i bapti~ts · student magazine. the issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. sylvia...

8
e was ended, ·made l·zone e 12-6. as no d the were gEp's 11er on I raeed tte for •re iri- • With· 'lay w ack in later, Donnie ·er the - Bryan's New Book Bebltes · African Problems ,, -.. Page 2 XL'Vq I ' llt n --· .. * * * Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem,. North Carolina, Monday,- November 13, 1961 ,State· Convene In Convention's History ·Shows , With College (• . dance. Students argue that Wake Forest could get along without the con- vention's modw {about ·six per cent _of Jthe total budget),-· and that since the Baptists conti.Ii.ue to insist upon pushing their moral. stand- ards on the College, the Boar<Lof Trustees· should just pull up stakes and break away. · · Convention Power The is, to understate, not quite that simple. In a very real sense, convention "owns" Wake Forest College, and its power over the Trustees, and consequently, over tlle College, is absolute. Before going further/into the present circumstances, however, a brief outline of the beginnings of. the convention .and the College, and of the workings of the convention, may serve to throw .some light on the problem, a.nd to provide background for this week's activities. The Baptist State Convention was March 26, 1830, N. C., :by seven ministers and seven laymen, members the "North Carolina Baptist Benevolent Society." The society had been formed to raise funds traveling ministers m North Carolina, and at a meetmg on this date the 14 members pre- sent resolved to transform the organization into a state convention. Organization Grows Rapidly Samuel Wait, who preached the sermon at llie Baptist Meeting House that morning,- became general agent of the convention. Within . two' years, the zation had assumed state-wide ac- tivilties, and, heartened lby good attendance began a: vigorous ex- \• pansion program. In '1833 the · "North Carolina Baptist Interpre- cter" was first published by the con- vention, and this monthly became the weekly "Biblical Recorder," which has survived Ito the present. Parisians At Salem · .. Then on Feb. 3, 1834, the conyen- " tion, having been granted a char- ter by the State Legislature, O:{len- ed the "Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute" in Wake County Ito pro- vide facilities .for. young ministers ·to obtain an· education. The Insti- tute was rechartered as Wake For- est College in +938. \. Charier Grants Ownership It should be. noted ihat the char- ter, granJted by the State Legisla- ture to the convention, provided for ltb.e of an insti- tute of education owned by the con- vention·:· This - is the relationship which exists today. Through the latter 1800's the . convention carried on the state missions and estalblished ·Sunday schools, · orphans' homes and wo- men's missionary societies. In 1919-20 various a g en c i e s (Contiilued on page 5) Two Students. AhoutMrica tk * Forensics Season In Full Swing; TV, Cambridge, On .Tap Page 3 NUMBER !J Greensboro Top Facing Delegates: Integration, Loan Requests

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Page 1: I Bapti~tS · Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine. The magazine will 'feature an in terview

e was

ended, ~pass,

·made l·zone e 12-6. as no

d the were

gEp's 11er on I

raeed tte for

•re iri­• With· 'lay w ack in later,

Donnie ·er the

-

Bryan's New Book JW~; Bebltes

· African Problems ,, -.. Page 2

.VOL~E XL'Vq

I '

llt n --· ..

* * * Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem,. North Carolina, Monday,- November 13, 1961

, State· Bapti~tS Convene Tod~y In Convention's History ·Shows , ~elationship With College

(•

. dance. Students argue that Wake Forest could get along without the con­

vention's modw {about ·six per cent _of Jthe total budget),-· and that since the Baptists conti.Ii.ue to insist upon pushing their moral. stand­ards on the College, the Boar<Lof Trustees· should just pull up stakes and break away. · ·

Convention ~s Power The s~ation is, to understate, not quite that simple. In a very real

~ sense, th~ convention "owns" Wake Forest College, and its power over the Trustees, and consequently, over tlle College, is absolute.

Before going further/into the present circumstances, however, a brief outline of the beginnings of. the convention .and the College, and of the workings of the convention, may serve to throw .some light on the problem, a.nd to provide background for this week's activities.

The Baptist State Convention was f~unded o~ March 26, 1830, G~eenville, N. C., :by seven ministers and seven laymen, members the "North Carolina Baptist Benevolent Society."

The society had been formed to raise funds fu~ traveling ministers m North Carolina, and at a meetmg on this date the 14 members pre­sent resolved to transform the organization into a state convention.

Organization Grows Rapidly Samuel Wait, who preached the sermon at llie Baptist Meeting House

that morning,- became general agent of the convention. Within . two' years, the o~gani­

zation had assumed state-wide ac­tivilties, and, heartened lby good attendance began a: vigorous ex-

\• pansion program. In '1833 the · "North Carolina Baptist Interpre­cter" was first published by the con­vention, and this monthly became the weekly "Biblical Recorder," which has survived Ito the present.

Parisians At Salem · ..

Then on Feb. 3, 1834, the conyen-" tion, having been granted a char­

ter by the State Legislature, O:{len­ed the "Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute" in Wake County Ito pro­vide facilities .for. young ministers

·to obtain an· education. The Insti­tute was rechartered as Wake For-est College in +938. \.

Charier Grants Ownership It should be. noted ihat the char­

ter, granJted by the State Legisla­ture to the convention, provided for ltb.e e~tablishment of an insti­tute of education owned by the con­vention·:· This - is the relationship which exists today.

Through the latter 1800's the . convention carried on the state missions and estalblished ·Sunday schools, · orphans' homes and wo­men's missionary societies.

In 1919-20 various a g en c i e s (Contiilued on page 5)

Two Students. AttendM~et4lg AhoutMrica

tk *

Forensics Season In Full Swing; TV, Cambridge, On .Tap

Page 3

NUMBER !J

Greensboro Top Is~ues Facing Delegates: Integration, Loan Requests

Page 2: I Bapti~tS · Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine. The magazine will 'feature an in terview

PAGE TWO Monday, Nov. 13, 1961 OLD GOLD AND BLACK

WF Preparing Bolllh Shelters

Drama Theme For Magazine

111is weekend students will re­ceive their second issue of the Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea­ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine.

The magazine will 'feature an in­terview with Paul Greene, a fa­mous dramatist of Chapel Hill, noted for his· performance in the play "In Abraham's B'l>som." He was interviewed by Oscar Creech, senior of New Orleans, La.

Other fealtures will be_ a photo­graphic essay on the Wake Forest theatre- production • of ''Hamlet" by guest photographer Corey Turner; a play "All the Little Boys" by Charles Stone, junior of Roanoke, Va.; and a series of poems by Dr. Elizabeth Phillips, assistant pro· fessor of English.

Also book reviews by Dr. Richard Eaton, instructor in English; Ange­la Johnson, senior of Wilmington; and B. C. May, freshman of Alex­andria, Va.

The magazine also includes a story by Sonny Berces. senior of Mt. Holly; a series of cartoons by guest contributer Howard Per· kins, cartoonist for ,The Carolinian at Western North Carolina College.

Also, a critical discussion on Sha-kespeare as a Playwright by James H. Walton, director of the Wake Forest theater as told to Linda Sutherland, sophomore of Macon, Ga. and Jolm Rosenthal, sophomore of New York City.

Illustrations included' are by ·Mary Martin Pickard, junior of Lexington, and Kay Overman, junior of Roanoke Rapids'.

C. F. Dwiggins , Gives - A Haircut

"Designed With Yon In Mind" At

WAKE FOREST COLLEGE BARBER SHOP

"On The Campus"

PORTABLES • EtEOTRIOS • STAIIDARDS The Typewriter

Showroom Of The Seuth

KeUy Typewriter Co. 1118 W. 4th ST.

"TYl'EWRITER IS OUR MIDDLB NAJIB"

' Ope_ra Star

.loins: Wake, Music Staff

Contralto Will Sing

The.re's No Secret

COX PHARMACY, Inc. In CeDe11e VWaa:e

(Just Off Robia Hood Read)

Triangle Restaurant And· Drive · In

Stratford- Center --· So. Stratford Road

•• • • •

Pizza and Spaghetti our Speciality

A Va·riety of Foods to be Selected From Our Menu

Curb Service

Open 7 Days A Week From lOa. m.- 2 a.m.

It's what's u'g 'front that c~unts ' .

IFil.TER·BLENDI is yours iii Winston and only Winston. Up front yeu get rich golden tobaccos specially selected and specially--processed for filter smokif1g. Smoke Winston.

n.t. Rel'Dolda Tobacco Co., Winston-'Balem, N. C.

liVINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette shoqld! ' ' ..

I•,

•,I

Page 3: I Bapti~tS · Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine. The magazine will 'feature an in terview

cret 1gs. You >f experi· itude and techanical ,,

·fo)111ula

troblems -process

MPANY .Ell, N.C.

0

c.

:s

-' -

lty

-

.}

1 •j

I•.

•.I

,,

',.. ' ' 'j

·Fall Forensic Activities 'Flourish - . ,. .

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Nov.l3,1961 PAGE THREE ..

.: .. ·Pitt ·wins -... In Can,pus. Touiri.ey ·

N'au Fernaon. Gives:- A Haircut

"Designed wiih You 1D MJDd••. B:v . Appomtmea&

At 'W. 4TH STREET

BARBER SHOP ~ Blqek West of sears

Reznick's ,., Rec~ds • NORTHSIDE SHOPPING CENT.BB

e .UO N. LIBERTY ST. \

dAZl; -:- POPULAR -- CUSSICS SQII'GLES AND ALBuMs

( l

. i

For Nice Things To Wear And Relaxed Suburban Shopp~

Visit

.Thruway Shopping Center

· Open Ever,. Night TDJ i MondQ TllroadJ: Frlc187

CAFETERIA

CANDLELIGHT SUPPER Every Sunday Night

5·- 7 p.m. M•a.gnolia Room

MAGNOLIA ROOM COFFEE HOUR

C. B •. BILL. DIR •. OF FOOD SERVICES :&OOMS 21-22, RF.;YNOLDA BALL

Two Locations

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NORTH SIDE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS ,, ,

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PAUL T. MYERS Restaurant

and Catering ·Service

'· fea~uring • • • e FAMOUS ORIGINAL PAUL T. MYERS

BAR-B-Q

e SANDWICHES-TRAYS-SHORT ORDERS

e DELICIOUS PLATE LUNCHES, ONLY 70c

e CURB SERVICE

e . ONLY ONE MILE FROM THE CAMPUS

e CATERING TO FRATERNITIES AND PARTIES

Located On Corner Of Polo Road And Indiana Ave.

For Reservations PA 42004

SPECIAL· WEEK ··END RATES For Students

For Details Call PA 3-0779

Page 4: I Bapti~tS · Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine. The magazine will 'feature an in terview

* · * * Wake Forest College * * *

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.,-MONDAY, NOV. 13, 1961

Tough Traffic· Problem How about a tunnel under the

Wake Forest College campus to link Silas Creek Parkway and Thirty-third street'?

Absurd? Yes, on the score of cost alone. It would be prohibitive. ·

. would do extensive violence to its value as a residential street. The street is now largely built-up, and 1·esidents understandably would ob­ject to having a throughfare in their front yards. .

But the idea serves to capsule a tough problem. A tunnel would be the only way of meeting all objectives to extending the new parkway to its logical connection with Thirty-third.

Going north of the campus might be feasible. But that would seem to offer a less direct connection. It would also take a big chunk of college property and could be expensive. .

The link-up is desirable from an engineering standpoint to complete the city's urban loop between the In­terstate Expressway on the west and the North-South Expressway on the east. And there is growing indication that the addition of prime traffic gen­erators in the area-the Western Elec­tric office building on Reynolda Road, the new R. J. Reynolds cigarette fac­tory on Thirty-third and the Hanes Hosiery plant on Cherry extension­are hastening the need f"or the pro­posed connection.

A route just south of Faculty Drive on property of the Old Town Club golf course, too, would entail con­siderable expense. Faculty Drive resi­dents do not look with favor either on having a throughfare in their back­yards. 0 bj ection is also raised that this route would separate the college­from an area suitable for f)-lture ex­pansion.

The question is how to provide the link at a justifiable cost without im­posing undue hardships on the Col­lege and property owners.

So what else besides a tunnel. will do? But there may yet be a surface route which, while it might not satisfy all objectives ·Will at least meet the major ones.

The cheapest method would prob­ably be to follow the route of Faculty Drive or some part of it. But that

And fortunately, consideration of possible routes is being carried out in close consultation and mutual respect among college officials, city planners and officials and state highway en-gineers.

-Twin City Sentinel

Integration Is Overdue This week's session of the Baptist

State Convention will be presented with a resolution which, if passed, may once and for all bring about the end of racial discrimination in the colleges affiliated with the North Carolina Baptists.

_ The report of the Convention's Christian Life Committee wm recom­mend that resolutions adopted in 1955 and 1959 urging the Boards of Trust-:­ees of the colleges to study the prob­lem of integration be renewed and expanded to express "the earnest de­sire of the convention" that discrimi­natory practices be discontinued.

The resolutions of the past have told the Boards of Trustees that they could open their colleges to Negroes, but implicit in these statements has seemed to be the condition that the trustees make quite certain that a minimus of trouble would result from integration.

Consequently, only two out of the seven colleges, Wake Forest and Mars Hill, have taken any steps at all to­wards admitting Negroes in the past six years, and Wake Forest's steps have been preliminary ones.

This year's resolution, however, if adopted. should prove to a much gr.eater e.1.-tent to be a mandate to the Boards of Trustees, not only allowing them to bring about integration, but strong-ly recommending that they do so without further delay.

We reiterate our contention that in­tegration would definite-ly be for the good of ·wake Forest, and strongly recommend to the delegates in Greens­boro that this resolution be adopted.

Integration fell due- at Wake For­est last year when the faculty recom­mended the move, and Nigerian Ed­-..vat·d Reynolds applied for admission. The Trustees, perhaps a little wary of the consequences of one big step, vetoed the plan and instead set up in­tegration on a less controversial basis, allowing Negroes to enroll in the sum­mer sessions, night school and grad­uate schools.

The lack of any controversy what­soever over these moves should be convincing evidence to the convention that integration can be accomplished with practically no drastic conse­quences.

Now that integration is overdue at Wake Forest, the Trustees could well take the action necessary to open the doors of the College to all qualified students, regardless of the color of their skin.

The active support of such a move by the convention would, we feel, be a principle factor in bringing about progressive action, toward integration of the undergraduate school-action which would greatly enhance our pride, as students, in Wake Forest Colleg-e.

-C. 0.

Chapel Announcements The Chapel Committee has shied

a way from the practice of limiting an­nouncements prior to the chapei pro-gram. .

This greatly lessens the effective­ness of chapel, since by the time the long list of announcements is com­pleted, the student interest has wan­dered and any speaker has two strikes against him before he begins to speak, not to speak of being rushed for time.

True, there are many announce­ments to be made concerning coming weekend activities, but there are also ample media by which these may be publicized- WFDD, for example, is

glad to make announcements of com­ing events. Bulletin boards, the infor­mation desk, and numerous poster dis-

. play areas also provide further ways of making announcements.

Also, it is debatable whether or not students hear many of the an­nouncements, so why spend time the speaker might be able to use?

Eliminating the announcements en­tirely might cause temporary publici~ ty problems for some groups, but these would not be disastrou~ and could be solved without too much trouble.

-R.S.

LYNNE SMATHERS IRVIN WILLIAMS Editor Business Manager

Found~d January 16, 1916, as the student newsl}aper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold 8lld ~l:a.ck is published each 'Monday during the schoDl year except during exrunination and holiday periods -as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

JIM BA'M'ERSON Associate Editor

CAROLYN YOUNG Managing Editor

JACK RAMRICK Sports Editor

CHARLES OSOLIN RAY SOUTHARD BLAKE AYDLETT Assistant Editor Assistant Editor Circulation Mana•er

COLUMNISTS: F. Bruce Bach, Stanley H. ASSISTANT S!'ORTS·E:QITOR: Ernie Accorsi. Jackman, Angela Johnson, Lewis Morgan, SPORTS STAFF: Bill Bentz, Steve Bost, Barry Charles Stone. Dorsey, Dennis Hoff. ·Jim McKinnen, Joe CARTOONIST: Peter Wong. Staggers, Pat Williams, Rodger Wood.

EDITORIAL STAFF: Sandy Barnes, Barbara Bennett, Pam Clodfelter, Marvin Coble, Llneta Craven, Bob Dick, Kay Doenges, Linda Eagles, Ron Enders, Jon Flledner, ·'Kelly Griffith, Glenn Hamm, Adrian King, Caroline King, June King, Bob Krause, Cliff Lowery, Jim McKinnon, Walt ·Pettit, Jan McQaere, Susie Simmons, Leon Spencer, Phyllis Steele, Jay Stroud, Dave Sumler, Sandy 'Thomas, Elizabeth Unruh, Kay Wilson, Frank Wood, Jo De Youn~. ·

BUSINESS STAFF: Nancy Howell, Roy Rockwell, Bill Spates, Bill Watson.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertisirig by Na­tional Advertising Service, Inc. Subserlption rate: $2.00 per year. Second-Class man privi-leges authorized at Winston-Salem, N. C. ·

Telephone PArk 5-9711 P. 0. Box 75G'l Extension 215 Reynolda Branch

Offices Jn lteJDOida Hall 225-227 Wfnsten.Salem, N. C.

/ '

Silas Cree~ Parkway /

I

I THE CARPETBAG By STANLEY H. JACKMAN

Staff Columnist There is a time for. men to be

passive, and .a time for men to be active ... very active. And ancient pl'ayer asks £or the patience "to bear with those things which can­not .be changed, the courage .to' · change those things which can (and should) be changed, rand the wisdom to know the lOne from the other/' This is such a time.

Some years ago, a dream was born in the minds of Wake Forest. That dream . . . to improve the physical plant of the college. That dream came true to a greater ex­tent than even the .most "head-in­the- sky" dreamer among theiil could have anticipated.

The college moved to its p1·es~nt site, •built a campus mimatched in its beauty, and located in. a way unique ~mong campuses, a very real -part of the city, and yet pro­vided that ;neither party would be in the other's back yard. •

And now, the d€1Ilons of road construction seek not only to make Wake Forest somebody's back­yard, but to provide it wital the easiest possible route to becom­ing an unslightly slum . . . a disreputable eyesore to w.inston­Salem and a thing of apology, dust, horns and speeding cars.

This is truly a thing which wis­dom a;nd <:ommon sense reveal as ready for some kind of a stand.

You have the power to make this stand. You joked about whad; last year's cartoonist called the "Bost­wick Expressway," ·but are you aware of the real and gruesome expressway that now !mocks at the front door of the college?

"It can't happen," no longer has. any teeth i;n !it. Recent Winston­Salem papers point that out clear­ly. The engineers are seeki~g "an acceptable route.'' There is no such route.

'I1he college is the victim of some abrupt but quiet changes of plans,

·and the result ... a tarred and ugly entra:nce to our mo·St sacred :POssession. We are told that this is "temporary," hut owe. have eyes to .see with.

As the drawing in Sunday's Journal so carefully pointed out, what is the permanent step '! Where does one connect two points with any kind of a line witihout going through tha.t which is ours by

Forum Topic· Is Survival·

Dr~ Philip Afr.ica of Salem Col­lege and! Dr. Dan Vi•a, assistant professor of religion at Wake Forest, discussed "The/ End of Human Life" at .the Wesley Foun­dati()n's stud-ent-faculty forum last Wednesday. , . ,

This was the last ~n a. series of debates on the future of man.

The discussion centered around man's hope for surviwli. Africa de­velop~ tlhe idea. of a universal community based on a common value system a.s man's only '~lope. He said that the founda.tion of this value system , shoulci ibe that all men .must be · regarded as being created free and equal.

He further added that the gu.id­. ing prinCiple should be, not the golden ;rule, ibut ratiher "-to do unto others :as·.they would be done by."

Via ·presented the view that for the Christian the final event in history has a:lready occurred; yet, paradoxically, it .is still to happen iru the future.

He -pictured tihe man of faith as. Jiving both in ordinary history and in the world to come. He stated tha-t the possiliility of nuclear deii­truction o()f the earth has nothing to do with the Bibiaal end of his­tory.

prior agreeiilent? Especia'lly if those two points happen to :be our front gate and the Cherry Street corner.

Today what does -it. matter if they :run an exressway across tib.e_ camp~1s, down fac11lty drive, acro.ss the golf course, or-an'y other place for that matter? The first ob­jection is obvious; the others need a bit of thinking. .

The eollege today is important, but the college fifty Years away is the i:nain point. We are hem­med in .by Reynolda, and P6lo, and Bctharbara Roads on three sides. !But the Old Town Golf course covers acres of land that could someday be purchased by the col­lege, and serve the gr.owing ;needs that every()ne of us can see very plainly.

And road builders want to run an expressway through that and cut us off. Grow <a tree in a coffee can, and it will 'die. A•llow this bmin.storm to -make Wake Forest into a coffee can, and it will twist­and become deformed, and possibly die. '

What is at stake? The campus a~ it ;now .is, secluded from the menance of tl'laffic, i.s beautiful. An what about another unique fea.tUTe of Wake Forest ... an en­tire section where laculcy and staff members have ibuilt their homes, not houses, but homes.

Surely all of this wasn't done without the assurance of continued serenity and ,calm. These people were assuredC-and are now being duped.

I, am not phiying "false pro­phet', " this· is a brazen, ugly fact, and it is not something we can do tomorrow. We must express our­selves today, and we must have the gumption to stand up ood shout ourselves Jblue in the face . . · NOW!

Surely tlhis is a cause we can all rally behind. This is not a stu~ d(mt thing, nor a faculty thing, nor an alUITllli matter, nor even some­thing the Trustees alone can solve . by a c. V'Ote. Thls needs everyone. Only then can we hope to stop this injustice.

Do we need to -go to Raleigh en masse andJ Jl'&ra<l:e around· tlhe State House? PQSs~bly so, if .that is what it will take. WHI you state your opinion about this ... loudl~'! We need to tell theSQ usurpers and agreement nullifiers that we ca.re, but further than that, we need to say that NO' R.OUTE through tJb.e · campus for ·the Silas Creek Park­way will ,be "-aecept81ble !"

I

Barnyard -~oogi.e Brightens- Campus. Activitieil Friday

The Student Uni<>n small func­tions. committee announced last week that a combo pal'f:y will be held at the "Barn" tihis week. The da>nce has been tentatively schedul-

: ed for Friday night at 8:00 p. m. The corr;mittee's· chail'man, David

Forsythe, sophomore of Riehmond, Va., said: tha.t posters announcing the exact time of the social and the :name of the .eombo which will play will be put up this- ...yeek.

Congressman Scott To Speak To YDC

Young Democrats of the College will serve as hosts w the Wilsonian Club, Forsyth County Y.D.C., Fri­day night. Congressman Ralph Scott, guest speaker, will 1alk on the issues of interest to the 5th congressional district ..

The dinner meeting will be held at St111.t2, Inc. ~at 6:!0 p .. m.

·survey Shows Need Eor Sfflatl· Roo,ms

(Editor's ·Note: The following article appeared in the ' Spring issue of the m·agazine What the. Colleges Are Doing.) A foU:r:College facUlty committee

h<a.s reptbrted th:at most college students dislike large library read- · ing rooms and that most ·colleges should .spend more time in de­signi;ng or improving space for their undergraduates to use for

·study. The committee was com:Posed of

faculty members from Amherst, Mount Holyoke and Smith Colleges

' and the University of Massachus­etts.

The report cin study facilities was designed as •a eontribution to col­lege architecture and evaluation of 'the study space availruble at the . four cooperating colleges. It urged college admdnistrators and arcitli­tects . to <:onsult students before erecting new buildings.

· The committee found that stu­dents .strongly pref~r small p1aces for study where !lln individual can work alone or with one or two others. ·

La;rge library rooms. are dis­Hked by most students even though some may use them. Such rooms produce distraetions. The larger the study !hall, the committee said, the more it should he broken up with other functions and facilities to reduce traff.ic and noi'.se.

Frequent complaint& among stu­dents. at the four colleges were about lighting, heating, noise.

Do;rmitories should be construct­ed to ·provide students rome fa­cilities where they can study out­side tb.~ir own rooms.

The devel()'Jlment of new devices, mic:vo-films, language laboratories and •individualized .instruction ma­chines, will requir-e more use· of smal:l study and work spaces and less of the large reading rooms'.

The more oolleges tend to develop and to requiTe independence on the part of students and 'require great­er amounts of individual research, the more ;need there will be for carrels or other small stndy spaces.

. These findings were among more than two dozen tlhe committee pre­sented .in the report. The findings were based on a sm:veY of 356

T-o The Editor: -- This note is :to express to Old Gold and Blaek my sincere · con! gratulations on its latest All­American rating.

· A. · L. Aycock Associate Pr.ofessor of En.gl;ish

To The Editor: Lest any of your ·readers questioo

my .accuracy, I :feel that I should point •out that I did not say that our library is "the best . unde:r­gTaduate library in the ' south." What I did say. was ,that in my opinion we ha'l(e "one of the four or five ·best purely undergraduate libraries in the south."·

Otherwise I am in full agreement with the views on our libr-ary ex­pressed in the e&itQrial iD l~LSt week's Old Gold and Black .

Edwin G. Wilson Dea!Jl

To The Editor: . , Having read this week's Old.

G<>ld and IBlaek, I am· writing to thank you for an editorial and article which aTe unusually under­standing and: written with eonsider­

. able 'fairness. Both .in the editorial and in the tarticle by Ray Southard, there is evidence 11hat a. :real at­ltempt was made to understand our . problem~ and to present them :iD a

. i ' students at the four colleges. These· stud-ents kept a record of over 8,000 hourst of studying and were quest-iDned · intensively about their · preferences for .study facilities. ·

Coed Gets YDC Post

DURHAM- Wake Forest coed Flora Ann Robinson, 19, Saturday became the <first woman to hold ltbe -Qffice of secretary of the State Young Democratic Clubs.

Miss Robinson, a sop.homoi:e pre­law student from Durham, was elected by acclamation at the Stalte YDC Concention in her home town. .1

About 25 Wake Forest YDC mem­bers came to the convention to SUP­port her candidacy. She- was .un­opposed all !the way during two days of furious politicking.

H\Uldreds of YDC delegates gave the pretty blonde coed a warm ovation after voting her· the office in the convention's waning mo-

. ments. · . Miss Robinson's con~ention cam­paign was headed largely by Bruce Bach, president of the campus YDC. , .

Ken Foste;, president of the Wfu­ston-Salem Wilsonian Democratic Club, nominated' :Miss Robinson on the convention floor. He headed the Forsyth County d e 1 e g a ti o ~ whic~ held ?9 votes. .

The post of YDC secretary tra­ditionally · goes tq a college stu­

. dent, but usually only. n:ten com-· pete for it.

The Young· Democrats elected W. E. <Dub) Graham of Charlotte, president; :r. 'AI House of iRoanoke R:pids, national committeeman; Cynthia Poole of Raleigh and N. C, · State College, college vice presi­dent; ~nd. :John Wright of Manteo, state treasurer.

AnotheJ;" Wake Forest student, Sid Eagles of Saratoga, is college organizer .for the State YDC and serves in the organization's college

' activities COJllMittee.

(AU letters to ihe editor mut 1te slgnea; names will 1te wtUaJaeW on request. Spe;Diq and puneta• ation are the writers• OWD.) ·

very satisfactory way. That you made an attempt :to. get .at the facts by talking with me before writingc is a matter which is Slso greatly appreciated. ,

All on the staff Will join me, I am sur~ •. in the feel..ink that a. good

~ job was done in dealing with the lib:rrary situa-tion.

Carlton ·P. West Libraria.n .

Beac_h To'· Speak - To Student flody

Dr. Wa~do Beach, professor of Christian Ethics in the Duke Di­vinity school, will deliver an ad­dress during stUdent chapel Thurs­day. Ba{fu. is also director of the graduate studies' .in religion at Duke University iri Durham..

He .is the IS;Uthor of -ODe book. "Conscience On Campus," ,and has . co-edited an o t h e,r, "Christian­Ethics," with H. Richard Niebuhr.

The address will 'follow a .devo­tional and an anthem by the Col­lege chapel choir.· · _ · .Students will receive a free cut · from compulsory chapel Tuesday

. in order tO get mid-semester grades from the registlla:r- and faculty ad-viSors. ' • · ·

' ¥'

,.

Page 5: I Bapti~tS · Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine. The magazine will 'feature an in terview

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SingB, Field .Day, lJanCes

.lFC Celeh:cates By CHARLES STONE · driven iri~ the· ground, one hope-

. Staff Re_porter : f'Ul fraterri.ity ma.n after another: ·. Greek Week began Wednesday atte:IJtpted to shinny it, a feat com~·

afternoon to . the Wne of slos.!J4ng I>licated: · by the application of. a mud, ra: 'squealing pig,· and 1Jlie _generous a.rnount ~f. lard .. Larry· cb,attering of many pairs of teeth. ~r4ham of Delt_a S1gma ~h1 made

Fraternity meri and spectators lt .to tlhe top f~r.st to ~n a $5 th ed '-·-I . w.· .. .··Hall. for reward. ,Alpha Sigma Ph1 was the ga er ·= ow ·· ms.on· · · :all · · f th t ·

·-the annuall; IGreek Week field 'day. over. . Winner 0 . e even.· 1. .

. . . . . •.. · · .· The scheduled mud slide was A m'9d :Plt which h~ been P~~ canceled due to an increcu!ingly

!Pared . was . shortly fill~d """':lth chilly Wind. struggling figures .. on the losm~ At 7:30 Thursday night, the ira­end of a tug..of,"':ar. One after ternities wathered in Wait dha:pel ~other 1ih-e fra~er.mty ,group~ were for oa sini. Each fraternity was ..

. mdecorously ~hmm·ated ~ntil only represented ·by ·a s.m.aH ID"Oup and­t"?e Kappa Stgma rein.almed rela- a large group ..

bvely dzy. . The· ·Wi~n'ing ', Sin1lll. !ti:oup was Next the fraterm~y men tried Kappl!- Sigma, .for the second con­

their ~kill· jn captu7mg, an unco- secutive Year. The o¥gma Chi Large operra:tlve greased ptg. Forty men group was judged,most outstand­cllased the squealing animal a,cross· ing for the third··~onsecutive 'year; the field. The pig stopped sh~rtly Delta Sigma Plii .and Kappa Sig~

· 9nly to be engulf~ .by a w:ave. of ma tied for overall winner of the :fighting men. The Kappa Sjgmas,, r.ing. · .. · . who carried the startled animal ResUlts ;f the decoration con- · hack. to the. goal,. were declared test, the Miss Greek Week- com­\l'ictorious. , .,_,_ . . · : pefltion, and the ·winner of the,

Turning. th~ir ·. attention to ... a I overa'll'' Greek Week .tmphy Were. 'stripped tree trun~ which ,was not ' . press deadline.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Nov, 13, 1961 PAGE FIVE .. ' . . I •

Six Per cent Of Convention Budget Earmarked· For College· ThiS Year ·

(Continued from p~e. 1) nificaDJt single emphasis within the Trustees to begin actions. j cellt will go to the colleges. ltltrougho1ut the state merged their convention at this thne. · Furthermore, steps can be taken The grant of the convention

<lJ!.JJC•iU". fOr fundS and diVided the All t~ Chtn:Ches in the state that by the COnVention jf itS dictateS makeS Up aboUt Six per Cenlf; Of the . . This cooperation yielded take part in the convention share are not followed by the Boards total Wake Forest budget, but H more than five million· dollars over in its support, and the state con- of Trustees 1to the convellltion's the revenue from student fees, dor­a period of five years in North ·vention further cooperates with 'llie satisfaction. mitory rental, and athletics is not Carolina, and in ltb.e hopes of pre- Southern Baptist Convention, so Quoting from Article IX, Section considered, the converution's allo~ serving . the profitable· arrange- that the funds'submitted by each A, paragraph 4 of the Convention mentis 17-19 per cent of the funds ment, North Carolina and C1ther church are broken down into not Constitution, "The Convention shall! received from outside sources (the Southern Baptists founded the Uni- onlY the state activities but into. have the righit to remove any trus-IBabcock endowment, lt.he Reynolds fied Program, which became the national programs as .well. . tee ... for cause considered suf-~ Foundation, and the c<>nvention).

Program utilized to- ·The delegates to the state con- ficient by the Convention ... (Af- Wake Forest wouldprobablyhave vention are representatives of their ter) the opportunity for hlm to be a difficult time indeed getting

Between 1932 and· the present, respective cllurches, anji they each heard before the Convention." ' along without the convention's . the itumber·of churches in the cone cast one vote on matters of bq.si- Whether il:his clause would stand money.

vellltion has increased from 2,3'74 ness, whether their congregation if a Board of Trustees rebelled and Wake Forest, then, is tied to the to about 3,200; . and membership numbers 2~ or ~,500. th~ convention appointed 36 new Baptist Stail:e Convention by very from 433,046 to over 900,000. Relatmnship 'fo College members is a point of law which real, practical and tradition a 1 ·

The Convention Today Now, _to the prob_lem of how this could be. debated at some length, apron-strings. We may not like Today the conventi'On carries on converution operates the college and and which does not seem likely to some of the restrictions and orders

missions, educationaJ ministry, and the extent of its power. crop up in the near future. lt.he Baptists impose upon us, but · promotional work, and supports and The' convention controls Wilke Financial Support rtheir right to do so seems to have 1 operates .se¥en colleges (including Forest and the other six colleges A final point to be made is thart; been made implicit when that little Wake Forest), Baptist Hospital in through Boards of Trustees, and the financial support given the Col- farm school was founded iij. Wake

· Winston-Salem, . two orphanages, each year elects Dine members to lege by the convention is. not so C<>unty 127 years ago. two homes for the aging, ·and a four-year terms so that a total of insignificant as would appear on -----·-------------------Baptist foundation. 36' is. maintained. · the surface. The budget of the con- ----------------

The funds for the operation of The Trustees must be residents 1 vention this year will be $4,200,000, these agencies are provided by :the of the state of North Carolina and about $1 million of which will' be cooperative program, established members of churches cooperating used for Christian higher educa-in the '20's, w~ch "is .the most sig-_ with the convention. . tion.

Artjcle IX, Section A, p~ragraph . Wake Forest rec_eives the largest 2 of the Constitution ()£ the Baptist smgle share of this :fund, 26.8 per State Convention stail:es: "These cent, or about $300,000 thi~ year. Trustees . . . shall be responsible In addition, the convention has in to lthe convention for the operation the. past helped the College with of its institutions in accordance cap1tal needs programs, and a plan with ~aptist principles; reports of is inlthe works fo: ne~t year whe~­work done and undertaken shall be by churches Will mcrease thell' · made annually to the convention contributions· to the convention, and ..• No change of policy shall be all additional funds over five per made without securing the prior · approval of the convention of its General Doard."

Convention· Is Policymaker In addition, the convention may

establish policies which the Trus­tees must carry out. An example of this. would be ·the resolution which' will be bought before the group, this week, calling ·for the convention to r.enew former resolu­tions calling d'or the colleges to consider il:he ·discontinuance of ra­cial discrimination.

Wake Forest officials see this proposal as an "urging" of the 1 Boards of Trustees to take steps [ toward integration, and consider/ that such a resolution, if passed.

Bill Burrus Gives - A Haircut

"Designed With ¥ ou In Mind" At

W. 4TH STREET • BARBER SHOP

~ :Biocl:: West of Sears

Ed Banner Restaurant Wake Forest Special

ChoiCe

5 Oz. Filet Mignon Steak

Tossed Green Salad

Baked Potato or

French Fries

Coffee or Iced Tea

$1.50 THIS SLICK CUSTOMER had managed·. to elud~ so~e forty men in Greek Week festivities- before the Kappa Sigs finally managed to bag .hiJn. Larry Allgood and Eddie Burton bring in the· squealing pork

A BATH, but ·not with Dial! These inen use all theii- "pull" in an effort to win the tug of war contest for their fraternity.

would be almost· an order to the ---------------.: •--------------

for &heir fraternity, · · · ·

. What does ·oos lovely .College Queen want in" her "diamond riilg~

Miss Pat Weaver, America's. National. College Queen, re­vealed her feminine taste as well as her practical sense when asked about diamond rings. She selected as her favorite the Iavely Artcarved.·Evening Star-one of Artcarved's award­winning designs. Why; did she choose it? Because ofits breathtaking beauty arid guaranteed quality. You see, every Artca'rved ring is gu.aranteed,in writing for alJ the, y~ars to come by America's most respected ring maker; You buy it with confidence-wear it with' pride.

Visit your local Artcarved"Jeweler and see why Artciu-ved diamond ri11gs have bee.n the c~oice of ·millions fbr more.· . thaR a century. Perhaps you can start hinting for yours now!

~ATIONAI.LV ADVERToiSED IN AMERICA'S LEADING MAGAZINES

Artcarv-e.d" DIAMOND AND WEDDir-;.G'R.INGS

· J. R. Wood & Sons, !nc:,, Dept. ~J?a1 . 216 E. 45th St, New Yo,rk 17, N.Y. · Please send me more facts about diamond rings aitd "Wedding Guide for Bride arid Groom." Also name . or' nearest (or hometown) Artcarved Jeweler. lam enclo~ing 10~ to cover handling and postage.

~ame•----------------------------­Add~=~~-------------------------

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HERE'S HOW 1029 STUDENTS AT 100. COLLEGES VOTED! xoq JO lf~ed U! W'81 ue aAeH

%ES" • ···aJow Jo )joed v %S£""" "lfOed e ueq1 ssa1 (j %Z£" ·ssaJ Jo lfOed e lf2H

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Page 6: I Bapti~tS · Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine. The magazine will 'feature an in terview

,{ ·>

PAGE SIX Mouda;r, Noy. 13, 1961 OLD GOLD AND BLACK Greensboro Will Host Both

Hinson .and Sims ~uet Baptists,ClihurnWillEntertaiQ Plays Piano And Smgs By CHARLIE WINBERRY be present. Van Cliburn, whosei will present ''The Taming of the

' Entertainment Columnist father is an ex-piano tuner, will Shrew" both Thursday and Friday Entertainment may be sparse in present a pia!lo recital. nights. . '

By ANGELA JOHNSON has had considerable experience in the Twin City this week but fur- This recital is . something that The actiJOn will take r>lac? in Arts Columnist this country and abroad. titer to the East things will be in no ?ne sh?Uld m1ss. . ~e .01~ Chapel· a<t the educationa~

. ~\, .,

REYNO,LDA FlORIST - GREENHOUSE • ~lowers for all occasions • Owne'd and op'erated by W.F.C.

' I. •

e Specializing in football mums and corsages

\ REYNOLDA VILLAGE - PA 2225~

Maurice Hinson and John N. Her selections will include works high gear. Over in the metro of . C~burnf 1s the; most, acclaimed mstlturtJon, acress. the Th;ruwa~. It Sims, faculty members of the of Bach, Handel, Beethoven, Greensboro, home of those two p1amst o. our time an~ probably should be . espectally ·appreCiated Southern Baptist Theological Semi- Brahm.s, Verdi, Saint-Saens, and "college communities , local au- the most fam.ous American of the by those car-less freshman who ·--------~---...:.---------------' nary, presented a recital last Tues- the contemporary composers !Me- thorities are closing d~wn all places arts in t,he past decade. He went like Salemites. . day at the College. The two musi- nollti and Sibelius. . of ill-repute and rumor has it that to Russia, and not only saw Stalin's Meanwhile, the Winston-Salem cians were sponsored by the MUsic In that almost· f~rgotten medium ,the populace is quite disturbed. tomb, which is hard to do now Arts Council will also be taking its Department of the College. (~rc;>m the standpo~nt of ~), ~;le- Today begins a four-day run of unless you like rose gardens, but place o_n <the stage. In one of its

Hinson, pianist, and Sims, tenor, VlSlon, a ~ew sen~s entitled An the State Baptist Convention. As also won the Tchaikowshy competi- many .fme·.-proc;Inctions of the year, provided a tastefully arranged pro- Age of Kings:• will be released the Baptists decend from the bank tion which bnought him internation- the Communiby Theater will pre-gram in the Lower Auditorium of through educaJtional networks, such d the bowery from their closets al fame. _ · sent the very popular "The Re-Wingate Hall. as WUNC_ in Chapel ~· . . =~d their ke s, 'mighty Greensboro Cliburn, be,sides bein_g one of this markable .Mr. Pennypacker."

Sims opened with four airs from The senes prese~ts m hlStorrcal '()ffers enter~ainment galore Be- country's best goodw11l ambassa- This prOduction had trouble at operas, Verdi's "ll Trovatore," sequence all ~e history plays of lieve me it's rthe best ent~rtain- dors because he refuses to write, first when the entire bookstore Bizet's "C:armen," being the best Shakespeare, Richard II, Henry IV ment in fue state since last year's home on postcards, stands at the staff, under the impression that known. (Parts 1 and 2), Henry V, Henry VI convenrt:i.on top among concert pianists. , the title was "The Campus Penny-~

Usually I am offended by any-, (Parts 1, 2 and :n, and Richard · _ ,lie will appear at 8:30 P. M., takers," tried out for parts. one "talking down" to me, but III. Produced in England, the se· Van Cliburn Saturday. In all seriousness, we Nevertheless, this. production, I

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Radios $12.50 up -- Phonographs $12.50 up Sims' explanations of the lyrics rie~ has been awarded the ~ritish Hot air and dee;p "a~ens" will heartily recommend his perform- which will> begin Tuesday at the and situations were very accept- Guild Award and has prevmusly be clear of the Coliseum m Greens- ance as the top event in the enrter- Arts Center, should be a grea<t hit. able and contributed rtJo the enjoy- been presented in and arotllld New boro by Saturday night, when one toinment sphere this week. And last but not least if you de- ·----------------------------....; ment of the songs. However, when York on television. I of the finest ~ntertainers ever will " Movies sire to wine and din~ with the

PORTABLES AND ELECTRIC .

Sims sang Hugo Wolf's German The Winston Thearter goes big- social elite of tobaccoland, visit Le liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Lieder in Eiglish one might have time <this week with a flick straight Chateau. Friday and Saturday you wished that he had not done so. ENTERTAINMENT from Radio City Music Hall. Aud- can enjoy rthe strains. of the Bill

I prefer the Lieder in German rey Hepburn, George Brevard, and Lowder Combo as YIOU eat student even if the whole m~aning does . _ 1\':'ickey Rooney, complete with his fare of ice~ tea and cole ~law. n{)t come ac.ross; I _like to hear escalator shoes, makes an appear- How~ver_ if your budget 1s low, Ge~an music ?illlg m Ge?Jlan. AND THE ARTS ance in "Breakfast at Tiffan 's." you will ~d th~t !Mr. Z an~ his

His last selection was a li:~ht and · The movie will show all Jeek Polo promtse !heu- l:ls.ual hosp1table ple~sant cycle of nursery J.m~~es. · and whether it appeals to you

0;, atmo~phere. wdh cwsme and bever-

Hinson pl~yed Beethoven s . Fif- not, remember "Breakfast at Tif- age JUSt nght for th~. budget of teen Vanatto;;s and. Fu?Ue m E fany's" is much be.tter than Break- most me~~rs of our Wake For-~at, Op~s 35 for his first sele~- fast at Slater's. est Family. tion which was adeptly liandled if _ _ . --------

not somew~at _tiring to listen to.1

cnoacs t1 Tt..0 Are· G·.,.eeks . la~:a~:~e:ro~lk~e orr:;es s:u~~ The ?hopm pieces that he played u~ YY n I Pacific comes what could be Holly-

later m the pr?gram w;~re to be wood's worst attempt of the year. preferred, p~rticularly Nocturn~ By CHARLES STONE Fred Kohmar has put .together a m c sharp mmor, Opus 27, No. 1, · ·tur f F nk s· tr s and "Ballade in A flat, Opus 47." It is interesting to hear every- generation of our culture that the mtx eo ra m~ a, ?encer

· · where all til-> time criticism It good and the just and the mild and Tracy. and an old lr1sh pr1est to

IRCHears History Prof

Franco-Italian Film • ~ ' · "th ti · t Another highli ht in the "cul- is such a universal vocation: in the loving are even praised. For come ~P Wl • a ~o on PIC ure Thomas E. Mullen, assistant pro-

tur " · 1 las1 week ibut of a letters to this paper, in the cafe- if !they were not very rare they hea::t-throb which rtvals any war fessor of history at the College, e c:rc es ' . teria in chapel between classes would not be singled out. stones, even those told by gen- ·was the <featured speaker at the very different nature was Film • • • · s · h A · w t . - at football games in fraternity D It g;....... Pbi ume paws - merican ar ve - International Relation Club's first Friends' presentation of the Fran- . . • e a --a erans . · .

co-Italian film "The Little World meetmgs, m Reynolda Garden, A party was held at Rural Hall "Th D vil t 4

, 1

k" . meeting las<t Tu?sd~y everung .. ol Don Camillo " starrin Fernan- everywhere in short where our Friday night. e e a 0 c oc lS At rthe orgamzational meeting del noted Fren~h comedfan. studeDJts congregate. Larry Hardham and Terry Jones ~che~ed ·~ run-t~ week a\ U: Mullen, sponsor for the group,

It is the story of rthe friendly ~he r?~son. for the popularity of wer~ initia~ed last week. to~ 't!ro~e e:e:. IS run ou spoke on the purpose of such a s'::;-uggle between a priest and a this actiTity lS the fact that every- Bill Hopkins and Ken Snowe re- Salem Colle e enters into theatri- club. . . . _ · Communist mayor in a small Ita- one can do it, and with a little cently pledged the fraternity. cal productio! gain this season He said Its mam obJe_ctive~ should lian village, and as serious as this praCitice, anyone Chuck Lewis p~ed Jane Bur- The Pierrettes a~parently a fane~ be to promote good relations be-sounds, it was a very fine comedy. can do it well. rell, a coed of Lexmgton. name for irls' who like the sta e tween the ?COPies an~ the govex:n-

One real dilfference in Hollywood- Destructive cri- Garry Roberson pinned Virginia g g • me~ts of different nati~m~. ~ his-made movies and some foreign ticism appears in Lowe, a senior art Greensboro High • · · tonan made a clear distinction be-films is taste. This difference was various interest- School. A "'COCk DISCUSSed tween peoples and governments. ably shown in the movie, which ing forms. There The annual Brother-Pledge foot- : · • Pla_ns were m~~e Jior future used the ChriSII: image to speak to is the "art" of ball game was held Friday after- PlCQSSO To Phz 's meetings. In addition to_ having the priest in what was neither a belittlement, then noon followed by an informal get- speakers ~d for:uns, s~de lee-sentimental a sacreligious nor a (on a higher level, together. The Philomathesian Society heard tu.re~ and informative moTies were distasteful :manner. ' some would in- Kappa Alpha a discussion of Picasso conducd:ed conside~ed. . .

Don Camillo's sins (making small sist) satire and Tom Shugart attended the Col- by Andrew L. ~cock, associate A senes of three JOmt. meetings bribes, smoking too many cigars, malicious parody, legi.arte Council for the United Na- professor of English, las<t. Mo~day. of the International ~~ations Clubs etc.) were tactfully brought rto his STONE then namecalling, lions in New York. Aycock supplemented his discus- of Salem College, Wmston-salem attention, not by a booming voice mockery, "cutting," and finally Dr. Gene Hooks has accepted the sion of the various periods of Pi- T~achers College, and .~ake Forest accompanied by an angel choir good ol' cussin'- position of faculty advisor for the casso's development by slides of will be plann~, aecording to Clyde through an opening in the sky, but Some get 50 proficient at these chapter. the artist's fa~us wo~~s: . Glosson, ~emor of Hampton, Va., by the camera focusing on the various methOds that they can go Kappa Sigma , ~e ~gan wtth the ?~1 m ,a who prestded. village church's altar cross and for days without saying a thing The. fraternity serenaded Gail ~or, . r~trogressed to r:1casso s --------------~ normal voice calmly admonish- constructive! Thompson of the Woman's College fu-st p~mtings, sho~ed ~tides re-mg <the all too human priest. It is so easy to sit in the same of the University of North Carolina pres?Dting eac~ ~no~, finally re-

Coming Events slovenly posture, peer out at the who is pinned to John Newitt. ~g-~. the 1Dltial s!lde. . HOME OF PIZZA PIE The Wake Forest College De- world through the same sagging A party was held in the house ';l'be p~ s ne~t mee~g ~ con- SPEcl;kEl~~ ~AGHETTI

Reynolda Grill

e PROMPT CURB SERVICE . e PRIVATE DINING ROOM -

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* * *· • PARKWAY PLAZA

r

-2 Meals Daily Partment of Music will present eyes and criticize. Friday night. tam a .~scusswn of AdVIse 3illd I CHARCOAL STEAKS

Mrs. E~el Las~t _Kalter, con- But it is as rare as spring breezes Pledge class officers are as fol- Coii. ~-n~·s:_e~':l~t~b~y~All~~en~-D-rury __ a_nd __ a_n~::::::8:5:3::Re::yn::::o:l:da::::Rd::.::==~::::=::::::::=::::=::::====::=:::::::::::::::::: tra~to, m a reCital m the Mag- to hear someone occasionally speak lows: Carlton Puckett, president; ~tiation ceremony. nolia Room Thursday at 8:15 p. m. well of a 'thing or to offer himself John Fennell vice-president· and Mrs; Kalter is rJ:ll.e new voice teach- to labor for a worthy goal. Fred Eaves, 'secretary-treas~er. er m rthe Mus1c Department and It is a sad comment on the de- Lambda Chi Alpha

i'WFDD-AM & FM

ss.I 0 Th 650 11 ~ Dial

A "Charley Brown" party was. held at the barn Friday night with the Thetea Chi's.

An open house for freshman par­ents was held in the -house after the VPI game.

Pi Kappa Alpha ' llonday, Novetnber 13

5:00--Evening Concert 6:55-News ~~:00-Campus Report -:{:15-Wake Forest Sports 7:30--Special of the Week 8:00-Reynolda Hall Lecture

Series .· · "•:ao-:Aimanac

9:25--Law in News 9:30-Broadway Spectrum

10:00-Interlude 10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-Sign Off

Tnesday, November 14 5:00--Evening Concert 'l:OO-Opera of the Week

10:00-Interlude 10:30-Dea~nlight Serenade 12:00-Sign Off

Wedne~y, November 15 5:00-Even.ing Concert 1:55-News 7:~rmany Toda7 7:15-H is for Joy 7:30-0ral Essays on Education 8:00-The Individual 8:55-Busine::u~ Review

It Takes A Heap Of Success To Offset A Poor Appearance!

With The Help 01

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T!tt!~~y P1tone PA 2-7106 612 West 4th Si.

9:00-Music from Wake Forest 10: DO-Interlude 10:30-Deaconllght Serenade 12: 00--Sign Off

Thursday, November 16 5:00--Evening Concert 7:00-Coming of Age 7:30-Challenge of the A2ing 8:00--Book Fair S:~Food for World 8:30--To Be Announced 9:00--Ethic for Broadcasting 9: 30-Pioneers of Prose and

Poetry 9:55-"Medical Milestones

10:00-Interlude 10: 30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-Sign Off

·Friday, November 17 5:00-Evening Concert 6:55-News 7:00-Consumer Question 7 :15-Land of the Bible 7:31)-American Law 8:00-World's Great Drama

10: CJO-Interlude 10: 30--Deaconllght Serenade 12:00-Sign Off

A panty was held Friday night at<theTanglewood Barn with Sigma Phi Epsilon !fraternity. Music was played by the, Catalinas.

Vic Smith recently pledged. Sigma Chi

The pledge-brother football game was held last Friday afternoon.

A combo party featuring the Asoots was held Friday night at Tanglewood.

Sigma Phi Epsilon John Moloney pledged the fra­

ternity recently. A party was held Friday night

at the· Tanglewood Bam with the Pikas.

Sigma Pi Sherri Williams represented the

fraternity in the Miss Greek Week contest. .

A combo party was· held in the house Friday night followed by a decorations party.

Theta Chi Ann Griffiths, pinned to Francis

Wilson, was serenaded at Salem College last week.

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"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa estJ': says veteran coach Romulus (Uncle) Remus. ''We hav'::a saying over at the Coliseum-'Tar~yton separates the gla~­tors from the gladioli'. It'~:~ a real magnus smoke. 'Thke 1t from me Tareyton delivers de gustibus -and the Dual Filter

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DUAL FILTER

. Tareyton ~ ___ /!? _____ .•t:;'<,t? • f'rollld of .fe~ J'~-J~;. 011r middk mzmt:" D.&,r • .,., . . -

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I ACCl

Who The oo,1 this ev~ contest::

At th1 ·a 4-1 C,O

at the I standini of two

In fo1 South C the rea and 1-3

At fir ..-'ch~mpi

to do i! have itl especia ~ver th

Ontl consect crowri. Wins tO! one of contest: record.

But c yet. It i

·could,e these t Last Sa one of had no

Thus for the North C

the AC Duke i:

In all ever, CJ

bottom race.

Allo Forest, the hoi games

OLD Best

Wake I in the , The~

sored 1 ment, perforn

The: pell, is high as

But 1 surpris Classm

Prioi Ed tot top-flig from a

SPOF It w~

Carolitl warme siderecl with C; Startin. as a c Resour tackle: Sunda~ had th

- 1962 SE Au burr Frankl has be;

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In onJ field ho popular women

Belie' has its "league' Miss D· cal educ

Ace or girls gc basic s: their fr Then, il ranged girJ.s wfi: in the ~

Coonp; intramu against Waker yearly l trnditiOI

The f

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Page 7: I Bapti~tS · Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine. The magazine will 'feature an in terview

, . I

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"

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By JACK HAMRICK Sports Editor

ACC PIGSKIN TITLE UP FOR G~BS-Wbo wm wi~ the 1961 Atlantic Coast Conference football title?

The outcome' of thls weekend's games could .p~ovide the ans~er to this ev~sive question, bUll: a1t: the same time. the'results of Saturday's contests may merely .. tighttm' up the race~' ' ' · At the time of· this writing Duke is riding oh top of· the heap with

., \ . ' ' a 4-1 c.onference record, buit the North Carolina Tar Heels are barking at the Blue Dukes' heels .with a 3-1 record. -Tied tfor third spot· in !the standings are Clemson and· N. b. State, each with identipal records of two wins against two. los'ses. ·

In fourth place are lthe Demon Deacons of Wake Fo:r;eSit and the South Carolina Gamecocks. Both schools si;lort 2-3 logs: Bringing up the rear are Maryland· and Virginia with respectl\>e records of 1-2 _ and 1-3. . . , .

At first glance it. may appear that Duke-hllSI the inside :track Ito the ch~mpi,;nship, and in -one respect they do. Jill the Blue Devils have I

_..to do is knock off Carolina in Duke Stadium Saturday, and they will­have lthe ·crown .sew~ up. Butt this feat may be no easy task, . especiallY~after the Tar Heels wc;:re so imp!essive in 'their !fine win over the Tennessee Volunteers a couple of Sa'iturdays back .. • On the other hand, if 'the Tar ifeels ui>end the Dukes tfor the thlrd

; consecutive year-, then ·carolina will have lthe best chance at the crown. Theii"two remaining games pit them agahlst Wake Forest at WinstOn-Salem and'.Virginia· at Chapel Hill, and a .victory m either one of tiJi!m would insure at least a ltie for the title.' ·To win in both contests would give _the Tar Heels the undisputed title, wilth a 6-1 record.

. THE W~E. FOREST FOOTBALL managerial corps, kneeling, left to right': Head Varsity Manager Cook Griffin, Bill Straughan, and John Williams. Standing: Steve ,'W.artin, Phil Chase, and Bubba Peay. Dan Ave~ett was absent when tbe picture was taken.

WakeFrosh '

Take State I I

_ C~oss-Country I · Emerging fr.om the 1961 season with an 8-0 record tand the North Carolina State Cr<Jss Country· Championship, Coach Boill Jordan's Baby Deacon harriers proved, them­

, selves .the .most successful in Wake Forest cross c<Juntry history,

Cal ·Brown and Ron Taylor, set-t~g the pace after the first half mile o~ the 1961 Freshman cham­pionsihips at Raleigh, played the starring roles in copping the state crown' for Wake. Brown stole first place from Davidsonian Chester Davis, who led the roce but briefly. The ehamp!ion's Clocking was 10:40.5, 20 seconds ·better than the previous time <Jn the State traek.·

Taylor tand Brown h3,d been run­ning: shoulder .to sihDulder, with Davis on their heels, over the second .half mile of the course, when Taylor stumbled and Davis fell .on top' of him, ·both boys rolling down a steep embankment aside fiLe illlarrow trail. Taylor • then got up and oogan running in quest of his teammate, only to stOp and re­turn to help his •opponent .to· his feet. The two sbarted together and while neither was able to catch

· Brown, lthe Davidson harrier over­t<Jok Taylor 1n the final ~00 yards of the race, m<~ving 'taylor down to third place.

Of ten medals awarded to the· best participants in the annual cham­pionship race, four went to Wake

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monda:r, Nov. 13, 1961 PAGE ~EVEN

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• VISIT OUR SHOWROOMS • But don't ·county Maryland, Clemson, or stalte out of the picture

yet. It is possible, but not probable, that any o'ne of these· three teams . could end up in a tie for the crown. To gain a tie, however; any one of these; three teams would have ·to win all of their remaining games. Last Saturdary's game between !Maryland and State will: have knocked one of the two teams out of the race, but at this writing the outcome had not been decided.

Managers· Ar~ I Vital To Football Success

Forest men. Davidson placed three ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in the top ten, Carolina won two l awards, and: Duke returned to their

By ERNIE ACCORSI Thus· any one of the aforementiohed five s-chools col.lld win or tie

· Much ·of the succes·s of "Oper-for the coveted ACC football title, but this wrilter's guess is that the . ation Football" at- Wake Forest is

jerseys, pants, and shoes for the dlay's practice session. Each day Dan also gathers up the used cloth­ing from the players' lockers and repLaces them with clean togs for the following aftern.oon.

North Carolina Tar Heels will take the crown. Carolina, I feel, sees bolstered by the behind the scenes the ACC $amplonship within its grasp, and I do 'not believe that work of the corps of football mana-Duke is strong enough to stop the . determined Heels. gers.

In all tlJe discussion 'abOut who will wiri. the ACC foptball race, ho,w- The crew of .managers i& head- Ga1111e Days Are Busy ever, one must not· overlook_ the· part that the three teams at the ed by Buddy Norwood, who is the When ime dlay of a game 1·olls bottom of the conference· standings could play in the outcome of the only full time and salaried mem- around the role of the manager is race. . . her of-the group. Aiding Norwood equally as vital. Averett and Grif-

All of the three teams which are definitely out 0~ the race, Wake is his managerial chores are Cook fin are the two student members Griffin, a junior fr<Jrn: Edenton, of the group who travel on the roaq

Forest, Virginia, and Soulth Carolina, are in ideal posiltion to wreck North Carolina, Dan Averett of with the ·ball club. 1 the hopes of title aspirants as' all three close out their seasons with Oxf<n:d and sophomore Bill Stra- Upon >arriva-l at the opposing

games against contenders for the crowri. uagn of w.arsaw, N. ~· team's campus on an :away trip the

OLD GOLD AND BLACK BASKETBALL GAME-Be sure to keep' the evening ~f Nov. 21 open, for on !that date the,

Wake Forest varsity basketball Iteam will go against the Wake Frosh in the annual Old Gold and Black Basketball Game.

The game will be played in Memorial Coliseum, and it is being spon­sored 'by the Wake Forest Monogram Club. For halftime enterltain­ment, the tfamous Dancing Boots from Reynolds High School will perform. ,

The 1961-32 Demon Deacon team, led by .All-Americim Len Chap­pell, is tabbed as the team to beat in the ACC _,and has been rated as high as lthird in the natiiQn in pre-season polls. ·

01iher members <>f the manager's managers immediately unpack the tea.m include freshmen Steve Mar- plane or bus and carry the equip­tin, Bubba Peay and John Wil- ment to the stadium. The boys then Iiams. Williams is the brother of ·prepare · sweflt' clothing for the Deac tackle Butch William.s. team's· pre-game work out. As

The daily work of these men must be done without f·ail to en­able the football squad: to take the practice field or even prepare to work out.

game time approaches Griff.in gathers the water supply for the field rwhile Averett assumes his post in the press ·box where he tabulates the number of quarters each player a·ppears in and also

(See Managers, P. "8)

Durham encampment with one ni.e.dal.

Team wise, Wake Forest accumu­lated only 42 points, Duke finished second witih 60, Caro1ina third with 61, Davidson tallied 65 points, Pem­'broke 154, State 199, and taking the cellar spot was Campbell, which c~mpeted with <Jnly th1·ee men.

David Young Gives - A Haircut

"Designed With Yon In Mind~'. At

W. F. C. BARBER SHOP "On The Campus"

But the frosh, featuring a great abundance of height, are ou.t tO surprise the .varsity and avenge last year's frosh loss to the upper class men.

Prior Ito the game all of the players on both squads will be intrOduc­ed to the fans:' Everyone will undoubtedly get his -money's worth of top-flight basketball' during the evening. Tickets can be purchased from any Monogr!ll? Club member or at the gate. -

Senior member of the student group, Cook Griffin, begins his day of work .bJ: aquiring. a schedule of the day from head coach Billy Hildebrand. Griffin is responsible for timing each phase of the prac­tice session and designating the be­ginning and end of each .separate period.

THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE

CARL HORN SPORTS NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE-It was so hot and humid in Kenan stadium· on the afternoon of the

Carolina-Tennessee game a couple of weeks back that the Tar Heels warmed up without shoulder pads. Coach Jim Hickey had even con­sidered using only t-shiits ... Wake Forest's next basketball game with Carolina will be the 100th meelting between the two ·schools •.• Starting guard Bob Irwin of the- Demon Deacons has tieen certified as a qu~ied weapons infltructor by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources. Commission . . . Bob McCrar-Y was a starting offensive tackle for the Dallas Cowboys against the Philadelphia Eagles several Sundays back ... Two former Wake Forest baseball players have had their contracts assigned to International Leai;w,e clubs' for :the 1962 season. Pitcher Bob Plemmons, ~ow doing, gr~duate ,;rork at Auburn University, has been assigned outriglrt .to Rochester while Jay Fr8.llklin, who spent ·his first pro' year in the Georgia-Florida League, has been .:assigned to Syracuse . . .

Griffin also is responsible for having the diagmms of the plays, .praetice dummies, footballs and all other necessities in the proper places on the field. When- a 'ball­pLayer loses a· cleat ;Qr chin strap during a scrimmage, C.ook has got to be there to replace it.

As o*e of the managers 1post ably put it, ''You can do your job perfectly every day, but -if y<Ju're not on the spot at tihe instant <Jne of the coaches needs you you're failblg in your duties." ·

How many niore people will need telephone service in Illinois by 1970? How many more tele­phone buildings should be built, how much more equipment ordered? Helping_ to find the right answers (because the wrong ones could he very ex-

At the same time Griffin is per­forming hi.s duties, Buddy Nor­wood and Bill Strauagn_ are indoors keeping things in order while Dan Averett is going through his di­versified chores.

Averett ios in cllarge of pTeparing

WF Coeds Enjoy Field Ho~key By BARRY DORSEY was played· at Salem, with the have it here and really enjoy it.''

In only two .decades the ga.me of Wake team emerging the winner by Observe· ·-(}ne vigorous, hard-field hock~y has become the most the close· scol"e of 1-0. Sophomore fought game, and imdoubtedly popular qutdoor team sport among Anne WYlie scored the only goal you'll agree. Twenty-two determm­women of-the United State·s. i:n this game. She was assisted de- ed girls, oarryi:rig .hockey sticks

Believe it o;r not; Wake Forest fensively by Marianne Harrelson and we~ting shin pads, charge onto has its own organized hockey and Carol Bain, two outstanding the :f.ield in' fTeezing weather. But "league" under the direction of fullbacks. ' · the chill on the field is soon over-Miss Dorothy. Casey, girls' physi- Goalkeeper J~my Ayers, whose come by the heat of the game. cal education instructor. quick action saved ,many Salem For 30 to 60 minutes the· girls

According to Miss Casey, al~ goals, and center line player Carol "bully," "dribble," and "flick" the gil"ls get. a:n intrOduction in the Ann: Canady were als.o key players ihard leather •hall 'around the field, basic skills of the ga,me during in the Wake Forest win. This past :pausing only for a -short half-time their freshman year· in phys. ed. Thursday the tw<> teams met on period. . Then, intramural contests are ar- the Wake field for the second game Miss Casey pointed out that the ranged outside io:tl class f<Jr :those in the series. · g1arne of field hockey is pLayed ex-girls wlho desire to be more active "Field hockey .i!l> new to the .rna- elusively by girls. However, after in the spo1't. jority of the girlp who college close comparison by .several fresh-

Competition is keen,_ both i~ the here," Miss CaseY said. "The rea- man boys p1·esently eng&ged in the intra.murla:ls, · which pit freshmen son for this is that -few southern game of soccer, it was the unani~ against upperclassmen, and in the schools :teach it. In the western mous opinion that soecer certainly Waker Forest-Salem games, ·two United States the. game is taugh~ looks less dangerous than hockey­yearly games which are becomhlg· in high- school," she .continued. particularly if the opposing team baditional 'vith the two schools. "However, whether or not theY were a group Of enthusiastic Wake

The first of the ·games this year Jaave ever played •be:fol"C, the girls Forest-instructed girls.

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Page 8: I Bapti~tS · Student magazine. The issue will place special emphasis on the thea ter. Sylvia Burroughs, junior of Bat Cave, edits the magazine. The magazine will 'feature an in terview

Football Forecasts Game Alabama vs Ga. Tech Citadel vs Fla. State Syracuse vs Notre Dame Duke vs Carolina {Maryland vs Wake Forest Yale vs Princeton Minnesota vs Pilrdue Texas vs TCU USC vs Pittsburgh Michigan St. vs Northwestern

Managers Work Hard

(Continued from Page 7)

keeps various statistics for the publicity department.

Following each game the same J>r-ocess of packing and loading is represented to prepare the team for the trip home. Very often the crew's chores are not limited to managerial duties.

Immediatll'ly:-10lloW:ing the Baylor game {;~: .. -and Averett drove ·.100 mifes .,trofn Waco to Austin,

·. ·TeXa'si'iWi'ih the film ()f that night's :~: 'Wta-ited until ft was develop­ed, and carrieO. it 'back to the coach­es.

These duties are typical of the life of .t1J.e "unsung heroes" of the !football program at Wake Forest College. The manager]al team re­iports in August and continues its work following the regular foot;.. brJI season.

Marching Deacs To Present Show

The 1001 Marching Deacons will travel :to College Park, Maryland t<> :J)erform for the Maryland-Wake Forest g.ame Nov. 18.

The hand will spend two nights in MarYland and the Washington, D. c. area ..

Bobby Todd Gives - A Haircut

"Designed With You In Mind .. .At .

WAKE FOREST COLLEGE BARBER SHOP

"On The Campus,.

Hamrick .700

Alabama Fla. State Notre Dame Carolina Wake Forest Yale Minnesota Texas Pittsburgh Mich. State

Williams .620

Alabama Fla. State Syracuse Duke Maryland Princeton' Minnesota Texas Pittsburgh Mich. State

Accorsi .700

Ga. Tech Citadel Notre Dame Duke Maryland Princeton Minnesota Texas Pittsburgh Mich. State

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Wake Forest has participated in two post-season bowl games. In 1946 the ~aeons •beat South Caro­lina, 26-14, in the Gator Bowl, and in 1949 they lost to Baylor, 20-7, in the Dbde Bowl.

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Vi . . FOOTBALL N 2 ICEROY CONTEST . 0 ... (For games played 9aturday, Ocl. 21)

1st Prize

$1QOQQ CASH!

Bill Mohlhenrich, Class of '62, a pre-med stu­dent, and a member of THeta Chi Frat., (photo at left). walked away with the· One Hundred Bucks Viceroy Prize Money. Stig Nissen, Class of '65, took . second prize 'money ($50), an.d Peter Stirrup, Class of '63, won third prize money at $25. \

5 PRIZES OF $10 EACH WON BY THESE STUDENTS ON CAMPUS! . 5 prizes of $10 Each won by these stll­

dent.s on campus: Ernest Accorsi Jr., Ronald Franco, Robert Jones, Bert Melton, and ·Joe Palshaw. Congratulations to these 8 students.

and a reminder to all. We need 8 more wumers for Viceroy's 4th contest. so get in on contest No.4 and win one of'the 8 Cash Prizes to be given 1 a way on this campus.

tp/~ -A carton of Viceroys to all students who got all the winners right, regardless of sc.or~sl

Here Are the Contest Rules: 1. Any student or faculty member on this campus may enter except employees of Brown & Williamson, its advertising agencies, or members of their immediate families. All entries beoome the property of Brown & Williamson-'-noDe will be returned. Winners will be notified within three weeks after each contest. Winners' names mil;' be pubHshed In this news­paper. You may enter as often as you wish, provided each entry is sent individually. Contest subject to all governmental regulations. Entries must be postmarked or dropped in ballot box on campus no later than the Wednesday midnight before the games are played and received by noon Fridayofthe same week. The righttodlscontinuefuture contests is reserved, 2. Entries must be in contestant's awn name. On the coupon in this ad or on an Official Entry Blank or piece of paper of the same size and format, write your predictions of the scores of the games and check the winners. Enclose an empty Viceroy_ package or a reasonable rendition of the Viceroy ' name as it appears on the package front. Mail entry to Viceroy at the Box Number on the entry blank, or drop in Viceroy Football Contest Ballot Box on campus. • J. ~ntries will be judged by Tba Reuben H. Donnelley Corp., on the basis of number of winners correctly predicted. Ties will be brokea oa the basis · of scores predicted. Duplicate prizes awarded In case of final ties, 4. Winners are eUgible for any prize in subsequent contests.

~--------------------------------~ I (Attach Viceroy package or facsimile.here) · -

I Viceroy ·college _Football" I ·CONTEST,N0.4 I Here are my predictions for next Saturday's games. I Send my prize money to :

~--------------~--------~--------.CLASS·------~ (I-LEASE PRIHT PLAlllllY)

...:.

ADDRESS>----------------------------------------------------------

WIN

0 No. Carolina

0 No. Carolina St.

0 Wak• Forest

0 Prlnc•lan

0 Michigan

-0 Army

0 L.S.I,J.

0 Stanford

0 Notre Dame

0 Pittsburgh .

SCORE WIN

0 Duke

0 So. Carolina

0 Maryland.

0 Yale

0 lo"'!a

0 Oklahoma

0 Mississippi 51.

0 Washington St.

.0 Syracuse

0 So. Californ.la

SCORE

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The the r; route pus a1 which the Sc: School and t' Fores1 posing Parlrn lege Drive, across and tJ: as fa· of the of con with ( Road.

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