter basis· nation­wide. and disregarding cam~;ms averages, the fraternity s~hol­astic averages have maintained a par relationship with All Men's Averagos for the past several years. During those years, as many fraternity chapters throughout the coun­try were above the All Men's Averages as were those below it. In the academic year 1964-65, the figure was 49'/'o of all fraternity chapters nationwide, wlrile the previous two aca­demic years the figure hov­ored approximately at the 50'io mark. A decade ago, only 44% of the· chapters were reported over the All Men's Average.

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for extended eulogy," Dean Wilson said. "Other occasions lie ahead when, witih form and ceremony, studen~, facul­ty members, trustees. and alumni, each in their own way, will pay 'him tribute."

"Dr. Tribble is an extra­ordinary man, and ho has been an extraordinary presi­dent, and therefore, the rou­tine words of praise do not fit," Wilson continued.

Not Ordinary

"If we are wise, we look to the man, and what do we ·see? A man abovo the ordi­nary. A man of tough fiber­no 'reed shaken by the wind'. An idealist who dreamed dreams and sees them reali­ty. A bold man-bold to be­live and bold to act . . . a kind and gracious man whose warmth pervaded his family, his friends and close asso­ciates, and on certain me­morable days, the entire Col­lege 'family.' A man of faith. of convictions. A man, in short, whose lengthoned sha­dow now extends to every corner of Wake Forest," said Wilson.

Next to speak was Butch Pate, President of the Stu­dent Government. who statod !that Tribble's presidency has been sprinkled with contro· versy, but that student disa­greement with Tribble's ad­ministration has done mucl1 to promote understanding and growth.

Pato noted that Tribble has worked with achievement and astounding progress can be noted in a college with a unique existence. Dr. Trib­ble. ihe continued, is "single-

mindedly devoted to a quali-ty college." .

Yet, Pate went on to say, the college. must move abea~ without lhis guiding· hand.'' He will leave his mark indelibly on Wake Forest College, and we are all endebted to him. Without this leadership, the college would not exist," he concluded.

This burst of sentiment brought tho students to tftl,eir feet in a standing ovation for Dr. Tribble who took the platform and at once presented Mrs. Tribble, !his "roommate," . to the student body.

41-Year Team

Tribble told the students that he and ;his "roommate" have been "teameu up" for 41 years.

Tribble said Ure had been looking for the best time to retire and that he thought he iliad found it, although he wished Jre could complete the buildings and the stadium be­fore doing so.

He said that as he was sit­ting listening to the speeches, prominent scenes in the ·his­tory of Wake Forest !had flashed across his mind. He recalled briefly for the stu­dent body his first visit to Winston-Salem in the spring of 1950, the ground breaking ceremonies Oct. 15, 1951, the laying of the cornerstone, and the dedication ceremonies.

"I want to retire to enjoy these scenes," ho said, and added that he and Mrs. Trib­ble have two rocking chairs and a fireplace in their cabin in the mountains and he plans to - use them.

house mixers By TOM COLLINS

On Friday, October 14th Dr. Tribble- made known his plans for retirement and a great marfuunt began. The search for a successor is always a difficult one, espe­cially if one is trying to re­place a man who stood at the helm for 16 years, raised some- $30 million and built a brand new college from the ground,. , up, ... The, .l?resid.en,~ial

~ , APP.sWi0¥rnt;, .~~p:mfx;r.itt~f .~ un-doubtedly faces a mammoth task and I have been won­dering this last week just \vhat it would be- like if col­lege presidents were selected in the same manner as stu­dents.

1£ tihis were ·the case t.h e application form would be-gin something like this -NOTE: Please ·send a 3X5 picture of yourself in glossy print that cannot be retur·ned. INSTRUC­TIONS: Print neatly in tilie spaces provided the Informa­tion specified. 1. Your full name and all degrees includ­ing honorary. 2. The names of both parents along with their age, occupation. birth­place and number of years of education. 3. Indicate wlhe­ther or not you desire early appointment.

Being a Wake Forest appli­cation, there is certain to be an item such. as this one: Check appropriate box for religious affiliation- a. Bap­tist b. Other NOTE: If Other, ignore the next 14 items. <You may also save- yourself a stamp and tear up this appli­cation) If Baptist, list all friends or relatives who ihave been past presidents of Wake Forest College.

To !help determine the ap­titude of a candidate for such a 'high administrative position the following should be !help­ful: Write in the boxes indi-

by TOM COLLINS cated your scores an the PRE <Presidential Record Exam) along with the combined scores on Trustee Boards. R~ommendations are an­

other significant factor in making tihe choice: Send as soon . a!( possible three re­commendations from people who know you well but are not relatives. It is advisable that one of these be your p,as­

:tor; Each of·these·people''will ! r~ceiVe ' a i:oilfidentiar rating ! "sheet. 'so. the applicant ·can be

rated on a. leadership b. piety c. b~nevolence d. · scope e. overall neatness and health !habits f. truth.

For .subjective sections suC'h responses to "What did you do this summer?" and "Why Would You Like to Become President of W.F.C.?" will be carefully examined, both of which would be evaluated on organization and riginallty of tJhought.

House News POTEAT HOUSE: A campus precedent was set Oct. 14th when tJhe first annual qarter Bowl was held, featuring the Poteat Playboys against the Les Soeurs. '!\he victory went to the Playboys, 14-7, despite the handicap of having one !hand behind tlheir back and the distorted penalties of cun­ning head-referee Ed Christ­man. The game was climaxed by a social gathering in the Dug Out.

Poteat House is proud of its two undefeated intramural football teams, the "Charg­ers" and tlhe "Red Barons". who lead tlheir re-spective leagues with unblemished rec­ords.

Elaborate plans have been made for Homecoming, in­cluding a combo party with music by the Checkmates.

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Page 7: To Search For President

)re.d:·

rtks •ted to a quali-

vent on to say, 1st move ahead lding· hand." He mark indelibly

•St College-, and .debted to !him. leadership, the not exist," he

of sentiment :udents to tal,eir anding ovation ·ble who took

and at once •. Tribble, !his to the student

· Team

l the students is "roommate-" ~ame'Cl up" for

U1e had been ~ best time to at he thought it, although he d complete the he stadium be-

as he was sit­) the speeches, t~s in the ·his­

Forest had his mind. He

' for the stu-first visit to

in the spring ·ound breaking . 15, 1951, the •rnerstone, and ceremonies.

·etire to enjoy he- said, and

md Mrs. Trib­rocking C'hairs in their cabin

s and he plans

rs )LLINS ~son the PRE ecord Exam) ile combined tee Boards. ions are an­It factor in •ice: Send as le' three re­from people well but are is advisable

• be your pas· se ·people'' Will ien:tial' rating lica'nt ·can be :rship b. piety d. -scope e.

and health

sections suC'h fhat did you "' and "Why ! to Become '.C.?" will be 1ed, both of evaluated on riginality of

'-iews :: A campus et Oct. 14th nnual qarter featuring the

against the victory went 14-7, despite having one

ir back and llties of cun­! Ed Christ­lllas climaxed .ering in the

is proud of d intramural the "Charg­~ed Barons"·

respective emished rec-

s :have been ~coming, in­

party with ~ckmates.

•omed

ments

1 Of

·esses ete

,,

Defensive-Minded. Deacs Down Heels, 3-0 OLD GOLDAND.BLACK Monday, Oct. 2.4,1966 PAGESEVEN.

Key Tackle Halts Heels, Saves Win

---------- -- ~- ---------- Save Money By BILL VERNOR

SPORTS EDITOR

CHAPEL HILL, N. C. -It took key plays by Andy Heck and Deacon dofensive guands Don McMurry to !halt the Tar Heels from a game winning -score and give the Wake For­est College Demon Deacons a 3-0 victory here at Kenan Stadium.

With 45 seconds to go on the scoroooard clock the Tar Heels mythical quarterback Danny Talbott ·(who the Tar Heel fans will tell you is the greatest t:here ever was) was dumped on a fantastic defense effort by McMurry for a 9-yard loss that kept the Heels from a score that would have given them victory.

The fourth down effort by UNC caught everyone by sur­prise as the fans in the stands

· wore looking for the pass, only to be crossed-up by Coach Jim Hickey's call for a 1·everse that ended :short of first down by less than a foot.

Tar Heels Drive

All afternoon the Tar Heels drove into Deacon territory only to be repulsed time aJid time again. The Heels rushed for 166 yards on tl1o ground and l1ad 93 through the air only to be 5hut off from tJhe precious scoring territory they sought by thl' hard hitting Wake dt'fense.

The only score or the game canm the second time the Deacons had pos,session of bhe ball. They took a Billy Warren punt and marched deep into Tar Heel territory to the 24-yard line where a 40-yard field goal effort by sopho­more kicking specialist Chick George provided Wake Forest with the only score of t-he day.

See-Saw Battle

For the rest of the after­-noon it was a soc-saw battle with neither team dominating the game at any time. T·he Deac dofense held the Tar Heels to a total of 259 yards for the day while the Tar

DEACON DEFENSE halts Tar Heel threat and insures a Deacon victory over the Tar Heels, 3-0.

their own territory. Twice on 3rd down situa­

tions Heck cracked off the left side of. the line to pick up valuable first downs. When the UNC dofense finally forced Wake to punt, Heck had con­tributed 12 key first downs and Carolina was forced to take possession of the foot­ball on the UNC 28-yard line.

The Wake offense controlled the call more than usual on the cloudy afternoon. The boys seemed to have a lot more ·confidence in their abili­ty to move the ball, and they were able to give the defense a rest.

your own 5 OT 10-yard line it is a risky business."

The Deacon coach played his ·defensive team saying "I just can't say enough about the goal line d-efense. Every­on& was just great. I couldn't have been !happier."

On the other side of the field, the -story told by Coacoh Jim Hickey of the Tar Heels was a sad one indeed. He felt his team had come back strong in the ;Second half and should have taken the victory but, "We just couldn't get the ball in the end zone at all.''

Hickey praised the Wake defensive effort giving them

r· a lot of credit for '"Keeping '"!k ~ t11e··· Tar' Heels I '"out!'

Harriers Take Two, By RUDY ASHTON

ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

The Wake Forest cross­c-ountry team increased its un­blemished record to 5-0 lasot week by whipping the Univer­sity of Virginia 21-34 and nipping VPI 28-29 t low score winsJ.

Senior captain AI Viehman and junior John Hodsdon led the harriers in both victories. They w~re backed by the con­sistent running of junior Jim Hope and sophomores Jim Sheffer and Bob Duval.

At U. Va. Friday, Oct. 14 Coach Koith Hamilton's stra­tegy worked out well in cap­turing the victory. Not want­ing ~is team to exert full energy because of the ap­proaching meet at VPI, he in­structed them to run in a pack, break up the Cavalier team, and run just fa&t enough to win.

Strategy :Pays Off

The Deacon Harriers com­plied by giving up first place to Bill Bailey of the Cavaliers, but then took second, l!:hird, fourth, and sevell'th. Hodsdon, Viehman, Sheffer, Hope, and Duval finished in those respec­tive positions.

The meet at VPI last Tues-

day was held in extremely ad­verse running conditions. Rain had washed out the cross­country course, so a new 4.1 mile course had to be routed through the mountainou~ roads near the school.

As if that wasn't enough, the runners had to splash through a steady downpour in tem­peratures that never exceeded 50 degrees.

Despite the conditions, the runners set a ·terrific pace and held it throughout the contest. Hodsdon and Viehman crossed the 2 mile mark at 9:36 keep­ing pace with Ron DeHart of ilie Gobblers. Hope was close behind them at 9:40.

DeHart finished first in a time of 19 minutes, 43 seconds. Hodsdon and Viehman were next at 9:50. Hope placed fifth, Sheffer sixth, and Duval thir­teenth to round out the Deacon scoring.

Best Race Ever

Coach Hamilton expressed pride in his .team saying, "For the conditions. this was the best race our top four boys have ever run. The pace they held was very fast." ·

Not having enough runners to form a freshman team, Coach Hamilton took his besl frosh harriers to compete as

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.. Jar;.k' ··~1?!4. )n_._,f;{l~ · s:ecg~f!;)J~lf l10lding them . .to a total. of 191 yards. !The Deacs had 137 yards at the half.)

With the Tar Ho~ls press­ing to score and Wake sudden­ly finding themselves in pos­session of a Tar Heel fumble (recovered by Jimmy Clack) at their own 17, it was the hard l'Unning of Andy Heck that moved Wako away from the goal line and into a po$i­tion from which they could punt ·and move UNC back into

In ~he first half Dcac quar­, terii\i~k'1 Ke~:l'·EricksorP!J-iftt'on -"§'ix 'out i'OYns"~~cnJ'\:i't'aM\\S'tlfrtor

92 -yard-s while the h-ackfiE'ld ground out 45 more. The sec­ond half !Showed a different picture, however, as t,he Dcacs elected to try and nail the ball to the ground and E'at up as much valuable time as pos­sible.

It was a great team effort .----------------------------... that gave Wake FOTest its

Coach Bill Tate said after the contest ended that a c-ouple of times in f:he second half he wanted his team to throw but, "Wa1en you are on

second ·straight victory of the season. its second in the ACC, and its •Second OVer the "mighty" Heels in as many years.

The Deacon's record is now 2-4, and their next 3 games will be played in Deaconland when a home crowd will !hope­fully be able to witness Wake at its best.

Tate. Seeks First Victory Over Clemson;

-Deacs Try To Break Homecoming Jinx By DAVE ROBERTS

ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

Homecoming seems to be bad luck for Bill Tate's Dea­cons. In Tate's first two sea­sons, Wake Forest suffered only one loss at home each ye;n·-the Homecoming game.

Clemson spoiled Tate's first Homecoming with a 21-2 vic­tory over a Deacon team that accounted for 341 yards of total offense, mostly between the 20-yard lines. Lnst season the Deacons marched for a score against Maryland the first time they had the ball, but the Terps came back with a field goal and a fourth-quarter touchdov.m, to win 10-7.

Frank Howard's Tigers pro­vide the opposition Saturday, when the Dcacs will attempt to break their string of Home­coming losses and to beat Clemson for the first time under Ta-te's reign. Tate squads have beaten every other team in the ACC.

Lacked Scoring

In the game two years ago, Wake's John Mackovic com­pleted 15 of 31 passes for 234 yards, but the absence of scoring punch plus a poor kicking game spelled defeat for :the Deacons. Clemson's first touchdown came after a

blocked ptmt, and the Tigers led 7-2 at the half. the Dea­con's score coming on a safety by Joe Sepic.

Another Tiger score came on a fake field goal a-ttempt,when quarterback Sonny Ray threrw a touchdown strike for the visitors' only _completion of the day. It put the game out of reach of the erratic Deacon attack.

Las-t year at Clemson, the Deacs were defeated 26-13 by a razzle-dazzle offense which featured another touchdown off a fake field goal attempt and a 61-yard scoring run on a double-reverse handoff. The Deacs again picked up more yardage than the winners, but Jacked the ability to score.

Rough Schedule

This year's Tigers are a better ·team, and they have gained valuable experience by playing a bruising schedule. After an exciting 40-35 win over Virginia in the opener, Clemson lost a heartbreaker at Georgia Tech, 13-12.

Alabama t r o u n c e d the Tigers 26-0, but Clemson bounced back for a 9-6 win over DuRe in a defensive bat­tle. Continuing non-conference play against top-ten opponents, the Tigers then journeyed all the way >to Southern Cal.

Saturday's game begins a string of five ACC contests for Clemson, a chief threat for the conference crown since Duke, North Carolina and South Carolina are ineligible. Clemson cast the only dis­senting vote on a proposal to nllow these teams to count s p e c i f i e d non-conference games in the ACC standings.

Able Attack

The Tiger offensive unit is a strong one, and its claws have been sharpened on some top defensive outfits. Quarter­back Jimmy Addison is one of the finest passers in the ACC, having completed 44 of his first 77 passes for an average of 15.8 yards per pass. The leading rushers are tailback Buddy Gore with a 3.2 yard average on 64 carries, and Jacky Jackson with 44 carries for a 3.6 mark. Phil Rogers is the top pass Teceiver.

If the Deacons are to break their Homecoming jinx Satur­day. the defensive unit will have to be at its best. Clemson may resort to the unusual again, since such plays have left the Deaes gaping in awe in the past. The defl'.'nse Slhould be prepared this time, how­ever, and the outcome will probably depend on Wake's off-and-on offeiliSe.

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Now 5-0 individuals. John Taggart, Phil Beavers, and Jim Sprinkle performed well on a 3 mile freshman course.

According to Al Vichman, the only senior on the small squad, the success of the Dea­cons this year is attributed to the g1·eat them effort of the runners. lie also added, "We may not have depth, but this hmm't pt·ovcd to be a handi­cap."

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Or In The

Thh is Ru-<s k<:ilJKtly of Balboa l~laml. Ctllfornia, on an in-port fidd trip as a student aboard Ch:tpman Collc~c·~ tloating eam 11us.

·1 h._. nuk he paused to make as fellow Mudents went ah~aJ to inspl!ct H~thht.!psut's Tomb in the Valh:y of the Kings ncar Luxor, he used to complete an assignment for his Comparative World Cultures professor.

Rus~ transferred the 12 units earned during the study-travel semester at sea to his record at the University of California at Irvine where he continues studies toward a teaching career in life

. sciences. As you read this, 450 other students have begun the fall semester voyage of discovery with

Chapman aboard the s.s. RYNDAM, for which Holland-America Line acts as General Passenger Agents.

In February still another 450 will embark from Los Angeles for the spring 1967 semestl!r, thi-. time bound for the Pan:tma Canal, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco. Spain. Portugnl. The Netherlands, Denmark, Great Britain and New York.

For a catalog describing how you can include a semester at sea in your educational plans, fill in the information belnw ant! mail. Sll:"'' ··--:.w ._.__ ·• .a;ilito0 _.,, ,_,>:Jl''' _,. w-·-o·'·'"'>:·~ ·1 __ M,--· ,.i,~~·;_:':'7.t< -~t;:'W'''~::: ii11 .&.n~-~~: J:.s :~·~~~ ·~ _ .. :., :'~·;::::'J~..'i:ii~~ ;.~_;;~r . ~~:1~~r~~ ,. *.':~t<i<\',,-.;,.,-,.,.d~li!!W!M !!!!~ "-",, . $'@, · ~ .... ~,. ,., .. .,...-; . .;.,"'«':««':!'~M~"'M'S!l,~ , ;0.:1; ::~ ~.... • :·:··:-: ••

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Page 8: To Search For President

PAGE EIGIIT l\londa~·. Oct. 2-1. 1966 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Deaclets Still Undefeated, Crush W olflets 18-7 By DICK l'AVLIS

GUEST WRITER

Wake Fon•st"s freshmen football te:1m •·an its winning !'lrC'~k to four g~mu·~ l>,\· down­ing t ht• North C:1 rolina State frosh 18-7 last l''rida~· on the W:1kc l''orp,;t frcshnwn field.

The Baby Deacs ~napped a 7-7 tic with an 11 point out­burst in tlw final quarter to insure tht• freshmen the most sncccl'sful scnson in thcit· foot­ball history.

Ilighlighl!ng tl1c Dt•aclcts ~howing wCis :1 sparlding dt""­fcnH' spt•arhcacled by Homan W ~Zl' laid. The clcfl'nsc :set up one touchdown, scored a ~:lfe­ty, rtnd gave the offense nu-

mcrons other chances to ~core. Cnnst:1ntly holdin~ Slrttc in tlwir own lt'ITitorv 11H' W::1lw dt>fcnse allowt•d ,ihe Dcaclct "ffense to ket'p good fit•ld po:-;ition for tno~t of the gaml'.

\\'zl'laki Blocks Punt

\Vszelaki gave the Baby Dcacs their first sem·ing op­portunit.'· when he blocked a Wo!flet punt that was rcct>vcr­t•d by h'ammatc Carl~·le Pate on the Slate two yard line. Thn'c' plays Ia tcr halfbaelC Chuck White smashed in from the twn. and the ~IICCC>~ful eonvcr~ion gavl' the Dcaclcts :1 7-0 lend.

The visit<,rs m;,nagcd Owir

Cross Country Title Caplztred By PiKA 's

George Sheffer of K::~ppn Sigma fraternity broke the onC-\'C::Jr-old !FC cross cotm­try ;.ccord l::~st \\"L'ek, but Pi Kapll::'l Alpha's o\·cral! strength and drpth brought home the te:m1 tiUc.

Sheffer's effort placed the Kappa Sigs second in team standin~s. as the !nnky senior nipped ·Pika's Don Smilli, last year's winner, by three sec­onds in the last 200 yards of the mile and fi ve-cights run. For the Pik::t's it was their second straight cross country ch:mJpionship.

Roundin;:>: out tile top ten including Sheffer wHh a time of 7 :~3.5, were Smith of PiKa second. Scott Crabtree (ind.l third. Lee Bl:mk Sig Ep four·lli, Ted Xodcll of Kappa Sig Da\'c King of Theta Chi, Dave Grochmal of PiKa, Bill Rucker of Sigma Chi, Ron McVittic of Thct:1 Cl1i ::tnd Kcywood Chc\·es tindl.

\\'ith intramural football at the hnlfw::1y mark, Pi Kappa Alpha continues to lead the pack. Tile PiKa's sport the

only UJ1bc::1ten record in the Fratcmity League, but i\ho KA's and Theta Chis arc in a dog fight for second. Not far lwhind are t.hc Lambda Chis and Sigma Chis, followed by t.hc Sig Eps, Sigma Pi's. Delta Sigs, Kappa Sigs. and Alpha Sigs.

In ::~ction lnst week Sigma Chi •lopped Alpha Sig and Lambda Chi, Sigma Po won over the Kappa Sigs in a dis­puted contest, KA shut out Sig Ep, and the Theta Chis slipped past the Delta Sigs by 2 points.

In independent football, the Theta Chi B team continues to ll'ad the Indepcndcn·t League. and the Chargers and Red Barons hc::td the list in Dorm Leagues Number One and Two.

In the Intramural tr:1ck mcd last week. the PiKas, Theta Chis. Kappa Sigs, and Sig Eps retnined and held command­ing leads going into the finals. The PiKas sport a slight lead, and hope to win the title they shared l::1st year with Thc,ta Chi.

onl.v offen~ivc thrust midway during the third qu;,rtcr when qum•!Prback Darrc•H Moody !Xl~st-cl to fullback Charles Bmvt•rs fm· 37 yards. The con­version tied 1hc score, but un­known to the Wolflets this was to be the las•t successful of­fense effort, as the Baby Dcacs defense took over.

Early ln the four,th quartet· the Dt'aclcls held North Caro­lina dL•cp in their own terri­tory, forcing them to punJt. Wake's offense sputtcrcU and Tom Deacon bootoo a 36 yard Ii0ld goal to give Wake Forest a 10-7 lead.

A few minutes later the Baby Dcac defense upped the score to 12-7 when lin-ebacker Carlyle Pate tackled State's Bowers in the end zone for a s::1fcty. Then, when State took over the ball again, Wszelaki blocked his second punt of the game, giving Wuke Forest the bull on the Wolflet five yard line.

Jurewicz Scores

The Deac!ets fumbled away lhisopportunity,but the defense held again forcing a punt. This time, the Baby Deacs moved for the score, the touchdown coming on a 6 yard run by fullback Ron Jurewicz; the score was set up by a 17 yard run by Jurewicz.

The Baby Deac defense, which l!as been instrumental in giving the team a 4-0 record this season, once again show­ed the way. They allowed Slate only two yards rushing and gave up 166 yards through ·the air. State qu,arterback Moody spent most of the af­ternoon running around in hill own backfield as the Deaclets' line put continuous pressure on him.

Besides Wszelaki and Pate, Bill Angle, Joe Theriault, and David Orange gave ou,tstand­ing defensive performances. They complc.tcly shut off a supposedly strong State run­ning attack, and for the most

GEORGE SHEFFER <126) of Kappa Sigma takes an early lead in the intramural cross country meet held last week. Sheffer placed

first in the event, establishing a new intra­murals record of 7:43.5 for the course.

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FRED ANGERMAN, speedy Deacon halfback, returns a punt in 18-7 victory over the N. C. State frosh.

part were effective in stopping the aerial game of the visitors.

Attack Sputters

Offensively the Baby Deacs still had trouble putting to­·gether a consistent attack. All their yardage-126 yards­came on the ground, as the passing aspect of the attack went 0-5. Given good field position by a strong defensive showing, 1they still could not cash in on most of their op­portunioties, though one touch­down run by quarterback Tom Gavin was called back because of a penalty and another touchdown pass was caught out of the end zone.

However, the good defense the Deaclets have displayed this year bas enabled the

freshmen to overcome this in­consi,.tcncy. With only one more g:1mc this season, (at home next week against South Carolina l this strong defensive play has put the Baby Deacs in the posHion of giving Wake Forest its first undefeated season <in any ~port) in cons.

Former Wake Forest quar­terback Karl Swcctan l1as taken over tiw starting quar­terback post for the Detroit Uons in thc:> Nation.:~! Football League.

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Fearless Forecasts

Clemson at Wake Illinois :~t Punlu~

Missouri a•t Nellra:>ka UNC at Ga. Ole Mbs at LSU S. Carolina at Md. UVa at Sbte Tul:mc at Vanderbilt SMU at Texa.s S. Calif. at Miami

VERNOR (21-]9)

Wake Jll. Mo. Ga. LSU Md. UVa. •rulanc Texas Miami

ROBERTS (26-14)

Wak~

Purdue Ncb. Ga. Ole Miss Md. State Tulane SMU s. Cal.

ASHTON (29-lJ)

Clemson PW"due Ncb. Ga. LSU Md. UVa. Tulane Tc:xas S. Cal.

PAL VIS (24.-16)

Wake Purdue Ncb. Ga. I..5U Md. State Tulane Texas S. Cal.

HOFLER (23-17)

Clemson Purdue Neb. Ga. Ole Miss Md. State Tulane Texas S. Cal.

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MEMBERS OF DOWNTOWN PARK AND SHOP

I

I I I

"Come on, Ed! Get that hand up. If you don't, you'll have to take Jan to Norman Stockton's a-t Thruway, and she'll browse your whole after­noon away," said Lorraine Cowall, as she refereed the Indian wrestling between Ed Arrington and Jan Achen.

"I know, I know," answered Ed, desparingly, "And that just cannot be! I have to get to the NS store downtown. Homecoming's this weekend, and I can't go to the game and parties in last yaar's sports jacket. If I can just get to Norman Stockton's before the homecoming rush cleans the store, I can get outfitted for the whole weekend."

Jan is obviously winning, so she takes an easy breath. "But with all those clotl1es to choose from, how are you ever going to decide what to buy? I'm a positive thinker and 1 alrc·ady know that the Thruway store has exactly what I want. As a matter of fact, Norman Stock­ton's Thruway could take care of your big-weekend needs, too, so why don't we go to­gether?"

"Yes, that's a mighty fine idea," offered Lorraine. "Since you two arc always fighting with each other, you can just get together tltis one time and do this one thing that will satisfy both of you."

Ed was immediately on the offensive. "Nothing doing. I don't want a picayuneish dame following me around a clothing •store. People will think that my confidence is shook or something. If I can go to NS down~own, I'll have the store all to myself-well almost all to myself. I can take my pick of all •the new sweaters for winter '66-'67. Did you know they've gotten in all the new snug winter colors, like burnt

orange and wheat and brick; plus they have those sharp­looking red ones and the Caro­lina (oops!) blue ones that always look. good. They come in alpaca, lambswool, and cable knits. And they've got patterned trousers and Eagle shirts in handsome stripes in addition to the ivy stand· bys."

"But Ed," pled Jan, "you can get the same things at the Thruway shop, I'm sure you'd be just as happy with the clothes there as with the ones downtown. Just listen to the variety of ladies' clothes they have-poor boy sweaters, cable knit cardigans and pullovers, regular ribbon sweaters in tile new colors like melon and creamy brown; and A-line

skirts to m a·tch every;thing, and plain and print blouses and shirts to go with the sweater· skirt outfits, and ..•• "

"Okay, okay, I believe you," interrupted Ed. "But I've got my mind made up about NS down-town. You wann•a hear what I've planned? For Friday night, brown and black pin· checked pants with a yellow ivy shirt and brick-colored alpaca. Then for the game, a glenn plaid jacket and any­thing else that looks good. And for Saturday night, min­gled plaid pants to g0 with a wheat ·Sweater and bronze shirt. And besides, I've never been to Norman Stockton at Thruway, and if I did, I'd have ·lo start all over again after all lliat taxing work."

It was time for the referee to enter in and take care of the whole mess. "Okay, that setties it," said Lorraine. If he's never been to rt.h.e NS Thruway store, now is the time. He'll take both of us to Thruway tltis very afternoon. We'll introduce him to the

good. time he can have look­ing through the store, and then we'll case the ladies' depart­ment."

And Ed just smiled, because

he knew he'd found the best 1 way to fPOrt two good-looking girls around in one afternoon. Just leave it to Ed and Nor­man Stockton!