8
·d,. Ed Barry lt ! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r C.anden; ·Smith. team of fra- en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes- tiLL ·' ··':) '. I• ' / \• . .McLAIN. :-: ........ ... : r .. ·,:! '• .;::"i :·., ...... RICHARDS SEAY - . ·; .·SMITH TWEED. WALKER . 23 Phi Beta l(appa . - . - .. Members . . l . Twenty-thi-ee seniors have been I Salem, Charles McCall of Lenoir, . selected for membership in Phi Isaac MeLain of Marion, Joan Beta: Kappa' national. honorarY Pierce of Winston-Salem, Charles frateinity. of Youngsville, The students, .15 of them coeds, Seay: of Charlotte, Helen Smith of will be. initiated . at a banquet· on Tweed of Ashe- Aprll 5. · · · Ville, B.Hl.:.W alker_ of ·' · to· Phi Beta Kappa· is Announcements of the 13elections based on 'scholastic averag;es, the .were ¥J1ade by Dr. H. Grady Britt, minimum being 2.300 for a \3-tudent secretary-treasurer of the· Wake who completes all of his. four Forest Chapter of Phi Beta Kap- years at Wake Forest, 2.450 for pa. · those who• complete -three years ·Candidates are chosen once every here and 2.600 for those who com- year· at' Wake Forest, and are se- pletuig two here. lected by members of Phi ·Beta · Candidates for ·the de- Kappa on the faculty-. gree are n:ot eligible for member- This year's total of 23 members is one more than the number cho- ship. T,hose chosen were: sen last year. In 1955, 33 were Denny Ba;xter· of .Hopewell, Va., selected. Ha.Iffiah Blackwell of Mars Hill, Members are drawn from Kitty Booth of Morganton, Tom following groups: Buie Jr. toof Bladenboro, Virginia 1. Those who completed . ch d V M work for the B.A. or B.S. degree Chamblee of Ri mon , a., rs. Betty McRary Chester of Lenoir, eharles Edwards of Elkin. Earl Ferguson of New Bern, llarjorie Fisher of Rockwell, Gloria: Flippin of Pilot Mountain, Jlrs. · lllartha Cook Gentry of :Moultrie, Ga., Mrs. J o Chandler Holcolnb . of Winston-Salem, Dee Hughes of Ahoskie, Harolyn King <1! St,.· George, S.C. Tucker Littleton of Winston- during the preceding summer or the preceding semester. 2. Those who have completed at least 104 S€mester hours and candidateS' for ·the B.A. or degree at the end of the semester. 3. Those who have completed at least 92 semester hours of pre- professional work in Wake Forest College and who are ca:ftdidates for the combined degree in cine. or jn law at the end o:f the current- year, provided that at least 80 of the 92 college credits are earned in liberal subjects, About 10 Per Cent . Campaign Begins .. For Campus Bell It is the policy of the fraternity to e}ect about 10 per eent of any one class. In no case can more tha.n The ea.mpaign to raise money for 15 of any class be elect- a llell for the campus has been ed. lauDChed by the senior elass. Computation of academic Letters 81ppealing for .money ords to determine which students have been senJt tO faculty members are eligJ1lle for election is based aJtd alumni, and :the dorms were upon all work completed at Wake canva&Sed Thursday night. Forest' -College previous to Walt Ward, president . of the election. S6II.ior class, emphasized last week No student is eligble who trans- that the eam.paign is being SlKln- fers more than 64 ho111'8 from else- sored. by .the seni9r class. Tlie where or 'who does" not spend at money 'Will come from the . &tire least two years !n residence at studeai body. faeulty and alumni. Wake Forest College. · . . lb .. anb * * VOLUME XLll Wake Forest-College, ;Winston.Sale·m.· North Carolina, Monday, March 11, 1957 NUMBER 20 WGA Attempts Petition· Method . * * ·* * * * * * * * * Party. Slates PTeliminary Meets .. Campus Student Party-·- WGA Presidency· Coed Leaders Aycock, Owens Are Nominees Seek Change Schedules No Activities Yet In Constitution - By,'LEON GATLIN I Jane Aycock and Joan. Owenlt . ,-ca.roi>us. poli.tics . .were . .in evi- have bOOn selected as candidates · · · k for president of WOman's Govtml- dence for the first time last wee . A!isociation for next yeaJ:; A as the Campus Party announced· 12.:(membe:t: nomiriating · connnittee a iroup olf organizational'meetings elected by the coed students select- to ibe held: the da)rs.: ed .the ·two candidates last week. The !four Campus Party fratern- Denny Baxter, current W.GA' ities 'tonight eleot delegates president, anno1.1nced th.at the elec- the party convention, and 'coeds tion for the president .will be held independent men aligned with next week-'Probal>ly · The other 11 positionS' on WGA's the ·party will to elect d<ele- Executive Board will be filled gates tomorrow and Wednesday. later. The election is split so that . ·:Student· Party members a losing candidate for the presi- tacted Friday said they do not yet dency might liave a chance at ana- have specific plans. Their ther office. ganizational . meetings- will prob- Miss Aycock is a native of ably ·be held next week. Win&ton-Salem and Miss Owens is Elections have obeen set for Tues- from Canton: Both girls jun- day, 'April 16, student body Presi- iors. JANE AYCOCK IOAN OWENS dJent Dave Hirano annoti.nced Fri- Those on the nomination com- day. As president, Hirano is chair- mittee are seniors Mary George and of the Board. All standards committee, town girls' man of the Elections Committee. Pennell, :Pee Hughes, Kitty Booth, undergraduate .resident women of representative, the house presi- Nominations for camlldates must JoAnne King and Miss Baxter; the College are members of the dents and one member at large be filed with the committee be- juniors Elizabeth Prickett, Reta Association, which governs them from each of the classes. tween April 1 and 15. · . Peoples and Bert Walton; sopho- in matters of social regulations. For the past two years the Ex- In the Campus Party, coeds of mores Frances Young.l>lood and· WGA's Executive Board is re-: ecutive Board has served as· the Ea,srt; Dormitory will meet to- Judy and freshmen Bet- sponsible for the legislation and Women's Jionor Council. Under morrow at 8 p. m. The West .ty Gall()WII.Y and Fabian Broad- enforcement- of r)lles and regula- the present ·student body Consti- 0or.mitory .. meeting is scheduled for way. tionS: · - tution, however, the Board will 3:30. Independent men have been Duties of the new president It· consists of the president, -no longer have authority in cases asked: .to meet Wednesday a.t.-7 p. will be to call and preside over vice president, recording secretary, of violations of student body n. in Room 124 oi Reynolda Hall. all ·meetings of the Association treasurer, chairman of the social gulations. CllllllJ)Us Party Chairman Joe Mill- . . sap!!f .will pre& ide; at alLthree. meet- ' · · ings.· ·:··.. .. ......... - . . unrrtf"l.Da;,ll··Satu•-Jay· '-Tlieibig• 't;t.:.:q-:. . "'" . . . . :- ;, : -rear concerns DeLta Plu, a · · · · · .• · . . . French Official .·f. ... fraternity revived at Wake Forest· . . . rc year a!fter three years as an 0 Be, Wl"P. 'S pl• .. 'Sl inactive. The -Delta ·Sigs have no.t · \ .. , . W £ .. £ j • Plans Speeches For Meetings yet indicated which. party they Nish to affiliate with. By JIM TURNER speclaeular ever given· by this Under the present s.etu.p four EvenC!ng gowns, military uni- large a group at Wake Forest," fraternities are in the Camp-us f-orms and gay decorations will and Blade President Ro- By MARGIE WOODALL Party and othe Student Party has CO'lor the ·Reserve Armory Satur-- land Tho.mas said last week. - The Secretary of the French . .Both organizations attempt day night as Wake Forest's ROTC Sparkle will be added to the Embassy in Washington will be to attraat as many coeds and non- cadetS S/tage the first military ball by the pre.sentation of spon· .guest speaker as social science fraternity men as they can., and• >J?all in the school's history. sors. Jean. Hobby, Cary fres.hman, professors lfrom the seven Baptist voting strength in the conventions The baltl will be of special in- will reign as. regimental 'sponsor. colleges in North Carolina meet is divided ibetween the fraternities terest to memlbers of .Sea:bbard Other girls elected! hy the ROTC on C3.JniPUS F1riday and. Sa.turday. and othe non-fraternity students.· and Blade honorary military so- cadets last :fall are Mrs. Shirley The secretary, Jean Le Canne- The CallliPU.S Party· fraternities ciety, the orgamizati-on which will Burros and Jane Aycock, lier, will speak on "The Middle are Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, sponsor the festivilty. Members olf battailiOillS sponsors; Ann Nuckols, East Crisis" at a dinner Friday Lambda Chi Alpha and Sigma Phi the society hope to make the ball headquar:ters c om 'Pan Y ; Jane night in the Magnolia :Roo-m. Epsilon. Those in the Student an annual aiiifair as i.t is in many Blake, band company; Mrs. Nancy He will Bpeak to social science Party are Alpha Sigma Phi, Pi other colleges !With ROTC units. Hughes Geer, drill platoon; Mrs. ·students and other interested stu- Kappa Alpha, Chi, Signna "We expect. this dance.·. to be Betty Mi'l-lsaps, A company; Eliza- .dents .Saturday morning at 9 o'- Pi and Theta Chi. one O'f the most colorful and most beth Prickett, B company; Lois clock in room 108 of the Library -------------:--------:-----:------1 Weeks, E company, and Linda building. Kinlaw, F company. Cannelier has studied at the f:•ponso.rs will be presented for University of Tangiers and the the first time tomorro.w at a regu- National Political Lnstitute of lar drill period. They will receive Paris. He was the French Foreign honorary commissions in the R.O- Qfficer in charge of .the United TC. Nations Program for three years. The public has :been invited to Business administration proies- tomorrow's presentation, which sors from the 1;;even colleges will will lbegin at noon o.n, the athletic also obe on campus, and they will practiee (field. · ·hold separate sessions Friday aft- Sipeci-al guesrt;s will be ·present ernOO'Il and 'Saturday morning. Friday night along with the RO- William H. Stevenso-n Jr., Re- TC studenU> and their dates.· A gional ·Manager for the North number oi Army officers from this Carolina EmploYJnent Security' area and the Third Army wiia at- Commission, will 1be the guest tend, and of!ficers and enlisted speaker_ There will :be discussion men from the Resen·e Annory groups for economies, aecounti.ng have also been invited. and secretarial studies teachers . . The Armory will be deeo:ra.ted Tillet To Speak OJl a military toheme which has no.t ·Dr. Lowell Tillet of .the History yet been diselosed. The dance will Depar:tment will open .the social last :from 8 o'clock until midnight. (Continued on page 4). Students To Direct A group of coed leaderS' have renewed tJ:!eir. efforts .to maintain Woman's Government Association as a part of the judicial branch of student government. . Led by WGA President Denny Baxter, . the c;;oeds· are now passing a petitiOn which they hope will force a campus-wide vote to test the Honor and Conduct Councils sys.tem as it outlined· in the stu- dent. body Constitution. · · Miss Baxter estimated Friday some 260 ·students· had then Signed the petition. It will take around 350 names-a total of 20 Denny Bax:ter and Owen Her- ring give their opposing views on the judicial branch question on page five. per cent of the student body-to force a vote on the proposed amendment. For the past two years WGA's Executive Couneil has served a dual !Purpose, acting both as a coed dormitory council and as the Women's .Honor .Council: ·However· sections of· the 'Constitution which will go into effect this spring ex- clude WGA- from participation. in the new council setup. (1) A Women's Conduct Council with jurisdiction over coedS' viola- ting conduct .and made up of eight eoeds to be elected by coed students · in ·regular spring elections. . (2) A Men's Conduct Council with jurisdiction over men viola- ting conduct regulations and made up of eight men to be· elected by men students in regular spring elections. {3) A Student Honor· C<>uncil with ·jurisdiction over all students in cheating cases and made up of eight men and eight women elect- ed to the Conduct Councils. The amendment now I>eing pe· titioned would remove the ·wom- en's Council election from student g-overnment control and lot the Executive Board of WGA auto- matically serve as the Women's C-{)nduct Council. Eight o:f the officials would automaticaJ.. ly be members of the new Honor Council. Student Legislature members gave the proposal a quick setback when Miss Baxter presented it to the Legislature on Feb. 28. Be- cause the proposal did not get the Legislature's approval, 20 per cent of the student body must petition an before the amendment can be brought to a vote. Miss Baxter appealed to the coeds concerning the amendment Tuesday in a compulsory meeting all women students who live in dorm·itories .• , The petition was be- 'ng circulated the :following day. Aeoording to Miss Baxter, nei- t.her she nor Dean of Women Loie Johnson. knew WGA was .being excluded from the judiciary branch vhen the Constitution was pre- sented and· approved last spring. Roles Assigned For -One-Act Plays By ED IONES her husband and six: sons doevour- wcho left him after she saved 12 High· Siepper-'-· Mary_ Elise Bridger gets in .a extra · · . practice on one of the daace ront1nes she will perform as Gladys' In the College Theater.:· of "Pajama Game.!' -The musical comedy opens ne::d Monday for a six-day run in the arena theater. The -College Theater has an- ed by ,the sea and now watches her oounds, is played by Linda Wil- nounced oasts !for three produc- y-oungest son go to face the same lard. tion.s to be directed and produced fate. . . His present wife, Lady Sims, by stndents Tuesday. and Wedne.s-- Jane Will .play lead is depicted by Hillary Jones. She day, March 27-28, m the Arena role, whlle Tony Stone Wlill play is a nervous ·person who has too Theater. the part of h;r youngest The much confidence in Sir Rarry. The Tolbel'!t daughters Will ibe portrayed by butler, who thinks Sir Harry is Wilkerson and Larry Thompson Becky Lampley and Ho- the pers<>n. in the world willl direet the one-act plays. All cutt, and Jerry Matherly has the wiH ,be played by James Wiggins' three are students in the play dl- role of an understanding neighbor. reeting dass of Prof. James Wal- Deals With War ton. "Crusade" is a verse play that CUl"tiim time for the !Plays is deals rwith causes and effeets of 8 o'clOCk each night and al!l stu- the Korean War. Three soldiers dents have been invited to attend. are lp<)l'trayed by Bill White, There will be no admission fee. · Fra«lk Crump and Bm Miller. ()th:. Each Bas Play . ers tin the cast are Peggy Rogers Miss Green.shields will direct and Elba Rouse, and the chorus "Riders to the Sea, H while Wdlldn- will be 9f H-oward Buim, son will be in charg-e of "Crusade" Chester Howe and Nancy Long; am.d will direct "The "The Twelve Pou:nd Look," a Twelve Pound Look." comedy, evolveS around . "Riders to the Sea," a t:ragll!dy Sir Harry, a successfal and aelf- of Irish sea pee.sants, deals with centered individual, portrayed by an elderly wo.nuint who has seen Jerry Pierce. Kate. his ex:-wi!e Traffic Appeals Board To Meet The present trad'fie appeals board wi:Ll hold its final meetingt thi6 afternoon at 4:30 in rootri 304 of Reynolda Hall, student eha.ir- man John Lineberger has announ- ced. A new board will be appointed by the incoming president ol the ·· student bocbr followmg next n»nth.

lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

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Page 1: lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

·d,. Ed Barry

lt ~··Eber­! Ladd, . Hines··

tiad. . . Bobby r Led~

C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra­en. In-.:· lveritt&

.. sport Vednes-

tiLL

~s

·'

··':) '.

I•

' /

\• .

.McLAIN.

:-: ........ ~. ~;, ~-~~-... : r .::..~·· .. ·,:!

'• .;::"i ~- :·., ......

PIERC~ RICHARDS SEAY - . ·;

.·SMITH TWEED. WALKER

. 23 Phi Beta l(appa . -. - ..

Members Na~ned . . l . Twenty-thi-ee seniors have been I Salem, Charles McCall of Lenoir,

. selected for membership in Phi Isaac MeLain of Marion, Joan Beta: Kappa' national. honorarY Pierce of Winston-Salem, Charles ~chola~ship frateinity. Ri_~hards of Youngsville, ~ther

The students, .15 of them coeds, Seay: of Charlotte, Helen Smith of will be. initiated . at a banquet· on Asheboro~ Su~ie Tweed of Ashe-Aprll 5. · · · Ville, B.Hl.:.W alker_ of Sta~sville.

·' · Selecti~l'l. to· Phi Beta Kappa· is Announcements of the 13elections based on 'scholastic averag;es, the .were ¥J1ade by Dr. H. Grady Britt, minimum being 2.300 for a \3-tudent secretary-treasurer of the· Wake who completes all of his. four Forest Chapter of Phi Beta Kap­years at Wake Forest, 2.450 for pa. · those who• complete -three years ·Candidates are chosen once every here and 2.600 for those who com- year· at' Wake Forest, and are se­pletuig two ie~rs here. lected by members of Phi ·Beta

· Candidates for ·the B~B.A. de- Kappa on the faculty-. gree are n:ot eligible for member- This year's total of 23 members

is one more than the number cho­ship. T,hose chosen were: sen last year. In 1955, 33 were Denny Ba;xter· of .Hopewell, Va., selected.

Ha.Iffiah Blackwell of Mars Hill, Members are drawn from Kitty Booth of Morganton, Tom following groups: Buie Jr. toof Bladenboro, Virginia 1. Those who completed

. ch d V M work for the B.A. or B.S. degree Chamblee of Ri mon , a., rs. Betty McRary Chester of Lenoir, eharles Edwards of Elkin.

Earl Ferguson of New Bern, llarjorie Fisher of Rockwell, Gloria: Flippin of Pilot Mountain, Jlrs. · lllartha Cook Gentry of :Moultrie, Ga., Mrs. J o Chandler Holcolnb . of Winston-Salem, Dee Hughes of Ahoskie, Harolyn King <1! St,.· George, S.C.

Tucker Littleton of Winston-

during the preceding summer or the preceding semester.

2. Those who have completed at least 104 S€mester hours and candidateS' for ·the B.A. or degree at the end of the mn-re•~t semester.

3. Those who have completed at least 92 semester hours of pre­professional work in Wake Forest College and who are ca:ftdidates for the combined degree in cine. or jn law at the end o:f the current- year, provided that at least 80 of the 92 college credits are earned in liberal subjects,

About 10 Per Cent . Campaign Begins

.. For Campus Bell It is the policy of the fraternity to e}ect about 10 per eent of any one class. In no case can more tha.n

The ea.mpaign to raise money for 15 pe~ cent~ of any class be elect­a llell for the campus has been ed. lauDChed by the senior elass. Computation of academic

Letters 81ppealing for .money ords to determine which students have been senJt tO faculty members are eligJ1lle for election is based aJtd alumni, and :the dorms were upon all work completed at Wake canva&Sed Thursday night. Forest' -College previous to

Walt Ward, president . of the election. S6II.ior class, emphasized last week No student is eligble who trans­that the eam.paign is being SlKln- fers more than 64 ho111'8 from else­sored. by .the seni9r class. Tlie where or 'who does" not spend at money 'Will come from the . &tire least two years !n residence at studeai body. faeulty and alumni. Wake Forest College. · . . ,~

lb .. anb * *

VOLUME XLll Wake Forest-College, ;Winston.Sale·m.· North Carolina, Monday, March 11, 1957 NUMBER 20

WGA Attempts Petition· Method . * * *· ·* * * * * * * * *

Party. Slates PTeliminary Meets ..

Campus Student Party-·- WGA Presidency· Coed Leaders

Aycock, Owens Are Nominees Seek Change Schedules No Activities Yet In Constitution - By,'LEON GATLIN I

Jane Aycock and • Joan. Owenlt . ,-ca.roi>us. poli.tics . .were . .in evi- have bOOn selected as candidates

· · · k for president of WOman's Govtml-dence for the first time last wee . ~nt. A!isociation for next yeaJ:; A

as the Campus Party announced· 12.:(membe:t: nomiriating · connnittee a iroup olf organizational'meetings elected by the coed students select-to ibe held: the ~e:x:t·few da)rs.: ed .the ·two candidates last week.

The !four Campus Party fratern- Denny Baxter, current W.GA' ities 'tonight ~11 eleot delegates president, anno1.1nced th.at the elec­t~ the party convention, and 'coeds tion for the president .will be held ~nd independent men aligned with next week-'Probal>ly ~esday;

· The other 11 positionS' on WGA's the ·party will ~et to elect d<ele- Executive Board will be filled gates tomorrow and Wednesday. later. The election is split so that .

·:Student· Party members >con~ a losing candidate for the presi­tacted Friday said they do not yet dency might liave a chance at ana­have an~ specific plans. Their o~ ther office. ganizational . meetings- will prob- Miss Aycock is a native of ably ·be held next week. Win&ton-Salem and Miss Owens is

Elections have obeen set for Tues- from Canton: Both girls ar~ jun­day, 'April 16, student body Presi- iors. JANE AYCOCK IOAN OWENS dJent Dave Hirano annoti.nced Fri- Those on the nomination com-day. As president, Hirano is chair- mittee are seniors Mary George and of the Ex~utive Board. All standards committee, town girls' man of the Elections Committee. Pennell, :Pee Hughes, Kitty Booth, undergraduate .resident women of representative, the house presi­Nominations for camlldates must JoAnne King and Miss Baxter; the College are members of the dents and one member at large be filed with the committee be- juniors Elizabeth Prickett, Reta Association, which governs them from each of the classes. tween April 1 and 15. · . Peoples and Bert Walton; sopho- in matters of social regulations. For the past two years the Ex-

In the Campus Party, coeds of mores Frances Young.l>lood and· WGA's Executive Board is re-: ecutive Board has served as· the Ea,srt; Dormitory will meet to- Judy Freeman~ and freshmen Bet- sponsible for the legislation and Women's Jionor Council. Under morrow at 8 p. m. The West .ty Gall()WII.Y and Fabian Broad- enforcement- of r)lles and regula- the present ·student body Consti-0or.mitory .. meeting is scheduled for way. tionS: · - tution, however, the Board will 3:30. Independent men have been Duties of the new president It· consists of the president, -no longer have authority in cases asked: .to meet Wednesday a.t.-7 p. will be to call and preside over vice president, recording secretary, of violations of student body r~ n. in Room 124 oi Reynolda Hall. all ·meetings of the Association treasurer, chairman of the social gulations. CllllllJ)Us Party Chairman Joe Mill- . . sap!!f .will pre& ide; at alLthree. meet- ' · · ings.· ·:··.. .. ......... - . . unrrtf"l.Da;,ll··Satu•-Jay·

'-Tlieibig• q).iestr~i-i~· p6lities,;:~t: 't;t.:.:q-:. ~ ~. '~· . "'" . . . . :- • ;, u~ : -rear concerns DeLta E~gma Plu, a · · · · · .• · . . .

French Official .·f. ...

fraternity revived at Wake Forest· ~· . . . rc ~is year a!fter three years as an 0 Be, Wl"P. 'S pl• .. 'Sl inactive. The -Delta ·Sigs have no.t · \ .. , . W £ -~ .. £ j • ~

Plans Speeches For Meetings yet indicated which. party they

Nish to affiliate with. By JIM TURNER speclaeular ever given· by this Under the present s.etu.p four EvenC!ng gowns, military uni- large a group at Wake Forest,"

fraternities are in the Camp-us f-orms and gay decorations will ~bbard and Blade President Ro- By MARGIE WOODALL Party and othe Student Party has CO'lor the ·Reserve Armory Satur-- land Tho.mas said last week. - The Secretary of the French f~ve . .Both organizations attempt day night as Wake Forest's ROTC Sparkle will be added to the Embassy in Washington will be to attraat as many coeds and non- cadetS S/tage the first military ball by the pre.sentation of spon· .guest speaker as social science fraternity men as they can., and• >J?all in the school's history. sors. Jean. Hobby, Cary fres.hman, professors lfrom the seven Baptist voting strength in the conventions The baltl will be of special in- will reign as. regimental 'sponsor. colleges in North Carolina meet is divided ibetween the fraternities terest to memlbers of .Sea:bbard Other girls elected! hy the ROTC on C3.JniPUS F1riday and. Sa.turday. and othe non-fraternity students.· and Blade honorary military so- cadets last :fall are Mrs. Shirley The secretary, Jean Le Canne-

The CallliPU.S Party· fraternities ciety, the orgamizati-on which will Burros Di~ey and Jane Aycock, lier, will speak on "The Middle are Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, sponsor the festivilty. Members olf battailiOillS sponsors; Ann Nuckols, East Crisis" at a dinner Friday Lambda Chi Alpha and Sigma Phi the society hope to make the ball headquar:ters c om 'Pan Y ; Jane night in the Magnolia :Roo-m. Epsilon. Those in the Student an annual aiiifair as i.t is in many Blake, band company; Mrs. Nancy He will Bpeak to social science Party are Alpha Sigma Phi, Pi other colleges !With ROTC units. Hughes Geer, drill platoon; Mrs. ·students and other interested stu-Kappa Alpha, ~}igma Chi, Signna "We expect. this dance.·. to be Betty Mi'l-lsaps, A company; Eliza- .dents .Saturday morning at 9 o'-Pi and Theta Chi. one O'f the most colorful and most beth Prickett, B company; Lois clock in room 108 of the Library -------------:--------:-----:------1 Weeks, E company, and Linda building.

Kinlaw, F company. Cannelier has studied at the f:•ponso.rs will be presented for University of Tangiers and the

the first time tomorro.w at a regu- National Political Lnstitute of lar drill period. They will receive Paris. He was the French Foreign honorary commissions in the R.O- Qfficer in charge of .the United TC. Nations Program for three years.

The public has :been invited to Business administration proies-tomorrow's presentation, which sors from the 1;;even colleges will will lbegin at noon o.n, the athletic also obe on campus, and they will practiee (field. · ·hold separate sessions Friday aft­

Sipeci-al guesrt;s will be ·present ernOO'Il and 'Saturday morning. Friday night along with the RO- William H. Stevenso-n Jr., Re­TC studenU> and their dates.· A gional ·Manager for the North number oi Army officers from this Carolina EmploYJnent Security' area and the Third Army wiia at- Commission, will 1be the guest tend, and of!ficers and enlisted speaker_ There will :be discussion men from the Resen·e Annory groups for economies, aecounti.ng have also been invited. and secretarial studies teachers .

. The Armory will be deeo:ra.ted Tillet To Speak OJl a military toheme which has no.t ·Dr. Lowell Tillet of .the History yet been diselosed. The dance will Depar:tment will open .the social last :from 8 o'clock until midnight. (Continued on page 4).

Students To Direct

A group of coed leaderS' have renewed tJ:!eir. efforts .to maintain Woman's Government Association as a part of the judicial branch of student government. .

Led by WGA President Denny Baxter, . the c;;oeds· are now passing a petitiOn which they hope will force a campus-wide vote to test the Honor and Conduct Councils sys.tem as it i~ outlined· in the stu-dent. body Constitution. · ·

Miss Baxter estimated Friday t~at some 260 ·students· had then Signed the petition. It will take around 350 names-a total of 20

Denny Bax:ter and Owen Her­ring give their opposing views on the judicial branch question on page five.

per cent of the student body-to force a vote on the proposed amendment.

For the past two years WGA's Executive Couneil has served a dual !Purpose, acting both as a coed dormitory council and as the Women's .Honor .Council: ·However· sections of· the 'Constitution which will go into effect this spring ex­clude WGA- from participation. in the new council setup.

(1) A Women's Conduct Council with jurisdiction over coedS' viola­ting conduct regul~tions .and made up of eight eoeds to be elected by coed students · in ·regular spring elections. .

(2) A Men's Conduct Council with jurisdiction over men viola­ting conduct regulations and made up of eight men to be· elected by men students in regular spring elections.

{3) A Student Honor· C<>uncil with ·jurisdiction over all students in cheating cases and made up of eight men and eight women elect­ed to the Conduct Councils.

The amendment now I>eing pe· titioned would remove the ·wom­en's Council election from student g-overnment control and lot the Executive Board of WGA auto­matically serve as the Women's C-{)nduct Council. Eight o:f the ~GA officials would automaticaJ.. ly be members of the new Honor Council.

Student Legislature members gave the proposal a quick setback when Miss Baxter presented it to the Legislature on Feb. 28. Be­cause the proposal did not get the Legislature's approval, 20 per cent of the student body must petition an electi~n before the amendment can be brought to a vote.

Miss Baxter appealed to the coeds concerning the amendment Tuesday in a compulsory meeting ~f all women students who live in dorm·itories .• , The petition was be­'ng circulated the :following day.

Aeoording to Miss Baxter, nei­t.her she nor Dean of Women Loie Johnson. knew WGA was .being excluded from the judiciary branch vhen the Constitution was pre­sented and· approved last spring.

Roles Assigned For -One-Act Plays By ED IONES her husband and six: sons doevour- wcho left him after she saved 12

High· Siepper-'-· Mary_ Elise Bridger gets in .a litt~,e extra · · . practice on one of the daace ront1nes she

will perform as Gladys' In the College Theater.:· prod~n. of "Pajama Game.!' -The musical comedy opens ne::d Monday for a six-day run in the arena theater.

The -College Theater has an- ed by ,the sea and now watches her oounds, is played by Linda Wil­nounced oasts !for three produc- y-oungest son go to face the same lard. tion.s to be directed and produced fate. . . His present wife, Lady Sims, by stndents Tuesday. and Wedne.s-- Jane ~reeman Will .play ~he lead is depicted by Hillary Jones. She day, March 27-28, m the Arena role, whlle Tony Stone Wlill play is a nervous ·person who has too Theater. the part of h;r youngest ~on. The much confidence in Sir Rarry. The

~a.rsha. G~lloShields, Tolbel'!t daughters Will ibe portrayed by butler, who thinks Sir Harry is Wilkerson and Larry Thompson Becky Lampley and M~t Ho- the fin~st pers<>n. in the world willl direet the one-act plays. All cutt, and Jerry Matherly has the wiH ,be played by James Wiggins' three are students in the play dl- role of an understanding neighbor. • reeting dass of Prof. James Wal- Deals With War ton. "Crusade" is a verse play that

CUl"tiim time for the !Plays is deals rwith causes and effeets of 8 o'clOCk each night and al!l stu- the Korean War. Three soldiers dents have been invited to attend. are lp<)l'trayed by Bill White, There will be no admission fee. · Fra«lk Crump and Bm Miller. ()th:.

Each Bas Play . ers tin the cast are Peggy Rogers Miss Green.shields will direct and Elba Rouse, and the chorus

"Riders to the Sea, H while Wdlldn- will be ~posed 9f H-oward Buim, son will be in charg-e of "Crusade" Chester Howe and Nancy Long; am.d ~n will direct "The "The Twelve Pou:nd Look," a Twelve Pound Look." Bri~h comedy, evolveS around

. "Riders to the Sea," a t:ragll!dy Sir Harry, a successfal and aelf­of Irish sea pee.sants, deals with centered individual, portrayed by an elderly wo.nuint who has seen Jerry Pierce. Kate. his ex:-wi!e

Traffic Appeals Board To Meet

The present trad'fie appeals board wi:Ll hold its final meetingt thi6 afternoon at 4:30 in rootri 304 of Reynolda Hall, student eha.ir­man John Lineberger has announ­ced.

A new board will be appointed by the incoming president ol the ·· student bocbr followmg electi~ next n»nth.

Page 2: lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

PAGE TWO Monday, March 11, Hl57 OLD GOLD .AND BLACK

Attendance Rated Good 'Far Country~ Is Next Movie Here The ca:m-pus movie series. now

in its fourth week, has aittracted crowds ranging from 50 to 100 ~ersons tper night, Dr. James Long of the Physical Educa,tion Depart­ment rep<J:rted last week.

"The Far Country", a. color film starring James Stewart, witl be presented this week.

3WFMen '

Get Roles Salem Play Has Student, 2 Profs · Two Wake Forest professors and

a ~aw student \Vill appear in Salem College's ·production of "The M.ale Animal," a co-medy .by J.ames Thur­·ber 'to be presented Wednesday and Thursday nights a;t Salem.

Law student Jack Isert will por.tray :foC'itball hero Joe F'erguson in' the play, and Dr. John E. Parker Jr. of the Wake -F<;~rest French Department, :will·aPIPear as Dean Damon. Dr. Walter Heilman, SpaniSh professor here, will play ~he par.t of Wally.

All three have appeared in 'Plays produced by the Wake Forest The:.?lter, and Dr. Hetlman has acted in European plays. :

Dr. Long said last week that he feels the films have already been a success. "The attendance is good," he .said, "considering the :OOA:t that the films are held on the week end, and the sound and color have been generally good."

This jet fighter will be displayed on campus . The setting of the play is N-orth­western University, the author's Alma. Mater.

The Physical Education Depart-· Navy Offi.CCrS ment is sponsoring the films. They are held each Friday and

Saturday at 7 p. m. in the Science To Intervi·ew Building Auditorium.

Ap!pearing with .Stewart in this

week's movie will be Ruth Roman, Stude' nts Here. Corinne Calvet, .and Wa1ter Bren-nan. The story 1s a.bout the early days of the Alaska gold-rush.

Businesses Set ·Job Interviews

An information team of naval officers will ·be at the College to­day and tomorrow ~ talk with stu­dents concerning oppor.tun.ities in the Navy.

Accompanying the team v.'"ill he "Miss Cougar," a transonic Navy jet fighter 'plane w.hich will be on

Seniors can be interviC'I'o·ed for display in the parking lot west of joos this week by representatives Reynolda Hall. of industries, business firms an<l The team, :which v.>ill conduet its school s:rstems. interviews in the main lounge of

Dr. Helm, To Perform . .

·Euzelian ·Meeting T rr - ' Q . · Slated Tomorrow J.n .1. 01n0rrow S 'Pera The ,Euzelian Literary Society

· · . ' . will meet tomorrow night at. '1 Wake Forest p:rO!fessor Dr. M.iclclef.o:rd who 15 tb.~ smtor of o'clock in Eu Hall. ·

Rob'ert Helm will have one of the Lady Harriet Durham. l-n. the story. Vice president Jane Freeman lead roles tomorrow night as the C~>llege students Will ~ adm'it- will 'be in charge of this week's Piedmont Opera Co. presents ted ,to 1;he play free if they present progr.a.m. ·"Martha" a romantic oomie opera their Concert-Lecture tickets at The society now meets every on the 'stage olf Reynolds High I the door . .Curtain time is 8 P·. m. other Tuesday night rather than School auditorium. The full .title rYf von Slotow's Wednesday. All interested stu-

Dr. Clifford Bair of .tbe~ Col- opera is "·Martha, or the Fair a.t dents. have ibeen invited to attend, lege's Department of Music :will Richmond.'' The female lead of especially those wh.o \Vere mem­direCt .the opera as he does most Lady Hal'riet will be played by bers of societies at other schools. productions hy the Piedmont Opera Ann Broyles, a 1956 graduate of At the last meeting Dr .. J. C. eo. Winthrop College. O'Fla.be:nty -o:f the Germa.n Depar.t-

Dr. Helm, professor in the Phi- There Will be a chorus and a ment introduced the Eu's to Ger-lotSophy-Psychology Department, dance sequence by the BaJ.let man literature with a discul!sion of will play the role of Tristan Guild of Winston-::Oalem. Goethe's "F;tust."

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Interview schedules released by ' Reynolda Hall, will cons.ist c! the Placement Offices are: representatives of the various

, Today-Union Ca11bide and Car- Navy officer -programs. ~e of oon. the officers will have information

Wednesday-Hartfol"d County, concerning the Naval Aviation Md., school superintendent wHJ Cadet program for two-year col­talk with prospective teachers at lege men. 7 'P· m. in. 102 Reyno1da Hall. A The only difference between the rep:resent_atn:e of ~he Norfolk, Va., jet to be displayed anu its oper­school '"Ill mterv1ew teachers be- ationail counte:ropart is that in tween 10 a. m . .and 4 P· .m. "Miss Cougar" th·e ;turbo• jet engine

W F 0 D: 55 0 On The Dial! ~A=::LSO~COMP~LE'I,'E~JEW~ELRY~DEP~ARTM~ENT~

Thursday-First National Bank can be viewed through a. '})<ll'tion of Atlanta. . . cut away from the tail assembly.

.Further m£o:rmatlon may be The engine can be operated at ()btained ~t th~ Placeme.n.t Office. s1ow speeds so that all of the

A mobile ~mt of. the Burrou~hs inner-component parrt:s may be ab­·Oornpany Wl!l! be m the parkmg served under actual operating c-on-1:)t on the west side of Reynolda ditri.ons. Hall Thursday and Friday.

A ramp built around the air-Chaplain Will· Speak craft will enable onlookers to get

a close view, and Navy personnel . Bob Yoll;11g, chaplai~ of the Bap- will be on hand to explain th~

tt~t Hospttal of Wmston-Salem, operation. w1ll speak tomorrow at 7 p. m. at -------- , · ~ meeting of the Cullom Minister-I The -present <Jrganiz.ation of the 1al Conference. All crninisteri.al stu- C~>llege Theater was begun in dents ·have :been urged to attend. 1.939. . · ·

Frank A. Stith Co. -Presents--

TRADITIONAL NATURAL'.

MODEL

In Spring Suits and Sport Coats--With Lapped Seams and Deep Hooked Vent

The traditional fashion favorite of college men is now big

style news everywhere. The new spring suits and sport coats come in exclusive new patterns in keeping with the natural look.

Authenic style features a minimum of padding in the shouldet·s, extra light-weigh front, and narrow lapels.:_

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Today 3:00 jp.m.-Santa Claus' J am.boree 4:00-Vro·sity Club

11:05-Deaconlight Serenade I 7:00-Lucky Strike News 12:00-Lounging with Logan 7:15-;A,d.ven.tures in Music- · 1:00-Sign off , 7:3.0--Music In Modern STEAKS • SALADS SPA GHEnt·

6:00-Supper Show 6 :25-Evening Vespers 6:30-Campus Scrapbook 7:00--News 7:15-Musica..lly Yours 7:30-Blue ·Monday Jamboree 8:00-Classical Hall of Fame 9:00-Tangents in Jazz 9:30-Serenad·e in Blue 9:45-Sports News '

10:00--News · 10: 05-Deaconlight Serenade :(with

WAIR) 11:00--News 11 :05-'-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00--Lounging with Logan 1 :00-Sign off

Tomorrow 3:00!P.m.-Santa Claus' Jamboree

, 4:00-Varsity Club 6:00-~upper Show 6:25-Evening Vespers 6:30-Campus Scrapbook 7:00-News 7:15-Record Shop 7:30-The BSU Show 8:00-Classical Hall o:f Fame 9:00--Tangen-ts irt Jazz 9:30--Guest Star 9:45-Sports News

10:00--News 10:05-Deaconlight Serenade 11:00--News 11:05-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00--Lounging with Logan 1 :00--Sign off

Wednesday 3:00\P. m.-Santa Claus' Jamboree 4:00-Varsity Club 6:00-Supper Show 6:25-Evening Vespers 6:30--Campus Scrapbook 7:00-News 7:15-Soda Shop Quiz 7 :30-Hit or Miss 8 :00-Cla.Ssical Hall of Fame 9:00-Tangen:ts in Jazz 9:30--Here's to Veterans 9:45-Sports News

10:00--News 10 :05-Deaconlight Serenade 11:00-News

The story tnat HAD to win the Pulitzer

Prize!

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Th d I 8:00--Classical Hall of Fame. urs ay 9:1)(}.......T·ange.n.ts in Jazz.

3:00[}. :m.-Santa: Claus' Jamboree I 9:30--Inside Deaco.n.land 4:00-Varsity Club · i 9:45-Sports· News 6:00--E:upper Show 10:00--News , 6:25-Evenirug V~spers 10:05-Deaconlight Serenade 6:30-Campus Scrapbook 11:00--News --' 7:00--News · 11:05-Deaconligbt Serenade 7:15-Record Show 12:00-Lot,uig.ing with Logan 7:30-The News and You 1:0(}......Sign orf 8:00-Classical ~all !}f Fame Saturday . 9:00--Ta.ngents m Jazz · (N" p:·ograms Scheduled.) 9:30-J,[)m the Navy . Sunday 9:45-Sports News .

10:00--News 2:00 p. m.--Mus1c .for You 10:05-Deaconlight· Serenade {:00-Paris. Star. Time 11 :00--N ews 4 :30-Classical Hour 11 :05-Deaconlight Serenade 6 :00-Supper Show 12:00-Lounging with Logan 7

7=010-5-NFewsh .. th A"

1. (){)--Sign off : rene m , ,e. 1r · 7 :30--l::-unday Serenade Friday 9:00-Campus Carrousel

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BE SURE TO TRY OUR 4:00-Varsity Club 9:45- News -and Sports Roundup 6:00-~upper Show 10:00-Deaconlight Serenade 6:25-Evenilllg Vespers 12:00-Late News Final 6:30-Ca:mpus Scrapbook 12:05-Sign off

I •

HERE IS THE FINAL

TIE BREAKER IN OLD GOLD'S.

~·~ ~ ~ ?a ER ~ . TIE-BREAKING PUZZLE

·NO.8

CLUE: This Nebraska coeducational college of liberal arts is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church. It was chartered and opened in 1882.

CLUE: Conducted by the Jesuit Fathers, this midwestern coeducational university was opened in 1'877. It bears the name of the citY in which it is located.

CLUE: This coeducational university was chartered -in 1845 under the Republic of Texas. It is a Baptist school. . '

ANSWER 1..-·----------­ANSWER 2.-·-----------ANSWER 3 .. ------------

lfame~-----------------------------------------------------Address: ________________ _

CitY'--------State: ______ _

College'---------------

NOTE THAT THE ABOVE PUmE COitTAINS THE NAMES OF THREE SCHOOLS FOR WHiCII THREE SEPARATE CLUES ARE GIVEN. - '

Players may now mail their completed sets of 8 Tie- . Breakers. Before mailing your puzzles, keep an accurate record of your answers. The·s Tie-Breakers must be answered, neatly trimmed, and enclosed in . ari envelope, flat and not rolled and addressed to: Tangle Schools, P. 0. Box 26A, Mount Vernon 10, N. Y., and bearing a postmark not later than April5, 1957. Do not decorate or ~mbellish the puzzles in any way. Do not include anything in the envelope but the puzzles.

If, after solutions have been submitted to this set of . Tie-Breakers~ a tie or ties still rein,ain, those tied Will be required to solve another tie-breaking-puzzle, in accordance with the official Tangle Scho.ols rules.· These:· tie-breaking puzzles,· if ~neces~, jti.IC be .. mailed to each contestant.

.ICE BOX PIES

·puzZLES . ~

FOLLOW THESE MAILING INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY! DOE, JOHN

lAIC.E DRIVE SOUTH BEND.,

IND.

Print or type your name and return addreJS on back of Hie envelope, lost name first, like this:

• To help checkers, use. business• size envelope approximately 4R x 9 Mz". Type or print the address as shown.

Use 6¢ postage.

TANGLE-SCHOOLS P. 0. BOX 26A . MOUNT VERNON 10, N. "{ •.

" • Use business-size envelope 41' x 9}11

' ••• sometimes referred to as a No. 10 envelope.

e. Each of the puzzles must be neatly trimmed, separately, and placed in numerical order. .

• No decorations please[ Address envelope as shown. • Your name and address MUST be on the ·BACK of the

envelope ACROSS THE END and in the position shown in the illustration. Please print or type in CAPITAL LETTERS­LAST NAME FIRST. If mailed according to instructions, 6¢ postage should be enough.

.: In the event of ftirther ties, contestants will be mailed an additional tie-breaking puzzle fonn.

. REMEMBER-ENTRIES MUST BE POSTMARKED NO LATER THAN· FRIDAY, APRILS, 1957.

FIRST 'PRIZE-A TOUR OF TH.E WORLD FOR TWO-

. OR $5,000 CASH! EIGHTY­FIVE OTHER LVALUA,LE_P~f~~~~-

... _·:; ...

Copr.l9,57 Harry H. llollislctl:

. ' ·. !.~H· . ,,, ..... v·.

'

,,

] ,.

J t; 11

f :... .. :E ·- "

t ~

.}.

,J 1: ~

~

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I'

~

Page 3: lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

I•

,,

I•

-A R ~ -~

0 L D

PAD Law FrU.ierDitY Can. Smokey Replace Dr. 'R~hfuson P' . . . . . . T.. b' ' I k ' r. .. I ed A~ Do.IU 's D. -e. .a.' n. ? Slates Org~h . -. raises · Illl er a e - ~ o . . . . ··Members- 0~ .the Phi Alph~ D:l-· all ~cca~i:ns, we, -the brothers of ' By LEON GATLIN . He does not get ;to the ca=- Recita_ lSunday

·t.a-.l.e. ga.l_fraternity _passed a res(loo P_hi.Alp;ha Delta Legal F'ra. ternity, Is Wake F .pus· mueh these days because - - - orest acq_uirmg a he is gettin"' on in years and. Dr. Paui S. Robinson of · the lution Iast. week honoring the late -hereby. acknowledge the ideal~ d·e- new canine 1 ader "'~r the cam "" · · · " e . .1v - D.r. ·.Snuggs is afraid his edu- Music Department will present an Prof. Edga'l" w. Timberlake,. who picted by his· life and express· our pus? .. · · · d cated pooch might ·get hit bey a organ vesper pro-am Sunday aft-"Dovoted his life to legal e uca- sincere regrets at t)le. unexpected Since Te~ "Snuggs", who ,_. · · · · ·- f - car. Also he has more than earn- ernoon in. Wait Chapel; . ti.on -.. and to the. Wake Forest passmg · o our brother." reig.ried for years liS' Dean of S. h · 1. f La " ·· · · . . d th ld · ·• · eel a rest iby servmg the old cam-' · . : The p•1blic hb been . invited to c oo o w. . ·. · . . . .. ·' ogs on . e o campus, 1s m . , 'thf 11 ,.

• · ... .. • • ·.J, • .. · · · · '· • - · • · • _... D .. H · pus so .. a~ ·U y, t.he _pro,..,._ am·, w· h1._ .... w·· _ill begin at .. · _T.heJoe~t:c~ripte:t,·!d.:Phi 'Alp_ba .. _..: . :· ::: . ·. . . . .senn-r.,.lrement at · r. enry Smokey's Other Claims · · 4 s• ""

1

·-~~f:ke:-~~~t~e~~:~~~r~i~:; -Many- Students ~~:e~s· .;;_:e ~re~ea:b~~~! ar~!tok!~eh~~l~im: ·to fame ~~ ~~ch ·selections. are. includ~ ·. will be ~tt~)led to his protrait in · .. wi~h<>ut its .traditi~l dog lead- ~ A,~ut the only- <lither incident ed on th'e program, the Chorale

!the P.AD ·chapter :room. Will T } , ' er. invol.ving smokey was an en- and eight va,ri~~i.ons of "0 God, · · · · · . ' · rave But recen .. tly a 'huge German • · ..... u fa1't'-"'ul G--A" ~""d the Ch~ral Prof. Timberlake has• been call: · . · · ' c<1Uilllter he hid ·with Ka.ppa, ·.a '"'"" = ""'· <WA ~ e

d . . ·I t f h Shepherd. named Smokey has small ... terrier belon"'ing :to Dill Preluc!e, ''Have Mercy, Lord." e a. persona . exponen o t e . . a...,..eared on campus, instilll!ing "' le. ·al thics whi h h · t ht t c i} s ..... Kei.th. Arid the outcome af that Other compositions to be play-

g e . . c ' e aug . 0 ounc· . a· ys h.,.;;.. into tltose wlto longed for . more than '1800 law students and • . · .· av~aseot. · skirmish did not ex~tly give ed are Prelude and Fugue in G -was ·widely known f.or his leader- . · · Smokey any !Prestige. Minor by Buxtehude, Toccata-Pre-

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, March 11, 1951 PAGE THREE

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Phone 8-2241

Welcome Wake Forest Students TO YOUR

FOREST HILLS GULF SERVICE N. CHERRY ST. EXT.

Just Beyond Winston Drive-In Theater ship in ·the' field of legal educa- United Spates Slbudents optimis~ Acquired By Jones However, &nokey used to be lude on a Plainsong Melody by ti<m. He taught at Wake Forest for .tic on mterri.atiolla'l conditions are Sm{)key, ~ho was recently with R 0 T C Dep:mtment, and Bairstow, Ronde .Francaise by DAN: ARNEY, Mgr. 50 Y'ears before his death in Jan- booking summer passa;ge -to Eu- acquired by Prof: Wayland Prof. Jones says .they trained .Boellrnann, Fugue in C Sharp. JJ! ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

PHONE 5-9321

uary. · · rupe in iilcreasing numbers, ac- Jon.es of the History Depart- him, in something or other. - Minor by Honegger, Folk Song pY ~ The resolution follows: cording :f!O a report from the CoUIIl- mend:, is so big be· w'as recently Perhalps he hasn't "found" Whitlock and ·Chorale Prelude on

. cil <>n Student ·Travel "in New mistaken .foo:" a pony by a near- himself yet, or it co-uld. be that th~ Tune "Andernach" by Willan. "Whereas: Professor Edgar W. York. sighted! student. the campus is stila strange to

Timberlake, Jr., an esteemed' br(loo To meet the in-creased deman'd Ted, as ariy one who Temem- · him? . ' · Wake Forest's ROTC unit was ther of the Edgar W. Timberlake the oon-q>rO!fit Counclil has announ- bers the old campus will tell In any event he is an impos- • established in 1951. Chapter of Phi Alpha Delta Legal ced severai ad<litionat·. sailmgs YJOU, was quite a scholarly dog ing-looking dog, and peih~~~ps ~e Fraternity has recently pa!;sed with space for students and teach-' with the equivalent of a degree will -actually beeoone the new away; 1 • ers. The council reports tba.t tta.n's" in.Engli&h. Dean of ea.mpus dogs.

"And whereas he devoted his Atl!ll!ltic !bookings by educational entire adult . life ·to legal educa- travelers are ' 1liP 15 J)er. cent

HAWTHORNE GRILL · tion and to the Wake Forest through March 1. Here 'fonight

School of La-w, and in recognition This year the Council ~xpeCts to of such devotion, the Wake For- arrange ·lo,ooo· one-way pasSa.ges e·st Chapter of Phi Alpha Delta for students and teachers, an in· was n~med in his honor; - crease of·ao percent over last sum- Businessmen ·Will Meet

119 s. Hawthorne

STEA~S - CHOPS SHORT ORDERS

" And whereas his gentility and mer, and the largest mnnbe'l". olf By ANN GRIFFIN qualities as a gentleman are keen- persons served iby the Council dur- Owners of small . businesses in. ly missed by the brothers of Phi ing ,its l1 years of operation. the area will :be on campus tonight Delta Legal ·Fraternity- "Inquiries to the Council by stu- f?r the .second meeting of a Small

"Now, therefore, be it res·otved: dents and teachers planning to Business Manag€:Jilent Course. that in sin,cere appreciation .. for travel independently are :running The (:OUrse, sponsored by the the life that he lived, for the serv- 30 :percent ahead of Jast year," College in conjunction with the ices that he rendered, and for the saM John E. Bmv.m,am., executive Winston-Salem Chamber of Com­character that he .manifested on director of the Council. He added merce and. the Small Business Ad-

that .. the educati'Onal travel pro- ministration: in Washington, D. C.,

Apo R El 'gl'ams .sponsored by the (}ouncil's ·began last Monday. . . e- ectS 43 mem'ber agencies are experiew!· Tonight's seminar will be con-ing a similar irncrease. ducted by Prof. Delmar D. Hylrtxm

Larr.r 'Aydle~t A}pha Phi Omega service fra­

ternity la.s;t; week re-elected Larry ~ydlett, Durham senior, as presi­dent :£or the remainder of the se-mester. .

Others chQaen. · w~re Larry Mc­Cullough, Durham senior, first vice JPresiderut; Matthew S-tyers, Winston-salem jnndor, second! vice ;presidelllt; Bill Owens, Winston­Sallem sophomore, s e c .r e t a r y; Charles Fitts, Roanoke Rapids junior, treasurer, and T . .T. Jerni­gan, Ahoskie junior, historian.

Captain Richard: A. Palmer of the C<>llege ROTC Depal'tment was chc>sen as chairman of the chll.lpter's .advisory co-mmittee.

'Ilhe Howler, Wake Fores.t's ye:azlbook, ihas ·apopearedl each year si~~Ce 1903. ·

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Bowman estimated that more of the Business Departmerut on than 10,000 students and teachers w.m be traveling abroad this s~~ mer in edluca.ti{)nal 'Pro.grams spon­&ored by the Council"s 43 educa­tional and religious agencies, These a-gencies C{)nduct interna­tiona:l educati<>nal travel progra=s in Euro-pe, Amer.ica, Africa Asia and South America. '

The Council! provides year~ round trams-Atlantic transpor:ta­ti{)n for students and teachers, TRIP-a sbiJpboar:dJ Travelers' Re­creation-Information Program and tour in!Jol"mlition · on international travel.

' '

Flat-Tops_ and G. I •. Haircuts our Specialty

5 EJtperienced Barbers Open 9 Till 9

LeVAN BROTHERS BARBER SHOP .

Nearest Barber Shop to Campus Comer Polo and Cherry Sts.

. "Accounting Information and How to ·Use lit." . -

Around 25 businessmen are en­rolled in ·:the class, which- meets each Monday night in Reynolda Hall. The sessions will be held for !light wf!e]ts.

Speaking 3lt last week's opening meeting was Laurence H. Levy, vice president of the Mod-em Woodworking Co11p1>ration of Rich­mond, Va. His subjec.t was "How: ito AJpplly the Basic. Functions of Management to Your Business."

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Page 4: lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

®lb ~rilb au~- ~lurk * * Wake Forest College * *

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1957

WGA: P~rpose And Practices As we see it, there are two major

reasons "why the· Constitution must remain as it is in regard to the ju• dicial branch of student ogo,rernment. The first reason can be stated simply:

Student government must not de­pend on a lesser qrganizatiori in or­der that student government func­tions be carried out.

This is a logical en6ugh reason.

Woman's Government ASsociation, according to the theory behind the Constitution, is as it should· be. It is a house organization designed to' meet the needs of coed students living in dormitories. It is free to set regula- . tions concerning activities peculiar to the life of a woman student in a dor­mitory. •

But while a coed at Wake Forest

That Time Again (Earlier in the year we were scolded by a

letter-writer who ·objected to editorials <.n spring and politics. Nevertheless, here's. ano-­ther. It was written by William Pate for Old Gold and Black, March 25, 1955.)

is a dormitory resident-and whe­ther she is or not, she is also a citi­zen of student government. She must obey the rules of the Honor Code as men students must, and sbe must re­frain from violations of the Cond!lct Code. Since. thes~ -rules are rules of -· 4 the student body, they must be en­forced l:iy student government. WGA

•'

With ,!';Pring, politics have come to the ca·mplis.

Party conventions set, the machin­ery is in motion. The first act of the political drama is about to begin. Al­ready prominent students are begin­ning to stare thou·ghtfully in their mirrors and at each other.

A student bends over books' ··and class notes, becomes still, then looks about.

"What sort of a chance would I-" he begins, pauses musing dreamily, shakes his head, and turns to books again.

"I don't knmv," says the Import­ant Figure in past politics. He has had his day. He is on the way out.

"I'm non-partisan," declares the IP, "so I can't say what they're gon­na fight a'bout ... I don't know."

"We've got plans!" the Party Whip shouts on the run. "This year we're goin·g to be bigger and better than ever. Can't stop to talk now. Got to see people, make plans."

"Well ... I don't know," muses the Prospective Candidate, "there are a lot of other good people." He tips his hat to a coed. "Actually," the PC continues, hastily concealing a handbill which had slipped into vie'\\·, "actually I haven't made plans. Ma~·be they won't pick me," he adds modestly. -

"Politics?" asks the Coed. "Oh. it's early yet," sh.e exclaims and hastens away suspiciously glancing back.

"Well, well!" gushes the Party Hopeful. He slaps the shoulder; he yrasps the hand firmly. "I don't be­lieve we've met," he beams. "My name, as you may know, is ... "

is not a part of stUdent government. And since WGA elections and activi­ties can not be administered or con- . trolled by student government, WGA has no business in student govern--ment. - ,

Our second reason is-this:· WGA, with its traditions of secrecy

and its reputation of dealing out vir­tual solitary confinement for some­times unavoidable violations, is not a fit organization to have more pow-er than it now has. ·

WGA officials say they want to protect the girls; that is their reason. for telling no one when they suspend a coed from school. Maybe so. But we must continue to contend what believers in democracy have deCided: The people have a right to know. Any governmental department cloak­ed in secrecy can be rightfully ques­tioned. We do not know that WGA is ashamed of its punishments; we do not know that it has committeed in­justices. But as long as it hides its acts, we cannot help feeling some­thing is wrong.

There are other WGA practices about which we wonder. ·we doubt the· wisdom of compulsory- meetings in which only one side of a question is aired. We doubt the reasons of WGA officials when they refuse to make public the voting results in their elections.

All these things make WGA an or­ganization ripe for corruption. There are many coeds who disagree with the_ practices, but few -\villing to risk an attempt at reform. Until there are revisions, we hope that WGA con­tinues to be reduced in power. Al­ready it is running out of prestige.

On Mischief And Its Limits The little hatchet men of Forsyth

have done it again. A sign markin·g the College's Rey­

nolda Road entrance vanished one night last week. It was the same marker that students 11ad brought here from the old campus onlv a few days before. In Wake Forest, 'it stood for 18 years. ·

Last fall, another sign was felled and l1auled away after standing un­disturbed for several years while the campus was under construction.

It's not likely that either sign will be recovered.

As for the first theft, nobody seems to care. It was dismissed as the w~ of a prankster, probably from ano­ther school.

But this time, the incident deals a more serious blow. The old sign had a certain familiarity about it that

LLOYD PRESLAR Editor

made it special. It was a link with the past, one of the few marks of_ tradition on a campus where all is new.

Perhaps the culprits wanted a sou­venir. Or maybe some local lad col­lects signs as a hobby.

We doubt that it was taken by any of our comrades from the consolidat­ed university, Duke or elsewhere. This seems too childish even for col­legiate pranksters. The sign stood un­molested for years in Wake Forest, where students from other schools could have snitched it with a shorter trip. .

It's hard to see what prompts the theft of anything so uninspiring as a sign. And perhaps there is no reason.

But such an incident must be judg-· ed beyond the limits of schoolboy mischief.

JOHN WAGSTER Business Manager

Founded January 16, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and Blac:k is published each Monday during the s~hool year except during examination and holi­day periods as~ directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

BILL CONNELLY, Managing Editor JO BUTLER, Circulation -Manager

EDITORIAL STAFF: Dottie Braddock, Vicki Brinegar, Bob Demsey, Charles Duncan, Rob~ ert Fitzgerald, Leon Gatlin, Bob Goerlich, Ann Griffin, Mark Hawthorne, Carter Hedrick, :Edie Hutchins, Ann Julian, Hannah Miller, Reta Peoples, Charles Richards, Earl Shaw, Jim Turner, Fred Wardlaw, Margie Woodall.

BUSINESS STAFF: Darlene Herman, Billy CIRCULATION STAFF: Libby Finch, Jea­Powell, David Rawley, Joe Richardson, Ginny' nette Haywood, Barbara Hill, Jane Lewis~ Stephens, Gerald Taylor, Roland Thomas, Pennv May, Joyce Odom, Judy Rice, Gaynelle Anne Torrey, Sue Weathers. Walk.er, Reid ~ocker, Barbara Williams.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Intercollegiate Press. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: ,2.50 per year. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Winston-Salem, N. C.

Offices In Reyno Ida Hall 225-227 Telephone PArk 5·9711 P. 0. Box '1567

ExtensioD 215 Reynolda Braneh Winston-salem, N. C. '

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Supp_er Time--The Great Exodu~- :Magnolia ·: ''( . L~eacves --•

\

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..c::.:;:::::.? -.~r· ~-. ------- -p

~ HERRING

• . '

· By. Jane Aycock , One _coed .illeceived a mo.st un.- .

u.rual rpresent the. other day from her mother: _The .bo~ contained a· "Belly_ Button B~h ~-For: ~a.:,e Who Have Evecything Else.'~

The card inside read as follows! : "You are now the proud pos­

sessor of the famous rhinestone­studded Belly Button Brush. With care it will l~U>t !or years and keep your ~val spotless and iint;:..free: ·

"Directions:- Brush with light, ·quick stroke for best lint'renioval: . Hold brush securely" between first and .second fingers.

".Make Money at Home!· It is also suggested that lint removed can be stored in plaStic box· for future use. (Gen­uine naval lint is .a mo.st valuable

· ' - material: It used to m~e ·Pil· lows for .. the·Uo-.

. angi -tr:ioo-" of- . '' .-, :mies' ---oF··-~ :...i+r.--

. Africa.)" ·Arid that isn't

all. There·~ all sortS of ·wlique devices this day· and tline. Iri French 22 laSt week Dr. Plli"ker' · took time 0\llt from his lecture to tell about a fascillatiD.g diScover-Y in ~e world of tootbpame. -

N011Vo,thexe -is a. toothpaste that -when squeezed out has ·a little .sliver of pepperin.int candy on top. The new invention encourages children to brush their teeth. . . \ . A foresighted. student in the

cl:u;s informed .":J?r. Parker that .someone is ·looking out for adults, too.

"A bourbon-flavo~ed toothpaste is now on the market," he dis­closed.

,,

Bird-Watching· Cognit9 .Has Prof Problem, Phil~sophizes

Four fraternity pledges :from Davidson came to ~ake Forest

-on their "pledge trip." Their mis­sion wa.s to stand over a- coed while she wrote her -boy friend at Davidson a letter. ·

Seem.s the young lady' had been rather lax in her le~ter writing, so the mail men were dispatched to carry the next letter in per­son.

With Buie By Tom Buie

Up on the top floor of the Li­brary Building, where rehearsals for the College Theater produc­tion of the smash Broadway hit "Pajama Game" are taking ·place, a group of students have been doing some real~y hard work­and enjoying it immensely.

Six nig.hts a week for the past three weeks they have gone time and time again through dance rou­tines and vocal numbers until it seems impossible that they can continue standing. But they do. And in spite of sore muscles, lost sleep and imperiled quality-point ratios, they keep coming back for more.

:I'he reason for the constant re­pititions was expressed pretty well by Direator James Walton while he was admonishing a second-act chorus line.

''You girls have some of the most difficult choreography in the play," Walton said. "But just be­cause you're amateurs doesn't mean you can't do a professional job.-And that's exactly what you're going "to ao before you leave here tonight."

And because they knew it, the girls went back to practice twice as hard.

THE MAIN THING that keeps the students going, as anyone who watches them rehearse realizes, is their determination to do as perfect a job as they are capable of doing. In fact, if enthusiasm among the members of the cast can make "Pajama Game" a suc­cess, anyone who doesn't plan to set aside a night to. see the musi­cal is making a mistake.

It is difficult for anyone who hasn't watched the rehearsals to realize the amount of time and E>ffort which is going into the pro­duction. To the ordinary diffi­culties encountered by an ama­teur group in staging a musical comedy is added the obstacle of planning choreography and vocals for an arena-type theater.

Most of these problems have been solved by the direction of Mr. Walton and the choreography of Glenn Clark.

Clark's dance routines are ex­ceptionally good, and the, dancers perform with a spontaneity _of ex­pression which is part of the gen­eral air of enthusiasm -which per­vades every rehearsal. That the performers · are enjoying their work is apparent in their move­ment and expression, and in their eagerness to improve their per­formances.

THE VOCALS ARE also - sur­prisingly good, and what one pr two of them may lack in technical perfection is more than compen­sated for by the manner -of deli­very.

One of the play's strongest

points is its comedy. Mary Elise Bridger is ]lerfectly cast as ''Gladys", and it would be hard to find a better "time·study man" than Bob Caesar. And Jimmy Icard as Prez and Dinah Gattis as Mable both turn in sparkling performances.

* * * One of the most enjoyable parts

of writing a column of this type is the ability to wander around ali sorts of places with almost complete impunity. -

One of the striking things you notice at a play rehearsal is the -apparent Jack of -order-you begin .to wonder h~ anything can ever be done according to schedule. I-t seems that people are always dashing up to take their places at the last possible moment, just wJlen the .director's hackles are beginning to rise.

A!ll"D THERE IS always a background of unrehearsed dia- · logue when somebody muffs a Une or takes a pratttfall not included in .the script. This can usually be

' stopped 1by the simple exrpedient of ·th~ direetor's suddenly shouted "Quiet!'' delivered in a voice which carries a definite note Olf menace.

People lounge all over the place, smoking, talking (with frequent glances tov.-ard the director) .or trying hopelessly to catch up with ,their studying. And it seems that the most mistreated i-ndividual on the set is the pianist, who some­times almost collapses over the keyboard as the dancers gQ

through the same routine for .the Nth time.

But in spite Oif the confusion which seems to dominate :the scene, things get done at an amaz­ingly rapid rate and you begin to see first a scene, .then an entire act, take form before your eyes·.

Finally, almost miraculously. they tie the ~vhole thing up in a neat little bundle and go on to ~·hatever. eomes next. ·

History, Business Professors To Meet

(Continued from page 1) science sessions with a "talk on "Recent Trends in Russian Fore­ign Policy". · -

Other speakers include Dr. Roy Jumper Olf the ·Political ·Science Department and Dr. ;e:enry S. 'Stroupe and Dr. David Smiley of the History ~Department. ·

Dr. Perci"!al Perry, who is-pr.esi­dent -of the Social Science Teach­ers· of the N.C. Blllptist colleges, is in clla·rge of the meeting. Dean Gaines M~ Rogers of the School of Business is in charge : of the Business administration sessions.

The rpurpose of the meetings is to better acquaint the faculty of the various colleges, discuss mut- · ual problems and improve relation­sb~ps between tl:ie schools.

By CHARLES RICHARDS

''I don't mean to be telling peo­ple what to do," I. N. Cognito .said last week, ''·but I know a lot about-college."

"In fact," he continued, "I could tell a. lot of people a lot of things.

"But that's a dangerous :thing; people tend to laugh when you are sincere.

''I say this because I am be­ginning my advice Qn college and life in general, and I expect to be criticized. Some may object to my being personal, but my life is a. perfect example of·most problem.s.

Professors Trouble Him

"Take •tJhat of professons. I have alway.s had trouble with profes­ISOII'S lilting me too much, for one re~U>on or another. This can .some-

- times cause you to get good grades without working. And no one at Wake Forest wauld like ·to do that.

"At a small 'university like this, where students are carefully ex­amined and· selected before en­trance, there are very few stu­dents who aren't sincere scholars.

"We all are here to learn. That is IW'hy we object to school dances. That is why men studenrts spend little time with coeds.

'Speaking Of Coeds .• .' "And speaking of coed.s," Cog­

nito continues, "most students agree that no relationship with­them is better tlian a little. Be­sides, they are a. hindrance to the life\ of a scholar, an adventure1· or a man.

"Besides professo1·s and coeds. most of my troubles have come from people. Many the times that I have given up my seat at ball games so other people could sit.

"But most _people don't care abOut the college. It's just the team that counts. And it's really alumni that cause the trouble. They are always contributing to the art collection, or buying books for the library or giving pro­fessors cans to r-ide to class in. And things like that might make Wake Forest a good university Instead of a large one.

Want To Be Large "And by all means: we want to

be large. Whyi we'd even take to-wn . people into night classes if there were not so many; other things to do.

'~But students and professors have too many extracurricular .aotivities to worry about more classes. Why we can hardly study any more. We must be active. Af­ter all, that is why we conie to college.

"We are here to live and act and sing and write. And YJCt some people think we schola.rs should take :time off wt nights from our

. ~ractica<3 to study."

In Prof. Memory's Measure­ment and Guidance .cla.Ss last week, students were giving oral re­ports. one young man gave a talk on ''Job Hunting." His opening lines :w~ent something like this:

"Personality counts 70 per cent," say Miss Margaret Wi.se and Miss Clara Bell Thompson, who travel­led for 10 weeks through seven states and landed 50 jobs."

At this point the student stop­ped and scratched his head as· if a new thought had ·occurred to him.

"If they were old maids,'' he ventured, ".iJt seema to me they might hav.e spent their time and personality looking for something a. little more profitable than a job.''

Practice teachers this. year are having a harder <time than ever before. Now they_ not only have to be able to teach, keep discipline and assign a. negligible amount of homework to keep their students . happy, but they must be avid fans of Elvis Presley to wlillthe 1-espect , and love of the class.

A coed and her date were park­ed in a car .beside -ReYnolda Hall a.t·ound 11 .P. m. the other Friday.

. One of the many policemen sta­tioned on-campus sauntered up to the car and tapped on the win­dow.

The coed, beirig an extremely quick thinker, lowered the glass and smiled. ·

"Won't you come in and join our philosophical discussion?"

The eop shook his head slowly -­and walked away into the night. Water fights he could underetand; but not this!

A notice was posted on the bul­letin board of the girls' dorm:

"Girls who- are not planning to be. here tihe week end of March 22-23 please sign below.'~

Four •names were listed: ''1. Greta Garbage 2. Mrs. O'Brien 3. Knuckles 4. "Peanuts.''

The editor of The Wake Weekly, _ a small newspaper in the town of

Wake Forest, included this item in his column in the March 1 is­sue:,

"Our- 'vote for the 'Meanest Person' in town is for the one who :rang the bell Tuesday night just before the Carolina-Wake Forest game WIU> over. For years and this year ihas been- no exception, when Wake Forest College wms a game, ·the bell rings, but Tuesday some­body jumped the gun."

La.ter. in lthe column the editor reported that the Semln&:Y? is now lighting the steeple of the old Col­lege Chapelst night. "It .shows up beautifully for miles· around," he sa.id.

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Page 5: lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

'' .. : ~-~. .. .. ' ,.~

. (. ' .... • ~ • •• • • -;. < ·'

· .. B~ter. ~.s. Herring '' '• .· . ·. : .... Letters .··

Judiciary Subject Of. Debate (All letters to the editor must be signed; uames will be witH­held on request.)

Law Students Answer Letter From Frosh (The author of · this' article,

Denny Baxter, is president of Student l Owen Herring defends the ju­dicial setup as it wiD be after elec:tions next month unless the ConStitution is ehanged. Herring was vice pr~ident of the stu­dent body last year and was one of the writers of the Constitu­tion.)

. I \' Woman's. Government Associ­ation. Miss Baxter is leading the attempt· to· change· the Consti­tution so that WGA officerS will continue as members, of the Women's Conduct Council and Student Honor· Council.) ·

Honor Council (The -f~lloWing letter was ad­dressed : to this column. and . is. directed ·.to 12 freshmen who last week had a letter published in Old Ghld.

Membership: Both Conduct Councils

- Tries violations of Honor COOe.

By DENNY BAXTER In a. generai m~eting of WGA

last Tuesday the disadvantages of the new. C!)nlltitution were presented. to the_, g~~~s. It·. seem­

~ ed .:wise· to tell ~hem '"just ·what. effect the new · Constitution Men's

Conduct. Council Eight Men

· Tries men's · violations of student body Conduct Code.

·' ;.~

. Women's Conduct Council

. ·Eight Women

Tries women's violations of student body Conduct Code:

. By OWEN HERRING Last spring a new constitu­

tion for student government was

In last week's.letter the fresh­men cited "narrowness and pre­judice" as reasons why Negro minister Ma-rtin ·Luther King

·was not in'fited to speak at -W-ake Forest. The .Rev. King is the man who lasi year led Montgom- · ery, Ala.; Negroes in a bus boycott as a protest against seg, rega.tion. -Ed.). . . To· the Editor: . Directed .to Messrs. Bridge­

wate~,: Grubbs, Hadley, QdQom,_ Peteroon:' Pettigrew, ~uden, ·. . Rolater, Carroll, 1\IcDonald, .

. would have on their government and on them. This was done so

·they ·.could decide. for themselves whether they want· t9 accept .it. or attempt to revise it by means of a petition: However, for this· revision·. to be voted on by ~e . student body,. it· must be pe­titioned by 20 per cent of the

· student 'body. · · . . ;· · One· objection to the new Con­

stitution is the ·matter of pol--jties •. Members of. the' Woman's 'council, wb.o now handle all

Council Setup--This ~iagram shows how . the C:onduct . . . · · . . Co~ncd~ land· Honor ~uncil are set up in ·.~he present Co~titutio~,. which I~\ now under attack by· Woman's ~veriunent AS&OeiaUon. W.GA ·h~s .been· excluded from· authority .in"cases of viv~_!~ons of ~ules ~~t, ~o:wn i~ the student :_bod:r Con~t~ tution.

·established. u·was drawn up ·ac­cording to principles outlined by a committee which represent­ed all elements of the student body. The final draot:t had the ap­proval 1 G! the committee, the of­ficials of both stude.qt govern­ment and! Woman's Government, .the leaders of the two political parties and the faculty executive committee, whieh included the Dean of Women. The new con­stitution was overwhelmingly a.p­~oved . by the student body in the· genera.l':spring election;·.

. The · president .. of . Woman~s · Government- has· now ·proposed . ·that W.GA t>e allowed to retain the · rlgnt tO' try cOed offenders of .the student body. Honor and

Bridges and Drozdna, and to twhoms,oev.er also it may:. con­cern:

· We·. read your letter of l,ast week ·and- were greatly impress­ed-the insatiable · seare:h- of yQouth for knowledge and .the ",more, deSirable" things, in ·life are trUly pe:i-sonified in your let~ ter.

conduCt · ca5es, are nominated by another girl is just as well quali-tne ~Pri.S· without regard to ~he . tied to do .the job. ·. party)() which the girl belongs. Boys Help Nominate ·· .A g{rl may ft}so be ~nominated . . Under the . Constitution that by 10 ~r·cerit of tlie members- will go into effect April 15,·-the' of the Association if· they feel election of the Women's Con·

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duet Council will be held at the same time as the general elec­tion;•· This . means that ·the· girls will•·be· nominated in a party·· cauc~~. by a maJo':rity. of boys. '£hen, when the vigorous earn­palgn1fi.g begins, there_~wm be a lot of hard feelings among the girls; If they· belong to, a cer­tain l'a~¥ they. will fee(obliK¢-s; to support a girl of that: ·party whether or _not they feel slie is· the l:est one for the job.

'Cuder Woman's Government cUl'tom. there is no campaiining o·.;lH than personal contact. We· f('el that it is a definite dis­advantage to inv()lve· an .import­ant body such as this disciplin­ary group in party politics·.

'l'he second disadvantage of ; the Constitution involyes the matte~ of punishments:· The only penalties· that-·' this· Conduct .:; •. unci! can give a:re expulsion,

· suspension, soc.ial probation (all three of whi'ch go· on one's per­nun ent record) and. a warning.

. Can't Give Campus · · Because the Council has noth­ing to do with dormitory rules, it will not be able to give such house punishments as campuses~ Even thr':lgh a camft'< · i:i 11 'hard punishment, it is intermediate b.etw.een . social p~obation and expulsion .. Also, a campus .does not go · on a girl's pe".'m::.r.ent record and permit;; a gh·l a sec­ond chance to prove 'herself.

In the unfortunate affair early this year, had. not WGA been able to use the strict cam­pus, most probably the ~iris would have suffered the !..arne fate as the boys. There is also a possibility that a girl will have to come before both groups for a violation of the CondQct Code. This would be rossible

. because of the similarity be­tween the conduct codes of WGA and the student body.

The third objection lies in the ;fact that it .is the custom of student body disciplinary groups to publish the facts of the trials. :f!owever, in all fairness to them, they do not publish names.

The secrecy of WGA is not only for the protection of the girl immediately involved, but for the protection of the reputa­tion ·of the coeds as a group. The fewer people who know about conduct offenses, the bet­ter it is for the girl involved and for all · the girls. Under the future setup it is probable that trials of the Conduct ·Coun­cil will be published to .the de­triment of women students.

WGA was first established for the purpose of creating and maintaining the ideals for the women of the college. It is the general opinion among the girls­that ·this group has succeeded in its purpose. The Executive Board of WGA sincerely hopes that the student body will seri­ously consider_ this matter and act in the best interests of the

'people involved.

NOW PLAYING ·.AT THE

CENTER fJIEIR DOWNTOWN

VIOLENCE SEARED THE WEST

A

IRON! JOSEPH YIVECA

COnEN ·LINDFORS HTSY WARD

BLAIR·BOND THE

A'LIDAY BRAND

.Conduct Codes. · This is unwiSe for. three rea­

·sons.: (1) Parallel groups within

student government are needed · Realizing.· that you are . fresh­

men, we'ean more r~dily under-· stand )-our'position ...• . to insure equal treatment for

. all students and to provide a basis- for a. single group to· handle honor· -code offenses.

(2) The primary function of ~.WGA is noband has never been .the enforcement of student gciv~ · ernment regulations. There is needed a body for which tb.is is the only duty:

. ·Upperclassmen· possess, much to their discredit .and oftentimes, detriment, a notoriously bad habit-as a general · rule they

.. .111"1} s_eldom 'Prone .to listen to the sagacious· advice so freely_.:yolll;n:. teered ·bY members of you! illus-' · tricius class--a fault, we're sure, which denies to them to a great extent, that inner peac.e, com­posure, and ..omnipotence wb.ieh is characterized: by your gr~uP:­more specifically, .by. you gen­tlemen yourselves.

. (3) The new system ·will in­crease the . interest. of women students in student government. Our student government can never be strong until the coeds have an .active part in it.

Several misconceptions about the new judicial system should be cleared up : · .

(1) It has ·been said that the election of the new Women's Conduet CounCil will be at the mercy of "party polities.'' It is, of ·course, likely that the parties will make nominations for these positions. However, the consti­tution allows any student to be nominated by a 10-name peti­tion. And only coeds may vate in the election of the Women's Conduct Council. Thus- -it is ri­diculous to say that the coeds niay :.not h2.ve_ exaetly' whom they want in these p'ositions.

(2) The trial' procedure for the new group has. been ques­tioned.· It it maintained that the Women's Conduct Council will lower the reputation of the co­eds by publishing trial informa­tion. The new Women's Couneil ] will set its own rrocedure rules,· however, and. they are in no way obligated to divulge the facts of any triaL The group may be, if it chooses, as com­pletely secret as WGA.

(3) It is clllimed by some that the new setup will create the poss~bility of two trials for a single offense. Certainly, there is the possibility that an act may violate both the regulations for girls and the regulations for all students. In such a case it is plain that the Women's .Conduct Council should take precedence. But since :both groups shall pre:. suma!bly -o:perate under the gen­eral sU'Pervision of the Dean of Women, there is no reason why the question Olf which group s'hould hold trial eannat be easily settled before any case is ever considered.

No one is trying to put W o­man's Government out of busi­ness. Jot- is neeessary that WGA continue its activity in matters. .that are particular to women students. But it is also necessary that student government be able to enforce its own• regulations.

you'll have!

We ·take this. opportunity to write to advise you not to de51pair if your "meritorious". campaign should lfail to materialize. If this happens we are sure. that you gentlemen,- instead of :form­ing a 'base and contempta:ble opin:ion of your fell<l'W students, will realize that, in .the final ana­lysis, such an endeavor as yours is a personal matter as to each and every person ..

We are reminded od' an adage whieh is applicable, not . neces­sarily in the instant case, to practically all controversial is­sues . . . . Realizing that we 'stan.:'ll to be corrected (and it is most likely that we will be), the essenee of the :phrase is as fol­locws:

·"It is ·better to remain silent and .be thought a fool than to s-peak and let all doulbts be re­moved." Doubtless you will say that we have incriminated our­selves by coining the foregoing, most apt phrase. Perhaps so-we will take our ehances.

, .. we are of the opinion, as undoubtedly you yourselves are, that each af you should make a pilgrimage to Montgomery, Ala., · this summer, or at your earliest convenience, so as to study at the feet of the Rev. Mr. King, a fellocw champion in your cause. The prO/fits of such a journey, we are sure, would better equip you, in the future, in waging this crusade you have taken upon yourselves. . . '.

P.S. In case you gentlemen, because of financial reasons or the like, cannot make the trip mentioned above, it is suggested that you contact the nearest of­fice Cif the NAACP. We are certain that this w.holly imparti­al, benevolent association will ·bend a sympathetic ear and will provide all expenses incidental to >l trip of this nature.

Who knows--they are liable to put you on the ;payroll.

(signed) A. H. Gainey Jr. and Leslie G. Frye Freshmen. School of Law

starring

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Pick up yo~r paper every morning and what do you read? "CRISIS IN HIGHER EDUCATION." That's what you ·read. "ENROLLMENT SPIRALLING UPWARD- DESPERATE NEED FOR MORE CLASSROOMS, MORE TEACHERS." But classrooms, alas, do not spring up like mushrooms, nor teachers like mayflies. So what must we do while we build more classrooms, train more teachers? We must get better use out of the classrooms and teachers we now have. That's what we must do.

This column, normally a vehicJe of good-humored foolery, of joy that wrinkled care derides, of laughter holding both his sides, will today forsake levity to ex­amine the crisis in higher education. My sponsors, the makers of Philip Morris Cigarettes, as bonnie a bunch of tycoons as you will see in a month of Sundays, have given cheerful cohsent to this departure. Oh, splendid chaps they are, the makers of Philip Morris ! Oh, dar lin'·

· types they are, fond of home, mother, porridge, the Con­stitution, and country fiddling! Twinkly and engaging they are, jaunty and sociable, roguish and winsome, as full of joy, as packed with pleasure, as brimming with natural goodness, as loaded with felicity as the ciga­rettes they bring you in two convenient sizes - regular in the handy snap-open pack, and new long-size in a crushproof flip-top box- both available at moderate cost from your favorite tobacconist. Light one now. Light either end. No filter cigarette can make that statement-

Let us then, with the gracious connivance of the makers of Philip Morris - Oh, splendid chaps! Oh, gra­cious connivers! -take up the terribly vexing question of how we can turn out more graduates with campus facilities as they now exist.

The answer can be given in one word: speedup! Speed up the educational process. Streamline courses. Elimi­nate frills. Sharpen. Shorten. Quicken.

, Following is a list of courses with suggested methods to speed up each one.

PHYSICS - Eliminate slow neutrons.

PSYCH LAB- Tilt the mazes downhill. The white mice will run much faster.

ENGINEERING- Make slide rules half as long.

Music · · Change all tempo to allegro. (A collateral benefit to be gained from this suggestion is that once you speed up w~ltz time, campus proms will all be over by 10 p.m. With students going home so early, romance will languish and marriage counselors can be transferred to the buildings and grounds department. Also, housing now used for married students can be returned to the school of animal husbandry,)

ALGEBRA- If "x" always equals 2-4, much time-con-suming computation can be eliminated.

LANGUAGES- Teach all language courses in E11glish.

DENTISTRY- Skip baby teeth. They fall out anyhow.

PoETRY- Amalgamate the classics. Like this:

Hail to thee, blithe spirit Shoot if you ·must this old gray head You a.in't nothin' but a hound dog Srniling the boy jell dead.

You see how simple it is? Perhaps you have some apeedup ideas ,of your own. If so, I'll thank you to keep them to yourselves.

®Max Shulman, 1957

The .makers of Pl•ilip !Uorris l1ar;e 110 i11terest in any speedup. We age our fine tobacco sloto and easy. And that'll the ~e~ay ie 11mokes-sl01o and eas;r-a natural snioke •

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Page 6: lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

PAGE SIX Monday, March 11, 1957 OLD GOLD AND BLACK llnLE' MAN ON CAMPUS

Veacs Who. Are Greeks By CARTER HEDRICK

Pledging, election of officers and Tuesday night dis­cussions on reli'gion featured last week for the Deacs \Vho Are Greeks.

Cupid had a slow week with the fraternity men as only two pinnings and one engamement took place, a record low for the 10 fraternities on campus.

.. Alpha Sigma Phi Bill Arrowood, Concord Junior,

was chosen president to head the list of new officers elected by ;,he chapter last. week. Other officers are Allan Pope, vice-president; Bob Street., treasurer, and Dud~ ley Watson, 1·ecording secretary.

Dean Gaines Rogel'S' of the Col­leg-e School of Business Adminis­tration, C a l' r o I ·Ferrell and George Clayton were speakers at an informal smoker held Monday night. Following the smoker re­freshments were served ·· the _r1.1sbees.

The Alpha Sig custom of grow­ing sideburns has been revived for the chapter's annual A;pache Ball to be held April 13.

sponsors the conference,

Sigma Phi Epsilon .Bryan Falls, social chairman, is completing final plans for the

cbapter's- Sweetheart Ball to be held Saturday, March 23 at the Robert E. Lee Hotel.

Dave Nanney,· Forest City fresh~an, pledged last week. Dr. Claude Roebuck of the College faculty led the chapter's in­

formal religious week discussio~ Tuesday night. Doug Graham has finally pinned Gloria Flippin, Pilot Mountain

liienior. Sigma Pi

Seven men pledged last week. They are James Benbow, East Bend junior; Adron Moore, Wallace junior; Coy Robertson, Spindale jun­ior; Benjamin Lancaster, Stoneville sophomore; Bill Moricle, Reids­ville sophomm·e; Edwin Jones, Anderson, S. C., freshman, and Car­roll Lupton, Greensboro freshman.

Police Chief J. I. Waller led the chapter Tuesday night in an informal discussion in connection with Religious Emphasis Week

' Theta Chi Jack Carter, Buddy Gaffney, Dickie Moore arlcl Jim Threlkeld

recently pledged the fraternity. Brothers, pledges and their dates attended a party at the fra­

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Page 7: lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

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. By..CARTER HEDRICK

·Mural.Sports Need More Participants·

Student interest in intramural sports has picked up . this year and participation is better than .it was on the old .campus, according to Intramural Manager Don

· A veritte. , . . . But a quick look at participation figures shows student interest :is far below what it should be even with the unlimited facilities

available. in Reynolds Gym; , , With so'm~ 1,300 men enroll~'d here in tlie fall, there were only

· 21 intramural football. teams, 11 of whiCh were sponsor.ed by social · frate~ities .. But officials ~ay the intramural program could easily :.:Q.ave accomodated 4o or . more teamS. ·

Mural basketball leagues had only 33 teams .~ntered and !n that· ~·sport also there should.have been twice that number of,entrimts.

· . :. . In individ1.ial sports, handball t;9urnamentS drew only 47· partfci· :pants, while 123 students competed in .the. table ~:nnig to1.1rney. :,·, · ~rticipa.tion of fraternity group~ always .exceed~ that .of the, :~·ind~pendents,' who compose the m~jorlty 'o! men' students. . ' · ThiS ean be attributed £o interest in the all..:CampuSI trophy, which· :~is iiven to the intramural team compiling the most poirits dw;fng ,the year. · · · · "Ind~pent men don't' seetn to realize," A veritte sa·ys, !'that ·they . can keep the same teams ·in each sport all year and try for the · big all-campus award." ' · . · ·

:ODiy ·ualt ~lay ... ~eating . · . . Less than one-half of the student body is taking part in the in· ·_ tramural program. This indica~es students are becoming more in· terested in spectating than participating, an increasing. source of

~ alarm to the nation's physical e(lucators. . . , : ·. _ .. : Participation in sports not only develops students· physically, the · physical education people say,· but a~so affords an opportunity to

: work off excess energy that develops as· a result of many hours with the books.

In an address last week ~o the Winston-Salem Lion·s· Club Asso· ciate Dean William C. Archie ·attributed the many student shenani­gans· this year to dissatisfaction of upperclassmen with· the new

· cam~us. But ·some students, seeking a reason perhaps•, .claim the ·out-

. bursts are due to ex~ess energy and tension from studies. . It may wen· be true. And the ·intramural program available in

the College's $1,750,000 gymnasium could do much to alleviate the · situation. But for some reason the students won't give it a chance.

Last week this column urged the Athletic Department to take· steps toward improving seating arrangements· for fa~ulty and stu-dents at home sports events next year. ·

'Tuesday afternoon, Athletic Director Bill Gibson called a meet­ing and informed Old Gold that arrangements · already had been mad~ and the student legislature had approved the ·departme~t's plan some time ago. ,

So, according to Gibson, football· seats· ''will start on the 50-yard line and go one way with students and the other v.ith alumni."

. Action Promised ... Swimming Nothing definite was stated concerning basketball games .v.ext

winter. But Gibson assures that the Department ''will do its best to pr,ovide .students with good seats."

A meeting is . scheduled today with the faculty exe1utive com­mittee to discuss the matter. The committee issued a joint reso·

· lution with student legislature members earlier in the year, asking better seats:

Gibson said he would not know specifically what arrangements could be made until today-'s meeting.

* * * Swimming ·Coach Ralph Steel reports' that when the Reynolds

Gym pool is opened to students each week less than 50 persons turn out. Only once in the year have as· many as 100 attended. ·

'10 * * A recently-fired football coach at de-emphasized Washington and

Lee blamed his· troubles on an inter-fraternity football league. Coach Bill Chipley, whose team lost 14 of its last 15 games,

says his best prospects were more interested in playing for frater· nity teams than for the varsity. - .

Frat teains at the Virginia school dress out in :full football equip-ment. ·

Handball Semifinals Set Today,Finals.Tuesday·

Semifinal rounds in th~ intra· n1ural handball tournameti.t will

tournament will earn points to­ward the individual all-campus award and, if he is in a social fra­

be played this afternoon, accord- ternity, will earn points :for his ing to Intramural Manager Don group in the race for the all·cam· Averitte. pus team trophy. .

·Winners· in today's matches will Runners-up also will receive play tomorrow for the all-campus ·points, as do other entra.II!ts. handball championship. Volleyball action in· independent

Competing in today's semifinals and fraternity leagues is scheduled will be Harold Moore against Pete to get underway April 1. When Barham and Jackie Murdock action in that sport is completed, against C. R. Copeland. swimming and · softball will be

Champion of the month-old 1 next on the team agenda.

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OLD GOLD AND BLACK ll011day, Mareh 11, 1957 PAGE SEVEN .

Freshman Pitchers Shine In Practice

Around 22 freshman baseball flight material are Jerry Alley !Prospects, none of them scholar· and; Jerry West, Winston-Salem. ship men, reported for practice men, and Wal•ter Lang, a New Jer­last week under Coach Don HiJYPS. seyian. ·~Some of. the boys show a lot of Infielders trying f~r the team I

promise," Hipps said, "especially are BOO Brown, Arlington, Va.; the pitchers. Blllt right now it's Tommy Mills, Mooresville; Char­too early to say just what we'll lie Fo(}l"te, Huntington, !'f. Y.; Bill have." Ho:hnan, Lenoir; Joe Parrish, Lan-

A 15-game schedule has been caster, S. C.; Billy Joe Neighbors, arranged for the Ba.by Deacs and Pimtsboro; and H. F. Wilkins, Grif· several additional oon.tests may be fith. slated la.ter in the seas.On. . Out!ielders working out are Wil-

Opening day for ~e yearlings is ton Hunt, Whiteville; Luther Kim­March 19. .!Whet). tltey will invade rey, Albermarle; Dennis Medloelc, Hanes High School.'Other contests· Oa.ml>ridge, Md.; Dexter Hall, Win­are scheduled· with Big Four fros}l ston-Salem, and ..Dean Hundley, squads a:nd with Qak. Ridge Hili~ Wa]laee.

. JACKIE MURDOCK JACK WILLIAMS tary, Academy, Greensboro High, The sclledule: .----------__;_----------------:---:-- ·Gray High of Winston and Gas- March 19--Hall.es High, there;

Deac Seirlors·. ' ..

. . .

Get, National, Linksinen Set opener tonia High. . . 21---Qak Ridge, there; .26...:0ak·

The mound corps, Which Hipps Ridge; · believes will be ''the best fresh- April 5-H1mes; 6-...~, there; man tpitehing staff we've had in 10--Duke; 16-Dulte, there; 17-a long time," boasts eight eandli- Greenl!boro Hi~h; 19-Gray High, dates. there; 26--Nortb Carolina; ·:w­

ACCHonors Considered p r om is i n g by G~tonia High; . The · Deacon gol:f. . te_am wili ·champion :from Burlington, and coaches are hurlers Wade Pascal · lfay .4 -State; S - Gas.tonia,

launch its season against Dav:id- Cotton ·Tatum from JVinston· of Siler City and DaVid Budd! CJif there; 7-Nonbh Carolma, thel"e; Deacon ~asketballers collected son here March 21. ·.. · Sale~. Woodbury, N. J. Also catled top- 8--Gra:t High.

their share of post season honors €each Bones MeKinney's men !P=ciiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiCiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiXiii:iiociiiiiiiiiiiiiXiiiiiiaiiiiOCXii:iociiiiii:ii last week as conference and .na- will play their home matches on tional 'all-star selections were re- the Old T9wn gol:f j,>urse. leased. The team has four returning

Jackie Murdock Wake's senio~ lettermen. They are John Ger­gliard, was awa'rded honorable ring,, Union: S.C. senior; Sonny mention on .the All-American se- ·George, ass1stant freshman foot­lections of both Associated Press ball. coach from Brunswick, Ga.; and United Pres!f. Ralph James, Asheville junior, and

He also was named to the first David Ogilvie, Cleveland, Ohio team All-Atlantic· Coast Confer- jlinior. ence squad by ACC sportswriters Gerring was· number one man and United Press. on last year's team and :finalist

Jack Williams, senior .forward, rated first team on the ACC sportswriters squad and w~s giv­en honorable mention on the Uni­ted Press· picks.

Both men were named earlier to the first team Ali-ACC club ~hosen by Associated Press.

Ernie Wiggins, another senior backcourt man, was chosen on the second team All-ACC of both Uni· ted Press, Associated Press and ACC Sportswriters;

in the CGA tournament last sum-mer. James finished fourth in the conference last year and qualified for the national amateur this­summer. /

Red Snapp, service returnee, has two years of eligibili~y left. He is a former state high school champion.

· Sophomores out for the team include Bill Greene, who finished second in the conference last year as a freshman, and Tommy Helms.

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.. ..A

Jim Gilley, Senior Center, made honorable mention on all confer­ence selections .released thus far .

Tw'o freshmen are on scholar­ships this year. They are Ronnie Thomas, former state high school I -

o-..qo~...o=r=====•-ccoc~::r==coocacc:cacooo~...o======COOOCI'"'~~...ocxxr~~~A Williams· averaged 16.0 points

per ~me dur,ing .the regular sea­son, wh,ile .¥urdock reg1stered an average ·of 15.2 pointsL Wiggins hit at a 13.2 clip, and Gilley fin­ished. with 'a 13.3. mark.

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"I was tremendously impressed,'' says 'Nick, "by my first plant tour. When you go through the facilities-meet the men and get an idea of the prob­lems they handle-you can't help but become interested. Add the friendly, informal work atmosphere; and you know right off the bat these people have a story to tell.'"

Nick came to IBM in 1951 with a B.S. in physics. H!i! started as a Tech­nical Engineer-in Test Equipment Engineering-working on an analog bombing system. When that project moved from the. Endicott to the Poughkeepsie plant, Nick followed it, becoming firSt an Associate Engineer, then a P!oject Engineer. As the lat-

Heading up Qualify Engineering

ter, he worked on IBM's first transis­torized electronic computer-the 608.

By November,-'55, Nick was head­ing up Quality · Engineering in the Quality Control Division of the Poughkeepsie plant. Recently pro­moted to Administrative Assistant to the Quality Control manager, Nick now concerns himseH with the funda­mental operations and pqlicies of this 450-man division. Quality Control is responsible for the performance of IBM's vast array of business ma­chines-from simple sorters and punches to the "electronic brains."

What an IBM physicist does

"The problems of Quality Controi in this business are endless," 'Nick reports, "and fascinating to the phys­icist. There's process control~of the manufacture of components such as transistors and. cores • • • of the con­tents of a gas ••• of the concentricity of an etch solution ••• of the diffrae-

"What's it like to be

A PHYSICIST AT IBM?'•

Five years ago, college senior Nick Hemmer asked himself this question •. Today, as Administrative Assistant to the Quality Control manager, Nick ~eviews his experience at IBM and gives some pointers that may be helpful to you in taking the first, most important step in your career as a physicist.

tion of alloys .•. or of the properties of metals, such as the resistivity of germanium. Then, there are the im­portant 'analysis of failure' and reliability studies, in which you seek to det~rmine, for exampl~, the 'life

Problems fascinating to th.• physicist

expectancy' of a device, the mean time between failures, or perhaps which step in a process has the great­est effect on the equipment involved. You may be asked to control the deposit of glass on X-ray tubes to avoid spill-over, or microscopic spot­ting. Or you may be dealing with arc-suppression, or gaseous electron­ics, the grass roots of instrumentation; or in the estimation of tolerances, or

Extensive educational facilities

in correlation coefficients-that is, in physically sound numbers."

Nick has been instrumental in encouraging many college physics majors to come to IBM. "I find they're interested in questions like these," he says: "How would you go about determining the 'life' of elec­trons in transition from the valence to the conduction band?" Or, in the manufacture of magnetic inks, "How can the grain size of the iron content be controlled ••• or its viscosity regu­lated over wide temperature ranges? How would you control the concen-

tration and concentricity of colloidal solutions?" "Present a job in terms of actual problems," believes Nick'. "and you~ll get the man's interest­for it's his career and his future that have top priority."

How about further study?

Nick has taken full advantage of IBM's extensive educational facilities to get ahead at IBM. He took at least one course each semester on subjects within his immediate work area­courses on digital and analog com­puters and on their components such as cores and transistors. He found time to take management courses as well. "If you want opportunity for study," Nick says, '~IBM will provide all you want."

Promotion almost inevitable

Asked about opportunities for ad­vancement at IBM, Nick says, "The situation could h;udly be better in that respect. With sales doubling every five years on the average, pro­motion is almost inevitable."

• • • IB.M hopes that this message will he!p to give you some idea of what it's like to be a physicist at IBM. There are equal op­portunities for E.E.'s, .M.E.'s, mathema­ticians and Liberal Arts major.s in IBM's many divisions-Research, Manufactur­ing Engineering, Sales and Technical Services. Why not drop in and discuss IBM with your Placement Director? He can supply our latest brochure and tell you when IBM will next interview on your campus. Meanwhile, our Manager of Engineering Recruitment, Mr. R. A. · Whitehorne, will be happy to answer your QUE!!!.tions. Just write him at IBM, Room 9301·,590 MadisonAve.,NewYork22,N.Y.

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Page 8: lb .. anb · 2018. 3. 20. · ·d,. Ed Barry lt ~··Eber! Ladd, . Hines·· tiad. . . Bobby r Led~ C.anden; ·Smith. ~t team of fra en. In-.:· lveritt& .. sport Vednes-tiLL ~s

l PAGE EIGHT M ........... "' u. ,,., ow ooLD AND BLACK . . . . . 3 Sidelined Bashful Ladies Play

Deacons Beat State, EntJ·.5·eason In Practice For Crown TuesdQ.y

Heartbreaking Loss r.}~')J UN C &:!d ::sl;::!g ;:S~~~12';,~§ ?.?E;~-E~ By CARTER HEDRICK Delta Phi's Legal Eagles, 43-26, 1956 lfrosh and ex-varsity player

In Carolintl;,Ge~s' Se1nijinal Win By Only 61-59 Another basketball year ended

·abruptly for Wake Forest Friday night as North Car"Olina's Lennie Rosenbluth hit a field goal and free throw in the closing seconds to give America's No. 1 team a 61-59 win over the Deacons.

The loss, in the semifinal round of the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament at Raleigh, ou~>ted the Deacs from play. -

Wake Forest reached the semi­finals with a 66-57 triumph over N.C. State in the first round. The Th>acs encfed regular seasori action tied 'for' fouith, place iri the ACX:: with the WolfPack-·

Se~a- Record."l9-~­

Fl'iday's loss brings: Wake's.&ea­l!on record to 19-9, the same mark

- tlie. teaq~. compiled last year. All losses this' se~s:Qri 'weie~· al?;ainst ' Atlantic Coast Conference oppo­sition.

Three men expected to be leaders for the Independent League Cham- George Austin. · '1!11 next faU's- football squad were pionship. LIIIWI'ence led the Ladies in last lost for the remainder of spring They '?'ill take qn Pi Kappa. AI- week's all-important trin:mph over oraetice last week as Coach Paul pha's · Fraternity League champs the. Eagles. witlt 16 poin.ts. Amen's charge!? passed .the half- tomorrow ·night fQr the All-Cam- · way mark in their off-season drills. ·pus Championship. Tap-off. time Tax Institute Held

John Niznik, a leading candidate will be 7:3t> •. ; Over 100 practicing lawyers of for one of the starting end posi- Intramur?l offi!!ials postp~ned . this state attended a Taxation In­tions, suffered a dislocated' elbow the title game, originally schedul- stitu.te held here Feb. "2&:Mai:eh' 2. and· underwent surgery. He is ex- ed _last Thursday, .because 01f the Judge N. 0. Tietjeris of the federal -"'"'"·ted to be fully recovered next varsity Atlantic Coas·t Can:fe.rence tax court was the ·princia)al ·speak-fall. · · tournament at Raleigh. er_ as the mee~g closed. The In- ,.

Last year's starting quarter- Both squads are undefeated in, stitute wa~ s~nsored by the N. C. back, Charlie Carpenter, is ha:ving regular,season play and the Ladies Bar Association. trouble with an O'ld hack ailment had to overcome an B{lditional ---------which prevents him from praetic- hurdle in the lindependent play- Grad ·En'tera OCS·. in~. offs. Albert Newman oif Wake For-

Tom Spicer, a promising lineman. In the J;ndependen.t semifinals, est, a l9S6 .graduate of the· College; ~1p from the fro.sh squad, had to staged early last. week, the Basih~ is in· trainiai:g at- the Navy's Of­drop out of school due to troubles 'ful Ladies knocked· od'f Phi Epsi- ficer Candidate School in Newport, at home. . Jon Kairo>a, 69-38, and the Legal R. I. After completing a foUr­

End Henry: Marbn and, tackles Eagles edged the Spiders, 51-46. month indoctrination 'and arlen­Frank 'Thc·mpsnn and Jim Horn The· Legal Eagles were All-Cam- tation.ocourse he will be commis- • ~on.tinue to refrain from heavy pus titlists last year. sioned'· as an· Ensign and assigned_ · work due to injuries suffered last The. Pi:K4's. boast such former an· activity in the fleet,

------~~--------~--------~~------~--seaSoOn, · , . .. . , ~

In a change last week, freshma·n ··!----------------------------, Bruce Nunnally :was .switched· to .q~rterbac!c; : • , ·· ,. "i . · SINCE 1929 STUDENTS MEET AT

Bowing out , of . ~llege basket-: _ " _ · : .. . : . · ." , ball as a result o'f" the ·~OSS' are Hooks~ Bunts~ Baseba.l!: Col!ch Gene HQO~ IS shown-demons!rating the ~rope~ ~a! to bunt as seniors Jackie Murdack Ernie . . ... _ . ·.. _ th~, \Vake .Forest squad prepares for Its opem;ng game wIth .. Yll'gmia Tech here Wiggins, Jack Williams ~nd Jim March 25. Watcldng the forme~ All-American are outfielder Rex Mcl\Iilla!". infielde_r Pete Williams, Gilley. . . , , . and .second baseman AI Baker. The Deacons are expected . to be among the Atll!Jitic'. Coast Con-

Standing ()ut irl last week's prac­tice's was Barry Hines,· a reserve end last' fall. Amen expects Hines to see exteniiVe action this .Year.

Freshmen standing .out. in recent drills . are.. tackle . Ronnie Ball, !('uar.d Ni~k P~tella, fuUback Pete Manning, quarterback Charlie Par­ker and halfbacks Ralph Conrad, George Parsha ana Neal Hunt.·

. MORRIS SERVICE 401 W. FOURTH STREET

Before the big Carolina Ali~ · ference's· best'· squads:· ihls spring. (Photo by Larry Austin)·: American sewed up hiS' team's · SANDWICH·ES- SODAS ~SNACKS

26th consecutive victory, the Dea­cons had led 59-58 with 55 sec­onds remaining after Jim Gilley :bad popped in two free throws to

Amen reports that a large turn-' r! 1ll oht is · e"-"POOted for the two-day ._ ..... ..;. _______ ""!'"" ____ ..;. ___ ~-'!"'-...;. ___ -::--=

high schwl coaches clinic to be i~!!!!!!~~~T;~-;;~~~c;~q;~~lli;;j~~~~~~·~';· i held March 22-23 at the conclusion Town And _Campus Shop

NEXT TO CAROLINA T~EATER

Hooks Says Baseball Success Depends On Promising Sophs

:PUt Walm ahead_ ' But on the next play downcourt

Wend ell Carr fouled Rosenbluth as he scored and the top Tar Heel calmly sank the decisive charity shot. Wake missed its opportuni­ty at the basket on the game's last shot and Carolina ran out the clock from that point.

Led After Comeback

"Every position is still wide open," Baseball Conch Gene Hooks said last week while ·prepadng the Deacons for an opening en­gagement with Virginia Tech Mon-After trailing by as much as

nine points in the first half, the a meeting in the Dixie Classic and Deacons carne back early in the engagements on home courts of second stanza and stayed within both teams going to the power­a few points of the Heels until ful Tar Heels. finally gaining the advantage in Thursday's first-round victory the last minute--only to lose it over State came as revenge for again. a Wolfpack victory over Wake

It was Carolina's fourth. win Forest the previous Saturday over the Deac<>ns this year, ·with night at Raleigh.

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day, •March 25. "I think they look pretty good

for this .time of year," the friend­ly young coach said. "But riwht now our ·biggest worry is finding a practice field."

!Practice has .been held across town at a high school park while workmen prepare fields on earn­pus near Reynolds Gym. But ·it appears now that weather condi­tions have halted work on the fields for several weeks.

The Deacs wi!ll lbe allowed to practice at the high school field only one more week. Ernie Shore Field, .where home games will be 'Played, is another possibility, but at last report it too was under construction.

Hooks appears optimistic over his club's chances this season.

"Our success will depend on these sophomores," Hooks said, "and we still haven't found our first string catcher."

Jim Horn, who was eX:peeted to ,take the backstop :post vacated hy All-American Linrwoo<l Holt last Year. is .still recuperating from a football injury and will not play.

Leading candidates are Jackie Murdock, the All-Conference bas­ketballer, who will report ,this week for his first year of college baseball. .Murdock last summer

·was named to the All-Southern softball team.

Sophomores Olln Broadway and Marion Miller also are in the run-rung for the position. .

Other sophomores, up from last

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of spring drill.s. · -

Pla'.!lS for the clinic caU for Receiving- New Spring And ~':~d !:~~e~;~ns:O~:~~~; Summer Mert:handise Everyday annual Gold a.nd Black intrasquad game v.;n end the clinic and spring 'STUDENTS

-· drg~~; 400 high school men.tors•'in . Come By And Take 'A Look! year's twice-beaten frosh team, North Carolina and surrounding ~ I

are Jack Philli<ps, Rex McMillian states have 'been invited to,:.attend ;$ We Have.' Ladies' and Men's and Byron Bullard. the two-day affair. · .,~

Phillips, a first baseman from "Early inQiCations show, that we fll TY7 .... LK S' -cr.o•·D,.,'S Danville, Va., and McMillan, an will have a large group attending =· w ...t:l. . .fl I . n -... j outfielder from :Raleigh, both hit the sessions," .said Amen, "and ~ over '.500 as 'freahmen. And Bul- we're looking ·forward to having ! '- To Match Uard wasn't far behind a gwd clinic." 0

Hooka singled out juniors Al Saturday the squad will conduct FROM $5.9S -' Baker and Pete Williams as "look- its final- intrasquad game prior ;to 3 ing very good" in practice, along· the annual Gold and Black game -. with seniQr shortstop Harold in Bowman-Gray Stadiu-m. ~ Moore. Baker is an infielder and ''Interested students are wel- ~ Williams-, an outfielder. come to come down andJ watch the _

Veteran third sacker Bill Barnes team :Saturday," said Amen. The and outfielder George Miller al!K!' game will be held on .the 'Practice have shined in early workouts. · field •beside Reyno1ds Gym.

A seasoned pitching staff of .seniors Buck Fichter, John Stokoe and Jack McGinley is ·expected to be the ACC's best. Service returnee Ben· Tench and soph Bob Lawrence will <provide additional strength.

Meet Planned On Volleyball

Managers of teams entering the­intramural volleyball race· will meet .this afternoon at 4 o'clock to work out details for the coming season.

Fo<otball was · discontinued. at Wake Forest in 1895, · ibut after man:"• requests the trustees auth?­rized restoration . of .the sport m 1908. .

FOR THE .BEST IN

Town And Campus Shop

Intramural Manager Don Aver­itte has set Wednesday as opening day for volleyball. The season will run through .A:.pril l.

Fraternity and independent teams will battle in a round-robin tourna­ment ;y;ith · approximately two games scheduled each week, Aver­itte said.

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