nlb nub-i lutk...ated into the fraternity at the thursday meeting, which was the last the group will...

6
s 'ive times •man .. Bill ree. onference drove in led with' 1ive :he plaie; •' s North first wiq e g:anie did >ast Con- way 'for' lked six, · ; 12 hits e Deacon.·, t Stokoe, ' with the the two ;tate by :wo runs ·th, and 6-0 lead nd their. nan Bill double, gun in •re was hits. e l a State 1th. Sec- got two 1\.cademy •re the red here for five ing one Stanton times at behind. victory h fresn- taten by :.y Dea- a game fternoon yed ali te here t Thurs- lay they val. ess de. val y- ne. •. . . :columnist Writes ··on· Mount · s Blasts · . i .,, . / ' ' . )' more, has been elected ·chairman of the Men's Honor Council. Stal'ling, · a Campus Party rep- nisentative to the Col.mcil, ·is the · first to be selec'ted chairman since the Student Body Constitution that separated· men's and women's councHs was passed this spring. He was elected at a joint meet- ing o{ the old and new councils. Walt Ward and. Tom Waller op- posed Starling. . Later Ward was accepted by ac- c1aimation as council .secretary. The posts of chairman and retary are the only one$ elected · by the Council. Mock Trial Held A mock trial was hE)ld at joint meeting to familarize. the new Council members with trial proceedures. , I The 13-man judiciary body Js provided for in Article VI, section 2, of the revised Student Body Constitution. It .sets ·t·· .... (l·.·.'.- . ' . ' . . . . . . . . * BILL. STARLING ... Men's Council 'chairman .•. · Two. Coeds Get Awards- Place Top In U.S. In Science Papers · Two coed members of Beta Beta on the men's council at six rep- Beta n_ational honorary biology 1·esentatives from the senior class,, fraternity placed. winning papers four from the junior class, and in the national fraternity under- mree from the sophomore class. graduate competition. .Starling represents the rising Binkley, Wake Forest junior class. junior, was awarded first place l<'ormer student body president Coy Privette first outlined the in the· Zoological Division of com- change. in his inaugural address petition for her -paper "T.he Work last spring. Exact details were not of William Harvey and His Pre- finished until March of this year. decessors on the Circulation of W\)men's CGuncil Blood." The revised Constitution pro- In the same division' Mary Ann . vides · that· the ... Honor Hampton, Forest· City 'junior, took Council shall consist of officers of Women's. Government Associ- second place with. her work "!n- ation. The -president of WGA, telligence and Heredity." Notie Vay White, acts as chair- This is the seventh consecutive of that group. yPar that the Wake Forest chap- The Men's Council has juris- te 1 has placed winning in diction only over· male students in t11c national competition. the College. The of The contest is spt>nsored annu. included in the duties of the . old ally by the national fraternity. Council, is not performed by the Miss Binkley received $50 · as revised council, chAir- first place award. Her paper will man Bruce McDaniel. pointed out lie published in the May issue of to the new group. This duty is to: "Bios," the national monthly pub- be perform..ed by a committee on .- . , elections. . lication of Beta Beta Beta. Miss Members ·of the-- new .. Council, Hampton. received $30 , for her besides Starling are Ted · Stone, ·second place · . Ronny Stanley, Bardon Bell, Bill The contest, judged by a nation- Whedbee, Joe Dupree, Waller, al committee, was open to all .Jackie· Murdock, Ward, ·Lloyd Preslar, Jimmy Powell, Jim undergraduate students in the Featherston, and .David ;Hughes. United States arid the. Caribbean area. •.· nlb nub- i lUtk * * * ... . . - . WAKE FOREST COLLEGE, WAKE FOREST, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY, MAY 9, 1955 '! Omicron Delta Kappa and Tas- sels, honorary leadership fraterni- ties for. men and women, have · elected their officers for· the coming year. Gray Boyette, Wendell junior, has 'been elected president of ODK, while Marietta Pen-y, Eden- ton junior, has been named Tas- sels president. ODK. elections were held· Tues- day night, and Tassles selected their Thursday night . Other ODK officers include Bruce McDaniel, vice p1'esident; and Ken Freeman, secretary-trea- surer. McDaniel, now a senior, will be fn Law School next year. Free- man is a junior. Tassels officers include Mary Ann Hampton,- vice president; Notie Vay White, secretary-trea- surer; and Pauline Binkley, social chairman. The four coeds that will serve as Tassels officers next year make up the student mem- bership of the group that will re- turn to school next fall. The new Tassels officers plan a reception after the coronation of the queen Saturday , ending the l\lagnolia Festival. Everyone at- tending the coronation is invited. Motsie Burden has served as Tassels president during the past year; Callie Ann Coughlin has been vice president and Jean But- ler, Carwile LeRoy has been presi- dent of ODK for the past year; Kos Weaver has served as vice president, and Wilfred Winstead has been secretary-treasurer. Members to both organizations is made on a selection basis. Mem- bers are tapped for leadership in scholastic and e."l:tracurricular ac- tivities. ODK is a national organ- ization. · Neal Gets BSU Summer Prexy Pat Neal, Caroleen junior, has been nctminated for summer ·president of the Baptist Student Union by the BSU nominating committee. · Miss Neal has served · on the STAFF PHOTO BY TOMMY BUNN 'Twelfth Night' Leads-The College Theater will present its annual Shakespearean pro- ·duction during the lUagnolia Festival tonight and tomorrow night. Playing the leading roles in the play are David McKay as Sir Toby Belch; Roy Zimmerman as Sebastian; Glenda Johnson as Viola;' Jean Butler as Olivia; and .Marjorie Thomas as lHaria. "Twelfth Night" is a comedy concerning identical twins and·their mistaken identities. Legislature Names Committees New Student Legislature mem- bers named chairman and mem- b!lrs of sbc student parallel' com- mittees, approved appointments, and elected minor Legislature of- ficers Wednesday night. , Dee Hughes defeated Do1ly Brock for secretary of the Legis- lature. C. J. Benner was named chaplain, a n d Owen Herring, parliamentarian, by acclamation. Committee chairmen are Hilda M a u 1 d e n, Magnolia Festival; Marietta Perry, Concert-Lecture; Don Craver, Fraternities; Don Scalf, Buildings and Grounds; Owen Herring, Calendar; and Bar- bara Barr, Social. Offices Not Filled Most of the members of the various committees hold their positions by virtue of offices in other organizations. Many were not named because those offices had not been filled for next year. fraternities will serve as 'members of the Fraternities Committee, with Craver, who is president of the Inter-Fraternity Council. ' Buildings and Grounds Commit- tee members are Sylvia Mangum, Bostwick president; Hilda Maul- den, Johnson president; Jac Re- Ville, Simmons representative; Vern Pike, Hunter representative; Lloyd Preslar, Little Dorm repre- Sigma Pi Alpha PicksPresident Lorraine Munn, Baden junior, has been elected president of Sigma Pi Alpha honorary modern language fraternity. sentative; and a representative of the Colonial Club. Calendar Committee members a1·e Sarah Riecke, Frank Wyatt, 2nd Dee Hughes. Groups Set In Fall l\lembers of the Social Commit- tee are Billie Olive, social chair- man· of WGA; Bill Holoman, social chairman of IFC; Larry Williams, independent representa- tive; and next year's president of the Club. The parallel committees were set up last fall as a compromise offered by the faculty to student government proposals to place students on faculty committees. At the "first of the Legislature meeting Wednesday night, Joe Hough turned over the reigns to Frank Wyatt, incoming studenil body vice president and Legisla- ture speaker. Richard Day, senior class pres,ident, is speaker pro tern. Registrar Lists Rules For 1956 Graduating Class Page Three 25 Lib Gouldman 8th Queen To Reign Magnolia Festival's e i g h t h annual production begins a week- long series of events starting in chapel this moring and ending Sunday evening. Mozart's "The i\<Iagic Flute" and S h a k e s p e a r e ' s "Twelfth Night" are among the productions featured in the festival. Other phases of the fine arts embraced · during the week include a side- walk a1·t exhibition,- productions by the 1\<Iusic Department's con- cert band, choir, and ,glee club, an illustrated art lecture, and a dance festival. Other festival highligh:ts will be oral readings in literature sponsored by the Speech Depart- ment, coronation of the magnolia queen and her court, and a Sat- urday afternoon baseball game. First Day Festival events begin today when the Student Chapel Commit- tee presents the magnolia queen and her court in chapel and re- counts a history of 'the festival. The S h a k e n p e a r e a n play "Twelfth Night" will be presented in chapel tonight and again to- morrow night. The production is directed by Prof. Clyde McElroy. Beverly Barge as Sabastian, Jean Butler as Oliva, Glenda Johnson as Viola, and Jim Gross as Orsina Constitute the lead roles in the comedy. Students of Dr. Clifford Bair will sing in a matin'ee voiCe recital at 3:30 p.m. in room 205 of the Seminary-Music Building Tuesday . Art Lecture Sara Mcintyre, contralto, and June Russell, soprano, will pres- ent the recital. Prof. A. L. Aycock will give an illustrated art lecture in chapel Wednesday morning. Prof. Aycock will lecture on Holman Hunt's "Light of the World," a painting which illustrates pre-Raphaelite art. Members of oral interpretation classes of the Speech Department will present three periods ,Jf readings during the festival week. Selections from literature will be read 7 p.m. W edneday and Thurs- iday and 3:30 p.m. Thursday. Selections from Walt Whitman, Shakespeare, Dickene, O'Henry, and Milton will be among the 22 readings to be given. Exhibit Of Art Thursday's Festival will feature (Continued On Page Six) AED Elects· , .. Boyette Gray Boyette !has been elected president of Alpha Epsilon Delta . - . national honorary pre-medieal fra- Miss Binkley, daughter of Dr. 0. :T. Binkley ·of the Seminary 1 raculty, is an English major, taking her minor in Biology. She plans a caree,r in teaching after graduate work in English. Miss Hampton is a science major, . planning to go from the College to a medical school for prepara- tion .. for a career in ·medicine.· the executive council of the BSU, has been president of the Religious Education Club, is a . Training Union president, and has been active in Sunday School, the Young Women's Auxiliary, and the Wake Coun- ty BSU organization. Summer school elections will be held W day evenfug immediately after Vesper sen·ices in the Church auditorium MagiJolia Festival Committee members will be representatives from the Opera Workshop, College Theater, Women's Recreation As- sociation, and Social Standards Committee of the Women's ernment Association. Members of the .Concert-Lecture will be Kitty Booth, the Band president, a College Theater re- presentative, a Publications Board representative, and a debate team representative. Other officers chosen for next year at the Thursday night meet- ing include Dee Hughes, vice president; Marietta Chamblee, secretary-treasurer; B e t t y J o Hanson, corresponding secretary; Esther Seay and Carol Stroud, co- social chairmen; Jim Dunn and Sarah Riecke, co-program chair- men; and Shirley Mudge, reporter. Ten new members were initi- ated into the fraternity at the Thursday meeting, which was the last the group will hold this year. The traditional formal initiation ceremony was carried out with and challenges issued to the initiates in German, Span- ish, and French. Terrell Leaves ROTC Post For W Assignment ternity for the coming year., . · Other officers elected at the Tuesday night meeting include Don Logsdon, vice Mary Ann Hampton, secretary; . Ray' Hartness, treasurer; Glot:ia Flippin, historian; and Tom Read-, ling, reporter for "Scapel," AED publication. · The new officers will assume their posts at a ba,nquet to · be held to:morrow evening at Gre!l- ham's Restaurant.· Dr. Roy More- head of the Bowman Gray School of Medicine faculty will be the :featured speaker. Morris has served as AED president :for the past yeal'. Other officers were Gary West, vice president; Logsdon, ·secretary; Bob Mann, treasurer; Gary Cope- land, 'historiim; and Boyette, edi-. tor. Appoints Chapel Coml;nittee Head Ray Whitley has been appointed chairman of the Student· Chapel Committee for next year by Tom- , my ,Frank, incoming student 'body president. Other members of· the commit- tee are Ike 'McLain, Darlene Her- man, Larry Vanhoy, Patsy Wil- helm, Murphy Townsend, Mary Cheste1· Applewhite, and Jack Cot- trelL !J'he appointments w ere ap- proved by the Legislature Wednesday night. 'Carwile LeRoy ·E>erved as cha1rman. of the' Student ' Committee·-.tliis year. Both coeds are active in campus religious organizations, and both are on the Howler staff. Nominations will he accepted from the· floor. Ken Freemen, local and State BSU presidents, will preside at the meeting. Frat Presidents Serve Presidents of the · nine social Cabinet Sets Orientation Group . ' New members include Betty Jo Huskins, Thelma Lancaster, Ann Lide, Carolyzi. Hunter, Shirley Danner, Pellen:ee Lord, Nan Long, John Blake, Sammy Raston, and Ward Burch. STAFF PHOTO BY TOMMY. BUNN Orientat, ion Heai.:ls-Lloyd Preslar and Gray Boyette · have been appointed to lead the F:reshman Orientation Committee for next fall. Preslar will edit the freshman while .will be in charge of the overall ooiillliittee. '!'hey were appointed last week by the student Cabinet; · · Boyette, Pr__eslar Get Committees Executive Cabinet m em b e r s have elected Gray Boyette as chairman of the Freshman Orien- tation Committee for next year. Other members of the committee Bursar Gives Senior Rules were also named. Candidates for graduation this Lloyd ·Preslar was appointed spring are requested to clear their editor of the Student Handbook accounts with the bursar's office by Coy ·Privette, president of the by next Monday. student body, during a meeting Senior accounts include the $7.- of the- Cabinet Tuesday night. 50 graduation fee. No candidate The Orientation Committee con- may be cleared for graduation sists of two representatives of until all accounts, including the each of the nine social fraterni- graduation fee have been paid. ties, seven coeds, and five inde- Veterans enrolled in the College pendent men. under the World War II G.I. Bill They were Widgie White and 'will have their graduation fees Jack Cottrell, Alpha Sigma Phi; paid. by the Veterans Adminis- Richard Day and Charlie Snipes, tratlon. Kappa Alpha; Charlie Reid and Caps and gowns will be issued Bill Starling, Kappa Sigma; Lloyd from the ·bursar's office Monday Baucom and Joe Millsaps, Lambda from 2 to 4 p.m. Costumes may Chi Alpha; Ray Whitley and Bud not be issued until all fees are Kelly, Pi · Kappa Alpha. Caps and gowns cannot be John:. Wagster and Murphy given to another for delivery to a Sigma Chi; Bob Davis "senior. Sigma Pi; Benny Exceptions to any of the rules Joe Killian, Sigma Phi set out by the bursar's office can- On Two) not be. made. Headed WF Military Since Its Beginning Lt. Col Joseph S. Terrell Jr. terminates in June his assign- ment as professor of military science and tactics at Wake est College. Lt. Col. Ten·ell has been head of the RO'{C Depart- ment since its inception here in 1951. ' During Lt. Col. Terrell's tour 10f duty here nearly 100 Wake Forest men have or will have suc- cessfully completed the four year ROTC course. LT. COL. J. S. TERRELL . •• reassigned to Washington ••• For three years Lt. Col Terrell has participated in ROTC summer camp at Ft. McClellan, Ala. For two years he was deputy com- mander of the summer camp. Four Years Here In his fifteenth year of active military service, Lt. Col. Terrell will complete his fourth at Wake Forest in May, He was assigned here May 14, 1951. He will leave June 20. Lt. Col. Terrell's new assign- will be in the office, chief chemical officer, Washington, D. c. A native of Buckner, Va., he is a graduate of Virginia Poly- technic Institute. Lt. Col Terrell holds a Batchelor of Science degree in Chemical Engineering. After graduation from Y.P.I., he was commissioned as a second enant in the Organized Reserve Corps until 1940, when he was called to active duty with the Army. During World War II, Lt. Col. Terrell served 25 months in the Southwest Pacific area. After the war he served 31 months in the Caribbean Defense Command in Panama. Prior to coming to Wake est, he was for two years chief of the technical branch, staff and faculty, The Chemical Corps. School, Army Chemical Center in Maryland. He holds the Bronze Star and the Army Commendation Ribbon. Lt. CoL Terrell is married and has one daughter. He and his family have resided in Wake"For- est during his sasignment here.

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Page 1: nlb nub-i lUtk...ated into the fraternity at the Thursday meeting, which was the last the group will hold this year. The traditional formal initiation ceremony was carried out with

s 'ive times •man .. Bill ree. onference drove in ~.anda. ~uinn led with' 1ive :he plaie;

•'

Dic~B.n s North first wiq e ~crest, g:anie did >ast Con-

way 'for' lked six, · ; 12 hits e Deacon.·, t Stokoe, ' with the

the two ;tate by

:wo runs ·th, and 6-0 lead nd their. nan Bill

double, gun in

•re was hits.

e

l a State 1th. Sec­got two

1\.cademy •re the red here

for five ing one Stanton

times at behind. victory

h fresn­taten by :.y Dea­a game fternoon yed ali

• te here t Thurs­lay they

val. ess de.

val

y­ne.

•.

. .

:columnist Writes ··on· R~iQr. Mount · 'P.~stor' s Blasts ·

. i

.,,

. /

' '

. )'

more, has been elected ·chairman of the Men's Honor Council.

Stal'ling, · a Campus Party rep­nisentative to the Col.mcil, ·is the

· first to be selec'ted chairman since the Student Body Constitution a~1endment that separated· men's and women's councHs was passed this spring.

He was elected at a joint meet­ing o{ the old and new councils. Walt Ward and. Tom Waller op­posed Starling. . Later Ward was accepted by ac­

c1aimation as council .secretary. The posts of chairman and s~c­retary are the only one$ elected

· by the Council. Mock Trial Held

A mock trial was hE)ld at th~ joint meeting to familarize. the new Council members with trial proceedures. , I

The 13-man judiciary body Js provided for in Article VI, section 2, of the revised Student Body Constitution. It .sets memb~rship

·t·· .... (l·.·.'.-. ' . ' . . . . . .

. .

*

BILL. STARLING ... Men's Council 'chairman .•. ·

Two. Coeds Get Awards-

Place Top In U.S. In Science Papers

· Two coed members of Beta Beta on the men's council at six rep- Beta n_ational honorary biology 1·esentatives from the senior class,, fraternity placed. winning papers four from the junior class, and in the national fraternity under­mree from the sophomore class. graduate competition.

.Starling represents the rising Pa~line Binkley, Wake Forest junior class. junior, was awarded first place

l<'ormer student body president Coy Privette first outlined the in the· Zoological Division of com-change. in his inaugural address petition for her -paper "T.he Work last spring. Exact details were not of William Harvey and His Pre­finished until March of this year. decessors on the Circulation of

W\)men's CGuncil Blood." The revised Constitution pro- In the same division' Mary Ann

. vides · that· the ... Women~s Honor Hampton, Forest· City 'junior, took Council shall consist of officers of Women's. Government Associ- second place with. her work "!n-ation. The -president of WGA, telligence and Heredity." Notie Vay White, acts as chair- This is the seventh consecutive ~an of that group. yPar that the Wake Forest chap-

The Men's Council has juris- te1 has placed winning paper~ in diction only over· male students in

t11c national competition. the College. The carrying-~ut of ~lections, The contest is spt>nsored annu.

included in the duties of the . old ally by the national fraternity. Council, is not performed by the Miss Binkley received $50 · as revised council, outgoi~g chAir- first place award. Her paper will man Bruce McDaniel. pointed out lie published in the May issue of to the new group. This duty is to: "Bios," the national monthly pub-be perform..ed by a committee on .- . , elections. . lication of Beta Beta Beta. Miss

Members ·of the-- new .. Council, Hampton. received $30 , for her besides Starling are Ted · Stone, ·second place paper~ · . Ronny Stanley, Bardon Bell, Bill The contest, judged by a nation­Whedbee, Joe Dupree, Waller, al committee, was open to all .Jackie· Murdock, Ward, ·Lloyd Preslar, Jimmy Powell, Jim undergraduate students in the Featherston, and .David ;Hughes. United States arid the. Caribbean

area.

•.·

nlb nub- i lUtk * "e~ <~'- e~·~J!i~M~ <~'- M~"· * * ... . . - .

WAKE FOREST COLLEGE, WAKE FOREST, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY, MAY 9, 1955 '!

Omicron Delta Kappa and Tas­sels, honorary leadership fraterni­ties for. men and women, have · elected their officers for· the coming year.

Gray Boyette, Wendell junior, has 'been elected president of ODK, while Marietta Pen-y, Eden­ton junior, has been named Tas­sels president.

ODK. elections were held· Tues­day night, and Tassles selected their offi~ers Thursday night .

Other ODK officers include Bruce McDaniel, vice p1'esident; and Ken Freeman, secretary-trea­surer. McDaniel, now a senior, will be fn Law School next year. Free­man is a junior.

Tassels officers include Mary Ann Hampton,- vice president; Notie Vay White, secretary-trea­surer; and Pauline Binkley, social chairman. The four coeds that will serve as Tassels officers next year make up the student mem­bership of the group that will re­turn to school next fall.

The new Tassels officers plan a reception after the coronation of the queen Saturday , ending the l\lagnolia Festival. Everyone at­tending the coronation is invited.

Motsie Burden has served as Tassels president during the past year; Callie Ann Coughlin has been vice president and Jean But­ler, secretar~

Carwile LeRoy has been presi­dent of ODK for the past year; Kos Weaver has served as vice president, and Wilfred Winstead has been secretary-treasurer.

Members to both organizations is made on a selection basis. Mem­bers are tapped for leadership in scholastic and e."l:tracurricular ac­tivities. ODK is a national organ-ization. ·

Neal Gets BSU Summer Prexy

Pat Neal, Caroleen junior, has been nctminated for summer

·president of the Baptist Student Union by the BSU nominating committee. ·

Miss Neal has served · on the

STAFF PHOTO BY TOMMY BUNN

'Twelfth Night' Leads-The College Theater will present its annual Shakespearean pro-·duction during the lUagnolia Festival tonight and tomorrow

night. Playing the leading roles in the play are David McKay as Sir Toby Belch; Roy Zimmerman as Sebastian; Glenda Johnson as Viola;' Jean Butler as Olivia; and .Marjorie Thomas as lHaria. "Twelfth Night" is a comedy concerning identical twins and·their mistaken identities.

Legislature Names Committees New Student Legislature mem­

bers named chairman and mem­b!lrs of sbc student parallel' com­mittees, approved appointments, and elected minor Legislature of­ficers Wednesday night. , Dee Hughes defeated Do1ly Brock for secretary of the Legis­lature. C. J. Benner was named chaplain, a n d Owen Herring, parliamentarian, by acclamation.

Committee chairmen are Hilda M a u 1 d e n, Magnolia Festival; Marietta Perry, Concert-Lecture; Don Craver, Fraternities; Don Scalf, Buildings and Grounds; Owen Herring, Calendar; and Bar­bara Barr, Social.

Offices Not Filled Most of the members of the

various committees hold their positions by virtue of offices in other organizations. Many were not named because those offices had not been filled for next year.

fraternities will serve as 'members of the Fraternities Committee, with Craver, who is president of the Inter-Fraternity Council. '

Buildings and Grounds Commit­tee members are Sylvia Mangum, Bostwick president; Hilda Maul­den, Johnson president; Jac Re­Ville, Simmons representative; Vern Pike, Hunter representative; Lloyd Preslar, Little Dorm repre-

Sigma Pi Alpha PicksPresident

Lorraine Munn, Baden junior, has been elected president of Sigma Pi Alpha honorary modern language fraternity.

sentative; and a representative of the Colonial Club.

Calendar Committee members a1·e Sarah Riecke, Frank Wyatt, 2nd Dee Hughes.

Groups Set In Fall l\lembers of the Social Commit­

tee are Billie Olive, social chair­man· of WGA; Bill Holoman, social chairman of IFC; Larry Williams, independent representa­tive; and next year's president of the ~onogram Club.

The parallel committees were set up last fall as a compromise offered by the faculty to student government proposals to place students on faculty committees.

At the "first of the Legislature meeting Wednesday night, Joe Hough turned over the reigns to Frank Wyatt, incoming studenil body vice president and Legisla­ture speaker. Richard Day, senior class pres,ident, is speaker pro tern.

Registrar Lists Rules For 1956 Graduating Class Page Three

NUM~ER 25

Lib Gouldman 8th Queen To Reign Magnolia Festival's e i g h t h

annual production begins a week­long series of events starting in chapel this moring and ending Sunday evening.

Mozart's "The i\<Iagic Flute" and S h a k e s p e a r e ' s "Twelfth Night" are among the productions featured in the festival. Other phases of the fine arts embraced · during the week include a side­walk a1·t exhibition,- productions by the 1\<Iusic Department's con­cert band, choir, and ,glee club, an illustrated art lecture, and a dance festival.

Other festival highligh:ts will be oral readings in literature sponsored by the Speech Depart­ment, coronation of the magnolia queen and her court, and a Sat­urday afternoon baseball game.

First Day Festival events begin today

when the Student Chapel Commit­tee presents the magnolia queen and her court in chapel and re­counts a history of 'the festival.

The S h a k e n p e a r e a n play "Twelfth Night" will be presented in chapel tonight and again to­morrow night. The production is directed by Prof. Clyde McElroy. Beverly Barge as Sabastian, Jean Butler as Oliva, Glenda Johnson as Viola, and Jim Gross as Orsina Constitute the lead roles in the comedy.

Students of Dr. Clifford Bair will sing in a matin'ee voiCe recital at 3:30 p.m. in room 205 of the Seminary-Music Building Tuesday .

Art Lecture Sara Mcintyre, contralto, and

June Russell, soprano, will pres­ent the recital.

Prof. A. L. Aycock will give an illustrated art lecture in chapel Wednesday morning. Prof. Aycock will lecture on Holman Hunt's "Light of the World," a painting which illustrates pre-Raphaelite art.

Members of oral interpretation classes of the Speech Department will present three periods ,Jf readings during the festival week. Selections from literature will be read 7 p.m. W edneday and Thurs­iday and 3:30 p.m. Thursday.

Selections from Walt Whitman, Shakespeare, Dickene, O'Henry, and Milton will be among the 22 readings to be given.

Exhibit Of Art Thursday's Festival will feature

(Continued On Page Six)

AED Elects· , .. Boyette Pre~y

Gray Boyette !has been elected president of Alpha Epsilon Delta

. - . national honorary pre-medieal fra-

Miss Binkley, daughter of Dr. 0. :T. Binkley ·of the Seminary

1raculty, is an English major, taking her minor in Biology. She plans a caree,r in teaching after ta~ing graduate work in English.

Miss Hampton is a science major, . planning to go from the College to a medical school for prepara­tion .. for a career in ·medicine.·

the executive council of the BSU, has been president of the Religious Education Club, is a

. Training Union president, and has been active in Sunday School, the Young Women's Auxiliary, and the Wake Coun­ty BSU organization.

Summer school president~al elections will be held W edn~s­day evenfug immediately after Vesper sen·ices in the Church auditorium •

MagiJolia Festival Committee members will be representatives from the Opera Workshop, College Theater, Women's Recreation As­sociation, and Social Standards Committee of the Women's Gov~ ernment Association.

Members of the .Concert-Lecture will be Kitty Booth, the Band president, a College Theater re­presentative, a Publications Board representative, and a debate team representative.

Other officers chosen for next year at the Thursday night meet­ing include Dee Hughes, vice president; Marietta Chamblee, secretary-treasurer; B e t t y J o Hanson, corresponding secretary; Esther Seay and Carol Stroud, co­social chairmen; Jim Dunn and Sarah Riecke, co-program chair­men; and Shirley Mudge, reporter.

Ten new members were initi­ated into the fraternity at the Thursday meeting, which was the last the group will hold this year. The traditional formal initiation ceremony was carried out with in~;truetions and challenges issued to the initiates in German, Span­ish, and French.

Terrell Leaves ROTC Post For W ash~ng;ton Assignment

ternity for the coming year., . · Other officers elected at the

Tuesday night meeting include Don Logsdon, vice pr~sidimt; Mary Ann Hampton, secretary;

. Ray' Hartness, treasurer; Glot:ia Flippin, historian; and Tom Read-, ling, reporter for "Scapel," AED publication. ·

The new officers will assume their posts at a ba,nquet to · be held to:morrow evening at Gre!l­ham's Restaurant.· Dr. Roy More­head of the Bowman Gray School of Medicine faculty will be the :featured speaker. T~m Morris has served as AED

president :for the past yeal'. Other officers were Gary West, vice president; Logsdon, ·secretary; Bob Mann, treasurer; Gary Cope­land, 'historiim; and Boyette, edi-. tor.

Appoints Chapel Coml;nittee Head

Ray Whitley has been appointed chairman of the Student· Chapel Committee for next year by Tom­

, my ,Frank, incoming student 'body president.

Other members of· the commit­tee are Ike 'McLain, Darlene Her­man, Larry Vanhoy, Patsy Wil­helm, Murphy Townsend, Mary Cheste1· Applewhite, and Jack Cot­trelL

!J'he appointments w ere ap­proved by the S~dent Legislature Wednesday night. 'Carwile LeRoy ·E>erved as cha1rman. of the' Student

' Committee·-.tliis year.

Both coeds are active in campus religious organizations, and both are on the Howler staff.

Nominations will he accepted from the· floor.

Ken Freemen, local and State BSU presidents, will preside at • the meeting. ~

• Frat Presidents Serve Presidents of the · nine social

Cabinet Sets Orientation Group . '

New members include Betty Jo Huskins, Thelma Lancaster, Ann Lide, Carolyzi. Hunter, Shirley Danner, Pellen:ee Lord, Nan Long, John Blake, Sammy Raston, and Ward Burch.

STAFF PHOTO BY TOMMY. BUNN

Orientat, ion Heai.:ls-Lloyd Preslar and Gray Boyette · have been appointed to lead the

F:reshman Orientation Committee for next fall. Preslar will edit the freshman ha~dbook; while ~yette .will be in charge of the overall ooiillliittee. '!'hey were appointed last week by the student Executiv~ Cabinet; · ·

Boyette, Pr__eslar Get Committees Executive Cabinet m em b e r s

have elected Gray Boyette as chairman of the Freshman Orien­tation Committee for next year. Other members of the committee

Bursar Gives Senior Rules

were also named. Candidates for graduation this Lloyd ·Preslar was appointed spring are requested to clear their

editor of the Student Handbook accounts with the bursar's office by Coy ·Privette, president of the by next Monday. student body, during a meeting Senior accounts include the $7.-of the- Cabinet Tuesday night. 50 graduation fee. No candidate

The Orientation Committee con- may be cleared for graduation sists of two representatives of until all accounts, including the each of the nine social fraterni- graduation fee have been paid. ties, seven coeds, and five inde- Veterans enrolled in the College pendent men. under the World War II G.I. Bill

They were Widgie White and 'will have their graduation fees Jack Cottrell, Alpha Sigma Phi; paid. by the Veterans Adminis­Richard Day and Charlie Snipes, tratlon. Kappa Alpha; Charlie Reid and Caps and gowns will be issued Bill Starling, Kappa Sigma; Lloyd from the ·bursar's office Monday Baucom and Joe Millsaps, Lambda from 2 to 4 p.m. Costumes may Chi Alpha; Ray Whitley and Bud not be issued until all fees are Kelly, Pi · Kappa Alpha. p~d. Caps and gowns cannot be

John:. Wagster and Murphy given to another for delivery to a Sigma Chi; Bob Davis "senior.

Sigma Pi; Benny Exceptions to any of the rules Joe Killian, Sigma Phi set out by the bursar's office can-

ICC~OiltilllU~!d On Pa~:e Two) not be. made.

Headed WF Military Since Its Beginning

Lt. Col Joseph S. Terrell Jr. terminates in June his assign­ment as professor of military science and tactics at Wake For~ est College. Lt. Col. Ten·ell has been head of the RO'{C Depart­ment since its inception here in 1951. '

During Lt. Col. Terrell's tour 10f duty here nearly 100 Wake Forest men have or will have suc­cessfully completed the four year ROTC course.

LT. COL. J. S. TERRELL . •• reassigned to Washington •••

For three years Lt. Col Terrell has participated in ROTC summer camp at Ft. McClellan, Ala. For two years he was deputy com­mander of the summer camp.

Four Years Here In his fifteenth year of active

military service, Lt. Col. Terrell will complete his fourth at Wake Forest in May, He was assigned here May 14, 1951. He will leave June 20.

Lt. Col. Terrell's new assign­men~. will be in the office, chief chemical officer, Washington, D. c.

A native of Buckner, Va., he is a graduate of Virginia Poly­technic Institute. Lt. Col Terrell holds a Batchelor of Science degree in Chemical Engineering. After graduation from Y.P.I., he was commissioned as a second lieut~ enant in the Organized Reserve Corps until 1940, when he was called to active duty with the Army.

During World War II, Lt. Col. Terrell served 25 months in the Southwest Pacific area. After the war he served 31 months in the Caribbean Defense Command in Panama.

Prior to coming to Wake For~ est, he was for two years chief of the technical branch, staff and faculty, The Chemical Corps. School, Army Chemical Center in Maryland. He holds the Bronze Star and the Army Commendation Ribbon.

Lt. CoL Terrell is married and has one daughter. He and his family have resided in Wake"For­est during his sasignment here.

Page 2: nlb nub-i lUtk...ated into the fraternity at the Thursday meeting, which was the last the group will hold this year. The traditional formal initiation ceremony was carried out with

etb 8olb a-nb lllatk . . Dan Poole

Editor

Wake Forest College· .. •

Gray Boyette Business Manager

Monday,· May 9, 1955

From Roof Down With exams coining closer and closer, and·

that e:x-tra pressure of work which seems to pile up at the end of each semester, a much­discussed, yet little-noticed, feature crops up a·gain.

Students have been asking for a reading . day before exams around here for many years. The political parties put it in their _platforms. Off and on, Old Gold and Black advocates it editorially. Student body presidents and Stu-· dent Legislatures have ·gone on record for the ~dea. But-every year, somehow, the same thing happens to it-it dies.

It is lamentable that nobody seems to want to do an;ything. about it. A reading day would be a strong advantage to students harassed by those term papers, reports, and the like which seem to be so much in abundance near the end of each semester. There just isn't time any more for studying. With a reading day, even if it means one more day added to the semester, students who otherwise go into the first days of exams inadequately prepared would gain badly needed time.

Lack of a reading day becomes even more acute this year in the face of faculty elimina­tion of the long standing practice of exempt­ing seniors from exams. The senior, pressed from all sides to culminate four years of col­leg"e work, focuses attention on the problem all students encounter as they find classes merging into exams. Rather than eliminate the pressures of approaching exams, abolish­ing senior exemptions seems more analogous to trying to build a house by starting at the roof and working down.

We think there should be a reading day before exams. \Ve feel that such a day would be a good thing. We would also like to kno·w why \Ve haven't as yet gotten official pro or con on the subject. We have been ignored.

Of course, it's a little late in the year to be bemoaning the lack of a feature which can­not be initiated in time to benefit. this year's students. Perhaps, however, official cog­nizance of this student need on the part of faculty or students capable of constructive action may yet be forthcoming. _

There is. in other words, time enough to begin thinking about a reading day for future generations of students. ,1'

The Colonel Leaves Lt. Col. Joseph S. Terrell Jr., ROTC De­

partment head since its beg"inning in 1951, is leaving.

Lt. Col. Terrell introduced the Army to this little college when many· of its students were. still wondering what t)le military would mean to them. During his four years here Lt. Col. Terrell has gradually made a place for the department.

In both college and community affairs be and his staff have contributed to the develop­ment of Wake Forest College and to train young men in leadership. .

Among the many cadets who have passed through his department in those four years Lt. Col. Terrell is held in the respect that is due both to a man of his rank and of his qualities.

. We shall be sorry to see him go.

Just Blame Spring· When spring brings its invigorating effects

to a college campus something is ___ usually bound to happen. This spring it happehed on campuses over the nation.

For example, the Oredigger, Colorado cam­pus paper, came up with the discovery of the world's most perfect Texan--he owns a herd of 100,000 cows that give oil.

Long' Island University's Seawanhaka an­nounced that the Suicide Club would meet for the Jast time today on the roof.

At Hillsdale College a pretty miss was named "Miss Blood Drop of 1955" for her assistance with a recent over-the-tot> blood drive there.

In a midnight effort the crew moved about 15 cars up ·on the sidewalk in front of the Pioneer Memorial building. One car was wed­ged up against the front door, another on the first landing of the steps, and the rest from the door down along the walk to the street. They even remo\·ed the· tires from the last car, which had to be repaired before the other 14 could be moved, said The Hermes.

Also at Hillsdale .'"College in Michigan a sorority decided to try out the early bird theory. The coeds called for their dates at 5 a. m., entertained them with a floor show, danced to recorded music, and served orange juice, doughnuts, and coffee, ending the party at 9 a. m.

The Hillsdale Collegian, campus paper, suggested it was "something new in the line of informals."

A West Virginia University girl reporter told of several economy-minded girls who took old nylon stockings, cut the heels off, tied the ends and wore them on their heads in a nighty fashion as they went to breakfast.

"The effect was so weird that it couldn't be described," informed the West Va. coed.

But none of them have anything on Wake Forest. A student reporter for Old Gold- and Black in pursuit of .a news story strolled into the chapel 'Wednesday. There was only a middle-aged gentleman in the chapel. .

He was clad in n·othing -but blue-str1p~d and a w bite undershirt.

..---By WILLIAM PATE.---------.

-==:M.ag,no[ia Leaves I A coed reports · she lost her

first wrestling match recently. Seems she was one of the few remaining coeds who could say that no one liad tossed her into a shower . during her four years

of ·college.

were flour sacks.

Student making a telephone call was. greeted by a male operator's voice. Well, he thought not too much surprised, it must.. be the telephone strike. Whe11 he had

•-It- .-took four . girls to · do it, but she no lo~Jg­

holds· her

- _finished· his· call, he. · heard _the. telephone operator sp.eak again:

'Cheerio," he said-:-

Speaking of records, here's another inter-' esting one:

. T h e student, who has not been to chap,el for

· two and one-half years greeted an approaching student who has not been yet this year.

"Been to chapel this morning?" asked the two and one-half year abstainer.

"Hell, no!" replied· the other. "Why spoil a perfect record?"

Lying on a table in the Recrea­tion Room:

One. broken cap pistol, cowboy type, probable vet of many Indian wars-possible oW!Jer, fierce freshman who abandonned it for more practical model.

This writer is still rarely per­mitted to let a week pass by in which -he is not reminded of a Magnolia Leaves item he un­fortunately once wrote. Coeds still pass by and remind him that "All Wake Forest men are jackasses," too.

"There are three kinds of men," said a coed last week, "the hand­soma; the intelligen~ and the majority."

In reply to the Magnolia Leaves item, she added:

"And the majority are in the majority at Wake Forest."

Even coeds must be getting tired of panty raids.

Report comes from East Caro­lina College that students there staged one. All they got, however,

Required to make a speech on mental delinquency for a class,_ a coed figured out_' how she. was. going to prepared for · it.

"I'm going to look in the mirror and take notes," she said.

· Advertisement on b u II e t i n board in the Rec Room:

~'For Sale: One slightly cut Felix Domestica!

"Reasonable! "Will stay embalmed for yearsl "Tail included."

Two students sat disagreeing on a point. One student very seriously and strongly made his argument. As he ,talked he would wave his bands more and more, and get more excited. He raised his , voice slightly, as if preparing to battle it out.

Then the other fellow made some humorous crack. The first student looked at him for a moment. He broke into a slightly sheepish grin and ruffled his !friend's crew cut.

"Aw, you haven't got· any sense,'" ·he smiled.

~lost of the members of a government class stood '?n tiptoe in room 5 of the Social Sciences Building. They stretched to see over the high ''indow stills.

Right across from that side of the building is Bostwick Beach. And several coeds were sunbath­ing.

A coed coming into the class­room looked wonderingly at the group of males crowded at that side of the room.

"It's spring," one of them ex­. plained.

Readers Write About School, Student's Conduct In Chapel

School Has Many· Failures lif'Year:

To the Editor: Thanks for recapitulating our

successes this year and Old Gold and Black, in my book, rates aill All-American this semester, also.

· It has been a great year ~n .. many respects.

But with these accomplish· ments I am still aware and mind­ful of' our failures and disappoint­ments; I would like to review those at this time.

At the start of the sehool year, a professor made a motion at a faculty meeting that concerned senior students; their last semes­ter final exams must be taken. 1 don't think the statistics will show an improvement.

Then the axe fell with 18 per cent shaking in their boots, and many getting the opportunity to air them out for at least one se­mester. No faculty member ad· mits anv administrative action or motion ·in a meeting which re­sulted in more class 1·equirements and closer grading. But they did consider too many reaching Phi Beta status. My predktion is that that number will diminish after this year. :But could some an· nouncement from the faculty have alleviated the 18 per cent situa­tion. Some students, working hard as usual (average), didn't know what to do when their grades

. dropped ·with the same amount of work.

Jean Butler, when asked the difference between a social regu­lation and a standard, l'eplied (showing neglect of handbook) by "giving examples. She said hose must be worn when going to Ra­leigh. That is a rule. Hats and heels to Sunda:~-- morning services, she said, was a standard. I take it a standard does not have to be obeyed. Both of these are listed as social standards on page 22. If both are rules, the Southern Baptist Convention 1night be in­terested in the latter.

One of the best ministers in this state has lost his effect as chaplin of a student "body. 'J;he recent incident, it seems, was only the straw that broke the camel's back.

I think this last view is the most disappointing. We, ·as Wake Forest students, agree in idea. stronger than the constituents of any other school.· The pity is, that on the occasion an organized re­sponse could or. should be made, we do not know how to act. We are all for som-ething, but we want to ·do nothing about it. One person has said that Wake Forest College is an ideal school. One can r.ome here for four· years and not get disturbed about a thing. I am glad nothing has disturbed me.

May no one question when I say that I think that this has been a great year, that Wake Forest ·

Conduct In Chapel Very Unbecoming

To the Editor: I am writing this to let you

and the rest of the student body know bow I feel about the conduct of the students during chapel. I have never seen such action as unbecoming to young ladies and men as I have in the past few wee"ks.

The chapel period is used :for other things than what it should be. I am not referring to the pro­grams. We have had very good programs.

Some students use the chapel period as they would a study hall. Some students wait for 10 a.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Fri­day to prepare their work for the third period class.

One day students were throw­ing paper airplanes ,during chapel. Some students continue talking during the program. Maybe the ~tudents are not interested in chapel. But does this justify the reason :for disturbing the other students?

In the high school I attended these things just were not al­lowed. If two or three students in-

. sisted. on talking during the chapel period the principal took neces­sary steps immediately. a f t e r chapel.

Another act of· disorderly con­duct is the way students act at the beginning of chapel. Wben people reach the age o:f colleg~ students, they should know how to enter the chapel with reverence

Names Heads Of Orientation

(Continued From Page One) Epsilon; and C. J .. Benner and Pat Price, Theta Chi. · ·

Coeds are Marietta Perry, Carol Stroud, Vivian Butler, Sylvia Man­gum, Hilda Maulden, Lynn Laugh­run and Sarah Riecke.

Independent men are Tommy Womble Don Scalf, Jim Goode, Larry Williams, and :Bill Whedbee.

Members of the Handbook Com­·mittee who will serve with Preslar are Charles Newman, Don Craver, Owen H e r r i n g, and Shirley Mudge.

Prof. Charles M. Allen of the Biology Department is chairman of the faculty Advisory Council to the lower division and will be in charge of freshman orientation along with Boyette.

The appointments . were ap­proved by the Student Legislature Wednesday night.

College is the best college in the United States, and that· members. of its faculty and student body · will stack up against any in the country.

Ted Fulp

. ' J

It see~• To Me . 2- 'Fake· Victories···: ··~. · In. M~a~ Sports . _ :::-

By WILFRED W:INSTE:AD- Two i~tr~mural. individual ~pcli-t~ · championships were decided last. : week. J·

\ . . . -

Rev. Johnston Reiterates Charges· Of Immorality At Wake Forest

Fred ·Young, an independent physical education major,· defeat­f!d Ka.]!Pa ·Alpha Carwile LeRoy for -the badminton crown; .and:

That Rocky Mount preacher: who attacked Wake Forest a.s a. hotbed. af liquor".iirhiking' and rm:.:. morality during the summer of 1953 is at it again.

In a paid advertisement in a re_.· cent edition of the Rocky Mount Evening Telegram, supporters of the Rev. Samuel H. ·W. Johnston claim that "in the past 32 months

. 161 people have -been added to this mapority group (the 241 per­sons who voted to withdraw from the Southern Baptist Convention) and we now have a· Charter mem- · bership of 402;''

"Since the first week of Jan­uary the offerings have averaged over $1,000.00 weekly," alleges the ad. The ad also claims that the new church, Bible Missionary Bap­tist Church, is helping to support seven missionary families.

The Rev. Johnston's serious charges against the Southern Bap­tist Convention are renewed and his disparaging position on Wake Forest reiterated. Financial obli­gations incurred in the trial, says the ad,_ totaled almost $19,000.00 and approximately $16,000.00 in a building fund had to be given to the minority group (144 persons voted against Johnston) "who aided and abetted by the ecclesias­tical hierarchy of the Southern Baptist Convention in direct dis­obedience to the plain teaching of the Bible and all Baptist Church jurisprudence."

"By the grace of God," the ad says, he ((Johnston) has preacher the truth. He has exposed this ecclesiastical hierarchy and their henchmen. He permitted Floyd Holmes, a former student at Wake Forest College, to expose the im­morality and drinking in the fra­ternitlr while he was a student there. He permitted Gene Gur­ganus to expose the conditions at Wake Forest College while he was a student there.

"He permitted the truth con­cerning the small per cent of col­lection plate dollar to eventually reach the mission field to be made known. He exposed the apostacy, modernism, liberalism permitted by the Southern Baptist Conven­tion."

Wake Forest College and the Southern Baptist Convention have

toward God and the speaker. The other day Dr. Blackburn asked the students to pay attention to the announcements. The noise of the students continued. Finally after a few minutes Dr. Black­burn was able to read the an~ nouncements. This is not the first time. It has happened many ti-mes. The students are not cooperating. with the speakers.

Students are not showing proper resp~t for . others •. I wonder if these students would act 'this way if their pa:t;ents knew of it. Were these students taught to show dis­respect for others and God?

I think it would add to the name of Wake Forest College if the students were to show more 1espect than they do for others. What do visitors think? FellO-w students, your name will go to places that you never will. Our school will have the name we give it. -

Ottis L. King

PRESS

-Old Gold

Staff

. Mana!Png Ed. ·--· Charles Newman Assoc~ate Editor .... William Pate ·Sports Editor ... --... Lloyd . Preslar Circulation Mgr ..... Patsy Pearce Photographer .. ,_ ... ____ Tommy Bunn

Editorial Staff: Lloyd Baucom J}itty Booth, Linda Boothe, Dotti~ :Braddock, Durell Bullock, Delores C_arson, Bill Connely, Bob Girard David McKay, Shirley Mudge' Darrell Oberg, Jo Anne Powell' Nancy Smith,,, Marjorie Thomas:­Tony Wrenn.

Business Staff: Don Craver, Wil­bur ·Early, Darlene Herman, Hilda Maulden, Li?nel Pate, Billy Powell, Gravely Re1d, Ann Scruggs, S.ue Weathers.

Circulation Staff: Dolly Brock, Sue Deaton, Carolyn Famswortl\, Margaret Feeney, Bob Fi51er, Chris Ford, Mary Ann Hampt.on, Hilda Maulden, Larry Peat·ce, :Becky Powers, Gayle Privette, Sarah Riecke, Joanne Till, Blair Tucker. ·

Founded Jan. 15, 1916. and publl.shetl each Monday during the school year ex­cept durtng exannnauon and holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

Member of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for national adver­tising by Natioual Advertialng Service. Inc. Subscription rate-$2.150 per year.

Entered.as second class matter January 22. 1916, and re-entered .AprU 5, 1943. ·at the post office at Wake Forest. Nortb Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879.

Offices In .The Student Center -4056 · P •. 0. Box 551

1 · Beau_ Claxton, another ·Kappa· AI- . been amply defended. There is · h · little need to deign to reply. . . . P a ·entry, topped Fred Cherry for

the spring golf title. · ·- - 'Phe 32-months, or ~'almost :three_ · years" which· the ad says have · .. Severai·'Tritta~u~"I~-siu-fifb·a·lJ~-- .:-passed since "the majority of the games will · be played ·.~is· w'eek.. · congregation of the North Rocky . · as single-elimination· tournaments· Mount Ba.ptjst Chut·ch · voted to .. begin in b,oth the Independent· and

· withdraw from the : State -and ~atemity Leagues. Southern :Baptist Convention" is · open to question. Old Gold's files for w·anting · the church to with- ·

· show :that the vote -was taken draw from '"the So~~hem · Baptist August 9, 1953, 11 days after· the- ·Convention -is so that he can con-Rev. Johnston initially made his t1-ol his· own church to a greater charges. To date 20 months have ·extent . . . . • If· '•he gets his way passed since the vote was taken. that would· make him a: church The ad's 32 months apparently power in tl;le state." includes one year extra time. Jo)lnston had his way. - _The two former Wake· Forest A J closing paragraph in the ad students who attacked the Col- says, "In appreciation ·for his un-lege, says the ad, are planning to tiring efforts and devotion. to the enter the mission field. Mr. ail.d Lord and,his •Word, we, the people Mrs. Floyd Holmes will leave :for of the Bible Missionary Ba,ptist Africa in the fall, and Mr. and Church, praise God for sending Mrs;_ Gene Gurganus plan to go him here and vote unanimously to to India, reports the ad. · give him · a substantial increase

in salary." Old Gold received a copy of the ad, marked "The Lord is blessing (n a marvelouf? way. Samuel H.

. ,V. ·Johnston." It was Johnston who in the- fall of· 1953 showed a "girlie show" ad in Old Gold to a Durham reporter ·as an example of immorality here. ·

ReferriJ?.g to the "exposes;" the . ad says, ·"by permittink these and other- flagrant evils" t() be exposed, pastor· Samuel H. W. Johnston has been blac.!cballed everywhere by those he has exposed."

In answering Johnson's charges almost two years ago, College President Harold W. Tribble said ~ohnston's attack was· a "smokescreen to cover his real intentions." Dr. Tribble said that "it appears to me his only reason

Incidentally, Robert T. Ket-. cham, ·founder and national re­presentative of the apostle of dis­cord General Association of Regu­lar Baptist Churches who testified at the Rocky Mount 'trial for .r olinston and who is a subscriber to.- Old Gold and Black, recently notified the . paper of a change of address. · .

. The University of Minnesota will work in a "sister relationship,. with the National University of Seoul for the next three years, un­der terms of a contract between the Minnesota school and the p. S. Foreign Operation administra­tion <FOA).

(Author o/'"Bare/oot_ Boy With Cheek," eee.)

THE GREAT CAP and GOWN CONTROVERSY The cap and gown season is upon us, and with it comes the

perennial question: which side of the. cap should the tassel hang on? · ·

This is an argb.ment that arises every year to roil the aca­demic world, and it is, alas, no closer to solution today than "it was in 1604 when Fred Tassel invented the troublesome orna­·ment. -.

Fred Tassel, incidentally; never made a penny from his inven­tion. The sad fact is he never took. out a patent on it. This ·tragic · oversight becomes understandable, however, when one considers that patents were not invented tilll851 by Fred Patent, himself a pitiable figure. A compulsive handwasher, he died in his four,. teenth year, leaving behind a wife and five spotless children.

But I 'digress. We were discussing which s~de of the cap tlie tassel s~uld hang on.

For many years the universally accepted prabtice was to hang the tassel over the front of the cap. This practice was.abandoned in 1942 when the entire graduating claas of Nort~.western Uni-

. versity, blinded by tassels· hanging in their'eyes, .made a wrong· turn during commencem~t exercises and ended up at the Great_ Lakes Training Center where, all unwitting.,they were: inducted into the Navy for five year hitches.- .. . · ' ·

There is· one school of thought-large and growing daily larger -which holds that the tassel sh<luld be worn on the same side you carry your Philip Morris Cigarettes. Thus a quick glance will show you where your Philip Morris are and save much time and fumbling., .

This_makes a good deal of sense 'because ·when one wants a Philip Morris, one wants one with a minimum of delay. One does not relish being kept, even for a second; from the clean, delicate flavor ~f Philip Morris, so artfupy blended, so subtly concocted to please the keen and alert taste buds of young smokers. One chafes at any obstacle, however smaJ~, that is put in the way .of enjoying this most edifying of cigarettes, so pleasing to the perceptive palate. Here, in king size or regular, at prices that

-do v.o violence to the slimmest of budgets, is a finn white cylinder of balm and pure, abiding content.

There is another group, small but vocal, that in_l!ists the tassel should hang over the back of'the cap. The tassel, they say, is a symbol like the bullfighter's pigtail, signifying honor and' courage. _ .

They are wrong. Bullfighters wear pigtails for only one rea­son: to keep the· backs of their necks warm. Do you have any idea what a draft a bull makes when h~ rushes past you? A plenty big one, you may be sure.

Jn fact, upper reSpiratory infections, contrac~ed in the wake of passing bulls, ar:e the largest single cause of bullring;; fatalities. I have this intere8ting- statistic ~rom the Bullfighters· Mutual Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, one. of "the few insurance companies in Hartford, CoLnecticut, which writes insurance exclusively for bullfighters. Incidentally, H~rtford, the insurance capital ·of America, is a most interesting city and

. weir worth. a visit if you are ever in New England, as north­eastern United States is, for some reason, called. Hartford can b'e reached by bus, train, plane, and the Humboldt Current. Try to make your visit in :;pring, when the actuaries are in bloom.

I .

But I digress. We· were talking about what side to wear the tassel on. An ingenious solution to this troubling problem was pr()posed a few years ago by Fred Sigafoos, perhaps better known· · -as "The Quoit King of Delaware." An eal-ly forbear of Mr. Sigafoos, Humboldt Sigafoos (who. later invented the current. which bears' his name) was granted a monopoly by King George III on all quoits manufactured in· Dela\vare. Somehow the royal appointment was never rescinded and from that day to this, every quoit'Jnade in Delaware has been a Sigafoos Quoit.

Well, sir, ·Fred ~igafoos once suggested that an equitable settlement to the great tassel controversy would be to starch the tassels so they_ stood upright and hung on no side of the cap at all. Mr. Sigafoos was, of course, only .seeking to broaden his market, because after. graduation, what can you do with an _upright tassel buthl.!rl quoits at it?

®Max Shulman. 1955 . . . The maker• of PHILIP MORRIS tDlao bring y~u thi• column make no recomDU!n.llation. about tDhat aide lo -hang, the' aaasel- oR. Bur 111irh cigarettea thq ·say: Str~y OR the gentle0 taary, · flintage · aide - IIlith PHILIP !flORRIS, of courae.. . .

••

B

1 2 3

5

Page 3: nlb nub-i lUtk...ated into the fraternity at the Thursday meeting, which was the last the group will hold this year. The traditional formal initiation ceremony was carried out with

....

•' .. :·· ........... ~. . "';'

< • • MONDAy 1\IKY 9, 1955 .. ! . ',. - ~ .;,- '_

~AGE TBllEE ·

,,

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

.... . Regis~ra,r k:is.tt;.·p~_les . ~For ·;ss,· '56~.GrqtJJiates ..

. . ·. . . . ~ . ' . ) . - . · The registrar's office has .. an- .. Draft StUdings .

I_Veacs · Who Are Greeks-j ~ _By A. T. AUSTIN

ALPHA SIGMA PHI SIG11A PHI EPSILON ·.

. no~ced administration policy on Each . student who desires ·that ,August ap.d January'. candidates t_he regis~~~s off.!ce: s~d· a, r_e- -·for :degrees, rising . senior confer- ~:}t ()~· ~l!!af,s:an~g ~1° his· l~cal ences, class standing [Qr .selective. . . . :. o~r ; .. er e c_ 0~~ of ;the

. liervice . .- abSences . .'re-examiil81 SPl'.Ing ' Se)Sl!~On W~:. :n;mntded to . . ' · ; · · . ' ·. · · . promptlv flle a:pph"Catlo· f S · tions, and· tssu~.c.e·· of• tranll(!npt.s~ .. 8. · -· " - . :• ·' · _ ..... · .. n. 9r •

~im Gross has been elected: · Four men were recently initi­president of the fraternity for ated into SPE. They include Veru the coming year. Other officers Pike, Bloomfield, N. J.; Jon ei'ecj;ed Monday night are Marvin Finger, Kannapolis; Doug Gra­Geritry, · vice president; Carrol ham, Salisbury; and ·Harold For­Ferrell, secretary; and Jack Cot- tenberry, Spartanburg, S. C . trell, treasurer. · SPE's held an informal party ·at

A A d · J . ..,._ · . S. Form 109. . .. ugust . n . anuary _..,.,grees . · . · ., · • · . . · · ;

C ·· d"d · te f · d · · · The reg~strar's · off1ce rem1nded an 1 a s . or e g r.e e s lJ.l · • • · · · · · • A t 1955 · d ·J · 1956· 1;h~ students that work 1n classes llgus • · • an ~nuaz:y:, . ' should be completed in full to

may- call at· the .registrars office. 1• • t 1 · f · :f 11 d •t d during· the w~ek . of May i-1;18! ::mhma dr: 088

/ udT cr~ 1 . ue · for conferences. Students desir- · an leap 0 con 1 xon or lm· ing · preference at· "tlie June 6 completed grade. .

Widgie. White 'bas been re~ent- Johnny Nettles home before the ·ly elected secretary of the Inter- Finals' Dance. Fra~rnity Council. Recent pinnings include Benny

Alpha Sigs and their dates ~renn to Cynthia Reed of Read-. hori..ored. the graduating seniors! mg,_ Pa., Bob Koontz to Patsy: in the chapter at a hay ride and I CraWford of Rola~d; Marcus pict!ic •Friday night. . . S~ruggs· to Tony Br1ggs of Ra-

KAPPA SIGMA . · le1gh; Norm R.oberts to Pat Carson 'iegistr~tion for the summer ses-1 . Absence Rules . sion ·. have . been advised to ar- · Statements for the attention of ·. range to have .their· names iP~!lced the Committee on Absences are on a .. special· list immediately. required to be filed in. the dean's

I of· Statesville; and Tommy Cole Bruce McDani_el was awarded a to Lib Gouldman, Fayetteville

key Monday mght by the fra- · senior. temi'ty for his contributions to Vern Pike was elected to the the local chapter. Student Legislature in the recent June, -1956,' Candidates office "immediately··· afte;r ·the

Candidates for deiz.ees in June,. oecurren~.? . o~ . the abs~nee . o~. 1956, may call at the registrar's' absences. :.1\.'Qs_enc,e. , requ~sts, t~e office for conference in the week . student was remmd!i!d, must ne of M~y 11-18. ·Rising seniors who l suJ?port:e? by ".the statement of desire preference at the Sept. 121 a. phYsiCian. or sol;lle other person registration are invited to arrange competent' to cert!!Y the, facts as to have their names placed oh a to the emer~en_c~ .•. special list during ·c;onference Re-Exammat~ons And week. . ' Transcrtpts ' If a rising senior fails to come The registrar .directed attention

to the registrar's office for con- to a statement on pages 51-52 of 'Flute' .ference in May, the fact. will be the . current catalog concerning

PHOTO SY IRVIN GRIGG

PrinCipals- The College Opera Workshop, Uirected by Dr. Clifford Bair, ~eat~d, will · present .. The Magic Flute'' by Mozart at 8:15 p.m. Friday in the. Chapel.

noted and taken into consid_eration re-examinations. by the Committee on)>egrees,_an:- "A student who plans to take nounced the registrar: a re-examination during _t~e ap-

more Why do college men· and women ·smoke·

Working _on the production with Dr. Bair are Prof. Angelo Capparella, director of the College Orches­tra; Jeff Roberts, who plays the part of Monastatos; Dunreath .Jarratt, who plays Pamina; and Dr. Robert Helpt of the College Psyehology Department, who plays Papageno.

·RO,TC Students Get Physicals· Physical ex~minations we r e

given to cadets of the Wake For­est ROTC unit last week hy a ~hird Army Mobile Medical Ex­a:q~in1ng Team from Fort Bragg.

Members of the Military Science IV class received physicals in preparation for receiving reserved officers commissions May 30. They were Jack E. Kehoe, Ralph L. Adams, John A. Behrmann, Dan E. Gryder, Tommy E. Stego~

all, and William ;B. Rogers. MS III class members took

physical examinations as . a part

oi pre-summer camp preparations. 18-20. MS IV cadets will tum in A series of immunizations have clothing and equipment immedi­also been scheduled for those ca- ately after graduation exercises dets who will attend the summer on May 30. camp." Dates for the shots were J The subsistence roll for the set as Apri~ 25, May 2, 9, and 16. month of April has been released

Physicals were also given tq by the Department. Third and MS II cadets as. a requirement Fourth year cadets received a 1Prior to registration for the ad- .total of $3,101.40 for the month. vanced ROTC course. An average pay check amounts

Physical examinations were to $27. Pay for seniors for the held May 5 and · 6. m.onth of May will terminate May

All clothing and equipment held 23. · by cadets of the first thi:ee ROTC classes will be turned in May

Coed Enters Local Contest

Charles Nels?~· alumnus from student body elections. Nelson, Va., VISited the chapter Bob Frederick and Dick Whis­last week. ~nant have been elected to the all-

Bill Starling, Joe Dupree, and intramural softball team. TJl,e David Hughes were elected mem- team will participate in the Big bers of the Men's Honor Coun~il Four Sports Day to be held soon.. in the recent student elections. SIGMA PI

Brunsori Salley :will represent The fraternjty held its annual the chap~er in IFC .as junior re- stag party Friday afternoon at presentative. the Rocks.

PI KAPPA ALPHA J.'ilominees for Orchid Ball Queen. Three PiKA's came away with were voted on Monday night._

vice· presidencies in the recent Gayle Apple, pinned to ·Tom Me .. student body elections. Frank Donald, and Mrs. Shirley Ratliff. Wyatt was elected vice president wife of Johnny Ratliff, are to be of the student body. Bud Kelly voted on this week • was elected vice president of the THETA CHI rising -senior class·; and''"Smokey" Four men were··,recently initi· Joe Lancaster was named vice ated ·intO Theta Chi. They include president of the upcoming sopho- Billy. Coppege, 'Paul· Childers,· Le_e more class. ... Poindexter, and Frank Roberts.

Ray Whitley recently pinned Zenith Gibson has been selected Louise Morgan of Raleigh. Dream Girl. She was named at

PiKA almunus AI Gilliam re- the Dream Girl Ball April 25. cently dropped in on the chapter ( Don Craver was elected presi~ on his way to Louisville, Ky., dent for the coming year. Other where he will set up business officers are Bob Jeffords, viee residence.. . president; C. J. Benner, secre~

Graduatmg senrors were feted tary· Pat Price, treasurer; .anct Friday night in a chapter party. Carl,_Coppege, pledge trainer. The

SIGMA CHI new IFC representative is Jef-

Two alumni recently visited the chapter; Bill Williams, now in graduate school at the University of North Carolina, and Bob Brown who is teaching in Lemon Springs.

Dickie Hemric and Billy Lyles. played for the graduates in the varsity-alumni basketball game, Monday night.

fords.· - ·. · ~

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THE BOOK EXCHANGE Five Points Durham, N. C~ VIC\EROYS

than any other filter cigareHe?

Yearns Gets Study Grant

Prof ·Elected Commissioner

Dr. John T. Wayland, professor Dr. W. B. Yearns, history pro- in Southeastern Seminary, has

fessor, has received a grant-in- ibeen elected to. t~e W a~e Forest aid for . six weeks of study at. Boar~ of Commissioners rn a town Duke University this summer election last week.

Jane Aycock, Wake Forest I freshman, has been entered in CLOVERLEAF TRAILEI· PARK the "Miss Wake County of 1955" contest. 2 Miles West On U. S. 1 - Phone 4546

She has been entered by the Fuquay Springs 'Junior Chamber "-----•P•L•E•N•T_Y_O_F_S•P•A•C-E--S·H-A•D·E-T•R-E•E•S-----~ oi Commerce. Winner of the con- -

Dr Y 1 t d . 'd · h" Dr. ·wayland received 208 votes . earns p ans o lVI e rs · · · th f"f h '

t . b t d" · . L t" In gammg e 1 t seat on the , rme e ween rea mg 1n a m B d America history 'and completion olanr • th to. 1 ti . o er wn e ec ons, ln-·of research begun on the Con- b t H L M"ll · · d f t d f d C . . cum en . . 1 er e ea e ; erate ongress of the CJV!l Carl L. Matheny 266 to 94 in the

ar. mayor's race. Another incumbent,

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proaching examination p e r i o d should apply in advance to . the

. registrar's office for a re-exami­mltion_ IJ!'!rmit.'' ·

J. C. Keeter, polled 271 votes to win the solidtor!s post. His opponent, former Solicitor H. E. Paschal, received 199.

0 t h e r. e.ommissioners elected' were W. H. Holding, 267. votes; J. N. Bond, 239; John B. ·Cole, 245; and' J. E. Anderson, 207. Holding, Bond, and Cqle were incumbents. . . .

20j000 FILTER. TRAPS IN EVERY .FILTER TIP!

1 Yes, only Viceroy has this filter comi:>osed of 20,000 ,e . tiny filter traps. You cannot obtain the same filtering

action in any other cigarette.· · -

2. Besides being non-mineral and no~-toxic, this cellu-. lose-acetate filter never shreds or cnuribles.-

3 -The Vic~roy filter wasn't jUst whipped up and rushed e to market to meet the new and skyrOcketing demand

..._ ·for. filtered cigarettes. Viceroy pioneered. Started ·, research more than 20 years ·ago tO create the pure and perfect filter.

4 Smo_ kers en_ m~e report th.at filtered 'Yicer?ys have· e .a finer flavor even than cigarettes mthout filters.

Rich, satisfying, yet ·pleasantly mild.

s. Viceroy draws so easily that you. wouldn't know, without looking, that it even had a filter tip •.. and Viceroys cost only a penny or two more than ciga-rettes without filters!

That's why more college men and women smoke VICEROYS than any other filter cigarette ••. that's why VICEROY is the largest-selling filter cigarette in the world! ·

\

20,000 TINY FILTER TRAPS •••

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·students wer~ reminded thatl .transcripts desired ·after the close of the semester should be re· ·quested in advance. Supplemen­tary transcripts (to complete transcripts formerly ·issued) are not issued unless specifically re­quested.

)P million

_times a day

Judge Don Gulley, unopposed for justice of the Recorder's Court, lead the ticket with 419 votes.

_at home, at work

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THE CAPITAL COCA-COLA BOTTLING,COMPANY

. ·.0 "54. THI! COC-'·COLA C!OMPANY

test will compete in the Miss North Carolina contest.

Miss Aycock is one of 14 con­testant.s in .the county-wide con-I 'test, mcludmg Ann Daniels, a 1

Wake Forest High School student.

SCHOOL OF RELIGIOUS EDUCATION Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary

Prepares for all phases of lay religious service. Faculty of thirteen trained and experienced specialists.

Building especially equipped for the work. Offers B. R. E.; M. 'R. E., and D. R. E. degrees. . . ..

2223 graduates, 859 enrolled this year. Established 1915. Next·~ession begins September 5. . .

For catalogue and other information write:"'J. :a-r. Pri~ Director, Box 6955, Fort Worth 15, Texas.

The local contest will be judged by Betty Jo Ring, a Wake Forest graduate and present Miss North Carolina; Becky Lee of Dunn, a. st11dent at Duke University and runner-up for the State title in 1954; and Mrs. L~ Long Ogburn Me.dlin o! Smithfield, 1951 state j qu~en; L-------------------------------------------------:.

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Midnite Blue Dress Trousers ...•••..•......•.. 12.95

Cummerbund and Cummervest Sets ..••. 7.50 to 15.0CJ

Page 4: nlb nub-i lUtk...ated into the fraternity at the Thursday meeting, which was the last the group will hold this year. The traditional formal initiation ceremony was carried out with

PAGE FOUR

Business Student Gets lstN. C. CPA Award

Thomas. Land, Lenoir senior, be­came the first Wake Forest busi­ness student to be honored by the North Carolina Association of Certified Public Accountants.

schools. Deans of the various school in the group meet annually to discuss problems relating to business schools.

Wake Forest's School of Busi­ness is accredited hy the As­sociation on a tentative basis. · He was presented as the out­

standing business student at the College at a banquet meeting of the CPA's April 22. German Club Hosts

Land, as well as outstanding students from the University of North Carolina and . Duke Uni­:Ver.sity, .was presented a medal in recognition of his wot·k in the Business Department.

Only Duke and Carolina stu­dents have been honored at the

Members of the German Club will :be hosts to the Meredith German Club at a picnic tomorrow.

Included in the Meredith' group is their sponsor, Prof. Susanna Freund.

CPA meetings in the past. PEK BANQUET Dean Gaines M. Rogers of the Phi Epsilon Kappa, profession­

School of Business attended' a al physical educatian fraternity, l!onvention of the American As- held its Founder's Day Banquet sociation of .Collegiate Schools of, April 23 in Raleigh, w i t h Business April 28-30 on the cam- around 25 members and guests at­pus of Marquette University in tending. Dr. J. L. Pierce, an Milwaukee, Wis. athletic advisor in the State De­. The A'Ssociation is an accredit- partment of Public Instruction,

LI)(JI(I/Irf mil 1/ CIIREER? 711£8£ IS A SUtJRTif6C OF 771lEN7ED ClO/IINS IN711~ CIRCUS BUSIIIESS.

. ,. OLD GoLD AND BLACK ,.

. '· ':I.

Scabbard And Bla~~-T,o Give 3 Achievement A .W~r~s'Today:.

. The Wake Forest unit of Scab-'and Oscar .T. Jones, freshman.- " bard and Blade, national honorary The awards ·are. bas.ed on· a com­military society, will present mili-. posite of factors contributing to. tary science achievement awards general military science excellence ~ three ~dets t1iis ·morning dur- exhibited by the cadets. Individual ing chapel services. · merit. an4 academic achievement

The .cadets to receive awards are among 'the factors considered. are Gary B. Copeland, junior; Scabbard · and Blade held\ a Charles H. Richards, sophomore; swimmint party 3-8 p.m. Friday

at Truby' Upchurch's between Ra­

French. Club Gives Plays

·- The · French Club will present two one-act plays in French at Scotland Neck High School May· 16.

The Scotland Neck audience will see "La Farce du Cuvier" and "La Dame de Bronze et le Monsi­eur de Crista!."

leigh· and Zebulon. -·Memliefs "and . ~ their dates attended the affair which included a barbecued~ chicken supper. '

FOR

FINE

FOOD

FO,R THE . BEST·

.. tit. ·Hair:~.··81Jtillg .. " Alul··. . , .

COld. w•ving . . . . ' .

VISIT

-~Hortense~ s ' ~ ' . '

Beauty-Salon-·~ · Phone 5596.

ing agency f<Jr collegiate business was the speaker. · .

---------. --- ROTC To Give Achievement

The cast of the first, a medieval play, includes Jini Dunn as the ·husband, Betty !\fay Tribble as the wife, and Norma Upchurch as the mother-in-law.

WFDDRadioLog Au,ards In Review Tomorrow The cast for "La Dame" con­

sists of Dr. John Parker ~s Sourcier, Joe Killian as- Soldat, Charles Cherry as Dassandeau, John Durham as· Alique, and Anne Lide as Madame Sourcier.

YISIT

'FRANCIS' . GRILL MONDAY 4:00-580 Club 6:00-News·' 6:15-Thought For Today 6:30-Music For Dining 7:00-Music To Remember 8:00-Campus Capers 8:30-That Wonderful Feeling 8:45-Platter Parade 9:00-News 9:g5-Deacontown Varieties 9:30-Serenade In Blue 9:45-Music Miller Made lO:O~ports News 10:15-Theater Show 10 :30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News 12:05-Rendezvous With Music 12:30-Sign Off ,

TUESDAY 4:00-580 Club 6:00-News 6:15-Quiet Talk 6:30-Music For Dining 7 :00---;Music To Remember 8:00-Campus Capers 8:30-Stan Kenton Show 9:00-News 9:05-Deacontown Varieties 9:30-Stargazing

10:00-Sports News 10:15-Join The Navy '10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News 12:05-Rendezvous With Music

WEDNESDAY 4:00--<580 Club 8:00-News 6:15-Thought For Today 6:15-Music For Dining 7:00-Music To Remember 8:00-Camptis Capers 8:30-Here's To Veterans .8:45-Spanish Show 9:00-News 9:05-Along Shubert Alley 9:3()...,....Paris Star Time

· 10:00-Sports News .. : 10:15-Theater Show

10:30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News 1'2:05-Rendezvous With Music 1'2:00-Sign Off

THURSDAY 4:0G:--580 Club 6:15-Quiet Talk 6:30-Music For Dining 7:()(}._.;Music To Remember 8:00-Campus Capers 8:30-That Wonderful Feeling 8:45-Platter Parade 9:00-News 9:05-Tune Toppers

10:00-Sports News !0:15-U. S. Marine Show !0 :30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News !2:05-Rendezvous With Music 1!2:30-Sign Off

. .FRIDAY ·4':00!-580 Club 3:00-News 6:15-Thought For Today 6:30-Music For Dining 7:00-Music To Remember 8:00-Campus Capers 8:00-Billy May Show 8:45-Platter Parade !!:00-News !I :05-Deacontown Varieties 9:30>-Serena.de In Blue !1:45-Music By Glenn Miller l:O:OO-Sports News 1'0:1&-Guest Star 10 :SQ.:-Deaconlight Serenade

M'EmME.AT

s s H Y'

H s

a ' R 0 T

Y' s

12:00-News 12:{)5-Rendezvous With Music 12:30-Sign Off

SATURDAY 7:00-Saturday Night Dance

Party 8:00-News 8:15-Guest Star 8:30-Campus Capers 9:00-News 9:05-Deacontown Varieties 9:30--U. S. Marine Show

10:00--Sports News 10:15-Jazz Show 10 :30-Deaconlight Serenade 12:00-News _ ... _ ..... 12:05-Rendezvous With Music 12 :30-Sign Off

SUNDAY 10:55-Church Service 12:00-News 12:00-Piano PoJ1;raits 12:15--Let's Go To Town 12:30-Platter Parade 12:45-UN Review 1:00-Musical Memories 3:00-Music On A Sunday

Afternoon 4:00-Baptist Hour 4:30-Music To Remember 5:30-Paris Star Time 6:00--Dinner Music For Sunday 7:00-News · 7:15-Broadway In Review 7 :30-Hymn Time 7 :45-Church Service 9 :00-Sunday Serenade

10:00-Caravan of Music 12:00-News 12:05-Sign Off

'>

'$,, -~ .... ~~

The Wake Forest ROTC cadet regiment will hold a ceremonial review parade Tuesday during regular drill period in which awards· will be given to cadets for achievement in various phases of military science.

Dr. C. S. Black, colonel in th~ Air Force Reserve, will be re­viewing officer for the ceremonies. He will present the awards.

Rifle Team awards will be presented to C. P. O'Brien, first; F. A. Bennett, second; and B. T. Watkins, third, places. G. E. John­sore will ·:be - awarded first place honors in individual drill competi­tion.

Recent competetive drill win­ner, Co. L, 3rd Battalion of the cadet regiment will receive the old gold and black citation cord and streamers.

J. C. Turner will receive the Award of the Association of the United States Army for achiev-

Twent~-four per cent of all drivers involved in fatal auto accidents in the U. S .. last year were under 25 years old.

Play Golf At CHEVIOT HILLS

Raleigh Road Green Fees - Week Days .... ;75 Sat., Sun., Holidays .......... $L50

We Rent Clubs

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ARRO CASUAL WEAR

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HANDKERCHIEFS

ing first. place rating out of 68 advanced cadets attending last summer's ROTC Summer Camp.

NOT TILL 'IOU-NEET!-l"WEf.T!­COMB 'fOUR MESSY FEATHERS!!-SLOPPY BIRDS LIKE. 'IOU GIVE. ALL OF US A BAD NAME!!-

. .

lUCKY DAY! MOR'E 1UCKV·DROOD1ES!

WHAT'S THIS? For solution see bottom paragraph.

&oY WHO HAD ftVI li.uLOOICS Martha L. Mednick

Northwestern. UniiJel'llilJ!

DALMAnAN AS IDN 8T RIA APPROACHING fOR LANIIINCJ

Er.eene_ B. Do~ Yale Uniuers1ty

/

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West Virginia University

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Page 5: nlb nub-i lUtk...ated into the fraternity at the Thursday meeting, which was the last the group will hold this year. The traditional formal initiation ceremony was carried out with

' .~ ' '

.-M,ONDAY, _&I.~Y: 9, -1955 ' ,_,,,. ,•t--.' • ~ ' ' ' -

PAGE FIVB

'! r.

~:;SPOR:TilAIT!S .. · Basket6'0ll{Vqrsity Shows Spar:k; Te~~~ Preview .

.De:~eUi$ Wearv Alumlti.By ~~~~9:_~~~=~.!.~~mewiUBusy Week ': • • I • l• • ' • • .,: ' •'• ~ .~ ' '. I ' , . I •· -~ . ·,, :~ ' ·->:' •. ', '

By LLOYD PRESLAR "· 'J '~ . J · . : \ . . . . 1 . Forest displayed some go o d!

· enter one of its most active weeks teamwork in the doubles and won'

' ' Murdoek Sinks 1.8 In 9-Minute ·Spree· ·Next year's varsity ·basketball

:Ano.ther busy baseball. week ~ill ::be'gin this afternoon team eased some early fears and displayed a benchful of talent . '\,Vhen the Dceacons take' on State .in Raleigh~ This week Monday night by defeating a . -=·will'fin.ish ·l{p ·tlief'regu·Ifir 'S~asoh 's~b:eiliile'-fbr -Wake -For-· cream-of-tb_e-crop alumni. team,

. . 81-69, in G~re Gymnasium. . - -est, but with a little luck in two .of the battles the Deacs .About soo fans watched varsity mity b(dn action later in ·the NCAA play';flffs. guard Jackie Murdock score

Today's matCh and a S~turday .tilt here with Virginia points in the last .nine minutes to key the victory. Until then he had

will be the important· ones. :Both are conference games, collected only two "points. · and they're the only ones left.· . Sophomore Ernie W i g gin s,

The re.sult of. the···state battle .may be the key to the starting ·with Murdock in the ·for­ward wall, accounted for 12 more Atlantic Coast Conference championship. The Deacons points and_ second-plac~ honors in

.. arid W olfpack have been neck-a~d:..neck the past fe.w the Deacon scoring. ·

.i. · ks . d· , · I b. h h O . .. I All-American Dickie Hemric, ,, wee , and to ay s Winner cou d- e t e c amp. rigma - who recently returned from a tour . ly, the. game .was scheduled for Ea.ster M<>nday. ·But. rain. of 21 games witb an all-star col-forced a cancellation, and today was the' firSt time the: legiate team against_ the ' . . lubs co ld g t toCTether. · · /. Globetrotte:s, .was htgh man C . U . e P . . the Alumm wtth 25.

Duke will visit· here Wednesday. The Deacs have trim- ·Guard AI DePorter was behind ined the Durham nine twice already ~this season; both Hemric with 17. DePorter finished times hy fo.ur-point ~argins~·_The· Duke game won't count. his colle~ate ~areer at Wake For-· in conference standings. Bec·ause· the Big Four teams are est a~ captam. of the_ 1953-54

Playino- each other three times each this season and only ~ampaign. Maunce George, start­., . . · . . h" 1ng forward of the Deaes··last sea­two of the games can count m · the . champwns 1P race, son was third scorer for the vet-the conference· ruled that the first two home-and·home era~s with 13. · games would be·· considered. . Scoring was slow early . in the

Wake and State have already played.three·times-once ga~e, ~ut the varsity managed to in the Dixie Classic- .but they haven't played in Ra- n:tamtam a lead. th;oug~o:ut the.

• '' · ·1'1 · I d t th first 'half. The margm shifted be-leigh7 ~heref~re, today S ~ontest WI be ln!! u ed m e tween two and four· .Points until, ACC . .w-In pere:entages. with about nine.minutes·remaining - · . · · C' '.a .a J;~• ,. • ' in the half, Joe Stepusin and cen-DeacS Were N nJ'1 .rzna zsts ter·Jim·Gilley pushed the score to

The last time a Wake Forest team entered NCAA par­ticipation was in 1949. The Deacons. won out in this dis· trict, then topped Notre Dame for the regional title. ~hen came Texas and the national finals. The Longhorns won, and wake took runner-up honors in the nation.

Because of the second""place showing in'1949, the Dea· con club of 1951 was invited to Buenos Aires, Argentina, as the only baseball representative of the United States in the first Pan-American Olympic Games. The Deacs had a good trip and returned home with another runner-

, up rating. · > Eight nations participated in the South American tourney, each playing seve~ games. Th~ Deacons-or the United States--won five, but lost to Nicaragua and Cuba, the Pan-Ani champ.

That's a· sample of what Wake Forest baseball teams have done in the past. The second-place rating was the fattest laurel any Deacon athletic group has e v e r achieved. •

Only 2 Home Games Remain.

16-6. By halftime, the Alumni had

managed to reduce that margin, and the Deacons started the sec­ond period ,with a five-point lead, 32 to 27.

Hemric and DePorter led a blistering attack for the _ nexti three minutes, and the Alumni pushed ahead. But the Alumni margin never passed four· points, as the two· Wake squads battled neck and neck until Murdock be­gan his rampage.

The varsity utilized a full-court press in the last few minutes, and the tiring graduates could hold out no longer. The biggest dif­ference, score-wise, was .15 points, and the varsity was again hitting steadily at the whistle.

Biggest disappointment for the students in attendance was the ab­sence of Horace "Bones" 1\fcKin­ney in the Alumni line-up.

McKinney had planned to play the game and worked out regular­

this afternoon in Charlottesville, two matches while Duke took a Va., when the Deacons visit the single victory. ·University of Virginia. Combinations of Bill Patterson-

The netters will then return Billy Jones and AI Griffin-Bill home for brief practice sessions Rogers paid off for the Deacs. before entering the Atlantic ·Wake Forest's tennis surprise Coast Conference tennis tourna- of the season came April ao •

_ ment,- which- begins--_T\uli:sda:J£ in_ when the netters upset N. C. Chapel Hill. · · ' - - State, 7-2, ·in Raleigh,· to avenge-

Dickie Hemric,, ba~k at h01me, shoots for Alumni

cold k.ept tile assist.ant coach out 1 where DePorter was _catching a of actwn· Monday mght. last moment of relaxatton. He was

alone on the bench. · "Same old story," Hemric grin­

ned, remembering his four years with the Deacs. "We ain't got no bench strength."

The veterans began to show their weariness as whistle-time drew near. They made good use of their time-outs, but during one in the last six minutes they chose

'Another absentee was Lowell "Lefty" Davis. The star Deacon forward, who has one more year of cage eligibility, rested his ann during the game in preparation for a baseball pitching assign­ment against Virginia Tuesday. Davis won the baseball game-his ninth straight mound victory this spr_ing.

1 not to make the few steps to the As the teams returned to the bench and t•emained in the middle

floor for the second half, Hemric of the court for the cheer-up bud­looked over the Alumni bench, die.

The Deacon record now stands an earlier loss to the Wolfpa.cl[. at two' wins and seven losses. Duke University had an easy time in handing the Deacs their latest loss Tuesday in Durham by a score of 7 to 2.

Duke V.:on , all the singles matches in easy order, but Wake

Schools Plan Sports Day

About 60 Wake Forest stud~nts will go to Durham tomorrow tQ represent the College in the seventh annual Big Four Sports Day .. _ .

Duke University is host school for this year's event, which will consist of eight team and indi­vidual sports. The 'University of North Carolina has won top hon­ors in the Sports Day every year but the first.

The Wake Forest group came near to winning last year, but set­tled for a second·place tie with State because of poor. scores post­ed by Wake golfers.

Golf matches will begin tomor­row at noon at Durham's Hill and Dale course, and the other events will follow in the afternoon. The golfing will be match play, with Nassau scoring. ·

The two team sports-softball and volleyball-will put most of the group into action. Single-elimi­nation tournaments will be held in those sports . .-

Singles and doubles matches: will be held in the other sports. They are handball, horse-shoes, table tennis, tennis, and bad­minton.

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If you haven't seen the 1955 baseballers in action, you··n have only tw.o...more ch;,t:Q_!!.~ .. JJulf~"W~~n~sday and the Cavaliers Saturday are the only remammg home ly the week before. But a severe =--~------------------------, games. .

Coach Taylor Sanford's men are making like major- Frosh Linksmen leaguers this week with five bout& in six days. The two G T K' · not already mentioned are with East 'Carolina, a strong. 0 0 entucky North State Conference squad. Wake swamped the The· freshman golf team un­Pirates earlier, but they've improved. It will be Wake defeated but once tied this' sea­vs ECC tomorrow in Kinston and again Friday in Rocky son, will take on Louisburg Junior

_ M~unt. Coll~ge's varsity this afternoon irt ··: · W . . . 1. f •t·· Lou1sburg, Ky.

· Three of the " ake, nme .ar~ m · me or posi. ·Ions 0~ :r:oday's match may he the last ali-ACC teams.· Lefty. Dayis .IS the league·leadf:p.g h?r thts season for the frosh. A re­ler, and he ·has. a- pair ~of heayy sluggers backm~ h1m. match with Carolina's Tar Babies, Catcher Linwood Holt,· with ·a AlO b·~~ting· av~rage, -~a,~ :the,_:t;eam which tied the Deaclets, number-two in the".::co_Aference . la!Jt: .:week; ·and Tommy; h~s;;~.n. consider€l!i, but is not Cole who plays eitheF infield or out,· was· ninth. · · yeti defimte.

' · · • . · 2.., d Three men have shared the spot-Holt was settmg;the pacem runs_-batt~d-m Wlth ~. an. light on the Wake frosh squad

Cole was second m home runs With five. Anoth~r Dea- this season. Ralph .Tames, number­con. second-baseman Bill Barnes, has been toppmg the one man, Dave Ogilvie, and David . ACC in stolen bases~ He had nine thefts on his record- Hughes have each taken medalist

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Page 6: nlb nub-i lUtk...ated into the fraternity at the Thursday meeting, which was the last the group will hold this year. The traditional formal initiation ceremony was carried out with

PAGE SIX

Deacs Win 3 In ACC, Will Play State Today lnAll-I~nportantBattle

Three Atlantic Coast Conference victories last week :kept the baseball Demon Deacons in first place before :Saturday's battle ·with South Carolina, but a game today -with N. C. State will be all-important in the champion-ship race. .

According to the outcomes of Saturday's games, Wake Forest is either alone or tied -·-------------­with State in the top position.

The Deacons will end their reg- Virginia oular season schedule with five· · ' :games this week. They will meet T N ACC State the:;e tod~y, _East Carolina Ourney ext .College m Kmston tomorrow, '·· . Duke here Wednesday, ECC again F G ~~ ~n Rocky Mount Friday, and Vit·- Or 0 l ers ginia here Saturday.

Only the State and Virginia games will count in conference ~tandings.

Wake Forest polished off Mary­land, Virginia, and Clemson last week to push its conference re­.cord to nine wins and two losses. The Deacon record in all games played before Saturday was 16-4.

Tigers Lose, 15-11 A 17-hit attack tlJat included

\wo home runs paid off for the Wake nine Friday afternoon as it out-scoretl Clemson, 15 to 11, on the Tiger's home field.

Wake Forest's golf team will meet the University of Virginia there this afternoon in a match which finishes up the regular sea~ son. The Deacons will tb.en move to Winston-Salem for the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament Fri­day and Saturday.

The Deacon linksmen polished off two ACC schools last week to protect a defeat-less record and push the victorv count to ten last week, as N. C. "state and Clemson fell Monday and Tuesday in Ra­leigh.

ol.o GO~D ANn ~LACK

6 To Enter ACC ·Meet

ifrackmen Ladner, Daniels Promising

·'· •, ' '·

MONpA Y,. 11A Y 9, 1955 ·

Play Tonight

Festival:·-w eek: Starts>· . ' ' ,, I'

(Continued From· Page One) · "The Lord's. Pra~er." a Sidewalk Exhibit of Art directed The .Opera Workshop will pro­by Pro!. Aycodk:. :Subjects for Sunday as the final event 'of the showing may be paintings, draw- festival. The Sunday program will .

Coach Harold Barrow will enter in g s, sketches,. sculptureq o'r be presented in, the Wake Forest carved obje.cts, and interesting Bapti~ Church. ·

six of his Wake· Forest trackmen · 1 h ' or unusua p otographs if mounted Choral Music

l·n the Atlantic Coast Conference and matted · Sa~;red . musie in the Sunday·_

track meet, which will be held Stu?en~_ have .been made ~va:!l: choir program will. include such, Friday and Saturday·. ir; Chapel abl~ .. xn room 20. of. the· Alumm liam Pearce, James'- Ward, Dun­Hill. . . . , -. B~n_l~mg ·to accept o_bJects _for eX- .re.ath Jarratt, Dr. ~obert li;elm,'

D ;· h1b1t1on. The sbowtng w11l last and Barbara Ledbetter w]ll 81·ng Jack Ladner and Dick amels the t' d · en 1re ay. ., the princi~al roles

will be the chief Deacon hopefuls The College Choir will present · . • in the meet, which will dimax a program of music in: Friday . 'Yake. Forest . C~ll?ge _and t1te1

track activities for this spring. morning chapel and a . ~rogi.'a'rit l!mversi.ty of. ;v1rmm~ wlll head­Both men won letters last fall on of ,.sacred choral music 7:~5. p.m; lu~e .Saturday,s festival _.events . . the Wake Forest football va~sity, duce Mozart;s "The Magic With a basebaU,gam~ .. at 8_,p.m. · · -. where Ladn~r. is an· end and Dan- Flute'' at. 8:15 ·p~m., Friday. Wil- ~he. Wo:r_nen ~ · x:ecreatton As"" iels a halfback. , hymns as "Roll,. Jordan, Roll;" soc~at10n V:11I h1g~hght ·the Mag-

Lad h "11 t th · · 1 "Jacob's Ladder" "Hosanna" and noha Festival through the pre-· . ner, w o WJ en er e Jave,- ' ' S£lntation· of a dance festival and m throw, has be7_n Wake· .Forest_s the coronation of the magnolia f 0: em 0 s t pomt-gatherer thiS Deaclets Halve queen at 5 p.m. Saturday. sprmg. In four _mee~s this seaso!l Dance Program ih_e has won the .Javehn ~ven~ every The dance festival will consisfl . time and has scored p~mts m four 2 More Tilts' of Luthuanian, Russian, . GE~rman, ?ther events - the d1scus, broad and Mexican folk dances; square . JUmp, and 220-yard, dash. The Wake Forest freshman !dances; and ballet and modem

Daniels, along with Don Scalf, baseball team will· play Duke's dance arrangements. will enter the broad jump. Daniels frosh 1n Durham Wednesday and A festival program presented· and Scalf took first and second Carolina's Tar Babies ."here Fti- i}y .the ,Department of Music 4 place respectively in a recent day, closing· the 1955 diamond _p.m. Sunday and followed by the 1three-way match with Virginia season. College Choir's program of sacred; and N. C. State. The Deaclets lost to N.C. State music will cdmplete the ·May'week

The other three Deacon entrants here Tuesday afternoon, but ·got celebration. · . ' Wake Forest came from behind

1o score five runs in the top of the ninth and overcome a one-run Clemson lead. Left-fielder Frank McRae's homer in the ninth with :two men on was the biggest Dea-

All six members of the Deacon team entered the 72-hole Southern Intercollegiate tournament in Athens, Ga., last week, but none of them were in the top seven ::fter two rounds.

HUGH BAREFOOT intraJD.ural sports :m.anager •

and their events will be Ted Stone, back into the win columns Thurs- The festival prqgram ~ill in­mile run; Bill Summerline, two- day by out-lasting Duke's Imps; elude music by the College Con­mile run; and Jim Adams, high 12-10. cert Band and Glee Club and se­jump. Charlie . Carpenter suffered· his lections . on the piano and organ.

The University of Maryland-won first loss in the State win of 7-3. The Band will play "March.

.con blast. · Tommy Cole, Deacon third base­

man, rapped his seventh round­tripper of the season in the fifth inning. He had one mate aboard.

Clemson's four home runs ac­.tounted for six t·uns. Charles :Blackston was hero in the Tiger's losing cause with two four-sack­~;rs-in the sixth and eighth. The two other homers, by Hugh Cole­man and Leonard Humphries, .came in the third frame.

The Deacons have now topped Clemson twice. The other game, an 11-4 decision, was played here two weeks ago.

Virginia Fails, 9-5 Though he was nicked for a

otiozen hits, Wake Forest pitching ace Lowell "Lefty" Davis went the route for his eighth straight triumph Tuesday in Charlottes­ville, Va., as the Deacs trimmed the Cavaliet·s, 9-5.

The Deacons collected 11 hits <:tff four Virginia pitchers and took advantage of eight Cavalier errors. Starter Ken Turner was charged with the defeat.

Tommy Cole led the Deacons at 'bat with three hits, while Frank McRae aided their cause with a 'home run in the nint,h ·with no ,one on base.

Wake Forest got its winning Tuns in the sixth inning when the Deacons knocked Turner from the mound. After walking the first two ibatters, Turner was yanked in favor of Bill Miller. Singles by .Davis and short stop Harold Moore and an error by Cavalier catcher Tom Berry accounted for ~wo runs.

Terps Fail By 4-2 Buck Fichter allowed only five

iliits as he pitched Wake Forest to a 4-2 victory over Maryland Monday in College Park.

Fichter struck out 11 and walk­~:d seven while racking up his third triumph without a loss ti1;s season. The sharp right-hander still needed help fl.·om Harold Moore, who produced a two-run single in the eighth to best Mary-land's lefty Bob Weiss. ·

Moore's blow broke up a 2-2 tie .after the Terrapins had picked up

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Deacon number-two man John Gerring posted a 71 on opening day Thursday. Gerl'ing's score was one stroke under par and left him four shots off the leader's pace.

Hard-Working Student Gives Time, Energy To lntramurals

the ACC track championship .Jast The Deaclets topped State in hit- lof the Spanish Soldiery," overture ting, 10:9, but the Wolflets took .to "From the South," and ·"Estrel-year, beating out Carolina by less -

than two points. Ca1•olina and advantage of scoring opporturi- lita." Duke will be favored this weekend. ities in six innings for the victory. Glee Club music will feature

Hurler Ken Conner went all the "B e g i n the Beg·uine," "Deep way for the freshmen as they de- River," and "Vesper Bells." C. N. feated Duke. The lead changed G i I e s, organist will present three times before Wake Forest "Nocturne in E Major" "Poem emerged with the two-point mar- in :D Major," and All;gro Bar­gin. Home runs by Elbert Brady baro." Other selections to be pre­and Harry Archer saved the day sented will be "Tico-Tico" and

In their four meets this spring the Deacon thinclads liave failed 'to win. This year's team is ·the fh·st Wake Forest has fielded in several years. Losses have been .to Duke, Clei:nson, Carolina, State, and Virginia.

Sandy Burton led the 14%-12% victory over State Monday with an eight-under par 63. He set a new record on the Carolina Coun­try Club course with a 28 for the first nine. He had 10 birdies in his 1·ound.

It was the second time this sea­son that the ·wake six has topped the Wolfpack. Other winning match-winners for Wake Forest were Henry Kerfoot, Joe Turner, and Gerring.

Number-one man Mickey Galla­gher turned in a 65 on the CCC course Tuesday to take medal honors as the Deacs battered Clemson for the second time, 23-4. Every Deacon golfer defeated ~is opponent, but the Tigers picked up points in nine-hole scores and' best balls.

The only blemish· on Wake For­est's ACC record this spring is an early-season tie ·with Carolina's Tar Heels. Because of their su­perior records, the Deacons and Heels will be favored in the con­ference tourney Friday. Carolina is the defending champion. .

a run in the fourth. Wake Fore~t had taken a 2-0 lead in the top of the fourth.

Tommy Cole led the early rallv with a triple sandwiched betwee~ singles by George Miller a:1d Frank McRae.

By WILLIAM PATE One of the toughest jobs in the

Wake Forest Physical Education Department is held down by a stu­dent.

He is Hugh Barefoot, busy in­tramural sports manager. From noon until night this Angier sen­ior handles his job of a hundred duties with 'I.Vhat department of­ficials describe as speedy, detail­ed accuracy.

"He's a man in a responsible position," Assistant Director of Physical Education James W. Long has said of him. Dr. Long praises him as "one of our most outstanding managers."

Barefoot puts in more time than any varsity manager. In numer­ical figures, the teams, players, and game officials the physical education ,major must d ire c t thrcugh a full intramural year of sports 1·eaches into the hun­dreds.

Manager's Duties Just some of the duties to which

Barefoot must constantly attend are up to 190 games played during the year in four team sports. Barefoot must schedule the teams for league and division play and is continuously on the watch for mixups in scheduled events, main­taining close contact with man­agers and players-all done while

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he watches :for rule changes or new developments in each sport.

Among the many sports to which Barefoot ntust. give his much-demanded attention are tab­le tennis, horseshoes, tennis, vol­leyball, basketball, touch football, and more.

for ·the Deaclets. "The Happy Warrior."

himself on the field filling in. The 25-year-old senior intends STUDENTS .•• "Hugh puts in a tremendous to make physical education his life

amount of time," said Dr. Long. work. He will enter the University "He is excellent on details, has of Carolina this summer where he kept accurate records, and kept hopes to obtain his Masters in schedules moving along without physical education. Afterwards he many niixups." plans to teach the subject.

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