10
-I Lllle forced to tel,y of receivers l Joe Carazo sary yardage route. Field- iie McKinney arm, for tbe v&rte soor!Dg did agafnst :!! Commodore but few scor- one will· os, Wake and ogly similar •. 1 teams place ' eundamentals, r.il1 constantly !their opposi- are depth sby with the te- Co:mniocJore .ng especlal)y •aC'h Green Is s of building only his third .ch. His years lve ones, see- mference eel- ' into a basic· won on'ly several of by a narrow r- attack' bas dr defense is they will give ft!l of trouble •Wl. LDA ST For asion, !iuywbere 1 (day) !1981 ,_ WF Marchblg Band Has 85 Members, Uniform Shortage Page Three 'voLUME LE lb * * * nlb nub 1Slark ·Golden Anniversary Year 1965-66 * * * Wake Forest College, Wius&on-Salem, North Cart»lina, Monday, Oct. 4, 1965 Bones McKinney's Retirement Ends Era In Basketball Page Eight .. NUMBER 3 y orkshop To Attract ProminentJ.oUrnalists Alumni To loin Campus Crowds For Homecoming H - . T G ''A' G G '' omecomtng o . o · o o · By HENRY BOSTIC, JR. ASSISTANT EDITOR The first annual E. E. Folk JOllf'nalism Workshop will be !be.ld '11uesday and Wednesday of last week. · Fifteen ; .JIIOmmen't . -of will ibe on hand to O!fei ·;Proressional instruction lin . different /lispeots of journal- isril. Boners E. E. Folk . . The Journalism Workshop is lin. of Dr. E. E. Folk, who bas i:>een the "'nly professor of jour'nalism .at the College un- til thi!S year. It is being held to !Pl'omote interest in journalism generemr ·and to encourage bet- ter journalistic practice in the College's three student publica- tions, according ot Doug Down- ard, j·unior: of Spartanbu!rg, S'. C. and workshop coordinator. Harold Hayes, Edl'tor of Es- qttire, will open thetwo-daywork- shop with ·a speech at three p. m. Tuesday in DeTamble Audi- toritim. The tppic of his remarks will bef"Dr_.Folk's Ordeal, W!iith on Cllaucerian lmag- .to be Found in the Woo-ks of Wake Graduate --PHOTO BY VERNOR TOWNSEND ••• Atlanta 1\fagazine Editor ... tson, copyreader and desk assils- tant for the Philadelphia In- quirer··will, also participate. Folk Pupils Wake Forest w.Ul daiJcrease Us ·ranks biY IBIPIP.roX'Lmaroell:y 1,000 ltJhls weekend o8ls wumni and dlr!ietllds descend on rtlhe campus w 1m. ltihe College's •homooommg !b!ies. Tlhe Pl"Oigna<m will wWll 'begiln 8Jt 3 IP. m. Flr.lda.y Wllith ttJhe Wake Fo.rest.Cilemron k-eslh- man. foOOtJbwll .game on Vh.e ClaJ!njpUS Jalthde.ti{! tieJd, Form811 regiatJrrutrl.-on 'Of Illi •begi-ns SaJtn:tn-da.y art; 9 :a. .m. a-nd wdJll oo.DJtin•ue u.nJtH .noon. An ,ad,u.mnd-f:aculty cof·fee h-our is sCJhEdu.led f·01r 10:30 18., m. i•n .tlhe ma.illl •loU!Il.ge of Rey- nold::t H'BI!II. · Bar-B-Q Luncheon 'IIhe Ar.mon.-y <l•n StJaiddru m Drive ds Slite ·for a ,baJr. .beque l•Uncheon I3Jt noon, f,o.l- ·lowed iby itlhe 2 ·tP. m. Mck-<Od:f o,f ltlhe g.a;me betw-een w,ake FGr.oot and Mamy,land. Tlhoe Item. social! ·f.r&ter.ntimes wfill lh'Oild open .house afiter the footbWJ. game, amd Plresd- deaut Ha:roll.d will re- ceiv.e ltlhe wumnd m Reynolda HaJJ fOOtm 6:30 •to 7 :P. m. 'Dh!e •lUIJllJlLail >Bil umnd bam- quet w'i:hl iferutwre a 'budlfed: din- ner.: and ·by ltJh:e Wake · Fores>t College ·tmlstee chatr- Hayes, a Wake Forest grad- Six of ·the 1 4 speakers, III.I.'..n, LrVIin•g E. OaJrliyJ€ of uate and for'mer Wiriston-Salem c1uding H a Y e s, Mcnwam, resident, became editor of Es- Thompson, Preslar, Robbins, The J:oca.l slho.res in 1963 after eight years and Williamson, are Wake For- t>he SIP'Dltliglht f·Dir.mer 1l1ea;d of working ·up the ranks. He has est Graduates and were all f 'h.n taught iby Dr. Folk. oolt ..... ,]ll coa;ch D. C. "Pea:he:ad" also worked :for Pageant Maga- W·alker, w1ho wiH jm:tJroduce zine, Tempo, and Picture Week. According to Downard, the the membeu-s .of ,the 1945 team ThE• workshop will close Wed- idea for the workshop has been w:hich liefeated South OaU'o- nesday night with a banquet in before, not lin;a 26-14 in uhe f,imt Grutor Robert E. Lee Hotel dining until last M<l;Y the Bowi gll)..m,e. room. Featured speaker will be as the bram- Gener;ad dhaliirma;n of rtlhe James. L. Townsend, editor of child. of Mbert Hunt blo:meco-milng r{la'ogram iis an- the Atlanta Magazine. His ad- Gaskin; ;t964-65 editor 'Oit.her [oead artltoalney, Ja;ek F. dress will center on "•the editor's ·and busmess manager. of Old Oa.nna.dy. p;residen.t Olf 1the THE LADIES AT THE ROUND 'l'.-l.BLE . are all Y)ing for Demon Deacon" titl«>. Seated left to rigl1t are: Sylvia Strickland, Sail)' Baner, Ka1-en Roberson, Suzanne Qf .... ern n·ew""'""'''""S." Gold and B1aek_, respectively. .J T M. E d C A . graduate of .the U.n:iversilj;y spent and July ner of Raleiigth, wdJ,J preside - ·"'-' .... ........... , lll.ESOc ......... """'.• ·ames ur- cKt.lliley ·II areer , of Alabama, Townsend has been orgaruzmg tb,e !»_am pamt of the alt •the ·banquet. M•usdc be -------- .... !::__ __________ _ --PHOTO BY VERNOR Bost and Trisba Jones, Standing, Susan Vaught, ll•is Hansen, Julie Davis, Joy Brumbaugh, Xonmt \\"illiams und Jeri Walsh. WGA Announces Senior Priviledges Big Event Scheduled By BON111'1E WRIGHT STAFF WRITER Tlhds yeaa-'s HooneoomJi.il,g pkt.n.nen; have abanrl'Ooru:d ibhe tiooitOOnru pan\lde, b ltlhe modoern styUe of celeba.-arting- "a' go go." 'I:he <Ieoorwtions oo-.III1Petirtfun betweem. amd ka- rterwHd.es •has ibeen •btroOIUogtht •b,a'Ck Qil a.f.ter . 'Wihalt wras >deemed a not >too ·f.nl .para.de artrtecrnjplt :last !}'lear. In!Sd:ead. ltlh.e -!llft.o.r:U:l <lf •the CoHege U.nioon amd 10- t 1h .e .r Dlr'ganiz,atllnns II'.e51Po.ns1ble fw H"Omecom:Ln,g will be fPOUol"ed ·m·to ·OOIIlvea'l1lLn,g lt!he F':ammeii"S' M<JJrkert; 111llto a. d.isootheq.ue fur •the Srumlll'ldlay llllilgQut danre. (Sd.noee ltlhe Dixie iFiadlr is OOOUIP'Ying rtlh-e Sltud.enits' f!lra· dJi!tllo.n:W baJJLr.oom, the ·O'oiY- seum, .tfue Colaeg€ Union >IISk.eld ei>t.y's BOOJI'U or .Add€a'lllloo. ·ror lth.e F.a.rmers• Ma:r.ket. T.he BorBJrod Will'l vQf.e oo tthe re- queSJt tonight.) Familiar Features Olt·h er Homec-olllliin.g !ea.tu.res ar-e famild.arr: >the •fOOit- :baul .gaane Sasturoay: ru'ftermooi!l (wi1tih •Vhe U.ndvems:itty IOf MIWrY- 1-and), 1t-he wownin.g O•f lthe Homeoomin!g Queen and ,!Jhe of rthe de0011"3.- -tio.ns 1troph!Y rut fllh.e 1game, >tlhe open ho.uses wt !the f·l'laltoonJi- ties and dormiltorie.s .afite.r •the ·game, amd lthe 1110u.n-d .of rBilum- ni aCitdViilties (see >acoomp>aJDoy- ing s1tocy) . connected wilth. the publiShii:ig" ··S . ,pll'ov:ided, .by DII'. 'Dha;ne Me- c h ' s At B ' _ _. _eS: urprzse . OReS he foundecf l!lhe Atlanta Maga- :responsibill.ty over to me. ·The magazine has won over· 30 awards .for edltx:lrial excell- ence and the top aWiall'd for a Chamber publ!ication avery year since its inception. He is an active civiC leader aild also teaches crealtive writing at Emory Universl.ty. zine,-:tb.e o:ffilcial publication of Downard pointed out that no D: . 'nc·z·s,·on w;:,·th .. nt the Aitlanta· Chamber of Com- participant in the initial work- Weatherly Drea_ ds .::;, 1,.1. W 'IV 6 t merce. shop is being :remuneralted for his serv.ices. Trip To Chicago "Many of the men," continued For Bell Clapper By RALPH SDIPSON "That was all a part of Bones. You couldn't separate Bones from his antics. I was too cerned, however, with what his !teams were doing to watch Bones." Pla.ns to.r (}bita:i:ning ideas for .seruior ·IJirdvileges were am- nounced rut W.ednes.day's Wo- man's Governomen>t Associastlon by C31they Moms, sendor of Mooresvohlle a-nd sem1or Tepr&. s:enrtJaltive. Added a:!Jtr,a,otions wiLl be a Ia wn .conc.ertt at <b'!ay.IJY')l eslt:alte Fo::iday f:rom 6 : 3 0-:-8 : 3 0 P. m. W'itlh ltlhe M>Od€fl'n F-olk Qll:lla"tet rBJnd ·a CO!illbo IPall'ltY, a.Ioo aJt Gr.ayJorn, co.rna>J_eltinog the ev€1ILin,g, T-he M Ooll:ZilS WliWl 'lJil"OV.ide the .m:usiic, 'to the rtum.e lOf $1 :per -couple. 'Dhe OoHege Ulllion w.iJi1 SIJP- ply 'buses illo oCa.ll'1l'y studielnJts to- •botlh Firll>dJa,y am.d Saitul'ldl:ey nd:gih<t aclliv1Jties-oan •u.IlfPl'€100- d&llltOO: · llllOV.e, to LaJrn-y Robiruson, s6Illiolr 'Of Klion- stoon and presildeonrt; of -the Oo!l-· iege Ullili.on·. Downard, "are Wake Forest graduates who are participating RJO;yc,e iWl€1111th€1I'l(y .as-: · because they want to help the .sliSita.nt Oif studem publications in any way 'bllliaJdtill,!gS a.nd •guoou.nds 1aJt .they possibly can. The others itJhe CoUaege, wou.ld liik.e rt;o whO are not Wake Forest grad- :avoid tlhe costa !Ln. · uates are ;parlWipating just be-- •Piing a 900-pou,nd •bell to other Professionals cause they want to further jour- Ohiiea,go. nalism in any way possible." 11he ,beiJJ. .is :tn .tJhe eU;PO- "l!hhirleen other professionals will·:t:join and 'Thwusend m .semlnar-workshOipS. Pnb Boa.rd Helped He added that 1lhe program Among them are C. W. Bark- would never have been PQSSIDle er,· section diief of the print shop had ilt not · been for the assis- ·EJ.ecitrioc tanee .and· encouragement of the FraD, Jones, Photograpbper of the PUJblications iBOaro advisors, Winstxln.sailem Jou.rnai; Howell . McElfresh, advertising repre- Dean Edwin G. Wilson, Bynam sentative of The . Wall Street Shaw, . instructor in journalism, JOU!t'Ral; and William F. Me- and Rn.tssell Brantley, news di- DW'ain, managing editor- of refCII:or of the College. · MNe'""""'a.v in Gxaden Clity, N.Y. AU sta:fi mellllbers of the three ___ coming are Mal M>allette, pUblications of the College, managing editor of the :Winston- iournalism students · at Salem Salem Jonrnal; J. W. Marlow, College and Winston-Salem State chief of · Grapbi>c Arts Depart. College, newspaper and year- ment ol the Western Electric- book editors frOm ·lllhe Wimston- Compaey; Gilibert E. Southam, Salem aTea ·biig,h .sch<?<>Is, Adverfli'Sing Agency; the of the and Ber:tbert L. Thompson, chief Journal and Twin City Sentinel of the Annapolis, IMd., bureau of have been invited to attend. the Associa.ted Press. Parts of tlhis workshop a,re Lloyd Pireslar, Washington cor- !being by l!he three stu- respondent of the Winston-5alem dent of the Journal and l!lhe Twin City Sen- ;and by an mterooted busmess m tinel; R. A. Recholitz, Winston-salem. 1ng manager of R. J. Reynolds ContriJbutions are now being Tobacco Co., William Robbins, accepted for the E. E. Folk feature writer for the New York Journalism Fund Wlhich ·will fi· T.imes; Wid; Newlbill William- nance future workshops. :la. .on lt'OIP >of ltlhe z. SmdJilh Reynolds Ubrlalry IIIIIld <ln'- <'liilnariliy is .Used •to iS>f,gml8ll .ciBBIS >Ciha.noges a.nd ' evenits ISllcli ·.as l1:ihe aJtih- llet'ie Vlictcmies. 'I1he !behl illas been !IIlolllted .sinc.e l·ast spirlnJg When lilts wac stOoleD. · •Wewtheruy -m-ote lflhe . OO.ID;Pia.Il(Y Wlha:r>e iflh:e beLl was 'CIISit I!IJlld asked for. a iilJ9W clajp.per, 'Ilhe <'>Oilnopany WTIOite 'back 'fihllllt lthe ·be.H WilliS 'OOSto-m- ·made and lbhJalt WTOrkel'l!l ' wouM nave to sec it:ihe .. Q;eolJ. ·be.foa-e a IIlew eouLd •00 ma.d'S. Bad" Suggestion T.o Wl6althei"lly lthii!Jt sug- . ®eSit!ilo-.n was wo;rse rtJban >tlhelpiT.OV:€(f;b>fraJ ltr.iip aJOOIUI!ld m ,: elbow •to In fi1 rtion Ito rt'he OOS!t, tbhere · would be •the eX!tremelly diifificu•Lt >task <l!f e:xlllrti.C!Blt- . d li·DJg .the ·oo:m fii'oon !the @ CUiJod:a a.D.d iJt 1f( M rthro.u,glh :a >fn'a.p door and rtJhen a of illa!rlge Ma"-co·ndMJ:iondng lli venJts dn the rt;o,p -of 1the m 2 n Weasthe.r>Jy .doosn'1 w.aillt d ,fj -to 1tlhe ·cul.prilt who 2<1 ! ltbe claJIJIPSII'. He S'l'Illlp·liy !hopes somebody .,, "11 b . -) t1 \VI mmg :iit .ba{!k, "In H 0 the dead -of nd@hlt, if ·necessary'' · 11 Df 1tlhe class of m q 1957 ·bought the $1,750 @ beH "rith I!Jhe lheup 'Of sev- r·J amonymous diomom. r.q ThSIY sa.id ttlhey ·Ind.ssed a · M S'i.milar 1b ell tlhlalt !ha.d ll'llmg iJ o.n lbhe old e1LilllPUS, Plays Set ASSISTANT EDITOR No one ever .knew whaJt .to expect of Bones McKinney dtur- ling a Wake ForeSt basketball game. His fieey antics caused tfians many times to focus their attention on :the sidelines instead Oif on 1Jh.e DeWoon Iteam. No one, includmg seve.IIall. of !McKinney's close rival coaches, expected his resignation last Tuesday. . iBut ill . nea;lth caused McKin- ney, recogni,zed as ibasketball's most colorfUl coach, to ternu- nate a ·coaching career at Wake Forest which lasted 13 years, eight years as head coach and five as assiSbant to the late Nluxray Greason. McKinney's success att Wake can be measured best by fue five teams he coached to •the Atlantic Coast Confer- ence finals for E.ve years in a FRANK MCGUIRE, Univer- sity of South Carolina, Colum- bia, s. c.: "We w.ere very upset there in South Carolina to hear that the mOOt colorful man in the confer- ence .by far had resigned. What 'llsed to lbe a great rivaley be- tween Everett Oase, Bones, and· myself, bas ended. It is now a different el'Q, "He'll 1be greatly missed na- tionwide. He gave great recogni- tion to !the conference as well as to Wake iFarest. I was very close Ito Bones, very fond of him. I admired him as a tre-- .mendol.IIS competitor and a great basketball coach." LEFTY DBISELL, Davidson College, Davidson: row. "I ·was Vel'IY SQr.ry, Iibh.ink he Two o.r these five years, [961 meant a lot ·to basketball in and 1962, his teams won the con- this section and the ·wholeo coun- ference championships. In 1962 try. His ;resignation is a big loss !the Deacons went to the NCAA to !the game and a big loss to finals and woo. third place in the the coaching profession. fie .national tournament. The year a credit to the game, not only ·bef«e, lthe <team w.a.s StOiP!Ped as a coach, ibult as a gentleman. in ltlhe Ea.st&'lll. R·-'@i.OII.all NCAA "I ·hwted 1:Jo see ih'Lm ll'esign, finals •bY St. Josep·h's. bmt yoUJr lh·elll.!lrth comes first .. past 23 years have played a major part in my life. Nineteen of ·those years have been spent with or near Coach McKinney. He contimJed, "I am heart- broken lbhat he (McKinney) can- not continue and I will try lll!Y be3t to uphold the high stand- ards of Wake Forest basketball that he and Coach (MUITay Greason built and maintained. Wards .cannot expre.ss what he has meant Ito me." <See related story on page nine.) Mter •the .meeDing ea{lh sen- m >llilld ju.njor ooed was ·given a Slll@gestion sheet ,requesting her-ideas. Miss MOI'1l'is says sthe feels ·DoOw 1hias sen- ior ·pl'liv.Heges" burt; ·tlhalt. rtlhe seniors need rto set us ajpairt,'' Pllrurs for .getting ddeas .far troes of senlior privileges cam.e i.n:iltiaJl!y fii'a.m Miss Moor- l'is herseJ;f ·ouit w.ere ·bY Lu Leake, Dean '()•f Women. Several Atlantic Coast Con- I'm SIU!re he .did Wlhrut was best. ference and national coaches IWle lost a g'Ood man, cer- e:xp:ressed both sorrow and reo- OOJinJ!y a.n ou>tstam.dion>g coa.cir." gret m telephone interviews EVERETI' CASE, former head week, but they all agreed 1ibat coach at N. C. Sta/te: McKinney'·s health "must come "Of course I hated to see -PHOTo BY VERNOR first," as Coach Lefty Drisell, Bones resign. He was one of KENNEDY;S RIGHT-H.'\ND 1\IAN .•. gives first-banll in- head basketball coach at David- the most colorful fellows we've formation pn 'the late President. son College, said. ihad in basketball. I think he 'DheSJe are the reactions <ld: contributed a grealt deal to the· s p• t CUS k severaJ. iCQoa.C'Jh.es ,to McKinney's ::::.c;,. and to basketball In gen-1' ore_nsen r lTS . veq, er resi!gJI'WtiOIIl: ""'-""" PRESS MARAVICH, N. C. "I hated to see him bow out, Theodore C. Sore-nsen, special dea·th Sorensen l<.>ft the White State University at Raleigh: but he bows ibest what was council to President John F. House to begin the account of "I was actually dwnbfounded. beSit •for !his '!}ersonal I Kennedy and author of the re- his 11 years with John F. Ken- I've !mown Coach McKinney for thou,ghit Bon>es' knowled,ge of cent book, "Kennedy,'' will dE>- nedy, Excerpts of the b-ook ap- a .gll'eal(; 'llUJIIJbe«" of yewrs. One basketball was one of the great- liver the first lecture in this rpoored in Look magazine before thing is certain, however; we est in the country. year's College Union Lecture its fall 1965 publication. probably will miss the most "Basketball just lost somE>- Series at 8 p. m. Thursday in Sorensen was born in Lincoln, colorful coach in this confer- thing great." Wai:t Chapel. · Nebraska and gradu.a!ted Phi ence. Another associate close to Me- Sorensen, who served on the Beta Kappa from University of ".As a coat-h, he was a Kinney, President Harold W. Kennedy staff for 11 years, has >Nebraska. He received his law competitor, able even to get his '11ri:bble, had this to say, "Coach been referred rto 'as the chief degree from Nebraska in 1951. !teams ready to play basketball McKinney's years of service at excutive's "alter ego," "lntel- Upon gradua,tion from law against the best of teams, some-. Wajte Forest College have been lectlllal and "top school, Sorensen became an at- times when the material wasn't marked by achievements that policy aide." torney for the Federal Security there. times have ibeen dramatic. I Close To .TFK Agency and later for the JACK RAMSEY, St. Joseph's deeply thai!: the rondiltion He was with Kennedy through- pavtment of Health, Education University, Philadelphia, Pa.: of h!is !health makes necessary out the key crises and turning and Welfare. The National Repertory Thea- "I was disheartened because termination of this relation. points of his career: presidential He then became the adminis- ter w.il present Jean Giraudoux' we were good friends and always He will always ibave my affec- candidacy, the ,television debates tra.tive assistant to the newly "The Madwoman o! Challlot" · iOOil. w>&M-coo:utestted ,games a- tionate coocern and best wish- with Nixon, the election, the Ber- elected Senator from Massachu- journalism and Richard Sherldan's "The gain!st each other. He was a es". lin laDd Cuban missle crises, the •setts, John F. Kennedy. Rivals" oct. 13-16 in Aycock fine coach and a vary person- Jack Murdock, assfstant 1o steel crisis, and lth& Bay of All students and residents of Auditorium at the UD!versJ.ty of able individuaL" McKinney and !the new head. Pigs fncident. Winston..Salem have been invited North Cal'OliDa at Greensboro. Of bis antics, Ramsey saJd, coacll, said ""Athletics fol' the Th;ree months after Kennedy's to attend the lecture. Buses Will leave £foil" oiJhe game :flfOm ,tihJe coed doOIIUIIS' 8/t. 12:30 liJ. m. Conversion Job B.lllt lbhe ma.jm- !P'OilTtiom 01! bhe Cohlege U.n!lon's ellel'lgies: wihl .be :POU!red inlto dlhoe OOtJL Vensi.Oill of tM F'a.r:niers' MiaD.-- ket. :lon.to a iHooneoomi.n,g Hiadl suditaJble .for 1lhe SaltUII'>daly IIlliig!M" d1loll>ee rto ;f..be lllllllGie .of tJhe F.QIIlr Toops >3.Ild M:aua::i.>ee Wlilili.runs amd itlhe Zodliacs. Oar.oly.n. Peacock, senior of and :hoEliSodJ of lth.e de- oomJt:iooms oom)lnitJtee, says tbhe decor wtiJll .be SJta-rlctJy ":a' g()." Posters wi<t!h. damoers I!IJlld .ads wW1ll :Pliaslter the -owtsdde waLls, and Cll"ePe paper Sltlrea.mers will ,pa"'v:ide a caJIJOipy oven- !the ohoeadls o:f .the d:a.n'Cii.n.g st.uderuts. 'IIhe ltr.addtiona.t 1b a .1 d o o 111 s, tables 8a'01mlJd illhe waa.I., .amd: coloroo wiiU OOIII;ll'lete the SCWI.e. Casual Dress 'lU!e casUJail-dress d:an.ce will •beig.Ln l8.!t: 8 : 3 0 Wld .end 1a1t 12: 3 o. Coeds w.ho adlflend rtJhe :fes1tivi't!ies will ·be given 1 a.m. late permission. T.he •b:kls ( $ 5 !Pea- >Courple) will a.dmitt \Situ<leruts Ito .botbh th.e Sa.tur>d a.y night d:a.nce and the la.wn c-oncent. 'I1hey may be P'l.rohased rut !the Im:orma- td·on Desk. T·he following co.oos are rom- pe,tJi.ng for ll:his Miss Demon Deacon tirol.e: SyJvia Strick.land, jurui01r of Dunn; Joy Bru,mbaU:g'h, sen- ior of Ba,Ltimore, Mod.; JSirtl. Wal·sh, of BaltitruOif'E!, Md.; Ro·berson, senior of DelTay Bea.oh, a;nd An.u P.h:il>lii·PIS, oo;phomo.re of GJ·eensboro. O·ther oonteSita.n,ts IM'e s.uz- :-.n:ne Boot, seni'OII' .of Char- lo.t>te; &lJJy llll.ller, sen.Wr of Del•rn.y Beach, Fila.. ; Amn. Hm:11t, s·enior of Green:vil>le; 'l1rlsha. Jones, sendOII' of W'insto.n- Sa:lem; J'llile Da.vds, :fir.esdtma.n of Nash-v.ilile, T-erun.; Susam. ValliJgh1, sophomore Off Ja;ck. oomv!dLe, ·Fla. ; N1m!IU1. IWlll- l.ilams, seni<Xr of RobemonvJillle; a.nd Lris Hansen, flreshmam. of Va.

lb nlb nub 1Slark - WakeSpace Scholarship | ZSR Library and presildeonrt; of -the Oo!l-· iege Ullili.on·. Downard, "are Wake Forest graduates who are participating RJO;yc,e iWl€1111th€1I'l(y

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-I Lllle forced to tel,y ~ of receivers l Joe Carazo sary yardage ~ route. Field­

iie McKinney arm, for tbe v&rte soor!Dg ~ did agafnst :!! Commodore but few scor­~aeh one will·

os, Wake and ogly similar •. 1 teams place ' eundamentals, r.il1 constantly !their opposi­

are depth sby with the te-

Co:mniocJore .ng especlal)y •aC'h Green Is s of building • only his third .ch. His years lve ones, see­mference eel-' into a basic·

~biLt won on'ly • ~ several of by a narrow r- attack' bas dr defense is they will give ft!l of trouble •Wl.

LDA ST For asion, !iuywbere 1 (day) !1981

,_

WF Marchblg Band Has 85 Members, Uniform Shortage

Page Three

'voLUME LE

lb * * *

nlb nub 1Slark ·Golden Anniversary Year 1965-66 * * *

Wake Forest College, Wius&on-Salem, North Cart»lina, Monday, Oct. 4, 1965

Bones McKinney's Retirement Ends Era In Basketball

Page Eight

.. NUMBER 3

y orkshop To Attract ProminentJ.oUrnalists

Alumni To loin Campus Crowds For Homecoming

H - . T G ''A' G G '' omecomtng o . o · o o · By HENRY BOSTIC, JR.

ASSISTANT EDITOR

The first annual E. E. Folk JOllf'nalism Workshop will be !be.ld '11uesday and Wednesday of last week. ·

Fifteen ; .JIIOmmen't . fi~es -of jo~m will ibe on hand to O!fei ·;Proressional instruction lin . different /lispeots of journal­isril.

Boners E. E. Folk . . The Journalism Workshop is

lin. ho~r of Dr. E. E. Folk, who bas i:>een the "'nly professor of jour'nalism .at the College un­til thi!S year. It is being held to !Pl'omote interest in journalism generemr ·and to encourage bet­ter journalistic practice in the College's three student publica­tions, according ot Doug Down­ard, j·unior: of Spartanbu!rg, S'. C. and workshop coordinator.

Harold Hayes, Edl'tor of Es­qttire, will open thetwo-daywork­shop with ·a speech at three p. m. Tuesday in DeTamble Audi­toritim. The tppic of his remarks will bef"Dr_.Folk's Ordeal, W!iith ~<J<atr1ot.es on Cllaucerian lmag­

.to be Found in the Woo-ks of

Wake Graduate

--PHOTO BY VERNOR

J~IES TOWNSEND ••• Atlanta 1\fagazine Editor ...

tson, copyreader and desk assils­tant for the Philadelphia In­quirer··will, also participate.

Folk Pupils

Wake Forest w.Ul daiJcrease Us ·ranks biY IBIPIP.roX'Lmaroell:y 1,000 ltJhls weekend o8ls wumni and dlr!ietllds descend on rtlhe campus w :partll,c~te 1m. ltihe College's •homooommg acl!J.v~­!b!ies.

Tlhe Pl"Oigna<m will wWll 'begiln 8Jt 3 IP. m. Flr.lda.y Wllith ttJhe Wake Fo.rest.Cilemron k-eslh­man. foOOtJbwll .game on Vh.e ClaJ!njpUS Jalthde.ti{! tieJd,

Form811 regiatJrrutrl.-on 'Of a.~lUJm­Illi •begi-ns SaJtn:tn-da.y art; 9 :a. .m. a-nd wdJll oo.DJtin•ue u.nJtH .noon. An ,ad,u.mnd-f:aculty cof·fee h-our is sCJhEdu.led f·01r 10:30 18., m. i•n .tlhe ma.illl •loU!Il.ge of Rey-nold::t H'BI!II. ·

Bar-B-Q Luncheon

'IIhe Ar.mon.-y <l•n StJaiddru m Drive ds rt;~ Slite ·for a ,baJr. .beque l•Uncheon I3Jt noon, f,o.l­·lowed iby itlhe 2 ·tP. m. Mck-<Od:f o,f ltlhe g.a;me betw-een w,ake FGr.oot and Mamy,land.

Tlhoe Item. social! ·f.r&ter.ntimes wfill lh'Oild open .house afiter the footbWJ. game, amd Plresd­deaut Ha:roll.d 'I\rlibibl~ will re­ceiv.e ltlhe wumnd m Reynolda HaJJ fOOtm 6:30 •to 7 :P. m.

'Dh!e •lUIJllJlLail >Bil umnd bam-quet w'i:hl iferutwre a 'budlfed: din­ner.: and ~ooch ·by ltJh:e Wake

· Fores>t College ·tmlstee chatr-Hayes, a Wake Forest grad- Six of ·the 14 speakers, ~- III.I.'..n, LrVIin•g E. OaJrliyJ€ of

uate and for'mer Wiriston-Salem c1uding H a Y e s, Mcnwam, tWtinsboo-S~lem resident, became editor of Es- Thompson, Preslar, Robbins, The J:oca.l ~DtOir.n~y slho.res

~quire in 1963 after eight years and Williamson, are Wake For- t>he SIP'Dltliglht w~th f·Dir.mer 1l1ea;d of working ·up the ranks. He has est Graduates and were all f 'h.n

taught iby Dr. Folk. oolt.....,]ll coa;ch D. C. "Pea:he:ad" also worked :for Pageant Maga- W·alker, w1ho wiH jm:tJroduce zine, Tempo, and Picture Week. According to Downard, the the membeu-s .of ,the 1945 team

ThE• workshop will close Wed- idea for the workshop has been w:hich liefeated South OaU'o­nesday night with a banquet in sug~E·sted before, .Howe~er, not lin;a 26-14 in uhe f,imt Grutor ·~ Robert E. Lee Hotel dining until last M<l;Y ~at the l~~a ·~ Bowi gll)..m,e.

room. Featured speaker will be g~ ~ ma~rlalize as the bram- Gener;ad dhaliirma;n of rtlhe James. L. Townsend, editor of child. of Mbert Hunt ~nd Ro~ blo:meco-milng r{la'ogram iis an­the Atlanta Magazine. His ad- Gaskin; ;t964-65 assoc~ate editor 'Oit.her [oead artltoalney, Ja;ek F. dress will center on "•the editor's ·and busmess manager. of Old Oa.nna.dy. T.h~ p;residen.t Olf 1the

THE LADIES AT THE ROUND 'l'.-l.BLE . are all Y)ing for t;h~ "~Iiss Demon Deacon" titl«>. Seated left to rigl1t are: Sylvia Strickland, Sail)' Baner, Ka1-en Roberson, Suzanne

Qf ~u"' .... ern n·ew""'""'''""S." Gold and B1aek_, respectively. al"'~n''i <n-+-<~n .J T M. E d C A . graduate of .the U.n:iversilj;y Gas~ spent J~e and July ner of Raleiigth, wdJ,J preside • -~ ·"'-' ~....-.... ~ ..........., lll.ESOc ......... """'.• ·ames ur- cKt.lliley ·II ~ areer

, of Alabama, Townsend has been orgaruzmg tb,e !»_am pamt of the alt •the ·banquet. M•usdc Wtirl~ be --------....!::__ __________ _

--PHOTO BY VERNOR Bost and Trisba Jones, Standing, Susan Vaught, ll•is Hansen, Julie Davis, Joy Brumbaugh, Xonmt \\"illiams und Jeri Walsh.

WGA Announces Senior Priviledges

Big Event Scheduled

By BON111'1E WRIGHT STAFF WRITER

Tlhds yeaa-'s HooneoomJi.il,g pkt.n.nen; have abanrl'Ooru:d ibhe tiooitOOnru pan\lde, b ltlhe

modoern styUe of celeba.-arting­"a' go go."

'I:he <Ieoorwtions oo-.III1Petirtfun betweem. odo.nn~lla"i.es amd ka­rterwHd.es •has ibeen •btroOIUogtht •b,a'Ck Qil ~llliDUS, a.f.ter . 'Wihalt wras >deemed a not >too sruccess~ ·f.nl .para.de artrtecrnjplt :last !}'lear.

In!Sd:ead. ltlh.e -!llft.o.r:U:l <lf •the CoHege U.nioon amd 10- t 1h .e .r Dlr'ganiz,atllnns II'.e51Po.ns1ble fw H"Omecom:Ln,g will be fPOUol"ed ·m·to ·OOIIlvea'l1lLn,g lt!he F':ammeii"S' M<JJrkert; 111llto a. d.isootheq.ue fur •the Srumlll'ldlay llllilgQut danre.

(Sd.noee ltlhe Dixie OJ~c iFiadlr is OOOUIP'Ying rtlh-e Sltud.enits' f!lra· dJi!tllo.n:W baJJLr.oom, the ·O'oiY­seum, .tfue Colaeg€ Union >IISk.eld ~~ ei>t.y's BOOJI'U or .Add€a'lllloo. ·ror lth.e F.a.rmers• Ma:r.ket. T.he BorBJrod Will'l vQf.e oo tthe re­queSJt tonight.)

Familiar Features

Olt·h er Homec-olllliin.g !ea.tu.res ar-e n101r~ famild.arr: >the •fOOit­:baul .gaane Sasturoay: ru'ftermooi!l (wi1tih •Vhe U.ndvems:itty IOf MIWrY-1-and), 1t-he wownin.g O•f lthe Homeoomin!g Queen and ,!Jhe pre£e.n.t.~.llfliQ.n of rthe de0011"3.­-tio.ns 1troph!Y rut fllh.e 1game, >tlhe open ho.uses wt !the f·l'laltoonJi­ties and dormiltorie.s .afite.r •the ·game, amd lthe 1110u.n-d .of rBilum­ni aCitdViilties (see >acoomp>aJDoy­ing s1tocy) .

connected wilth. the publiShii:ig" ~~--- ··S ~·~ . ~~:t ,pll'ov:ided, .by DII'. 'Dha;ne Me- c h ' s • At B ' ~in:S!~~t:stA~~~~~e: eve~n?.~ehel~~th~ ~~~~~~~e,~c_·_-~_QOC _ _. _eS: urprzse . OReS he foundecf l!lhe Atlanta Maga- :responsibill.ty over to me.

·The magazine has won over· 30 awards .for edltx:lrial excell­ence and the top aWiall'd for a Chamber publ!ication avery year since its inception. He is an active civiC leader aild also teaches crealtive writing at Emory Universl.ty.

zine,-:tb.e o:ffilcial publication of Downard pointed out that no D: . 'nc·z·s,·on lls,·n~led w;:,·th Rn~· .. nt the Aitlanta· Chamber of Com- participant in the initial work- Weatherly Drea_ ds .::;, 1,.1. ~ W ~ 'IV 6 t • merce. shop is being :remuneralted for his serv.ices. Trip To Chicago

"Many of the men," continued For Bell Clapper By RALPH SDIPSON "That was all a part of Bones. You couldn't separate Bones from his antics. I was too con~ cerned, however, with what his !teams were doing to watch Bones."

Pla.ns to.r (}bita:i:ning ideas for .seruior ·IJirdvileges were am­nounced rut W.ednes.day's Wo­man's Governomen>t Associastlon by C31they Moms, sendor of Mooresvohlle a-nd sem1or Tepr&.

s:enrtJaltive.

Added a:!Jtr,a,otions wiLl be a Ia wn .conc.ertt at <b'!ay.IJY')l eslt:alte Fo::iday f:rom 6 : 3 0-:-8 : 3 0 P. m. W'itlh ltlhe M>Od€fl'n F-olk Qll:lla"tet ~rm:LDJg, rBJnd ·a CO!illbo IPall'ltY, a.Ioo aJt Gr.ayJorn, co.rna>J_eltinog the ev€1ILin,g,

T-he M Ooll:ZilS WliWl 'lJil"OV.ide the .m:usiic, 'to the rtum.e lOf $1 :per -couple.

'Dhe OoHege Ulllion w.iJi1 SIJP­ply 'buses illo oCa.ll'1l'y studielnJts to- •botlh Firll>dJa,y am.d Saitul'ldl:ey nd:gih<t aclliv1Jties-oan •u.IlfPl'€100-d&llltOO: · llllOV.e, ~ to LaJrn-y Robiruson, s6Illiolr 'Of Klion­stoon and presildeonrt; of -the Oo!l-· iege Ullili.on·.

Downard, "are Wake Forest graduates who are participating RJO;yc,e iWl€1111th€1I'l(y .as-: · because they want to help the .sliSita.nt 1311l11lerdnrt;~ Oif studem publications in any way 'bllliaJdtill,!gS a.nd •guoou.nds 1aJt .they possibly can. The others itJhe CoUaege, wou.ld liik.e rt;o whO are not Wake Forest grad- :avoid tlhe costa !Ln. ISihiaJ~ · uates are ;parlWipating just be-- •Piing a 900-pou,nd •bell to

other Professionals cause they want to further jour- Ohiiea,go. nalism in any way possible." 11he ,beiJJ. .is :tn .tJhe eU;PO-"l!hhirleen other professionals

will·:t:join ~es and 'Thwusend m ~e .semlnar-workshOipS.

Pnb Boa.rd Helped

He added that 1lhe program Among them are C. W. Bark- would never have been PQSSIDle

er,· section diief of the print shop had ilt not · been for the assis­~-JVestern ·EJ.ecitrioc Com~DG'"; tanee .and· encouragement of the FraD, Jones, Photograpbper of the PUJblications iBOaro advisors, Winstxln.sailem Jou.rnai; Howell

. ~- McElfresh, advertising repre- Dean Edwin G. Wilson, Bynam sentative of The . Wall Street Shaw, . instructor in journalism, JOU!t'Ral; and William F. Me- and Rn.tssell Brantley, news di­DW'ain, managing editor- of refCII:or of the College. ·

MNe'""""'a.v in Gxaden Clity, N.Y. AU sta:fi mellllbers of the three ....,~..._ ___ coming are Mal M>allette, pUblications of the College,

managing editor of the :Winston- iournalism students · at Salem Salem Jonrnal; J. W. Marlow, College and Winston-Salem State chief of · Grapbi>c Arts Depart. College, newspaper and year­ment ol the Western Electric- book editors frOm ·lllhe Wimston­Compaey; Gilibert E. Southam, Salem aTea ·biig,h .sch<?<>Is, ~ X~rt Adverfli'Sing Agency; the s~s of the W~n~ and Ber:tbert L. Thompson, chief Journal and Twin City Sentinel of the Annapolis, IMd., bureau of have been invited to attend. the Associa.ted Press. Parts of tlhis workshop a,re

Lloyd Pireslar, Washington cor- !being fin~ce?- by l!he three stu­respondent of the Winston-5alem dent publi~tio~ of the _Colle~e Journal and l!lhe Twin City Sen- ;and by an mterooted busmess m tinel; R. A. Recholitz, adve-rtis~ Winston-salem. 1ng manager of R. J. Reynolds ContriJbutions are now being Tobacco Co., William Robbins, accepted for the E. E. Folk feature writer for the New York Journalism Fund Wlhich ·will fi· T.imes; Wid; Newlbill William- nance future workshops.

:la. .on lt'OIP >of ltlhe z. SmdJilh Reynolds Ubrlalry IIIIIld <ln'­<'liilnariliy is .Used •to iS>f,gml8ll .ciBBIS >Ciha.noges a.nd ~~

' evenits ISllcli ·.as l1:ihe aJtih­llet'ie Vlictcmies.

'I1he !behl illas been !IIlolllted .sinc.e l·ast spirlnJg When lilts ~lll/lliPer wac stOoleD.

· •Wewtheruy -m-ote lflhe . 'Ohde~a[;o OO.ID;Pia.Il(Y Wlha:r>e iflh:e beLl was 'CIISit I!IJlld asked for. a iilJ9W clajp.per, 'Ilhe <'>Oilnopany WTIOite 'back 'fihllllt lthe ·be.H WilliS 'OOSto-m­·made and lbhJalt WTOrkel'l!l ' wouM nave to sec it:ihe

.. Q;eolJ. ·be.foa-e a IIlew cla~ppe,r eouLd •00 ma.d'S.

Bad" Suggestion

T.o Wl6althei"lly lthii!Jt sug- . ®eSit!ilo-.n was wo;rse rtJban >tlhelpiT.OV:€(f;b>fraJ ltr.iip aJOOIUI!ld m

,: elbow •to ~umlb. In a.ddd-~~ fi1 rtion Ito rt'he OOS!t, tbhere · ~ would be •the eX!tremelly ~ diifificu•Lt >task <l!f e:xlllrti.C!Blt- . d li·DJg .the ·oo:m fii'oon !the @ ~~ CUiJod:a a.D.d 1b~lllgling iJt 1f( M rthro.u,glh :a >fn'a.p door and ~ ~~ rtJhen a.rou~ a ~":tW101r1k ~ ~ of illa!rlge Ma"-co·ndMJ:iondng lli ~ venJts dn the rt;o,p -of 1the ~ m 'li>bn-~B~rY. 2 ~ n ~ Weasthe.r>Jy .doosn'1 w.aillt d ,fj -to ~tch 1tlhe ·cul.prilt who 2<1 ! ;t~k ltbe claJIJIPSII'. He t~ ;~ S'l'Illlp·liy !hopes somebody l~ .,, "11 b . -) t1 \VI mmg :iit .ba{!k, "In H 0 the dead -of nd@hlt, if ~ ~';"; ·necessary'' · .:~

11 Selllio~~:s' Df 1tlhe class of m q 1957 ·bought the $1,750 }~ @ beH "rith I!Jhe lheup 'Of sev- ~] r·J era~l amonymous diomom. r.q ~~ ThSIY sa.id ttlhey ·Ind.ssed a · M S'i.milar 1b ell tlhlalt !ha.d ll'llmg iJ o.n lbhe old e1LilllPUS, ~"* *~~,2;=3:~:r~~ll~::?~'S'~~:

Plays Set

ASSISTANT EDITOR

No one ever .knew whaJt .to expect of Bones McKinney dtur­ling a Wake ForeSt basketball game. His fieey antics caused tfians many times to focus their attention on :the sidelines instead Oif on 1Jh.e DeWoon Iteam.

No one, includmg seve.IIall. of !McKinney's close rival coaches, expected his resignation last Tuesday. . iBut ill . nea;lth caused McKin­

ney, recogni,zed as ibasketball's most colorfUl coach, to ternu­nate a ·coaching career at Wake Forest which lasted 13 years, eight years as head coach and five as assiSbant to the late Nluxray Greason.

McKinney's success att Wake Fore~ can be measured best by fue five teams he coached to •the Atlantic Coast Confer­ence finals for E.ve years in a

FRANK MCGUIRE, Univer­sity of South Carolina, Colum­bia, s. c.:

"We w.ere very upset there in South Carolina to hear that the mOOt colorful man in the confer­ence .by far had resigned. What 'llsed to lbe a great rivaley be­tween Everett Oase, Bones, and· myself, bas ended. It is now a different el'Q,

"He'll 1be greatly missed na­tionwide. He gave great recogni­tion to !the conference as well as to Wake iFarest. I was very close Ito Bones, very fond of him. I admired him as a tre-­.mendol.IIS competitor and a great basketball coach."

LEFTY DBISELL, Davidson College, Davidson:

row. "I ·was Vel'IY SQr.ry, Iibh.ink he Two o.r these five years, [961 meant a lot ·to basketball in

and 1962, his teams won the con- this section and the ·wholeo coun­ference championships. In 1962 try. His ;resignation is a big loss !the Deacons went to the NCAA to !the game and a big loss to finals and woo. third place in the the coaching profession. fie ~as .national tournament. The year a credit to the game, not only ·bef«e, lthe <team w.a.s StOiP!Ped as a coach, ibult as a gentleman. in ltlhe Ea.st&'lll. R·-'@i.OII.all NCAA "I ·hwted 1:Jo see ih'Lm ll'esign, finals •bY St. Josep·h's. bmt yoUJr lh·elll.!lrth comes first ..

past 23 years have played a major part in my life. Nineteen of ·those years have been spent with or near Coach McKinney.

He contimJed, "I am heart­broken lbhat he (McKinney) can­not continue and I will try lll!Y be3t to uphold the high stand­ards of Wake Forest basketball that he and Coach (MUITay Greason built and maintained. Wards .cannot expre.ss what he has meant Ito me." <See related story on page nine.)

Mter •the .meeDing ea{lh sen­m >llilld ju.njor ooed was ·given a Slll@gestion sheet ,requesting her-ideas.

Miss MOI'1l'is says sthe feels tba~t ·DoOw "~verybO<)jy 1hias sen­ior ·pl'liv.Heges" burt; ·tlhalt. rtlhe seniors need "oomethd~~~g rto set us ajpairt,''

Pllrurs for .getting ddeas .far troes of senlior privileges cam.e i.n:iltiaJl!y fii'a.m Miss Moor­l'is herseJ;f ·ouit w.ere ~proved ·bY Lu Leake, Dean '()•f Women.

Several Atlantic Coast Con- I'm SIU!re he .did Wlhrut was best. ference and national coaches IWle lost a ~re811 g'Ood man, cer­e:xp:ressed both sorrow and reo- OOJinJ!y a.n ou>tstam.dion>g coa.cir." gret m telephone interviews ~st EVERETI' CASE, former head week, but they all agreed 1ibat coach at N. C. Sta/te: McKinney'·s health "must come "Of course I hated to see -PHOTo BY VERNOR

first," as Coach Lefty Drisell, Bones resign. He was one of KENNEDY;S RIGHT-H.'\ND 1\IAN .•. gives first-banll in­head basketball coach at David- the most colorful fellows we've formation pn 'the late President. son College, said. ihad in basketball. I think he

'DheSJe are the reactions <ld: contributed a grealt deal to the· s p• t CUS k severaJ. iCQoa.C'Jh.es ,to McKinney's ::::.c;,. and to basketball In gen-1' ore_nsen r lTS . veq, er resi!gJI'WtiOIIl: ""'-"""

PRESS MARAVICH, N. C. "I hated to see him bow out, Theodore C. Sore-nsen, special dea·th Sorensen l<.>ft the White State University at Raleigh: but he bows ibest what was council to President John F. House to begin the account of

"I was actually dwnbfounded. beSit •for !his '!}ersonal th~alth. I Kennedy and author of the re- his 11 years with John F. Ken­I've !mown Coach McKinney for thou,ghit Bon>es' knowled,ge of cent book, "Kennedy,'' will dE>- nedy, Excerpts of the b-ook ap­a .gll'eal(; 'llUJIIJbe«" of yewrs. One basketball was one of the great- liver the first lecture in this rpoored in Look magazine before thing is certain, however; we est in the country. year's College Union Lecture its fall 1965 publication. probably will miss the most "Basketball just lost somE>- Series at 8 p. m. Thursday in Sorensen was born in Lincoln, colorful coach in this confer- thing great." Wai:t Chapel. · Nebraska and gradu.a!ted Phi ence. Another associate close to Me- Sorensen, who served on the Beta Kappa from University of

".As a coat-h, he was a gre~t Kinney, President Harold W. Kennedy staff for 11 years, has >Nebraska. He received his law competitor, able even to get his '11ri:bble, had this to say, "Coach been referred rto 'as the chief degree from Nebraska in 1951. !teams ready to play basketball McKinney's years of service at excutive's "alter ego," "lntel- Upon gradua,tion from law against the best of teams, some-. Wajte Forest College have been lectlllal blood~bank," and "top school, Sorensen became an at-times when the material wasn't marked by achievements that policy aide." torney for the Federal Security there. times have ibeen dramatic. I Close To .TFK Agency and later for the D~

JACK RAMSEY, St. Joseph's deeply reg~~:et thai!: the rondiltion He was with Kennedy through- pavtment of Health, Education University, Philadelphia, Pa.: of h!is !health makes necessary out the key crises and turning and Welfare.

The National Repertory Thea- "I was disheartened because ~e termination of this relation. points of his career: presidential He then became the adminis-ter w.il present Jean Giraudoux' we were good friends and always He will always ibave my affec- candidacy, the ,television debates tra.tive assistant to the newly "The Madwoman o! Challlot" · iOOil. w>&M-coo:utestted ,games a- tionate coocern and best wish- with Nixon, the election, the Ber- elected Senator from Massachu-

journalism and Richard Sherldan's "The gain!st each other. He was a es". lin laDd Cuban missle crises, the •setts, John F. Kennedy. Rivals" oct. 13-16 in Aycock fine coach and a vary person- Jack Murdock, assfstant 1o steel crisis, and lth& Bay of All students and residents of Auditorium at the UD!versJ.ty of able individuaL" McKinney and !the new head. Pigs fncident. Winston..Salem have been invited North Cal'OliDa at Greensboro. Of bis antics, Ramsey saJd, coacll, said ""Athletics fol' the Th;ree months after Kennedy's to attend the lecture.

Buses Will leave £foil" oiJhe game :flfOm ,tihJe coed doOIIUIIS' 8/t. 12:30 liJ. m.

Conversion Job

B.lllt lbhe ma.jm- !P'OilTtiom 01! bhe Cohlege U.n!lon's ellel'lgies: wihl .be :POU!red inlto dlhoe OOtJL -· Vensi.Oill of tM F'a.r:niers' MiaD.-­ket. :lon.to a iHooneoomi.n,g Hiadl suditaJble .for 1lhe SaltUII'>daly IIlliig!M" d1loll>ee rto ;f..be lllllllGie .of tJhe F.QIIlr Toops >3.Ild M:aua::i.>ee Wlilili.runs amd itlhe Zodliacs.

Oar.oly.n. Peacock, senior of RlaJLe~gJr and :hoEliSodJ of lth.e de­oomJt:iooms oom)lnitJtee, says tbhe decor wtiJll .be SJta-rlctJy ":a' ~ g()." Posters wi<t!h. damoers I!IJlld ~hil'qoue .ads wW1ll :Pliaslter the -owtsdde waLls, and Cll"ePe paper Sltlrea.mers will ,pa"'v:ide a caJIJOipy oven- !the ohoeadls o:f .the d:a.n'Cii.n.g st.uderuts.

'IIhe ltr.addtiona.t 1b a .1 d o o 111 s, tables 8a'01mlJd illhe waa.I., .amd: coloroo ~' wiiU OOIII;ll'lete the SCWI.e.

Casual Dress

'lU!e casUJail-dress d:an.ce will •beig.Ln l8.!t: 8 : 3 0 Wld .end 1a1t 12: 3 o. Coeds w.ho adlflend rtJhe :fes1tivi't!ies will ·be given 1 a.m. late permission.

T.he •b:kls ( $ 5 !Pea- >Courple) will a.dmitt \Situ<leruts Ito .botbh th.e Sa.tur>d a.y night d:a.nce and the la.wn c-oncent. 'I1hey may be P'l.rohased rut !the Im:orma­td·on Desk.

T·he following co.oos are rom­pe,tJi.ng for ll:his y~aD:'s Miss Demon Deacon tirol.e:

SyJvia Strick.land, jurui01r of Dunn; Joy Bru,mbaU:g'h, sen­ior of Ba,Ltimore, Mod.; JSirtl. Wal·sh, ,geni.o~r of BaltitruOif'E!, Md.; ~aren Ro·berson, senior of DelTay Bea.oh, ~Ia,; a;nd An.u P.h:il>lii·PIS, oo;phomo.re of GJ·eensboro.

O·ther oonteSita.n,ts IM'e s.uz­:-.n:ne Boot, seni'OII' .of Char­lo.t>te; &lJJy llll.ller, sen.Wr of Del•rn.y Beach, Fila.. ; Amn. Hm:11t, s·enior of Green:vil>le; 'l1rlsha. Jones, sendOII' of W'insto.n­Sa:lem; J'llile Da.vds, :fir.esdtma.n of Nash-v.ilile, T-erun.; Susam. ValliJgh1, sophomore Off Ja;ck. oomv!dLe, ·Fla. ; N1m!IU1. IWlll­l.ilams, seni<Xr of RobemonvJillle; a.nd Lris Hansen, flreshmam. of A!rJd,ng~tJon, Va.

PAGE TWO 1\Ionday, Oct. 4. 1965 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

SNACK SHOP SPECIALS * BK-\('0:-i' Bt'I~Gl~B .•. •lettuce & dressin,g ------ 3Qc

* HK\CO:\' IH:HGF.lt J)ELUXJ~ .•• ·le!Jtuc:e, dres:;in>:, french .f<ries, cole s·law,

an-d l~ickle chips --------------------------

* FISH & cnn•s ... Fr·ied boneless fish on a seeded ro-ll, f.rencll [ries and cole slaw ------------------ 35<!

* PO\·l<~UTY BOY • , • o.n a f.renc:h roll ----------- 40c

TltY THK\1 ,\J.L AT THE SN.\OK SHOP!

On The Campus In R~·noldu Hall

COEDS BARBARA KNOOP AND OA.ROLYN SNIDER mix paint in coke cups in preparation for last Saturday's Barn mbcer. Freshman girls turned out to turn the ott-campus hangout into a gala setting for regalar weekend :tllngs.

Tues Chapel While Exploring In Africa

Will Feature German Student Tells Story Dr. Thor Hall Of Ordeal As Pigmy Captive

Dr. Thor Hall, assistant pro­fessor of preaching . and theol­ogy at Duke University Divinity School, will speak in Chapel Tut-sday.

A native of Larvik, Norway, Hall has received several a­wards and honors. Among them are a schola~ from the World Council of Churches, Gen­eva, 11.950-51, ·and the Angus B. Duke Memorial SC'homs:ltip.

He is a memlber of the Nor­wegi·an .Aruma! Conference of the Methodist Church and a rep­resentative of the Met:hodislj Church to ecwnenical yourt:h con­ferences in Denmark and Swit­zerland.

From 1953-57 he was editor of Var Un&ldom, Monthly Metho­dist Youth. Magazine.

Han received his B. D. degree from the Soandinavian Metho­dist Se.min:acy in 1950, his M.R. E. in 1959 from !Jiuke Oivimty School, rand his Ph. D. Jn 1962 from Duke Graduate School.

He will be Introduced to the Student Bodlv' iby David Riffe, chaplain to Methodist students. at the College.

Plans have lbeen made for Hall to !re!Uain on campus most of the day to enalble students to speak with him.

w.hen rtili'6 Ga.I-a.p.a.gos islands W€JI'e first d·iscov.ered, there W€n'e SO olll®ny >tortoises .thl!Jt saUOO"S oould walk .I~mg ·llis­tanoCes w:!Jtlho-UJt steppilng on 1the ground.

By PAM HAWKINS STAFF WRITER

Uwe Gielen left Germany March 1, 1965 on an ethnologi· cal ex;pedition. Three months later, he was a captive of a primitive African Pigmy tribe isolated from civilization in the Ruwenzori Motmtains.

Uwe, sophomore Gennan ex­change student, and 'his girl­friend Ulrike Foehst, following a twist of circumstances tbarll ibrought them rto Uganda, were exploring in the Ruweil2lOO'i Mountains.

Uwe and Ulrike had deviated from ;bhe welloiW'Ol"n paths up the mountains that serves as a bor­der :between Uganda and the Congo, •and ventured across the ridge of the mountains into the Congo re,gi.on.

Uwe, .25-yea:r-old sociology maaor at the University of Ber­lin, was not really worried about getting lost. "I had no fear of which general direction to go, ibut I had fear to find the ex· act way."

Whlle exploring the mountain ;side, "we were spotted lby pig­my hunters about two or three miles olll1:side their village. I was ndt looking for <their village how· ever."

"When we arrived in Africa, there was a war between two of the pigmy tribes as well as a general Congo civil war."

FORMER PRISONER OF AN AFRICAN TRIBIEI. German excha.:oge st-udent Uw.e Gielen. is the momentary captive of reporter Pam Hawkins.

iar wilt:h the habits of the men. Their customs were In the

primitive tradiltion, Md Uwe rememJbered a few.

"They became aware," Uwe continued, "that there is another category of man from the ones ·lihat they kri&w." •

Freshman Dorms Hospital Is Charging More Select Presidents For Beds., Some Antibiotics

A much larger turnout of fresbman men liast year went to Wait Chapel Tuesday and elected Jim Sheffer of Dallas, Tex:as, and Chuck Alexander of Winston-Salem presidents of Kitchen and Poteat Dormitor­ies.

"This t:Iibe <thoughit that I was an enemy," U:we said. "I had no chance to explain. We tnain1y ·spoke with our ihands," he said g:iV:ing mock gestures.

"I wanted to asswne a role of a foreigner among them, but this role is non-existant there. Foreigners means mainly to til.em an enemy," he said grop. ing for a way to e:lq)lain the situation.

"When they marry, it is just inside the tribe. The wife of one man can be circulated among his ibrothers. She is as their wife, too, and she can sleep wtth them.

"'I1he mortality rate. is high," Uwe said. Most of the children die at birth or soon thereafter."

"When they let me go some of the men of the tribe escorted us lbac:k far enough so :that we ICOu!Jd find Our waJY."

Their adventure had its n...l',<ti•"""~ in Egypt where they were ing during part of the swnmer. .In Egy!I)t, they had a chance to go to Sudan, where they met ·an Indian merchant who offered them transportation to U~da.

AVAILABLE AT

Fran~k A. Stith Co. WINSTON -S.-\LE:\1

The election was under the supervision of the Independent Council. The dormitory posts ·are part of the independent men's organization.

The presidents will be in charge of Homecoming deco­rations in the fr'eslunen dormi­tories.

Their other main responsibfi­ity will be the organization Df intramural athletic la!cti.vities.

The College Hospital has be­gun a new policy of charging students for certain drugs, and has doubled the daily rate for staying in the hospital.

The 15-35 cents-per-capsule charge for certain antibiotics, among them ·the mycin and pen· icillin drugs, is the wholesale price paid by the hospital for the medicine.

The price of spending one. day in the hospital has doubled­from $3 to S6-causing student instiDance rates to rise from $18.75 to $20.75

Mrs. Inez Holderman, admin­istrative assistant in the hos­pital, said the price for certain

The Bitter End FEATUR·ING TOP COLLEGE ENTERTAINMEIIT

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 6

ADMISSION - FREE THE STACCOTOES

Stags Admitted

FRIDAY, OCT. 8

GUITAR KIMBER & THE UNTOUCHABLES

$3.00 Per Couple

SATURDAY NIGHT, OCT. 9

THE VENTU~RAS $3.00 Per Couple

THE· BITTER END 1502 LOCKLAND AVE.

drugs was something that "should have been pzia:oticed years earlier."

"However, we were trying to provide this medicine free to the students," she said. "The increased number of students and the amount of infection has necessitated our charging the students the price we pay for the medicine."

The drugs to be payed for< must be prescribed by the stu­dent's physician or one of the hospital's doctors. No nurse can prescribe a drug that must be bought by the student.

Students can still receive free­of"C.harge the standard pills and capsules given for colds and minor illnesses.

Mrs. Inez Black, campus rep­resentative for tlle North Amer­ica Insurance Society of Vii:r­ginia, Inc., which handles stu­dent insurance, said the policy price increase !Was simply a re­sult of the 'Ereasurer's Office's increasing the lin"Patient room and board prices.

"Foreigners were normally 'black, so they were very un­certain about what to do with us," Uwe said with a faint sm.i!le.

"They took us back :to the village, and we were put in a bamboo hut with the ground as a floor. They allowed us to walk around in the village but not to leave it."

Uwe llalked about what he had learned of the tribe's living con· ditions during his months of captivity.

"Their meals are irregular. These people eat when they have food, and don•rt eat when they don't have food."

A form of grain and water wa:s the main substance of the meals and the abundant springs on the mountain furnished drink­able water.

Uwe and tnrike were interes· ted in studying the habits and customs of the pigmy tribes and especially of relations between the tribes. Uhike conceatrated on leaming aibout the wcme.n and Uwe tried to become famil-

The tribe of about 70 or 75 rpigmi.es were "about 4% feet tali,... Uwe estimated. Scant After returning to civilization,· clothing was worn bamboo Uwe and Ulrike traveled to other • skirts for the women. countries ·and th€-n home. Their

Uwe e:xJplained that the war traveling expenses were nom­that was going on between the inal. ("It costs $2 to travel by two tribes was not a bit as :b'lain through Egypt for 1000 we would asswne. "If the men miles," tJwe said.) ·are hunting and happen rto meet Uwe, commenting about !}is a man of another tribe, they will ~reactions, said, "I. think to live want to kill ihirn," Uwe said. among .such a tribe, you can "But the war was rather re- !better see your own civilization. duced when I was there because If you are living here, a lot of of the rainy season (rain every things <are. unconscious to you, day.)" •and it is sort of adven11urous,

Uwe believes that the natives which I like." had only two alternatives as to Following Uwe's year of study what to do with them. in psychology here, ihe is con-,

"They could kill m.e, or they sidering "a tri[:> throu~ South could let me fio. They didn't America, before I go back to want to feed me anymore," !he the University of BerlJn Oct. 14:' said. "Germans are, more travelling

"Finally one day, I was al- than any other people. It is com- , iowed to go. That is all." mon for Germans 100 go to ~-

Uwe speCIUlated, "I think one ndflher country just for. interest," reason that they let me go is Uwe 1added as a pal'll:fal expllana­ibecaJUSe I was :interested in tion fer hls e:lq)loilts. them.' I made drawings and So here he is at Wake Forest, took pictmes, and they didn't !Stud(ying the ihaibi.ts of another really. know wh!at I was. tribe.

The student policy will pay the $6-per-night lfee for a maxi­mum 30 days for any one illness. The chaTge includes three meals. professional care, a bed and clean linens. For Being Pigmy President

In :addiltion, tlle policy will also pay up to $10 a year lor the ·antibiotic drugs if the stu­dent is an in-palfient, and w::i11 continue to P23' up to $25 for X­Riays if prescribed by the hos­pital doctors.

Tribe Chief Lists Requirements

EIPEQT W •t<lhma.ker & J'ewelea-

ECKERD'S DRUG STORE

Reynolda Manor 725-5348

All Merchandise & ~pairs Folly Guaranteed

Editor's Note: Uwe Gielen wrote ft1is letter in response to an incorrect u:Hcle in Old Gold last week.

Dear Sirs, When I read your arti~Ie

"Seventeen International Stu· dents Express Their Views, Comparisons Of Campus Life," I was very pleased Ito be prefa-­red to a "president of one of the 1pr.i.nlitive tribes in Africa."

Perhaps you might be inter­ested in getting the same job sin·ce there are onl(y some slight difficulties for · yom advance­ment in Africa. First you might not have the suitable size (those

EXPERTS ARE ON THE CAMPUS

For the BEST of care for your HAIR. the WAKE FOREST BARBER SHOP can't be beat. \VHY? Because there you will find expert barbers who know what they're doing.

STOP IN AND SEE FOR YOlrnSELF! ., • • • •

JUNIOR ATK·INS BUD WALL DAVID Y,OUNG W. C. PADGETT C. F. DWIGGINS

-,

Wake Forest Barber Shop Under Davis Dorm

people seldOm reach. more than 4lkfeet). Well, last year the tribe got a fine, new IPM (In­ternational President Ma,Jring Machines). It just takes .234 seconds if:o get you pounded to the average size.

A second question might be tlhe colour <Presidents there are Old Gold and Black-old gold the head and iblaclt the body). In my case Palblo Picasso did the work and he did i.t so well that I was eJiliibited the next ;:: months. - J.'llot the r.ighlt hau-s? Alexan­are, .Pans, still best bairstyler of :the worJ.a, does his best tor you-llhe trice is a regular cus­tomer a:or .tum. And-last not .Least----the language. We.l:l, here wese gu()'s are really nobJ.e­•tney unmedlate.ly c:riange tb.e:i.I' own language \mcrC1ellllly wnen .L b"-'1. tW~ JUU UJ.. a .rTeSlO.eut..

w..lt.r ,.pu.c..c a v c.•J..':t .:>OPIW> u.cat.t:O. ..... u;.t w..L£ ~::~J.U.to.:e .;):~J.J:).u . .c:; .iUr1l!aD.U~

""~·.u. J.U.<vw u w .a.u experus v.t

.... .-luau .<l.l..>. WL'.)' W «.S .J.J...)' p.reu.­~"'c.::>~V.L". J.J.a.ve.a.~-~ d.L"c- 1·ac~

...v .u ,you SJlow.u ·De one tine uay at 'Iii a.egreas l.4' 12" IS, 27·

degrees 5' 0' E speak always

German. Eve.eybody will under­stand you.

I hope you will endoy your\ stay there as I did. Sincereey- yours, Uwe Gielen German Exchange Student,

Prisoner of one of the African native tribes ·and arlmiret< of iJ11 magnolia that cover the campus:

fHERE'S NO SECRET to producti!llg fine photoengrav­ings. You simply take genero1111 amounts of experience, skill anti conscicmtlous attitude and combine them with the best mechanical equipment av.afl. able today. Piedm0111t Engraving f o 11 o w If this formula on every job. Let Piedmont solve your plate problems far publications, bro-

~:-~o~or~~~-PA2-9722, Winston.Salem, N. C

COLLEGE 66 SERVICE • FREE VACUUiM SERVICE • MECHANIC ON DUTY • PHILLIPS TIRES AND BA'l'TERII!S • TROP-ARTIC MOTOR OIL • FOREIGN CAR SERVICE

6 A. M. - II pI M. Johnny Hemric, Mgr. 1235 Polo Road

I

I" ;'.

"f I

Th' ll.nl!.lh mg lmnd avai-l:;:

'D.tL rootOJ ca:me 30 s1 t.erE!Sit bamd. DeaJOO fOUil" J

I!Illa.joo

Wjh l!.lhe

. J.a.u,gih· An~

.dust'l'li ·Fotr€81 does .f« .u testa ' Mg.h

Hlu.l maste da.ydl

.nnia.I. ln'Wlh (., . sdh'O'OO WW.fth V.amde

The oeprt:illl

. mo.ri ~ !'l· Day"'

a.ble ~ Saltull'Mi at. lth. CGlroJILJ lmnd ·hd.gih tl

"T-h\ BiPeaks <the sil: rooo.gnr ~.it { also, sometl ledge •I

fo.re"­ure .to tici;pa.n

HU!b Univen he rec1 degu-ee

A.fie New 1! baT ked w.hicih ence Sr to CM1 Tenn~·

,NOI'!Lh At C

ba:n·d '(j

before tlion :at

Tlhjs

al:l lthe P.h. D.

With the ba ~al~ am•dm wi'bh. rill <p/hJen.y

He ~ Mllig,&IDJ

in.g B&l sound n heck I(

iLani.glh~

Wllei .f.:his ye: Slalid, "]

Arti~

$4{)(j 'Ilhe

&Wan".d! ~

,. for a. . miltited

Galolalry lecbion ,] om; Oat.

'.NJ.e ( Ol'lga.ndza ~ telll;PO'roJ ~il"E !.ina, So: Georgia.

Work h1rles lery's ·~ Plkl.yed il ly ex:hdb

'I'ode.y for· su:b1 S'CUI[Id'Jtu-E

. '1Jih·lcs foe this yea.1

Eillltlcy ltadn-ed ~ Soulbh M

(

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• zve

I

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Band. Outnumbers Uniforntsl Coeds Are Trying I For 'Missing Link'

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Oct. 4,1965 PAGE THREE

Reynolda Florist By SUSID 1\IEJ\IORY FEATURE EDITOR

This Y6811', ,fo.r tthe f·irst ti-me iLn ttlhe· lhfst,ory of /the M.aroh­irng D~ea.coniS, •the wo1~ld-be lmnod members ()UJt ... numbw r!Jhe avaH.wbtle · und!oounso.

'Tih.ree yoo.rs .a,go, w1hen Di­rector · Oa.lViim. Hu•ber ·f.ill'Sit oa:me to IWja.lte Farest, on•ly 30 stu.dents dindsi.OO!tOO. an in­terest · • in •PillliYiiD.g w:ilth rtlhe. bamd. Thds yerur rthe Moax.<lh..l·ng DooooiD.fll num1be.r 85, .tncl•u.di.n,g !owr majOTelttes aJld one odr>um !ll1laj Olr. '

"Wjhen. •asll;ed :f:lhe .reE~JSo.n fJOr t!he ba-nd's success, Hu.ber

. a&ugiiled·, "I'v-e W'Ol"ked lbaJrod·!" .A.n.d .inJdJeed :he has. This iii!­

. duet'l'dous d!!Jrector Qf 111Jlol W111Jke Fotres.t'a diJGtr'llmeorutai mlliSic does Q!u.irt:e a biJt IO·f ltrave!Ji.ng . .r.or 1tihe· ColLege, judglin,g oon­teslts and ll'oor:uit'l.ng i!Jnlte.reB\ted M~h scohool 1bamd Sltudeillts.

Hlubef 'ds, m ·a.ddliimon, a mas<ter orgra.nJ.ze.r. 'Dhds &t.t:ur­ooy he 1l'fll".a.n:ged riJhie rtihd~d am.­

. ~aJ. W:aJke ]1oroot BaJll.d Da,y, in Wlhdcl!. •b-ands .!irom 2 0 •hiig:h

~~ BICthOO<ls <performed du•r1n,g the lm!Lf.time · ~emo.n:ies of rthe V.amdel"bi:lt .game,

The 'Illu:mlbe.r of scilioo~s oac­ceprtin,g tiYJa,ke Forest's diUvilba­

. truori. If;() ;plllll.1b!.ci;p1a:te in BWIIIQ.

I By SUSAN BAR.LO\V Sihe a•nd Tri1b-hle g·ot to.ge!Jher

STAFF WRITER and ·begwn c.heckin.g into lthe

I maltter, T·hey contacrted H. s.

"Come up ~n'li see me s-ome M ·O o .r e, Supei'Lrutenden1t of , time," tt!he mran said. Building <!!Dod Grou.nds, who J And s.he did. gave .them an -estimra.te of I Last year, Andy Guun, juiil- $10,000-$15,000 for 1Jhe vro-

. , ior of Atl<aJruta, Ga., mal'ched jeet. i U•P to Pres.ide-Illt Haro•lod W. The tti1Illlel would be ;placed ; T'l'ihblle's .offd.ce a.ud rtold 1h:Lm wlhere o!!he wall! between the

_,.,11'!..,..~ ·she lbho.ughlt !the =eds ·needed tw-o dorms srtamds now, Wii•bh : j a tunnel oo.uneoting JDhD.610n the waH oa.otmg as one Slide

. · aud BaJbcock dO'l':llllitortes, simi- of .tJh-e turnnel. · : Lwr 100 lth-e .one tlinking Bcsotwick Miss Gunn po.inltcd o-u,t that · : a.nd Jolh•nson. now rtlhwt the ooeds lh.ave a

I SeYeroil thUi!Wil'ed coeds had .. · petd.tionod d'01r just such a. .tu.n- cenlt:r2,l J.au.nd.ry system, •bhe

tun·n€11 wou.Id ma.Ite ilt ea5ier · I neltl the yeaa- ~ter Ba.l:J.oooclt foil' fuboock gda-1& to· ,get to

I was b-ud~lt. bout tihe Admimis- Johnwn when <tbe wea-ther is t.rart;io-n fecr1t tthe .mooney cou.ld be used f<Jcr- ·bett-er pu:r:poses. badAnorthe.r a.dvanltaig-e no.ted

I Tlh-eir ·fa:ilu.re ddd not sto•p woas rth!llt 'Since at .presenrt

l Miss GU·Illll. B'<'Jbeock dso mo!I'e or ,less iso-1 lla'ted, t.he •tunnel :w-ould aHow

I! State Department tbe g.il'llS t'O :wavel iback and

fol'lth more easily a.nd would i, Announces Exam enahle freshmen rto know up­

p€ll'Cllas~men bette.r . j AppliCIIItio•ns ,for rt.he nex.t On·e objection ma.de ·bv :the ' writlten Foreign Se.rvice Ex- hou-se m:orthc·rs is :thwt if a~ll l:>.minlrutd:o.n •IIlll.IIS't •be filed •before th:re-e dOII':llls are connected, U I Oot. 18, .the U. S. De:Pk'lJJ"tmen·t wou.ld make l<l=Ung ,grtrls , o.f Sltalte has an·noun.cerd. much hardel!'.

I 'Dhe examiD<llltdorn, w.hd•ch will 'Tille ori:g:innJ p·la.n was .to

!!<· Day wa.s ev-en mo.re tremail'k­able iin oJ.igJlit of rtlhe f!llct th.rut LITTLE DRIDIM!ElR BOYS ••• need a Ohristmas miracle ro drum up additional uniforms.

1 be lbeld Dec. 4, 1s rrequ!iil'ed of co•n.n,ec.t Babcock with a new l ca.ndli<laJtes for pc1>'LtiOillS in dOO'lllll to be ·bud.Jt across .£vom

bO!bh vhe Foo·ei•g.n Service of B.a•bc~k as J oh!Ilson faces tlhe Dep-al'ltment of 'Strute rund Bostwli.ck. Salturoay WIUS aliso B:amd Day thils wi!J be llhe best borund we

at. the U.llliversdity of Nonth ever lhaod." Caa'oJd.rul. <lllt Clb.aipel HiH, whoo·e Fe n<llted •t!h•at o·n.ce •a ·Ce.I'!bain band di.r·ecior invited every quota. iso reached, •tlhe :runmb.er ohtigh £:ohool .oond :!Jn tlh-e Sltalte. of ·band :membei1S does n.ot

"'Tihois' Wcondell'\liu•l res;ponsoe make a. su,bSitailltial diHereii!Ce B((lea.ks weJfl ·f.oor rt:lhe .fOII'Imad: of in the souJid of tflhe band.

, the show," OOJid Hnher. "We "We rea.H(Y :h·av.s ·so.meLMng recogndze 63idh dnd~V!ilduw bamd we ·CIIIn •be •IJII'Ol.!d of," ·b-eamed as .it oomes on Jthe fdeJd . .Amd Huber, "We oa.n d·o ·aJnY!toon.g aJ.s·o, thds yea.r w-e';re dolin.g amtYb'Ody else ean do--we joust so.metb.ing rt:Jh.a;t 1to my knCJow- od·on'rt .t:reJmp down a:s much ledg-e •h•a.s lllevw •been done be-l grass·!" fore"--Jt~ .mu~c!lll staff fi:g-·Utre ofol'ID.ed :by !the 13·0 0 ;par-

'Dhe d:ill'ector iJs es·peciatllY grn.~teofu-1 to t.he admin.isbr/IIJtlion f.or ·its effovts on beha-lf of the band. ·:Dr. T.rd'bMe WJ.d rtlhe admi.IrlstraJtion :l!Jave dOIDe so mu-ch! rto hcl·~." :he said. "'I'Ihey­•ve .drone evecythdlug they :pos­silb.Iy cam ,tlcJ. keep up wi-tth gr:ow•tih in rt:lhdls wrea."

He aJ}S() CC)DltPlimented the m<ad:~r.ebt-es, Wlho ;paid for ;theill' own u:nd:fOIJ',ms, and I!Jhe bra.n<l mem.oom. "IWte thayoe qWlll..ity

musicians lin a.I.I depa.nt.menvs. tJhe Un~ted Srtaltes Irufo.rJrulJtio.n Mi:os Gu.nn s:balted •l!hwt •be-Oucr- old ·biMJJd memb-ers have At:;em:.y, ca.use of tt:h.e sdze of the esoti-l>een m-ost loyal; !they W.a.v-e Arp<,pJii:CJaJtiOIIS' may ,be ob- mo!IJte f<>r tJhe co.n61truetiOID, rtJhe con.tributed in spreadin•g .the tadned fll'om rtil.e ·Booa'd of Ex- oDJly ,p-ossriMe way to have t.he word to .people O·n 1the cam- amine:rs for rtJbe F.01reign Ser- tu.n.nel .Jl.u:iilit rut .aH would be IH'S w·ho a.re musiCIBJI." · D tm t f co.•~~ for 1:ihe g.i:rls Ito u.n•••te ~'nd QuralL!Jy iJs de~imitely rt:Jh-e Vl.ce, e_par. €>Ill 0 "'""'"e, • ~ wo.rd full' cthe .Wdomilta>ble _w_a.sh __ i_n.g;_,to_n_,_n_._c_. ______ l1_a_iw __ 'f_·u_IIJ_d_s_f_oc_.t_h_e_IJ_ro_je_c_t_. _

Ma.r.chi.n,g Deac·o.ns- t!Jhe Qnly J)eo.ple on c.am.pus who •have 1 the •lega;l au tlhm1ty Ito go j arouoo !tooting ·th·eilr own 1 .holrnS. I

YAMAHA

"Flowers For Any Occasion"

e CORSAGES e ARRANGEMENTS

e POTTED PLANTS

We H,ave Homecoming Corsages Pay 7244411 Night 7239772

Hopsacking is traditional for the

"""'""'~"'"'

individualist·

This is a sport coat for the man with the strength of an individualist and the taste of the traditionalist. College Hall has tailored this outstanding fabric with all the authentic details

tici;panlts tn ~e event. To Libert.r Associatzoon Hmb-er is ra. .gra,ctuwte of 1the

of natural shoulder styling. A wealth of colors and tones, all by College Hall, Universi!cy of W;j,s.oo,lliSiiil, wth.ere

ho received ttlhe B.A. an.d M.A. degrrees.

After ~ year l()f study art; New Y:ork University, :be em­ba:rked on a teacll.i.ng caroeer, w.hicl:l. .took il:uim ,fl'om E'Ior­ence S!Ja:te Col1lege in .Ala.ba:ma to Catt'Son-Newman CoLlege in Ten.nessse :to ilhe U.ni.vea'ISilty of

Students., Chaplain Give Program

, NQI'Itb Oaa'olina a.t Cha.perl Hill. At Ou.roldrna !he was a:srsistrunlt

b<md mreotor f·or lth:ree yea.r.s before ltrulrlng Ms <pll'eseDJt posi­'llion at Wwke l<,orest.

Tih.is su·mme.r he co.ID[l•leted 3/ll •the W'OoTk required tor ih.is F.h, D. degree fiooun Oa~ol!iM.,

With p1ayill!g oabililtly on all th-e band :instr.!LIDJeillOO, Hu;be.r SPOOiaa~zes: on I!Jhe lt:romll!One, BIII!d: oin IJJJ:is stprure •time ,performs wi.tlh rtlhe ·Wilnston-Sa:Iem ~m­p1lJeiiLy Orlchesltra.

He l8iliso · Wil"~tes a.1J. 1the IM'­ra.n:gem.elllts used :by !the Ma.1"c:h­ill!g Baind, "It m:aikes rt:lhe hand sou.nd ibebter and saves us .one <heck 10t a. J.ot ()f m'Oilley! " iLa'\l,glhed Huheu",

When asked: !to oom.menlt o.n .this ye81r's ib:a:nd, ith.e ddlreotor Sll.lid, "I lloom.eshly ibeilii.eve rt:h:alt

By CHARLm KIRKLAND STAFF WRITER

Several Wiake Forest students, including the president of the Student Body, joined the ad­ministrad:ion last week In forg­ing another link in the chain of comm.(mica'bi.on between the CQllege and the Convention.

At the annual session of the Li:berty Baptist Association, held Wednesday in Winslton-Salem., Dr. L. H. Hollingsworth, chap­lain of !the. College; Jerry Part­ney, senior of !Miami, Fla. and president ()f the Student Body; and eiglb.t members of the tour­ing choir pr€•::>ented a "Pano­rama of Wake Forest College."

Plaol'tney showed slides of the campus, students, and various student activities.

His na1'1l"ation, he later ex­plained, was aimed at giving a !full picture of the everyday life of the College,

Hol.linglslworith, who baiS at­tended aibout 12 suoh associat­ional meetings ·this month, obser'ved ro the Baptists that "all North Carolina Baptist stu­dents should not aifll:end Wake Forest College."

Artist To Receive $400 ~"rom CU

He pointed out that young '.rnle Oollege Un.f.on wll1;1 people Wlho, foo: instance, want

a. wall"-d! a $ 4 0 0 !PU'rohase .prdze to go into engineering or elem­. f<l'T a ·work or WIOXlks su:b- entary school teaching would

'· miltted to the Winston-Saaem ne~ need Ito look to non­Gail.WJry ot Ii'ine Allts f01r se- denontinational schoo1s for their loobion .by rt:Jhe ,tw6I!J11Y'-ftrst j•ua-y ·instruction. o.n Oclt. 9. He continued by stating that

'IIh.e Gaoia:wry ils ra. IDron-pa'IOI!ll!t the concern of the College is Oll'lgantiza:tflo.n watddl:L t.unclllons "to prepare students for life, not ~Y Ito seLl WIOO':ks of .con- for a liv.i.n:g," tempoT.aJ11y aTit fu'Qm .the ·Jli.ve- HO!hl.i~ontJh saiid !alter tlhaJt ~ regoLon of NtOO'Itlh Oruro- h:e lbas had ov-er 15 !I'equests lima, So1tt!h ~. V:ilrrgWnda., for !PII'eselllbaitions silll'i!JaJr ibo Georgia :and T~. t:hlis week's f01r <the ·mOOlith of

Wo()oT'k ~ .b,y amn'llaJ <XM!ber. Jnries . oonstiltuteso rtlhe Gall- He expressed the feeling that lery's ·ISitock, wlhiodh. is idJis.. the. presentation of the every· prLayed: in ltlhe·GaHemy !in m.orubh- day life of tlhe College, and llhe ly ex:hdbita · presence of several students . Today lis ~he closing di!IJte does more ro make a ·favorable for · eu:banlissdOoll Oif !Paliinti~, lmpression than any speeches

• S'CU~ibn;r~, da-a.wLn@SI a.n:d gtl"B.- or' ~lanations he could make . . "lllh·ics for the -oonsidemwtiom. .of He pointed out that while the

this year's jUJl'IY, College has "made -an awful lot E;wbcy" 1bJ.a.n:k,s may •be ob- of progress in the J:aslt two or

!i:t is now. I of ffi!Usic, were Sarah Davis, In the future, he hopes ro put freshman of Johnson City,

rog€•ther a film strip of slides I Tenn,; Ellen Bouldin, sopho­which ib.e could •use when Situ- more of Ridgeway, Va.,; Pa­dents m-e not able to accompany I tricia Carnes, sophomore. of hi.m. Miami, FLa.; Helen Smithson,

He also bas a dream of mak· I sophomore of Hamilron, Ohio; ing a movie about 20 minutes Phillip Saylor freshman of long depicting the College life. Winsroil-Salem; Charles Kirk-

The eight students from the land, freshman of Augusta, Ga.; Touring Choir who presented Clay War:f, junior of Reidsville; specijail music, accompanied by : and John Mann, junior ()f Con­Dr. Thane McDonald, professor i cord.

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***Wake

WINSTON-8ALEM, N. C., MONDAY, OCT. 4, 1965

Socks Not Scores Bestow Fame On Bones Mcl(inney

As "Peahead" Walker, Wake Forest's famous football coach of the

140's, was making final

preparations for his visit to the campus this week, "Bones" Mc­Kinney, Wake Forest's famous basketball coach of the 60's was ·announcing his departure. Strange that the destinies of two Deacon Sports Greats should brush so closely.

In the College's great football days, Peahead took his team to the Gator Bo·wl. A decade later, Bones took his to the NCAA finals. Before last year, con­sistently bad football seasons elicited the student response: "Just wait until basketball sea­son."

But Bones McKinney does not owe his place in the Deacon Hall of Fame to his winning teams.

He carved out his niche with the tool of personality. The man with red socks, the seat-belted figure, the coach who could not sit still-this is how ·Bones will appear in Wake Forest annals.

And because his reputation rests on what he is and not what he has done, we believe that his name will not drop from the College's memory. Few Ameri­cans could list Ben Franklin's fl.Ccomplishments; 'many recall chat he walked down the streets of Philadelphia with a loaf of bread under his arm. We may forget in future years that Bones took the basketball team to the· national finals-but we will re­member his red socks.

And when we come baek as alumni in 20 years, we hope t:hat Bones will wear them to the banquet.

Alumni Owe College Debt Wake Forest College probably

provides more education for less compensation from its students than any other comparable in­stitution. This payment deficiency ~s not so much due to the fact that tuition pays only 48 per cent of the CoHege's bills, as it is to the relatively insignificant donations from the alumni.

At neighbor institutions, proud graduates compete in friendl.\' rivalr.v to determine 'who can come the closest to reimlmrsing his alma mate1· for their stav in academia. In previous years, gracluates of ·wake Fore::;t phn·­ed the role of the lepers in the New Testament story- 9 0 per

cent of them failed to offer any expression of appreciation.

The College's past failure to compare favorably with the na­tional alumni giving average stemmed partly from the ab­sence of any coordinated ad­ministrative effort. The 1965-66 program outlined by Alumni Di­rector M. Henry Garrity promis­es to correct this deficiency.

However, u n I e s s graduates realize that they O\Ye a debt to the College. the alumni office ·will never be able to collect the monev due-· and Wake Forest College will continue to be de­pendent on the fund-raising po"·ers of its president.

Wake Culls Culture's Best Wake Forest's endowment may not compare favorably with that

of Ivy League schools, but we believe our extracurricular cultural and educational offerings stack up with the best they have to offer.

Last week sa.w the debuts of the College Union foreign film series and the Wake Forest history department speeches. This week Theodore Sorensen will open the 1965-66 College Union lecture series.

Not only do these programs merit praise for what they are, but for what they stand for-the belief that education is not limited to the classroom-and the conviction on the part of professors and students that they need not be inhibited by the College's budget.

Pub Row Plays Important Role In Wake Forest Life

Since 1882, when The Student first went to press, student pub­lications have been providing the College c()mmunity with a common source of communica­tion. The addition of the Howler in 1903 and of the Old Gold and Black in 1916 insured that the wmmon source would be marked by diversity-in style, coverage and opinion.

Moreover, the existence of three publications of varying nature but with a com·mon goal has guaranteed that every stu­dent who thinks in print has an outlet for his thoughts-whether they turn to news, creative writ­ing, or the comprehensive view.

Countless numbers of students have walked through the office doors of the three publications and have come out with college lives more meaningful for the experience. A smaller, but equal­ly significant group, has gon~ from Pub Row to prominent press

positions on the local, state, na­tiona.l and international scenes. A consistently high quality of the publications has caused more than one professional journalist to comment that a Pub Row graduate is well prepared for the school of hard knoeks.

But The Student, Howler, and Old Gold and Black do not exist for the sole purpose of turning out journalists. We write to be read-and we are read-by stu­dents. professors, administrators, alumni, friends (and enemies) of the College. The students who walk Pub Row are the recorders of the present, the historians of the future.

Most important of all. through the pag-es of campus nublications flows the feeling of the campus. 'T'he Wake Forest tradition of freedom of the oresR 001131'ds the ~cadt>mic trllditio., (\f frPPdom of thonQ"ht. Without Pnt-. Row. there ,.ould be no true College com­munit~'·

OAROL OLAXON and SHillBRY PRYOR Oo-Editors

TROY STALLARD Bnsfness ~tanager

SYLVIA PRIDGEN, Associate Editor RALPH SIMPSON, Assistant Editor SUSIE MElM:ORY, Feature Edit.or DICK PAVLIB, Sports Editor EIENRY BOSTIO JR., Assistant Editor BILL NELSON, Assoc. Sports Editor H. A. TURNER, Clrcnlation Manager BILL FUNDERBURG, Adv. Mgr.

EDITORIAL STAFF: Mramt:ha Gewbry, Ra.ndy Halrtmam, Mic'hael Anderson, Jan W'\llel'lteoniber.gCII', Walter Beal~. Ann Lewis, Steve E=s, Susan Ha.rilow, Jadln ·Riee, Ka:t'hy WQolley, Pla.m Hla:wMns, ChwrUe Kirkland, Bult~h Pate, Oalrmy Stl8irk, Bonme WJ'Iigh<t, John Stone, Joo.nna Rollman, Roger Rohliillaln, Wlfl1!l'lam Ray, iSUSMl Beck, Bill Ameen, Peggy Park. SPORTS STAFF: Dave Roberrts, Rndy Ashton, Jo.hn La:mhemt, Bob H<!lltfuaway Em v ei'IIliOO'. '

BUSINESS STAFF: Brn Gor.don, H. A. Tumar, Oir. MgT,, Buddy Laymon Fred Wiendor:t. '

PHOTOGRAPHERS:. Bill Verno,r, .T«Yhn Daughtry.

Member ot the Assoclated CoDegtate Press. Represented for National Advertlsmg by National Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $2.110 per year. Second-class postage paid, W1Dston-Salem. N. C. Form 3579 should be mailed to Box 7587 Wlnston·9alem. N. C. 27108. Printed by The NashvUle Grapb!e, Nashvtlle. N. C. '

FOUDded .January 15, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold anG Black Is pnbllshetl each Monday dllrint: the school year exeept durbtg e:nmfnatton and lloUd&y periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publlcat!OIUI Board.

OFF The Bench Good New At Barn Theater

The Drunkard Giveni '~ R t•

·-., 'I

''First Class a 1ng By ROGER ROLLMAN

THE DRUNKARD, written by W N Smith and starring Carl~ De Mayo, Jamie De Roy, Ohester Clark, Bar­bara Nelson. Bob Briggs, Julie &berts, Joan Clark, Lee Lawrence, John D. Monka. Directoi•, Bro Her• rod. Musical director, BaiTY Mann At the Ba.rn Dinner Thea~ in Greensboro.

'illle meloda:~a>ma .is a fOJI'.m in .the itJhearter •thwt receives very ,),jjtJtJle a.otention todaiY oom­:prured to fiJh:rut Wlhich ilt ll'eceiv.ed half a OOII/tUil'Y ~o. The DruDk­ard by IWl. N. Smd!tlh !Is one very :rea-l -exceptdon to •thls pre­sent 'C'OD!!tlrtJion. Tillis Broadway .pcroductiJOn wh>iclh now is aJP­pear:lln!g aJt ~e Balr.n DiiJJn.oer Thead:er' dn Greensboro ihas ca.~, in :the fu·hl~ sense, the •Wu.e esse11ee of ·thds genre.

Publications Have Tradition Of Excellence To Maintain

In The Drunkard robe forees of -g'()Od and evil- come to ®ri.PS in •th·e sh.a,pe of a :bobble an<l a. nasty v:hl.ll81in. '1lhe h~ :is tempted too !the :lJiortlf:Le ·bY ibhlis unsorU!Pu-lious fellow and i.n qtttck time 1005 lbecom-e a. gen­uine boozer. Thou.glb -tlhlls Is ·not .the &deal hero, one can -oot -e~peat; P'9I'feati01ll. Wiltlh •11h•e aM of a tYJPe of semi-h-ero in the .flOililll Olf a .footer :brother and a Sa.lv131tion Arm~ wor:ter, tJhe lh·ero I8Jt ·lrurt u.nderslla.nds the •er:ror of hds mkdnig "dlemon rum." Tlh!is iW essential'l y •th e stoll'y wirtJh vacr-ious com:p•lica­•tio.ns in !the :form of a wife ·amd Clb.hld and wild, ltoose women.

Way back in the mists of !time, many wars ago, Dean Wil­son wrote a column for Old Gold and Black which was known as "Pro · Humanitate." The De'an was then an under­graduate, neith~r so old nor so lbenlt nor so world-wise as he is now, but even so his column was memorable.

It was not memorable in the far-ou:t way of a rival column, written by 'a confessed lunaltic (now a staid Professor of Eng­lish Literature at respectable insti:tution which did not too carefully investigaJte his back­ground.) Tha!t one was called '·Pegasus on Roller Skates" and was written to fill all the space the Editor found vacant at press time. Lt sometimes wenrt on and on. for days.

Wilson's Colwnn

Dr. Wilson's columl1'S were li-terate, devastaJtingly clissect­ing Beethoven's newest sym­phony· or lthe latest Charles Dickens potboiler. They were so good :that ;there was some talk, even then, of placing cop­ies in /the cornerstone of the Adrninilstration Building on the old campus, or in a time capsule to be opened years later, in 1950. Both "Pro Hwnani.'tlate•• and "Pegasus" would ibe highly readable !today, although the laltter would probably have to be update<i aJS "Pegasus on a S!tateboard."

This freshness, perhaps ap­par.ent only to old eyes, sug­ge:;.ts that lthe role of college publications at Wake Forest bias n01t been appreciably changed eilther lby time, by ltran!Sition or by circumstance.

The college newspaper, hon­ored 23 times as ·an all-Ameri­can product, remains the mir­ror of campus life. It is a stu­derut publication, student edilted and studenit produC€d, and never in its proud hiStory has it been a propaganda outl~ for the college adminiJstration. Old Gold has borne and mus!l: continue to bear the marks of journalistic excellence: a press that is free, ·and a press thalt :is responsible.

Newspaper's Place

As the mdst frequenit of stu­dent publications, the '!neWS­paper hias a central and power­ful place in campus life. IJt in­forms, it instructs, It emter­tains, it molds opinion. From one year Ito lthe n~xt it passes on tradition. Its columiliS of one season will be hiisltory in the nelct. Because it will be con­sulted by historians for years to come, accuracy and truth are of utme1St imporrtance. It may frolic and kick up its heals, but iit never forgets that its primary milssion is altogether serious.

The sensitive faculty advisor for Old Gold, as well as for the ~ther student publications, is equally aware of lthe sacred na­ture of a free presis. He does not - indeed, he cannot -censor. He COUDSels, he advises, he persuade&; bult finally he relies on the mJaturity and sense of responSibility · of his editors. In the sthdent-facullty relallion­ship, Old Gold has b:een -\an exempliacy' publicallion.

Spotty Histor::v

The Situd~t haS had a spot­tier history. Its pages, monlths in preparation, tempt the shal­low and college magazines IIJa­

ltioz{ally have JlleVer consistent­!~ mattched the standards set by ISitudent newspapers and yearibooks.

College magazine editors fall into an easy trap. They yield to the conviction, eiiif;irely er-

roneous, thalt there is humor tell the story of a yeax as fully on1y in sex, significance only in and •brightly' and responsibly as booze. They are wrong, and the he can. There have been good good magazine editor will shun Howlers and bad HGwlers, but gimmicks and search instead for the quality hials con:sis'tell!tly im-writers ·and writing of s~rious proved. quality, for essa;y~S and verse In a pLa,ce of learning, the •thalt reflect mature student in- written word is highly prized. terest. He will not sacrifice the The faculty and administration reputation of lthe college or of 'watch rt:he written word of the

I m'UJst. ailmilt •thrut this is nort tlhe substa-nce for ·one of BGckelt's J}lays, bu-t it d1oe.s coDJtai.n aJhl the ma.terial for a ftkst dass comedy, •th!oug'h one with a ,less·on. The g-rouv of not'Ors who 'Pil'esent •th·is ·pLay ihave mu.s.tered rt:the >t0111e Qf The Drnnkard •a.nd :give fomth wd>th a full ev·endiJJg's erutentainmerut. H woul!d 'be ii:lJ.JOISs~Me fo,r me .her.e to gdve credit .to each hud;ividual who woll'ked in or on •this •play, bUJt it can eastly be s1aid thrut each in •his or •her own wa1y is a va;luaJble russet to The Drunlrard.

the student body for a passing students carefully, most care-sensation, for in doing so he fully when it is widely circu-does a disservice to generations laJted. !it is a line of cornmunica-of studerubs not yet enrolled. tion almost as important as the

The yearbook, while appear- written word of the classroom. ing only once annually, is the Except for a few notable lapses, publication which will live rthe student publications at Wake longest. It is to The Howler that Forest have ·been uniformly ex-alumni will turn, 20 yean; after cellent. The i(;radition began back publication, to find 1a name or a in the dark ages', even before face. It will be displayed in a Dean Wilson's "Pro Humani-place of honor. llt will be swart;- tate." The permanent residents hed in nostalgia. The edi!tor, here confidently !hope the tradi-therefore, will try his best to tion will be continued.

~······;::~:;::::;;.::·························~

j Social Interests Vary I There ·wre three .peQple w•ho

I feel deserve special men­tion. 'Dhe fill'st 1s Ches-ter Glwrk Wlhlo ,ga"e a. bril:lianrt .p-omayal of 1the VliJ1lailn. On.e -could ll!Jlmost feel very olooe rto ltbds parson

BY LARRY ROBINSON This is nolt to be deplored, Law Applications Some professors are male,

some female; some tJall, some short; some fat, some thin; some have hair, many do ndt; all have B.A.'s and M.A.'s, most have Ph.D, 's. Profes;sors are of all sizes, shlapes, qualifi­Ciations, and all are different in their abilities·.

However, each makes his or her contdbultion to the college academic life. Although no stu­dent likes all prot.essors, no professor is disliked by all stu­dents. Each sltudenlt will make his major academic acquisition from a few profeiS!sors, and ev.ery profeiSSor will make a major conltribution to a few students.

Social Situation

And so i1t is with the social sltu<:rlion on a college campus and at Wake Fore'S!; in pial1ticu­lar.

Some social opportunities are thin in that their budget ils slim <Barn dances to taped music on Friday land Saturday nighJiis.) Others are more plwup {The Four Tops and Maurice Wil­liams and lthe Zodiacs on /the same evening.)

Some social functions are more of male thlan female or­ientation (fr!alternity stag par­Ities). Some social functions are long <the big week-ends- Fra­lternilty and College Union). Otheru are shol11: (nigbJtly visits to the Studenit Government­sponsored "Attic'').

Long - Hair

Some hla.ve appeal to students of "long-hair" inclinallions, and others to students witll more level heads. All involve plan­ning of some sort, many in great clietail.

Just las each professor, re­gardless of his nature, has a role to play, so does every so­cial opportuni!ty. No studerllt will ever like all social events, but then neither will evel'!Y stu~ dislike every social eve'nt.' There are those that loved lthe clasual dress and a go-go style of Homeconnng 1965, lthere will be others, however, who thought it in bad taslte.

Personal OpiDions

The same hold!s true for such occasions as /the semi-formal !Magnolia Weekend - some will not. frhere are those that will revel in' lthe quietness of the "Altttic'' Wld be diametrally opposed tG a College Union combo party with the Fabulous Five.

bU!t accepted as natural. No student will enjoy or partici­pate in every form of social life on !the Wake Forest cam­pus, but I hope that no stu­dent will refuse Ito participate in art; least one form.

An efforlt is being made this year to increase !the Wake For­eslt student. Hopefully each stu­dent will find some form of sociial activity that appeals to him and fills hls needs, and will support it, thereby insur­ing its conltinued operation.

A,i)plioatdorus for !Vhe Nov, 13 ::>A.mi.niiJSitnation of r1lh e Law School Adlll!i:sston Test must be in the hands of rbh.e Edu~­tion;wl Testinlg Service, P<r:ince­t'()n, N. J., ,by Om. 30.

!llltere.sted stmdeDJts .have 1been adWJsed rto obtain ll"e~strrution fomms li.=-edii31te]jy from •the Servioo by Wll'liitliing lia w .Scihoo-1 .A!dmissi.o.n !Test, Box 944, Edu­<Caitioillal 'Desti.ng Ser\"ioce, PT:l:nce­•t'O.n., N. J. 08540.

T.he •tesrt is ~rell:ULb-.00 ·by -mosrt .law schools.

l\f·;·x·;·:'f'/t"~=~~«".--,...,,;'"""'"'-'*""''' -"""""FHI'!? ·rnm"'!~<Ct«:Sr·:;. ~ ,,),.,y.v.wm;,-.;.;,,w;_~-~"'.. ... _, ........ :;;~~ ....... :;.~-:~.MM'::J:•:•,·,;~.~:{;.NfiW:ml:::~ ~ ;i;! :~

1 Ever Meet Your Match? f:1 By STEVE BURNS ~;1 Y. '; ~ STAFF WRITER t>, ~ Nrow you oo.n .get •maJtches fm ,tJhlllee dol·lam. ~'1 i0 Tobey won'rt: liiigiht Y.OUJl' cigarettes, ,lJ.UJt -they •m-ay 1tJhiroW a [:;l ~ J.ttrole Ught on •YOIUX •diatdn-g ilife. ['J YJ AnO<tiher eX!EI!lilple of Democl"'!Jtic mfillatd()n? No,pe, just ~:; ~ ~ t:ll ~<rogii'ess. ~-\ ~~ 'Dhaniks to some ima.ginatiV'e HM'V~d Sltwdents rtl'!Ying .to l?.i ~ 'take rflhe "blli.nd" •oUJt 1of bl:iind dates, stmden,ts· flrom 131]1 .over U © 1lhe .naJtion ·are seek:.i.u,g ,1Jheir id~.:lll martlch Vlia -com'!)wterized ;j n; st.a.tfuti.cs. w (! 'Dh.e coonputer ia tlh·e w;or;ld's •l.Mig1est, l'Ocated at Massa!chu- r~ ~ seb~ ~3·tute o1t T.eCidh.~logy1 in""'C~mn~~digf-e, Mass. N~n. k_:'-·.··~: fo;i .L'IOil' 'l' , •ffii8J e atr u.SiiD'll!•e "uUu€>~.,.; ' ro,m ;zn:amy '-'" ua -,~ ~:] Cwrolina eolleges and .un'iversirtJLes a.re filrliiilg oUJt "Quallltita- ~~ [)! ·biv.e P.11odeotti:on Tests," .eva;lu'llltiJIJJg 1themselves .perso.nru1ity- rJ u~ w:ise and indicrutin.g tlh'6ir I'P'I"Cferences in 13. diate. r,-~ r-f The ·coomp,UJter SC!lJJJS >the ·rup,J.Jo:Li-cation· .am.d .matches •tlhe ~1 {;; l!ikoo and di!lllikes wiltJh ·th'OISie of 'Other studenrt:.s in t!he state ;;j . ::: ' i~ ~~~ s•eDJding tlhe {l:pplioca.rut five ·t'O 'fo.Uil'lteEm lllames of "ideal" "~ ~j! dates. M f1 CruHed OPERATION MATCH, the prQg~rom wa,s, .indtia;t-ed ~ ~ ~a.m. yeax a.t Harvard Univcersity •by a gi!'IOU'!} of boys wlho M ~ r.eaJized 1thwt mo!llt coLlege stud-ents kinow -w.hiaJt kind of R Vi ;peop.le .tfuey enJo.y -<La.tilllg. ~ w . ~ ~ 20,000 Students Matched ~

ln two projects :bhe rtoot has :maltehed over 20,000 Situ- ~ de.Illts •from 'C'Olleges ~1 over 'tlh:e counrtJrty and 1ln England. 0

'llhe aM.emprt to strilre iiiiil ·Dew :a~quaillltiaaLces d.n Nol'tlh CJaTo- f,:~ lilll3. ds !JeLn,g handled ·by some of lthe ·IJiaa'lvlaiM ~lams ~ now i.n ·th-e Business School 6lt tlJ.e Unlversilty of NOII'Ith~ ~< ~roD~ ·

trnley !OII'lned a COirP'Ol'llltion I!I.Il!d ~ fuwr ·fm.ten:m-ti.es illl ltlhe ·SJrea rto odd!sitribUJte the q•uestiolLD181lres. ·

A DUJke University ~-ern:ity is ll"~nsiibtle for eiirc.u·lialt:lmg­t'he fol"JllS to DUJke, WB!ke Fo.rest, aond· Saaem Cblhleg~e.

Somoe 'Of :the qUJeslti~QD,na.iJres w-ere \PLaced: Wl ibhe Ool•l.ag.e I·Ilif~OOl Desk last week-end, and a.lJl wer.e ,glo.IlJe •by ewrly F'rddJaiy eV'enin•g. However, rtlh.ey were linrtend-ed· OIIiltY tot .men studenta. ,Qoedls must w~t :for lllJplJil".OB -by !the WGA, W'h!iCih vOites on ,bhe Illlaltrtler 1tonlighrt.

:Gi!I'Ils :llro.m Du:loo, Sacred Beamt, st. Mary's, Pea.oe, Queens a.nd othffi" selllools in the state illlr-e ,l_>alntlclprutii!Jg lin 1the maJtch-'IL:P. ~

OUJt of rtJhe •milliimum 'five llJaiJiles OIJ>e of you-r ma.tches is:~~ bou.mi.d Ito atrdke. lit IIIl!Lglht nOit be an eternllll IZla.me, ibut, as , OOl:e •Oif ·the Duke ·representaltdv:es ex.p.LIIJined, "It's somethd:nig , new." M

.A!ll ap:pilicaMcms must be InaJhl.ed 'by OCito.'ber 18 .to moo ~ •res-earoh center in Ma;ssaJdhu.s-etrt:s.

.as he, ·in certJain moments l>e­·=e •the very evi.l -in man Mnis81l·f.

Barbaxa Nelson sang ·her way .uh·ro·ug:h the ent.flre iPI:ay tn a reBJHY wo.nderf·uil voice. , Wilth tlw add of a very 1811'1ge voice pam.ge, Misa Nelso.n is ~,Me -bime a.rud ·again !bo tlrla.n.s­fix ,tJhe :a;udli&niCe amd iho.ld fit in •her &WI8/Y.

J,o.hn D. Monka tplays- tthe pla.no .lbr The Drnnka.rd. Tlhe sltJY!Le :Is oa,utlherutde, alive, a.nd deXJ!JrGUJS. WJ.irtlh eudien:ce PBJr­tici,pa.tion eonllmibuting ·ID'Uch to tlbis ,plla.y, Ma-. Monlta is vital! in :the !infusion IOf moo(} iJn t'O It' he 1p;a.trons.

The 'Balm Dinn-er '11lleater is a ,great asset to mhe eDJte:t'ltlain­roeii!t of liiOr·bh-wester:n NIQII'Ith Carolina. It :Is well lthrought owt and seems rto be ISit:rd Ving for qua.!Jity. W.e WlOUld llooipe thart 1t'he flllt'Ull'e holds much for <t:h.eater .i.n NOirtlh Ca:ro1d.na and , The Drtmkat:d is one ex>~~<mple thlalt 1the ,p.resenrt; is not waiting fo;r ,th-e furture to just lha'IJII)en.

RQgiar Ro.lit'ma.n

Whimsey By Faye Setzer

Call downs, WGA patrol, house rules, donn council • • . if these words 'aren't familiar to you, you must either be a boy, or , an unwilling meffilber of the Wo­men's Government Association. One person closely associated with preserving the virture of all the sweet young things at Wake Forest :is the House Pres­ident. If you axe not in the know as to what this job ®tails, per­haps it would be interesting to fill you in from personal obser­vations.

Being able to have only one House President at a time, lt is hard rto know the idiosyn_cra­·sies of more than one., so.Alice Ivey, ·as the pseudonyms go, is lthe House- President of the week. Taking a c-loser look at Alice, it is immediately apparent lthat she is not an ordinary coed f nor an ordinary WGA official. This may iJJe thought of as ex­tremely meritorious by some, hm in oMs instam.ce, W1are 'she normal, we would have no col­umn.

Be In Everything! ? ~.

Alice is the ty_pe of girl who ·Can't be eontent with only hav­ing her fingers in several pies, but insists that SHE be the cen­ter of the pie. Her election to WGA was oot exactly her cup of tea, but being the. zesty in- • dividual she is, sihe decided it was worth a ltr!y. Mter all, who lhas had more ·call downs, cam­puses, and trouble with the WGA than she? H yo-u can't beat them ('and we ·all know we can't), join them. So she did.

' . ~··

A most colorful girl, Alice can be seen zipping around the dorm in her blue Tee-shirt at any hour, ilooking !for troublespots. H there are none to be found, me must l!:hen utilize her un­limited qui? ·and create some.

What To Do? I I

How to disperse of a dead baby shark slyly removed from her cihor'date lab, took ;priority on one day's list of adventures. The toilet bowl, so o:Men the fi­nal resting place for turtles, fish, and other dorm animals, which mdeed do ndt fade away, but lie dead in your room, W!l!S not ·the Wlswer, as a baby shark waos• a 1Wifi1e rtoo ilaJr.ge for ltilrls type of burial. The wasbjpg ma­chine foo Was eliminated as they I

have guards there now to super­vise laundry service •.

illtimately, of course, Alice thought of the perfect solution: to place the puny animal in 1

somebody e-lse's lavatory; and [ let her play underifiaker. ThiS maneuver having been smoothlY 1 · accomplished (sinee Alice ls by n1l m-eans Wl aonmrt;.eUJr) , she w:as ruMe 100 r.esu-me her trek aTouoo !the dorm.

Watching T. V.

Everybody seemed to be watching television, playing cards, o:r101tJhJeu-wt!se ~ng j,n the learning process, except far one poor damsel, who, inept at using the !l"azor blade, bad caus· ed blood to flow from several large gashes on her right lower :!Jeg. Dr. Aldee, •being .exrw.eme-, ly ad~ as a mectie dmanedi­atel'Y II1ea.dh~ed fOil' lllhe !AS!ter-ine •borotJie. It 'j'IOU ltlhf.nk rt:ihaot Usterme lis ·Used IOJllly Ito h-elP •bealllty qperartonJ ,get m«e eusto.mers, .tJhen you s'hou~dtn'.t watch ltelev:isdo.n muoh, •bUJt ·be­<:rom1!l •m'Oire WIO'rJdly lin ymm-ou t.Look. :Sihoe 'J)Oildslh, ibooltlh­paste, shampoo, detergen>t-oone of these items are necessarY if you have Listerine.

After a last minute inspection of all empty liquor bottles that do not have candles in them, our young house president could retire to-wen, whatever House .Presidents retire to.

' .

. CtJ Wi Prodtl Readi For F

Ki.IlJg Gullinev~ anooieVIi level 'Of Ubra.ry

Thie vooved ifme's il lot," t -20-23

Rehe for !the rt:o ,be IIi

' lton '().f !

W13J1ton Dr. H•w dJl,Tieato:l:

Foo1est west T.

Alsstljl · · ·Mlity

susan ·York ,(

Derunis> BellleV'lili Jim De va., .m'll 1Jh-e ata La.noolo

,PetreJr vilile, T willl -Ell ovenoo.n: speoi.aJI Baadw.liJ:: tt,.es.y of !P"<UilY,"' cLu-ction, SIIllirtlh witih lth \llel'CUssU

B.ug:ej as small tha-n ds est iffilli

SUI"lpTisd.

:tJhose w The

only of -also of member ,pa:r;l:m&

The 11

;tJha.t 'h-il rthe sb:• an'd CII' eostume the ifot oon:tutie OO'ooalde 'othea.- -e!

other a.re .J.o'll J'lllllles Md·ckey Ollllvin LillllJ.EjJ;

. .... ~

, 1o 'I

tg momeruts be­

evLl .in man

n sang ·her ' en;f;.flr~ :P.loay deorf·W. voice , a VfirY laQ'Ig~

IS NeJ.so.n fJs ain !l:.o tlrian,g. amd ihold ~t

:a ip]ays- the :"Unkard. Tlb.e ~. alive, and . nodien:ce p.wr. ~uting -m'Uch r. Mo111.kia. is don of mOOd

;no 'nhleaJter is •he ellJtenllalfn­:!Ster:n NOI'Ith '€11.1 lthrought • be stnlving W1011lod hoipe

t!.ds !DNlodh for Caxo1d.na &J.d • one exrunp.le ~ not waiting just iha'Jlll)en. g~ar Ro.Uman

Setzer patrol, house ! ••. if :these iliar to you, >e a boy, or~ e:r of the Wo-

Association. y associated :e virture of ng things at House Pres-

t in the know entails, per­

nteresting to rsonal obser-

tve only one t a time, lt e idiosyn_cra­>ne, so. Alice >nyms go, is ent of the oser look at ~e]y apparent rdinary coed f 7GA official. :ht of as ex­s by some, !e, Wiere •she have no col-

thing! ! ~. t

of girl who 1h only hav­seve:ral pies,

. ~··

l be the cen-r election to :tly her cup he- zesty in- • a decided it fter all, who downs, cam­ith theWGA L't beat them · we can't), lid. rl, Alice can tnd the dorm llirt at any troublespots. to be found, fze her un­atesome.

lo?

of a dead moved from ook priority adventures.

otiten the fi­for turtles,

:nl animals, ~fade away, r room, was

, i

L baby shark rge for ltJh!is washipg ma­ated as they 1

ow to super-'•.

>urse, Alice act solution: . animal inl vatory; and :"'iaker. This :en smoothlY 1 ·

Alice ls by :.uteUJr) , she Le lh.er trek

. v. Led to be 11, playing llnidJuWgin:g .!tn 1, except far ib.o, inept at e, bad oaus· :>am several right lower

llg .eilOtr!eine-. 11c, dmanedd­lbhe LiSiter­JtJhiD:k ttalla>t

•llllY tto he1P •get mo;re

.u s'hi~~.wn·.t 10h, •bnlt ·be­ly rl.n your ldslh, ito'Oibh· ~rgent-oone

~ necessarY ~.

e inspection bottles that *l in them, ·sident could tever House

I l

College Theatre 'Sounds Off' With Lusty Medieval Musical Production Group Readies 'Camelot' For First Curtain

Ki.rug .A:rrt.lhu.r tWnd Queen Gudtnevere oove orelocwted 1thetr mooiev.rul CO!Ull1t on ·th.e seventh level 'Of '1lhe;z. S'lllliitJh Reymolds Ubra.ry,

The royllil.ty aJre Ito be Ln­vooved lin !the OoUege ':rnLea.­tme's iPirod:um1Qil of "Came­lot," to :be o!lfered 0-otJo.ber -20-23 am.d 25-3·0.

ReheBil'Silll8 •begl8.11. •thrl.s w.eek for Jthe ·musi'call. ,perfo:rtni8Jil!Ce .to •be tddJrected 1by James 'W a1 ~

. 1ton. 'Oi JtJhe ·S!Peeeh Dapa.1'ftltnlenlt. Wta~lton mlll ·be t31Ssieted .by Dr. Hllll'dld r.r~dsford, ttecllm:icall dJl,roeallo:r, 'WOO IC8IID-e t.o Walk-e Foo1esrt: ltlb!ls :y.ewr 'llrom So111th­west TmJaS S1laJte CooLlege.

Nobility Roles

.A.sstllDldJ!l!g' tthe •roles of lillO·

· · ·b<Uity 001 rtJhe T.h881ter , are Susan· l!rfby, &e.Ddor o.f New ·York .Oflty, as Glllin&vere 18m.d D.eaunis Sayel'IS, eopiholilJore of Belllev:11le, m., taB KiialJg AJr.th~. Jim DOil'll.", seD!Ior of Fa:linfax, Va., .m'ltktes- lh!iJs, aJNieall'lallJCe. on 1Jhe a1la®e :tn· tthe IPersool of La.noolot.

.Petrar BUJg;ei, sen-ior of NlllBih­villle, Te.Illn., music:ltl. .dt!Jreator, willl -emplhias>lze th-e !fa..nltasy QVel'lto.II:OO 10tf otJOO shiOW wtiJtJh sp.e.claJJ. m'lM!ItcaJ effeobs. A Baadw.lin ltlhewtoo ·ootgta~n, ~r­!l:.oooY' of Mlo,xl:ey ·Piano Coon­pamy, Wihll be used liln t.be opr.o­dlu-otion, l3lii!d MTs. IH:oweiJ SIDiirtlh wdJJl SU:PfiJt]!y lthoe .slhiO<W wi1ih !the sou.nds of f.1u.te and i1'el"CUssion iiJJS1lr.umelll1:s.

--PHOTO BY VE~NOR PU.CKER UP • • • and whistle if you can't kiss. Royalty Dennis Sayers and Susan Irby practice whistling the tune from the Camelot scm·e,

Smaller Chorus

B.~el notes t'hiaJt tth.e ·ohoo-us as smw11Ellr :itn ltlhts iPtrod·u·cmon 1lha.n ds ·usullil for •a Wake For­est :monSiicaJ beca. U'se tOtf ltJh e su:r>prisi,n,glly b:iigh •ca,Ji,ber otf :tJhose w.ho oamodlittiQin-ed ith1s· year.

The OoUTit is mlllde UJP nott only of tt'heartl'e vateroMLS bu,t -also of several .:JlreS~b.mwn am:d members oQf ltb.e Mu•sdc De­,paa;tment.

Laod'Y A.rune. 'l1he :K!nigthrt:.s olll!l!d !Lad:ies of

ot!h·e Cou:nt wtill be p.layed by Miarsha ·Camn3idJa, E!Llin Bo.UJ!.d­im., MM'lti Oum!IlliJIIJgs, Joe My­ers, Ricky HorH:1y:cwtt, RUith BotlLn, 'Dr.itsh Jon·es, Ginger Dantzle:r. and Gail P·uzak.

Behind The Scenes

.A.sslistin.g Wailto,n in <ii'l·ect­inog .the IPrO·d!l.l·Cit~on WiiH be sen­ior Dona WestmaJy ·oif Loll.tlis­ville, Ky., Mdke Sttruuffe.r, sop-h­omtOJre of Defiamce, Ohio, is p·roouCition m.anag.er. Otih·e;r iSitu­-deUJts Involved lin rtlhe tecih.ruiOOtl a;rea.so .ar.e Costume M:a.na,ger Ba.;uce DailiLels of Newola;nd;

LLgtMs and Sollllld M.amtlllger D\acrmy Wells oQf Mda.mi, FJa.; Pno:p·er.Ue:s M.3JIJ!ruger F.I-ol'a Hoof.f­ma:n of CMhlu.m, M•d.; a;DJd PmMiCiilty Manager Gail Puzak o.f .Aa-Jing~to.n, Vta.

Mike StaJU:f•Eer vrill ibe .spe­cia.J. design assistant and is respo.n.sihle for .specia~l effeats for the "Montt'h of J.\!liay" SCel1e.

Amyone intterested ILn .pa,r­•tiDipatin.g Ln .teahtnica;l work ·is asked •to c<Jin•t:act Mike Sitam.f­fer, .the managers ·of •t:he a;p­·P•r·o[lriate crews, •o.r Ha.rOtl.d T.edto.rd in Lib.rary Offd.ce 309 fo·r fu~theJr :in,for.malt.ion. Seam­Sitl'esses tatr.e especially ·needed.

The JteohnJi;call direoto!I' notes •thwt lh·:i.s •bfg;gesrt; ihea.d.ache ·fo!I' the slrow witH ,be desilg·rui.n:g .a.ntd CII"eadrl.rug t.he n.'lllller.ous eosttu.mes, Weall"ing •apptrurel o.f the ifollll'lteenotih and .iiftteel!lth oen:turies Teq·uire,COflorful •heavy .brooaldes, SlitLks, velvets,• and ·other eiLetglamt lfa.brios.

Rest Of Cast

Oit:her 'lll.emlbers of lllhe oo.st a.re .T.o'bal Ooltl.dms a.s MOl'ldlred; J'Wmes l!lastm.ram. as P elJd,nore; Md·ckey 1N.JlJn 1313 Sir DinacLam .. ; Oatlvin Bibrliniglfelolow oo SdJr Lto.n.al; and D.ona WteStJray as

Interested Frosh Invited To Legislature Program

Jdm Rainey, senior of Roxboro and a studellll: ~ vice presi­dent, !has amnged for fresbmen interested in the Student Leader­ship Troining Program to be the

LENWOOD AMMONS A.. C. MOTSINGU I

AMM·ONS ESSO Servicenter

JUST REMODELED TO SERVE YOU BETrER

ROAD SERVICE Tires-- Acces•ories --Batteries

1210 Be7Dolda Road Corner Robin Hood .Road ·

Phone 725-2681

guests of the Legislature at its first meeting Oct. 6.

The .Program, which has been. an annual event for several years, is designed to acquaint freshmen with the workings of Student Government.

Chairman of this year"s pro­gram is Warren Boultilier, soph­omore of Sald:sbury.

Elmore To Speak

At •a meeting Oct. 13, speakers including Thomas M. Elmore, dean of Students; Joe Sparks, s€n~or of Rluthel"fo:rdton and chairman of the Honor Council; Lairy Robinson, senior of Kin-ston and president of the College Union; ·Rainey; and Jerry Part­ney, semor of Miami, Fila., and student body president, will ex­plialin the structure and function of the Wake Forest student gov-ernment organizations.

An assembly at which cam­pus leaders will deldneate the qualilties of leadersbilp will con­cLude the series.

Freshmen have been asked to indicate interest :in the program lby signing up at the information desk before midnight tonight. 'l'hose who register will be noti-

1 fied iby mail of the dates and times of meetings.

~-------------------------------------

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Oct. 4, 1lNiS PAGE FIVJi:

Contributions Might Double In Looking About Behind A Bush •••

Aluntni Support Anticipated Discarded newspapers filled

l:the empty chapel seats as stu-dents stood •to scream in a I •bo.uafii-de pep ra.lly Thtwsda.y.

BY SYLVIA PRIDGEN ASSOCIATE EDITOR

If plans go according Ito sche­dule, 40 percent of Wake For­est's grodula!tes maty pour a half million dollars per year inlto the College budget.

Allthough the sum does not appear exorbitant iJt is a gene­rous increase over the previous 10 percent per annum conltri­buted by AIWimi.

The basis for this five-year protection is an extensive program of alumni develop­ment under the direction of M. Henry Garrity. Garrity first assumed office a year ago and can be credited with doubling the percentages of alumni participation during his short tenure.

Claiming that hits job is "to develop total support of Wake Forest," Garrity notes thaJt un­til this year, !the College had no elaborttlte fund drives that came eloise to !those of othJer instiltutions of the same calliber. Although the percenltage of al­umili giving jumped. from 10 to 19 percent in 1964-65, rthe new climb was not !that exceptionlal, if measured according to na­•tional standards.

Thirty-four percent of al­umni over the nation contri­but-e to their aJ:ma. maters, with Princeton and Yale lead­ing the graduates with per­centages in the 70's.

To compare figures with the Big Three institution, approx­imately 39 percent of Duke's alumni contribute over $1.5 million per year, as compared with the $:1.94,567 donated by 2495 ex-Deacons. The difference in real excel­

lence, notes Garrit;y- "Ils finan­cial supportt. The finest univer­sities are the ones with the money."

Financial funds for Wake Forest, GrurdtJy ·COntends, "are obrtainable, possible, and a must."

Tuition of students contri­butes only 48% of the budget, with annual giving, Baptist contribution, and endowment making up the difference. Therefore Garrity believes that everyone with an interest in the College has a responsi­bility t~ make an annual gift. He put his belief into action by instituting the first ex­tensive giving program at the College. To enliSit fimds from every

possible source, Garrity made 155 speaking engagements, covered 30,000 miles, toured 30 foundations in New York, aiJ.d senlt out 300,000 pieces of mail to alumni.

In Fori;yth county alone 256 people solicited door :to door and industry to industry, a oampaign which was followed up lY,y a regional campaign in March. ,

Garrity's program employs more strategy this year with such new tactics as:

-increased contact with al­umni and friends of the college;

-the use of a Development Advisory Council composed of industrial leaders and eminent graduates;

-initiation of a wills and bequests program.

The basis of the alumni program affords each gradu· ate the opportunity to identi­fy with the spirit of Wake Forest, said Garrity. "The heart and mind lead direcUy to the wallet, and we're using every means possible to ap­proach that sacred area."

Garrity, who callls himself "a I professional fund raiser who would ask rthe devil for a buck for 'Wake Forest," announced tha£ tile alumni office would kick off :the annual giving pro­gram Nov. 1.

~ Sixty class chairmen and 60 graduates of the Law School will be responsible for recruitments. Each will write the members of their class, requesting an mmual gift •

"'The classes haven't been involved in giving, whereas it's almost a crusade in some colleges to see which class ean raise the biggest amounts. It's something we should have been doing before," Garrity commented.

Homecoming and class re- the vice president of Reynolds At Wake Forest College. Any unions are major alumni Tobacco Company, Albert by-stander would bet it was draws duriQg the year. Ath- Mills,· Wachovia Bank, and surely· a pep rally. lit probably letics, Garrity confirmed, is Burlington Mills. was. The 'test of 1the pep is the the best means of contact with The final <approach to f d ability 'to carry the cheers from the school. . . ux; 3 the campus to Bo·wman Gray

lS an orgaruzed pro~am seekmg Stadium. Too ibad the stadium "Doctors, lawyers and preach- bequests through wills. A pro- .

ens who have lii1Ue in common f . nal fund . . f' h doesn"': have a $100,000 acoush-e!SSlO ra1smg 1.r1n as a1 Sit

can meet on common ground been hired to wriite the letters c sy em. at the football stadium. And to alumni. * * * a winni.ng team winis their "The greatest source of phil- There are many n~w roads loylalty.'' a:IlltbJro,piJc ~Illds lllire W!Ltl.s tan.d to progress on the Wake For-

Once the alumni return to requests. Of course, this pro- est Campus._ New sidewalks campus; lthere ils opporiun.Lty to gram doesn't show any results have ?een la1d from 'the plaza win their support in other for 5-10 years, but offers an It~ ·a s:tde Chapel ellJt.rruJ.ce, New tareas. "This is why we push opportunity for the alwnni to s1dewalks are n:e<ied for the athletics. If lth.is wins their carry on ttheir life interest " Babcock mud trail to the park-loyalty, l'm all for ilt." Galrrlby said. ' ing lot. Tunnel passageways

Loyal alumni, Garrity pro- from dorm to dorm are in the Garrity reviews the pro-poses, are the backbone of the of • • "th pt· drawing /table stage. Hmm . . • college and provide interest- gram glvm,g WI 0 Im- could somiWne !llreot us to the iDg research ground for foun- ism. expressing the belief that highway to universilty status?

the al~ have "come out dOJJ4tiOns seeking outlets for of the darkness. The anti- * . * * their funds, move factions, the confusion Anyone who has stood in the

"The big foundations like with the convention, the pro- queues at the Snack Shop might to see what you're doing to and anti-Tribble leagues kept advocate andther tunnel sneak-help yourself. They may well the association in turmoil for ily lea cling .from the dorm. to ask, why should we give if 10 years. All that's passed ·the grill. Thls might be . the your own graduates don't? A now. This office looks to the on1(y feasible propoSal for ob-bigger program may strength- moment, not the past. We're ltaining a h!llllburger ait noon, en our 'asking position',"

most concerned with the pre- since rioting on campus is le­Foundations are responsible for lthe major gifts :to the col- 5leDit and future of Wake gaily fro-wned upon.

Forest."

The grealtest source of public relations, assents GSJ'rity, is the Wake Forest Mlagazine. Five to six times a year the alumni r.eoeives 3 6 <to 40 (pag-es of "slmllted ma~terial l!:elling the story of Wake Forest in _higher educaltion. It's not just a rah­ir.alh tnaJgazinte, tb'Wt 1teltlts Jbhe iPTO. blems and needs of the College and helps people to idenltify with ill;. In short, iJt keeps them in touch.''

A second method is develop­ment of alumni clubs, There are now 87 bonafide organi­zations scattered from New York to Jacksonville. These clubs are considered "active," elect officers and hold two meetings a year.

lege, tand /though the office is always looking for contributors, The future of the College, in there are no major gifts in view tum, apparently depends upon ait this point. Gla:rrity a1Jtribultes rthe reciprocal concern of its the majorilty of support from graduates.

Beat Maryland foundations to the work of the

College President. "Dr. Tribble works on all

sorts of major gifts, and has probably raised more money

"We provide speakers to than any other oollege presi-keep them in contact with dent in America." the college and to keep the «our job is merely to spend Wake Forest spirit alive in money on seed and fertilizer local communities. and hope to reap the crop

lit's absolwtely essemial that later." we keep them informed. Additional consideration of

In order to indodt:rinate the finiancial development programs "give" idea into every gradu- will be under:tlaken by a spe­ate, the developmenlt office is cially appointed Development planning an informational pro- Council Advisory Council. Al­gram for the benefit of every lthough de'llaHs are still forma­graduating senior. tive, the council will spend two

The senior clitss presidenlt is days in October formulating a to appoint a committee of 20 10-year program lthat runs into who will in /turn be responsible the millioil!S. Thirty of the "big­for contacting every member gest men in America are coope· of tlle cJiass and exp1aining the rating 'to help offer advice. alumni giving program to them. From lthi'S meeting w:ill come "During the year they can be- our real strength."

T.hJOimaS AlVIa Edison's f.imt words ;recited iilJto rtlhe pho.DJo­

·:gu"'aJPih were <bh-ose besinnmg "Millll'Y Jlo:lid a. :l'i!tJtle .lamb." I

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PAGE SIX Monday, Oct. 4, 1965 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Survey Reveals _Attitudes

Freshman Girls See Validity In Closed Study; Nix Curfew By JAN 'WUERTI<iNBERGER

STAFF WRITER

"Moot of us ·agree >that closed study is <~~n .:J!ttem.pt to develop in us good s.budy hla.briJts; wllrut we don',t u.nder­lllllarud :is w>hy our CUJllers ·have to leave a;t 10:30 P. m., why we can't Ueave •the do•rms .after 'l: 30 •P • .m., an'll. why we should bave Ito be saf.ely ·tucked away in our rooms by md.dnoLg;ht."

~hat s!Jaltemerut, made ·by a :freshman ,giru, seems to inidi­erute the general feeling in J obnson Dorm~tory. A rule, the girls say, oug1hot •to .have a xooson behd.nd it ra.bher •than a boUlow •trad~tion. Freshman g;Wls fruil to see ·anytJhin·g con­Sitruotive in p·res·emt ·curfew 1h0'111"S.

Closed study at least has a. reason for ·beoin.g-a ·reason w<hioh, according tto a survey taken in ·bhe f.rosh dorm, is a WJJlid one. A!ll overwhe1miiLg maj011·ity of freSJhma.n g,inls a,p­p;rove of the closed study im­tpoosed upon them ·in tthei·r f·irst sem€Slter at 1\'\ake Forest.

M.any of ,these sa.me coeds

Go Go Mania

freely voice cl'itic'isms of <the s.ysttem but .proff~r few eon­crete sug.gestlions for H.s im­.provemenrt.

Called "a .Jesser evil" or a "Hfesaver,'' .regime·nrtadon is both a hin<lemnce and a help. Some rurgue >that <Ule-y "have no otllter rtime •to s.tudy," mh\ile opponents• of J!Jhe !Pla,n claim th wt ~t drilsconil"Thges rthe Wiise use of rt.Lme durdng the dca.y.

This la.tJt€Jl" ·i;'J'OUP feels rtihat ,!Jhe ;presen1t >tem;p•taJtioill rto pOOit­pone s•tndy ·un'til a rtwo-a.nd-a.­haJlf hoUtr cm.m session is s•t.ronger .than would be rllhe te·n<leucy not .to study at a.ll if •the closed s.tudy hours were removed.

"I don • t feel •tha.t I e-'1.n p·ar­ticipa.te in extracumcular and sooia•l a.ot i vi,tJies or <take d,n cul­tural even,t;s if I get in the ·ha.bit of being locked away in a room," c01npla;ins o.ne coed.

Her ih•aHmate counters wtbh .the :remark •thrut olosed study is rrood b~ca use i•t gets a §]rl s•tante'll. o·n the r<ig1ht foo.t so ,tJhrut ·S!he can .gert involved 1l·a.ter in 'the •a.ctivllties of her choice.

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Stu.dcn•t leaden= seem to feel tthla.t f~h.men. wilo are inter­ested and oa.pabue e-nou~ll to W'OO"\k m -camrrms fu•nooons the finJEt semeslter can m~.lte- I!Jhe h:l.g,gest CO!ll1!ribu•11ion 1b-y ,get­>ti.lllg iln on lthe t!,'"l"oun<l f.Loor. '~These saome oDga,ILiz·rution lead­ers ed.mlit ltht81t ltlhe opeil"Son w;h 0 gets into too IIIDIDY otihill:!;S at onoo is no :h·el;p lbo any of ;them a:llter gra(les oome oUJt.

Lenienc:;r and tighiter ;r-ulles iba.ve b,oith .beeiil c·oompioned. Some gd:r-ls .feel tit.~. alrtihou@h cLosed Sltuody lis good :in lbhe IllJad.n, !)lresillllt rules shou.J<l :PeT!Ill~ moire ex.ce.ptions. For­eign :llL!nw, antislts. sea-ies, Jec- ; _, tures, tamd oon•cel"'!s s.houM •not .. , ; be denied ro frmhm>am. gilrls, _ .. they assell'lt.

"A more stliot obse.rvan>ec" is lbhe cry of an01thex- •gi10•U1P.

T.hese •g.io;-ls sa,y lthey do.n 'It mlin'll. bedil'£" ~ocked away ·for robe eveiililllg as il.o.ng :as rt.bey a.re ruble to .accom-pllsll. som<>thiintg. U •P 1) e r c J. ass g:i>r·ls ltna.ilin.g throug<h :flro&h ilMls Q)revents eXItendod 'CIOilloeilltn!rtion, they sa.Y.

Abo.rut haJf of .1Jhe girtls in favor of the syste-m ex:press the opinion ibhat qui€1t hou;rs would 1be Tequi·red. of a:ll coeds. A girl wiltlh ;ponta.bae stereo in ·her roo.m dlisaigll"eed wiltlh this idea dfu!IIJt dJorm .ro'DJmS should ·be q·u~et llltud.y cells. "I m>a.ke .a;,n e.ffO!tt rtJo .-x>n­sider my roo.m mwe lbha.n thrut," Slhe e~l·ained.

THIS IS C.H.;\PEL? It wusn't exactly Sunday School, but the unholy heroes were fighting

for ~ righteous cause--the charity to whlch the Uglr JUan Oontest proceeds uill go.

One of those awisy u•pper­clrummen loollin•g back on closed study sn,g.gest.s •that the rules be .enforced only until r!Jhe midterm i!"ep.cmtJs •are ~·e­Joo.sed. She claims tth.art: .by >thrut time the :Druta.iiJty of not study­ing wdll be ob>'ious,

Fraternities~ Freaks Are Panics Dem.onstrating u·gly Man Antics

1'he Mr. Hy'll.e ,perso.nalilties of Dr. Jeky"lls on >eam;pus cmm-ged in 1rrep•ressible form in T•hunsday·s ·cJha,pel assem-

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bly. Suave f·rruteornilty men re­

presse'll. thew egos and fl>aunlt­ed vhedr se::dess .:1Jp,peal in an effort to beuefilt a ch>arita;ble o.rgaru~a.tio11.

T.he gesltl!lre was •t<he on·Ly evidence of ilove in a. strife­torn, mo,Mt€!l':m.asih '])r.ogr-a.m wih.ere noth•illlg was reverenced and ever)'th:iJng r:idicuaed.

The PllaitJ~OII"t:l wa.s 1the stage for g:uest a.ppeanan.ces of .suoh nota!bles •as GoucrJJt Dnaeula, a giummy mummy, and a.n Ori-

e111tal p.i:rrute wJw enttea-ed rut the 9tr'O•lce of gorug WI.d >boo more ·to SlaJy than "nJh-so."

T1he ineviltn.ble ba.by had a.n affinity for ohla.nkets and oreos and bolruttallJt .bul'Ps.

Coed-s ·on >the .scene ·e·v.i­denced no vio>lerut r·eructi'Ou tlhe disllJ.l•ay dh,ty d•uds,

They -aH knew ,1Jhe ugliest man o.n Cll!r.:t.pus Wtas.n'•t rep.r.e­sented~the f•real' .Qf naJture wJJ!o iuvited a Greensboro !;'irl to lthe Sa•tUtrday ga.me.

t~ News Briefs

~he U. S. Ailr Foil"ce Se­leotion Team, whoe'll.uied .to vis!Lt Wtake Fo.resrt: rt:omo;rrow and Wednesd•aY ,flo talk wdth seuiors, !booth men •and wo­men, a.b:orut ~n Od:fioer's Co.m­missd.on dn .the Offieers' T.nruin­in,g School Pil'o@l"am, !has ,been ca:nceHed u,n,tH tlater m.~.

* * * rl'•he I11Jter-V•rurslity O~n

Feldowship wiLl Jtoad a recep­tion :i!ll. thoe TlllterdeniOmdi!Iaitdon­aJ!. Room of ltJhe Lib!!'la:ry 'Dh.wrs• da.y oat 6: 3 0 iP. m. All•l studeruts have •b-oon iin'V'ilted.

* * *

llhe Little ii!<J,gn.olda Room greet ltlhe visiting Sltu.delllts Qll oomp•us. ALI mem­bers amd irutm-ested have been .i!llvited.

* * * Dr. Ga.ines M. Rogers,

Ott tihe Sclb.ooJ. of B.us.in.ess, wHl he key:n.o,te speak€11' at Delit.a. Sigma Pd's •fo11mer smoker 7 p. m. Wednesday, Delta Siigma. Pli., :PTOfessdonail ·business frn­tarn.!Jcy, ·has :invilted adl iruter­este'll. men !business students to bbe smoker.

* * * 'l'he Wake FOO"est Studen,t

The IDiter-n.artJiOIIJliJ} Olub wild lWlives Olub wiLl •meet l8Jt 7:3 0 hold a. dinner ·meetd.nig Jtrom P. m. ltom.orr.ow ;im lt'he East 5:15-6:15 P. m. romcmr.ow 1n Uolllllge.

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Chapel Scl1edttle October

Tuesday-5 Dr. ':nhor Ha.H, Pll"ofe&sol' of P•reach:Ln,g and TiheoJogw, The Divinity .Sc<hoo.l, Duke Undven;Wty, Durham, N. C.

ri1b;uirodJa.y - 7 Wake Forest S t .u d e lit 1t Governcrne!lJt, J err·y Par.t.ney, Pre'Siideut of •th.e Situ­dent Body.

(Oct 9-HomeooiDJ!n.g foot­baH-Mary,Jamd.)

Tuesday-12 Concert-M:m. Sallie Cone and Mr. Dnn A·n­direws, Win.stQ·n"Salem, N. C.

'1\hu:rsday-14 Tihe Rrt.. Rev. DI8Jiloiel CI!Jorlli,giMl, D ·iII" ·e e tor, Home De;paJI"Itmemt od' Execu­tive Councdi, 'I1he :En>riJsoopa.l Cihurcll, New YOII"k, N. Y.

Tuesd.a.y-19 Dr. Geor.ge M. Doche.I"Ity, P.ast<Jil", New Y.ork Avenue Presbylterian Cll!urch, W llJSihling.to n, D. C.

T·hllll"&day-21 Dr. Harold W. Tinib<Me, P.reslide!lJt-W.u.ke Thll"­eSit Co•Llege.

'I'uesday - 2 6 Tihe OoH~e Undon, LaJrcy R~billnson, Presd: denot, Wake Forest CoUeoge.

Thumd•ay- 28 Mil". David Bl'iobt, No.rth Cwoo•ldma Gene=I Assem1b.ly, Cihta.inmam of •the Situdy ColDIIllli$.ion QIIl tbhe S,pe::>ker Ban Law, Frui.:r.mon•t, NiO'J'.th Crurotlin·a (!W(a:ke Foo%t A'l UiiilUUS ) •

Novembct•

TU(}&IW,y-2 Dr. JO'h.n K!i•ll­illb'"e!l'", 'r.h.e DiVli!lliity Scboo,J, VlllJldeu"!blli. U111i varsity, Noash­vi.Ue, Tennessee.

Tlhui!"Sda.y- 4 Wake Fores-t as an l•ruterimJtd.ona.l Oo.mm,uni­ty, Mr. Joih,u Wiclrens, Lonodon, England, featrur:irug Jn,tm:maJbion­:al members olf ·the Waite For­est Facwlity ·a.'llld Studerut Body.

Touesd•ay-9 To ·b-e aJiltno,unc­e'll..

'Ilhu11Sday-ll Dr. AJ..bert G. Edwrurd.s, P.astOT Rirst P!l"e.s­h)1terdan C:hu.rcJ:l, Rale~g:h, N.

c. TueSid,a;y-16 A Survey: T!he

Dept. of ObSJtmrics a:nd Gyne­c,ology, BoWIIlla.n Gray Sclhool of Medli:clne, IW\a.ke FIOrest CoHege. Spea,ker: fu. (M;rs.) IEitihel M. N:<~~Sh.

Thursday- 18 M:r. Natih:a.n Pomer, Associa.te ·Seclretar:Y, Home Mission ·Bowrd, SEC, D®t. of M!issdonllll'Y P~SQill­nel-Ait~llJn>ta, Geo.rgia.

'I'uesday- 23 No Cha.pel­AidVliser- Advisee Conferences ( Req uliTed for Freshmen a:nd so.phiOmores).

Tihutl"Sda.y-3 0 Ms.g:r . .Tohm F. Bra.dtley, Nart.l<>Wli Oha~Plain, Tlhe Newman AJJI()Sitoil&te, Ann Al'OOII", MichJ.s'a,n.

Decem bel'

Thu:reday-2 ~p.prlng Cell"e­mo.ndes- ODK a.n.d TWJSels, CamoJ 101axon amd Lee May, W-ake Fo•rest College.

Tuesday- 7 M.r. J~BJmes J. Kilp&trick, editor and oeoJ.umn­illt, Tlh.e News Leader, Rich­mon'll., Vi.I1;indJa.

T.fuuu-.sda.y - 9 M!r. Rabelrt Sh·oot, Aurllhor, The Gos.pel .A£­C01l"di·ng tOO P~:anwbs, C:hioogo, J.I~mno·is.

T.uesday-14 A Carol .Sling wiJtJh Dan And·rews, W.ina.t-on­Srule,m, North CaroHna.

Tbwr~day-16 T.he Chirupl.wln (}f ·the CoLlege.

January

Tues.day-4 'l1o ·be a.llJd~unc­oo.

Toh.ursd.ay-6 Dr. Wml'ld.am R. MueHe.r, Professor of ElllgJ:iSh, Gou•oher College, BrultimOII"e, :Li'Iti!Jr:J"laD.Id.

Tue&day-11 Dr. J·o1hn R. Clay:pooJ, PastOO" C11"€'SC€11l•t HW Boap.tiSJt Ohur·Cih, Lou·isville, Ken,tu.elry.

~!J.,ursday-13 No Cllm.pel.

FAIREST OF THEM ALL ••• Ooaeh Bill Tate relieved the monotony of the parade of ugly forms whiclt filed through Chapel Thursday,

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'rnle ~tlst Studenlt Ulllion suilst of Jtille system.." 'W1llll lhold ~ October 9l1l1liPel' The OclhedUJle ohiii.Di&'6 :1lrom forum '.Nl.U!l'Edazy- ll1ifl1bt IIlii: 5 .J!Wd.ay ndgiht to Tblm!day wru~ "· ~. m Wf.t1,glaste Hal11. IDJil.<!_e Ito avoid oonftllot ~

DEACS ... who are GREEKS Homecoming To Feature "Gentleman's Agreement"

By Tommy Baker BAKER

Dr. J01mes C. O'FIIaihel1ty, ROOneoomriJ:n,g .p~ame, a.coordWilg dhiallrJnJam. of ·the German De- to Ed Ohtr'l!!ltmlan, BSU 4frieoot.­p1114'1tmerut, wi:ll1 Wltlr.odUJCe ltlb.e or. 'Dhe time clm.i!.ge wal8 lbhe.n. 1 Jtotp[oo, "'l'lhe HOIIlor S;v~Jtemi ~~lind mede din Oll'ldler to &llow ·treSh- l·n a. Uttle ~as& lbham one Coacll Taite) 0!(1d to .the socia•l :r.u'Bih roles wdll·l ·be lti\ted fOT •hi& ,pa.ll1bl.cu:la.r fnuternirty. He tlhe Studelllt,'' ~ to mam. ,gimls to !be :Ln tlheitr -dQl'!IJls week ctJ1e a,nanuw ohomeoomd.ng ~ rto P«"'duee, .pootenJt- .the a.ctwW. event. Witlh ~ re- must !liJrst 'PUM rthe :fu-.aJterni-JIOibmhie J'a.-ckSOil, ju.n!IM of for' dosed stu,dy: even~ta w.lill mke -~. As ia.loly, a fine weekend oa.Ll- EYbri'Citions lld:mecl, - rtlhe d()!()ll' to cy s,vt9tem :in genemwl. H.a;mJpton, va., 6llld .ab.alit'Jllalll • usuaol some rt:op f:lf®M en<ter- :IJI'ound for t.hose .con'Cerned. monoiJol:izart:lon of &Oillle 'freSh- SmaWI as rthis gesture .may ol the SufPII)er .Forum Com- Pritchard Relo-oa..-... l.tMa!:menit ~has •been llined up, Rules Lifted mm~ :Is aefot wid-e OJ>eR- and Bit fd.r8t seem iJt ds an im-InJ!rotee. - Ul/l:..,.o and from WibJaJt I unde4"1'31t:Mld tlh!Ls :Is datlndt.ely not 'rtlhe in- porta.nrt stetP, in facl the only

·Panel DlsCUBSion Two-Fold. View tl1e !Ciba.noes. ue 11'00J!Il7 good There lh!a.s a.~red, •how- temlt of otihe O!P&n weekend. . sot~ rea:lly fea&ib-le, towrurd A ;p.a.ne:l v;.i!Ll dlseuSoS ltlhios ;!;halt aM tllle pe.rfiol'llll:em w!IJ.-1 ver, a. new n'6llleslJS lthat couold The w:e-ekeDid Wtaso op~I'i.matrfi:ly 1 .p'l"leveDJtinlg" a potenJtial ,problem.

tJhem.e .tOtlolowtiiillg :tJhe intro- Of Honor System- -sh'Ow .. Yes, soclaol~y ltdie week- possibly -mall' rthe feslt.iY!.ties. designed. ~ oal~ow a f~reedom Th€11'e can ·be IloO Teall police duct:.olroy ll'eiiiiWl'ks m81d.e ·bY end .slhouild ·be u. ,g~ one. This pa:ntiouJJar evelllt wioLI be of sociaoliZID!g Deeessall'Y for aotlion, nor shQoU~d rthere he. O"Ji''liwhenty, on ltJb.e ;paonoe1 lied "It's up otJo you" 'IVII1S lbb.e 'Dhe ih?W-eoomdng decorarl;Jf,ons the ftirsrt mU;tul'e Qf tresoh.men su.c>h an. everut oo. ho.meoomilllg. There -can be none o.r the new-b.y O'F>IJ8.hemy wlil:l be aarocy.n· theme Oti'T.uesda.y's <fu.a.pel pro- oom~on and thoe excllt&- a.nd trlait€fl'.ndlty men und« r!lhe Mter, 3111, w:h~>Jt. would l!lhe ly 1nat.iltuted ll"eSitorrictions wdltoh­P-eoa.ooek, senior of Rmelog.h gu-am w1hen Jooo Spa:rJm, sendoor merut <llf 3 og.o.od tootJbDJLI ,gMll:e new sysot.em of defeJI'ITed :rush. PiiKA s (~ aony -o.tller fsralterlnd- oult il'Ulf,nrial,g lthe socia.l azpect and warren · Dollltilli€11', S®hio- of Rurth'E!Il"fOil'dlton, and almdir- (lf ~he lteMn opewrmso oas ·ilt Alltlhou,g.h rflhe .r~roohmeon m-ust ty m00113@l'll:g to secucre a. foot-, of rtlhe weekend. There ca.n more of Saildsboua'y ma:n of Jbb.e Honor Cou.n'Oi•l a.nd dd.d lll ltJhe 5000Ild ihalf -aoga.in6l1: porovdde .tilieir OW!Il ltlroJnS.P<J(l'!ta- hold on rth.aJt tootJterin.g :frolllt oDay be t.he •gentleman's n.goree-

"OU.r ID>UII":PQSIEl,'' 'added Jack- Dr, Keitlh. Pritoclha.Tid of othe :ue, tlhis ooUJl.d welol ·be obhe lt!ilon and may •not m4x with Iu:e> do !If tJhey «l'tlold not. yell I menrt. so111, "i& rto dnetJiiLl a sene& O'f :Elidsu.<laJtlOIIl D&pamtmen.t ip'r-esenrt:- oot excd.tdlllg game 11.1Jllder m;ter.nity men on rthe wa.y, otlhe w.ilth, or l!llt, lt!h~ staon.dling ~I' .A.ccew<tWn.g !the a.bove, dt wou-ld ill.OIJlloo' !1m. dlhooose rut tlhe for:um ed -a rtw.o-.foLd Vilew ·of .tJhoe sid~ rthem. Wlhl•le m~IIJtainling seem ,1lhalt rtlh:e sociaa su-ccess of ru~A ob:leeotiv.el:y Ito 'SJlloaJloyze amod ·hoonor s'}'&tem. Fraternity News thel·r tradirtiona~l :POSttion? tlhe weekend depen<Is largeay wiltielze ltihe s-ystem, IWle !Wlso ~riotcllard sopoke Wl wn ion- "System Rushed" on ·ohe iir.nodll.Vilduaol fl"lalteron:ity illiWnd Ito unoover oua- ~vi- dlvobdua4 :faeu.Lty ·member. He Kappa Sigma Senior Brother Shennan Town· man. BlY a.lJl means rnSih, hurt d'tal responslbillit,y as oa. re· ··noted. ·~t of tlhe thlree oey,pe.s ThreE brothers' have recently send of Frankford, Del., is en- N~er:th:eless, "'~hJi,le .tlhe week- do so with of.h~ · oa.goroomenct .in

of •tes.tmg ~e open, -been pinned.: Jim Soy!nder, j.un- gaoged. •to Elaiale 1ssacos a se.Illi'!l!T enJd ~s 10jpeil to II"USih, to- •JliTe- mind ruld oa.vo1d monopoHza-rthe closed, a-nd ibhe ih.MoOO' ior of Lex:ington, to Sandra Cra- eoed of the UniversitY of DeJa. V&DJt, hopefully, lthe ;p;r.oW~s I tion. . (whdch Wake Forest lhaB)- v&, student nurse at Baptist ware. of il"'llsih, rtJhe Im:erfrart.ermdlty By adlheri)llg :to •tili.ios policy, the ~aroter 1s itlh.e onoly ~re!Wl one Hospital of Lexington; Smitty The 29th Grand National Con-~ !has !Institu-ted a gen- tlhe weekend can be moore

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Oct. 4,1965 PAGE SEVEN

Only

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thaJt works. ___ •EUoynn, jll1Ilior of ClhlaJrloolbte, to clave and Aead~ was held ~ s a@'OOIIllenlt tib8lt thel.f.Ulll, and we can .gti.ve fthe IFC P.mtc.ha.rd also noted otlbaJt Jill Stuart, junior of Salem Col- August 28-September first at fl'la.temlirty sy&tem as a wi.hole a vote of ,confifdence.

4 o 1per .coot of students art; _lege, also of Charlotte; and Sam the Hotel Biltmore in New York wW be .rushed f~~· :amd tlhe ~ijij~iYfiiiiiiiiiJi[if~§:;j~JJ~~~~iiS~iJi major colleges and 1LIIJiv.emi- W~Ison of !.lincolnton, wlho Is City. Representing the North indiV'I.du~ ~rort:erna.rt.ies. second. ~ ~ ties •C!heat. He .co!Ilimelllted rtlhlaJt, now a sotu<lerut art; Bowmaa1• Gmiy Carolina Zeta Chapter was Pres-- Thast 'lS, no fl'alterm.ty !Illi3Ul

SUNDAY'S FUN o·AY, CHARLI.E­BROWN

THE NEW

I'EAIIU7S®

aceordLn;g to hois stlaJtdsties, School of Medkine, to Bonnie ident Chuck Hollis of Bennetts- can a:pproacll ~ i~€-Shmaw ~e- ,_.,_.:.' clleartlin:g a.ol'loss the oolloll!try Unde-rhill, senior coed of Arling- ville, S. C., and Vice-President ly wJotoh vhe ~dea o•f puslhinog ~:-'.:) has _b~me ·a opaont of studerut Jton, V.i•rgjnia. Derme.t McConnel-l of Ohar- i~'~J.

>"{'~ cuo!Jture. A house party was held satur- Ionte. Applicatiop Forms (-~:-1

Beca.U!Se stu<lents· seem :to feaJr day .night aliter the Wake-Van- Pi Kappa Alpha To Be Distributed f'/f,i lo9i.ng sotandmg wlitlh otiheor stu- der.bil!f: game. An open house 1 ':C0b d'8Illbs, ·lOOJllY ~ the mOifltos was also held before and after Robert Caldwell, sophomore of ApQ>Ucaotion forms for a..n ~~':1 o.f "coOQJ·eraote :and •groaodua,te" the ·vanderbilt game. Gastonia, Richard Stanley, soph- emmina.tion .required for ·all ~ ~ and "dot's obetJter •tQo clhea.t :than omore of Beaufort, and Doug son·iooors .graduoaroim.g in Jan- ~ "' to repewt," PlrtiltCJhard sald. Theta Chi Sexton, sophomore of Edenton u.a:r:v, 1966 ru~d ;prepall'inog to :---

S'P'8•rks ;represented rtJhe stu- House parties have been held rocellltly pledged the fraternity. tooah wihl be ·disotributed at '· dtmlt view O'f the !honor code. the past two weeks with com- A gangs!ter party was held at 7 •P. •m. O~t. 5 111 1>he Hu.mani-~ b· He dist.illl.gu.isohoed •between rtJhe bos at each one. the house Saturday night after ties Buil-ddng, Ro:oom C-115. ~ • h-onor eoll!Ilcil amd honor sys- C'"-'- B ly .~t. the Vanderbilt "'arne. Naot oon.Jy lthe fa11 semeS~ter ?:ZL t b • _ _.., _.. ... _ _.. ""h lh un<> yer , so.!o'L'omor& of b , ., em • Y •Suww.rrg :w.ua;~ "' e ·o-noor Sil ,...,,_ R' ._ __ , ~- Under the direction ""' Pete- sotudelllt -teachers but a·lso ~- • ,,:,;:: ""'' i bod er ..... ~~y, lCUI<tl-u ~ce soph- v-'- • , .. " .. coun.,~. ~ -a . • y of y.o-ur omore of Virginia Beach, Va., Hunt, House Manager, the house p.lloo'lllts !oil'" .the "B., cenbifi- !?:-{

h.oel-eet.edn~~~t'Wtiv-;s oa.nd !the B:LJ.l nurton, sO[llhomore of Mrur- was redecora:ted and partially C3Jte aTe ll"equ•ired ,to ·take othe l ;,',! nor ,,.., .. , ... em iiS you ' . . d 'ed Noartion'l!ll Too.cher E~am'illlaroion i ~ / • 1etta Ohio and Wayne Jordan remo e, . . .... SoPM'ks continued hy sayi.nog 50 h.om.or~ f . • December 11, 1965, aeco.Tid~ng ~;:))

that .Situdervt:& '3IDe .gOiing Ito P 0 Du.rham rwent Delta Sigma Phi to Jasper L. Memory, c:haWI'- : }) play an liim;pontaallt opa.rt in through Help ~eek last week. ma.n of .the E.duca,tion Depamt- i',i-ft society as oolle@e g;m.dlllllll:e6 Recently. p~ed are Conrad Mark Horne, senior »f Reids- men.t. ,.,.;,-:,

5"/o DISCOUNT lO WAKE FOREST STUDENTS

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EXPERT MECHANIC -- 8 A. M. - 5 P. M. 'IIherefore, lhe said, lbh-ei.r ih.oo.~ :.r~rrow~ ~=or ~·Greenville, ville, !represented the fraternity The senior •tea-oher grou,p ; -\ esty GlOW is releV'alllt lflo lbhe ISS., everly urch, junior in the Ugly Man contest Thurs- WllTo wiU @mduaote in Ju.ne, ' _ _-:; <loeve!O.p.melllt of lD.Ol'lllll :m.bm ~ed of ~tl-anta, Ga.; Ste~e day. 1966, wiH otoake otJhe exa.mina.- (:·-;

CARTOON BOOKJ and ~lloaJl inltegllity ~ Fisher, semor of South Qharles~ A party was held in the house tion Mal'Cih 19_ The ·d•ate Wihen 'i-'·-i 2898 REYNOLDA RUB by Charles M. Schurz rthey w.illd rtla.ke wti.th ot.hem ton, w. ya., ·to Rose Marie Saturdaor night after the game. a:p:pJoicaltlions woiU ·be d•i&trdbuoted !"

PHONE 723-8939

$~ v11heon !they leave lbhe ·ooiieg.e Owen, semor coed from Greens· Alpha Sigma Phi ~o~.th~e~m~w-=~1~1 ~b=e~a>n:n:o:u::n:oc:ed~~~~~~~~~~~~~[ili~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ · In conclus4on s--,.- add lboro; ~d Jerry Costello, j.unior Febor:ua.'""'. ONLY at your college ..,._....,. of Haf,f';eld Penn to P H ··"

bookstore tlm!t vhe honor system :r&- ....,. • · •• am u- .T~ Hayes, junior of Kensing-sembled a cll.ado fin ltb.elt tt ~nd!t~;n~ nurse Flat Baptist ton, iMd., was elected treasurer!

_ Ill It; lUIIe 11111 Willlbn. IH. was only as sllr0111g 811 1te spL 0 ampa, . or_ida. and Lloyd Hise, junior of Spruce

~;:;::========~~w::.ea.k~~est~~at~n~k:._--:----- Percy Blo:mm, Jumor of Pine was elected IFC represen-":" • Greenville, N. C., was eieotec1 tative. r-· ;o;;--·;;;;·-;;;;c.--~-.--.....,-.... ~-,----..,....,;_ .... ._. ____ ._. __ _;_;____ the Wake Forest Demon Dea- K<aren Roberson, senior coed

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con. of Winter Garden, Fla., will be Kappa Alpha the fraternity's Homecoming

Queen candidate. Brother John 'Xurlington of Danny Gabrial, senior of Sher-

Chapel Hill recently pinned rill's Ford; Peter Gray, sopho­Carlyle Poteat, a student at Ran- more of Cornwall, N. Y.; Steve dolph-Macon Woman's College, Martin, sophomore of Indiana-who Is also frt>m Chapel lml. polis, Indiana; and Joe Shaw,

Sigma Phi Epsilon junior of Milford, N. J. were Senior Brother Lee May of irecently initiated into the fra­

Bethesda, Md., WQS mattied to ternity. Linda Rimel on August 22. Lin- Jim George, former chapter da :is a 1965 graduate of Wake president, visited ot:he fraternity Forest. - recentzy.

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The Ant and the Grasshopper

One sunny day, a grasshopper hopped merrily across the campus. An ant passed by, diligently bearing two bags of coins to his bank, Wachovia.

"Whafs bugging you?" asked the grass­hopper.

"I'm laying up sustenance for winter quar­ter," replied the ant, ·~and recommend you do likewise. This is for my Wachovia Savings Ac­count. You see, Wachovia figures up my interest every three months •.. and figures it up two ways: first with four per cent, then with Daily Interest. I get the larger amount.

"Humph!" scoffed the grasshopper. "And this is for my Wachovia Special CheeR­

ing Account. It helps me keep track of my money. Wachovia sends a statement every month. And my money is protected by Federal Deposit In­surance. No minimum balance required, either. Wachovia even prints my name and address on

checks and deposit slips absoiutely free." "So what's the matter with Father?" snorted

the grasshopper. "01' Dad sends me a nice, big check every Friday."

Paying no heed, the ant went industriously on his way ••• the Wachovla way.

Then winter came ••• and one bleak Friday, OJ' Dad failed to remit the .usual sum to his in­dolent son.

The grasshopper was in a quandary. For he had a date witb a social butteiily and his pockets were empty. In a black moment he even con­sidered insecticide.

Meanwhile, the ant and his ladybug strolled by, deeply involved in Daily Interest.

MORAL: Hop over to Wachovia now! (It's right on the plaza.)

W"ACHOVIA BANK &. TRUST CO:M:PANY

PAGE EIGHT Monday, Oct. 4, 1965 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Bones McKinney LeaVes Trail Of Memories •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

VIEWlNG the DEACS

By DICK PAVLIS SPORTS EDITOR

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Retirement Ends An Era

The era of the flying towels, red socks, and bottles of pepsi is ove1·. Last Tuesday, Wake For­est's master court impressarie, Horace (Bones) McKinney announced his retirement from the · coaching position he held at Wake for eight years.

No longer will basketball fans be treated to this long, lean figure of a man who bounced up and down off benches, pointed his finger Ol' waved his arms at officials, and often provided more fan appeal than the basketball game, itself.

His antics, tantrums, and gyrations became legendary. On and off the basketball court he was one of the most entertaining and refreshing individuals in the game.

McKinney became the head coach at Wake For­est on March 26, 1957, after serving for five years as assistant to coach :i\Iurray Greason.

DEACS \VOX OFTEN

During his eight year tenure as the Deacon basketball mentor, Bones' teams won 122 games and lost 94 for a .565 percentage. And after a poor first two years when his teams won only 16 out of 4 7 games, the basketball teams compiled a .649 percentage, winning 106 games while losing only 47.

For five consecutive seasons (1960-1964) the Deacons ·were finalists in the ACC Tournament. Two years, 1961 and 1962, they were winners of the post season event.

In 1961, the Deacons advanced to the NCAA Eastern Regional finals before losing to St. Jo­seph's of Pennsylvania, 96-86. His 1962 edition, the pinnacle of his coaching success, led by All­American Lennie Chappell, went to the NCAA semifinals before losing to Ohio State, 84-68; then they defeated UCLA, 82-80 for third place.

Played And Coached In NBA Before coming to \Vake Forest, McKinney

played college ball at N. C . .State and UNC. Then, in 1947, he joined the professional ranks and was named to the National Basketball Association All­Pro first team while playing with the Washing­ton Capitals. He served as a player-coach for the Caps during the 1950-51 season before closing out his career with the Boston Celtics in 1952.

Ever since his arrival on the college scene, he has been the focal point of attention. He was one of the most colorful, as well as controversial, coaches in the nation. Many who knew nothing else about Wake Forest knew that Bones coached there.

Despite his antics, he was a respected basket­ball figure-his past record stands fo1· itself. Twice ACC Coach of the Year, his coaching ability was often relegated to a secondary position because of his outgoing nature.

While many have questioned his coaching prow­ess, it can not be denied that he has produced what Dr. Tribble termed, "achievements that have at times been dramatic."

For the last few years, hO\vever, his tenure had become somewhat embroiled. His health declined, his actions and statements often became centers of controversy, particularly in the celebrated fir­ing and then re-hiring of his then assistant. and now head coach, .Jack MurdQck.

Murdock joined the Wake Forest staff in 1960 as freshman coach, a position he held for four years before being moved up to the post of Yar­sity assistant last year.

Can Bones' Spirit Be Replaced? Even though this switch in personnel appears to

be one of name only, Murdock wi11 also have the problem of replacing a spirit.

Who else could generate the excitement of this man, or become involved in so many side-splitting incidents? He had that intangible something that brought a much needed spark of enj ovment and excitement to the sports scene. ·

In a game of many colorful coaches, he was the showman of the showmen.

For who else would t1·~r seat belts to stay on the bench? Who else would run onto the court to·· retrieve a shoe he had kicked off, and then pro­ceed to have his pen drop out of his pocket­while the game was in progress.

And, most memorable of all was the famous broken-chair incident which occmTed in the Dixie Classic of 1960.

Bones, in a fit of a11ger after a loss to N. C. State, picked up a wooden chair and hurled it to the floor. Later, his long-time friend and coaching rival Everett Case presented the chair to him. It then was painted red and ·white and became the prize of the winning team in games between the two schools.

1\'IANY 1\IORE INCIDENTS

These incidents were only a few· of the many that helped to make legendary the name of Bones McKinney. His departure will leave mixed emo­tions, but no one can deny that his presence made basketball more interesting and enjoyable.

The strain of coaching finally forced him out of the game to which he brought so much; his loss will take something out of the game for future students at Wake Forest.

Winning Or Losing Produce_d A Myriad Of Unforgettable Memories

• determination

Bones Directs

\

... with a Competitive Spirit · ~botos by Bill Vernor

• • • with Everett Case

Pre~Game ·Pow-Wow

That. Extra Step

Reco:t:d In Retrospect-1958

Reg, season: Won 6, Lost 16. ACC !tourney: Wo.n. 0, Losrr. 1.

1959 Reg. season: Won 10, Lost 13. ACC .toUIDlley: Won 0, 4lst 1.

- 1960 Reg. seaOOin: Won 19, LoSlt 6. ACC ooum.~y: IWlon 2, Lost 1.

1961 Re!g, season: Won 14, .Loot io. A.CC ltou:rn.ey: Won. 3, Loot 0. Eastern .Reg,: Won 2, Lost 1. D~ea.ted !IJn ~ :by St. J.o-

sep.'h's, 9 6 to 8 6. ·

1962 Reg. season: Won 15, LOOit 8. ACO wurn.ey: Won 3, Lost 0. Eiil:iltem Reg.: Wo-n 3, Lo6t 0. NCAA Sem!i:f,inalJ.s: W 1, L 1.

1968 Reg. sea&oo~.: Won 14, Loot 9. A.CC lt.oll!l'n~y: fWlon 2, Lost 1.

1964 Reg. S(.'!tl.SOll: :Won 14, Lost 10, ACC tlloUl'!D.ey: Won 2, Lost 1.

1965 Reg. season: Won 11, Lost 14. A.OC !tourney: IWlon 1, Lol!lt 1.

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,,

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• Lost s. • Lost o. • Loot o.

1, L 1.

• LOOit 9. ' Loot 1.

Lost 10. Lost 1.

Lost 14. Loot 1.

.... , t" " ..... :

Mur,dock To Inherit Cage Spot

While <the !resignation of Bones McKinney came as a surprise to most,- the choice of his successor W'aJS not an unexpected one.

J.a~k Murdock takes over as acting bead coa'Ch after serving on the coachlng staff a·t Wake Forest since 3.960.

The thirty-year-old Deacon coach had a long association with the man .whom he now re­places, first meeting McKinnEiy when' ihe was only eleven years old. At ·that time ihe ;played baseball for a team thalt Me­Kinney cOadhed.

Basketball . ·Star

NEW OA.G;E OOA<JH

with McKinney, M'W"dock doesn't forsee any fundamental changes in 1lhe :team's style of play. "We'l!l go GIS we've gone before, .. he said. "If we think we need

Later; M'l.11'dock was success- to change anything we will. But fully recruited iby Bones for 'the with a coach of Bones' caliber, Wake. Forest. baSketball team. I don'lt think rwe'll need many While at Wake lle was an out- changes." standing play'er, twilce winning And so, a new basketball All-ACC honors. season will find a change in

Mrer Ibis plia(ying days ended the head coa,ch position. His in 1957, M'lm'dock went into the association with Wake Forest army. Later iheo was head basket- ihas been a long one; his des­lball ocoach aif: Clinton, N. c. jgnation as successor to McKin­High School (1959-1960). He jolD- ney is a welcomed choice. ed the Wake Forest staff as Bob Leonaa:d, the Deacons' &eshman coach in 1960, movmg standout player said that it uP to assistant with the varsity came as a "shook" to learn of last year. McKinney's resignation. But iheo . A difficult season ls sche<luled added that !he was gl.ad .the

for' Mmdock as he assumes his school appointed Murdock role. In addition to their nor- instead of going outside to find mal quota of 14 ACC games, •a repb.cement." the Deacs wiJl play Davidson MurdOck's yooxs of basketball twice, V.P.I. ·twice Vanderbilt, -experience and ibis long asso­Duquesne, Ohio State, Cincin-' dation with Wake Forest and its Dati, Georgia Tech, and St. ll"ecently departed coach certain­Joseph's. ly makes hilm a logical choice

Because of his long association to take over the coaching duties.

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OLD GOLD AND BLACK

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For nice things to wear and relaxed suburban shopping

Monday, Oct. 4, 1961i PAGE NINB'

ARMSTRONG OPTICIANS visit

ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR backer positions. The Melcher By BOB HATHAWAY

COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE "PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS"

One of the most powerful teams twdns le1!tered in 1963 before be· sTAFF WRITER

to -be assembled in the last ten ing ineligible last year. CONTACT LENSES years at the University of Mary- Last year's backfield consi.s­land will invade Bowman Gray ted of ail sophomores, the most Stadium next weekend as the heralded of wham. was Bo Hick­main event in the Deacons' ey, a fleet-footed tailback who homecoming festivities. 11aced for 894 yards, second in

Still smarting from a 21-17 ·the ACC and the Iliinth leading defeat at t:he hands of Wake rusher in the nation. Forest :Last year, Coaeh Tom However, Hickey was dropped Nugent's Terrapins appear from th.e Maryland team in the reaey this year to give the Dea- spring of ·last year due to ac­cons one. of the roughest games ademic difficulties and his po-on the 1965 schedule. sition will be difiieult to fill.

Picked iby many sports writers With Hi<:key gone, the Tf!IlPS to capture their fir.St AOC title, are recylng on a. 215-pound full. the Terps are loaded with ex- back Walt Marciniak who gained !Perience at a:1l positions except 440 yaxds l'llst year, and tai!Jbaek on the left side of the offensive Doug Klingerman, a senior wbo liine. ran from the llal.tba.ck slot last

The last half of the 1964 season year. gave ACC teams a good indica- Filling the quarterback posi­·tion of what to expect from the tion has not been a C(X!IlpUcated Terrnpins in 1965, when they problem lfor Nugent who has won five of t:b.eiJr !last six games three men who are capable of to fimsh with a 5-5 mark. In the tak!ing <>vex the team. last two games, Maryland bliS.llk- Petry Leads Team ed Clemson and Virginia by 'l1h:i:s weekend, however, the scores of 34-0 and 10-0, respec- call will probablY go to Phil tive!y. Petry who ran for 233 yards and

'Many Ret11l'Jlees passed lor 809 more last year. One of the most promising soph­omores is Billy Van Heusen, who led the freshman team in all offensive departments last year.

This year in spring practice, Nugent was greeted !by 32 letter­men, 19 of whom filled the tap 22 positions on the offensive and defensive squads

Maryland's defensive unit ls led lby Tom Cicihowski.; and Matt Avbutina, in at 230 pounds and 220 pounds, respectively.

The number one defensive unit which consisted of all let­termen last yelm', now has Dicit

Kenny Ambrusko is the third of the tihree capable signal­callers, but will probably see aotion at the. wingback spot. Amlbrusko started at q\llal'lter­barck for the Ter.ps a year ago.

The end positions willlbe field­ed by Chuck Myrtle and Pick Absher. a pair of highly-rated juniors. MyDtJ.e a<:counted for 23() yardS Last year wbile Ab­sher, Maryland's leacling pass­receiver in 1964, rolled u;p 268 yatrds on 22 catches.

Eernm-do Branson, the Ter­rapins human scoreboard, takes care of the extra points and field goals. Branson, whose number changes wiJth each :point he scores, aCICOunted for nine FG's and 17 PAT's to lead the teoam.

Ellison Needs NewTankmen

Swimming pmctice began 1ast Tuesday, ibut coach Leo El­lison doesn'tt yet have an eval­uation of the !J?rospeots for this year's team.

Tfte Derucon tankmen are b.Oip­ing to improve on last year's -record of only one· dual-meet win. Hampered •all season by Lack of depth and numerous in­juries, the Deacs did moanage a fifth place in the ACC tourna­ment when Drew Taylol'l won oboth the three and fi.vHDeter diving events.

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J·im Bishop, a muscular fresh­man from Roanoke, Virginia, is Wake Forest's newest champion. Jim hafted 735 pounds in three tries Saturday, September 25, to win the middle-weight divi­sion :in the! Carolinas' Weight­Lifting Championships.

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The AAU-sanctioned contest. held at the Winston-Salem Y. M. IC. A., attracted parocipants from all over North and South Carollll'a. •However, Jim's clos­est CODl(petitor !Was 135 pounds below Jim's winning lift.

()pea Enn Nlaht '1'II1 t lfoada7 ftroQb Friday Located Ground Floor of Nissen Bl., 312 West 4th S&.

Bishop's 735 pound total was made up of three different liift.s. He pressea 250 pounds, SDaltcbed 215, and hoisted 270 in the clean­and-jerk. · 'l.1his total was 9Q pounds more than his previous high of 645, achieved in the Southern Championships at Higb Point last Ma:y.

His wrestLing coach at Pat­rick Henry High School firs1j ·got Jim interested in weiglht lift­ing to keep in shape· for wrestl­ing. Jim. kept it up, though, af­ter .the season was through, and in bw"o-wld-a-half years tbat he has been tl'18ining, 'heo 'has com­peted in five tournaments, plac· ing in all nve of them. This, however, was his first victary.

As to Ibis plans for the tuture, Jim is inde:f:ini.te. He hopes to eDter the East Coast Champion­ships in Atlantic City this win­ter, but he hasn'lt made any plans beyond that.

One event that is alW~ays on an amateur athlete's mind is the Ol(ympi-c games. He feeLs that :by 1972 he might be in a posi­tion to try out for the team, as it takes six to eight years for •a weight lifter to reach his peak.

With rthe progress he has made so far, though, no one can deny him a claim to sports prowess unique on the Wake Forest cam­pus.

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Isn't itt· tmeyou . . Jomed th

- e Dodge Rebeffion1 Forget all you've seen and heard about '66 cars. Because Coronet Is here i .. sharp, smart and sassy, the greatest thing from Dodge since Year One. Loaded with luxury the higher-priced cars haven't caught onto yet. With a choice of five engines, each one designed to make the walls of Dullsville come tumbling down. And with a whole slew of standard equipment that used to cost extra. like an outside rear view mirror. A padded

dash for extra safety. Variable-speed electric windshield wipers and washers. Backup lights. Turn signals. Seat belts, two front and two rear. And, as some extra frosting on the Coronet cake, a 5-year or 50,000-mile warranty.•

Enough said to get you really tempted? Now let's get away from the look-alike, drive-alike, first-cousin cars with Coronet, a car with a lively personality all its own.

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•HERE'S HOW DODGE'S 5-YEAR, 50,000-MILE ENGINE AND DRIVE TRAUI WARRANTY PROTECTS YOU: Chrysler Corporation c:onftdtntiY warrants all o! the followln11 vital parts of its 1966 cars for 5 years or 50,000 miles, whichever comas flrs~ durlnll which time anY such parts that prove detective in materill and workmanship will byeplaced or repaired at a Chrysler Motors Corporation Authorized Dealer's place of buliniiSS without charge lor such parts or lobar: mgme block, head and Internal parts, intake manifold, water JlllrnJJ, transmission case and Internal pam (exceptlnll manual clutch), torque converter, drive shaH. universal joints, rear axle and differential. and rear wheel bearings. REQUIRED MAINTENANCE: Tha following maintonance services are required under !lie warranty-change engine oil every 3 months or 4,000 miles, whlehever comes first; reploce oil filter avery second oil chongo· cle•n carburetor air filter every 6 months and replace It ~2years;and avery8months!urnlsh evldenceoftlils required aervlcetoa Chrysler Motors Corporation Authorized Dealer and request hiiR to Certlf7 receipt or such evldtnc. and ~our car's mlltaae. Simple enauah fllr sueh Important protection.

Join the Dodge Rebellion at your Dodge Dealer's.

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PAGE TEN Monday, Oct. 4, 1965 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Bob Grant Sparks Wake Lin~

Deacs Blank Vanderbilt, 7-0 :By DIOK PAVLIS

SPORTS EDITOR

dJore.s •b y 7-0 in •th.e a.nnual PiooiDIOnt BoWll .game here.

of:flense am.d giving IV<"Iake its I J'001t, era.cked over the midd:le Till<! sophomore tba.!iklle Bob •h·wrd..earoed Wll.n. f01r .bhe •ta.ny. Gr.anlt, a. 6 '2", 21 O~pou.ooer

·SATURDAY, OCT. 2 -Boob Ga-Mlt WQD. !the OU•l:et:alilding player a ward a.nd •the Deaoons wo.n tllmr flrst game, defeat­ing tile Va:nderMLt Commo-

· W·a.ke <mly .m a.n.aged •to 5C()(re

onee, ·bu·t •llhlart: was more tbJS.n enoug'h. The Deaoons .pl.a.yed like Demons :on defense, ef­fectively checldmig rtlhe Vandy

The Baoptlst5' score ciLDle 10n the s.eoo.nd ,pd.aoy o! .the .foUJl"lth Q:uatrter. Joe Caorazro, ~ho e.a.r­Jdoer lb.ad a 29-y.asnl -touchdown mu.n n'IIJJllfied .by a ipena.lrt.y, -dove l.n. fro.m one )'lllJI"(( out. 'I1he kick was ·good, IIIJilod lt.he Deeoo.ns hl!1d ·thed!r 7-0 V'ietoll"Y.

The Oomlmod,ores gene.rruted knoW'JI as "M!r. Clean." Cilean a .thlrerut mild way in the Jast u:p :he d1d -as ·he 'W'alS d.n oo. 14 q u..a:nter oas .they •moved down~ tackJ.es aDJd geneao.aldy llllade .his field to the Dea.oon seven-}'1!llnl presem.ce ·kmoown lbo tthe Oom-lii·ne witih 7:15 ;remadllti.n.g. modo.re OO.Ck.fdeild.

However, V.amdy k·idcer Dtck Bo tWdhl!:ams, ·Ly:nn Nesbitt,

Fraternities Start Grid Competition

Lemay, W'hose •three f.ield Joe Carozo, atlld A.nodoy Ear.per goals loaslt yea,r odeflewted Wake were ollllY oa few !(}( <the others Forest, then lllli&"!ed one f,rom Wlhooe sh3JI'!P deilensive ;play

T.he .g.a.me 0~.00 Wlilth Ken- 15 yruros omt. This Wl:lS •the hetped tpave ·tlhe way.to vlot.ory. DIY Haus<wailid lh!irtttli·lllg" J10e ~a- l<ast time •bhe Viilsi•oors .got Th·Ls w.as •the Deaeon.s' ffi.rst 2lO f01r 15 y.ar.d:s oanod :a flrSit '()lose en.OU@h •to ·poroduce a sh.utou•t silnce SeP.t. 20, ·1958 odiown. Bwt after ·tlh'IS tbhe s~o11'1inog •llhrea.t when •bhey ·hla.nked .the U.ni-

By D.'\ VE ROBERTS STAFF WRITER

yandy defe~, II'!ank~ se:ven.th Lea<Lin.g 11:lhe. Deaco.n defense venrtty of Moa.ryband, 34-0. 1u •bhe n.a.tlon, '()()ntMned o!Jhe -------------------------­

The iJrutJro.mnmaJ footba-ll S'!la­SQ>n began with a .bang tJhis week, as llast yeaa-' s ogtrlod ch.a.m1P1-<>115 won otheilr f·iorst .two gt>.mes. • 'J1heta Cthli, th'll defen&ng

champions, defe.a.te.d Ka.ppa Al•ph.a. 13 tOO 2 and squeezed iby Lambda Chi 7 •to 6. Quar­terback L!LTTY Gostello, :pwss­eM.cdler Joa.ck Lewis, and de­fensive specialist Edol()W Dark­er •led the way 1to •the opeMnlg wilD., a.n.d 1Jhe second fll3,me waa a ti@hrt defensive bruttle wd:th an .e:xrt:ra ,point othe deciding twloly.

Kappa Sigs Strong

The Kru!}pa. Sigs a.ppOOJr to .be lthe -oMef ·ob•aJ.len.ge.r for t:he title o!Jlrls faJ·l, ha:vdng won !their fi.nst t"'IVO .eontesJts hy ·hwge scores. On MoiJJday 1they stoon,p­ed -the Si.g Eps 25 ·tO 8, and Thursday ,tJhey enjoye-d a ter­rific second haM . d.n •beaJti.ng De!Jta S~g 54 ItO 2 0.

fensiveJy, 1n <Jither action, •the KA's

r.al•lied from ltJheir opend.ng Jooss to smotJher Atl,ph:a Sig 38 to 6, and Delta Sig stau'S M.ark H<l:r.n a-nd Mac Smd.llh Joo lt.he way to a 41 •to 13 romtp <>v-eor A1pha Sig ·tn ttheir open<;r. And fima.l­ly, the PiKA's sohu.t out sLgma Cib.i by a SJCOO'e of 9 to 0.

'.Dhe :KaaJ;poa. Sigs won wt yco.r's AH-Coa.mpus 'DroJ)Ih.y, and •they are of! .to a f•L)'Itlllg sta.rt ·towa;rd wli.nn.in.g lilt a;gadn. 'l1he­ta Ohoi's tohirod. :p.la:ce finLshers agradn .Look str.o.ng on 1bhe gu-id­irou, ·rund •tlhe rwnner-u.p KA's a;re .a d.a.r.k~oorse football {X)ID.­

tender. Tuornin•g .to Indep.endenrt: foot­

bruH, the.r"' a;re 111ow enou.gh teams to f01rm one larg-e •league and a second ·league wiJ.l be formed if enou.g.h moterest is sohow,n. New team en.tries should be made •by tomorow (Tues­<1ay).

The firs1t round of .tennds and golf opaay ds in ,pr<lgr.ess al!ld resul·ts will •IIJPpewr in next week's issue. C.ross-coun·try ·rDnnel'\s should .begiill p.raotic­ing now,' for race day will be announced next week. iEnttJies

Deaco-ns.

Punting · Dnel

~he ·ehdef :utJbr.action of the t.kstt .]laJf waa Jtlhe WO!!'kout .g'iven '93/eh punter. Vandy's Jerry 'Sihaf<l/l'ld had Jto ·roiek fiV1e t.:i:mes oand W.ake's Ro.n Sh<i11Jd.rugloaw p.unoted on six oe­OOSJio.ns.

T.he second .haJ.f .sotrurltoo outt as a replay 'Of othe ·:fltrst. Van­der:bilt T<ec.eived the kiclooff­a.nd W'en•t IIJOWhere.

Wake, Jtoo, woo uma·b~e .to get its SP'Uiilter.i.n.g offei!ISe under way Ulllt:il olaJte in .the tllMrd qua.rter.

'!'!alti.Illg oo'Ver on the Vam.der­lJ.i:lt 4 2-:y:rund Une, after sf:o:p­ping ,tJhe Commodores on ,fJhei-r own n.i.nc :aJn.d f01rcin.g them •to klick, tthe D.eoaes utncr.ea.sheod tbhed.r win Jlin:g odr.i ve.

U.sing Joe Oar.azo, HecJr, ·and Mike Kelly, Wake did ·an exeeolleJ!Jt job of moving . the ·baR on 'the .g.round. The key play :in ttJhe drive ·occurred when, woiJth ·llllil'd down and 10 on ·the V.andy 15, Heck wenot over origh1t .guard f·or 13 yards to ·the Oom.modo.r.e ·two.

Leading :by only seven poinots at halftime, the :K!ap.p·a S.igs ;racke-d up 33 seco.nd-'haJ..f points. Ghar.les Van IWtagner rred the w.ay b~- scoring ,(Jhoree touchdowns, and Cla;rk DiJ.lon and Sam Todd mam-ed de-

are not necessall'y in advance, Tlwn, with 40 secon<!s gone and the cour5e wiH be ·around in t11e last qui\Jr.ter, senior h·rulf­the campus, as usu<l!l. back Car:azo, in his second ef-

Fearless Forecasts Pavlis Ne1son Ashton Roberts Verno:r (2·7·1) (8·6-1) (8-6-1) (5-4~1) (6-3-1)

~loa.n.d at Wake Fores<t Wake Wake Wake W.ake Mod. ,P~tJt a:t Duke Duke Dnke Duke Pi tit. Duke tUNC at N.C. smte UNC UNC UNO UNO UNO ClemsOill. at Geongda. G.u.. Ga. Clemson Ga. Ga. 1'1lort!da st. aJt Kellltucky Ky, Ky. Ky. Kw". Ky. A.labama J3lt V:undm:Mlt Bam a B.a.ma Bruma Blunla Barna IWIIooo.n6iln ad: Nebriaska Noe.b, Neb. Neb. Neb. Neb. Texas 8/t Okllalhoma Te:ms Te:xias OkJ.a. Te:DIIl Texlas ~ cllt Memphis :St. 'l1u.lsa 'Tiu.lsa. 'I1u.lsa 'DuJsa Tu.lea .Alriilly oat Notre Dame N.D. N.D. N.D. N.D. N.D.

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--PHOTO BY VERNOR RON SBILLINGLA.W blasts ball by block-hurdling Wolfpack lineman.

Beat Maryland

Swingline

P1liZIJMEN1S [1] Divide 30 by ~

and add 10. What is the

llDIWer? (Anawen

belaw)

Harriers Defeated In Meet

By RUDY ASBn'ON STAFF WRITER

. 1-n •tJh.elr f!Jil"Sit Cll"OOs-'()()U~ meat of ttih-e season, otihe ~ OOill h.all'II'Iiers Wlell'.e vietd.ms of a dou:ble stlroke of bad: 1 uek a.nd iJJost ,botJh Jliall ves ~ f ltth-edir tri--meet.

-. Ln lthe meet at Duke Sialtw­day, ot:he Doalcs •lost •to Duik.e 1 7-4 5, atlld .00. N.ooflh Oa.roli·na. Statte, 23-32 (.low soore wdons)

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t

J·uslt rt:wo odazys .~fore the meet, Deacon 'Coruch Bitl!l J or dam. .f'()unod olllt tthat Jfun · HOtPe a iP~ s01p.homore, w-as i:n.ellilgihle lbeMusoe of a mdl!lu•te detadll ltn semester •regUJlaltiOII!S J OO'dam. ds still .hoping to :ge tthe <!ooision reversoo.

e

--()

e

If .tJhis .event w.a.sn •,t enoulglh bad luck for O·ne m~. lth 'DeaooiliS' lead runner, A1 Vieh m.a.n, spraJm.oo 'his oan·klle hadf way •thll"'Ou,glh :the 11"\ace. Alt o!Jhe tmme, V'ieh.man WillS rullliJiimg wilflh rtlh.e oleaJd.er.s, but ,hoa,d t setrt.le f01r a. pad•n.J5ul 1 01th~p~ae r.ltnJ!ish

r

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'I1b.~ ·loeaddtn.g Deacon fin~!fue was John HodSidon, who •Ptla:ced f()U/J'ltlh. TJJe ll'est of ,tJhe eligti:ble :r.tLnn.ers woce not in -t()•P coon diftion aJilJd placed .flaJr ·back in Jt:Jh-e crowd.

Frosh Split In tlhe fll"eSh:rrum meet, •t:he

Baby Deacs sp.l·it, beruti·ng N, C Strute •by 20-41 an-d .Josin•g a close b<~~tltll·e wdth Duke, 28-29 J1m SJ:i.ef.fer og:we an exceol 1erut perl<>or.ma.n•ce aJJ.d lli-n·ished

-fomnth.

Coach Jo:ndiaon Sltlill !l"ellllains 'OllJf:!Lmjsltic about hin val"SWty and ·fll"eSJhmlain. .teams and ex Peets Ito tbe in. 'the wjn eoJ.umon

-.soo.n .

Baby Deacs Washed Out

t t --

Tohe Ba.by Deacs' .flfes.h.mMl fo•oltba.ll game Wilth UNC a Chavel Hilol was .rained on ·1aslt F~·ida.(Y and ·lm.s been re &CJ1Ieduled fo~· F.rid·ay, Novem ber f·ifbh.

-

vV.ith 1Jh.e s·ched u.led ope.ner dela•yed, •the frosh wiH .open their s~on •rut 'home ,tJh'is· F;ri day a.gadnst Clemso ... The ,g:ame w.iJ1 st.ant .a;t 3: 0 0 ,p.-m. O·D tthe P!f'UIC/tlice field a.d·ja<:ent <to tlhe gyllll.

'Dhe only other W.ome -con­test for .the Ba.by Deacs• is seot fotr October 29 .a,gainst Duke.

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