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After one more school year Wake 'Forest packs up its books·, chairs and all and moves to Win­ ston-Salem. The last year on the Wake For­ est campus. officially began Sept. 14 with the 122nd opening of ochool. After this year Southeast­ ern Seminary will take over the -:ampus, bringing many changes to the Magnolia campus. The campus in Winstson-Salem will be ready to open the summer achool session next June, said Col­ lege Vice President Robert G. Deyton. All buildings now under con­ ·~truction necessary- for the move ~.PHOTO COURTESY THE HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE will be completed by June, 1956, Nea:ring 'Completion--Reynolda Hall, ~lie nerve center of the new campus in Winston-Salem said Deyton. Four men's and two · !tas been nearly completed for .the move in June. The exterior is to women's dormatories will be ready to accomodate apprpximately 2,000 be completed in November, while the interior will be finish~d in March. Other buildings on ·the new students for the first term there campus are, f~r the most part, finished on the outside. Inside work will not be completed on any until in 1956, he said. later in the winter. .However, Deyton said that ac­ ~omodations for married students have not been planned. He added that there will be a parking area College Adds Six PrOfs for trailers·. Last spring Deyton promised By BILL CONNELY a Ph. D. in Economics and In- After leaving Harvard, Prof. "We have obligations" to the Six new professors, two of them dustrial Relations from the Uni­ Scarlet practiced law in New York married students. "We recognize graduates of Wake Forest, have versity of Tilinois in 1930 . City for a year before accepting the problem; it won't be long be-. been-added to the College·faculty. He has served as Dean of the a position as Assistant Direotor fore we know something." He said Dr. J. William· Angel, •who School of Commerce at the' Uni­ of the Institute of Go•ernment at that the College has had the re- matter up for a good while. ceived his B. A. degree from Wake ·versity of Arkansas and has held. u. N.C. He taught at Ohj.o North­ While married students worry Forest in _ 1941, has joined the professorships at the University ern University last year. / faculty of the School. of Religion. of _Nort_h Dak-ota, Duke and the Sue N. Green, a graduate of with housing problems·, the six · - Umvers1ty of . the University ·of. Nebraska, is a dormatories for single students ROTC Reset~ A native of Mocksville, Dr. Ange1 · are beginning to be completed. new instructor in :tlie:~nglish de­ holds degrees from Southern Bap- . Holds Harvard Degree , Nine sections in the four men's ... ~ ... ,~d Nained 'Miss 'Maryland; tist Seminary and Andover-New-. ~ss B~teman attended Woman s partment. Mrs. Gi'~en received her· B. A. degree from Nebraska in dorms have been set aside for the Rank.·System ton Theological .Scboo1 in BoSton. Colldeget Jdn .Gre1e9ns54bor?t·hwherde she social fraternities· on campus. 1!153 and her M. A. in 1955 . A change in the scale· of ad­ H · f .. ~ ·o!. the Buies gra ua e 1n w1 a egree These nine sections will house a In· Miss America Competition· c eJSa·k B ormerp...,...,r_·t. t Ch_J_ fi' h e he 1n· s ecret ana'lAdm' - 1ms 't ra t' 10n. She vancement -for Wake Forest cadets lS ur~ , total of 268 men, not nearly the ree ap w er. h 0 ld M t • d . Ed 'goes into effect this year. ' Juni~r · Cof!d Ghid also served as ehaplan ·.of Camp- . s a as er s eg~e ~ u- total of 'fraternity men enrolled as ..,,_, .Under_ the new,.:plan,' only ,..,.T,u.. - .• bell . Colleg:e.. Bef9f.,~ ;>ret~ to cation fron:'- t~e . UmverSl~;y;. of .Trib__ble s·p~.a. k~·- is true on this campus.- '· To:.: Start. S~hool Wake .Forest,· he .fatl!ght- .at .J3tet- :t:rorth Caxolina. - -- _ _ Each . ~~1;'1'\.t.ernity ".section will have, however, ample space for l :~~~:a~:=~~i~~:~. Lt. Col., F h sc University -for fOUr years. Prof. John. o: Scarlet has· ·been· o· 'Ne' w''. E.·. r·.. ···ac ... ,, j :Major, Captain, and· 1st and 2nd or t e second straight, ~ear _Will Teach. Psyoholqgy. added to the faculty of Wake fi chapter- rooms; ;including- ·.game,, ... Wake Fores~ College has s~emmg-. Prof. Clauae Roebuck is a new Forest Law SchooL A native of game rooms and kitchenettes. · i.ieutenb.nts: Juniors may advapce Deyton pointed out that dorm­ to Sergeant and sophomores may ly devote~ Itself to provmg the instructor in· the Department of Reading, Pa.. Prof. Scarlet grad- A new era for Wake Forest will i:ct that Its coeds are good look- Psychology "··and. Philosophy, .. He ua.ted from ?ataw~a College in begin when the College moves to atory rooms will have ample attain the rank of Corporal or (Continued on page 5) Private- Firsj; ciass. _ -- g. . . graduated from Wake Forest in 1948 and received hiS LL.B degree Winston-Salem next spring-and Formerly, juniors he~d the rank And ~t would see~ t~at the Col- 1940 with a B. A. degree, and later at Harv~rd University in 1951. of 2nd Lt.. with all lower lege has succeeded 1n 1ts efforts- attended Southern Baptist Semi- this school year will be the pro- ~es· another coed made the grade to nary M 'logue, College President . Harold being filled by ·fr~shmen and s . Enrollment Up sophomores. the.. toughest. of be~uty con;t- ou'ring·World Wax II, he served . eniors eet W. Tribble told the student body Total enrollment iii the rnilltln-v·l petttton, the M1ss America conte~t. as a chaplin in the u. s. Navy for in a convocation address here Sept. science program,_fin~ the fall se~ Carol Jennette, junior student two years. After the war, he pur- On· Thursday 14. For Fall Terin· .• 'mester iS sss: which is ~nsider­ ~rom Westminister, Md., followed sued graduate .·work· at Union . _ · . Dr.-Tribble made his remarks in ably below Il4;t ·year's count. OnlY 1 ~ the tracks: of a former College Theological Seminary and Colllin- a ceremony formally opening the Fall· rel;istration at the College 131 freshlnen.iregisterea for ROTC coed t? t~e. pageant of ,lovies at bia University, ·.and was_ a tutor A meeting of t~e senior ctass will 122nd academic year of the school. brought a total of 1536 students to the campus, according to early --this fall. A minimum of 100 fresh- Atlantic City, 1-l. _J. ir; the Department of "Philosophy be held Thursday morning at IO' It -was the last Wake F'orest Col- ·CAROL JENNETI'E Last year .a Wake Forest gradu- of Religion at Union for a year. o'clock in the Chapel, Prof. J. L. Jege convocation that will ever be figures released by the. registrar's man enrolllJ1ents is required if o!fice. Enrollment is the higl).est . ·· -&cllool is to-·nave a military-seience •• MiSiil· Maryland •• \. ate, Betty Jo Ring, was, named Taught At Williams · Memory Jr., director of the Place- held on this campus• . ~' . smce 1950. · '--- Miss. ·North Carolina· and was For three years, ·Prof. Roebuck ment_ Bureau, announced l~t week. _ Remembering the College's past :::~...... - .· Registrar Grady Patterson said :;·_ ·· In the sophomore class there axe entered in the contest. taught at Williams College, Will- Purpose of the meeting . is to and especially its first 60 years last week that the number of . -107 enrolled and in the junior Miss Jennette, or Miss Maryland iams, Mass., serving for a time have the seniors fill out question- of "steady progress," Dr. Tribble freshmen entering the College this cl~ there are 54-. The senior P~p Carroll depending on the state she ·is in, as acting chaplan of the College. naires which will be used· in an- challenged the students to "de­ fall is approximately the·same as· class has 46 taking the ~litary started on the trail to Atlantic Dr. Karl M. Scott and Fie swering inquiries coming to the. termine that the one hundred and in previous years ana that the in­ science course-. Fund Started· City with the contest for· her home Joyce Bateman have joined the College from various sources. · twenty-second year here on this creased enrollment is due largely county queen. She was ·supported School of Business Adan.iriistration Prof. Memory says that it Will· campus will be the best.. in all of to an increased number of return­ The -College Board of Trustees by the Soroptimists Club of W e<:t- faculty, be "to the best interest of e;ery our history to the present. ees and graduates of junior col­ Religious Drama voted during the summer to estab­ minjster in the Lions Club's page- Dr. Scott received his B. A. de- senior" to be present at ;the meet- "Then we shall be ready to move leges. lish the James. Grover Carroll ant for Miss Carroll Cvunty. gree from the University of Arkan- ing, regardless of whether no not- into the new era with justifiable . The number show an increase of Slated Thursday Memorial Athletic ·scholarship in :After tak'ing th'O' local contest sas in 1925, a Master's degree from he needs assistance in obtaining a pride and strong confidence." He 154 or over 11 per cent in com­ "Lord, Lead Me" is the title o;f a honor . of the mathematics pro­ (Conti~ued on page 5) Iowa State University in 1926 ancL jcb. · urged the students to devote them- parison with .last fall's 1382 total. religious· play to be given Thu!'s­ fessor who died in May.. · • Iselves "with high resolve to the Fall registrations in other years day night at the first meeting of The scholarship, which was not \ tasks of each day." were 1446 in 1953 and 1491 in the Religious Education Club for set up in time for this school year, Dr. Tribble described the new 1952. the current school ;year. is to be awarded to an athlete with . facilities· an~ larger operating in- The 1955 total· of 1536 students an outstanding scholastic record. ROTC Gets· 4 N·ew Instructors The play will be given at 7 p.m. . eome that will be available in includes 89 registered for the on the third floor of the Alumni Prof. Carroll, an ardent sports Winston-Salem as factors that School of Law and approximately Building. The cast includes Mari­ fan, waS' on the College faculty 35 "will enable us to transcend a 360 for the School of Business ... anna Long, Philip Ann Gardner, years. ·He spent much of his time · Lt. Col. Peyton noble history and place Wake For­ Administration. The number of Hed Teague, ;reff Roperts, Joanne tutoring athletes. est College among the strongest business students is approximately King and Barbara Hill. . The exact amount of the the same as last year, while there colleges in modern All students interested. in Christ­ scholarship is to be determined Unit Commander ~~~·I:.~st o~r are 11 fewer law students than in ian education and service have later. College officials said gifts He paused in his talk to pay 1954. to the new fund would be accepted. been invited to attend. A new Professor of Military tribute to Dr. Thurman D. Kitchen, former president of the College Science and Tactics and three who died here earlier this month. College Theater Will Begin other · new staff members were Dr. Tribble praised the late edu­ Hodge~ May. added to the Wake Forest ROTC cator as "a constant source of in­ unit during the summer. spriation and encouragement.'' Tryouts,_ For· ('The Rainmaker' Lt. Col. Wythe M. Peyton Jr. has Speak Here By NOTIE VAY W1llTE her becoming an old maid. They replaced Lt. Col. J. S. 'I'errell lUi The Governor of North Carolina head of the local unit. Terrell was may speak at a -chapel program Tiryouts for the fa.IJr production make many unsuccessful attempts transfered to the Office of the Cocke Elected this fall, ·Johnie Ray Hendren, of the College Theater will be bela to ma~ry her off. Chief of the Army Chemical Corps president of the Young Democrats today, tomorrow and Wednesday All the while there is no relief after a three-year tenure here. Club, announced last week. afternoons in' the Alumni Building. from the dry heat. Suddenly a Society Veep Hendren safd that he has con­ The play will be a three-act ro- picturesque character !Who promis­ Col. Peyton, a native of Ashe­ ville, graduated from The Citadel Dr. Elton c. Cocke of the Bio­ tacted Luther Hodges and that the es to bring rain appear.s. While he logy Department has· been re­ manti·c comedy, "The Rai=aker," in 1931 with a B. degree in civil Governor stated he would definite­ by N. Richar-d Nash. · is attemping to cause rain to fall, s. elected for a second term as vice­ . the rainmaker :turns his magic on engineering. He receie. director of tlJe girl and persuades her that mission '

s s knownwhen Williamauthor andShirer, radio-tele- widely~ jes~ti~·via~l~la~t~eir~in~t~h~e~y~e~ari.iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiigiria~d~eieid~uiciat~iioni.iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~T~hie~C~o~ll~egie~C~h~o~iirio~f~4~6im~eimi-~ii:ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' i"'i.iiiiiiiiiiiiii~· =------..1 vision commentator, will give his _,. ..------"' analysis of world affairs in a "'·~-· speech entitled "The World 'Do­ day." Another concert will conclude ¥'•• ., . , the year's series March 7, when CLOTHING of'lll'al\~ 9">or4!s;t the North Carolina Little Symp­ SPORrs WEAR We Take This hony will perform In Addition To Our Made- Opportunity Students Plead To'!'Measure Service We .Slacks from. SI 0~9& Ivy an~. R~~i~r-·M~ti~.I~ Guilty In Theft Are Now Pleased to Offer Stock Suits and Sport Sport Ooals From $27.50 To Three Wake Forest College N0W' i. . , ••• freshmen and three local high Coats By school students, pleading guilty to J-amb's Woo' Sweaters S9.95 charges of robbing Gresham's ' ·~ ...... ":- - ' . ·. ' •. . . - . ' . Welcome You Motor Court of $108 on July 7, were fined, given probation and MIDDISHADE ShirJs From $3.95 Back For Your ordered to repay the amount A COMPLETE ; .: stolen, by Wake County Superior Last, And We Court. See The Beautiful Harris Tw~Jd Salvatore Marchese, 18, of Dun­ Hope, Your more, Pa.; Joe Cowley, 19, of Coat~ ~~.~5 Charleston, W. Va. and James Flannels at $85.00 Sport- Most Success­ Robinson, 19, of Clinton, all frosh football players at Wake Forest, ful Year On were dismissed from school. OPERATION I Wake Forest High School stu­ \ dents taking part in the robbery The Old Wake were Clyde W. Bobbitt Jr., 16, Zeb Perry, 16, and Lin Lyman, 17. Forest Campus. The group reportedly called Mrs. J. J. Strickland, a night clerk at the motel, out of her TO SERVE room at about 12:05 on Thursday, FUR NI SHIN 8 S Slf.O·ES July 7. While three students in­ quired a b o u t renting .rooms, another dashed in the room, picked Dress Shirts By Regular Shoes By up a box containing the money JONES and fled through a rear entrance. Arrow and Holbrook· ALL YOUR The six were arrested the fol­ Jarman lowing day. at Wake Forest. The three college students were re­ Socks By Interwoven presented by Raleigh Attorney J. HARDWARE Wilbur Bunn and Wake Forest Hickok Belts and Jewelry Athletic Shoes By Attorney Edward Paschal repre­ Neckwear By Superba sented the high school youths. APPAREL Gqodrich

._.mb's Wool Sox $1.50 See The Tassel Loafer . WELCOME BACK And The Black Cordovan College And Seminary NEEDS Students .- Save On Your Feod Bill SPECIAL AT SPECIAL 5 SUEDE JACKETS 5 SUEDE COAlS Keith'S Super Market Regularly $25.00 - 14.95 Regular $47~50 - 29.95 PHONE 2661 - W1 ,. ' :~ ' .,w ',. . •,', -... ·\ ' ' _, ,. MON-DA~; SEPTEMBER 26,; 1955 · PAGE THREE " .. " ' ', . ' . . ., JJ?"ake Forest Latv ·Graduates Orders Pr~pa_red To Take Out •• NEW ASIA RESTAURANT Pass State·· Bar Exa1ninations (Incorporated) ··Meeting: Winston-Salem, N. C. Twenty-eight ·graduates of the admitted to the bar. Our Chinese Family Dinners .43 Students Attend Wake Forest Law School passed Others passing were David W. are the talk of the Town the N. C.· Bar Association exam­ Bailey, Winston-Salem; John V. Four-Day Retreat inations last month, and all 'but Blackwell Jr., Fayetteville; Ken~ W. D. Tarn, Manager one of them were native North neth K. Bridges, Shelby; Luther Phone 4·1356 315 W. Fifth St•. . ~ By BARBARA JACKSON Carolinians. J·. Britt Jr., Lumberton; Albert J. ·------~ _James L. Young Jr. of Somer­ Forty-three students, 'includ­ Bunton, Wake Forest; Edgar D. ville, N. J., was the only out-of~ ;ing 17 freshm!ID. attended. a four­ Christman, Wake Forest; Wade state student· from Wake Forest M. Gallant Jr., Raleigh; John E. day :pre"'school retreat. spon.sored FOR by the Baptist Student Union at Hall, Spray; Frederick C. Hamil­ Camp. Kanata .Sept. 6-9. ton, Morehead City. YWAHolds John N. Hodgin, Thomasville; DRUG SUPPLIES · The encampment, first of its . . .. Parks H. Icenjour, Wake Forest; :kirid held 'by 'the Wake Forest Doyle E. Lowder, Albemarle; Les- SODAS · ~SU; featured- ."Seeking, Finding, -d p · · t' · Gar en ar y ter P. Martin, Mocksville; David AND Knowing-God" :u;. its theme, The P. Mast Jr., Sugar Grove; Joe B . . , · retreat was beld especially for The College coeds -and /ladi.es Mauney, Shel!>y; John B. Miles, SUNDRIES freshmen. of the Wake Forest community McLeansville; William L. Moses, , Miriam Hollis, associate staJte were entertained at a garden party Aberdeen; William E. Mussel­ BSU secretary,',posed the question Tu~sday, afternoon on the lawn white, Lumberton; William Bland VISIT ,;Why came to the l'etreat?" to the group. The first-night program · . · • . . PHOTO BY lR'{IN GRIGG of Johnson Dorm. The party· was Ray, Wake Forest. aiso included a ·film describing · Camp Seminar-- Dr. David Smiley of the .College History Department leads a :Bsu seminar sponsored by the Young Woman's Wesley L. Roach, Wendell; John Au."f the community. ~ 1strickland, Goldsboro; Perry N. PHARMACY of the wa.tts Street Baptist Church manly for new students, many up'per classmen in=Iuding members of the BSU Council, attended the Several members 'of the College · WalkJer, Greensboro; Robert. S. in Durham, spoke· on "Paradoxes three-day retreat. faculty, the Executive Council of Weathers Jr., Franklinton; Robert Phone 2761 in. Cbristianity." . The .. Rev. Carr l------;------....:.-~-----~­ the '!Voman's Missionary Union D. Wheeler,' Grifton; Charles R. had a regular part on other pro- 1 and nine returning missionaries Williams, Erwin. grams including "Mr. lStudeDJt, . A daily program during the re- Dr. J. Glenn Blackburn, College Student leaders in the various were among the ladies present.!--:------..:,______:_..:= Meet the Master" a.nd "'rhe Value treat included talks on "What chaplin, and Dr. M. Ray McKay seminars were Rod Beals· Golds- These missionaries and their By.appointment ~urveyors of sooP to the late King George VI, Yardley & Co., Ltd., London and Importance of Textural Criti- Christianity Mea.n.s To, Me." Whed- and Dr. Olin T. Brinkley, both . . . ' former fields are Mrs. Everett - . . . . cism in Understanding the Bible." bee and Miss Long told of their professors in the Seminary were borD JUnior; Joe Millsaps, Moores- . Gill, fialy;- Mrs. Elmo Scoggins, Tell Of Work' work dming one of these sessions. in charge of worship , ville junior; Joe Killian, Atlanta. -Mi~sfon service~ Jerusalem; Mrs. Arthur Gallimore, · In another program at the camp, Margelieth Leit11man, a la.w Seminars Held Ga. juniot:; Polly Binkley, Wake China; Mrs. John Lake, China; ~>eniors Nan LOng {)f ·Belmont and student 8lt the University of Jer:u- Group seminars were held dur- F-orest senior, and Sarah Rieche, Mrs. Frank Lyde, China; Miss Bill whedbee of Greensboro re- salem, spoke on the problems of ing the mornings, each on a spec- Charleston, s. c.,· senio~. Sophi Leneau, China; Miss Wanda Iated their summer experience~ in her native Israeli people, at an- ial phase of Christian life. Dr. The retreat closed with a ban­ Ponder, Paraguay; Mrs. J. D. various kinds of .miSsion work. other session of the retreat. David Smiley 0~ the College His- quet at which Dr. J. c. Trotter Franks, Yurich;•lmd Miss Virginia I ,tory Department led a discus- of· the Seminary faculty was prin- Miles, Phillipine Islands. 1 .------;._--:: sion on "Christianity is serious cipal speaker, followed by a de- .·. A' ~e· r -Meeks ·business."' •. "Preparation for a dication service led by Tom Fund- no ' Ut . Christian Home" was Jed by Dr. erburke, Asheboro senior. E -I' CJJ.e acs w; George Corbin of Rolesville. Yearns Studies A. Parks. Jr. of Durham A lithograph 'print of Davy I· u ·11. • 1•t I 1 By P. C~ BARWICK v. \, 1\ J\...tli 11 (g,,\ \ 1f. d . ., spoke on "A Layman looks at Crockett on 'display at the Chi­ N. Historian . Alpha Sigma Phi side, Lambda Chi's spread dia- Christianity," while Billie Russell, cago. Public Library shows him ·C. ' Alpha Sigs joilled a majority of monds and weddulg bands over youth director' at 'Ashboro's First in the outfit he wore to Congress Dr. W. B. Yearns of the History ., ·the other fraJtemities on campus the state th~ summer. Millsaps Baptist Church, led a group in -swallow-tail coat and all the Department spent six weeks of !With an open-house party after the and' Betty Sue Reinhart of Cha-r­ "Choosing Your Vocation." trimmings. On it, in his own the past summer on research on Wake· Forest-VPI game. Among lotte got engaged, as did A. T. "C'llristianity and Social Problems" hand, is this inscription: "The a nineteenth century historian. :the ·gueSts at·the house were alum- Austin and Elaine Pierce of Char­ was-led ·by Dr. Ed· Wilson of the only correct likeness that has Francis X. Martin, who wrote ni ·&unmy Flynn, Paul Williams- lotte and Charles Newman and qonege English Department. been made of me." a history of North Carolina early -- · . ·ton and Preston Leggett. coed Vann Mitchell. Wed were in that century, was the topic of Dean Gaines Rogers of the Col- Cecil Jackson to the former Caro- · • ' · · a paper w'ritten by Dr. Yearns '.lege ·BusiD.ess Department and lyn Sa>wyer of Waynesville .and R_·elim.·o.. n Pr; o'fs .. H',ave .Summe'r from material gathered in the , , Alpha. Sig faculty advisor spoke Cary Hunter to ·th9 former Ann ---o ..... ··library. :at a dinner meeting of the mem- Flemming of Raleigh, . Full Of p · · - L'!-: S . . While at Duke, Dr. Yearns also !Z!•s:hursday night at Gresh- Pi Kappa Alpha react..:i.ug, peaking rewrote part of his doctriate dis~ certation which concerns the re­ Back from the service and re- By HANNAH MILLER- Sch 1 Kappa. Alpha. • joining th. e PiKA's this semester 00 of Religion, addressed the lationship that existed between. The summer months were. busy m'nist · I 5 t d t f C b ·ts II t' f t · are Elli_·s Brinkley of T ~ng Island, r.. ena · u en s o amt> ell the legislative and the executive T o a dd t o, I co ec Ion o ri- """' ones· for the faculty of the School College. His topic was "A M~inis- branches of the Confederate gov­ butes to .the Confe~erate le~er, N.__ Y., and Bill Wedbee of Ahoskie. of Religion. On Sept. 19, D. r. J. t • c 0 11 p ernment. ··cecil 'Home· ·.,..~esen"t',... ed an anti.;.•~...-... While two came back,- three Allen Easley,· Acting Dean of the erD s G ege reparation". · portrait of Robert E. Lee to the PiKA's have entered graduate r. eorge J. Griffin and Dr.l;=;;=====::::=====;l chapter last week. History of the schools: Earl Britt and Frank Emmett W. Hamrick attended a I, ~portrait goes hack to the, time . of Wyatt· are now in the College Law Seth Brown returned .to the SPE meeting of the College Association Winston-Salem Real Estate iee•s death, when such etch- School apd Bill Beach is at the house from service this.falL ·. of Ba_ptist Teacher!>:Qf Religion at Looking for a ·Lot or Home 15 ings were made a,ild sold to raise Emory University Medical School. Field secretaries Dick Whit- Ridgecrest on Aug.· 30, There Dr. in New W.F; Area? money· for a. memorial for the 'B. F. Beallley,, a transfer stu-· man and Bill Davis will visit the Griffin read his paper; "The Con- W. F. BALDWIN Gener8J. ., . dent.' from ·Mars. Hill, recently house .this'"_ week. Ntezi~s and Ol)jectiTes of a College 209 First Nat'l. Bank Bldg. . ew Testament Course." ' w· t Sal N .Another trophy brought home joined the rap~: as a ~ pledge. Sigma Pi . IDS on- em, · C. from the summer. fo~ the .. KA's Ray McLauren of Fayetteville, Hurricane Diane forced Dr. Phone 2-2540 - 21834 ."·-was one in tribute to the chapter's ...... , ·Sigma Chi . Sonny Mewborne of Kinston, Owen ·F. Herring 'to return home scholastic .rating last year. The . The summer h!!-d. its effect. on George Mast .of Boone and Man- Aug._15 after one day at the State Yardley brings you Wake Forest men had the highest. the Sigs as two walked--the aisle. rice Taylor of Fayetteville . were .~apt1st Assembly at Caswell. Dur- ,------average in. this district and the· Yulan Washburn . married coed reeently ·initia;ted into Sigma Pi. rng ~he week of Sept. 4-11, Dr. TIJ o-ur MaferiaJ a new feeling of well-being-. district had the :highest scholar-· ~ary, Broc~, aD:d Lo-w:en (Rocky) ASSU!Ining pledge duties recently Herrtng conducted revival ser- " . ship. score in· th~ country: .,,. L1ttleton marned \ fqnner . -coe_ct were· :SOb Hinnant and Regie vices at the Sandy Creek Baptist And· London style OlJ the romantic side Jim Joanne Till. B. Bell pinned Ell- Dawkins · Church in the Tar River Associa- '!Powell pinned llenrietta R~id of zaheth Crowell, Hugh Wallace ' tion. Compare Our -Prices GreensbOro durlng the summer. pinned Joan ?:albert and Ed _Bul- Theta. Chi . Drs. Easley, Griffin, .. Herring The way to arrive at this happy state, gentlemen, is to use RetUrning to. the chapter· 'from lock pinned Barbara Thompson. Bill Tucker, Bob Crook and and Hamrick preached at several Yardley After Shower Powder morning and night. Here is the wars this semester are Bill Alumnus Qickie Hemric recent- pledge Dale Holland returned to different churches, and: durinoo SMITH'S SHOE SHOP a cooling, ma!\culine body powder-conceived in England Moore,·•a senior; ·Olin Hunter and· ly visited the. chapter before re- school this fall aftet duty in the June. and July, Drr Griffin wa~ LOc:ated one-half block behind and now made in America-whi<;h has a special drying action ·Fred Upchurch, both. in law school, porting for workouts with the pro- service. supply pastor for. the Southside· Underpass Esso Service effective in the muggiest weather: Its deodorant properties are and Horne, a senior. ·c~ers Boston Celtics. He and the pan,Lovelace joined 'the 'pledge Baptist Church of Durham. Dr. former Jan Sanders were married class, last Monday in a special Easley was supply pastor for the PHGNE 3756 invaluable. At your campus store, $1.10 plus tax. Makers and Ka.ppa Sigma. during the summer. pledging ceremony,. First Baptist Church of Dunn. distributors for U. S. A., Yardley of London, Inc., New York. · ,:"~e~ Kappi': Sigs turned · ro- The Sigs held open house for mantrc1sts durmg the summer . coeds Friday afternoon. months :u; J, B. Johnson pinned 1 coed Nancy Beck, Ronald Dilthey Sigma Phi Epsilon pinned coed Shirley Burrus and Marcus Scruggs represented the When your courses are set Ty . Tucker and Delores carson Wake Forest Sig Ep's at the ltdo'k the first ~tep towards the big national concla"V·e in Cincinnati, day with a diamond. Ohio, during the summer. And a dream-girl you've met ... Back' froin the Army to rejoin Bob Frederick and the former the men on, North Main is Bob Joyce Ann Jones of warsaw JWent Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL.! JoiJ.es, while Bill Smith came back .to the alter just befcre school after four· years with the· navy. started - Sept. 18. · Joinirig the chapter this semester, .Jerry Perkins, Jack Isert and from Davidson is Bob Muffett.. , -'-'------=---- Officers for this year include Charles Reid, Grand Master; !}ill Starling, Grand Procurator; Ches­ WAKE FOREST ter Howe, Grand Scri-be; Harold Moore, Grand Treasilrer, and A·ulomatic Laundry F.rank Bennett, Grand Master of ONE DAY SERVICE Ceremonies. 9 lbs. Bundles Washed Lambda Chi Alpha For soc .. Lloyd . Baucom e.nd Joe Mill- Washed and Dried . saPS, Lambda Chi secretary and ' '!President, along with Bobby For 9Dc Mooneyham, a.ttended a. Manage­ Mrs. Zula Wilson, Mgr. ment• 'Ilraiinng Seminar at De · It's a psychological fad: Paul ·Uinversity in August to trade Pleasure helps your disposition. :fraternity ideas vry.th others of the :fralemity fr~ ov-er the nation. If you're a smoker, remember ~ MrS. C}larles M. Ramsey, wife -more people get more' of Dr. Ramsey of the College Busi­ pure pleasure from Camels ness Department, will think up MUMS than from any other cigarette! ~menus and act as housemother :for the· chapter this year. AND No other cigareHe is so The~ Army returned Louis BUT­ rich-tasting, yet so mild! ney to the chapter this fall. CORSAGES Among the top on the . Cupid \ for all MUSIC OF ALL PUBLISHERS ·King and Selmer Band occasions Instruments Altec Hi-Fi System . ~ebcor Phonographs and Tape _Reeor4ers B'EDDirtGFIELD BRODT SEPARK FLORAL SHOP.

MUSIC CO. Phone 246-1 620 W. Fourth St. WIN~TON-SALE.M, N. C. &. J. Benolcll Tob&QQO Co •• wt.toa.-salem. N. Q, 102493 :·"1: '.';;.';. ·.,~ I' OLD GOLD .AND BLACK MONDAY. SEPTEMBE~. '26; -195~ '· ... · ' PAGE FOUR ,. ,----By HILDA MAULDIN-----~.,-----;

c9lb fjolb anb ~latk \.==-.Magnptia ,LeaiJes ~ It Seems To· Me. t·"" • • Wake Forest College • • -·-By The 'Editor Orientation for the ·freshmen dedicated to Chemistry majors. It Another summer is past.. With Charles Newman Don Craver - Bob Jeffords is usually pretty interesting each was found on a Seminary bulletin it came · the almost unbearable Editor Co-Business Managers By GRAY BOYETTE year, but this fall had a special board. , . sticky heat· th~t made summer beginning. One Chemical Analysis of Women 'school miserable; more. ·hurricanes l\Ionday, Sept. 26, 1955 of the members Symbol: WO and storms· that tried to outstri'D · · of the freshmen Atomic Weight: 120 the havoc of their cousins of th'El- · football squad · It must be said at the outset on whe~e Wilfred· left off, I will previous _.year; - summer camp'• was late getting Occun-ence: Fo1,1.nd everywhere that this writer in -no way pro- consider .my efforts r~warding\ prought to many male stuO.ents tl.e dressed on the and nowhere. fesses to be capable of maintain- first taste of real· military life; · · first d a y of PhYsical properties: Boils at no­ ing the standards set in, ·.%is. For the seniors who are ·grad- · ·An Unnoticed Amendment practice. Hurry· thing; freezes at any minute; column during the last school year. i uating it must be admitted that For one member of .the College's .. I . . heritage the summer added anotliei ing to catch up melts when properly ti:·eated; My predecessor and originator of t h1s year offers a strange ·feeling with the team ·bitter when not well used. '· · "It Seenis to Me" was a former witnin. It is not so much the year of service. Dr~ George ··w. · '1 f C 11 I already headed h . 1 edi~or of Old ' Gold W~? gave the thought of i:iot getting to "walk Pas~hal, who for many. .years. . On Aprl 28, 1953, the students o Wake Forest o ege. for the practice C em1ca properties: Great af- college its first two consecutive the 110 miles for the Camel" nor taught Greek at Wake Forest .and··,., voted on four amendments to the Student Body Consti- i field, the player finity for gold, silver, platinum, 1 1 and precious stones; violent All-American editions. Having de- is it either the reminder that ·we'll who retired in 940 to write vari- . tution. One was designed to give the Student Council lost his way and started for frat- action if left alone; absorbs parted from college via' gradua- not return to ,. the "magnolia- ous histories, celebrated hl.; 86th . . . . . ernity row. A fraternity man found JUriSdiCtwn over coeds; It was defeated. Another was to l'.im a little later wandering great ~aunts ~f food matter; tion, the former columnist Wilfred covered campus." But '\¥hen a bi_;thd.ay on J~ly 7. : · th 1\[ Cl b · · th 1 t' . . turns green eas1ly. Winstead has left the. :ranks of senior thinks about an alma mater While teachmg here, Dr. Paschal give e .~.. onogram u superv1s10n over · e se ec IOn around annlessly and w1th an un- . . Pub Row. he or she stops and wonders:· served as Director . of Athletics ·. of cheerleaders; it passed. A third provided for an intra- derstanding look pointed out the' Uses: Highly . ornamental; ~omc Fate has left his column in the Technically speaking the seniors and. was t~e Coll~~e's first of~icial · · • · way to the practice field. Tile be- of a~celera.t1o~ . o~. low spmts; mural athletic council, 1t passed. wildered freshman then bounded equalizer for tne a1stnbut10n of hands of a battle-stained business of '56 will never have an alma registrar m addltlon to ttlaching­ Old Gold headlines about that time told of the fury on his way. wealth: most effective incam.,e manager wh0 fought the .. wars of mater. For if .he goes to Reynolda Greek. financing this pape~. His ·copy he will be confro:rfted- ·with sur- -Dr. Paschal has writ:e·t seversd < converning the Student Council's jurisdiction over coeds. , red~cing ·agent known. turned out for publication prior to roundings new and unique to him. histori~s oE .North Carolina Bap-' Feelin·gs over that issue· were so strong that the· chairman Some of the coeds in Johilson Caution: Highly explosive in inex- now has been a grand total o:f And if he returns to Baptist Hal- tist ac~iVi.ties 'as'wen.:as ·south£:• Ji"O.: Dorm have been suffering with up- perienced hands. ! one story buried deep· on an inside low he will in many cases not Baptist history. Before ·his of the Council resigned his post over the issue. No one set stomachs. Probable cause: a '·r'e- ·,. By 1970 .. the number of yourig ·p,age to fi'll.up space. recogiiize __ "Ii:iside the Ro.ck Wall", tirement' Dr."· Paschal· WrGte· · 'the··· noticed- the fourth amendment at that time, thoug·h it was local restau-rant's menu for last people attending college in the · Ironically enough,_ fate left me for a new and different school will firf!,t,- volunie of "A . Hisi~ry>ijf ,., passed by a vote of 783 to 244. Wednesday read: "Oickled Beets United States may have ·increased 1so .with choice· of writing have gone into full time operation. Wake, College." .Since i94o '.- ,. , and Gratted Cheese." 11 ~he ~orest And seemingly, ·no one has noticed that amendment b,y 70 per cent, according to Dr. this story or...f.illing the space witla As for the J:uniors, .Sophom~~es heto .t}lishas work:added, ·two ·other.- volumes·.-· · until now. The fourth amendrrie:irt--which is· Article V, The other morning in one of J. Paul Leonard, president of San an·.advertise;ment. I chose· to try- and. Freshmen they can at .least -·. · ·.-_ ._ Francisco State College. Present my· hand at::~riting ·as I had no have 'part ti:me on a camp\ls:-that . · ;·. . --.- . .. ~ ·; Section 1, of the Constitution-separated. law students Dr. Speas' physic's classes, he nationwide enrollment is 2,250,- .ads .. remaining. However, · if 'bY. can return- to and .. · J?urmg_the Wake Fc:rest .. . asked in his usual manner, "Has th~y. s~-~and s~~mer· from. undergraduates in the matter of politics. It stated the laSt bell rung?" A student at 000. .. chance · I can · in some way ·carry' rem€mber. things as th~Y. ~ctually· :revl~ed a ·tradttlon :from the late·'­ ~---,...----,..-.,.-----..!------...... --...,------=- were. The . Senior -will never have ~ 920 s. In June·: the College· ,held that "No ·person enrolled in the School. of· La'v shall be once answered, "Here.", t~is opp:ortunity. I .:do not mean, ,i;o the first spelli~g· beeAhat· has -~ eligible to hold an office of the student body, o~ vote in im',PlY-· that ·we ?critical or: are. been hel ·'~ . The "Frustrated 'exhibitionists" are any election held by the student body, or be amendable exhib~ting. sour grapes._ It is .j~st . The winner was ··a:h 18-year old ..' ,.. f·the~J'aYnes If the re~uJI'ltion excludinl! law students from student ration were beginning to show on ~ . . . Grover Carroll Athletic Scholarship · p-overnment officies is invalirl. +.hen on what grounds can one of. the junior coeds. Completely · Ch ' · -.- ;·· Fund. The .schola:rship will be the :honor system be enforced? Both are parts of the same exhausted after an active morn­ N ew ' anges .given each year to an athlete with· ' set pf rules. ing of standing in -iine and fill­ "It's pnly Ed's sister with his laundry.:• - · an ·outstanding scholastic record.. 1 College radio station WFDD As a tribute to "Po'[!" Car1·oll, :old Gold hopes that Wyatt's decision be a prompt ing· out cards, she gasped, "Now will :what .do you have to show to get went on the air during orientation anything dealing with athletics, .. and .wise one. out of here~" "Well, it depends on week end with many improvements and particularly that of helping·. who's at the door," said one of A 'Newspaper's Policy over last year. .. . . an athlete get through College; ·· the boys who was taking pictures. A new console, the nerve. center could not have been more wisely : .-­ With this first issue of th~ standing of the College by its stu- of the station, was purchased and made. Prof. Carroll loved -~ports· . h An e To A Challenge The following contribution is forty-first volume of puolication, dents. installed during the summer. and the men 'that 'Play them.' He ·: ; ''..T e SW r . Old Gold and Black begins another Old Gold is an inqependent news- ·£everly Barge, station . manager, tutored many a ··freshman~·f'ootball Writer Wishes. Paper, year of. ¥.·ark dedicated-to hringiJi.g paper. All of· the work done on says that the ;new console increa.l'les ·player -through, college aJ,gc'bra the stndents all the news ~or.cern- this paper is' done by students, .t.he cl~arne.ss',c)f transmission and during the 35 years he ~ug1J,t.- Wilke 1 ' • ·; . b • · Editor Best Of Luck ing Wake Forest College. .· and the ·views expressed herein receptiOn. here. __ ~gt. A chapter of Wake Forest Colle•ge s history IS now em~ Old Gold and Black w;l strive are stUdents opinions. As a result . Besides those already subscribed With the fund, Prof. Carroll's.. nah, written-a challanging chapter, stuclent .body president .To the Editor:· to ke~c> the .. students informed cif this independence, those pe-r.:· to, the station has subscribed to· spirit of sportsmanship ,,'ill be. Anny Tommy Frank will say this morning. · .::,· · In my years at 'Wake Forest, through its news columns, which sons connected with· the College can three- new ·record services that able .to .continue. -~ -··gineer In ·answer to this challange,. Frank says that those now no. one ever took time to write the will. served as a mirror in which know what the students are think- will furnish the files with more served connected with the College should answer it in the same editor of Old 1d .and Black 3 the week-by-week history of the ing. new records. · · H ld-· S vision mitimer that all the challanl!eS of the past have been met. letter for the first Issue;. College ~s reflected. \ The JieWs stories in Old Gold In the n~r future,- Barge said,· o. s . _upper' Wake· The nast manner has included devotion; . courage an 'd. Few ·persons- are aware that on The editorial, columns of the will reflect factual reporting, for the' statio.n will undergo a complete Delta Kappa ~ Nu, society for'·· sacrif~ce, he says. . the first issue, when staff mem- 1Japer '\"ill be dedicated to an in- we believe the readers have a check o~ all _equipment by a -con- coed bu_siness major~,- began th':l" · b~rs are'just learning, it's often: terpre.tation, as'we see it, of that right to know,·whether the·facts sulting engineer from Raleigh's year Wednes~ay night_' ~s··:Mrs. Fi'ank cites several examples from more· recent Col- hard to fill up·. the polumns. news.-'The editorials will serv<> as are -.pleasant or unpleasant. WPTF . · ' charles·:M. Ramsey entertamed the·· lege history in illustrating student followin•g of the three A very minor.part;of the reaso!l a me'imso! discussin'g the meaning The·views of the editors are not Fin;l plans. are being-laid. for. members with. a ouff~t sup~r ·at·_:.. answers to previous challenges. . '. . ·. . . . : for this letter is to help yop, if it and backgrut.Pds of the ;signific;;.nt the only ones 'which Old Gold will the jnstallation of a. chapter of 'her ~~me. - . ·. ·.- . - . - _'· For sacrifice, he mentions the absen'ce t: ·students' is needed, fill up a hole that might events which happen at the Col- present. The columns of the paper Rho Tau.Sigma, national-honorary. -' Dturdlnthg tthethmeet.ll~g lt ~~ ~.: : 0 ·' f "'h. d't · 1 lege. are .open a·t all t1"mes for the ex- rad1"o--TV -fraternt'ty, . for . the ·.por e a e c • u 'rece.lveu. an~ .. op'inions in_ drawincr.., up the Co, n.ege ca1 en .ar,. or 'L 19 appear .on your: .e 1 Orla .page. 1 ,.., d yela!l!', br.ieH:v: pointing out the-- incoriviences to, students The rest of the' reason is to The reader may not always agree pression of views of any individual sta~f of WFDD. Insta,llation. will :~:!:~us ~ ~. ~~t · ~n~g ,.~:~e . l d Th' Old G ld f l · wish you and the staff tile very with the editorial views taken ·who· will take time to write a be In l!rte· Oc.tober.. . ·Special· -guestS' included.. -,,,·SS·· 0 1 ca.'used: bv the. revised ca en ar. · - lS, f· th· b ee s, ISf best of luck t"n the tremendous J'o'-"' b Y.- Old Go ld , b u t ag-reemen.• or 1·e tt er to th e paper. Wh en s1gne· d, 0 n th ~ 11g ht er s1 d e, . B arge said Joyce_ Bateman, new pr~fessor•u. in th'e:.gr·eater sacrifice,. rather than that 0 · ~ a sen-ce 0 you have undertaken. disagreeme.p.t will constitute more these letters will be printed, re- the station has planned a ·show the School ·of Business- .Adminis--. opinions that may not have been heeded anyway, had Name Withheld thinking on the part of the stu- gardless of· the views expressed called "Merrimac," which is to·be tration; and :prospective members.·· students b.een present at.the Calendar CommittEle me~ting. On Request dents- and thereby a fuller under- .therein. ·-' a sequel to ·"Monitor." of -Delta.Kappa.Nu. The greatest loss re;:;ulting ·from the revised- :calendar ____..::.:::...::::::.::::=::_ ____:__=.::.:.:__-.,---_:_-----_.:.:-----'------:---....;..--'--=------'---'-..:.....--'--.:..:::....=.::::..:..::._::::.~,=-=~--.:_-....:. is cel'tainly that of an absence of spring· holidays.. The s h s . PI T c·h . B .Id. ~~~n~a~~r;!s~~~~o::. 1~~rte~~d~;:~hlue~t0Ir~~;~-s~r1:~{~ out eastern eminary: .. ans 0 _. ange. Ul tn_gs pointed out in his convocation speech that the· spring vacations will simply be movP.rl to the end of the semester Wake Forest College is under- sons long past and the thousands Idents wili have a new student ROTC equipment now below the planned for the building will have · instead of coming in the middle. But even with the closing going a change·. In a few· months of students ;who have passed. over center located in the center of the auditorium.. Instead of- weapons, taken their places. of school approximately two weeks early, time in class the College will leave the town its .oiled floors have.been.too much ·campus. A~ the Seminary, too, the there will be equipment for audio­ The three floors of· each- of··the · rooms has not been cut down. of Wake Forest and move to for the antenna-topped structure. s~udentsb wilhl .have ~ newb shtudendt visual. training, and instead of sections are to compose an apart- :· another city. A new reading room section center, ut t 1s one 1s to e ouse military pl~ms, there will be dra ment. Frank's illuf'ltration of devotion holds completely true. In Winston-Salem only the tra- will be built on to the Library in what is now the Chemistry matic productions. Wait Hall, the Music--Religion · He says that the majority of students are "willing and ditions and the spirit will be the in place of the present one. The Bui~dti~g· .ortedth~ Lea Laborabtl~ry, Johnson D(}rmilory, long the Building, which the Seminary now­ 11 '· anxious to do tl1eir part in the removal pro•gram. That, same-everything else will bene~. two-story stack :room is to be re- a.s 1 lS 1 lS 10 co ege pu lea- habitat of upperclass coeds, will partially occupies, and the J ofin-. indeed, is devotion. But what is to become of the old tained and used· as it is presently . tions. continue its dormitory use. Cou­ son Building are to ·be used almost · ples without children, single wom­ It takes something- besides mere school spirit to face campus where the College has being used. On the second floor Architects say ivy-cov­ as they are now. · . tha~ ~he en or single men, as the space is A new cafeteria11is being planned the problems of moving a college. Left behind are all the stood for some 12(} years'? graduate students will replace the ·ered walls of the bUildmg are the needed, will take charge of the to be built either on the site 'of the - traditions that go with a_ camups. thP. personal meanings Southeastern Baptist Theologic- law students. most architecura~y beautiful on 'ld' 1 s · th t Southe · U ta' F tu the campus. The smks and faucets halls. present one or on the land opposi~ - o f eac h b Ul mg, room or bench. Without devotion to a emmary, e newes rn ncer m u re of' the laboratories are to '!!le taken The suites arranged in sections the _gym now occupied by houses. that c:w<::e student apathy towards the removal would Baptist institution, has bought the The Alumni Building, which' out and replaced with possibly a up and down the long halls are With all the changes, though, · leave College officials with all the details of moving. old campus-from the buildings has been on the· south side of the soda fountain, easy chairs, a piano suitable for occupancy by any of and the athletic grounds to the · 1906 h t d th t' 1 f 'l't' the magnolias surrounded by the , With all the illustrations of devotion and sacri:fies, magnolias. campus smce ' as an uncer- an o er recrea IOna acilles. the three classes of students. rock wall, long traditions on. the Frank fails to go deeply into the matter of coura•ge. He ain future. The first floor· of the Chapel To Stand Dor.ms To Cliange campus, will remain basically the : The three-year-old school has building, which has, according to The· Chapel, one of the newest Bostwick Dormitory, originally same. might have mentioned the courage it took to face the un- about 400 students at present, legends, been b11rne!l out twice in , used by the men students of old Popularity of moving. an educational plant that has stood but after the college b gone, that its 49 years of housing-first as buildings on the campus, will re- Wake Forest, -will be 'refitted with Founded -Jan. lS, 1916, and publlshell ~ in the same place for 122 years. He might have pointed number will rise ·to about twice the medical school, then as the main the same on the outside. long-needed plumbing and used to each Monday during the school year ex· . out' the courage it takes to beg, borrow ·and scrape up that amount, perhaps ~ven more. English and Physics Departments Inside, the stage will be removed. house couples without children. cept during examination and hoHdaQt 1 ~ periods liS directed by the Wake Forest . · $19.5 million. He mip;ht have named the courage it will For the Seminary's use the cam- -is to be held as a stand-by for In place of the rows of wooden, Hunter Dormitory, the residence PUblicatioDS Bz'il s, 1943, at Dr. Tribble has, and-will go throll'gh all three of Frank's be that of the Social Science Build- partment. future planned for it. Seminary a complete change of occupants. the post office at Wake Forest, ~orth 3 1879 answers to the challange. The faculty and administration ing. In 1900 the red-brick struc- The building now has little architects plan to remove it. The Instead of fraternity pledges run- carolina, under the. act of-March ' • have and will face the answers. The· students, as· Frank ture was erected as a gymnasium. For 35 years it served in that cost of repair and upkeep on the in and out of the five sections, Offices In The Student Center· points out, must face the same responsibilities in order Seminary officials. The wear and haps used for storage. old building will be too-"great, say children of Seminary students Telephone 4056 P. 0. Box 5Sl to make the removal the complete success it must be. tear of games in sea- At Reynolda,--W"ake Forest stu- el will rise a stage in place of t_he living · ·in · the 15 apartments .. : ' MONDAY •. -SEPTEMBER 2&; .1955- OLD GOLD AND B£ACK PAGE FIVE 1955'. ' I . - . ,. ': . ,! ';.. $~QO~OOO~xpenditureS 9 Frats Draw Dorm Sections For-Winston Chapter Houses Pla'nntJd By' SeminOry Nine sections in the four men's corner of the southwest dorm. . The Board of. TrusteeS' of ingham, Ala,., chairman; William dormatories on the Winston-Salem Three other dormatory space!!' Southeastern Baptist · Theological L. Wyatt, ~leigh; Dr. J.,·Glenn' campus have been selected by the were available to fraternities, said · Seminaey . .jn a recen't meeting Blackburn, pastor of the Wake nine social f~aternities as chapter Dt'. Wilson, but each can accomo­ voted· to·. ·spend approximately. Forest Baptist Church; Dr. W. houses after the move to the new date only 2(} men. He said 'that the $6Qo,OOO. ~n. the 'first ·pha~e of re­ Perry Crouch, pastor of the First campus. two law fraternities, Phi Alpha. novation of the Wake Forest Col­ Baptist Church, Asheville · and Representatives from each of Delta and Phi Delta Phi, may use lege plant•. Chair>man of the Board of Trust­ ~he nine fraternities met Friday two of the 20-bed sections. . The only new building• approved ees; Dr: Claud B. Bowen, pastor of aftemoon to draw for the sections. for th:e present is a -cafeteria, an the First Baptist Church of Dr. Ed Wilson, chairman of the immediate necessity, which will Gree~:Sboro; Dr. S. L. Stealy, faculty fraternity· committee, ex- D b plained that two of the SECtions for provide.an adequat~ on-the-campus Presrden~ of Southeastern Semi­ e ate Team. ~election would aceomodate 27 eatip.g' · pJace for studentss. The n~:r;y;' and Gordon IVL Funk, Busi­ estimateii costs f()r 'building and ness Manager. Representing the men, five would provide fot" 30 equipment a r e approximately faculty on the Long' Range Plan-· "Tlen and two wculd accomodate Work 32 men. $100,000. ni~g Committee are Dr. S. A. JFC Members Draw By JOE KILLIAN A new "Wing .also was 'approved Newman and Dr: 0. 'T. Binkley. The Architect is Hent"y I. Gaines So that each frate·1·nity might Only two varsity debaters are· for· the library to replace the con­ have an equal chanee for' the sec­ demned section. of' the old library. of Aa!lheville. :eturning from last year's Wa,ke tions, Wil!':on said, Inter-Fratern­ ?orest team which ranked titird The Board also voted to :utilize ity Council ·members would draw the administration building, Wait for them. ·n the national ·west Point tourna-- Hall;··for administrative and fac- Mag' Mak. es IFC representatives ·elected to 11ent last spring. ·- ·. ulty::offices. :. provide a ~riod for trading sec- The ',eterans. n.-rarjorie Thoma..'ll Other projects approved by the N tions, but added that the trades ·.lnd Barbara Massey, along with·· boaPd:. are proper . drainage. and . e_·.. w .c_ ha. nges would have to be satisfactory with ~5 ot.hcr·team candidates, are ll()W storm sewers, necessary :fQr the both fraternities. The swaping working toward the annuru Noviceo preservaotion pf the natural beauty 1 _ period is to end Oct. 4, giving the Tournament to be held here Oi::t. of ~be campus;·. that j'.he old Alum- A grea:ter "variety·--of material fraternities two meeting-s in which ~8 and 2l}. Debate teams from ni ',Building' be retained for the an i:r;tcreased staff and a more up~ to settle any trades that might ~evet·al eastern colleges will be at present. aiJd~ t!!.at the f~rst, floor to-date layout wm rmark this take place. Wake ·Forest to participate. be renoV.ated'for· use; temporarily, year's six issues of The: Student LiRts Sections 1 as ·a)iiD;s'ei\y; _tha£ t~e· Lea Science campus magazine, according ti' The fraternities and the sections Prof. Franklin R. Shirley, d~ Building be converted for ·use as co-editor· Owen He~ring;, · · · '. each drew include .. Alpha Sigma bate. coach. "X·as host at a. recept­ a student center; that the sinimons· Phi, a 32-bed;-sediop on 1;be south:- ;on for those interested in debatEr . Dormitory be converted into fif- :. ·fi.~i:riiig and .· ShirleY:·.'J,\rud.'ge; west corne1· o'f the southeast dorm; ";cpt. · ·16. He discussed the new teen·.. ap'artineh~ for: married stU- the' other'J cp-editor;· say that this Kappa 'Alpha, ·a 32-bed section on debate· query. "Resolved: That the dents; tliat Bostwick''Dormitory be y~a~s. ma.'gazine will possess sonie the southeast corner of the south-· Non-Agr!cultund . Indu..'ltries of' reconditioned :fol'· .married students of ~h~· •qualities ·of both'' "humor.....::. . . ., . west dorm; Kapp~~ Sigma, a 30: the u. s. Should Guarantee their without children. ; .~ . ; .. : _ ous' ~~d "literary" '-period~Ca.ls. . . Work;nert are fin~shing tunnel to ·m:eet: · eonstru~tion deadline . bed section on the northwest cor- Employees i\n Annual Wage." With the'-exception of the,-cafe• "We're 'Y'orking ·-tOWar-d ·a ·. .. _,,;: ·' .. ,., -- ·· · · ·. · ·· · · !' · '·.. -. . ner of the s·outhwe.o:;t :donn; Lamb- The coach assured ·everyone pre­ da Chi Alpha. a 30-bed section on ,;ent that the opportunity of being .. ···u·.:,_ ·.t·· • : .- ~,. t~~- ~~~:o;r:n~~:tr~~~it~: ~c::-~;~~~;:'sz::e~~~~:li~~~~:t~~: ·N·t~i~T =~tlfntp. s·~Ne'· a· r"~'si-~-C- .· · -_. 1·· the northeast· <'orner 'of the ;iouth- 1 n the debate squad . is open w · to prepare. and submit. fore~.'.. ;tin!il· ~~st -w~k··as- t~e i;fe'adlme· ?-ea:ed . =., . ·. :;'!l' . :L . , ..· . · .. 0 111p. e.· I 0 D west dorm: Si~ma PL a· 30.-bed approval. . plans . for the. . proJects. ' for d t'The f Studentth s fustt publication' _ ..,- ...... ' ' _.'" . _, ' · . ., -. _: .·. . section ·on tbe southw·est corner of 'lil v.~ho will work. "We lack ex­ 0 the northwe;;t dorm; Sigma Phi ?erience," Shirley added. "How-. It' is· .ex_pected that detailed plan,s a e ·'·· e_.yeaz:. · ·· (Contmued...:frorn page i) atories. Other,: shopping places, in- forseen diffi~lties, will ~: th caji be approved at the meeting of First is!!U'e · will he distributed closet~ sp:ice for:···the occUpantS of chiding a bank and men's and f' 1 f · · · _e Epsilon, a 30-bed section on' the wer. the interest of the team. i:~ the "Board in Fe~rtui.i'y and con- Oct. '12; and SUCcessive numbEirs' each 'room. Tht~'-'·. is "con' trary'. to ctna cost- od dthfat·tphorhont ofhthel southwP.::;t cornet'· of the northeast ~r:;.tifying." · racts. let ·n f II th - d W d . . . ' s . . women's clothing -stores, will be am pus nee e or e nex sc oo t · WI o ow on e secon . e nes- stude~~ .. opi!'lions 'on this 1:9~pus located on the campus: year~. rlptm ;. Sigm·a Chi, a 27~bcd section Jo Chandlei'. David Hughes., Due to .the prima:r;:y: importance days of November, December and that no closet space' has .been· pro- T~tal. cost of the"' campus at the ___... _ .. _·---'---- on the northwest comer of the Clifton Sneeden, James Peterson nortnwest donn; and Theta Chi, a ·lnd Joe Killian are back· with. of the' ,;:hapel, worship center of February through April." vided· in dorm rooms.. ": .. time of remoVa.l 'hi. set at $19.5 27-bed section on the southwest hopes for a successful yea,r. the ca;np~~. ~t was. unanimously .Last _year onli four issues of . A .. cafet':lri~·. now beJng com- millio~. Deyton. said' that_ thi~- {ig- Lawyer Leaves agreed that more time and study The Student were published. pleted will; .acc~IJiodate approxi- ure .. mcludes, . landscapm·g and . 'was ne(!ded- before ·making final Pu . ·- . mately 1,000 people plus a separate . t d th 't b • plans for the uncompleted interior. __rpose of .the enlarged staff, dinnini{'room that'holds _300. Dey- equtpmen an a' arrmg un-. L"b · T WTF The architect and committee -were Herrmg. says, lS· to let more. cam- ton said that the' ~feteria 'will be . - - I ra.r.y 0 .ll'· asked to continue st11dy of) the pus grgups be repre~en~d m the equipj~d to ~!'!rve from four lines. BSU ·Will .Give -- chapel and to brirtg alternative· P~!5es of . the magazme. The new The'.:-college book store will be , , · · · ., · A :prominent Greensbor() lawyer plans for consideration by the ea1tors have made one major. located in one of the men's dorm- R~dio :· Pro!!rams and alumnus of Wake Forest Col- Beard in its February ~eeting. . appointm:e~t for· the year. Lynne · Ll lege -was recently named" ·co···ea· ·w.·n· s· .The Baptist Student Union will law library to the Law SchO{)l .. - Members of the Long ange p_ro..:~_.uction mana!!'er. present a in:ogi-am entitled "Your . . . . ' -Planning Commi~tee are Dr. Har-. ~ ~ BSlr' each Tuesday and _Thurs- T. Settle Graham Jr., a lead- old W. Seever, pastor of the Dau- The Student of 1955 has new · . · day at 8:30 p.m. over radio sta- er in the civic and . religious af · . phin Way .BaJ?tist Church, :Bh:m- advisorss,.along with the new ideas B_eau·ty:_' .. ·TI.tle tion WFDD. ' fairs of Greensboro' and formerly ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH of . content. Dr.· David Sm~ley of Pu. 'rpose_ of the 'program- is to vice-president· of the Wake Forest· the· History Department and Dr. .~ · · · provide ·a basis for -i;nspiration and Alumni Ass()Ciation, died at the Today I begin my second year of writing this column for - .ey.ton H ~a d S. Mary McFeeters, professor in (Continued from· page 1) meditation··'throug.h',;;5acred· music age of 58. He graduated fl'Om the Philip Morris Cigarettes. Once every week during the coming P French, have replaced English Miss.-Jennette· went t.o lialtimore and scripture- readmi· and to· in- College in 1922 and received his ·school year I will take up, without fear or favor, issues that . n·· . . ROTC professor .D. A. Brown as councils for the. state. pageant. Against form students of campus religious law degree here in 1923 inflame the minds and quicken the hearts of college students. . 0 for. the publication,· rougher competition she came actiyities. . ''.'. -~· ~;-:~.:.'/. . . Dean Carroll· .Weathers of·. the everywhere. I will grapple with such knotty questions as: "Ia C ege- . . . compulsory attendance the reflection of an insecure faculty!'• ) _throu_~~ ... ~n9:. ~-.a~. ~ro~~~

WF Cagers 3· Letterm·en Lead Deac WEiCOIE~ Nante Slate CrosS COuniry RUn~e~s - BACK STUDENJS Schedule Has Only Three returning lettermen and leigh, 21, Atla:rtic Coast Confer­ 7 Games At Home 1 another trio of sophomore distance e!lce. meet at Raleigh. ·lei: us me~ a~e leading cross cour}try · The freshman'team will be with A 26-game schedule which in­ V:·orkouts as the 'Deacon rurine~s : s~pply ·dudes only seven home games has prep for their season opener next the_ Yarsity When it l"UDS against been announced for the Colleg-e's week agaii;Jst N. C. State.. State, Duke and· Carolina and. will your floral 1955-56 basketball team bv l'at William Jordan, Wake Forest's participate in the state meet in Pr~ston, athletic director. - new head track coach, has 'urged Ral~igh. · . ~eeds The Deacons, who won 17 whil2 all freshman a.nd upper-classmen Other .meets for the freshman,. Josing 10 last season, will launch boys ~nterested in trying out for but. not yet scheduled, will be one play Dec. 2 against George ·wash-! -cross country ·to report for prac­ more each against Carolina, State Wake Forelt Florist :ington of the Southern Confer- : tice. The drills are held on the and Duke. The frosh runners will ence in Washington. D. C., and athl~tic field each afternoon at ~lso run against Burlington Run­ Phone '429-6 will close out the reg-ular season 3:30 o'clock. ning Club a~d Myers Park High \.. in the Atlantic Coast ConferenC·? Varsity lettermen returning to School of Charlotte. tournament at Raleigh March 1-3. this year's team are seniors Billy None of the se•·en home games Summerlin, Ted Stone and. Ronnie will ~e playc.'d before the ChTist­ Stanley. Summerlin and Stanley mas holidays. First. apparance the ,were recently chosen "? lead the Deacons will make in Gore Gym­ 'Deacon cindermen as co-captains. ·nasium will be Jan. 4. when they play host to Duke. The three sophomores-Bob Wil­ ' Two of the games are billed for Safety 1Il3n 'John Parham returns a VPI punt, gets !Omothered liamson, Doug Graham and Rich'­ the new coliseum in Winston­ ard Fraziel'--gained experience on Salem. The ACC scrap with arch­ last year's freshman ·team. rival N. C. State will be played in Rogers Confident,_ Full OJ Praise Jones Missing the Twin City Dec. 6, while an in­ Biggest blow to the Wake i.er-sectional battle with Brigham marathoners this sea!'jon .. is the Young will be played there Dec. absense of Billy Jones, fastest man 22. As Gridders Upset VPI Go.bbler.s on last fall's team.· Jones, who Two tournament appearances also lettered in wtesttling \ and· faJl during the last two weeks of By LLOYD PRESLAR held an overall scoring advantage Coach ,Rog~;rs }lad. plenty of ten~is, has· quit school to serve December. The Deacons will be Coac!l Tom Rogers stood at mid- o:f 202 to zero. It was the 32-0 praise for his team after they in the armed forces. one of eight teams competing in field seconds after his Demon score and· six other defeats last whipped the invaders, and All- Wake Forest re.vived cross conn­ ih€ first Charlotte Invitational Deacons had beaten Virginia Tech season that gave the DeaconS. their American tackle Bob Bartholomew try as a varsity sport last .year Tournament and will occupy their for the first time in six games the "desire" to win. was in for the highest praise. after a three-year lay-off, and 'USUal spot in the annual Dixie ·two schools have played since 1916. The Gobblers, tabbed with West "I though Bartholomew was an ,though the record showed few Classic lineup in Raleigh's Rey- ''I thought we was going to Virginia as the best in the South­ All-American," Rogers opined. "I wins, a foothold was gained. Last :nolds Coliseum; win," the rotund Rogers said. "I ern circuit, had not lost a game certainly did. If he don't make it, fall's team ended its season. with The schedule follows: :thought so all along. We had too since 1953, but looked highly out­ somebody's wrong!" 'a fifth-place rating in the Atlantic Our F oo.ds Are Made 1;o ~tisfy Dec. 1, at George Washington; much desire to lost th.at ball classed against a spirited Baptist Coast Conference meet. •6, N. C. State at Virinston-Salem; game." team which scored 17 fiust downs The Deacon coach singled out Coach Jordan hopes within th_e Both Hunger And Pocket ·Book 10, at Maryland; 12, at Vh·ginia; Wake Forest had just run up a while holding its opponents to several others-Consoles, halfback next few years to bring track . , 19-21, C h a r 1 ott e Invitational 13-0 victory and saw two more only three. Gerald Huth and end Ralph Brews­ at Wake Forest out of the "minor. P aJtns. Tournament; 22, Brigham Young touchdowns nullified· by penalties Halfback Bill Barnes scored' the ter among them. sport" category and into the at Winston-Salem; 29-31, Dixie as the Deacons opened tbeir 1955 jinx-b:r\!aking first touchdown· as "Brewster played a great game "major. sport" bracket. Classic at Raleigh. schedule aganist the favored he dived over from one yard out for ,, a sophomore," the mentol' He says that boys who are not Jan. 4, Duke, home; 7, North Southern Conference foes here on the 14th play of the game, and thought. "He's just a little 172- primarily interested in cross !0 PARKING SPACE PROBLEM Carolina, home; 10, George Wash- Sept. 17. quarterback Nick Consoles contri­ pounder." · country, but want to get in con­ ington, home; 23, at McCrary When the Deacons took the buted a similar plunge to m'ake dition for another sport, are in­ Eagles (Asheboro); 27, at South opening kickoff and pushed the scoreboard read 13 to 0 in the vited t;o the workouts. The ne"· Carolina; 28, at Clemson. through four first downs for 66 third quarter. Consoles, who masterminded the coach is also -in need of managers F~b. 2, Virginia, home; 3, Clem- yards and the first of two touch­ . 13-13 tie with mighty Maryland for both the varisty and freshman son, home; 6, Richmond at Ports- downs, it ~as the first time they Two other scoring plays;· a· 39- last season, completed eight of 12 yard trip .to the end zone by half- ,passes while directing the offens­ teams. mouth, Va.; 10, South Carolina, had ever scored on the Gobblers. Want To Win :home; 11, at Duke; 13, at Rich- Before the season opener the back Harry Mazman and a pass . ive; and Huth, who is in the back­ ...... __ from Consoles to Parham, were field after running at guard in .Jordan says that although the Hollowell's mond; 15, at North Carolina; 20, teams had met five times on the turn-out of distance runners "has called back on holding penalties. other years, furnished plenty of Maryland, horne; 25, at N. C. football field, and including last not been as large as it should be, State. year's 32-0 VPI win, the Virginians Tech; unable to dent the big power before going out with an Wake Forest line the first three injury. we have a fine group of boys quarters, managed to move into · working · out who are anxiQus to Deacon territory late in the final run and still more anxious to win." And last oi all, the VPI coach The varsity schedule follows: Food Deac Baske~hall Hopes Rise period, but the Gobbler drive was Store sttopped at the 27-yard line. -Frank Moseley.,-had something Oct. 8, at N. C. State; 13, at to · say about the Deacon per­ South Carolina; 28, Duke ·and Roosevelt Ave. ·Phone 4971 With Jack Williams' Return· formance: Maryland at · Durham. · .. Wake Forest ·did everything Nov. '7, Carolina, home; 12, at. By WESLEY KEITH Uncle Sam's Cager Team Regains well and out-played us badly." jack Williams is back at Wake While in the armed forces, Wil­ 0ems~n; lA, · state meet at Ra- i "------..1 Forest, and to Deacon basketbail liams did not waste his talents. fans. dismayed over the loss of Even way up in Alaska he helped Phil Weichman Dick Hemric, k;ey man on last keep the· temperature of service Wake Forest's defending. At- · year's ·team, Williams' return is ball hot by sparkplugging the lantic Coast Conference, g o I f ·welcome news. Eielson Warriors, his outfit's champions find their' hopes for After a successful year as a team. Last season the Warriors repeating bolstered with the re­ first string forward on the Deacon won all their games. turn of Phil Weichman after one .. :', five of 1952-53, Williams was sud-· Williams' performance with his semester's absence due to scholas­ denly drafted into the Army and team won him a starting spot on tic difficulties. ./~·:1 Wake Forest basketball lost for a the Arined Forces All-Star quintet Weichman, No. 2 man behind "·:' , . while one of its most valuable • l ~ that played in the Pan American former U. S. Arnateu;r champ . \ assets. games in South America. Se-Veral Arnold Palmer during the 1954 Got a LU'cky-Dr.o;oclle When he traded campus for other outstanding hardwood art- .season, returns to school after a military life two years ago, many ists, induding Olympic guard successful golfing summer. thought that Wake Forest had Dean Kelley, were also on the Besides teaming with a Michigan seen the last of the 6-foot-3 for- team. friend to win two best-ball tourna- ward. But Williams' ties to his · alma mater were strong, and he During his playing career with :tnents in the mid-western state, Uncle Sam Wl.lll'ams a•·eraged Weichman was second low qualifier in.yOur·noOclle? 111ays he planned all along to com- ' . • < . -nlete his basketball career here. around,. 25 pomts a game, and,_ he in the Southern Amateur and tied ,... ' 1 d 1 t d d for medal honors in the Biltmore • r , :' · Had Other Offers 1 SilJ s, earne a o an game . 1 _ · · Despite tempting offers to plav some valu._.ble experience." Country Club -wurney in Ashe- ·'-' fo; the University of Illinois and William:;' got his discharge last ville. Bradley University, he decided to sprmg,· ar.-,• l Jast summer h e \\,.ake's top golfer last year, come back to Wake Forest. "Since ''swung an ko;;c" in Wilson, where Mickey Gallagher, regained his I made a name for myself here my h e work ·e d f t!r'- th e 'Stat e H"1gnway • competitive edge last summer as .Bophomore year and because l and Public "(orks Co!!Jrnission. he finished close behind Tam Jike it here," Williams explaiiis, G.amed · •pome'" w e1g· h t O'Shanter amateur· champ Doug ·"I wanted to come back." When asked '!if the job l{ept him Sanders in Georgia's Piney Wood's EOWLING BALL While playing with the Deacons in shap,•, Willi~ms grinningly re- Invitational and ·was a quarter­ fOR CENTIPEDE nis sophomore year, Williams plied, uwe were pretty busy cut- finalist in the Georgia State Ama- Ann Bosler racked up an average of 20.7 ting down tre~s). and· surveying, teur. Sarah Lawrence points per game. When individual but I managed\ to guin a little Add to Gal1ag!1er and Weichmari scaring honors were handed out weight." Williari~ puts his play- last spring's :nost consistent in the Southern Confe1·ence that ing weight at 17Q. pounds, .15 less scorer, John Gerring, and two year, he was thit·d .highest. Only than his present ::Weight. ether veterans, Henry Kerfoot and Hundreds and hundreds of students earned $25 in Lucky Strike's Drood1e All-Americans Frank Selvy of The lanky cag~r didn't have Joe . Turner, · anq you have what drive last year-and they'll tell you it's the easiest money yet. Furman and Hemric outscored the much time for bii\sketball prac- promises to be a bright picture '• Droodles are a snap to do-just look at the samples here. Droodle Johnson City, Ill., eager. tice ~uri~g the sunl_~er, and he for Wake's demonishQ linksmen. J The 1953 team on which Wil- says he 1s glad to_ ~ back and Those five letterman don't have anything you want. D:roodle as many as you want. If we select your liatns played . forward won the ea~r to start playing,_ball again. !their positions on next spring's Droodle, we'll pay $25 for the right to use it, with your name, in our Southern Conference champion- Williams, who wilD probably team sewed up, though, for three advertising. And we always end up paying fo~ plenty we don't use! · sl:tip, nosing out N. C. State in a land a forward position long with top sophomores will be driving for - 71-70 title game. hometown friend Lowel (Lefty) posts on 1rhe varsity team. The •• Send your Droodle, complete with title, to Lucky Droodle, P~O. Box· Davis, is optimistic about he Dea- trio-all veterans of last year's ,, 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Include your name, address, college and class. Play Golf At cons' chanceB this winter, freshman golf' team-are David Please include, too, the name and address of the dealer in your college toWn CHEVIOT HILLS that Hemric wiil be miss Hughes, Ralph James and Dave you buy cigarettes most often...... _ · Raleigh Road Coming back .as a junio Wil- Ogilvie. IILANIC YDSII from whom Green Fees • Week Days .....75 liams i3 22 years old an ------John Vancim . While you droodle, light up a .Lucky, the cigarette that tastes Iietter ·Sat., Sun., Holidays ...... $1.50 single. He plans to majc\r in Bo.lo11 Colleae because it's made of :fine tobacco ••• and &'lfs Too8ted" to taste better. We Rent Clubs physical education and hoptl.s to use his spare time playing \golf. Chaplain Talks DROODLES. cOpyright 1953 by Roger Pri01 ' I To Conference , Dr. J. Glenn Blackburn, pastor ''IT'S TOASTED'' to taste lietter! l of the Wake Fore~t Baptist Church . . and College chaplain, will speak @A. T.Co. I'JtOD'I!C'I OF J2:~.7'~AMERJCA's LIW)IHG MANUFACTUIIZR OF O:GAR&T'l'ES Compliments Of at a meeting of the Cu'l!om Minis­ terial Conference tomorrow night at 7:00. Dr. Blackburn will speak on the Baptist World Alliance and Baptist in Europe. K and WCAFETERIA of the Conference in­ Nash Odom, president; Jack vice president; Bob Wat­ ':r'"''-'mr·er;, Claude. Marshall, WINSTON-SALBM, N.C. ... voL~un,., leader; Tom Hogan, re­ Hinson, chorister; Luckies lead all other brands,. regular or king. size, among 36,075 "Between Bus Statien and Robert E. Lee Hotel" pianist, and Grady college students questioned coast-to-coast The number one reason: sports cbairman. ·,, George J. Griffin of the Luckies taste better. Religion Department is advisor for the group.

\ ,_ ·.. ··- • I i' SEPTEMBER 26, 1955' OLD GOU) AriD BLACK. PA~E SEVEN

'"·H.onOrs Pour'In For !VQtiOnQl ChampiOn Bqseballers FOREST THEATRE Wake Forest's national ~ol~- of the Year. by the American watches, former Yarikee pftcher Mountaineers Stubborn lfeek of Sept. 26, 1955 legiate baaseball champions, the Association of· College . Lefty Gomez and Miss North The Mountaineers were a stub­ Cinderella team which 'came up _Coaches, and the ·same g1·oup Carolina were on the menu. born bunch, but. the Baptist were Shows-Mon.- Fri. 3:15, 7:00, 9:01J through the ranks in Omaha, listed catche'r Linwood Holt on· The.story began in late Ma~ch just as tough-and after taking Saturday-C-ontinuous 1 - 1t - ~SPORTRAITS Neb., Jast June, have been the its All-American nine. - · when a Deacon diamond team t~o of the three battles, they Sunday-2:0.0, 3:45, 9:00 , •. ~. ; - , •., . . ·.:· 'I· object of nation-wide congratu- Banquets Held which included . 11 lettermen went South for a sweeping win -. ) - \ ' Monday ' - lations . during the last. three In mid-July the Atlantic Coast opened its season . with four over Rollins College in Fl()rida. months-and the honors are Conference -coaches and 'Com- stra·ight victories. By mid-sea- After the conquest of Rollins, Betty Grable & Robert Cummings still po'uring in. missioner Ji~ Weaver got to- ·son the _ Deacs loolCactly the kind ning, and the Broncos gave lHONTERAY" of sh()wing the average sports fa:ri' expects of a college of less than Wake its biggest scare. The -alsD-­ 1500 stud'e~ts, put tliat's what ·wake Forest turned out last year. Broncs blanked the Deacons, 9- Robert Mikh11m. , And just to make the record more impressive, the trio got their 0, in their first meeting; but -in­ '· ·- ~ vatings in the three major sports. · . ' ·- Sanford's men evened it up with "lUACOA" ·, First ()f_ the All-Amerieans was Bob Bartholomew,· the be­ -a 10-7 win the next night. _ hemoth tackle who helped. tear up VPI' Saturday before last. ~ig Oklahoma A&M, another big Bob is the type of guy coaches like to have. han~ing around. No. team in the O,maha action, .had Sunday 2 .d()uble-A man was Dick.'Hernric of' basketball fame. The big something to say about the Gene .Kelly & Cyd C.hariss~ - center' ·and highest-scoring ·college player of -all time won't be r Wake Forest surge, also; but -in- J arbund 'this winter, but his running mate of three years ago 'is the Aggies took a 2-0 whipping, "IT'S ALWAYS FAIR j back, and Jack Williams shou1d ·help make up, for _the loss.' _ and the stage was set for the WEATHER" . ~ The "third All-Anierieah was Linwood Holt, ·catcher· on· the finals. CINEMA SCOPE , ,June 16, 1955, will he a long­ I ·Deacon nine and S:'fellow with.the kind of batting eye scouts like . I remembered day for Wake .For­ ·to wave contracts at. Holt has another· year of eligibility, but est fans. It was raining in since he played- ball as a freshman, lie W'on't be ~llowed to. play Omaha that day, but the skies in NCAA competition should the Deacs, make the playoffs ag-ain cleared in time for the gam'e, COLLEGIATE THEATRE next spring. Two other stars-pi~her Lefty Davis and outfielder and Wake's n~ver-give-up base­ Week ,of Sept. 26, 1955 Luke McKeel:-would als·o be ruled off the diamond. - ·ballers took their second win Shows-Mon.. - Sat. 3:15, 7:00, 9:091 over Western Michigan-a vic­ Sunday 2:00,3:45, 9:0D· Home Cage .Slate _Lacks Big Game tory which brought the nation_al - · Looking over football schedules the past few years has been pennant to this campus. I'rlonday & Tuesday a bit disgu~ting to·'students who like to see· the 'Deacons play, · · McGinley Tosses .,Vin Bing Crosby & Grace Kelly -and now the same. thin~ seem~ to be happeni~g to the basketball Jack McGinley pitched the 7- .:.-in- card. Only seven g~mes are ·scheduled for Gore Gymna'sium this 6 comeback• win, Linwood Holt · "COUNTRY GIRL" winter. Granted, that's just one less -than last year; but that one and Frank McRae provided the .. _...... i-ame h~PP!'ln~ to be the most important of the season from the.' · defensive spark and Holt's single standpoint of the Wake Forest student. · to score McGinley jn the eighth Wed..-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. i:iming/ gave the Deacs their big The first' game with State-:-usrially pl?oyed here in early De­ .fames.Stewart & June ~IlySGn. seventh run. , --:...in- cember--J:ias ~en moved to Winston-Salem's new coliseum. The All but one of the champs are game will be played on Tuesday night, and> coeds would have an "STRA.TEGIC AIR COMMAND'" $ports Publicist back in school now, going to ~ISTA-VISION . - awfully hard time seeing the game 'and ·m~king it back in time school and occasionally looking . for.. curfew. · . ·at" their gift watches as they Buses, anyone? .. '. Or shall we follow the cagers by radio. ' ~larvin Fra~cis Suc(!eeds Hens-ey . await the 1956 season. e ' .-- . STARTING SUNDAY, OCT. Z ,Coach Sanford, to(), is loo!dng * * * * * ·. * FOR ONE WEEK Marvin (Skeete£:) Francis, f()rm­ mer to direct sports publicity for in 1942. He served- as an aerial forward to next spring, for the Peahead Walker left the plains of Grov~_s _Stadi_l]m several er· assistant sports editor of the N. C. State College.'"A" Wake For~ gunnery insti;uctor until his dis­ team lost only. Tommy Cole by :years ago, but this name' is. stiil with us, and some of the legends Audie Murphy & Charles Drake · Durham Morning Hera:Id, has be­ est ·graduate and editor of Old charge in -1946. In 1951 he was. graduation. The season' will be -in- .surrounding it are. beginning to reach Bunyonesque proportions. 1 gun duties as new athletic publici~ Gold and Black in 1950, he had reca!Jed to active duty with the a tough one, Sanford. says with "TO HELL AND BACK" Here's .the latest; as told 'by Herman Hickman: ty director for the College. taken the job here in 1953. \ Air .Force. He was discharged with a grin. "Everybody w,ill expect "Peahead, when he was at.Wake Forest, ·used to take 50 of his . Francis, who 5ucceeds Bill"Hens­ Francis, -a 33-year-old Durham the rank ()f m_aster sergeant. us to win all of them." biggest boys· and tul'll them loose -in the woods near the stadiq.m. ley, began work here Sept. 5. n11tive who attended Wake F,orest . Francis is a member of the The ones who. r!ln through t;o the clearing on the oth~-r side were Hen~ley resigned during the sum- also, has bee,n assistant sp()rts Atlantic Coast Conference Sports backs; the boys who knock~d down th_e· trees to get out were editor of the Durham paper since Writers Association, the Football ,linemen. 1941. He started work on the Writers Association of America, More Oldsters Herald in 1937 as a high school itte board of directors of 'the N. C. !.'·~.i ·' sports reporter. Outdoor Writers Association and ...•1- :: ...,."' jo million T.his year he 'was 'presented an the Outdoor Writers of America l ~ . ' . : -Will Be· Feted award. ·by the American .. College His wife is the former Miss. .. ,: / .· : ·... ~ . Baseball Coaches AssGCiatjon for i\t:n Fi~lds ·of Durh~m:' Just· Open . times· a f!la1 .. The . College At-!tleti.c .. Associa­ writing the best ,news story on tion and the Deacon Club will con­ college baseball.· He received the ·'.., ' 1 t!nue its new plan for honoring same award in 1950. at home, 41 work ._ TJast Wilke Forest football teams Th SQn of Mrs~ W. B. Francis Sr. Welcome Coeds in the two remaining home foot-. ()f Durham and the late Mr. \'.' .". '. 'TO : or while at pki;y· oalJ games this tall. Francis, he attended Durham High ;-"!. ' • • • 6a$oline :O:oaor guests at the Winston- Sch()ol and Wake Forest before , Salem-- contest -Saturday. night. enlisting in the .Army Air Corps H;ORTEISE'S -- were the members - of the' 1942 · · There's squad, which won -six, lost two and . BEAUTY SAt.DN ' ' tied.· one. The 1930 , team was SHORT ORDERS AND For That honored at the Virginia Tech game SANDWICHES Special Occasion Sept, 17, and 14 member:5 wer~ .pothi~g_. here for the occasion. Let ua style your hair Orders To Suit Short The 1924 te-am will be honored DEACON'S ROOST at the game with North Carolina '"You" ''Young's Barbecue" here Oct. 22, and the i936 grid and your features or like a. Winston Salem, N. C. personality. '· .. squad will be honored at the Wil­ ''Near the New Campus"' And liam and Mary battle Nov. 5. Phjme 5596 Me:rnbers of the 1942 team feted Saturday include Pat Preston, now director 'of athletics here, and two 1-'!------~ members of the present Deacon . football coaching staff., John (Red) Sandwiches Cochran and Don Hipps. Old Gold ,and· Blilck ON HIGHWAY 1 NORTH For The Best In Haircuts l'Y2 Miles From Wake Forest VISIT Subscribers! NORTH END BARBER SHOP The first issue of Old Gold is mailed to all previous subscrib~ J::"SO BluGHT .-.-• so right for: At Its New Location ·service Center .yoa • •• so tangy m. taste,, N. Main St. -·-ers. 1 - ever-&esh in sparkle. · (Across From Sug's) ' '-- ~so BRACING ••• so quitkl)" AU who wish. to continue their And ,refreshing ~ith its bit of. 1 'wholesome energy.; All Haircuts, induding subscriptions should pay the Flat Top $ -75 'BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COcA·COIA C:,OMPAI'IY l'f subscriptio~ rate of $2.50 per. -RALEIGH COCO-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY R. D. Elllington, Prop. ' ~ year. Drive-In C 1955, THE COCA·COLA' COMI'AN't For Styli!, Quality, and Value . . • Shop The B._ & S. DEPARTMENT STORE,· INC. • Wake Forest,· North Carolina ' .,

PAGE EI~HT .. . ' / OLD GOLD AND BLACK ·Deacs Face west Vi,rg. inia Neit Mural Pigskin Jord~,.Arla!l T~li-e. Up ,::.::'"'''''·"''·'·""'·.::':,<-·:,,.',_, · Squads Pref ·. Athletic~Duties WF .. -- Pa Wyant Directs For Campazgn. · · · . • .· .t·, · · · Track Coach· And· .. ·~ Mountaineers. By LLOYD BAUCOM- : , ·· · .·.· ·- -· --. The last y'ear of intramural ac­ .'Trainer Arel Added;·;; ... VC Biggest problem for the Wake tivities on this campus· will get . '-' ' ''. ' ·...... --.-.. ~_-:,~~~~~}~.}~. F'orest footballers as they prep I under way tomorrow afternoon · Two appointment5-'- track:'C~h'!;:;;,.. · ' for Saturdav's Morgantown, W. when the touch football season be- and a trainer-were . ~ade 'iii' 'the;-:· \: Va., game with \vest Virginia will gins. At~letic ~partment during t~'J:-:: •1 be how to stop Freddie Wyant, Deadline for entries will be at Lhe Mountaineer's ace quarterback. 3:30 o'clock this afternoon, at summer.. .·- ;;:./~~' Wyant, the Southern Conference \Vhich time a. meeting cYf the man­ Edgar W. Jordan, former/cross··. 1 ~:hampions' All-American candi­ agers of the various teams will be country coach at .. N. C. 'State, ha~.; : t.l.ate and a veteran of three yeaTS held in the physical education of­ ·~{ssumed his new, duties 'as · ~Cl( ·. :, 1 of varsity grid play. is expecting fice. coach, and a' rme~ber ·of the' ph~-· 'his biggest ~eason this fall. and The Sigma Chi's will be out to sical education staff 'at.',.W8Jce· ·. ihe Deacons will have their hands take their !jecond straight champ­ Forestr The new athletic ·tl'a;ine~ .:"··'. 1'1 Jull cvme Saturday. ionship on .the gridiron this sea­ is. Warren (Floogie) Ariail- Jr.,.. . · Ga. The game, scheduled for 1:30 son. They ddeated the Independ­ trainer at .Wofford since. '194'1: .. ; ., . o'clock at the University's Mount­ ent League champ-ion Monogram tic.e Axiail, who began .work' her~ _.in. cho: aineer Field, will be the first grid­ Club for the All-Campus champ­ July, is a graduate of Wofford· .iron meeting of the two elevens. j ionship last fall. "Til and a· former Marine. He eilr9lle~. due· West Virginia, &n oeigh'kgame I Pigskin play this year will be at Wofford· in 1941, .but enj;ered vr:inner last season while taking on th~ two intramural fields, with the Marines in'1942.and· serv'ea·~iiO j 0 only one defeat, has been billed as the·: ·upper (east). field being des­ lr - Dr. . WARREN G. ARI:AIL JR. lost four years ·before returning ;:£9· f!-...,.. the top team in the Southern Con­ ignated as field ·no. 1 and the ·• . . succeeds McKenzie • • college' in 1946. · <\' ··. '-:~:;_::,;: : ':-;Tho ference again this season, but the lower (west) grid serving_ as -During the sumn;~is h~ atten~\~ . Mr1 Deacons have a habit of showing fields nos. 2 and 3. ed Ea$tern Medical" :A:Id School·· in · . ·~R little respect for Southern loop Few Rules Changed New· Yo~k and served:. as .:tbiiner'· ilpponents. · It's Floogie Now pial Rules for play will follow· the for the Spartanburg, S. c. P~E!cltes. the Virginia Tech, also, was billed as general pattern. of previous sea­ --ol''Fe:l's G~ne- '1-baSElba.ll -team: He· has a certificate' M a po.werhouse, but Coach Tom sons. T~ managerg will be i:ri physio-therapy and is. .freqhent~ role Rogers' squad drove for two· im­ . -. ly; called upon to lecture ...McKe~i~; the 01' is h sophomores Don Averitte and versity Of Richmond_ and received 'f face bench full of talent; the Mount­ Charles Johnson. F!!l ·. of ' Deacon .· athleti-cs ·.for. master's degree in· ·education aineers are promising trouble. ,:~.·~· ei'ght years, last spring at the.' University· of North Caro~ · Js, Wyant Runs, Throws · Young: served as an assi~tant to· ;~~signed ·ut~ become head trainer of ·the lina, where he also was a graduate f. ~ w~ Wyant remains the 'big threat mwiager Hugh Barfoot· in 19S4- 55. Montreal Alouettes. of ,the Ca­ assistant. . hous on Coach Art Lewis' eleven. The Open· Thursday 1 that Tennis; Golf nadian Football League, coach­ Before 'be,c.oming instructor .'}n quarterback carried the ball 841 By DAVID HUGHES ~ear the.h si::e cf the line. bert Ro~rson"' - are the tallest ends, F a 1I tenms· entries opened to- ed by former Wake Forest coach physical education and cross coun­ yards last season for an average D. C. (Peahead) Walker. huck of 93.4 yards per game and ended Wake Forest's largest freshman · The Deaclet coach singles out both .·flankmen measuring 6-foot-4.. day and will close Friday. Play in try coach at·. State, he was an .aS'­ f(){)tball squad in several years will. 1;1ine boys. as being. impressive in Quarterback 'Versatile' the ·net snort will be#rll1 Oct. 4. Du~·!ng the off-season Mc­ and f.hl') year with a, "Player of the >istant track coach there and alsO 1 Kenzie v:·;~l operate a health Year" award from the Southern open its 1955 season agaimrt South drills so ;fiu.• ;.L nem(m he pick~· are In thEt. backfield .Hipps- choosses Intramural "Sneads". will get their· had a year's '.'c.)aching experie~e a-ve. Carolina's first-year men in Lan- ends Barry_Hines and Danny Par- "versatile" quarterback Don Lee chance with the opening of goJf club in Montreat He came to llt Binford Junior High SC.ho_9l, Dz Conference Sports \Vriters As­ Wa.ke Forest in 1948. sociation. caster, S. C., Thursday night. ham, tackle Sam Thayer and center and a quartet of halfbacks as prob- play Oct. 11. Entries for tlle golf Ri<::hmqnd, Va. Fre'ri The left-handed. field general's With 47 men on the Deaclet Pete Watts. able standouts. The four are Ralph touTnament will open Oct. 3. r 'Lizzi 'Passing record isn't to be taken team, there is naturally keen com- Heavies·t_ man <>n the big line More1Ii, RobeJt, .Sawyer and the Tile intramural program. at..• ------;...------~------. good lightly, either. One hundred thirty­ petition for starting· positions in will be Melvin Lemley, who carries Spach brother'iWJimmy and Buddy. Wake Forest includes 15 different TF SERVICE IS WHAT enou. two completions in 312 attemps the first test of the season. The a whopping 275. Parham and AI- After ThurS,day !light's opener sports, and entrance is open to : .II · heiiv, and a three-year passing average unusually large number oi fresh- "'ith the South Carolina Biddies, all students. A scoring system has· YOU WANT . Li: of 42.3 per cent are the big num­ man players is now working out Fellowship Plans the Deaclets will meet four more been set up, and each spring a' ' daily under Don Hipps, head fresh~ · foes, .two of them he~. The sch- number of trophies are awarded · _Visit-._ play~ bers on' his aerial record sheet. senio Another stalwart in the Mount­ man coach, and his assistant, Don edule includes North Carolina .At to fraternities and. independents Picnic. Saturday . junio aineer backfield is expected to he Garrison. ., Wilson, Oct. 13; Clemson at Can- wno have excelled in their fields. fullback Joe Marconi, who aver­ C h H . 1 · th t th .ton, Oct. 28; Duke, here, Nov. 4, As a· service to students who es~ ( .t,- . ·; . self-l aged 6.6 yards per carry in the . ~f tlheppslaexp amsd . a ·b-e Westminster Fellowship has and N.· C. State here, Nov. 18. want to take fuller advantage of reason OI' rge squa Is pro la1'd plans for a p1·cn1·c to be held L t ' 'f h ·a tea th · f "l't" · h Ph 1954 campaign. th as ·year s: res man gr1 m e gyrnnasmm ac1 1 1es·, t e· . y- imag Opposing Wyant as signal-caller ab'ly that ere has been an in- Saturday at Rock Springs, and all didn't manage·to win any 'games. sical Education Department plans Jim,· fo;r. Wake Forest will be Nick Con­ ~nse search· f.or capable ··line Methodist, Episcopal and Presliy- The '54' Deaclets •lost to Duke, to·keep the·gy.tn open on Sunday famil ·material. Seve~al replacements terian students have been invited State, Clemson, North ~arolina afternoons th,rough the school soles, wh ______:______~------!...._------~'---- ·. '.Fr~ Bill Barnes and John Parham. The is made· u~;mostly m seniors. for the YJlar Sept. 18 with itS first . ·' tria turned in brilliant perform­ more, ances as the Deacs brushed aside Ba~k8; Line hnpressive regular Sunday night meeting. A Tflo~h Coach· Hipps stresses fellowship hour followed the pro­ of th VPI. . Wake . Barnes reeled off 86 yards in the faCt that the :frosh haven't yet gram, and refreshments were baa·· chance to show him what served. ray : J 5 carries while Parham, a senior a: fro:m Oxford, got 57 yards in they can do, :two faets have im- The group meets every Sunday :,;even tries. •Barnes tallied one pressed him. These are the aburi-. at 6:30 p.m. in room 210 of the dance of speedy halfbacks and the I Seminary Building. touchdown on a one-yard smash Sm,oke Tomor.row-5· and kicked one of two extra poi!lt . '· attempts. .· - Consoles, who ranked second in :passing in the Atlantic Coast Conferenct last fall, continued his Women In Shorts Ac better ciga.rette*~ Dr. l air-borne · bombardment in the season's lid-lifter with eight com- -By JOANNE POWELL "' years ple-tions in' 12 tosses. · Depar Club activities for· girls interest­ each montp.. C~s interested in press ed in · physical education began joining the linksters· should con­ The Thursday ai'ternoou as. the Today- Booklet Explains Wo~ tact either J.ackie .Collins .or Ann. Man's man•s Recreation Association held Barlow. Drean its firs.t lneeting at Rock Springs. • # <.: Sports Progrrun . Georg A handbook explaining the Col- Seventy-five members were pres- Ann Barlow has been. chosen Enjoy a Cool Mil-drie-ss I, profeE lege intramural and ·recreational ent. . girl's intramural manager for the Dr. E sports programs has been printed Skits were g:iven by both so· year. Vann Mitchell and Jo Anne lish. · by the Physical Educa~on Depart- cieties during the picnic. Freshman Powell will be the chief officials ment and is availaBle free of girls will be able to join either never possible beforet~ "It for all intramural games. f persor charge to students of the College. society Wednesday at 7 p.m. First intramural activity for The booklet entitled "Intra- New officers for WRA are Jo ·editor: the year-the annual fall softbaU man t mural Sports,' Reereation~" , was Al!ne ·~owell, )!resident; Barbara tournament-will begin this after­ .compiled by the staff of the de-l H1ll, v1ce-pres1aent; ~nn Barlow. noon at 3:30. The plaque, which is hind :b , partment and· attempts to give a 1 secre~l.:\• and Manetta Perry, presently in Johnson, will be go a , q>mprehensive resume of the treasure!. awarded to the dorm wining two legend .basic pbysical education program of the three games. will I offered here. Three other clubs are ready to future · · Freshmen receh·ed copies of the begin activities for the year. Phy­ Cost handbook during the :first few days sical Education MajOTS will hold is beir of school. Other students can' pick a picnic at Rock Springs tomorrow mirers '· Gp copies at the physical education afternoon at 5 o'clock. from i office. · · The tennis club met Tuesday man en with 11 members present. Sybil moria! The American Automobile As- Hinkle, chairman, and Mariam partmE sociation has endorsed the pro- Allred, vice-chairman, are now for th• posed Democratic pay-as-you-go scheduling matches with Duke, which $48,500,000,000 highway program, Carolina and Meredith. calling it "more desirable'' than The golf club has been organized to see the Administration's bond finan- again this year, Jackie Collins ser­ Dr., cing plan, according to a report ving as .~>resident. Members are NOW OPEN his stu from Washington, D. C. , required to play 36 holes of golf :fessor Under New the Co: was Pr of thai Management 1938. 1 JUST REOPENED tired; Delicious Gasoline • • • • 11.9c gal Food AI Phil Gar Washed • ·sMOKINGJ dent, ·-w • • • ~ $1~15 Young Minimum meetin~ GLASS CUT AND INSTALLED night. Othe1 FOR ANY MAK'E. CAR Applew Cost .P. C. l dent; • ·- Bob Rit PERRY'S AMOCO SERVICE Thad of Nor1 SUG'S CAFE-- Ches"terfi·eld the clu HIGHWAY 1 SOUTH 3Yz MILES FROM WAKE FOREST Oct. 2c Eure w. O.A.PERRY,MANAGER BEST FOR YOU ! N. .Main Street of' t'lle who th~