Slates 'Mikado' Here Thursday Complete List of Students, Their ' - '
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, 25, .'195' . ' ., . ·' I' . £ditorial :Blasts . ... " Newman Blames <t..·· ··ll ....' - .... e StudC,nf Couilcil :'_. ' · ... .. _·. o·fficials For· Fuss I . It holiday ·· Cloi~d Se~~i.;n In Carolina Game minimum tsses has Page Two Page Five ;ion of· ~* * _\ '~e~u ·<tit. f4~•#i4:::Jll.k.· <flu. M~'' ~ -·~-. ·~·. * ;he g&nU!. * ' . lty mem· VOLUME XL wA~E F~REs'i' coLLEGE, wAKE Fo.R.¢sir. -NQR;r~'.,~~~~A. MONDAY, Nov'EMsE~ 1, 195~ NUMBER..& Saturday ' ' ' J ' • - e able to:· ~ cuts to ilrant e e >S lkS By CHARLES NEWMAN 18CU8 The · post of treasurer was the only position filled in freshman EJections Thursday. The four other · offices will be elected in runoffs :4 tomorrow. Dickie N'~wsome, Sigma Chi pl~dge f~om Ahoskie, received 160 · .. votes for the only clear majority ' of the five positions. Three men are in the runoff for· president of the cla!!s. · Jimmy Powell, Kappa Alpha pledge from Greensboro, recei-ved 59 ·votes to· !ead .the race, :but di!l :IJ,01; have enough to take a m.ajo~ity. Tommy ' Bunn,· · I?ambda .Chi Alpha pled~e . from Wendell, took 48 votes; and Lee Koontz, Alpha ueigh Sigma Phi pledge from Lexington, received 46. ~ 1 . Others In Ra~ Others in 'the presidential race were DaVid Uufdtes, Kappa Sigma pledge·frm Moultrie, Ga.,.25 votes; Billy Lynam, Wake Forest, 24 votes; Vern Pike, Sigma Phi Epsi lon pledge from Broomfield, N. J ., 37 votes;· and Tommy Womble, Cary, 38 votes. In the Vice presidential race, Joe Lancaster, Pi Kappa Alpha pledge from Rocky Mount; an<i Neil Mc Curry, KA pledg_e from Shelby, are in the runoff. Lancaster re· ceived 111 votes and McCurry, 37. Other candidates for Vice presi • dent were Carter Hedrick, Rocky ·:Mount, 11; Larry-James, Kappa Sig pledge f r o m Elkin, 15; Paul Kennedy, SPE pledge from Shelby, 34; Henry Morgan, La·mbda Chi pledge from· Cary, 35; and · Linda Willard, • coed from Pilot Moqntain,,34; ., For· Secretary Two coeds, Jo Butler, Charlotte; and Corinne Webb, Morehead City, are in the runoff for secretary. Miss Butler -received 116 votes, while Miss 'Webb polled 85. Nancy Fogleman, Cha_rlottesville, Va., was the othe;r candidate for the posi tion. She received 74 votes. In the runoff for representative to the Student Legislature are Dottie Braddock, coed from Mor (Con~inued On Page Six) Directory Due A Student Directory, compiled by the Studen~ Legislature, goes on sale 'W t·dnesday at tb<:! Chapel. Thereaft-er the little book will be available in the Recreation Room. The Directory will contain a Slates 'Mikado' Here Thursday complete list of students, their ' - ' . addresses, and other information; Concert Series It will be sold for twenty-five cents. Sponsors Opera By LLOYD PRESLAR The American Sayoyards will Lawyers Name 3 ·Representatives present Gilbert and Sullivan's "The Mikado," at 8:15 p. m. Thursday in the College Chapel. Admission Will Send Students is free for the famous comic opera, To National Court the first of four presentations in By BOB GffiARD this year's Concert-Lecture Series. • Sally Knapp, soprano, will be Judges of the Appellate moot seen as the female lead in court selected three men to repre production. She. is a native of sent Wake Forest Law School fu Johnsonburg, Penn. At the age of the annual National Moot COUl·t 17,-·upon winning a local beauty Competition. contest, she decided that she Joe B. Mauney, Alan White. and wanted theater as a career. John Blackowell will carry the Dedicated solely to the works Sponsors Ugly colors of <the Law School into the of Gilbert and Sullivan, the intercollegiate moot court compe· Savoyards company is unique. The tition beginning Friday. Their op company recently concluded three Man· Campaig~ ponents have not been named. ' and one half years of repertory in . The appellate Court coll'vened . New. York and a tour o:f many of An ugly man contest is again Wednesday night to settle a case the major cities. · being ·sponsored this year by which concerned whether peaceful Members o:f the company are Alpha Phi Omega, -service frater picketing comes within the juris· trained in the chorus and work nity. Penny votes gathered in the their way up from role to role. diction of the National Labor Re· contest will go to. the Baptist Stu lations Act. Thls assures a unity of style and dent Union Home Mission project. Case Facts ng smoothness of playing seen chiefly Each social fraternity has se in European companies whose The facts of the case involved lected its candidate for the con peaceful Picketing by a labor es). members have spent a .lifetime to· test. Competing will be Fred Hill, . - -' union of a retail television busi 'gether. l Kappa Sigma from Smithfield; The "business" employed by the 'The ·Mikado'- Sally -Knapp, as Yum-Yum, and Horman ness engaged in interstate com· nt Paige, as Hanki-Poo, are to appear here Joe Ceros, Lambda Chi Alpha actors of the company is as was from Chatham, Ontario; Danny merce. The union was trying to ey. originally devised by lyrist W. S. Thursday in Gilbert and Sullivan's opera, "The Mikado," in the first Gryder, Pi Kappa Alpha from encourage the employees of the' ld, Gilbert. The costumes are au of this year's College Concert-Lecture Series. The American Savo Roanoke, Virginia. concern to join the union. thentic, based upon the designers' yards, who do ~othing but Gilbert and Sullivan works, produce the The employees had voted not to sketches found in London. · Walt Ward, Kappa Alpha from . program. Asheville; Bob Koontz, Sigma Phi join the union, but the picketing ne Dorothy Raedler, producer-di I was continued in an effort to rector of the American Savoyards The company consists of 40 ized and leavened with humor "per ~psilon from Kannapolis; Paul · Williamson, Alpha Sigma Phi from change the minds of the employ )S. who has spent fifteen years plac m em b e r s, including. musicians, taining to the England o( that day, ees. It was stated that the busi· singers, and production staffs. and Gilbert penetrated , so close Washington, N. C.; Nick Con $t ing Gilbert. and Sullivan operas soles, Sigma Chi from Lynn, ness had suffered a loss of 16 per on the stage, has directed this Lyrics for -the opera's songs are to the core of human nature that cent in ·their sales. in English. The setting is Japan, the failing of y~sterday are the Mass.; and Bob NeSmith, Sigma production of the "Mikado." Pi :from Dalton, Ga. STAFF PHOTO BY IRVIN GRIGG A lower court had decided that Brooks Atkinson, New York and the characters are members same we know today. the union was violating the act of the Japanese nobility. The second presentation of the The contest will be held Nov. Court Contestants- Three Wake Fotest law students Times columnist, comments on the were selected last week to repre. and ordered the union to refrain , Although Gilbert prete~~e~ to Concert-Lecture Series will be 8-9. APO will also sponsor a re Savoyards: "There is just the right sent Wake .Forest in the National Moot Court Contest to be held from picketing. touch o;f dry, mischievous formali be writing aoout Japan m The held Jan. 11. Entremont, a young turn · of the bloodmobile to the Appellant's Case French pianist making his second campus and will operate the Stu in-~New York. Picked were AI White, Wynn~wood, Pa.; Joe Manney, ty in .the ·acting. Altogether, this Mikado," the only Asiatic matters Kenneth Bridges and Parks were the fans, costumes and props. tour of the United States, will be dent BOok . Exchang~,: again this Shelby; and John Blackwell,· Fayetteville. All three men are senior is one of the most delightful en- ,- •. Icenhour pleaded the case for the the perfcirmer. · year. law students. tertairiments the town affords." The sentiments and deeds satir• (Continued Un Page Six) · ··-· .,-... By WILLIAM PATE . Reader'· Urges'· ., . C!)lb ~olb anb Jllntk Leacoe s.==:;.·· .... Wake Forest College • • Magnolia ==- ~~- -Gh_~reh,.--a$u: ·· By WI~FRED WINSTEAD Dan Poole Gray Boyette -- ' l Editor Business Manager Several penetrating s c r e am s · called th~ Punch Bowl!•. Smith Barrier in the Greens ·P.articipgti~~ _ reached the lower levels of John ·' ·Frosh-·Sound Mournful Dirge · i 1\londay, Nov. 1, 195-t· son Dorm: The 'noise was so loud · ·boro Daily -News began hi.s story. .- To \he Editor': ,. that it caused a housemother to on the game with- the date line · lily purpo~e in vn·iting these For Passing· Election Tradition call upstairs to quieten it. "Madison Square Garden, Chapel f.ew words is to challenge the stu- . On an upper Hill." dents to participate · more- in floor, a 1i t t 1 e A radio commenta~r-"ContrarY: .. religious activities here on the LET . THE MOURNFUL dirge same reason. The Diplomatic Boot group" . of coeds · to popular· b_elief; the neit Wake campus. sound long and low•. Let the toll- Five fraternities (the Student ran down the Forest-Carolina game will not be In Matthew 6:33 we find these. ing.of the bells summon freshman· .Party) ·and:.five' ·candidates, one Student Council members went behind closed govemed by the National · Box words: ~·seek ye first the kingdom voters· to the ballot .boxes tomor- . for. each poSt ~a-: rio~ m~re .. That- doors last week to conduct public business. hall. A :few mo ments pass~d. ing Association. of ~od, and.his.'righteousness;-" and row.' For·· one :of~ the Ja~t Wake was the-plan:·WJiich one got.which: Old Gold and Black was there to cover the ·Then t.he same '· - all these things shall be added Forest traditions, this one a pure- .