10
Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, EDITORIALLY au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e New Trustees SSOC Meets * * * An All American Newspaper * * * VOLUME LUI Wake Forest Umverslty, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, Nov. 6, 1967 NUMBER 8 Deacs Beat Austine Crowned Queen In 1967 Homecoming Wake Forest's rebounding Demon Dea- con football team broke a 21-21 tie late in the final period Saturday night to de- feat South Carolina's Gamecocks, 35-21, for their second win of the season. The Deacons' junior transfer quarter- back, Freddie Summers, broke the tie with a scoring scamper from approxi- mately six yards out. Summers had engineered the Deacons on the 60.yard scoring march. The tie- breaking score came with approximately three minutes remaining in the game. After kicking off, the Deacons held the Gamecocks on a fourth down play and took over the ball on the South Carolina 30-yard line. Sophomore halfback Buzz Leavitt Salisbury To Lecture On Vietnam Involvement By BARBARA PETERSON STAFF WRITER Harrison Salisbury, Pulitzer Prize-win- ning reporter, author, and ·expel't on Russian-Chinese relations, will speak at 8:15 p. m. Thursday in Wait Chapel. · His lecture will center on the many intricacies of United States involvement in Vietnam, based on his recent tour of that country nine months ago. In recent lectures at tw(} other schools Salisbury concenrated on what has hap- pened in the war since January, 1965, when President Johnson and his advisors decided to push a program of intensive bombings in the North. In each address he regarded the bomb- ing as the greatest hindrance to negotia- tions and eventual easing of hostilities. Considering China's possible involve- ment, he said, "I think China anticipates a U. S. attack; she thinks our govern- ment is using Vietnam as a landi'lg place." Chinese Bombs "He speculated that the Chinese might use their nuclear capabilities in a Viet- nam theater (}f war to wipe out entire American operation in that ·country. . "I can see .. the U. S. retaliating and putting the w6rld into nuclear holocaust," he said. Salisbury's solution in these lectures is diplomacy. His plan includes nego- tiations with not only Hanoi, but also Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand. He is confident that every major power, ex- cept China, wishes to end the war; there- fore, in a final proposal he encourages America to guarantee to back Hanoi if China attempts to block negotiations. Now the assistant managing editor of The New YQrk Times, Salisbury's career in journalism began in UP's Chicago bureau covering the end <Jf the Prohibi- tion gang wars and the trial of AI Capone. In 1940 he was transferred t(} the for- eign desk in Washington, D. C., and in 1943 became the London bureau manager and directed coverage of the war in Europe. First Russian Trip. Salisbury's first assignment in Russia was as head of the UPI's Moscow staff ft, 1944. That year he traveled 25,000 miles inside Russia and saw liberated cities and the Red Army in action. At the war's end, he returned to this country as foreign news editor, and cov- (Continued on Page 5) HARRISON SALISBURY • . • to speak Thlll'Sday • • • Decision Due On Tomorrow Parties By IJNDA CARTER Two S(}Cial fraternities and one societY f::iced charges Fiiday in a two-oour ses- sion of the Student Affairs Committee of having unchaperoned off-campus .par- ties at which alcoholic beverages were con.sumed. The committee deferred a decision on the cases until Tuesday because Dean of Men Mark Reece, a member, had to leave unexpectedly. Reece flew to Columbia, S. C. to try to persuade· 'Smokey' Robinson and the Miracles to a Homecoming concert engagement· Saturday afternoon in spite of the racia,l, violence in Wins·ton-Salem. The incidents under discussion involved an off-campus gathering <Jf Laurels so- ciety and Lambda Chi Alpha fraterroity Oct. 19, and Laurels and Pi Kappa ALpha f1"aternity Oct. 26. Automobile accidents followed both events, resulting in the hospitalization of coeds Carolyn Benz, senior of Wash- ington, D. C., and Barbara Luker, sopho- more of Ft. Thomas, Ky. Dr. Thomas Olive, biology professor and chairman of the committee, said the organizations were accused Df break- ing two University regulations-those re- (Continued on Page 5) climaxed the short scoring drive later in the game with a two-yard plunge. Second Win The win for the Deacons was ·tbeir second in a row after a 2D-10 victory over North Carolina last week end. Wake Forest is now 2-6 for the season and will meet the University of Tulsa in Tulsa Saturday afternoon. During the haHtime homecoming fes- tivities, Austine Odom, senior cheer- leader of Martinsburg, W. Va., repre- senting Poteat House, was crowned Miss Demon Deacon, 1967. Miss Odom was one of 16 sponsors r.epresenting ten social fraternities, one business fTaternity, one service frater- nity and the four Men's Residence Council houses. The student body voted on the candi- dates after they had been presented in chapel Thursday, Oct. 26. The contest was sponsored by the Monogram Club. Also announced dw-ing halftime were tP.e winners of the homecroning decor- ations contest. Sigma Chi Fraternity won il:e fraternity division as well as the overall award. Taylor House won in the residence house division, and Babcock Donnirory won in the women's dorm division. The racial disorders in downtown Win- ston-Salem Thursday, Friday and Sat- Urday nights almost disrupted the Uni- versity's homecoming festivities this year. Rumors circulated until eMly Sat- urday that the football game would be postponed because of trouble and ·the lo- c<..tion of Bowman Gray Stadiwn. How- ever, the game began at 7:30 p. m. as scheduled. Wmston-Salem May<Jr M. C. Benton placed a curfew of 11:30 p. m. on the city because of scattered racial violence which ireluded some attacks on auto- mobiles carrying Wake Forest fans to the football game. The cl.ll'fuw also had ·· SOhifL:effect on parties scheduled for after the game. Saturday's concert with "Smokey" Robinson and the Miracles narrowly missed being called off because of the racial strife. RobiiJSQil cancelled the concert Friday when he heard of the riots, because his father had been injured in a Detroit riot last year. Mark H. Reece, dean of men, and Dem Ward, co-chairman of the College Union major functions committee, flew to Col- umbia, S. C., Friday afternoon in an at- tempt to persuade Robinson to change his mind. ' The concert was held as planned, but the group did not perform until 3 p. m. because of travel difficulties. Homecoming festivities began Thurs- day with a bonfire and pep rally on the field beside the gymnasium. The football team was present and senior members of the squad were honored. Thursday night saw students dancing in Reynolda Hall to music by Bob Collins and the Fabulous Five. The group was booked by Jokers Three Productions as "the South's number one group." Friday evening, Simon and Garfunkle, the "fastest-rising popular vocal group in the land," performed before a full house in Wait Chapel. FALL CARNIVAL ..• Saturday night will have many booths similar to last year's spectacle, in which the Les Soeurs were drenched with water-filled balloons. Approximately thirty booths will be set up SatUrday. Revised Interpretation Eases Draft Pressure By LINDA CARTER MANAGING EDITOR The pressure of the dra£t on male stu- <lents relaxed somewhat last week with' the announcement of a .revised inter- pretation of the Selective Service law. The director of the North Carolina Selective Service board, William H. Mc- Cachren,. told state .college and universi- ty registrars ThurSday their recol'nmen- dations concerning the academic pro- gress of students would be considered by local draft boards in the future. jected to the new guidelines . on the grounds that they were so inflexible and they were enacted too late in the sum- mer for student-: lacking only a few credit hours· to make them up in summer school. The revised guidelines, Patterson said, stipulate that a student "make normal and satisfactory progress each year for not more than four years." , The change, in addition to · deferment criteria more flexible, gives (Continued on Page 5) Fall Carnival Scheduled For Saturday By J. D. Wll.SON ASSISTANT EDITOR Wake Forest's second annual fall car- nival will be held Saturday on the Mag- nolia Court behind Reynolda Hall from 7:3D-I0:30 p. m. Approximately 30 organizations are ex- pected to participate in the carnival sponsored by the junior class and student government. Fraternities, MRC houses, and Baptist Student Union, College Union and so- cieties have entered booths. The booths will feature various ac- tivities-balloon, basketball and football tosses, cigarette games and an automo- bile demolition. Refreshment Stands The junior class will sponsor refresh- ment booths selling sandwiches, dough- nuts, coffee and cokes. The BSU will have a bake sale. The booths will be designed and op- erated by members O<f the various par- ticipating organizations. The proceeds from each booth will be divided-60 per cent to the group and 40 per cent to student government. It has not been specified as to how student government will use the money. This year's carnival is headed by two members of the junior class, Mike Gun- ter, of Gastonia, and Sandy Bigelow, of East Grand Rapids, Mich. Booth Construction Construction can begin on the booths on the Magnolia Court Saturday morn- ing at 9:00. Everything mUSot be cleaned up immediately following the carnival except for big pieces of lwnber. Last year was the first year the fall carnival was held. It was initiated by the junior class under the direction of Dayna Pate. Last year's carnival made a profit of $1,300, part of which wenJt to each group and part to the stadium drive. - It was originally scheduled for par- ents' weekend again this year, but was postponed because it would have to have been in the afternoon, since the game was scheduled to be at night this year. In case Df rain the carnival will be held in the gyrnnasiwn. The aetion mOO.ified the state board's interpretation of the national draft di- rectives enacted during ·the summer re- quiring a student to complete success- fully 25 per cent of his school's require· ments for graduation each school year for a maximum of four years. Alabama Congressman Will Speak Tomorrow Strict Guidelines The state board had determined the percentages on the basis of credit hours completed. Local boards had been in- structed to adhere strictly to those guide- lines. As a result many students needing only one or two credit hours to fulfill the percentage requirements lost their II-S student defermerut. rating. The percentage of credit hours com- pleted was the only .criteria for defer- ment regardless of statements from reg· istrars saying some students lacking only a few credits were making normal pro- gress and would graduate within the four year limit. McCachren announced the revised poli- cy during the annual meeting of the N. C. Association of College Registrars a-1:d Admissions Officers in Greensboro. Registrars across the state had ob- John H. Buchanan Jr., Republican Re- presentative from Alabama, will speak in chapel Tuesday. Buchanan, a Baptist minister, is a member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and serves on the Asian and Pacific and: the Near East subcom- mittees. During the 89th Congress he was a member of the House Coonmittee on Un- American Activities and the post office an{\ civil service conunittee. Buchanan was born in 1928 in Paris, Tenn., served in the Navy during World War II, and was graduated from How· ard College in Bilmingham, Ala., in 1949. Later he did graduate work at the Uni- versity of Virginia and was graduated from Southern· Theological Seminary in Louisville. For 10 years Buchanan was a pastor in Tennessee, Virginia and Alabama. In 1962, he resigned his church to ac- cept the Republican nomination to Con- gress. He led the Alabama Republican Congressional slate in that year. He was elected sixth district representa- tive to Congress in 1964. Buchanan also serves on the Republi- can Congressional C(}mmittee, the na- tional advisory board of Young Ameri- cans for Freedom, the Young Republi- cc:n National Federation Congressional advisory committee and the steering committee of the Conunittee of One Million Against Admission of Communist China to the United Nations. In 1965 he was named "Congressman of the Year" by Americans United for his efforts in defense of the First Amendment.

Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    2

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

Nursing is established

Center

\

of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in

\ t

\ .

TODAY, EDITORIALLY

• • • • au TODAY, INSIDE

e Vietnam Greetings e New Trustees e· SSOC Meets

* * * An All American Newspaper * * * VOLUME LUI Wake Forest Umverslty, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, Nov. 6, 1967 NUMBER 8

Deacs Beat Gamecocks~ Austine Crowned Queen In 1967 Homecoming

Wake Forest's rebounding Demon Dea­con football team broke a 21-21 tie late in the final period Saturday night to de­feat South Carolina's Gamecocks, 35-21, for their second win of the season.

The Deacons' junior transfer quarter­back, Freddie Summers, broke the tie with a scoring scamper from approxi­mately six yards out.

Summers had engineered the Deacons on the 60.yard scoring march. The tie­breaking score came with approximately three minutes remaining in the game.

After kicking off, the Deacons held the Gamecocks on a fourth down play and took over the ball on the South Carolina 30-yard line.

Sophomore halfback Buzz Leavitt

Salisbury To Lecture On Vietnam Involvement

By BARBARA PETERSON STAFF WRITER

Harrison Salisbury, Pulitzer Prize-win­ning reporter, author, and ·expel't on Russian-Chinese relations, will speak at 8:15 p. m. Thursday in Wait Chapel. ·

His lecture will center on the many intricacies of United States involvement in Vietnam, based on his recent tour of that country nine months ago.

In recent lectures at tw(} other schools Salisbury concenrated on what has hap­pened in the war since January, 1965, when President Johnson and his advisors decided to push a program of intensive bombings in the North.

In each address he regarded the bomb­ing as the greatest hindrance to negotia­tions and eventual easing of hostilities.

Considering China's possible involve­ment, he said, "I think China anticipates a U. S. attack; she thinks our govern­ment is using Vietnam as a landi'lg place."

Chinese Bombs

"He speculated that the Chinese might use their nuclear capabilities in a Viet­nam theater (}f war to wipe out entire American operation in that ·country. . "I can see .. the U. S. retaliating and

putting the w6rld into nuclear holocaust," • he said.

Salisbury's solution in these lectures is diplomacy. His plan includes nego­tiations with not only Hanoi, but also Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand. He is confident that every major power, ex­cept China, wishes to end the war; there­fore, in a final proposal he encourages America to guarantee to back Hanoi if China attempts to block negotiations.

Now the assistant managing editor of The New YQrk Times, Salisbury's career in journalism began in UP's Chicago bureau covering the end <Jf the Prohibi­tion gang wars and the trial of AI Capone.

In 1940 he was transferred t(} the for­eign desk in Washington, D. C., and in 1943 became the London bureau manager and directed coverage of the war in Europe.

First Russian Trip.

Salisbury's first assignment in Russia was as head of the UPI's Moscow staff ft, 1944. That year he traveled 25,000 miles inside Russia and saw liberated cities and the Red Army in action.

At the war's end, he returned to this country as foreign news editor, and cov­

( Continued on Page 5)

HARRISON SALISBURY • . • to speak Thlll'Sday • • •

Decision Due On Tomorrow

Parties By IJNDA CARTER

Two S(}Cial fraternities and one societY f::iced charges Fiiday in a two-oour ses­sion of the Student Affairs Committee of having unchaperoned off-campus .par­ties at which alcoholic beverages were con.sumed.

The committee deferred a decision on the cases until Tuesday because Dean of Men Mark Reece, a member, had to leave unexpectedly.

Reece flew to Columbia, S. C. to try to persuade· 'Smokey' Robinson and the Miracles to ~eep a Homecoming concert engagement· Saturday afternoon in spite of the racia,l, violence in Wins·ton-Salem.

The incidents under discussion involved an off-campus gathering <Jf Laurels so­ciety and Lambda Chi Alpha fraterroity Oct. 19, and Laurels and Pi Kappa ALpha f1"aternity Oct. 26.

Automobile accidents followed both events, resulting in the hospitalization of coeds Carolyn Benz, senior of Wash­ington, D. C., and Barbara Luker, sopho­more of Ft. Thomas, Ky.

Dr. Thomas Olive, biology professor and chairman of the committee, said the organizations were accused Df break­ing two University regulations-those re-

(Continued on Page 5)

climaxed the short scoring drive later in the game with a two-yard plunge.

Second Win

The win for the Deacons was ·tbeir second in a row after a 2D-10 victory over North Carolina last week end. Wake Forest is now 2-6 for the season and will meet the University of Tulsa in Tulsa Saturday afternoon.

During the haHtime homecoming fes­tivities, Austine Odom, senior cheer­leader of Martinsburg, W. Va., repre­senting Poteat House, was crowned Miss Demon Deacon, 1967.

Miss Odom was one of 16 sponsors r.epresenting ten social fraternities, one business fTaternity, one service frater­nity and the four Men's Residence Council houses.

The student body voted on the candi­dates after they had been presented in chapel Thursday, Oct. 26. The contest was sponsored by the Monogram Club.

Also announced dw-ing halftime were tP.e winners of the homecroning decor­ations contest. Sigma Chi Fraternity won il:e fraternity division as well as the overall award.

Taylor House won in the residence house division, and Babcock Donnirory won in the women's dorm division.

The racial disorders in downtown Win­ston-Salem Thursday, Friday and Sat­Urday nights almost disrupted the Uni­versity's homecoming festivities this year. Rumors circulated until eMly Sat­urday that the football game would be postponed because of trouble and ·the lo­c<..tion of Bowman Gray Stadiwn. How­ever, the game began at 7:30 p. m. as scheduled.

Wmston-Salem May<Jr M. C. Benton placed a curfew of 11:30 p. m. on the city because of scattered racial violence which ireluded some attacks on auto­mobiles carrying Wake Forest fans to the football game. The cl.ll'fuw also had

· · SOhifL:effect on parties scheduled for after the game.

Saturday's concert with "Smokey" Robinson and the Miracles narrowly missed being called off because of the racial strife.

RobiiJSQil cancelled the concert Friday when he heard of the riots, because his father had been injured in a Detroit riot last year.

Mark H. Reece, dean of men, and Dem Ward, co-chairman of the College Union major functions committee, flew to Col­umbia, S. C., Friday afternoon in an at­tempt to persuade Robinson to change his mind. '

The concert was held as planned, but the group did not perform until 3 p. m. because of travel difficulties.

Homecoming festivities began Thurs­day with a bonfire and pep rally on the field beside the gymnasium. The football team was present and senior members of the squad were honored.

Thursday night saw students dancing in Reynolda Hall to music by Bob Collins and the Fabulous Five. The group was booked by Jokers Three Productions as "the South's number one group."

Friday evening, Simon and Garfunkle, the "fastest-rising popular vocal group in the land," performed before a full house in Wait Chapel.

FALL CARNIVAL ..• Saturday night will have many booths similar to last year's spectacle, in which the Les Soeurs were drenched with water-filled balloons. Approximately thirty booths will be set up SatUrday.

Revised Interpretation Eases Draft Pressure

By LINDA CARTER MANAGING EDITOR

The pressure of the dra£t on male stu­<lents relaxed somewhat last week with' the announcement of a .revised inter­pretation of the Selective Service law.

The director of the North Carolina Selective Service board, William H. Mc­Cachren,. told state .college and universi­ty registrars ThurSday their recol'nmen­dations concerning the academic pro­gress of students would be considered by local draft boards in the future.

jected to the new guidelines . on the grounds that they were so inflexible and they were enacted too late in the sum­mer for student-: lacking only a few credit hours· to make them up in summer school.

The revised guidelines, Patterson said, stipulate that a student "make normal and satisfactory progress each year for not more than four years." ,

The change, in addition to malti~1he · deferment criteria more flexible, gives

(Continued on Page 5)

Fall Carnival Scheduled For Saturday

By J. D. Wll.SON ASSISTANT EDITOR

Wake Forest's second annual fall car­nival will be held Saturday on the Mag­nolia Court behind Reynolda Hall from 7:3D-I0:30 p. m.

Approximately 30 organizations are ex­pected to participate in the carnival sponsored by the junior class and student government.

Fraternities, MRC houses, and Baptist Student Union, College Union and so­cieties have entered booths.

The booths will feature various ac­tivities-balloon, basketball and football tosses, cigarette games and an automo­bile demolition.

Refreshment Stands

The junior class will sponsor refresh­ment booths selling sandwiches, dough­nuts, coffee and cokes. The BSU will have a bake sale.

The booths will be designed and op­erated by members O<f the various par­ticipating organizations. The proceeds from each booth will be divided-60 per cent to the group and 40 per cent to student government.

It has not been specified as to how student government will use the money.

This year's carnival is headed by two members of the junior class, Mike Gun­ter, of Gastonia, and Sandy Bigelow, of East Grand Rapids, Mich.

Booth Construction

Construction can begin on the booths on the Magnolia Court Saturday morn­ing at 9:00. Everything mUSot be cleaned up immediately following the carnival except for big pieces of lwnber.

Last year was the first year the fall carnival was held. It was initiated by the junior class under the direction of Dayna Pate.

Last year's carnival made a profit of $1,300, part of which wenJt to each group and part to the stadium drive.

- It was originally scheduled for par­ents' weekend again this year, but was postponed because it would have to have been in the afternoon, since the game was scheduled to be at night this year.

In case Df rain the carnival will be held in the gyrnnasiwn.

The aetion mOO.ified the state board's interpretation of the national draft di­rectives enacted during ·the summer re­quiring a student to complete success­fully 25 per cent of his school's require· ments for graduation each school year for a maximum of four years.

Alabama Congressman Will Speak Tomorrow

Strict Guidelines

The state board had determined the percentages on the basis of credit hours completed. Local boards had been in­structed to adhere strictly to those guide­lines. As a result many students needing only one or two credit hours to fulfill the percentage requirements lost their II-S student defermerut. rating.

The percentage of credit hours com­pleted was the only .criteria for defer­ment regardless of statements from reg· istrars saying some students lacking only a few credits were making normal pro­gress and would graduate within the four year limit.

McCachren announced the revised poli­cy during the annual meeting of the N. C. Association of College Registrars a-1:d Admissions Officers in Greensboro.

Registrars across the state had ob-

John H. Buchanan Jr., Republican Re­presentative from Alabama, will speak in chapel Tuesday.

Buchanan, a Baptist minister, is a member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and serves on the Asian and Pacific and: the Near East subcom­mittees.

During the 89th Congress he was a member of the House Coonmittee on Un­American Activities and the post office an{\ civil service conunittee.

Buchanan was born in 1928 in Paris, Tenn., served in the Navy during World War II, and was graduated from How· ard College in Bilmingham, Ala., in 1949. Later he did graduate work at the Uni­versity of Virginia and was graduated from Southern· Theological Seminary in Louisville.

For 10 years Buchanan was a pastor in Tennessee, Virginia and Alabama.

In 1962, he resigned his church to ac­cept the Republican nomination to Con­gress. He led the Alabama Republican Congressional slate in that year. He was elected sixth district representa­tive to Congress in 1964.

Buchanan also serves on the Republi­can Congressional C(}mmittee, the na­tional advisory board of Young Ameri­cans for Freedom, the Young Republi­cc:n National Federation Congressional advisory committee and the steering committee of the Conunittee of One Million Against Admission of Communist China to the United Nations.

In 1965 he was named "Congressman of the Year" by Americans United for his efforts in defense of the First Amendment.

Page 2: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

PAGE TWO Monday, Nov. II, 1967 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Senate Names Five To Find New Dea~n.

The University Senate named five men last week to a fac­ulty committee which will assist the administration in the search for a new Dean of the College.

Dr. Edwin G. Wilson, Dean of the College since 1958, was recently appointed Provost of the University, in charge of academic affairs.

Three of the five committee members are professors in the undergraduate school. They are Dr. Paul M. Gross, Jr., associate professor of chem­istry; Dr. Robert C Beck, as­sociate professor of psychology and Dr. Percival Perry. Dean of the Summer School and professor of history.

Perry is the only member of the committee fr()m the hu­manities.

The other two members of the committee are n(Jt from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.

They are Dr. Robert E. Lee, professor of law in the School of Law and Dr. Cor­nelius F. Strittmatter, profes-5or and chairman of the de­partment of biochemistry at Bowman Gray School of Medi­cine.

The committee met Oct. 27 and elected Gross as its chair­man. They met again last Fri­day.

Gross said "We will move ahead as rapidly as possible to find the right man. but that's about all I can say right now for we are just getting the committee organized."

Gross said the c:onunittee was chosen from the Universi­ty Senate. He said th!' reason there were three irom the un­dergraduate school and two from other areas of the Uni­versitv was so that they might make· a "more objective" choice.

Direct jets to New York, Atlanta.

PIEDMONT AIRLINES

ROUTE OF THE PACEMAKERS

Get·

Protestors Continue Silent Vigil

By BARRY ROBINSON STAFF WRITER

The third in a series of stu­dent and faculty vigils pro­testing the war in Vietnam was held Saturday in front of the Winston-Salem post office.

The participants, some car­rying signs, marched for an hour in silence at the vigil which was sponsored by the local "Negotiation Now" group.

Third Vigil

The vigil, the third in three Saturdays, was "a silent wit­ness against the war," ac­cording to William M. Hagen, Wake Forest English profes­sor and leader of the "Nego­tiation Now" group.

Negotiati()n Now groups were organized throughout the coun­try during the summer in order to secure signatures for a petition to be presented to President Johnson. The peti· tion, with a total of 500,000 signatures, called for new ini­tiatives to bring about a peace­ful settlement of the war.

The idea of the "silent vigils" was proposed to keep the movement alive. The pre­sent goal of "Negotiation Now," according to Hagen, is to provoke thought among the public about Vietnam.

Hagen hopes to hold the vigils every week throughout the winter. He also plans to call several meetings of the group to discuss other ways in which the group can work for peace.

A new aspect of the move­ment was provided last week when the foundations of a peace organization, the South­c~rn Student Organizing Com­nrittee (SSOC), were laid on campus.

Laura .Jordon, senior of Mi­ami, Fla., who is one of the students working to establish a SSOC chapter here, urged all present at a preliminary meeting to participate in the vigil Saturday.

"Peace is more important than 'Smokey' Bill Robinson and the Miracles," she said. The Miracles, a popular sing­ing group, appeared on cam­pus at 2 p.m.

The peace vigil lasted from 1-2 p. m.

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY

VARSITY DEBATERS ... Tom Slonaker, Ray Emric, and Laura Abernathy chat during a break in the recent Wake Forest novice rournament. Slonaker and Miss Abernathy are in Detroit today for a meet at Wayne State University.

Committee Nondnates 9 University Trustees

Nine men, including five former trustees, have been nominated for new University trustees by the State Baptist Convention nominating com· mittee.

'I'he men will be voted on by the Convention when it meets Nov. 13-15 in Asheville.

Among the five former members of the board of trus· tees who will be voted on is Thomas H. Davis, of Winston­Salem. He 1s president of Piedmont Aviation, Inc. which owns and operates Piedmont Airlines.

Another former trustee is Walter E. Greer, of Greens· boro, who is vice president of Burlington Industries.

Other nominees who have served as Wake Forest trus~ tees are Dr. Carlton Prickett, minister of First Baptist Church of Burlington; J. Ever­ette Miller of Raleigh, who is with the state department of public instruction; and Dr. William L. Bingham, a Lex­ington physician.

Other nominees include El­mer Lee Cain, of Winston­Salem, who is vice president of Wachovia Bank and Trust Company; Lonnie Boyd Wil­liams, a Wilmington lawyer; Dr. Riley M. Jordan, a Rae­ford physician and Samuel Cameron Tatum of Greens­boro, an official of the Jef­ferson Standard Life Insur­ance Company.

It is required by the Con­\'ention that all trustees of Wake Forest University be North Carolina Baptists.

Attempts were made to lib­eralize this rule when the con­vention met in Wilmington in 1963 and in Greensboro in . 1964 so &.at the University could have a broader base for selection of tr1.13tees.

The proposal was defeated in Wilmington by a vote of 1,628-1,106 and in Greensboro by a vote of 2,247·1,566. A two-thirds majority is nec­essary to change the rule.

SG To Discuss l\~ajor .ReVis~~~ For Coustitu'iion

Varsity Debaters In Detroit For Meet At Wayne State

Four· vaTSity Wake Forest debaters are in Detroit today partidpating in "Debate Days In Detroit" at Wayne State University.

The tournament will continue through tomorrow.

Debating on the' negative side are sophomores Duke Wil­son of Balboa, Canal Zone, and Dick Leader of Wayne, Pa.

Affirmative debaters in the tournament are sophomores Laura Abernathy of Kingsport, Tenn., and Tom Slonaker of Ellicott City, Md.

Judges Determine

This .tournament differs from others in that the wirmers will be determined by judges and the audience.

Before the debate begins the audience will fill out question­naires concerning their feel­ings on the topic.

After the debate .the audi­ence will again fill out ques­tioona.ires. Winners will- be de­termined by the shift in opin­ion.

Various civic clubs and high school gi'()U_p.<; make up the audiences.

Thursday and Fr'iday, four novice debaters will travel to Columbia, S. C., to .participate in the Carolina Forensics tour­nament at the University of South Carolina.

Six Rounds

Battling in the six rounds of debate on the affll'mative side will be Danny Higgins and Doug Osborne, both freshmen of Eden.

Negative debaters will be freshmen Steve Harvey of Orchard Lake, Mich., and Ray Emerick of Ellicott City, Md.

Other Wake Forest debaters

Library Hours

Are Extended

As Experiment

will go to Athens, Ga., Friday ~ ~mpete in the Georgia In­VItational tournament which will continue through Satoc­day.

yarsity debaters attending this tournament will be Wanda Radford, junior of Cliffside, and George Spencer, senior of Concord.

Novice debaters will also participate in the Georgia tournament.

Barry SchUSoter, freshman of Jacksonville, Fla., and Ralph Dennison, freshman of Winston-Salem, will be affirm-

ative debaters. Negative debaters will be

Chris Barnes, freshman of Cincinnati, Ohio, and Dan Mosely, freshman of Arling- ' ton, Va.

While Homecoming activities were going on here last Thurs­day through Sattm:Iay, two Wake Forest debaters were at Emory University in At­lanta, Ga., competing in the Peachtree Invitational.

Results of ·this tournament were not available when the Old Gold and Black went to press.

-PHOTO BY McNEILL

DR. ltRNEST SIMMONS literary authority on Rass!a and its culture, talks with an unidentified student after hfs Institute of Literature speech Tuesday night on "The New Soviet Man." See story on Page 7.

Graduate School To Decide . Today On Bylaw Changes

Beginning Monday, Nov. 13, 'Dhe farullty of tJre graduate credit; and 438a, 438b, den-the University's Z. Smith Rey- school of the University will drology two hours c·redit nolds library will extend hours vote today on the Graduate each semester to 438, four on an experimental basis. CoWlcil's proposed revision of hours credit. ... ~c~rcJmg to Dr. Merri.J,l. G. th~- ~-o~t., ..• ~- .. , ~ ·-···"~ . ,,.Md~~as .... J;P;tnPflJ'l!-..ij.Y~ .. plant Be~qng<il. ~r: .. ~( Li· .,. ·.The·.·'l'.eco.tnp~enrledi!cru.nges y~n~ ..M4 ~o.,.~~~~ ·in braries. ~t ti:e Uni:v:erstty, ~e '{:aL"e tbe£117esnili1inf::~wsllJ!i- genetics. .t::;ru;1 exper.ilii~t LS'"being carr1ed versilty status an'd: the desig- -English. Delete course " out becaus~ of "repeated re- oofion of .the Division of Grad- 458, Studies in American quests by students and by uate Studies as the Graduate t.ranscenden1Jalism. Add 41&, various student grougs" with School. studies in Chaucer.

your bumblebee

The Legislature approved a proposal last week to appoint a bipatii.san committee to in­vestigate the possibility of major constitutional revision.

Norma Murdoch (BPOC) pointed out the vast dispari­ties between the written con­stitution and practice and the increased strength of the WGA and MRC as factors warrant­ing the investigation.

Another bill proposed by Adele Patrick (SAM) ap­proved the formation of a committee to explore the pos­sibility of developing the gar­dens into a student activity center.

additional :fmancial support Th Is · 1 d -History. Delete 425 Tudor from the adm_ inistration. . e proposa me u e: and Ear:ly Stu""t E'ngland. -Making possible the am- ....

The new library hours wil endment of the bylaws by . a The course will be replaced by be: · · tead f a 300 . level course with the Monday-Thursday 8:30 a. m.- simple maJO!"Ity ins o . a same title.

two-thirds· vote. 11 P:m. -Sociology - Anthropology.

Fnday 8:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Grad Council On1y AddJ course 464, Seminar: Re-(Reserve 11 p m) Making the Graduate Coun-

' . . cil instead of the entire fac- rearch in Applied! Antbropo-Saturday 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. logy. Sunday 2 p.m.-11 p. m. uUy responsible for recom- -------All services will be avail- mending candidates for de-

able until the new closing grees. S d A b d

degree~

Enroll in one of three exciting classes. Charger R/T, Coronet R;T, or Dart GTSport. Each has its own dis· tinctive sporty style, but all three have a lot in com­mon. Like automatic transmissions, widtl·tread red line t:res, special handling packages, and a long list of other standard and optional features.

:A,~ ~~~ ~?=.._ ~~\ ,., ~·

Dodge Coronel R/T

To help you make the grade, the standard engines for the Scat Pack include a 340-cu.·in. VB for the Dart GTS. And for Charger R/T and Coronet R/T, a 440 Magnum V8. Or for a more accelerated course, you can order the optional 426 Hemi.

All three members of the Scat Pack offer distin· guishing marks at no extra cost. Bold bumblebee stripes wrapped around the rear. Or Rallye stripes along the side. Or if you prefer to be a little more modest, no stripes at all. It's your choice. Ready for class? With the Scat Pack, you've got it. Why not sign up at your nearby Dodge Dealer's and get your Bumblebee Degree, today?

Dodge ~ CHRYSLER M01DRS CORPORADDN

To add some color to campus, get your Official Dodge Scat Pack Jacket in the official "Dodge Red"

Color-with the authentic embroi­dered "bumble­bee" design on front and back. Send for yours today.

r------------------~ FILL OUT AND MAIL TO: Hughes-Hatcher·Suffrln, 1133 Shelby at Slate, Detroit, Michigan 48226. Attn.: Mr. Gus Anton.

Enclosed is a check or money order (made payable to Hughes-Hatcher-Suffrin) for$ to cover cost of ___ jackets at $9.95 each. Available sizes: S, M. L. XL, XXL. (Add 4% sales tax for delivery in Michigan.)

Name Size

Address~-----------------------­

City State Zip

Norma Murdoch announced that the library hours would be extended, beginning Nov. 13, until 11 p. m. on an ex­perimental basis.

hours, Bertllroog said. -Removing the require- fu ;y' roa The experimental changes ment that the secretary of the

mean, in effect, that the li- faculty be the parliamentar- Program Taking brary will remain open one ian. additional hour each day of -Election r3Jther than ap- Annlications the week except Friday and pointment of one of the Bow- :rr Saturday. man Gray members of the . Berthrong did not say how oouncil. long the experiment would -Changing a quorum of the last. faculty from one-half to one-

--------------- third.

The Scandinavian Sem[nar is now accepting applications for its study abroad program in Denmark, Finland, Norway or Sweden for the academic

to

dance or show-

it's IN OUT

in Clothes

Professionally Drycleaned and Finished

XL CLEANERS PA 2-1027

Across From The Tavem On Cherry St.

Graduate Council recom-mendations for oourse chang­es w:ill aJso be presented for vote. Included are:

Biology Changes -Biology: Delete courses

434, advanced vertebrate zo­ology-:rnammalogy; 441, popu­lation dynamics; and 444, hy­drobiology.

Change 427a, 427b, phycolo­gy, two hotn"s credit each semester to 427, four hours

MEN • URATE •

WOMEN WINSTON-SALEM SCHOOL

OF SELF-DEFENSE nos w. First Street 724-7427

year 1968-69. · The student in ·the seminar

program stays 2 to 8 weeks with a family in the Scandi­navian country of his cboice, using the language druly and sharing in the activities of the corrunwli.ty ..

He is completely separated from his fellow American stu­dents throughout tile seminar year except during the periods of intensive language instruc­tion and during the three gen­eral courses conducted under the supervision of the semi­nar's American director, Dr. Adolph G. Anderson, Dean of New COllege of Hofstra Uni· versity. , .

Over 100 American colleges and t.miversities have given either partial or full ·credit for the Seminar year.

For complete information writ e to SCANDINAVIAN SEMINAR, 140 West 57tb Street, New York. N. Y. lOOlt.

STEVE·'S ltali.an ~Ristorante

Best in llal.ian Food Spapelll and Pizza

ALSO AN AMERICAN· ~ENtJ'.

Open 11 :00. A M.-ioioo.P ... M •. OLOSED·SUIDAY . : . . , .

112·. Oakwood Drive . _

L------------------~-------------------------------<ACROSS FROM THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER>:·

'• . .

"

. ·)

I

CJ Cc Fr Sc M

Ri N< Ju C<

is sit

stl to to A~

' ar gu

ve of

pll Se La m•

' G1

.1-

~

ca Pr ce de tel er fr<

be or, co ce pu de of . su tic Cc P<l co en so Sc tic co

by pr th to thl of sb In! co ito stJ le< Al de a its tic

va cu de: joi cei

in pr• frc fl'c ne1 Sol ha in~ ing ari inll is

1 Se< "VI we les hm cor fre not tic1 we to

lr

Page 3: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

lt.

rill be lall of t Dan Arling- '

:tivilies Thurs-

'· two 1 were in At- ' in tbe

il3ment ICn the vent to

~EILL ..... rbfs New

de es

den-c·redit

four

.Plant ~w-in .1..1 ::ourse erican

415,

Tudor gland. :ed by lh the

iOlogy. ~: Re-hropo-

r • rng

minar ations >gram orway demic ..

mnar weeks candi-hoi.ce, yand of the

!ll'ated 1n stu-!lllinar eriods astnro-e gen-under semi·

r, Dr. aan of 1 Uni·

>lieges given credit

nation LVIAN

57th lOOJJ.

" "

. , '

·Federal Judge To Address Law School's Fall Banquet

By MACK MASON STAFF WRITER

Federal Judge J. Braxton Craven of the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals will speak Friday at 8 p. m. at the Law School's fall banquet in the Magnolia Room.

Craven, whose court sits 'in Richmond, Va., is a former North Carolina Superior Court Judge and Federal District Court Judge. · A native of Morganton, he

is a graduate of Duke Univer· sity Law School. .

Members of the Law School student body will be admitted to the banquet free, according to Thm Robinson, Student Bar Association president.

Tickets for wives and dates are $2.25, and tickets for other guests are $2.50.

A reception honoring Cra· ven will be held in the foyer of the Magnolia Room at 7:15.

Robinson also announced plans for a Law Placement Seminar to be held at the Law School prior to the Christ­mas recess.

Seminar chairman Wesley Grant, second-year law stu·

dent of Kannapolis, said that til€ seminar is designed to give the University's stu<lent barristers infonnation con· cerning the professional op­)JOrtunities available to them after obtaining their law de­grees and passng the State Bar Exam.

Grant hopes to bring to the campus an array of young lawyers to discuss til€ pros and cons of indivi· dual practice, practice with a large firm, work with federal and state agencies, legal aid, the Judge Advocate General's Corp, and cler_king for fed­eral and State JUdges.

Wake Alumni

Most of the participants in the program will be recent graduates of the Wake Law School. During the evening seminar they will explain the requirements for the positions, amount of discretion and re­sponsibility allowed, method of obtaining the positions, salaries, and fringe benefits.

In announeing the up-com· ing events, Robinson noted that more is being demanded

· of the Student Bar Associa-

· AA UP Condemns Student Protestors

WASHINGTON-The Ameri· ·can Association of University Professors has condemned re· cent student demonstrations designed to stop campus in­terviews or to prevent speak· ers invited to the campus from speaking.

The AAUP, which has long been one of the most liberal organizations in the academic community, warned that re­cent protests at several cam· puses across the nation are destructive to llhe principles of academic freedom. ·

The AAUP position was is­sued in the form of a resolu­tion adopted by the AAUP Council, the organization's policy-making board, which consists of 30 elected repres­entatives. National Student As­sociation President Edward Schwartz endorsed the resolu­tion, when he was asked fur comment. · .. · ·

Destructive Action

The resolution says "action by individuals or grofips to prevent speakers invited to the campus from speaking, to disrupt the operations of the institutions in the course of demonstrations, or to ob­struct and restrain other members of the academic community and campus vis· itors by physical force is de­structive of the pursuit of learning and of a free society. All components of the aca­demic community are under a strong obligation to protect its processes from these tac­tics."

The resolution, through its vague wording, refers to fa· culty members as well as stu· dents. Faculty members have joined students in several re­cent protests.

Series of Protests

The AAUP position comes in the wake of a series of protests against recruiters from the armed services and f1·om other organizations con· nected with the military. Some of the demonstrations have been suocessful in keep­ing recruiters from conduct· ing interviews or in tempor­arily shutting down a bulid­ing where miJi.tary research is conducted.

Robert Van Waes, associate secretary of tihe AAUP, sa1d, "We're all for dissent. But we think all persons, regard­less of their beliefs, should have the same freedoms. Our concern is that the larger freedom (freedom of speech) not be eroded away by par­ticular forms of protest which we think may be a challenge to that larger freedom."

Van Waes emphasized that

the AAUP bias been promot· ing greater academic freedom for students. The organiza­tion is one of five behind a joint statement on the tights and freedoms of students. This statemerrt endorses sucll rights as a student role in policy-making and due pro­cess for students in disci­plinary cases.

No Support

In endnrsing the AA UP stand, SchwaJ:Itz said, '"While there are some points where we (NSA) would support a student ·strike if it was neces· sary to achieve a tactical ob­jective for student power or educational refonn, we can in oo way support demonstr.a· tions where the goal is to pre­vent students from seeing re­cruiters or to expel recruiters from the campus because of the organization· whicll they represent."

Schwartz explained: his view by asking, "In what way does the left's attempt ro rld the university of recruiters whom they oppose differ from the right's frequent attempts to ban Communists from the campus?"

He added that there arE! ways of confronting recruiters, even sitting down m front of them; without blocking the passage of students who want to speak to them.

Favors Open Fonun

Schwartz said he has pro­posed that "any :recrll!loter coming to campus be reqwred to participate in an open forum to answer questions: if students so request." If the

. recruiier refuses to meet this requirement, then he shouid oot be permitted on the cam­pus, he added.

Schwartz's proposal would seriously affect military re­cruiters, who generally are not permitted to discuss im· portant military policies like the Vietnam war. The war 1s the primary concern of the student protests.

Explaining his proposal, Schwartz said, "The grounds here . would reflect the re­cruiters willingness to· adhere to the standards of an aca­demic community rather than the nature of the recruiter's political affiliation."

The AAUP resolution, adopt­ed by the Oouneil during a closed meeting last weekend, did not mention any institu­tions where pro~sts have been held or any particular organizations, such as Stu· dents for a Democratic So­ciety, which have been spon· soring the demonstrations.

For Your Fail Parties

and Blasts ...

·~ .

:.

CITY BEVERAGE is the place to go for the Best Prices on ell of yo4r favorit~ broncls of lee<old 8ev4rcges

' . ~

PA 51411 ~ ~

tion this year than the "blouse­keeping function" that it has served primarily during the past several years.

Robinson himself rode into office last year on a wave of dissatisfaction with the re· latively passive role of the SBA.

His administration is now under a mandate from the Law School Student body to study the system of nomi­nating officers for the SBA and to investig·ate the leader­ship structure resulting from the present form and proce· dures of the organization.

Tom Jones of Sylva current­ly is heading a constitutional study committee set up to of· fer alternatives to .the pres· ent system. After public hear­ings last spring and elrl.ensive study since then, Joru:s' com­mittee recently sublllltted al· ternatives to the SBA Council which is expected to act on the report at its next meet­ing.

New Constitution

Any cllanges made would have to be approved by the Law School student body and would probably require re­writing of the SBA Constitu· tion.

Though Robinson says be is trying to steer a more ac­tive COUTSe for the SBA, be notes that the group is se­verely restric-ted by a lack of fums. According to Robmson his total working budget is just $2.100, $1,900 of whic'h is committed to banquets, the Law Review, and the Law

· School Placement Brochure. The remainder must be di~

vided between purchasing sup­plies, paying speaker honor­ariums, and o~her incidental expenses.

Robinson hopes that the SBA will ·receive some relief on Law Review expenses from the Univens~ty.

"The Law Review has ap­proached the ~nt where _it must increase 1ts budget m order to survive. Costs have almost doubled since the first issue was· printed in 1964," he said. "The University admin­istration is sympathetic to the problem and has express;e<I its willingness to work Wlth the Law School toward some solution," Rob1nson sa_id.

Twice A Year

'I'he Law Review, now print· ed twice annually, is mailed to Law School alumni. How· ever, it is ·set up as an in­tramural effort and uses only student writers.

Many Law Schools solicit their main articles from au· thorities outside the school and call on students for short articles called "case notes."

An SBA committee current­ly is studying the feasibility of a television-telephone ib.ook­up whicll would allow law school graduates to ~emain in Winston-Salem wh:ile they studied for the bar exam wJJiich foll'OWIS .their senior year.

Now students have to move to Chapel Hill foz til€ two­month bar review course which is taught only in Cha-

WANT TO SET A

CAREER OBJECTIVE

OF $25,000 OR MORE

IN ANNUAL INCOME?

This is a realistic goal

f{)r any man entering

Grant's Management

T r a i n i n g Program.

Starting sal,aries from

$455 to $541 per

month.

We are a rapidly ex­

panding bi1lion doUar

retail chain -of over

11 0 0 stores with a

reputation· for p'aying

top incomes.

Ask your Pl'acement

Direcoor for a copy of

our brochure and sig'll

up for an interview.

Friday, Nov. ID, 1967,

lloyd Jackson

W. T. GRANT CO • 1441 Broadway, N.Y. C.

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY LIGHTS . . . came to "the Boondocks" last week after com­plaints from students that the lack of lighting was an open invitation to vandalism.

College Union Committee Outlines Movies For Week

College Union will present a film Friday and Saturday that film committee chairrn.an Hayes McNeill calls "one of two reli:g'i~us fi.lms Wlor.tizy of being shuwr1 to an intelli­gent audience."

'!'he film, "The Gospel Ac­cording to Saint Matthew," said· McNeill, is classed in the same category as Carl Drey­er's "The Passion of Joan of Arc," made in France .at the end of the silent era.

"The Gospel" is a recent film made by a young Italian communist, Pier Paolo Pas­olini "roth runazing fervor and' power," McNeill says.

The film's case is streng·th· ened because :be uses non­actors and stark black and whtie photography, continues McNeill.

Not de Mille

"And it goes without say­ing," the film chairman says, "That the director uses non-actors and that Parolini does n~t run :his locations and

pel Hill. Such a hook-up would pipe

the three-hour evening lec· tures into a Wake law school classroom, and . according to Robinson, save each student approximately $150-$200.

The SBA also plans ro have representaJI.ive political fig· ures speak at the law school in connection with the spring gubernatorial primaries.

s'tars through de Mille." "The film has been highly

praised almost universally," says McNeill. "And so wheth­er one agrees with the sub­jected matter or not is im­material. It is recommended."

It will be shown at 7 and 9 p. m. Friday and 7:30 p. m. SatUTday in DeTamble Audi­torium in Tribble Hall.

Other films this week in­clude a full length classic fea­ture and three short'S on Mon­day and .a full length foreign film Wednesday.

"Nosferatu," Monday's clas­sic, is an unofficial version of Bram Stoker's novel "Dra· cula," starring M.ax Schreck. In addition there will be clips from Bela Lugosi's original "Dracula," (the whole film is not available) and two films from W. C. Fields, "Th.e Odd Ball" and "Salome." The feature begins a1 7:30 p. m. in DeTamble.

Third Man Wednesday's foreign film,

"The Th:iTd Man," will be shown at 8 p. m. in DeTam­ble. 'J1he movie stars Joseph Cotten, Orson Wells and Er­nest Deutsch with Alida Valli, 'I'revor Howard and Wilfred Hyde· White.

The film won an Academy A Wiard for Best ~n<emoto­graphy, the Grand Prize at Cannes, and the Critic's Award in England. The screenplay is by Gra:ham Greene, based on his own novel.

Mr. Wrangler~ Wremember,

the "W" is silent.

If somebody tries to tell you that all slacks ore cut like Mr. Wrangler, resist. Hold out for no·flob trimness. And don't foil for anything that doesn"t hove Wrongloki!P, the wrinklefighter finish. lr means neatness forever. ironing never. These Hondo8

slacks (the Saturday night jeans I of wide-wale corduroy in whiskey, putty and charred green $7.00. Oxford b.d. shirt in strong colors • $5.00. And everything wears bet· tar because there·s KODEL8 in it -a niuscle blend of 50% Kadel

!polyester/SO% combed cotton. FRANK STITII CO.,

Wmston-Sale:m; \ Ooll"desr's Kernersville;

Store,

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Nov. 6,1967 PAGE TJ1R:EE

Lights Installed In Boondocks Due To Vandalism Complaints

Lights were installed in the parking lot behind Wait Chap­el last week due to student complaints that the lot was improperly li-ghted·.

The parking lot, conunonly known as "the boondocks" has been the scene of increased vandalism ·to students' auto­mobiles. Students have com­plained in the past that the lots were poorly lighted, but

nothing was done. Gene T. Lucas, vice presi­

dent of til€ University for busi­ness and finance, said the lights were installed "for safe­ty.

"! received a nwnber of offidal and unofficial com­plaints," he said. "I received numerous requests from stu­dents that there was not enough light in the parking

Coeds Billed Additional $5 F.,or Semester's Room Rent

By UNDA LEVI Due -to an error in the pre­

payment booklet distributed to students this summer, the treasurer's office is in the process of sending coeds bills for an additional $5 room rent for the semester.

The notices are being sent to those coeds who were pre­paid before registration, bu~ not to th.ose whose parents Ultilize the nront!hly 'tuition P'ayment plan whioh provided for the additional $5.

Coeds who paid their tuition and: board at registration were assessed at that time.

s~ssed and credted to the ac­counts."

Lucas said that the treasur­er's office "wanted to make sure that they didn't bill peo­ple who had credits coming in."

In addition, the office had to wait until! all charges and credits had . been posted.

Rather than re-assess those who caught the m:istake and sent in the proper amount, the treasurer's office decided to wait until everything had been posted.

lots, so I immediately started working on them."

He said he drove past the lot at night and saw that it was an "open invitation" to vandalism.

He sa'id he didn't know why the lights had not been in­stalled in the past.

He said the lights are only temporary. They are on wood­en poles and will be replaced by metal ones when the lot is completed.

The lights were installed by Duke Power Co. at no expense to the University.

Lucas said Duke Power will maintain the lights, and the University will pay only a small monthly charge for the electricity used.

MEN • KARATE •

WOMEN WINSTON-sALEM SCHOOL

OF SELF-DEFENSE 1105 W. First Street 724-7427

The booklet quoted room rates for coeds as $135 per semester, when the rate had actually risen to $140.

The administration announc· ed the rise in room rates last December, in conjunction with the rise in the activity fee.

HAVE YOUR PORTRAIT MADE NOW

FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING The booklets were distri­

buted to students in August and the mi'stake was not dis­covered until two weeks later, when .tt was too late to notify students.

Your gift portrait says, more than any other gift, "I'm thinking of you." It's the gift that's most treasured, for it's the gift only you can give!

Coeds were oot billed soon· er, according to Gene T. Lu­cas, vice president in charge of business and financial af­fairs, because "it takes about this length of ·time for all scholarship credts to be as-

Wake Forest University Phone 723-4640

COME SEE US For the Best Car Wash In Town and Receive a Free Wax Job •..

Clip this ad and bring it to

REYNOLDA MINIT CAR WASH at

-REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTER

WAUHEGANS ®

hand-sewn vamps with the

must-be-just-so lookl

Hand-sewn vamps ••. hand-lasted, genuine moccasin construction ..• soft mellow leather uppers •.. sturdy­wear soles. Add it up, Gentlemen! We have your size; come get yours NOW!

$20.00 IN BLACK AND OLIVE

Sherwood Plaza Shopping Center

Robin Hood at Pe.tce Haven Road

QUAUTV· I VALUE

STORE HOURS DAn. Y - 10 'til 9 p. m. SAT. - 10 'til 6 p. m.

Page 4: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

®1~ ~nlli'·.·;itu~ ~lurk An All-American. Newspaper

HENRY H. BOSTIC, JR. RALPH A. SIMPSON

Co-Editors

DICK HEIDGERD Business Manager

----------- ----- .. -----LINDA LEVI. Associate Editor J. D. WILSON. Assistant Editor

LINDA CARTER, Managing Editor SUSANNE BENNE'M', Feature Editor

WINSTON..SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, NOV. 6, 1967

Two Wrong Worlds There were two ,,·orlds in

\Vinston-Salem Thursday night, and at one time. the world" were less than <l mile apart. One was a mass of hand-clapping, hip­g~-rating \Vake Forest students, oblivious to eYer:dhing but a blaring combo called the Fa·b­ulous Five.

The other world was scattered here and there over the cit~·. led by Negro hoodlums. The citizens of both ·worlds were frustrated: the wrought-up emotions were released in happiness and gaiety here. and in anger and dis­plea,ure there.

Here and there never met phy­sicalh·. but the student's world begai1 to dissolve early _Friday morning. For two da~·s the people at \Vake Forest forg-ot about theil· o"·n plemmres and problems and focused attention on the riot­ing- Negros.

This shift in focus, this aware­ness. was good. As one threaten­~·ng Kegro woman who telephoned the l:nh·ersity Frida;\· said, "You white people out there have been on your hill too long." It is true that \Vake Forest has for too long been unaware of the problems of the citv which it influences so great)~.: We have been in the clouds too long.

There should be other ways, howe,·er, that the University could reach down to bring the Negroes up. In a like manner, there are better ways the Negro community could let its plight

be known. The destruction of property. the threatening tele­phone calls, and the imposing of curfews only cause students to resent the Negroes, to become bitter.

Two worlds will never meet if actions such as the rioting con­tinue. Resentment can only cause separation. Let neither group re­main bitter is our sec.ond plea. Our first is for the two communi­ties to work to help each other.

Why So Late? Thanks to the prompt action of

the University's new vice presi­dent in charge of financial af­fairs, student car parking facili­ties no.w have adequate lighting.

Gene T. Lucas, after receiving several official and unofficial re­quests for better lighting and per­sonally observing what he called an "open invitation" to vandal­ism, quickly remedied the situa­tion.

And what's more, he did so with relatively insignificant add­ed expense to the University. Duke Power Co. installed the five new lights free. The only expense will be small monthly charges for electricity used.

Our only question about the whole matter is why it couldn't have been done before-like five years ago.

·A· Saving Homecoming Homecoming has been saved.

With its revamped, three-day format, variety and the concerts, well-attended events and dancing on campus, Homecoming '67 must be called the most successful homecoming in at least four years. Past events have been marked by confusion, cancella­tions. and conformity. Dance sites were switched from the campus and the Colliseum to even the Farmer's :\iarket. Perform­ers such as the Coasters evident­ly didn't mind forgetting about 55,000 if they could forget about 3,000 jeyed collegians waiting their conce1-ts.

It was all different this year, and the "·hole program waR changed. Homecoming began in earnest Thursday night with one of the swinging-est parties eve1·, right in the heart of the campus. Dispite quizzes on Frida\' most ,.;tudents thought about clctt~s and drinkinf! and forg-ot about the hooks. Two top notch concerts,

one Friday night and the other Saturday afternoon, followed. Saturday night came the Deacon­Gamecocks dash, and then there were post-game fraternity and residence house parties.

Another factor that improved the Homecoming idea was the variety of the two concerts. Simon and Garfunkel. with their Eng­lish folk-rock sound, didn't ap­peal to some students, although the Friday night concert was a sell-out. Saturday afternoon, how­ever, Wait Chapel was entirely a different world, with the soul sound of Smoke'• Robinson and t h ~ Miracles. ·

College Union deserved much credit for its hard work that began last spring and continued until the wee hours Sunday morn­ing. Three individuals, president .Jeff Kincheloe. publicity director .J. D. Wilson, and advisor Mark Reece should be proud. And the University should be apprecia­tive.

Draft Deal S.quared North Carolina college men

can breathe easier now that the seeh1ingly blood-thirsty draft law which eaused manv of them to ·be reclassified Vietn'am-bound has been revised. The question of ;;tudent deferment has partially heen taken out of the hands of the miltar.v and placed under the authorit~· of more qualifierl judg­es of academic progress-univer­~ity registrars.

The new guidelines, which re· quire a ;;tudent to "make normal and satisfactory progt·ess each year for not more than four yea1·s," are most significant he­cause they allow the academi­cians to decide whether a f>tudent is making- the progress. Workin,g within the bounds of the new law, of course, registrm·.o; can now recommend deferment on the basis of a student's real pro-

gress instead of a list of cold, inflexible percentages.

Registrar Grady S. Patterson and assistant registrar Mrs. Mar­garet Perry became more con­cerned each day with the fury of mail f1·om local draft boards, and thei1· concern has paid off for approximately half the Uni­versity's men. While several hun­dred other college registrars in the state accepted the old, unfair draft law, Mrs. Perry and Patter­son stayed busy drawing up plans for a more reasonable proposal. Last week at a state meeting of rep-ist.rars, the Patte~son-Perry plan was overwhelmmgly t•n­rlo,·sed.

Several hundred relieved men are testimony of the gratitude that Rhould he offererl to the University's registrars.

Foundrd Januar:v 15. 1916, as th<• stud<•nt n<·14.l>••r of Wake !."orest University. Old f'..old and Ulack Is J)ttbllshcd each Monday llttrln~ the school year except durin~: examination and holiday periods as directed b.v the Wak" Forest Publications Board Mailed each Tues· day, one day after publlcallon date.

Member of the 1\•:soelated Collc~;late P•·•·ss. nepr~scnted for National J\dvertlslnc by Nn· tlonal Educational 1\dvertislng Service, Inc .• a division of Reader's Digest Sales and Serv· Ice. SubscriJ>tiDn rate: S3.50. Second-Cia-. postage paid, Winston-Salem, N. C. Form 3579 should be mailed to Dox 7SG7, Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, N. c. 21109. Printed\ b:Y The NashvlllP Graphic, .Na~h,·lllc, N. C.

Two Different Worlds: Students Danced ;while A City Was Torn By Racial Strife Let

FREE·D·MAN Ring

.•

By GLENN FREEDMAN

One impression that too many stu­dents hold is .that profesrors are not human. The biology department inform­ed me that this i'S incorrect, but the psychology department was not sure as all the relevent material was not in, and the sociology department said they woU'ld study the .problem providing I would help t'hem get a government grant.

My own abt.mdant files show only the personal habits of the professors, which I could not print, but whic'h do mean that some human qualities exist. One of ' the more prevalent traits seems to be a Spock complex (Star Trek variety, , not Dr.). ·

Terry Sanford Expected To Battle SaiD Ervin For U. S. Senate Seat

However, I felt I could not draw a definilte conclusion until I talked to one of the breed in his natural habitat. So I built a fallout shelter and -pasted the walls with blue books and fil'ied the ·coffee pot with red pencils·.

I chose to invite Dr. Pierpont Fledg­ling of the Home EconOIIJlics Depart­ment. Dr. Fledgling gr-aduated from Parsons after flunking out of six of the Big 10 schools. He went to Duke on waivers during the off season and, after a fine comeback, Dr. Fledgling came

By CARROLL LEGETT

Terry Sanford will run for the United States Senate in 1968. The press is pre­dicting it, incumbent Sam Ervin is "as­suming" it, and Sanford enthusiasts are wishing it. But Terry Sanford, the for­mer North Carolina governor, is hav­ing little to say other than giving eva­sive, yet suggestive, answers to the queries of newsmen.

For a long while, persons have pre­aicted that if Ervin, the state's senior senator, did not soon retire or become incapacitated he and Sanford ·eventually would vie for Ervin's Sena·te seat. San· ford has never made any bones about the fact that he would like to represent North Carolina in the Senate. Likewise, he never has tried to conceal that if going to Washington meant challenging <me of the state's two senators, it would be Ervin.

Gentlemen's Agreement

There seems to be a gentleman's agreement between Sanford and the state's junior Senator, Everete Jordan, that the two will not cross political

· ·~ Stiidents Today· Are Idealistic

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONlTOR

Reports flowing in from all over the United States challenge the easy im· pression that today's college students are a lawless crowd, engaged mainly in riots and picketing, taking drugs, be­coming hippies and at war with so­ciety.

A Gallup Poll conducted by Reader's Dige~t on 426 college campuses found, ior instance, that 51 per cent of those questioned did not know of a single stu­dent who l1ad tried LSD or marijuna. But it did conclude that six per cent of tne country's six million college students had done some kind of drug-experiment­ing.

Those who speak to college audiences are continually reporting fllrat the pre­:::ent crop of collegians are "exciting.'' a&k the sharpest kind of questions, are not afraid to challenge opinions or pro­fessors.

They want courses that are relevant to today's big events, such as poverty, racialism, and the underdeveloped world. Some are asking far a say in the ·hiring of professors. Moot are in­t-enS>ely idealistic. And many resent the fact tha,t the news media give more publicity to the hippies than to those who win scholarships.

It lw~ also bEen discovered that stu­dents who have to work ha·rd to finance t.!1eir college education haven't much time for drugs, hippy behavior o•· "free ::rcech" rows with the faculty.

On Mini-Things HARTFORD COURANT

Ju~t a short time ago, if you had ask­ed someone to tell you the first word that came into his mind' when you said mini, he probably would have answered mouse, for Mirmie Mouse. But not any more. Today the answer would range irom miniskirt to ministate. And it's nOt :tbout to end.

Ikcently Moscow radio reported that the Soviet Union has a mini-river. The mini-river is the Reprua River, which is used as a natural reservoir at Gagary, Soviet Georgia. It measures some 65.6 feet from its source to its mouth.

One can only wonder where all this will end. There are loads of possibilities .. F'Dr in"tunce, in the future, workers will demand mini-d<tys and mini-weeks, but no doubt that will do more than mini-complain when they sec their mini­salaries.

wires. There certainly is no sueh agree­ment between Sanford and Ervin. In fact there has been open hostility diating back at least to Ervin's endorsement and active support of 1964 gubernatorial candida~ Dan K. Moore who opposed and defaeted Sanford-supported L. Rich­ardson Preyer.

Ervin helped line up the Democratic "Old Guard" for Moore and denied the Sanford faction an opportunity to steer the -course of North Carolina for another four years. The Sanford organization has never forgiven Ervin for his role in the '64 primary.

Some North Carolindans lend to look upon Ervin as an institution and many younger voters mistakenly believe that his tenure in ·the Senate is longer than it is in fact: The 71-year-old Ervin has served only thirteen year..s, cOIIIling to Washington ~rom the Nol'th Carolina Supreme Court in 1954 to fill the seat of Clyde R. Hoey.

More Than Longevity

ed to answer with enthusiasm any call which Sanford might send out.

Organization Functioning

Sanford has a political organization still functioning in 1Jhe state. Since San­ford lett office in 1964, the Young Demo­cratic Club of North Carolina has been Sanford influenced and many of the organ.irw1tion's most active members look to Sanford as their mentor. They have maintained he won't run unless there is some indication from the people that they want him and will vote for him in both -the primaries and the general election.

One of Sanford's classirc comments was in response to a question by a friend who wanted to know i.f Sanford would run for the Senate if he· knew he ('Ouldn't win.

Sanford's simple, yet te1l.ing reply: "I don't trot my horse just to hear the harness ~attle." That was a pretty good statement of his· political philosophy.

Incurred . Disfpvor

to Wake Forest in ·a trade involving two assistant professors, one instructor, and four pictures CJof Harold Tribble suitable • for framing.

Altooug:h not a Baptis-t himself, J;>ier­pont said that being with a church af­fi1a.ted school has no real bearing on him. ··

'·I have always believed that church "tuff is good for people who need it."

Dr. Fledgling arrived at my simulated r.ffice punctually and explained that lie was on time because his wife thought it was "nice to talk to the students oc­casionally as it keeps one in touch with the little people."

"Sir," I asked, "what do you think of the students here?"

"They are just kids, the bulk of them, 18 to 21 years old."

"Very astute, sir." "And because they are just kids, they

should be chaperoned, but I mysell would not do it because it reminds me of my pas,t and I cry every time J think of all the fun I missed."

"As a pro0fessor, what d:o you think about the drafit?"

It's all right, but you could close the

H di f · Sanfo.rd's ....... , 6 rnaton'al admi'ru'stration air vent a little more." oey ed while in o fice and Ervm 5u.v<' · succeeded to 'his seat by appointment was marked by direction. Sanford es- . "I'm goin~ to ~ave to change the sub-fr~m Gov. Winiam B. Umstead. So in tabl~hed definite ai~s and worked . to Jec\ now, s1r. GlVe !Jle your opinion of sprte of his grandfatherly appearance, a~eve !hem, sol!lebmes at. the nsk ou;, acuity at Wake. . . Ervin does not quite fit the sterotvpe of mcurnng the disfavor of voters. He I ~grE!7, boy, most of the b.me 1t of the silver-haired Southern '.'<';,ii.l:tgr'' :ndid incur their great ~avor when. he,:., acts, hke It:sc ~.t a ;~ake .. T~e,~n,t~6orit~

. :·"'7 · .. · 1.: shed· thr 11' · 3% ····&1 _., "J>.·~ 0~ JIJ,'·:...t-'···Jof ·my collea!!ues,.m~t don't .. ru.v~e,ir . who .. had- possessory.,nghts on hiS seat__ pu . oug. a --~fr1rfri.'t":'1'rff&rtB\'!'hr;:.i 1i''.;~; ... ,t· w~"• '·'.>.'.if"'ii,T.J!.~ "' ,~·:m· rrr· ,( ·by virtue of tenure alone. Ervim'·'~~pu-'''~~'That disfavor ·.may have ngerea, but . ~~..., m .,us:.PJ..<il~e,: ~~·:.o~s. w .,.p tation then is based on more than mere the greater probability is that hind- have only · thetr hearts m 1t. Nont:th~ longevity. sight has soown justification and that less, we have _fun _at faculty_ ~eetings

Ervin is a champion of states' rights while Sanford in the past has been labeled as a liberal. But overnight, with the publication of his book ·'Storm Over the States," which analyzes the role of the states in the modern federal system. ~anford may have become mor-e of o:·!ates' rights theorist than Ervin.

There are who believe the ideas San­ford has proposed to s.trengthen the states might get a reasonable hearing in W <:shington legislative circles, but doubt that Ervin ever will be able to accomplis'h mur:h in this area.

Fresh Source

Sanford's ideas, though not necessary original, come from a f.resh course and Congressmen could co-me to the counsel table with with without feeling they were compromising themselves or their for­mer positions.

Sanford also has the advantage of age. He is 50; Ervin is 71. Young voters want to ca~ their ballots for young candi­dates, if possible. Sanford would be a natura:! choice for he helped bring the aura of ~th to North Carolina politics at the same time that John Kennedy carried it to Wiaruungton.

Many young voters and paPty workers cut their teetlh during the Sanford ad­ministration, and they could be expect-

Letters .... (All letters to the editor must be signed; names will be withheld on request. Spelling and punctuation are the writer's own.)

Campus Rats To the Editors:

I have recently noticed rats on cam­pus. Assuming they do not belong here. l think they should be removed. I have feveral sugges•tions:

1. Send Officer Hill on a seek and clestroy mission.

2. Post copies of Old Gold and Black in areas where they have been seen (Wingate, Huffman) to scare them away.

3. Request funds from the President's ;~at Control BHL With these ideas as a rtarting point, I suggest that the Student Government appoint a Committee on rtat Affairs to study the matter.

Kirk Jonas Class . of '71

North Carolina moved forward because even though hstemng to. as1rune pro-of it. posals is not my cup of tea. ·

Some say that Senator Sam is un· bea·table. Others say that if there· is one man who can do it, it is Terry Sanford. SeMtor Ervin already. has announced that he will seek reelection. All' it will ~ake is a word from Sanford to set the pot boiling.

"Do you think you are getting paid enough?" ·

"No, but teaching here beats the ·of. fers I keep getting from junior high s<:hools." .

"One final que:;tion. are professors hl.llllllan?"

"Only at night, my boy, only at night.'·,

Film 'Ulysses' Remarkable For Clarity And Brilliance

By D. J. LEMZA STAFF REVIEWER

Unusual is the word' fDr the movie made from James Joyce's novel "Ulys­ses.

The very fact th!at the film has been made deserves some attention;· and with the arrival of a highly tasteful and provocative method us~ to transform the masterpiece novel ·into a W(lrrt;hy film, others kulhls should be awarded to producer-director Joseph Strick.

Recently opened at .the Winstim Thea­tre for a limited engagement, "Ulysses" deserves the attention of the public and the more intellectually motivated au­dience because it is a major step in the photography of a literary work.

The film forces its audience to s-it U!l

and take notice of its visual and verbal images. If either of these images are dro.pped from the viewer's- perception

')lf the film the two hours of transfor­mation on the s>ereen is lost, and the film is worthless.

View Entirety One must view ·bhe ·entirety, not a per·

formance, a passage, or a directorial scene, but all. As it stands, the filni is remarkable for its clarity and brNliancy of movement. . Director Strick sticks closely. to the skeletal basis of the novel. The explora­tion of Dublin is under the watchful eye of one Leopold Bloom an Irish Jew, dur­ing the span of one day. Along .with this excursion Of Bloom we meet his wife Molly and a young' teacher-poet, Step-hen Daedalus. .

Their lives cros>S and re-cross during this period, and the observation is made that their lives are more than lives themselves, but representative of the su~ferings and joys of all people.

They . a~e pe~ple trying to fu!I'Ction from w1thm whil-e having Cl'ises of an mternal nature. Of course the book ex· plains :no~e and has considerably more dep·th m 1ts meanings and pronounce­ments, hut the film sets a record of its own in describing the plight of hwnans in a certain environment.

As a movie these wanderings of Bloom are a yisual and: verbal treat; the pro­grarnmmg of their motion is fascinating

without any superfluous shots or high­minded intellectualism. The film acts as a diary; and as such its viewpoint is self-centered. ·

Three Diaries But there are three diaries going full

force and the combination of all three is one achievement that must treat the sul)fleties with respect, and the more inflamatory par:ts of the novel with taste - even a bit of criticism.

As .moentioned before, the film follows the plot to the letter in the examples and the scenes that moSit people have been ·told about since the time they could read· serious literature. ·

Bloom's imagination, the trip to the street of the prosti­tutes, Daedalu's walk upon the beach, Bloom's rejection or reluctant acceptance in the ar~ fairs of Dublin, Bloom's meeting with Daeda" lus, and Molly. Bloom's

LEMZA famous sololoquy are all given a treatment of refined movie­making.

The minor characters are allowed to play their place on the SJtage of life.: Gone are absolute stereotypings of char· · a<:ters. What is· left is an honest evalua­tion of society and the ideas of a few people trapped in their existence.

Without reading the book, this reviewer finds the movie quite exceptional; neve11 has the irmer mind been penetrated (with .the exception of some ·of our ad­vanced directors). The results are fasci-. nating oo behold if not positive to agree· wlit'h.

The takers of the top three roles are admirably perfonned', and their inner selves are most aptly brought out with-. out strain of competition or harried di~ rection.

Milo O'Shea as Bloom, Maurice Roe­vas as young Daedalus, and Barbara Jefford as Molly tt.rrn in the most com· petent acting of the entire cast. ·They· speak their lines enthusiastically, and with a definite image of what character .they are playing. As with Miss Jefford's roUloquy, her intonations of \rordS are a full creative process. in itself,

'I

Page 5: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

think

going full all three treat the

-the more with

allowed to of life.: or char-. evalua-

of a few

'I

Students To Draw Plans For Local SSOC Chapter

OLD GOLD AND BLACK _Monday, Nov. 8, 186'1 PAGE FIVE

Student Greetings To Cheer Soldiers

WAKE FOREST STUDENT . . . Bill Amen, talks with three members of the Southern Stu­dent Organizing Committee (SSOC) after a

-PHOTO BY BUNN

meeting in DeTamble Wednesday evening. The meeting followed a series of lectures and discussions by the SSOC representatives.

- .

___.University Affected By Riots If the racial disorders in

Winston-Salem had few major consequences for Wake For­est, they did imbue the home­coming atmosphere with a quite different air and caused

a number of annoying incon­<'nniences.

· When the rioting began down­town 'l'hursday afternoon, few !;tudents knew anything about it. They went about as usual.

The pep rally went off with-out a hitch, and everyone

S l• b moved over to Reynolda Hall a IS ury .. for the College Union combo · • • party in the main lounge with (Continued from Page 1) the Fabulol!S Five.

ered the birth of the United The announcement at t!he Nations in San Franciso. dance that Wake men dating!

Salisbury joined The New Salem girls were to take them York Times staff in 1949 and back by way of Silas Cr~k soon was back in Russia as Parkway caused some specu-

. correspondent, a post he held lation. five years. His series of arti- But it was not until radfo cles in these years, called ' stations started reporting "Russia Re-Viewed'' won him what was happenir.g that stu­the Pulitzer Prize for excel- dents really knew what was lence in foreign reporting ·,in going on and then it didn't 1954. It was expanded into a cause any great concern. book, "American in Russia," Rumors Spread in 1955. Rmnors spread quickly as in

Soviet authorities objected most cases w'hen there is to these articles and barred little information about a him from their country for dangerous situation. Some

an hour as traffic streamed by.

Finally the sergeant return­ed to tell the three that no more police escorts were avail-able. After a short talk, the sergeant agreed to take the copy to the bus station.

Friday classes went off as usual; however, there was more discussion about the riot situation than about Shakes­peare or calculus or plant anatomy.

The University's food ser· vice was also affected because of fue failure of some of :its Negro employees to show up for work.

Friday night there was much speculation about what would happen to students at­tending the Simon and Gar­funkle concert, which did not get over until almost 11 when the · curfew on automobile travel in the city went into effect.

five years. During this time of the braver souls on cam- Date Problems he worked as a reporter on pus even went downtown to B t t"- f · the Times city staff and b th 'tu t' u ,,..,e were ew lii.COn-. • o serve e . Sl • a IOn. . veniences except for some rotet notabl~ :rticles do~ ur- About ~dnlght Thursday males who had difficulty get-

By BARRY ROBINSON STAFF WRITER

Approximately 30 Univer­sity students will moot Tues­day ·to formulate plans for the establiS'hment of a chapter of the Southern Student Organi­

zing Committee (SSOC) on campus.

The meeting was arranged Wednesday following a l!eries of lectures and discussions by four of the principle officers of SSOC, ·a regiona-l organiza-tion founded several ye-ars ago as· a civil rights group which has now expanded its policies to include free speech, and especially, peace.

At. the meeting, to be held in the Interdenominational Center at 8 p. m. Tuesday, leaders of the caanpus move­ment wHl discuss the formal ot'ganiza•lion of the group and suggest possible. courses of ac­tion to work- towaro securing peace in Vietnam.

Many of the students, in­strumental in the organizing of this group, are active in the Vietnam Peace Vigils held every Saturday a,t the main pwt office in Winston-Salem.

Student-Oriented

For these students, SSOC represents a "more expansive, more student-oriented group," said Laura Jordon, senior of Miama, Fla., one of the prin­ciple campus leaders.

"The basic problem fa-ced by SSOC," said Lyn We~ls, campus traveler for SSOC, "is to get peo;ple interested, to break down campus· isolation and get students out of their ivory towers·."

According to Miss Wells, the advantage of having an SSOC chapter is that it will "hook up Wake studellits with stu- -dents doing the swne things throughout the South."

The officers of the group came here as . part of the

School Spirit CoChairman

?-"l drli~spor a ton an Juve- the dormttory counselors, at ting their out-of-town dates rue e nquency. the request of the campus b , k t d t -•-'- and

The latter series was ex- police herded all male stu- ac 0 :own own m~ J S d d Sphan~;~; i~~. th.~ti]Joo!,,H"'l'hle ~, ~eg_~.: into,:W~~.:-~J:t~~t ,for. c ,110l~!in Friday night things S USpen e

oo"·up ~enera on.. e. ar, what}.,•"neti'out· tO be. a .dis- ' . , ____ , ''> ·- d ' -soltb --eli s ···t afelUt .. i:f ·'·"- - •·· .. :~~b ~~l..~~-. 'ati"" ··''I-... weren t·· '""mcu.. at .tOO. 01 G .. ··tr· · .- ur ·· 1°~~, ·f y··'" ~ 1c,,pni,-"; I;l;JpPY,~ ut,.W.U't!?lJ!l,,,ye ~ . ·Go"d office •Students'"wanteu· ·· . eorge·Brooks, co:-chairman

1es, mc UUlng ugos av a, rugnt chapel periOd: ·- · · · he 1· ·.nf ·u · abo • · of the school spirit coriimittee Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Ru- Up in the Old Gold and t m t atest 1 .orma onand U• was suspended from the Uni: mania, Poland, Bulgaria and Black office things weren't w aed.wasthagot mtheg on as- verstty for two weeks begin-Alb · . ' su:m newspaper . • _

arua. . . qUite normal. Phones kept staff would know nmg Saturday, for hanging a The b~n lifted temporar'.ll¥, ringing for information and - dummy of a Virginia athlete

and . SaliSbury was b31ck m the staff in turn kept itself in Wait Chapel. Russia for the 1959 trip. His posted on events downtown Brooks, sophomore of Cary book, '_'To· Moscow-and Be- through constant communi- ·mid. Paul Cale, sophomore of yond," IS a report of the Sov- cation with the city news- Clemson Meet Crozet Va were discovered iet Union at that time and its paper. ' ., by a campus relationships with t?-e other A tt· ... r.cts n_.0, ~S , policeman late col~ssus of commurusm, Red When the copy was ready • u r • ' 'J • . 1 in the even-Chma. . . . to go to the bus station, things ; ing of Oct. 4

A ~IXth tnp to Russl?, really turned upside down. Four University professors . , while adjust-made m 1961-l!l62, resulted m How could the staff get the of physics pai'Iticipated in pro- .. ing the dum-his_ book, "A New Russia?", copy to the station when all grams Friday at a meetingi of my for Chapel wh1~h takes a new look at the of the downtown area Wi35 the Southeastern Section of the next morn-Sovlet challenge and another_ blocked off? the American Phys:ica~ So- - ing appraisal of Russian relation· Editors Ralph Simpson and ciety at Clemson University. · The police-ships with Red China. Henry Bostic, accompanied Dr. Thomas J. Turner and BROOKS man ~DJtacted

In· the summer of _1966 Sal~- by University News Bureau Dr. Howard Shields presented Captain William H. Byrd, head bury made a. complete or_blt · Head. Russell Brantley, de- papers dealing with the ef- of the traffic department, who around China, traveling dded to make the trip. They feels of irradiation. gave Brooks permission to t~ough S?utheast Asia on a traveled down Reynolda Road Dr. Ysbrand Haven presid- hang the dummy. tnp that mclu~ed Laos, B_ur- to West End Boulevard, ed at·the morning session. By 10 a. an. the following rna and the Htmalay_an-India::' where they were stopped at Dr. Robert Brehme partici-- morning, the dummy had been bor?er,, up to Mongolia and S1- Si~th Street ·by National pated ·in an afternoon panel taken·down by order of Har<Jld hena. . . . Guardsmen. diseussion on relativity and s. Moore, head of buildings · A ~enes of ~Ive articles, Given new instructions, the quantum mechanics in under- and grounds.·-

summmg up this expensive group moved on, only to be graduate physics. Brooks, who was on social tour, appeared on the front stopped again at the inter- About 500 physicists, most probation for participation in p~ges of The New York section of West End Boule- of them college and univer- a panty raid, was tried by the Tim.es. . . vard and Fourth Street. sity profe5'Sors, attended the Meri's Judicial Boord last week

His latest tnp~ to VIetnam three-day meeting, which be- and suspended for .two weeks. a~d to Moscow m 19~7, make Brantley Confers gan Thursday. Cale waS placed on social ~m one of ~?e most informed Brantley got out of the car probation. on-t~e-spo~ newsmen in to talk with the soldiers about Brooks said that he "was

Amenca. His latest two books, the problem. The sergeant in tried as to whether to take baseq on these tours, are charge told the group to wait SlA c A ctz·on a breaking and entering charge "Orbl~ of China:' and "Behind until he could getl a police es- downtown to the police sta-the Lmes-Hanm." cor!. They waited almost half tion.

(Continued from Page 1) "I really didn't feel like we

Revised Interpretation Eases Draft Pressure

(Continued from Page 1)

more discretion to school of­ficials.

"We will analyze each stu­dent's ca<>e according to his needs and situation," Pat­terson said. "Then we can is­sue a statement to his local board based on the analysis. •:·

But, he stressed only those students who actually are making satisfactory progress clespite some minor discre­pancy in credit hours earned will be helped.

"We will make sure a stu­dent lacking hour~ is coming to summer school and will graduate in four years. We cannot help the student who is failing in llis work. ·•

Students who are not mak­ing normal progress and lose the'ir n-s deferment still can request a 1-S-(C) temporary deferment for one year only.

Patterson said Fr.iday he already had contacted most

students who had draft prob· !ems and sent statements to local draft boards. He urged any men with questions to come by the registrar's of­fice.

In order to avoid any re­currence of problems, the registrars secured McCach­ren's permission to have a small group of r~gistrar:; meet periodically with offi­cials of the state Selective Service board.

The President of the regis­trars' association named 12 schools to send representa­lives to these meetings.

The schools were: Wake Forest, the University of ;\;orth Carolina at Chapel Hill, Duke University, East Caro­lina University, Western Caro­iina University, Elon College, C;,mpbell College, Central Piedmont Community College, Wilmington College, Brevard College, A&T University and K C. State University.

quiring c~al?erones for parties were breaking and entering and forb'idding alcoholic bev- into our own Chapel, • • he said. e-rages at Wake Forest par-ties.

The gatherings were official parties according to the defi­nition in the student hand­book, Olive said.

The handbook defines a party c)s "any event wholly or partially social which is sponsored by' a Wake Forest student organization or a group of students and at which both men and women will be present."

All such parties are requir­ed to have chaperones who are faculty or administration members. One chaperone is required for any function on campus and1 a married couple must chaperone an off-cam­pus function.

1'he handbook forbids the consumption of alcoholic bev­erages or the presence of per­sons under the influence of alcohol at a party.

Although testimony at the meeting revealed off-campus functions involving fraterni­ties and societies were com­mon occurrences, Olive said, the majority of SAC members had not been aware of them.

Now Thru Tues.

STARTING WED~SDAY

~Wtios MINDING

DIE MINT'?'' EASTMAN COLOfl

Watch For These: THE NAKED RUNNER TO SIR, WITH LOVE

group's "Peace Caravan," de­signed to stimulwte interest in the peace situation.

'Why Vitenam?'

Lectures held on subjects such as "Why Vietnam?" and films, such as "Alt€:I'natives" (to the draft) were presented to a crowd of 30 in DeTarnble Auditorium throughout the day.

Wednesday night, Miss Wells spoke to a crowd numbering around 60 in tlte Attic about SSOC activities on other cam­puses and what could be done here.

A literature table waSJ main­tained throughout the day in Reyoolda Hall. A number of heated discussions took place.

Replaced SNCC

According to Miss Wells, SSOC was first organized to take the place of the Student Non-Violent Coordina,ting Com­mittee' (SNCC) when it be­came too "racist" for white :>tudents. The group's first activities dealt with a migra­tory labor camp in Florida. .

"SSOC stays a•way frOIID pas­sing resolutions on every­thing," said Tom Gardner, chairman of the group. "Wa leave it up to ~he individual chapters to decide what tJhey want to do."

"An example of the varied activities of SSOC is the chap­ter at Davidson,'' said Miss WeHs. "Students there became concerned aoout conditions in textile mills and organized a chapter to aid union organiea­tion in the state."

The main issue disJCussed at the meetings here was the Vietnam situation during which SSOC members urged students "to demand U. S. withdrawal from Vietnam."

SSOC participants on the "Peace Caravan" suggested that students work toward a basic awarenes-s of the situa­tion among their fellow stu­dents and "not to jump right in at this campus.'"

"We had nothing like this here last y·ear ,'' said Miss Jordon.

Activiti!S

Campus leaders were asked afterwards what activities a Wake chapter could organize. Among the various, smme>­tions were: a ltterature table, staffed by a group member who could talk with students; a reference library; a speak­er's program, under which leading authorities would come to the campus; and par­ticipation in the Sa.tu:rday post office vigils ..

SSOC participants were: Tom Gardner, chairman, who has just returned from a meet­ing with representatives from North Vietnam and the Na­tional Liberation Front; Nan­cy Hodes, who lived in China from 1955-60 and has studied far Eastern affairs at Rad­cliffe; Bruce Smith, who has just returned frorrn a month in Cuba; and Miss Wells.

Following the Attic meeting, a representative of the Wake Forest ROTC department showed a film entitled "Red Chinese Battle Plan."

~:?·~, ' ' ':'•>:

-PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY

JIM HOYLE . . . , senior of Roanoke Rapids donates blood during the American Red Cross campus blood donor drive. The drive, spot>sored by the local chapter of Scabbard and Blade, national honorary military fraternity was held Thurs­day for five and one-half hours in the b~sement of W. N. Reynolds Gymnasium.

By Lm BRANTLEY

Because of one coed, the famous greeting of "come up a-nd see me some time" will go winging to U. S. service­men in Vietnam this Christ­m-as.

Her greeting and more than 200 others have been record­ed this week for use by the Armed Forces Radio Network.

The projrot is sponsored by the Wake Fores:t chaptoc of Alpha Phi Omega service fra­ternity. It is headed by Bever­ly Beal of Lenoir, a member of the fraternity w'ho also works with WFDD-FM. Bob­by Ervin of Salisbury and John Searle of Aiken, S. C .. are tihe production engint!ers.

Used In Vietnam

The hour-long tape, with its background of Christmas mu­sic, will be used in segments by Armed Forces radio units in Vietnam during the Christ­mas seasori.

All through the week stu­dents have been ll'ecording mesages such as, "Hi, this is Mary Smith of Winston­Salem, N. C .. and Wake Fo­rest University sending Christ­mas greetings to the First. Air Cavalry Division in Vietnam. Merry Ohris.tmas and Happy New Year.'' The names o[ units arc interchanged.

There are greetings from male students and from mem­bers of the Military Science Department, several of whom

have recently returned from Vietnam. But emphasis has been placed on letting service­men hear feminine voices.

Individual Greetings

Some students have idivl· duals they want to greet. Some have special messages.

"We wish you a merry Christmas and happy New Year,'' a group of female voices sings in one taped greeting. Then one girl speaks. "Merry Christmas from the girls on the second floor of Babcock Dormitory. Come up and see us some time, big boys."

"Boys, I'm sure the going must get rough," says another girl. "We're behind you all the way. "I'll remember you in my prayers."

Female Chorus

A group of girls harmonize on "Silent Night,'' and while they hum the chorus one coed says, "Merry Christmas from all the girls at Wake Forest University. God bless you. We hope t-o see you home again soon."

"I want to wish you all a Merry Christmas and 31 happy New Year," drawls a sweet, southern voice, "And give 'em Hell."

The course in dentistry lead­ing to 'the degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery (D.D.S.) at the University of North Carolina School of Dentistry embodies a four-year curriculum.

The Happiest Motion Picture of the Year!

UNIVERSAL presents

.JVLIIE Aliiiii>RI:WS ..sMILUE Singing, Dancing, Derrghtingl

MA~Y TYLI:~ M()O~I:

CA~OL CtfANNING ~AMI:S rox ... ·-

co-starrinc .Jt>tfN f>4YIN and

EIEATIUCI:LJLLIIE asMrs.M••rs

Ucnic SeeN br EiMER BERN'SittN • MI.Ka11'11.rmben St:oi.S b'l Alitdii.E .PREVIH M~l ~ :>rJOE LAYTON •fltlln.,. t.. RICHARD MOP.RIS 1\ttd«< ~GEORGE Rm' Hn.L • ProciUC.S.,. ftos.s HUNTE It A Uniwetsaf Piettn

GALA AREA PREMIERE! THURSDAY, NOV. 9TH

SEATS ARE NOT ·RESERVED RESERVED PERFORMANC£S DAILY

SHOWS: Daily, 2:00 & 8:00 p.m. Sunday 2 - S - 8 p.m. Mon.- Fri.- Matinees-$1.50 Eve. Sat. Sun.' & Holidays-$2.00

PLAYING THROUGH WEDNESDAY THE SAND PEBBLES

REYNOLDA CUNEMA REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENHR.

PHONE 723-8711

$50.00 FREE Drawing Each Saturday At 10:00 A.M.

KEEP YOUR TICKET STUBS AND

WIN For futher Details Check At

~jnt"e,..l LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING

"On The Campua"

GIRLS-- JOHNSON DORM BOYS-- TAYLOR DORM MR. BOB BEAMER, Manager

Page 6: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

PAGE SIX Monday, Nov. 8, 1967 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Works On Cargo Ships .

Methodist Students Plan Retreat, Famous Speaker This Weekend

Student Hitchhikes Abroad By UNDA LEVI

One col'lege Sltudent with a flaiT for adventtli"e di&!overed an eScape from the grind of school.

A fireman all: the shipyard discovered him· and invited ~ to his boone on the roast.

"They killed cight bulis in a row," he said. "I though! it was rather rum-dum, al­though I realized: thlat it took a certain amount of skill to be a matador."

A speaker from the World Council of Churches and a re­treat will be offered to Meth­odist students this weekend by the Wesley Foundation.

Dr. Eugene L. Smith, ex­ecutive secretary in the Unit­ed states for the World Coun­cil, will speak Friday at Ma­ple Springs Methodist Church.

The program wiN begin at 5 p. m. with worship, follow­ed by supper and Smith's talk. It will ronclude at 7 p. m. Rides will leave from John­son Dormitory a;t 4:40 p. m.

Top U. S. Post Smith'SJ post is the top U.

S. position in the World Council of Churches, an or­ganization including 233 Pro­testant, Anglican and Eastern Orthodox churches in 90 coun­tries and territories.

He also heads the U. S. Conference for the World Council.

Before he assumed his po­sition in October, 1964, Smith was general secretary of the Division of World Missions of the Board of Missions of the Methodist Church for 15 years. He was in charge of more .than 1,100 missionaries in 47 coun­tries of ·Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America.

Smith also has been a member of the General Board of the National CoWlcil of Churches of Christ since it was organized in the U. S. in 1950.

He has served as vice presi­ident of that organization, vice· chairman of the Division of World Mission and Evange­

Council of

DR. SMITH • To Speak Friday • .

Chj.lrches and· president of the Council of Secrellaries of the Methodist Church.

Smith also has been a member of the religious edu­cation faculty at New York UnivernLty and has taught at Drew University Theological School.

He has written books includ-. ing "The Power Within Us,"

"They Gird the Earth for Christ," and "God's Mission - and Ours." His article~ have a,ppeared in numerous magazines.

The Wesley Foundation re­treat will be held Saturday and Sunday at Camp Susan Barbour Jones, a Presbytt'r­ian camp about one hour's drive from Winston-Salem.

The theme of tfle weekend will be "A Basis for Sex and

" The program will

Some Men Want A

Different Swea-ter

This is Sportscaster Frank Gifford with

Countdown to Kic~off. We're really going to see

some action today. Warming up in the field:

Bull Mountain, Jantzen's cable-and-rib pullover ...

a real powerhouse in 1 OOo/o worsted wool.

You're going to see a lot of color and excitement ...

color like pumpkin and brown with a brown insert,

gold 'n red heather-gold•'

SIZES: S, M, L, & XL, $20.00

~ SPORTSWEAR II'OR SPORTSMEN

Jantzen

W. Fourth Sb'eet at a.erry Open Friday "''D t

Reyaolda Maaor Sboppiag a.ter Open Nights "111. t ·

College Village Shoppillg Cellter 111gb PoiDt

include a film, "The Game.'" and discussions of a book. "Living With Sex" by Richard Hettlinger.

The cost for the retreat will be five dollars per person, in­cluding food, lodging and re­creation.

Rides wHl leave Sa·turday at 1 p. m. and retu-rn by 5 p. m. Sunday. Registrai!lion forms must be turned in by Thursday.

Youth Dies In Hazing At Baylor

WACO, Tex. - Administra­tion officials at Baylor Uni­versity have warned social service clubs to exercise more caution in pledge activity af­ter a student died ami two others suffered injuries during separate initiations.

Dead :is John Everet Clif­ton, a 19-year-old sophomore frorri Crosby, Tex. Local au­ed in1n the Baylor Chamber thorities ruled his death acci­dental. He was being irutiat­of Commerce, a service club, along with nine other pledges when he collapsed.

President Abner V. McCall, immedi·ately anounced a ban on all physical initiations.

"We will observe at this lime that for the past few years the university adminis­tration with the support of Student Congress has been trying to eliminate physical hazing from club initiations,?' said McCaH.

"Some of the men's clubs have maintained some of the milder physical aspects· of the initiations such as calisthen­ics and the drinking of dis­tasteful concoctions. We shall continue om- policy until we ellininate a.Jl such clubs ini­tiation praetices at Baylor,"

:added McCall. Justice of the Peace Joe

Johnson said Clifton's death was caused by "aspirational asphyxiation." He said -Clif-

. :ton had been given fivEi":dit ferent kinds· of laxative and garlic. He was running in place when he collapsed dur­ing the initiation.

First Choice Of The Engage·ables They like the smart styling ·and

the perfect center diamond .•• a brilliant gem of fine

color and modern cut. The name, Keepsake, in your

ring assures lifetime satis­faction. Select yours at your Keepsake Jeweler's store.

He's in the yellow pc-ges under "Jewelers."

REGISTERED

DON'T FORGET the Fall Carnival Saturday night from 7:30 to 11 on the Magnolia Court.

Harvard Divinity Prof To Speak Here Tomorrow

Dr. G. Ernest Wright, Parkman ProJessor of Divini­ty at Harvard University, will lecture at 11 a. m. Tuesday in DeTarnble Auditorium.

Wri:ght will speak on "Old Testament Prophecy in Recent Research." The lecture is sponsored by the religion de­par.tment under the Piedmont University Center Visiting Scholars Program. It is open to the public.

Wright also is curator of

Craftsmen's Fair To Open· Ftiday

The fourth annual Piedmont Craftsmen's Fair will be held this Friday and Saturday in Memorial Qoiliseurn.

the Semttic Museum at Har­vard, director of the Drew­McCormick Areheol'Ogical Ex­pedition to Shechem . in Jor­dan and archeologi:cal director of Hebrew Union College Bib­lical and Archeologi-cal School at Jerusalem.

He received B.A. and D.D. degrees from Wooster College, the M.A. from Johns Hop­kins University and the B.D. deg•ree from McCormick The­ological Seminary at Chicago. He taught at McCotmick from 1939 until 1958, when he be­came Parkman Professor at Harvard.

His principal research in­terests are Syro-Palestinian Archeology and Old Testa­ment history and criticism. He has written a number of books·. One of the moSit re­cent is "Shechem: The Bio­graphy of a Biblical Cil!y."

For the price of a hiil:cbbike and an inquiry, he had a SIJlll· mer job aboard a finnish ship bound for Algeria.

Joe Myers, seuiQr of Reids­ville, explained 11hat Ute rea sons behiJild his! decision to go abroadl were "purely physio­logical."

"When I sat down and thoughlt about not going around the world tbe next summer, I got a pain in my neck."

In 4lhe summer of 1966, after his oophomore year, Myers hitchlrlked to Charleston, S. C., approached the captain of a Finnish ship then in port and asked for a job.

Replaced Drowned. Man

One: of the ship's deckhands had fallen overboard on the trip to the States and Myers was hired to replace him.

Unfortunately, the ship was not the most modern. In fact, it had been sunk in World War II and' the mp across the Atlantic to Algeria took 21 daJYS.

On the trip a1cross, Myers's duties ranJged from steering the ship to watclrlng for ice­burgs. While in port be con­centrated· on scra-ping and painting the deck.

Mter ten ~ in Algerian po11!s· scraping and painting, he negotiatedl with the captain to get off the smp in Oran.

His reasoning? "Purely phy­siological. When I sat down and thPuglhJt aholllb staying on that ship, I got a pain in my neck," he said.

From Oran he il;r-aveled: to · Algiers and on to Tunis.

''I had' a sliglht ·problem in Tunis," he said. "I had Al­gerian money."

Sells Watch

He was forced to hitchhke back i.nside tbe Algerian bor­der \\~here he bought a watch. He then went back to Tunis · and sold ,tlJe wabcb for cur­rency.

About this time he met two American girls, and the three of them fuured Tunis, Libya, Tripoli; M~ta and Sicily, · .' One''riight ·in Sicil:yo tl_le three~

Distinctive handicraft items will be on display and for sale. Admission is· 75 cents for adults, 5 cents for those under 18 years and free for thiose under s·ix years .old. .

The fair is open from 10 a. m.-9 p. m. Friday and 10 a. m.-6 p. m. Saturday.

-:· were iiding witb a Bri.tisb cou..:

DR. WRIGHT • • • To Speak Taesd.ay • • •

SCHOOL OF

Self-Defense

pie when they sbapped at a bar. They reburned ro tfue car to find that everything had been stolen, including a diary in which Myers bad been writing his experiences.

"I hit the road With the greaitest feeling of complete freedbm. I was looking f<tr a ship back home. It was night and tih.e British man gave me nwney."

Finds 'Fat Mama'

He went to a hotel, but the proprietor chJa.r:ged too much for l!ihe room. He finally found "fat mama" who sold him a room for the nig'ht - and tried' to include her daughter in the bargain. -

H~e soon traveE.ed to the norllh.ern region of Sicily where he spent his last money on an ice cream cone.

Kee1;2sa.k:e • KARATE • "It was delicious," he re­called!.

OIA~OND RINGS Men-Women 1105 W. First Street 724-7427

He spen,t the next two days · canvassing the docks · for ships headed west and nights sleeping on the baiek of sbips in por.t.

AAA 24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE

ALSO GENERAL REPAIR AND BODY WORK

Fritts Motor Company 967 BROOKSTOWN AVE. PA 2·1671

GO DEACS! Your Welcome ·to Winston- Salem

Home _of DOWNTOWNTOWNER'S

FffiS1' CLASS DINING IN OUR EXOTIC AMBtF !lOOM and ADDED CONVENIENCE!

I spent three beautiful days . swimming, eating and sleepmg." ·

When he returned to the doc~s~ a Danish ship was pre­parmg to carry cal'go to France. and Sweden. Myers was hired as galleyboy, in charge of cooking breakfast and cleaning up.

"They had the most deli­cious Danish baC'Oil," he said. "Every night I'd fix a huge plate of it anct sit on the deck while I ate Lt." . The captain had· purchased

crgarelltes which he planned to sell ·to lthe Mafia. A small boat pulled aside the ship one nilgbt and the cigarettes were exchanged for currency. Un­fortunately the Mafia repre­semaltive expeated more cig­arettes thian the C8iptain had and a fight erUIPted. The cap­tain pushedJ the man over­boaro and! lef:t.

When the ship r-eached Bay­eux, France, Myers ~disemr­barkerl.

He attended a bu!Hfight in the o~ty, blllt did IliOit enjoy his introdu:ction to thatt sport.

The next 1oo dlays wen spent in Bordeaux wher.e he found a group of European Sltudelllt.s living on a house­boat.

"I slept on the boat for a week until I found a Norwe­gian freighter char.tered tc carry Ohristmas liquor to the u. s.

"Again luck brought me through," he said. The cap­tain of the ship would not hirE him but said that he could work to pay for his fare back to the States ..

The tm> went to a bar and · over a dlink Myers- discover­ed that the captain had once corresponded with a girl · in North Carolina. He was con· sequently hired: as. a gaiJiley­OOy and later .pronroted .to steer.man.

"So I brough!t Christmas joy to the U.S.," he said of his reburn. to. the States that September- in time to resunre his stumes.

Forms Available Dec. 4 For German Scholarship

Formal applications for the Gerunan Exchange Scholar­ship will be availabk Dec. 4 from the German department.

Any Wake Forest student who bas taken four semes.ters of German and has acquired junior standing can apply with the ·penndS'Sion of the chair­man of the depaflflment of his major.

Dr. James C. O'Flaherty, chafrmm of the German De­pantment, said! an applicant sho~ be above average aca­demically. He said applicants would be considered on the basis of character and per­sonality, a!Iso.

11he college catal.og:ue states that the schola·rshlp provides 400 German marks a liJDnth for ten months and remission of an registralion and insur­ance fees. It al:so provides 100 Ger~an.mai"~.a.semester .. for, the t.Jpureh~ ·of: ;;;·"~essary' books.; and paym~iJ.t,:.of trans-' portation costs from the Ger­man border or a European

post to Berlin an.dl return costs. The student must pay his

own tr:a·nsportation rost.s to Europe, but the overall cost of the year is no lllDre expen­sive than a year aJt Wake For­est, O'Flaherty said.

The student will leave next August for Europe and will spend six: weeks at ~ language institute in Germarw. He will attend! the Free University of Berlin's winter S'ellleSiter from November to February. After a two-month vacaJtion, he will att€ndl the next semester from May to July.

Applications must be return­ed to the German Department by Jan. 5, 1968. A committee which has previously consist­ed of members of the German oepar.tment, as well as Deans Leake and Dyer, will select Wake Forest's exchangee by the end·.of Janu,ary. , '". · .. Tl)_!s J: y~a~.'.s-.. , ex<:~ge_~ .§tu:­

d?n;t froi,I!. Germ,any; JS ~ngdte Shrader who is d(}ing gradu­ate work in sociology.

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY TOILET PAPER ••• is rolled out to celebrate the ffrsl victol'y of the football season after Wake Forest blasted the University of North Carolina 20-10 at Chapel Hill Oct. 28. Tbese coeds at ·Bostwick Dormitory contribute their tissue for the sake of tradition. Tbe elltire campus was transformed,' with brown streamers fluttering from every bllildfDg and tree.

the K & W cafeterias HICII ROlf 11M. TO tHH. llaN II..,_.. II fG bOW IIAun t• f'Cl,lll •• • TUIIoll&ll Ill, A. No Nil CPN.n'o IIC.. IIJAIUIItlt lUI

fi=i"owro-PL.A'NvouRe'N<i;;t:MeNTAN~w-eot;iNal su DG ET RENT-A -CAR ~!T y:~: c~~CEm~A~::i g~ ~ I Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engage. THEm FIVE LOCATIONS I ment and Wedding" and new 12-page full .color folder, both lor I 1 F d S • d I only25c.Aieo,aendepeclalofferofbeautlfui44-PageBrlde'aBook.J "LOWEST RATES Excel ent oo , ervtce, an I Name · . .., ·I Satisfaction 1 Address . . I ' BEST SERVICE"' I WINSTON-SALEM mGH POINT 1 42Z North Cherry St. 110 East High St.

J. ~=. tp .,., Spend your next visit witb US! : =!!r:t=Yeenter ~~:C,~ Cel*l'

t~~~~~~~~~~~~~:!~:.~·~:~:u::.~..:~~~- l-------~~~~~~,;_-,.,.--•--'!!-~-.,..--..al._ ___ RALE_...;,.I.G•B,-N•o•rth-•H•ii•Is•S•hopping--·--ee-nter ____ _.

THE ' LONG-1 in forcE tory RE

,. Gee

Up( WASH

-A rulE in dormi pectedly town U

Officia which a: beer anE rooms. students sponsibil

Ace on thony J. dent ~ who hav drinking

11 that "th men is are gi\ choose 1

to use < GeorgE

said the end the an une1 mary co to sever

Studie! which al

Thl We~

Dr. Wi liberal n byterian W.Va., fhursda)

While terian SE Ky., Ben the civil the Soutl

"Benfi1 key figur ville's i facilities took gu1 Talbert, religion, LouisvillE and saw of the fir tegrate.

Benfiel1 the presE ment. HE for the of the Ur ecutive c

Page 7: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

me cap.

not hirE he coulil fare back

a bar and . discover­had once a girl ir1 was COD•

a ga'liey­til

THE GHOUUES AND GHOSTIES AND LONG-LEGGED BEASTIES . . • were out in force Tuesday afternoon in Babcock Dormi· tory Rec Room for the Fidele Society's Ballo-

ween Party. AU faculty and administration children between the ages of four and eight were invited to the costume affair.

, .. Georgetown University Updates Drinking Rule

WASHINGTON, D. C. (CPS) -A rule prohibiting drinking in dormitories has been unex­pectedly reversed by George­town University. · Officials said the new policy which allows all men to keep

P beer and hard liquor in their rooms. was designed to help students develop personal re­sponsibility.

According to the Rev. An­thony J. Zeits, director of stu­dent personnel, authorities who have studied the campus· drinking isslie have, con chided, that "the formation of young· men is faciliated when they are given the freedom to choose whether to use or not to use alcoholic beverages."

Georgetown officials also said the move was made to end the pretense of enforcing an unenforcible rule-a pri­mary consideration, according to several students.

have shown that "most stu· dents do not over-indulge when allowed to have alcoholic be­erages in their dormitories," Father Zeits emphasized·.

The step taken by George­town is a surprising one, ac­cording to Gerry McCullough, news editor of the student paper.

McCullough said the drink· ing situation was handled quietly. The Student Council discussed the issue with ad­ministration officials-last-year. The ~newspaper knewnnothing, of. ;the prdceedfugs ;until the: matter was settled, McCullough said.

No one circulated petitions or flyers in support of cam· pus drinking.

Eastman Kodak

Grants $3,600

To University

An unrestricted grant of $3,600 has been awarded to the University under Eastman Kodak Co.'s 1967 educational aid program.

The University is one of 80 privately endowed colleges and universities which will receive direct grants from Kodak this year.

The gran·ts are based on the number of graduates who join­ed the company within .. .five y~~ f(}llowillg g~:~;uJq~~p~,a~d are . completing five --:Year,s ,;of.. company employment. ·

Kodak's educational aid con­tributions ,tlJ,is year will total $6.4 million. This includes spe­cial support Df educational in­stitutions in areas where the company has major manufac­turing facilities.

SimmonS, Russian Expert, Tells Of 'New Soviet Man'

Dr. Ernest Simmons, liter­ary authority on Russia and its culture, updated the description of "The New Soviet Man" in a lecture in DeTamble auditor­ium Tuesday night.

Simmons. who has spent much time in Russia as a teacher, research specialist. and .author, said the original ''new Soviet man" was .a myth.

The man of the myth, he said, was the heroic workm· created by the propaganda machine of the government.

·'These heroes were devel-­oped from the values of Com-­munism," he said. "The new Soviet man achieved outstand­ing feats of labor. The new man sacrificed all for the bene­fit of the people. He was a paragon of moral virtue. He had a lofty feeling of civic duty."

But the Soviet Union is dif­ferent today, Simmons con­tinued. The country is no long­er the harsh Iron Curtain na­tion of the Stalin period.

The new Soviet man is real­ly the modern rebellious youth he said. The rebellion is not against Communism but against "old standards, con­servatisms."

The younger generation JS

viewed as amoral, as juvenile delinquents, and as lacking in Communist idealism, Simmons said.

"Older people look on the younger generation with re· proach-girls who want pros· perity, love and happiness, who kiss fellows they barely ·know, men who dance, drink and smoke."

Part of the reason for the re­bellion, he said, is tha1; af­fluence in Russia is drawing the people closer to Western culture. Burgeois trademarks such as beauty parlors, better housing and stylish clothes are becoming more evident in Rus· sian life.

"Young people have become cynical. They are thinking only of themselves. The yotmg have become troubled. They idolize the 1920's as the only period of Soviet freedom in the arts. . • TheY.:.eien;sing.'We shaU.OVer-come.'" ·

There is a Russian- cultural underground in literature, Sim· mons said. Forbidden memeo­graphed publications and man­uscripts circulate freely.

The pcopagalld:ists now al"e trying to revitalize the orignal

mythical "new soviet man". Simmons said. But the youths refuse to accept the idea. "The really new Soviet man conflicts with the old," he said.

Simmons lecture opened the University's sixth annual In­stitute of Literature.

He spent the day on campus,

meeting with several groups as well as delivering his for­mal talk.

Sturgis E. Leavitt, retired professor of Spanish. will dis­cuss "Spanish Drama of the Golden Age" in the next In­stitute of Literature lecture Nov. 16.

College MayBe

'Tickets' Worthless

MISSISSIPPL ICPSJ - Mil­lions of university-issued park­ing tickets across the count.ry may now be worthless. In :t precedent-setting case, the prosecution of a Mississippi State University student for r~fusing to pay his cam pus h.ckets has been dismissed.

Leslie C. Cohen. a Canadian political science student at MSU, balked when the aca­demic institution imposed $20 in parking fines without a hearing.

When the University threat­ened him with dismissal and state court action unless fines were paid, Cohen went to the Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee of the American Civil Liberties Union.

The LCDC secured a re· straining order to prevent MSU officials from impeding Cohen's efforts to gain ad­mission to a Canadian law school.

Cohen feared that the Uni· versity would delay sending his records, would note tile parking vi~lations on his rec­ord or would not .allow him

to take a nccessarv summt·r scs:;ion course <.~t ·Mississippi Stille.

The LCDCsubsequently chal­lenged the constitutionality of the Mississippi state law under which the Univc1·sity justified its n.!gulalions. The statute granted to the State Board of Instituli()ns of Higher Learn­ing the power to create regu­lations which are municipal in effect, the LCDC charged.

While the case was before the U. S. District Court, the State Attorney General, re­presenting the University, con­ceded that tile regulations which were promulgated by MSU and their manner of en­forcement were null and void.

The University dropped· its charges against Cohen and the Mississippi statute came under the consideration of a three­judge federal court.

Although the law was even­tually r u I e d constitutional, LCDC chief counsel Alvin Bronstein said that this does nDt affect the due process precedent that had been raised over the tickets themselves.

SERVICE IS OUB Bt1SINESS

ColseUII ESSO Service N. Cllei'IJ' S&. at Coll.seliiD Dr.

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.

U.Om ~OIJN WILSON FANSLER

Phone 723-9430

NEW ... JADE lEAST·. GOLOEN LrME

Studies of other colleges which .allow liquor on campus

For the past four years, Mc­Cullough added, student lead· ers have been trying to libera­lize Georgetown's policies, Dormitory curfew regulations have also been relaxed this se­mester, he said.

Thursday Chapel To Hear West Virginia Minister

Campus Humor Magazines

Find Censorship Isn't Fun

Dr. William A. Benfield, Jr., liberal minister of First Pres· byterian Church in Charleston, W. Va., will speak in chapel fhursday.

While teaching at Presby­terian Seminary in Louisville, Ky., Benfield was a pioneer in the civil rights movement in the South.

"Bf>nfield was one of the • key figures in the city of Louis­

ville's integration of public facilities which at that time took guts," Dr. Charles H. Talbert, associate professor of religion, said. Talbert lived !n Louisville during that time, and saw the city become one of the first in the South to in­tegrate.

Benfield is also a leader of the present ecumenical move· ment. He is the representative for the Presbyterian Church of the United States on the ex­ecutive committee of the Con·

sultation on Church Union. COCU is an attempt by ten American Protestant bodies to join together.

Benfield received his B. A. from Davidson College in 1936, and his B. D. and Th. M. from Louisville's Presbyterian Sem­inary. He did further graduate work at the University of Chi· cago.

There will be no chapel Tuesday, Nov. 14 That period is designated for adviser-ad­visee conferences between stu­dents and faculty about mid· semester grades.

Chapel Thursday, Nov. 16, will feature Dr. Charles E. Boddie, president of the American Baptist Theological Seminary in Nashville, Tenn.

Boddie, a popular speaker last year in Chapel, will pre­sent various lectures across campus in addition to his chapel appearance.

Special SLICED

AUSTIN, TEXAS (CPS) -Things do not seem so fllllny for editors of college humor magazines these days.

In the latest in a series of controversies over the con1ent of student publications, the University of Texas at El Paso has fired .the editor of "El Burro" for publishing a ficti· tious interview between Jesus Christ and Beatie John Lennon.

The administration .has also suspended publication of the magazine for the remainder of the fall semester.

The Sept. 14 issue of "El Burro" portrayed on the cover a girl wearing bell-bottomed slacks and, in ,the backgroWid, a. man dragging a cross away.

Following the disciplinary action against the editor, stu­dents circulated petitions back­ing ·the magazine. "El BUITo" is not usually censored, but questionable material is some­times taken to the director of student publications for ap­proval.

Barbequed Beef On A Bun FRENCH FRIES •• SMALL COKE

$.65 ARA SLATER SCHOOL AND COLLEGE SERVICES

The University of Massa­chusetts administration recent­ly took action against the campus humor magazine by denying the publication any funds for the year. The maga­zine embroiled the school in a controversy last year af.ter a cartoon of a priest pulling a ralibit out of a chalice was published.

The State Senate censured the magazioo and plarmed an investigation of all campus publications, but the Universi­ty dissuaded ihe legislators.

AFTER SHAVE from $2.50 COLOGNE from $3.00 SWANK Inc.-Sole Dlotrlbulot

As u aflemate fragratlce, try JADE EAST or Jade Eaot CORAL

CRUISE TO NASSAU For The Spring Holidays

Last year's group had a ball on the BAHAMA STAR, so we have reserved cabins FOR YOU on the MARCH 25 SAILING f.rom MIAMI-returns March 29 to Miami at 9:00 A. M. All meals Included-Use sbip as hotel in port at NASSAU! SPECIAL STU· DENT RATE IS $74, iDcluQing port taxes!! Since space is limited first-come, first­served. A $20 DEPOSIT will hold your RESERVATION til MARCH 1, 1968.

BOOK NOW DON'T MISS THE BOAT George Shipp Travel

308 W. Fifth St. Winston-Salem Phone 723-5594

OW GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Nov. I, 1!181 PAGE SEVEN

Camel PawnShop, Inc. "Money To Loan On Anything Of Value"

422 N. Liberty

Bargains In Out-Of-Pawn Merchandise Radios ........... . Phonographs ..... . Binoculars ....... .

9 95 up Wedding Bands . . . 3.95 up 12.50 up Transistor Tape 14.95 up Recorders . . . . . . . 12.50 up

Port. and Desk Typewriters . . . . . 29.59 up

Guitars ............ 12.59 up

Electric Tape Recorders ...... .

Cameras ......... . Suitcases ......... .

29.59 up 3.95 up 3.95 up

WINSTON.SALEM'S AUTHORIZED FENDER GUITAR AND AMPLIFICATION DEALER

Patterson's Drug Stores

Visit Or Call One Of Our Three Stores:

e CLOVERDALE A VE.-723-4366 HI STRATFORD RD., S. W.

• SHERWOOD PLAZA-725-0647 ROBIN HOOD AND PEACE HAVEN RD.

e DOWNTOWN-722-7194 112 WES'f FOURTH STREET

DELIVERY SERVICE

Roman numerars

-!

White enamel design

:1' 1Jl'ft\d(JM.t ClfJ td:chPA

ti.88

Snap open watch

and remember .••

just say charge it!

your choia

Etched c.~: pattern

3 fine KAY Stores to Serve You in Winston-salem

!14 W. Fo!ll'th St., 725-426& 13 W. F()urth St., 725-0222

and Northside Shopping Center,

76'7-2384

Page 8: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

PAGE EIGHT Monday, Nov. 6, 1967 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

From The ... ~~ ... · ... · ; · . · ..... , .. . ,.·;~~:~ ... ~:r.~.::-x.:-:~~~ ·:f·::-~~:·::;~:~~.::~~.::~::L:;::·~ ..... ,. ... ~.-~.:·:·-::~ ~:: ... :,::~

:· WFDD This Week f]

FOUR CORNERS By JETER WALKER

At least once a week the MRC finds itself in a position of symphathetic understand­ing for those groups \~·ho need space in order to function adequately.

After the hair-pulling strug­gle our organization underwent in order to obtain the very limited allocation ~urrently enjoyed. we c<m only nod a silent "amen" whenewr some­one mentions the bigge~t space request of all. that of the Col­lege Union.

The whole idea of the Col­lege Union and space requests as an article was prompted by a concern on this writer's part that some sort of o•:erlapping

of functions would be typical of a well-devploped CU :md an expanded MRC.

The two organizntions. m· so it seems. would eventually r~·ovide some rather extensive­ly dual activities.

Then. too. there is a ques­tion of what functinn a CU could perform for social or­gani?.~tion:o; whkh are already apparently providing for a_ll the ba~ic need~ of all theu· members. Could a CU do any­thing more?

After havim' C'onrcr·r·ed with informed per~ons in the Col­lege Union and in other student-oriented org<mizations, this writer became com·inced

HAIRDRESSERS

For the Hairstyles Fashionable Women

Prefer THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

REYNOLDA MANOR 722-8193 NORTIISIDE . . • 761-6235 THRUWAY . . .. 723-&791

Open Thursday & Friday Nights by AppoiDtment

that all organizations should work closely with the CU in order to provide assurance that gross overlapping of func· lions would not occur.

I also became convine<>d that the CU not only has a definite place in the current set-up. but also that is pr-essingly needed.

College Union's prim a r y functions, as seen hy those with whom we talked. was to provide tho~e mafer·ial things which enable a student to develop his abilities. alii­tudes. etc.

Material Goods

These material goods would, for the most part. include those items which other or­ganizations could not Jeasibly and economically provide for the exclusive use of their own m~mbers.

Most important. the develop. ed CU would provide those services which require greater areas of space (e.g. meeting rooms, listening rooms. dan~e areas. cafeteria services, etc.) which other organizations do not have.

By virtue of the fact that the CU would be housed in a complete CU building, it would exercise that ·'pulling together" of divergent organi­zations in a common program which could complete the idea of a "living experience" bf education that the MRC ad­vocates.

Simple Formula

'I11e formula is relatively simple. College Union would have the material goods which

Bobbitt's Pharinacies COSMETICS -~ PRESCRIPTIONS -- SUNDRIE'S

FREE DELIVERY 3 LOCATIONS

Reynolds Building - Nissen Building

Corner S. Hawthorne Road at· Lockland

THI OttiGIHAL SPECIAL

TODAY 7:00-Campus Report. News

of Wake Forest with emphasis on interviews with campus personalities.

7:15-Wake Fore:;t Sports. 9:00-Reynolda Hall Lecture

Series. The important speech­es made recentlv on the Wake Forest campus ·are presented by tape recording.

TUESDAY 7:00- Georgetown Forum.

"The Urgent Urban Future?" Panel: Albert Mayer. FAIA, architect and city planner; G. Yate:; Cool{, u1·ban affairs con­sultant.

9:00-The V. D. Epidemic. ·'Eradication by 1972?" dis­c-usses tile theory that vene­n'al disease can be eliminated hv 1972. · 9:30- Netherlands Solohts.

Music performed by Dutch nrtists fmm Radio Nederland.

WEDNESDAY 4:~5-Wall Street Report. A

summary of stock market ac­tivities with comment and analysis. emphasizing corpora­tiuns and regional interest.

7:00 - European Review. Weekly report on matters of importance in Europe by cor­respondents of Radio Neder­land. 7:1~-The New Freedom. Au­

thoritative guests discuss the implications and consequences of America's new freedom of time. This week, "Designing for Fun-a Theory," by Dr. Clare Gunn, landscape archi­tect. Michigan State Univer-

would make the "living ex­perience" a nearer reality while the MRC and other or­ganizations would supply the people who would make the best use of the program.

Should an effective College Union building be obtained, and should officials of that organization attempt to mesh the CU program with that of the MRC, IFC and WGA, Wake Forest might come a great deal closer to produc· ing the kind of total education which is deemed so necessary.

-:;~~~~~~IT'S THE RAGE ~ REGULAR

MODEL

,!!!!~~ AHY $2 '\i 3 LINE TEXT The finest JND!Sl!IUCTIBLE METAL POCKET RUBBER STAMP. 'lz" x 2".

S<!-nd ~heck. ar money Ot'der~ Be :-.ur-e to jnclude your Zip Code. No f*o"t.."ge or handling charges. Add .... ,res tax. P romp! shipment. Satisfaction GuoroniH<I

THE MOPPCO. P. 0. Box 18623 Ll!flOI Square S!Jiion

ATlANTA, GA., 30326

STUDENT

Famous For Our SALADS

CHARCOAL STEAKS ITALIAN DISHES

FRESH SEAFOOD

RATES!! No Minimum

Regular Menu Rates To Wake Forest Students

on Friday Only ],,

THE STRATFORD ROOM

Dine And Dance To The

Musk <>I Sid Hellier

Plus lliq Combo On

Weekends

Private Oining Reservations 723-6718

TOWN STEAK HOUSE STRATFORD ROAD

: ... sity.

DEACS • • • who are GREEKS THURSDAY 4:55-Wall Street Report. 7:00-NER Washington For-

By SANDY BIGELOW

um. Tydings CD-Md.) urges against a constitutional con­vention.

9:00-Man and the Multitude -"Political Reality an<! Indi­vidual Responsibility."

FRIDAY 7:00-Special of the Week. A

discussion of architecture to­day, wilh Los Angeles arehi· teet. Charles Luckman.

9:00-Seach for the New. Dr. Donald Justice discusses "The Poet as Amateur: Emily Dick­inson."

SATURDAY 2:00-0pera of the Week.

Donizetti: Lucia di Lammer· moor.

5:00-0mcert Hall. Richard Strauss: Don Juan; Casuals: Six Songs; Haydn: Symphony No. 6 in D; Dvorak: Quintet in E flat.

SUNDAY 4:00-Collector's Corner. Si­

belius: Concerto in D minor; R. Strauss: Songs by Monser­rat Caballe; Haydn: Trio No. 30 in D minor; Richter: Sona­ta de Camera in A minor; Mozart: Symphony in B flat major; and Prokofieff: Con­certo No. 2 in G minor.

8:00 - Showcase. Features Winston-Salem and area musi­cians and musical organiza­tions in recording of live con­certs.

9:00-Musie off the Beaten Path: Berg: Concertina for Violin, piano and winds; Berg: Wozzeck.

One of the most serious and unfortunate results of Wake Forest's deferred rush policy is the suspicion this policy engenders between fraternities.

Although few if ~ny fraterni­ty men are in favor of the rules, deferred rushing rules create a climate of tension which often causes amiable in­tra-fraternity relations to fray.

The deferred rush regula­lions prohibit any fraterniza­tion between freshmen and fraternity men. The rules are openly broken: rides are given to freshmen and conversations between freshmen and fra­ternity men are common.

In short, ·the rule is practi­cally unenforceable. The prob­lem becomes acute when some­one is reported for a rush violation.

'Dirty Rush' Common

Knowing that "dirty rush" is a common occurrence and tha:t the rules are so strict that even an unconscious act of friendship (which, by the way, is one of the great tradi­tions of the Wake forest "fami­ly") can be construed as a rush violation, the victimized fraternity feels cheated, and ideas of revenge are fostered.

Immediately, relations be­tween the fraternities involved in the incident become strain­ed. The fraternity which must pay the fine for their violation begins to feel that if they had to pay, then, by God, some· one else will pay also.

A vicious circle is created, with fraternities changing from the accused ·to the accuser. Relations between fraternities worsen, and the whole situa­tion get<; out of hand.

On the other hand, the fresh­man who is involved in a vio­latiGn may be prohibited from pledging a fraternity when rush bec£Xmes open. This hurts the boy and the fraternity system. The tragic irony here is ·that the freshman who is reported for rush· violation may have wanted to pledge the very fraternity that re­ported him.

'No good can come from a situation like this. The fresh·

man is embarrassed and per­haps deprived of the chance to pledge a fraternity, and the fraternity faces a stiff fine.

Worst of all, the regulations provoke covert and often overt feelings of suspicion and ani· mosity between· fraternities.

The obvious solution to this problem is to end deferred rush.

These reasons, combined with the academic excellence of fraternity men and pledges should be ample evidence to support the theory that de­ferred rush is not necessary, and is, in fact, detrimental to freshmen and fraternities alike.

Fraternity News Delta Sigma Phi

A combination masquerade party-dinner was held last week at the Baltll. Music was provided by the Sounds of Soul.

Newly-elected: officers of the pledge class are Jim Naphus of Pittman, N. J., president; Chuck Lott <If Westfield, N. J., vice-president; and Terry Stewart of Havelock, secre­tary-treasurer.

Delta Sigma Pi Curtis Long of Long, Haym­

es, and Carr Advertising and Public Relations spoke to the fraternity last week. He is

president of the Chamber of Commerce.

Lambda Chi Alpha Senior George Findlay of·

Palm Beach, Fla., was re­cently pinned to Miss Lucy Ford, junior at Salem College of Winston-Salem.

Tbeta Chi Scott Reed, sophomore of

Greensboro, recently pinned Miss Pam Hoyer, a second year nursing student at Bap. tist Hospital

Bruce Walley, sophomore of Wilmington, Del., recently la­valiered Miss Carol Drain, also of Wilmington.

Placement Office Lists Recruiters

Frats At Midwest School Job recruiters will visit the

placement office for inter­views according to the fol­lowing schedule:

To Abandon National Ties American Red Cross-Tues­

day. Openings available for men and women for positions in various U. S. areas, Viet­nam and Korea.

Fairfax County Schools-'I'uesday.

Public

HEW Audit Agency-Tues­day. Jobs as auditors for men and women. Locations in Va., W.Va., Ky., N. C., Wash-" ington, D. C. and Pa. _ _

Branch Banking and Trust Company-Wednesday. Posi· tions for men and women include management trainees, in commercial loans, trust ad­ministration, mortage loans, installment loans, accounting and auditing.

Southern Bell Telephone Company-Wednesday. Posi­tions as management trainees for men and women.

Western Electric Company -Wednesday. -Jobs available for men and women with ma­jors in math, physics, and business administration.

F. W. Woolworth Company­Thursday. Managing trainee positions open for men.

U. S. Bureau of the Cen­sus-Friday, Wide variety of jobs for men and women. Location in Suitland, Md., a suburb of Washington, D. C.

VALPARAISO, Ind. (CPS)_: As a key 1x> eliminating "dis­criminatory practiees" and the "trivial, anti-intellectual character'' of their frater­nity's activities, the presi­dents of the social fraterni­ties at Valparaiso. University have advocated a complete split with their nationals by the end of .this semesrer.

In a·· guest editorial in the· Sept: 30' issue uf the student newspaper, the Torch, the 11 fraternity presidents express­ed doubts that their chapters served any poSJitive purpose as presellltly organized.

They charged that the most crucial weakness of the sys­tem was its "apathy regard­ing the academic enterprise,'' and suggested that "tbe gen­eral Greek attitude is one of disdain toward diligent and sustained interest in critical inquiry."

"Ridiculous" Rush

The entire student body suf­fers from the fraternities' "ri­diculous" and "annoying" rushing procedures, they said. In addition fra~~ men themselves suffer from their pledging programs which in­clude ··absurd physical and

... a full size pouch of Burgundy pipe tobacco with

the pleasing aroma Burgundy combines an aromatic blend of vintage to­baccos, fine taste and pleasant wine aroma for the smoothest smoke ever to come out of a pipe.

Why is it free? Frankly, because we feel that once you try Burgundy it your regular smoke. So .have a pouch · the house .•• Cheers!

r------- ----~ I ~~~~ I I C/O p. Lorlllard COmpany I I 200 East 42nd Street, New York City 17, N.Y. I I Pteaso send me a tree Dackage of Burgundy smoklna; Tobacco, ~ I Nama 1

Street I I City State Zip__ 1

~--------------------~-·

mental endurance tests." The 11 categorically stated

that fraternities are guilty of discrimination toward minor­ity groups .and explained that, while many national fraterni­ties have oo clauses specifi­cally excluding certain peo­ple, "gentleman's agree­ments" or some o!Jher ar­rangements ()0 tbe local level strongly discourage the pledg-ing_ of Negroes/; : . · ." ·

Eliminate Discrimination

Disaffifiating from the na­tionals would "once and fur all eliminate the claim 'we may discriminate, but it's due to national policy of some sort','' they said.

Local autonomy would al· low each fraternity more freedom in establishing it<; own illlternal reform pro­grams, they suggested.

They proposed that all r:a­t.ernities sign a pledge stating they will not discriminate. This would, they said, give public and official notice of the attitude which fraternities should have had all along.

Having declared local au­tonomy and signed the pledge, the eleven presidents said they would work to abolish the umt. rule, or "Blackball" system.

Primarily . responsible for discriminatory: practices, the unit nile, -tiw!y said, means that the ne~tive vote of only one member ·can be enough to exclude a camidate from the fraternity.

15 Percent Vote

They suggested the estab­lishment of reasonably ac­ceptable alternatives for de­termining membership, such as requiting a 15 per~ent neg­ative vote for reJection of a candidate. .

The eleven national soc1al fraternities on the Valparaiso campus :include Tau Kappa Epsilon, Phi Kappa Psi, P!

. Kappa Alpha, Lambda Chi

Alpha, Phi Sigma Epsilon, Phi Delta Theta, Delta Theta Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Theta Chi. Sigma Tau Gamma, and Sigma Pi. .

Several (}f the fraternities' national officers said that re­lations had always been good with Valparaiso C!J..apoors and found the aetions of the eleven presidents hard to believe.

Bruce Nelchert, Tau Kappa Epsilon . 'executive ·· secretary, said that it was a chapter's own fault if it was anti-intel­lectual and agreed that "stupid" rush rules should be eliminated.

Some of .the national of· fices added that their chap­rers already had local autono­my in selecting members, but others refused to comment.

Reaction Mixed

Reaction on the Valparaiso ca:mpus has been mixed. Dean of Men Carl Galow said the fraternities were in a "change or .perish" position and comrnen<IOO the state­ment. 'I'he University presi­dent has also indicated his support.

· A majority of the fraternity men probably never even readi the editorial, Torch editor Tim Zorn commented, and reaction aiDOng the Greeks 008- been lukewarm. There seems oo be a ronsen­sus among the l~ders, how­ever, he said, that tbe criti­cisms were all too ~.

. Presented By Presidenj

The statement was original­ly drafted and presented to the presidents for theh- sig­natures by student body president Mark Sehwelm. Schwehn was elected. last spring partially as a "frater­nity candidate" and a m'Oder­ate on the reform issue.

His erstwhile "radical" op­ponent ·said that Sch'Ye~'s initiative on the fratermty IS­sue had come as a rather pleasant shock •

COLLEGE ,LAZA . SHOP~ING CINTER

(Across From Coliseum) DRY CLEANING & SHIRT LAUNDRY

COIN-QP LAUNDRY OPEN 24 HOURS

Dial '723-1377

. '

.,

• t t

I

_g

Jl v tl p (

y r: n ,, b p tl

m al

~~ rn pJ pl VE

01 ul w (~ Tl in Ot

''no qu gu fo, an

fa• tei or COl

th• SOt ex< sell nat AC

J bot in Ian fini

j

ing sist Itv ord

l 'gre•

ocrc: gan tne

Page 9: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

and per­chance to

, and the stiff fine. regulations often overt

and ani·

combined excellence

and pledges evidence to

that de-

VIEWING the DEA---

By DAVE ROBERTS Sports Editor

................................................. Gridiron Dilemma It is generally accepted that the Atlantic Coast

Conference is not one of the nation's major football ,; powers. Only two of the conference's eight teams

have winning records, and the loop's mark against outside competition is a meager 6-16 this season, indicating that the popular conception of ACC grid prowess is correct.

After seven weeks of the season, only N. C. State (7-0) and South Carolina (5~2) had overall records a:bove the .500 mark. Only the Wolfpack had a win­ning mark against non-conference foes (3-0), and Duke was even at one win and one defeat.

South Carolina and Clemson, both undefeated in the ACC, were 1-2 and 0-4, respectively, against non-league foes.

However, statistics can be ·misleading, and in this caRe they are. Some weeks ago, Bill Brill, sports editor of the Roanoke Times, wrote, "Critics say that the ACC does not play good football. That is not true. The ACC does not play great football, and, unfortunately, it must make its needed dollars by playing great football teams."

* * * A glance at the non-conference games on ACC

schedules shows the truth of Brill's statement: Clemson played Georgia, Georgia Tech, Auburn and

,. Alabama; Duke met Michigan and Army and will play Navy; Maryland fell to Oklahoma and Syra­cuse and must still play Penn State; South Carolina lost to Georgia and Florida State; etc.

In other words, most of the ACC's 22 non-league games have been against top regional -or national powers. Such schedules have become the conference vogue in recent years. Last season's slate was even tougher: two ACC teams met Notre Dame, one played Michigan State, two met Alabama, Georgia, Georgia Tech and Florida State, etc.

· Ju~~~~~~ .ft~~ .. :~;1J~'':~or~~~;~(~ ;~:J~l~;,~ v.~i~;~ year, the future has more of the same in store. The Deacs will meet Big Ten powers Purdue and Min­nesota, both ranked in the nation's top twenty last week, and Virginia Tech, which drew some votes because of its 7-0 record. There is no reason to sup­pose the rest of the conference will deviate from the trend.

* * * The ACC has the further disadvantage of playing

most of these top teams on the road: For example, all four of Duke's non-league games are aw,ay; State

,. met Florida State and Houston on the road and plays next week at Penn State; South Carolina played at Florida State and Georgia and later tra­vels to Alabama; etc.

·Why, one wonders, do such teams schedule ACC opponents? For victories. Why do ACC teams sched-

' ule them? Brill answered that question, for money. Wake Forest sports information director Marvin (Skeeter) Francis said, "We have to face up to it. Those teams are playing us because they .are look­ing for wins. The only way we can expect td improve our record is to schedule that way also."·'

But most of the ACC teams schedule for money, ~not victories, so wins will continue to come infre­quently. Brill said, "This is the price that the little guy must pay in order to maintain a ·big-time college football program. It is the story of most of the ACC and it is a continuing story.

1'When you play the best, you won't win many."

So several ACC teams, including Wake Forest are fa~ed with two alternatives: they may play good teams, lbse, and make money (or reduce deficits) · or they may play teams with which they can b~ competitive, and lose money.

* * * A third possibility, competing successfully with

the nation's top teams, is not likely. The main rea­son is the ACC's higher academic standards, which exclude many top high school prospects from ACC scholarships. The loop's ability to compete on a national scale may be judged by the infrequency of ACC finishers in the Top Ten:

In the AP poll, Duke finished lOth in 1960. In both the AP and UPI polls, Maryland finished third in 1955 and first in 1953. The AP also voted Mary­l~~d eigh!h in 1954. These are the only Top Ten f1mshers smce the conference wa!'l formed in 1953.

As long as the ACC continues its current schedul­ing policy, it cannot win non-conference games con­sistently. It will have few teams over .500 each year. It will seldom have a team with an outstanding rec­ord.

, Unfortunately, the question is not whether to play · great teams and lose or to play good feams and win

occasionally. The real question is whether to lo;:;e games or dollars, and few schools will choose to do the latter in the big ·business of college football.

Deacs Tromp USC, 35-21 By DAVE ROBERTS

Wake Forest discovered in the fourth quarter that all it needed to do was stick to the ground, and it rolled 55 yards for a tie-breaking touchdown which led the way to a 35-21 homecoming victory over South Carolina Saturday night.

The Deacons scored the most points they'd had since the second game of the 1964 season in giving Coach Bill Tate his first homecoming win in four years.

Leading 21-14 at the half, the Deacons had the ball for only three offensive plays in the third quarter, two of which were passes. South Carolina took. the second half kickoff and conswned nearly nine minutes with an 80-yard scoring drive. After the Deacs punted the Gamecocks began anothe~ sustained drive which ended in a wide field goal at­tempt from the 17-yard line.

The Deacs moved to mid­field before stalling after an incomplete. pass and a com­pletion which gained only four yards. Digit Laughridge punted and USC failed on a third-and-four when a. pass was incomplete.

Getting possession at the Wake 45, the Deacs decided they'd had enough! of this aerial nonsense and crashed through the line for consistent gains before Freddie Sum­mers scored from the 17 with 2:45 remaining.

After South Carolina failed to move, Buzz Leavitt keyed a 3o-yard drive for the final touchdown.

In the first half, Jack Dol­bin ran for 120 yards and set up two of the three Deacon

BUZ LEAVITT cuts down two Tar Heels at UNC ten-yard line, springing Jack Dolbin for

-PHOTO BY MCNEILl.

the final Jeg of his opening-play 51-yard toueh­doW11 run.

touchdowns. 'I'hree plays af­ter Wake Forest took the kkk­off he raced off tackle for 60 yards and a first down at the Gamecock three.

The Deacon offensive line openerl huge holes on the se­cond scoring drive, a 69-yarder which ended with a two-yard run by Don Jure­wicz.

The offense moved again In the USC 38 before Summers was hit while looking for a . receiver and dropped the ball. · ~outh Carolina recovered and, sparked by the break, romped

for a score. Quarterback Mike Fair ran the final five yards.

On the following series, Swnmers was dropped for a loss while trying to pass and Wake Forest punted. South Carolina moved qttkkly for a score, Ben Garnto crashing

over from the one. Laughridge intercepted a

pass to give the Deacon of~ fense another chance late in the first half. Dolbin set up the score with a 35-yard scamper, and Leavitt took tbe ball in from the four.

Bulson Scores Two As Deaconettes Tie

By DOUG BUCKLEY STAFF WRITER

The Wake Forest women's field hockey team battled Ca­tawba ·to a 3-3 tie in an excit­ing contest played last ThUTS­day on the home field. The coeds are now 2-1-1 on the season.

It appeared that the Deac­ettes .llad .. the, game,:;~Hon :as they held a 3-2 lead'·With less:) than two minutes remaining in the CO'lltest. However, Bar· bara Koffel was able to slip a shot past Wake Forest goalie Connie Goehring to end the emotion packed game in a sober 3-3 tie.

Catawba completely domi­nated the action in the first half as the Wake Forest coeds appeared to be lifeless.

After several near misses, Catawba finally scored two quick goals to vault into a 2-0 lead mid-way through the first half.

Coeds Rally

Then, with less than a min­ute le~t in the half, the Deac­ettes suddenly came alive. The first goal of the home forces came on an out of bounds .play when Barbara Gutekunst made a crisp pass to Ronnie Bulson who scored from short range.

Kay Stoudenmire gained pos­session of the ball on the fol­lowing bully and stick handled the ball on a fantastic indi­vidual effort through the en­tire catawba defense before dri1ling a shot past the be­wildered goalie.

The Deacettes managed to take the lead mid-way through the second half on Miss Bul· son"s second goal of the day. The goal was scored. from six yards out during a. scramble in front of the Catawba net. The inspired play of Sharon Lynch was also a key factor in the coeds' third goal.

Coach Dorothy Casey did not feel that the team played up to its capabilities blaming its sub par perfonnance on

Downstairs Bookroom

Sale New and Used

B 00 KS from

Sc up

the lack of proper rest due to the pressure of mid-semester exams.

The hockey •team concludes its season with a home game against arch-rival Salem Wed­nesday at 4:00. Attendance at past games has been extreme­ly small and Miss Casey hopes that more spectators will come out>'tl} see. the .final 'contest.' Since the ·sat em: girls 'are· Still"' smarting from a 2-lloss to the Deacettes earlier in, the sea­son, the game figures to be a real grudge battle.

--PHOTO BY DAUGHTRY

HALFBACK JUDY MORROW whacks ball out of trouble during Deacettes' 8-3 tie with Catawba.

The CLASSICAL RECORD HAPPENING of the Year! ... only $1.79 per disc

Seraphim has happened!

Angel Records created this new series in answer to the need for low-priced clas­sical records of comparable quality, performance and presentation to its superb line of full-price recordings.

Seraphim makes available the world's most distinguished artists doing the greatest of classical literature. The treasured old: Furtwangler's Walkure, the Gigli/Caniglia Aida and concert programs by Cantelli, Beecham, Lipatti, Brain and Toscanini­and the brand NEW: song collections by Fischer-Dieskau, Ludwig, Mathis and Wun­derlich; orchestral and instrumental giants by Giulini, Sargent, Rodzinski, and the Hungarian Quartet. "The price, mono or stereo, is unbelievable. There are no better buys anywhere ... no performance of equal merit"- Paul Hume, Washington Post

s 60043 60040 s 60045

~ "Champagne at beer prices" -The New York Times ~- . /(.·--- '-~-·-

C\1"~1~> College Book Store "ON THE CAMPUS"

Owned and Operated by Wake Forest University

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Nov. I, 1967 PAGE NINE

~ffiit.%'i~~~;..:;..::--./J;:~~;;;,;.~:£l ~~a~;.~-·;~:~ ~- ·~ · . .t: ;, •• :~:·2~>u-w;.r~~ ... ~1: ::&-r-.~·:;Ft'}~~-·~1 . · ·

~ Theta Chi Breaks :H

I Open Football Race llil

By RUDY ASHTON Theta Chi Fraternity broke

the intramural football race wide open last week as they won two games and the chal­langing PiKA's lost two con­tests.

Last Tuesday both the Big Red and the PiKA's were un­defeated, Sigma Pi topped the PiKA's 37..1) and Theta Chi romped past Kappa Sigma 48-18. Then Thursday Theta Chi overcame a two touch­down deficit to top the PiKA's, 26-18.

In other Fraternity action, the surprising Sig Ep's inter­cepted eight Sigma Chi pass­es to down the men in blue, 37-25. The Sigma Chi's had already beaten the Alpha Sig's 22-6 earlier in the week.

'I~e Delta Sig's continued their perfect record by los­ing the KA's 19-0 and the Lambda Chi's 28·12.

In action this week, The Alpha Sig's play Sigma Pi's and the KA's meet the Kappa Sig's on Monday. Tuesday the KA's replay the Sig Ep's in a game that was protested two weeks ago because of faculty refereclng.

Thursday Delta Sig plays Sigma Chi, the busy KA's meet the PiKA's, and Kappa Sig plays Lambda Chi.

The stadings now are Theta Chi (6-0), Sigma Pi (4-2), Sig Ep (4-2), PiKA (4-2), Lambda Chi (4-3), Kappa Sig (3-2),

KA (2-2), Sigma Chi (2-4), Alpha Sig (1-5), and. Delta Sig (Q-7).

In the other football leagues, the Bandits and the Defenders remain tied for the lead in the Independent League with 6-0 records. In Dorm No. 1 League the Taylor No. 1 and Poteat No. 2 lead with 5-1 re­cords. In the Dorm No. 2 League, the Blue Saints lead with a 5·0 record and are closely followed by the Mar­auders who are 4-1.

The Theta Chi's dominated the track scene in the intra­mural track meet held two weeks ago. The Big Red scored 19 points to beat the Lambda Chi's, who had 17.5. The Kappa Sigs, PiKA's, and Sig Eps scored 16, 10, and 9 points respectively to round out the top five.

Individual winners were Lester Butt in the 100, Ted Nodell in the 220, Tom Pres· ton in the hurdles, Roger Crockett in the 880, and Theta Chi in the mile relay. Also Charles Jackson won the shot and discus, 'l'om Moyer the h:igh jwnp, and Jim Callison the broad jwnp.

Handball and table tennis entries are due by noon Fri­day. Pairings will be pasted Saturday and play will begin next Monday. Rifle entries are due by noon on Nov. 15, with shooting beginning Nov. 20. Wrestling weigh-ins will be Nov. 2D-21 in the weight room.

Paschal Shoe Repair REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTER

and PARKWAY PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER

While You Wait Service

"A COAT FOR ALL SEASONS" Mandarin col­lar-set in sleeves-8 button front-slanting double slosh pockets-Coot is fully lined and completely wosh 'n wear-inside book pockets and cope strops. Regular sizes 6-16 in pea­cock, raspberry, lemon, mint and pink. Petits sizes 6-14 in lemon and mint. 40.00. Match­Ing hats and umbrellas 6.00 eo.

Page 10: Wake Forest University · Nursing is established Center \ of North Hill. The \ were ad· tenn in \ t \ . TODAY, • EDITORIALLY • • • au TODAY, INSIDE e Vietnam Greetings e

PAGE TEN Monday, Nov. II, 1!167 OLD GOLD AND BLAClt

Deacs To Challenge Tulsa, Perennial Offensive Power

Tankmen Preparing WF Runners

For Tough Season Gain Split By RUDY ASHTON had in past years. In Tri-Meet

By RICHARD SINK STAFF WRITER

This Saturdav afternoon Wake Forest plays a team which is number one in total offense and in total defense among all the major college football teams. This team is not Houston. Purdue. South­ern Cal. Notre Dame. or UCLA, but rather a team not even ranked in the nation's Top Twenty-the Tulsa Hur­ricanes.

Tulsa a\'eraged 440.6 yards per game after its first five contests. 111c Hurricanes averaged 312.4 yards passing and 128.2 yards rushing. De· fensivelv. Tulsa's first five opponen-ts scored only 33 points against the mammoth defense.

The Tulsa offensiYe statis­tics are staggering. Tulsa has averaged 80 offensive plays

a game. Tulsa has always been known for its passing attack but even more so this yeat·. averaging 25 comple­tiOns and 42 attempts for a 58.8 percentage after its first five games.

Small-college Southern 11-linoi:-: handed the Hurricanes their lone defeat in their first five games. a 15-13 setback. However. Tulsa's first four victories were quite impres­sive.

F~ur Straight Wins

A 14-12 victory ov~r peren­nial power Arkansas got Tulsa off to a winning start. 111en followed a shutout \'ictory over Idaho State. a 77-0 romp over Tampa. and a 35·6 de­c'ision against Cincinnati. The Southern Illinois upset snapp­ed the Hurricane four-game winning streak.

-PHOTO IIY McNEILL

BUTCH HENRY, here making a last-minute interception ai UNC, will face a atern test from Tulia's passing.

Tired o{ WOI'!HJat gloves? Improve Yow

We Flat Feed You-· FRIED CHICKEN

BREASTS ALL YOU CAN EAT

WITH HOT BISCUITS, FRENCH FRIES,

AND COLE SLAW • . •

ONLY $1.35 OR

Fried Fillet Of Flounder Only $1.25

WITH FRENCH FRIES, COLE SLAW AND HUSH PUPPIES

T~AVEL. HOST OF AMERICA MOTEL AND RESTAURANT

Motel Reservations 767-1930 52 North and Patterson Avt. Ext.

The victory over Arkansas came at Arkansas. where vic­tories are hard to come by. In the Idaho State victory Tulsa piled up offense. Four different quarterbacks threw for Tulsa touchdowns in this \''ictory.

Following the Idaho State and Tampa victories, Tulsa coach Glenn Dobbs was ac­cused of running up the score. Dobbs replied, "I can't tell my third and fourth teams not to score. Besides, it isn't foatball to kick on first or second down."

After four such victories, it's hard to believe that Tul­sa could have lost to a small­college team which had only two victories all season. In any case, Wake Forest will probably have to play its best game of the season to beat the Hurricanes.

As evidenced by the statis· tics, Wake Forest must score some points against the Tulsa defense and slow down the Hurricane passing attack. The Tulsa quarterbacks have two primary receivers, Rick Eber and Harry Wood.

Coach Dobbs has three fine quarterbacks to choose from. He even furnishes two of them with a place to live. Those two are Glenn Dobbs, Jr., and Johnny Dobbs. But Coach Dobbs does not start favorites because Greg Barton starts at quarterbacks.

Gobs of Dobbs

Barton has a good arm but has had trouble avoiding in­juries in the past. Rangy (6-6, 201) Glenn, Jr., a senior is usually the first to replace Barton when his throwing arm gets tired. Sophomore Johnny backs up older brother Glenn.

If Tulsa ever decides to run the ball against the Deacons, 205-pound tailback Gary Mc­Dermott will more than likely get the call. Last year's top groundgainer, fullback Gene Lukusiak. quit Tulsa and de­fected to the Canadian Football League.

The Hurricanes' biggest

-PHOTO BY McNEILL

JACK DOLBIN BREAKS AWAY for 51 yards and a TD to start Deacons on way to victory number one.

paces the offensive linemen. Reynolds was a stru-ter two years ago but was injured all of last season.

Wake Forest will be hard pressed to mount any kind of offense against the well-bal­anced Hurricane defense. The defensive linemen look like re­fugees from the NFL. There's tackle Alfred Jenkins (6-2, 280), tackle Joe Blake (6-3, 295), and defensive end Willie Crittendon (6-5, 295). Blake rates All-America considera­tion, whereas Jenkins and Crittendon are transfer stu­dents.

The linebackers and the de­fensive halfbacks are also de­fensive standouts. Bob Junko and transfer Smiley Elmore (6-2, 232) pace the lineback­ers. Linebacker Donnie Mig! and defensive back Bob Dun­can (180} alternate at the mon­ster man position en defense. Both were injured last season but have come back strong this year. ·

vulnerable pass defense seems incapable of stopping the Hur­ricane pass attack. Also, the often-erratic Deacon offense may have trouble moving the ball against the Tulsa giants.

Still, a small-college team with only two victories found some way to weather the Hur­ricane attack and survive with a victory. Why oot Wake For­est?

ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR

On September 25, the Wake Forest swimming team be­gan its preseason practice schedule for the 1967-19611 season.

Under the guidance of Coach Leo Ellison, the tank­men have been subject to a rugged conditioning program in order to get ready for their first meet. The Deacon tank­ers host the University of Maryland on Dec. 1 at 4:00 and the University of Virginia Dec. 2 at 3:00. Both meets will be in the pool in the gym.

Conditioning Stressed 1 'he fall conditioning con­

sisted of both swimming and weight work for the first five weeks in order to build strength and endurance in the :;wimmers. Now they are just swimming and concentrating on technique and 1mprove­ment.

The swimm·ing workouts have mainly been long dis­lance and interval work. Real ming squad than they have speed work will not be fea­tured until closer to the sea­t;on.

The number one problem for past Deacon swimming learns has been depth. Under the new freshman eligibility rule, the problem wil be par­·tially cured. '11he Deacons have a larger var.s:ity swim·

Coach Ellison pointed out an_other problem arising from this rule saying, "Even ~hough the freshman eligibil­Ity rule helps us in our depth problem, it will also aid th~ other ACC schools -too."

So far this fall the swim­mers' progress is' at least as good and probably a little bet­ter than last year. The fresh­men seem to be 'shaping up well.

:t'IJ.e tankmen will be led this year by senior co-cap­tains Milt Ackerman and Don Riordan. Other returning let­terme~ are seniors Roy Blank and Vmce Howard and junior Frank Stemng.

Up from last year's fresh­man team are Bl'uce Lamb, Bob Dunckel, Mike Neal, Bill Bley, Barry Hackshaw, Ed Urban, and George Slaton.

'fhe season this year promises twelve tough dual meets. Ac­cording ~Ellison, the ACC is as strong as it ever has been and the Southern Conference has improved too.

Ellison added that some of the dutch meets will be at home this year, and it is hoped llhat there will be good student body support to en­courage the team to victory.

The Wake Forest cross­country team closed out its 1967 dual meet season Friday, October 27, with a 26-29 vic­tory over the University of South Carolina and a 25-33 loss to Clemson in a tri-meet held on the Gamecock course in Columbia.

The tri-meet, scored as three dual meets, saw Clem­son emerge 2-o, Wake 1-1, and South Carolina 0-2. The victory and loss gave the Dea­con thindads a 4-4 record for the season.

Deacon ace Jolm HoOOdon was not at his best and came in second to USC's Dave Ped­die. It was only the second meet Hodsdon has lost all y~ar. Jim Hope continued in hts consistent form and finish­ed in third place.

The 4.8 mile course was run in a time of 24:26 minutes. Hodsdon's second place time was 25:04.

Today the Deacons travel to Raleigh for the state meet. Next week the journey to Duke for the ACC Champion-ships. 1

LIFE INSURANCE BENEFITS AVAILABLE ONLY TO

COLLEGE SENIORS and Graduate Students

The College Special is a unique plan designed only for the college senior or graduate student ... the preferred policyholder because of your high earn· lng potential, discriminating taste and need for more extensive coverage.

problem lies in the offEmsive line. Center Chuck Reynolds

Defensive backs Gary Berch­told and Doug Wyatt were also injured last season but have regained their starting posi­tions. Transfer Ron Cambiano ( 6-1, 195} draws ,the starting nod at safety.

Wake Forest with its highly

Popp: Depth Lack Costly For Frosh

-PHOTO BY BUNN

FROSH HALFBACK Dick Bozoian, sbowu here on offense, has a good chance to make next year's varsity secondary.

By BILL UPTON ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

Although the 1967 edition of the Baby Deacon football squad finished tll.e season with a 1-4 record, Coach Bob Popp is far from discouraged with the performance of this year's team.

"Excluding our record, the players did a fine job. Indi­vidually, we had fine person· nel, and all were willing to le!ll'n and to work," he said.

Lack of depth was a contri­buting factor to the poor re­cord of the Baby Deacs this season. Popp began the year using a one-platoon system, playing his best 11 on both

offense and defense, but when the strain of playing both ways began to tell on the players, he was farced to shift back to two-platooning the best possible use of all the available talent.

Another reason for the low mark was mental letdown. "Mentally letting down when­ever we made a mistake was what really hlli't, especially on defense. The players would get down ~n flhemselves after a mistake, and that would hurt their performance," said Popp.

The coach anticipates that at least eight players will move up to help next year's

varsity, although he emp~­sizes that the competition for positions will be fierce since most of the varsit· squad will be retu..rning ntxt year. He s-uressed the fact that "Spring practice will be, a de­ciding factor on whether or not many of these kids will help the varsity."

The eight players with the best chance to move up, ac­cording to Popp, are: Win Headley (tackle), Gary Win­row (tight end), Dick Bozoian and Terry Ku:harchek (both played in the offensive back­field but might make it as de­fensive secondary men}, Jim Pope (linebacker), Al Beard (defensive end), Archie Logan (defensive end), and Lee Cly­mer (defensive halfback).

The Duke game was the high spot of the season for coach Popp. In that game the Baby Deacs put it all together

Fearless Forecasts SINK ROBERTS

GAME (40-19-1) (38-21-1) WF at Tulsa Tulsa Tulsa Navy at Duke Navy Navy Ga. at Florida Ga. Ga. Indiana at Mich. St. MSU MSU Okla. St. at Nebraska Neb. Neb. N. C. State at Penn. St. Perm. Penn. Arkansas .at Rice Ark. Rice Baylor at Texas Texas Texas UNC at Virginia UNC U. Va. Memphis St. at Houston Hous. Hous.

WHEW!! Only Two More

Miles To Thruway

50 STORES And SERViCES

UPTON ASHTON BUCKLEY (38-21-1) (34-25-1) (33-26-1) Tulsa Tulsa Tulsa Navy Duke Duke Ga. Ga. Ga. Ind. MSU Ind. Neb. Neb. Neb. N.C. st. N.C. St. Pem. Ark. Ark. Ark. Texas Texas Texas U. Va. U. Va. U. Va. Hous. Hous. Hous.

to route the Devils 4(}-21, with Bozoian and Larry Russell spearheading ~ offense. "We avoided mistakes and mental letdowns," said Popp, · "and although the defense al­lowed 21 points, it was tough when it had to be."

Some unexpected surprises this season were Gary Win­row, who received a chance to play because of an injury to the starting tight end, and finished the year as the team's leading receiver; and Lee Clymer, the hustling hal£­back who. came out for the team on his own (he was not on scholarship) and became a regular in the defensive back­fidd.

In a recent vote of team members, Bozoian was se­lected offensive tearrn MVP, while Pope was named de­fensive team MVP. Kuhar­chek was named co--captain for the offense, and Pope re­ceived the hooor on defense.

ACC Crowds Up After seven weeks of ACC

football, more than 700,000 spectators have filed in to see twe~ty-three games at ACC stadiums. 'This is an in­crease of almost 76 000 fans ~:>ver last . year. Leading the rncrease u Clemson ~ch has drawn 131,000 fans for three home games.

CHECK THESE BENEFITS: II' $10,000 to $25,000 of pennanent life insuraiJCe

at low guaranteed premium. Jl# Pre-financed first annual premium . . . paid II' off automati~ by your policy in 4 years.

Option to buy up to $70,000 additional life in­tt' surance in the future, regardless of insurability

. . · . your choice of plans.

II' Guarant~ cash values at any time to meet emergencies.

fill Guaranteed premium payments should you be disabled 6 months or longer.

G Frank Ma,y Wake Forest Representative

2000 Cloverdale Avenue 723-7975- 765-3300

Appointment At Your Convenience

Jefferson Standard ~~9~~~

May We Order

· ~ We would be pleased to order any of . the over 400 colkge paintings from the at-tached list. Each scene is hand-painted em glass and there is always a variation in the painting, which is bordered by a 15" x 9W' leafed frame in silvery gold tones. . .

Some views depict modern campuses. Others illustrate earlier buildings: We try to. phoose: a vieu.• that most Tepresents the college· to t'fl-~·· students. '··.. ·

· McPhai~l' s, Inc:. i

410 N. SPRUCE ST. . THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER

Over 200 Colleges and Universitii!S Available. Ideal for Christmas Givf:Dg.

TOD_, e· A e SA

VOLUM

Three ,: recent 1

at a SE De Tam!

The s how tht prevent menthi itself in

Memb J. T. M1

SJ

The S day pia on stric and han• ty and staging

The tl a two-ho es of vic quiring , surnptior parties.

Decisic • ' until Tu

Mark Ii called 01

The p Laurels and by Oct. 26.

Two c Washing! sophomo. hospitalh accident;

'' .Social:· Thomas

" SAC cha will not social gJ

For th ternity '" social ac ticipate i or pledge

ParticiJ activities bidden. used onlj No orgar tt,e hOUSI

There] Lambda ing that will lead

The re] lating tt parties tc

,, of the de married c parties. Lambda ganized t

The co: against Pi the result violations.

In Marc

Pr£ SA~

Students non-voting fairs Comn in the fac

Dr. Thor ·' posal and

actians las the com.m:

The prop name fron to Student three stud• bership.

Under tt faculty m terms are mittee.

Non-votin dent of the Tege, dean

• dean of w of concert!

No studeJ r.1ittee in 1

Other SA -Olive a)

to conduct, University's

. , Committe C.· Barnett chainnan,