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' ~; ·· . VOLUME LV~ Wake Forest Uufverslty, Wlnsto...Salem, North Carolina, Friday, October 15, 1971 *** Number 8 ! Consumer Bulletin Law School Starts Planned 83 Million Drive By JILL THIS · Staff Writer A $3 million campaign, $500,000 attorney," and support of law Leon L. Rice of Wmston-salem · ~n.e Wake Forest Board for to be raised by Nov. 6, was an school publications. and James W. Mason of Ecommic Oloperation, headed nounced Sunday by the School of "Although our growth will be Laurinburg, both practicing by sentor class president James law at the University. healthy and substantial,"· attorneys, are co-chairmen of the Kirkpatrick, will begin President James Ralph Scales Bowman said, "the school will $500,000 drive. pubUshing a consumer report for said that the law school's cam remain the smallest of the three Twenty-nine area chairmen university students. The purpose paign wUl not affect the priority major law schools in North have been appointed to assist of this weekly publication will be of a fine arts building for the . Carolina." them. ).a to. make students aware of University, which was recently ;''I established by the board of l bargains available to them in the •. Winston-salem area •. · visitors. As stated in the Bill for the He added that the campaign· is Statutes Under Fire, d-eation of a Board for student restricted to law alumni and their .widows.· ) ' Economic Cooperation, the purpose of the Board is to ''im· Scales, said an intensive, short p-ove student eConomic position term drive is being conducted Rights Group Named on· the campus and in the com· among alumni of the law school munity by seeking price to raise $500,000 for a three-story reductiona, student fares, and addition to the law building. He By SUSAN GILLE'n'E terested students to contact him. various other concessions and said the other $2 and one-balf Assistant Editor When complete, the con p-ivileges." For this reason the million will be sought between stitutional revision convention Bom:d, composed Of Tom Younz, now and 1976 and will be used to After adopting By-Laws for the will be composed of seven Frank Dew, Tere Dale,·Maryi.ou develop ''key areas of service." 1971-72 session, the Student members of the legislature, three Oloper, Steve Grossman, and The program has been en· Government established a other students, two faculty Jim Kirkpatrick have been dorsed by the school's board of committee for student rights and members, two administrators collecting data on wbere most visitors and the executive responsibility and selected the and one trustee. Freshman students spelld their mo~ey. committee of the Law Alumni nucleus of a constitutional legislator Bunz Daniels heads the The · greatest portion of the Association. revision convention in Wed convention. students' dollars go for food. The Dr. Pas.c.o M. Bowman, dean of nesday night's session. Spo0110rs of the bill for the low priced places near campus the school, said · present Extensive revisions to the convention cited as their causes· receive . .most student enrollment already taxes statutes of the student body "inadequacy of the present business.'lbe taverns do not have existing space in the law building constitution were introduced, but constitution in providing the as' much student business as and that he hopes construction on consideration was postponed students appropriate University wiluld be expected. Most students the $500,000 addition will be until next week. A hearing on the representation," ''cloudiness and report going only once or twice a completed by the beginning of the revisions will be held Monday at 8 confusion, due to revisions, , , I next school year. p.m. in the SG office. month to the bars near the Photo By Jones rendering the constitution totally campus. Bowman said the addition will Kitchin legislator Steve devoid of almost any goal," and ·Wake Forest students are give the school enough space to Grossman will chair the student the fact that the Charter of Wake habitual in their preferences and Here Comes The Sun e:s:pand enrollment to 440 by 1975- rights committee, whose function Forest University "does not 76 and to increase its faculty from will be patterned after that of a recognize student Government go· to one or two particular •. Sometimes It fakes several tries to get a thiDg down right. Local through with the right combination at the first of the week-cool and temporary rights committee establishments repeatedly. clear. 10 to 18 over the same period. as the real, proportional weather, after l'WliiiDg through UDBeasonably warm days and tryfDg Bowman said the addition will eldSting laSt year. 1bat com StUdents also average only two again with an unpl.e8santly cold and wet weekend, ffD8ily broke academic, and social authority meals a day. meet "the particularly critical mittee, which Grossman within the Wake Forest Com Thruway Shopping Center need for additional library space described as "one of the munity. re
I I *:::~:::::::::::~:;:•:~:;;;:;;;::::::-.:::::::!!::?.?r!:?m::::::::::::::!:~::::::::::::~::::~:~:!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::•:=:=:=:=:=:!:!=~~=~=~:~~ SHERWOOD PLAZA I ·\ RESTAURANT I •. IMemories Include Yells, I 17" (Where quality prevails) ~ I ~ SERVING THREE COMPLETE MEALS A DAY IShorty's,Hurricane Hazel·l OPEN 6:36 • 8:36 MONDAY.SATURDAY By JOHN ELLIOTT he . and the English ' . SHERWOOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER I. o~her I I maJors used to Jump from the , '1 ~ R · · t b th door to the staircase. ~ I}. 1 emmiscences wen ° · On the other hand, there were ~ ~l ways at the old campus last those who stayed, like Mrs. I. ~ Two trekkers stop by the ) .. fountain in old Wake, far right; "'· Saturday. ~ students tour the main thorough ~ on the one hand, there were Beverly Lake, whose husband, ,~ fare, above; and Dr. Scales talks '- those who left in 1956 after a justice on the North Carolina §~ with to:wnspeople, right. ;;~ Supreme Court, taught law on :;:: ~~ being both students and the old campus for 18 years. 1:l: ;:;: teachers at the College such as The Lakes still ·live in . the :1:l ''Lovers and a 1970 CODledJ ··· Provost Edwin G. Wilson. .. Union's Photos By iliesty 1111 "I cannot pretend to be town, and having un- ~ill Starring :::: detached," he told his audience dergraduates back w_as :i:l Bedelia and :::: "wonderful," she sa1d. :::: the movie will .,. i:~: in Binkley Chapel. On his first "Having young people here i:i: and tomorrow The most :i:i sight of the campus, he kept us young." :i:1 p.m., and ~.·::.· recalled, "I was captured-for She remembered that when ~1:.· Fifty cents Meaningful Semester life· as it turned out." ·· charged...... :~; . The Wake Forest of the 1940's Hurricane Hazel.hit the town in . ~il "Jezebel", ever .spend ... :::i was, he sa.. id, a .place where 1954, a crew of student .volun· ::.,o:. ::::.;;·, and ''Samun ~il teers came·quickly to saw apart · · ~ "' production could be the one on ll:: "with, so little to do, there was the four trees which blocked 1!~ ' .. second :;:; really so much to do"-for him, them in their house. :~~ complete the World CamP.US Afloat ·· Pub Row and hamburgers at ··• Bette Davis ;i:! Shorty's and English classes on "My husband says he would. :::; portraying Sailing Feb. 1972 to Africa and the Orient :::1 just give anything to wake up in :~: Southern belle Through a transfer format, more than 5,000 ;j:~ the upper floors of Alumni Hall. the night and hear a great big ~: p.m. Monday. students from 450 campuses have participated ·· Physics was taught on the first .... The '54 for a semester in this unique program in inter· !i!i floor, he said with a smile, and yell. It used to irritate us then," ;:;: "Samurai," national education. 16th century WCA will broaden your horizons, literally and . ....~~:~:~!::::::;:;:!:~:~:::~:::::~~:::::::::::::::::~::~:~:.:.~::::::.~:~:~?.~.?.::;:•=-:-:-:::•:•!c:::::.:.:.:.:.:::.:.!Z:·:~·!·~·!·!-~·!-~•!•!•!•!~•!•"•"•~•······················•··=-~·~··•·•·• • I •e• • • • :.• o • • ~ • • • • • •• I I ·o ••,. •• .-.~~-~--~~!!~.~.. o"o"o"~t"l"l'"l'"l" •o•••o•o•,.•,.•.•o••'•"•'•"•"•'•"ol~o;o,•;o;o;o;.o.o,.o.. •.v.•.•.•.•-•.•.•.•.•.•-•.•-•.•.•.• ....&. :::: scheduled for figuratively ... and give you a better chance to make it-meaningfully-in this changing world. Tuesday. Both You'll study at sea with an experienced cos· preceded by mopolitan faculty, and then during port stops No Date Set 'Superficiality' Feared Olapter &. " you'll study the world itself. You'll discover that no matter how foreign and far-away, you have a lot in common with people of other lands. For Dorm WCA isn't as expensive as you might think: Jeans For Guys & Gals we've done our best to bring it within reach of most college students. Write today for free Completion Profs· See Minintester Limitations details. institution and faculty have to TEACHERS: Summer travel with credit for teach· Pete Moore, director of the an emotional basis?" happens in the classroom, but ers and administrators. ByNANCY ANDREWS His colleague, Dr. Jon what· happens ten or 15 years take gambles and risks on physical plant, said Tuesday that Assistant Editor student maturity. The hope is Friday, MILLER'S VARIETY construction on the new dorm is Reinhardt pointed out the later. Whether or not we're "proceeding, but not at any great practical limitations of a creative sucked in by TV. Of course, this that it will be there." 5 p.m. ALL 620 N. TRADE ST. ~~~~;~:~alol~~e. Two professors of politics, one 4-1-4 I Schoonmaker also speculated ST 0 RE rate". the director of the January enterprise such as the doesn'tmean that throw content SIDERED l.a~l'".ttM-aYimF.. ,_.,._.,_.,.,. •• ,...... ~W Box CC26, Orange, California 92666 winter term: "A lot of people are out the window." on the need for a committee of 6 p.m. The dorm was scheduled to be winter term for the new 4-1-4 sorts which would constanUy_ finished July 19, but due to bad trying out things they will want to As to making a minimester Spohr: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:::::!:::~:::~:~:~:~:!:~:~:;:~:!:::;:;:;:;:=:=:;:::::::::~:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:~:~:;:~:=:::~:~:~:~:~:~:!:~:!:~:;:~:~:~:~:~:~:::=:!:~:~:~:~:~:::~:!:;:::::::::::: curriculUm, feel that the new consider ideas for curriculum weather and other uncontrollable program offers great possibilities incorporate in the curriculum. I curriculum a model for the two Mother believe that there is a need for semesters, Schoonmaker has change. . 8 circumstances, the contractors for course innovation, but are "Is there a need for a student or were granted an extension on the skeptical of making it part of an innovation. Innovation has some reservations. He feels that spawned a lot of good things, but often the strain of continual in· faculty, or student-faculty I ·. completion date until August 19. all-out drive for continual committee oriented toward the ~~~~~ The University granted a further curricular change. also a lot of superficiality. There novation could cause a lack of are practical limitations. There's thought and therefore a lack of possibility of curriculum in· extension to August 29 due to a "The latest issue of the New novation? The curriculum change in the specifications of the York Review of Books printed an not enough free time to set up real innovation. I , , I new courses all the time." "One aspect of the winter term, committee, made up of the building. No firm completion article about reaction against the he continued, "is that the student chairmen of all departments, are date has since been established. Schoonmaker picked up "ENJOY .. ~ university as a knowledge fac· Reinhardt's comment on seeks integrity and relations busy with a large number of other The ''mudflats" around the tory, stating that today, superficiality, explaining, between the social and academic, things, so that innovation is new dorm will be there at least education has become im· particularly at a time when he is difficult to talk about. But there is until construction is completed, personalized," said Dr. Don "American culture has cultivated something called trying to develop his own iden· no committee for long-range since landscaping will be the last Schoonmaker, the director. "Can tity. curriculum planning." thing done, Moore said. a teacher relate to hls students on 'instant learning'. I have a theory about education in the twentieth "It is hoped," he said, "that Monday & Tuesday Nife century that there is just too there is enough leeway for the I ., much knowledge around for you students and faculty to explore Carnival to learn all of it. So you have to their talents. For the teacher, it Look concentrate on the nature of means he can really try out questions. techniques. For the student, it's All houses, societies, and OUr major concern is not what unlimited what he can do. The fraternities are urged to contact whete we•te the junior class officers and let ·I DELICIOUS BURGER, ANY FLAVOR SHAKE goin9. them know whether the organization is planning a booth for the junior class carnival AND FRENCH FRIES y 25905 ' DATE JoNO PLACE OF ISSUE November 5. Groups are a.,ked to contact aement Brown, Charles Glass, Susan Holloway or FOR ONLY Deborah Graves as soon as I 1 NAME possible .
SIGNA TUllE C>< ' ·:I so~ EXPIRATION DATE PIEDMONT AIRLINES First Baptist YOUTH FARE CARD · If cord is lost, stolen or destroyed, a new cord must be purchased. Church The SMck Bar Is Open take thil catd and go. College Group Every Nite From 5: 00 - 10: 30, Now at a new low price: $3. And it's 9:30 good until your 22nd birthday! So Come By & Try Us Out! You get a reserved seat, any day, Worship 11:00 and save about 20%. Call us, or see . Bus Leaves Johnson :·:· ~::: your travel agent. . At 9:30 JiL======:======·=·=·===·='='='==:=:=::;:;:;::==·=·=:=:=:======:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::=:======:=:===:======:======::====::;:;:;:;:;======:==:======:===:===::::=~====~======:,;,;,;,;:;;~ ~-~------· ·- Elm Virus PAGE THREE Friday, October 15, 1971. OLD GOLD AND BLACK Hits Trees Artist's Book Praised On. Plaza Artist-in-residence Ray would be available to both Prohaska said that he "had But working with drawing and Prohaska published an in amateurs and professionals." some very good students" at painting alone, he said, he could By CINDY LUTENBACHER lroductary text on drawing and Prohaska teaches two studio Wake, and that student work still fill the main function of the Staff Writer painting earlier this year and courses-beginning and ad would continue to be displayed at art teacher, to teach students quickly found himself swamped vanced-a semester, working out an annual showing In May. Ex "how to see, to develop a Five elm · trees on the plaza with critical acclaim. of a spare room on the sixth floor pansion of student exhibitions selective eye." have died from Dutch elm "A Basic Course In Design: An of the library. He said he had would have to wait until the art Once this lear,ning how to see disease since the disease was Introduction to Drawing and pl"Oblems using the same small ~epartment grew, he said. was underway, stadents were .J first detected here nine years Painting," published by Fletcher room for both sections, because Smaller schools have three or I encouraged to undertake projects ago, according to Pete Moore, Art Services, was written over a equipment had to be arranged four instructors," in sculpture, of their own, in whatever media director of the physical plant. . two year period wbile Prohaska differently for the different graphics, and graphic design, as were available Moore said that although Wake was teaching at Washington and classes. About twelve students w~~ as in drawing and painting. "You see that nice thing over bas tried several different Lee University are enrolled in each class. If we ever get the space, we there. That's by one of my methods of combating the Ruth Latter, reviewing for the Prohaska is also provided with want to have a graphics depart students." disease, none has really been arts newsletter Focus, called a personal studio in the steeple of ment." CXJmpletely successful. Prohaska's book, "one of the Walt Olapel. "It's a beautiful Dutch elm disease was first most comprehensive 'bow to' room. I have been able to do a lot discovered in Holland. It is a books ever published for of work there." But, since the virus carried by the European beginning artists ... everythlng studio can only be reached by a ABORTION bark beetle which, after being you ever wanted to know about locked elevator, students find it , transferred onto a tree, feeds on drawing and painting but didn't difficult to visit him, he said. new shoots and twigs. Sap and its know who to ask." . With a more accessible studio, QUESTIONS conductors spread the germ And Howard Mantz, writing for students could "watch me work • throughout the tree. the graphic arts magazine North out my own problems, and learn 'lbe virus can be passed from Ught eaid, "Ray Prohaska has some ways to work out theirs." For Information and tree to tree lf the roots of the trees filfed a gaping need With a superb are In contact. new book ... This book will be Referral Assistance Call Of two ways of controlling the many things to many people ...a disease -poisoning the beetles or lecture series-a demonstration Yale Prof ABORTION INFORMATION CENTER, INC. finding an antidote for the virus - course, a gallery visit, a series of Moore said that poisoning is the reviews and above all, an easy (201) 868-3745 preferred method. and fascinating dialogue between To Speak 868-3746 He said that the type of poison two artists: Ray Prohaska and .. < to use has become the problem. you." 9:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. ·' DDT had worked fairly well Mantz and other critics Monday to Saturday '!' before it was outlawed. Four especially praised Prohaska's Wednesday I years ago, he added, a systemic use of drawings by students in his poison ·was used but had to be courses to illustrate each step in ·Dr. John Edwin· Smith, discontinued because of the the process of learning to draw. professor of philosophy at Yale dangers to those admlnister~g it. Prohaska said that all the University, will speak on "What 1 Moore said that this year the student drawings Inside the book is Man?" at 4p.m. Wednesday in DeTamble Auditorium. I '· disease has so far infected only were done at classes at one tree. Washington and Lee. But one of 'lbe lecture is sponsored by the i·r He added that he hopes a three designs used on the dust Visiting Scholars Program of the Piedmont University Center. 'lbe ·~!J control will be found soon, but jacket was drawn by one of Vita bath that the outlook for such a control Prohaska's first students at public is invited. is rather doubtful. If no control is Wake Forest, Rod Adams. &ni.th is a past president of the (Europe's Famed Badedas) found and the disease becomes Interspersed between student American 'lbeological Society widespread, he concluded, a drawings are photographs, a few and is the author of several books '~ decision will have to be made works by artists such as Cezanne, on religion and philosophy. 'lbe concerning whether or not to and several of Prohaska's own latest, '"Themes in American For A Most replace the elms with a new kind Jieces. Philosophy," was publis.bed last I ~ of tree. Prohaska has done work for year. magazines such as Esquire, the He received the B.A. and Pb.D. Luxurious Bath J .. Saturday Evening Post, Good degrees from Columbia CU Schedules Housekeeping, Parents University and the B.D. from Magazine, Lady's Home Journal, Union 'lbeological Seminary. He 'Lovers' Comedy and Woman's Home Companion, joined the Yale faculty in 1952. The Violent Against Nature, from the J:aferno of "The Divine Comedy", as well as trade and company Previously he taught at Rarnard 15' Trial Size periodicals. C' 11lege. "Lovers and other Strangers," He came to Wake Forest as a 1970 comedy, is the College artist4n-«'esidence in the fall of Union's weekend film feature. Baskin Exhibit To Feature 1968. Starring Bea Arthur, Bonnie Bedella and Richard Castellano, Prohaska said that, in writing the movie will be shown tonight the books he "searched out the and tomorrow night at 7 and 9 visual first, then wrote around With This Coupon p.m., and Sunday night at 8 p.m. Illustrations of Dante Epic that," writing to illustrate the progress of student drawings Fifty cents admission will be charged. Dlustrations by American rather than having students in 1942 he printed a volume of his of the quickly apPlied cartoon assigned to illustrate particular "Jezebel ", 1938 American film, ·artist Leonard Baskin for Dante's own poetry, ·"On a . Payer of . uncie.rpainting of e~ly fre~. steps. "I wrote the book so that it and "Samurai", a Japanese·· '-'Divine ·eomedy" will· be Withered Rose." He is presently ...... ,: ----. ·.' '• '':/ ...... ·. ".. ' -·· ~--·~- -- - '- production switched from the ·presented by the Deparbnent of professor of drawing, printing, AN DREWS PHARMACY second semester schedule, Art from October 18 through and sculpture at Smith College ir. "BaSkin has redressed this Winslen·S•Iem, N. c. complete the week's film list. November 14. Northwnpton, Mass. literary classic in an admittedly Phon~ 723·1619 Bette Davis leads in "Jezebel " The 53 drawings are circulated Dr. Sterling Boyd, chairman of harsh but relevant and powerful portraying a tempestuo~s under the auspices of the the Department of Art, said, "In statement of our times. 'lbere is ANDREWS-SUMMIT PHARMACY Southern belle. Showtime is 8 Smithsonian Institute and will be the 'Divine Comedy,' · he has none of the strange tiresomeness 1214 ll•rnDid.o lle•lll Winolan·S•Itm, N. c. p.m. Monday. on display in DeTamble Gallery responded to the challenge of the or Wlbalance in the treatment of Phonf' 722 -llU The '54 Japanese movie from 9 am. to 4 p.m. weekdays, 9 twentieth centUry by creating a Heaven and Hell in his work that "Samurai," an examination the am. to 12 noon Saturdays and 2 stark new image for the seven has secured in many of the 16th century Samurai warrior, is pm. to 6 pm. Sundays. century-old poem. The drawings earlier illustrated Dantes but scheduled for 5 and 8 p.m. Baskin has had previous are full of erudite nods to past rather a sustained cre~ture Tuesday. Both showings will be association with book Illustration tradition. 'lbe large pen and. ink energy manifested, canto by Wake Forest students are preceded by "Buck Rogers, at Yale University and at illustrations have the direct and canto, through the Inferno eligible for competition In New O!apter 6." Jonathan Edwards College, when unhesitating quality reminiscent Purgatorio, and Paradise." ' York City's fourth annual urban Fellowship Program. Ap plications ar~ due by January 31 r------~ and may be secured through Julius H. Corpening Ext. 481. The program is designed to ~== STAL :::: offer young men and women a have to unique learning experience in I EY'S I ·isks on urban government by providing hope is Friday, October 15 the ' opportunity to study the Paganini: caprices Schubert: Oberon Overture Prokofiev: No.14Hindemith: Concerto for challenge of managing the city 5 p.m. ALL THINGS CON Symphony No. 1 Symphony No. 5 Sibelius: Open Hearth Restaurant leCulated SIDERED Horn and Orch. while tsking an active role in its I I 8 p.m. SHOWCASE (ST) :nittee of 6 p.m. MUSIC AT SUNSET Symphony No. 3 10 pm. FIRING LINE government. I I ~nstantly Spohr: Double Quartet Ravel: 10:30 p.m. NOcrURNE (ST) 5 p.m. ALL THINGS CON· 11 pJD. DEACONUGHT (ST) 'lbe program brings 20 students ...... rriculum· 11 p.m. DEACONUGHT (ST) to New York City for a full Mother Goose SUite SIDE RED Thursday, October21 6 pm. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) academic year, beginning in tudentor 8 p.m. EVENING CONCERT (ST) Sibelius: Symphony No. 7 Monday, October 18 Soler: Fandango Mozart: 7 am. RENAISSANCE September, 1972. Assignment WELCOMES BACK ALL WFU STUDENTS! &-faculty I . I positions Include such areas as I Beethoven: Quartet No. 8 Piano Sonata No. 10 1 p.m. CONCERT HALL ...... 'ard the 10 p.m. RADIO SMITHSONIAN 7 a.m. RENAISSANCE 7:55pm. THECU'ITING TABLE Prokofiev: Symphony for Cello health and social services' tlum in 1 pJD. CONCERT HALL 8 pm. EVENING CONCERT economic development, ·riculum 10:30 pm. JAZZ REVISITED & Orch. Chopin: Piano Con 11pJD.DEAOONIJGHT 1 p.m. CONCERT HALL Liszt: (ST) Bach: SUite No. 2 Bartok: certo No. 2 Schoenberg: corrections and police ad of the Funerialles Scriabin: Piano Piano Concerto No. 2 ministration, environmental The House That Seroice and Quality Built - tents, are Saturday, October 16 Serenade Sonata No. 10 Ravel: Five 10 p.m. BIRTH CONTROL 5 p.m. ALL THINGS CON protection, transportation, rof other 2 p.m. SATURDAY OPERA Greek Songs TODAY recreation and cultural affairs, The Favorite of All WFU Students and Faculty. ·ation is MATINEE (ST) Verdi: "Don SIDERED education, city planning and 5 p.m. ALL THINGS CON 10:30 p.m. CAMPUS REPORT 6 pJD. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) ttthere is Carlo" SIDERED 11 p.m. DEACONIJGHT (ST) housing. ·ng-range 6 pJD. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) Debussy: Jeux Mendelssohn: The Fellowship is open to all 6 p.m. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) Piano Concerto No. 1 Bernstein: Serenade for Orch. Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 2 Wednesday, October 20 8 p.m. EVENING CONCERT students registered in any lDl· and Violin Chopin: Etudes Copland: Billy the Kid Couperin: Mass ·Britten: dergraduate or graduate degree I •, 8 p.m. HOLLAND MUSIC 7:55 p.m. FOCUSING ON THE 7 am. RENAISSANCE Symphony for Cello Brahms: program who will have com FESTIVAL ARTS 1 p.m. CONCERT HALL Brah· pleted their junior year of college I Quartet in C-minor by September, 1972. 'lbe selection 8:30 p.m. MUSIC FROM 8 pJD. EVENING CONCERT ms: Quartet No. 1 10 p.m. BOOK BEAT ROCHESTER (ST) Poulenc: Calligrammes Shostakovich: Symphony No. 1 process will be based on fully es, and 10:30 p.m. NOcrURNE (ST) 10:30 p.m. MASTERWORKS OF detailed applications, tran Strauss: Death and Tran 5 p.m. ALL THINGS CON- FRENCH MUSIC Pick Up and Delivery 1 contact 11 pm. DEACONIJGHT (ST) sfiguration Honegger: Sym scripts, personal statements and SIDERED 11 pm. DEACONUGH1' (ST) 1 and let ·I phony No.2 6 pm. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) recommendations. Across from TOG er the Sunday, October 17 10 p.m. REYNOLDA HALL Wagner: Siegfreid Idyll a booth LECTURE SERIES Mozart: Piano Sonata No. 1 carnival 11 a.m. WAKE FOREST BAP TIST CHURCH 11 pJD. DEACONUGHT (ST) Bach: Brandenburg Concerto a.,kedto No.1 in F . Charles 12:30 p.m. AUDITORIUM ORGAN CONCERT Tuesday, October 19 8 p.m. SOUNDS OF WINSTON way or SALEM 311 W. Fourth St., Winston-salem, N.C. soon as 1 p.m. CINCINNATI SYM· 7 a.m. RENAISSANCE I ~ PHONY CONCERT 8:30 pJD. EVENING CONCERT 4 p.m. OOLLEcrOR'S CORNER 1 p.m. CONCERT HALL Weber: (ST) Beethoven: Piano Sonata (ST) everage 6 PJD. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) STEVE'S The finest fashions and accessories BEERS SPECIAL TV FOODS tist Italian Ristorante , I for the WINES PARTY FAVORS & ACCESSORIES Best In Italian Food i well-dressed PARTY MIXES ICE AND CONTAINERS I SPAGHffil And PIZZA I ALSO AN AMERICAN MENU lady. l. \I Open 11:00 A.M.· 10:00 P.M. l Telephone 722-1191 :00 CLOSED SUNDAY Stores Hours: 9:30 • 5:30 Conveniently Located 112 Oakwood Drive Monday Through Saturday lSOn Between The Stadium & Coliseum ACROSS. FROM THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER PAGE FOUR Frida , October 15,1971 OLD GOLD AND BLACK 'Alienation' New Tune. Lee De I lark For College Fiddlers ByMABKROFMAN RUSS BRANTLEY JOHN ELLIO'IT FRD'ZHEIDGERD I' SY.Stem? I just wondered why you're not doing •! Editor Managing Editor BuaiDess Manager Alot of administrators and students ·cannot J fathom the eerie quie~ which has descended anything about it." upon campus commwil.ti~s following the 1&70 . "You just don't understand, I'm alienated. I can't do anything, nobody can." End. of Kent and Jackson: · State murders. . ' NANCY ANDREWS SUSAN GILLETI'E HELEN TYREE "Something's ·wrong!" they cey, remem conversation. ·r Asslstaat Editors bering the small burst of revolutionary glory · ·other people who I overheard ·complaining at Colwnbla.in 1968and the ~Y endless and who had no solution gave the same an- stream of pseudo-revolutionary. prattle swer. "I'm alienated, you just don't un- Winston-Salem, N.C., Friday, October 15, 1971 issuing from some west coast colleges. The derstand." The amount of alienated people on only reason given is that the valiant, if this campus Is truly astounding. Not only .... somewhat misguided, student idealists have 81ienated from the system, but from virtually been brutalized into submission by a reac any form of humari contact, If they are to be tionary Justice Department and a neo.fasclst believed. ~I. . Another young lady ot my acquaintance Law's Non-Drive Actually, most would-be revolutionaries bemoaned her. loneliness to me. Moat of tbe time she feels lonely and nobody undentandll Dr. Scales managed to create a alumni would contribute only to the could care less about Justice Department techniques and the FBI mes. ~te the her at all. I asked her if she was prepared to credibility gap in this one week that law school. nwnerous arbitrary rules and regulations do anything to remedy this lamentable ,I' we would not try to span with half a If there is one alumni who would here, few WFU students make an active situation. dozen chapel steeples laid end on contribute to an arts campaign, then protest. Overhearing a young lady of would "Whyshouldllnitiate something?" was the be revolutionary bent complaining about reply. "I'm far. too alienated for anyone to end. It was quite an ac the law drive does, pardon us, take women's hours, I asked her why she did establlsh a meailingful·relationsbip .with, you complishment. away from the hoped-for arts nothing. know. Everybody else just seems so shiilow, To hear that a drive for fine arts complex. And we do hope that there "Mark, you just wouldn't understand." She everybody's a· Conformist. I just don't have I 'I f· accomodations awaited only the is more than one that likes the arts sighed, "I can't work within the system." an~Y to turn. to." ( "Who's asking you to work within the went on to say that I waan 't as shallow completion of the medical center as well as he likes law. H there is as most of the other people, but my econoiJiic drive (this from Dr. Scales); to hear not, we would be curious to find what creed ( .i.e. capitalist) prevented any relationship from developing because I must of the 'top priority' status to be strange, debilitating influence our be an exploitive person. I thanked her for the allocated those accomodations (that law school works on its graduates. Reviewing Media --1: TV And Film '' \ character analysis and went on about. my from the board of visitors), was Until this influence is proved, we way. comforting news, if long over-due. must at least accuse Dr. Scales of a The rest of my conversations seemed to To hear that the law school was to poor memory, and at worst accuse bear out my contention .that .the campus quiet J is artiflcally induced, The widespread ! immediately start a three million him of playing-up to students with "alienation" is, for the most part, nothing r\ 1 dollar fund drive was, how sweetly the most obvious sort of put-offs TV Artists Need Freedom more than a narcissistic evasion of respon- . should we put it - disheartening? and by that we do mean lies . slbWty, a counterpart of the revival of Tarot ' By JOHN BROWNING This Isn't a call for back to Our Miss opinion of a movie enough. With all the ad and astrology and of some portions of the • As Dr. Scales would put it (would But let us give it one more try, for PART I: TELEVISION Brooks. It Is a plea for making television vertising finesse the film-makers and called "Jesus Revolution." Drowning have put it?), ''There cannot be any the sake of faith in powers- that-be: AND FILMS worthwhile. Yet in the end, hardly anything promoters have, why don't they seek· more sorrows in sweet clouds of smouldering grass J• can justify the millions of wasted, passive . I organized campaign for it (arts Perhaps students are the sort of thorough and revealing ways to push their and in lakes of alcohol, our "alienated '1 ·' hours that people have spent waiting for it all art? Of course, part of the artistic integrity of I beings who must be lied to, in It has been said, but not often or loudly compadre convinces h1maelf th8t he Is complex) or any other university enough, TV is messing up the mind of to be handed to them. Faith in the human a movie demands that a movie have a chance unique, that he alone can reason and that the "' cause because of our commitment capable or unworthy of being told America. Night after nlght year after year we spirit, in our age, means hoping that in spite to speak for itself without supersell. But the secret of the universe Is almost within hls with community leaders for the the truth. · plop ourselves down in front of a 26 inch color of it all, children will grow up knowing that public Is entitled to a reasonably sane idea of weak grasp if only the other people were not reality and just let it all in, the pseudo you can't just change the channel in life. what it Is going to pay so much money to see out to subvert him. In tbJs line of "logic," the Medical Center drive." Old Gold and Then, Dr. Scales is guilty of harm violence and the pseudo passions. There was Without thinking. and absorb. done to the University. Fpr, if we are only way to escape the thwarting of one's Black, volume LVII, number 1, by a comic recently in Saturday Review which The economic plight of actors, studios, plans by others is to avoid others. 'l1dS works ,J. FILMS AS ART the way. to have it that Wake Forest is to showed a family sitting in their car by the p-oducers- the fl1m artists- Is a national fine on paper and in monastaries; but ~ts highway with a flat tire. While changing the disgrace. This Isn't the kiitd of country that I t· But come, let us reason our way remain essentially a college, that it only in soured idealism in practice, eapeclally '\ tire in the pouring rain, the father was trying Movies are quite a different story from will nationally subsidize such endeavors. Yet if practiced in twentieth century America •. ,.,! around it, all together now. Perhaps is devoted to undergraduate work, television. Movies do involve a good amount it seems that the government should be every to counter his daughter's complaints by ex The real world steadlly decays, I 1 the law drive is not a university then harm is being done. It will plaining (futilely) that this was really hap of deliberative choice. Though a movie bit as concerned over the effects of a depleted strengthening the contentions of the cause. continue to be done, so long as pening, and that he could not just change the demands total captivity of the audience, it entertainment industry as it Is in interfering "alienated." Things get more repressive and :t channel to a better program. makes sense like a novel. For that captivity Is with labor union negotiations of other in rules wax more arbitrary, but the alienated ,, Well, we will have to work that one essential aspects of an un under one singular aesthetic purpose, and dustries. out somehow, and it may take some dergraduate education are Therein lies the key problem with idealist shirks what responsibility he. still television, and I wish it were as funny as the when it Is over you leave the theater with Overall, it is hard ro believe that the film feels and withdraws further and further into time. But let it be. sacrificed to non-undergraduate comic. But it Is not. There is bitter irony in an memory of a distinct work-of-artoi!xperience, people will be struggling for long. They his own delusions of persecution. As the worst I' a two hour setting of music, drama, words, deserve to be taken seriously, they deserve I' Shall we also let be Dr. Scales' programs. And we see nothing more establishment which panics in the face of pot fears of the leftists are realized, the alienated I induced laziness, and then which con and visuals. the honor and interest that any fine writer, idelaist says "I always said it WBS that way" : statement of this week, front page, essential than an expanded arts For a long time people are· going to be musician, or artist deserves. The sixties sort veniently overlooks the mass siclmess of a and retreats further from reality. He forgeta I ,, that the law drive will not detract program. cynic~ about the artistic integrity of movies. of got "overloaded" with the media by the end people passively sprawled before a no-choice his history and in the eleventh hour supports If from any future arts drive; because Or as Dr. Scales perhaps might box of jumbled entertainment. :rttat IS a shame, ~onsidering the quality and of that communication• obsessed decade. But some totalitarian solution to the problems mterest range of films today. But there are a the seventies promise a lot of subtle the money is to be raised only among have it (we don't know; but he did And TV can hardly be called entertainment .he:~.~ running from for so long. He forgeta couple of things which ~e film · ~~e · generously hwnorous and profound h law alumni and their families? . say it): ''We can plan, hope and pray anymore. Think about some of the dwnb old where the re~lijs of so many other alienated f' shows we grew up on, shows like OUr Miss themselves need to change m order .. to. gam , . from'& whole cast of artists that deserve more 'idelltiSts Iuive ~e I l ' PAGE FIYE Friday, October 15.1971. OLD GOLD AND BLACK Lee Opens 'C.aesura' Editor. Anticipates DeTamhle 'Titallating' Issue In Spring "A magazine to titillate your Program That's why the publication of a of poetry," Jones said. aesthetic senses ... " 'lbese are the special poetry magazine Is so words editor Malcobn Jones used Caesura will probably be 'lbe Honorable Howard Lee, important." published aroWld March or April. 11 're not doing I' to describe Caesura, the new A similar attempt with a first Black mayor of Olapel Hill, poetry magazine which will be Any poetry submitted to 'lbe I will lead the opening session of magazine of the same name was Student after contest deadlines published in the spring. made in 1987 and 1968. The rn alienated. I the DeTamble lecture series The purpose of Caesura, ac· will be considered for publication an." End of Tuesday. A native of Georgia, magazine, however, did not last I cording to Jones, is to unite all in the magazine, and any ., Mr. Lee obtained his Bachelor's for more than two printings. students and faculty members Jones, sophomore of WinstOn graphics used as illustrations will I complaining degree at Fort Valley State who are interested in poetry and also be acceptable. the same an- College and received his Master's Salem does not plan to spend as give them more of an opportunity much money on the magazine's All students interested in 1St don't Wl· in Social Work from tbe for poetic creativity. writing poetry or just reac:ling it 1ted people on University of North Carolina. He appearance as the first editor "'lbe Student magazine," Vaud did, but hopes to use his limited are invitea to attend the ng. Not only Is presently head of the Man· Travis, editor of The Student, workshops of the Caesura staff :rom virtually fWlds to concentrate on obtaining power .and Organizational said "simply does not provide a good copy. every Monday night at 8:00 in bey are to be Resources department at lT.N .. C. wide enough avenue for the The student office. A board of A lwtcheon for Mr. Lee ·Will be As well as printing poetry, creativity of people like Malcolm Jones also hopes to print one editors is also needed to read all acquaintance held following the lectiD'e .. Any Jones to flourish. We print submissions, and Jones said that 1. Most of tbe interested students or faculty essay per Issue on some facet of those interested should come by , Wlderstands poetry, but we only have a poetry. "I'd like to print a members should contact Ed limited amoWlt of space fgr it. The Student office and leave their s prepared to Olrlstman for further details. magazine about poetry as well as names. 1 lamentable . Other programs scheduled for the lecture series include films ing?" was the . and discussions. 'lbe film "If or anyone to There Weren't Any Blacks, You'd Pakistani For Your Convenience lhip,~ilou Have to Invent Them," dealing IS SO OW, · with with the immigration of st don't bave Negroes to England from Aid Sought ... On Campus! Commonwealth nations will be l 't u lllallOW shown with commentary by Dr. In response to the flood of my economic Pakistani refugees who fled their Robert Shorter, professor of Back Rogers fBDB watch yet another eacoPilter of futuristic good aad evil. !vented any English. 'Ibis film, shown at the native country for asylmn within cause I must pre-school retreat, is described Indian borders, UNICEF has ld her for the ' ' by Rev. Olristman as ''highly initiated a food, shelter, tran~ 1n about-my stimulating." sport and medical aid program. A debate between Mr. Bynam The Wake Forest Relief for IS seemed to Shaw, professor of journallsm, Buck Rogers Fans Are Kids Again Pakistan Committee co campUB quiet and Mr. Weston P. Hatfield, a ordinated by JWle Sabah, jwlior widespread By SUSAN GILLETI'E to escape whatever gliastly peril during the titles of the main fUm) "Willie Wonka and the Olocolate of Brooklyn, N.Y. extends the Winston..salem attorney, on the Asslstaat Editor ~.nothing topic of "'lbe Public's Right to Killer Kane invented last week to have a purpose differing from Factory" spiked with soci21l project onto this campus. ln of respon- . leave Wake Forest fans in that of the usual film viewer· comment. Buck Rogers is a good, "The Pakistani refugee Know" Is also scheduled. Mr. The annoWtcer clicks his mike anxiety for the past seven days. Nostalgia -yes, that infects many old-fashioned show whose problem may now be switched to ivai of Tarot ' Shaw and Mr. Hatfield ex off ...the lights dim... the onsoftheso;. changed letters in a leading And the fans, too, are set for an of the Rogers following. 'lbrills & characters are black or white, the back pages, Sabab said, "but projector reels whir evening of cheering, boos, and Adventure • this standard cliche whose production leaves a lot to the fact remains that over seven ' Drowning Winston-Salem newspaper steadily .. light floods the lderlng grasa regarding the disclosure of wolf whistles, puncblated by the element may attract a few· be desired, and whose audience is million people are starving in 1 screen ... a panorama of the (in) famous paper plane However,themainlureto Buck true-blue. (How many current Indian refugee camps. We're "alienated ' confidential government in rise thit he Is I ', galaxy gives to an ap barrages. Rogers was established beyond a productions can make this rather asking for help from people formation, particularly the proaching spaceship ... and 1 and tbat the Someone in the devoted Rogers doubt when, in Chapter Qne, the Wlique combination of claims?) who're interested." Pentagon Papers. Discussion will amidst loud cheering paper st within his be allowed following the debate. following remembered the dog in suspended animation Seen with the spontaneity of The refugees who fled to India 1ple were not airplanes soar through the science fiction series from his picked his head up and looked children that is, with no artistic from East Pakistan between Reverend Ed Cllrlstman will charged stratosphere of r ''logic," the speak on. Thursday at 11:00 in childhood roWlds with afterno9n aroWld the laboratory. respect -the series serves as the April and midsummer con DeTamble Auditorimn. television. Why else would a This proves the obvioUB in· key to unlatch the free-wheeling stituted the largest sudden -Attendant: Mrs. Ruth Cigliano - tlng of one's Davis Olapel in a lecture entitled Yes, WldaWlted by primitive 1. ThiS works "Faith Without Reason Is Dead" . mature and responsible college tellectual advantage of the so- hearts of freaks, football players, displacement of people in the rock slides and more student, before seeing even one called audience, even if their frat men, intellectuals and even history of mankind. 'lbe rate of Complete! a;but~ta as a part of the continuing Olapel sophisticated paraiyzing rays, le, espedally lecture series. clip of Olapter One, hold a piece behavior might indicate other- effete snobs who might wander flow across the border continues y America. Buck Rogers is back again, ready of "heavy" reading titled wise. College students know ltle in.· Somel:ow, sensing the at over 40,000 per day. * Professional Cleaning & Laundry * ly decays; Tonight's Foreign Film into a fly- real truth about suspendea therape.utic good of the Buck Upon India's request for in· ms of the around toy circa second grade. animation, space exploration, Rogersshow,thesekidsexitafter ternational aid, the United IN BY 9: A.M.- ByLARRYLYON ·nea·_ · cs,"· . .· Sports Editor Knows All About Unfamiliar Tulsa .. By LARRY LYON inStead to transfer to a four-year years, indicating why he was so Tulsa players and the Golden S"'rts Editor school. Tulsa and Wake were two highly- recruited. He has been Hurricanes' All-American of the major contenders for hampered consistently though by ... .Truly. Unbelievable Tomorrow night when the Garrett. a bad right leg, which has slowed candidate defensive back, Ralph Tulsa Golden Hurricanes take Tulsa ended up signing his great speed. McGill, was a teammate of their field, it will be tbe first look Garrett, but they made some Garrett's at Northeastern After this column proclaimed last week that Wake's Nowhere was his potential so Oklahoma. for99.9percentofthe20,000orso mistakes in doing so. One was evident as it was last Saturday .football season had finally turned around in that won people in Groves Stadiwn at what that they signed him a few hours night ln Raleigh, when the junior . "I've still got a long way to go derful second half sunshine at Maryland, the rains a· Golden Hurricane really looks before he was ellglble to sign, m my rwmlng," Garrett says halfback averaged nearly eleven with evident determination. "It's promptly returned worse than ever and Wake took its like. thus negating the whole thing. yards a carry on eleven rushes. Tulsa could be tagged Wake's Tbls violation, plus some others Two of his runs bordered on the about time I started doing most disappointing and unexpected defeat in years at Unknown Opponent, for the Tulsa committed in signing unbelievable, when he broke something." the hands of a, at best, medi(JCI'e football team. · · amount of knowledge most jWlior college transfers, made through tackle after tackle and night People around here lmow about the NCAA place them on still managed to regain his Person wanted to run a very The loSs was amazing· because it came on a when profitable business. Earning the Deacs seemed to be playing their best football of the Tulsa could be fitted into a probation, which they are still on. balance. thimble with still enough room Instrumental in signing His performance against State abilities are unlimited and · season- the veer "Was moving easily and the defense let left over for the little finger. They Garrett for Tulsa was assistant has earned him a starting role well above average. Mail State have only one drive of any consequence all night. do know Tulsa beat Arkansas, coach Claude Gibson, who against Tulsa, his first start this qualifications to Mr. Warren, It was a fuimy loss because the Deacs seemed to be which is enough for most people. ·· ironically is now Tulsa's bead year. Kenny !mows many of the P. 0. Box 503, Malden Mass., ; However, there is one in· coach. Gibson is a former N.C. 02148 or call 617-261·1964. playing so well, and because they were doing it against a dividual who does know a lot State player who once spent two team so inept that couldn't (!Ven run the Clock out with a 'bout Tulsa, and he will play a days on Wake's coacblng staff minute and half reniaiirlng and no timeouts left for very active role ln tomorroW before he decided he didn't like Wake. When one thinks back on it, it just seems there nigbt's encounter. He is Wake · Baptist Hollow and packed up -halfback Ken Garrett. and left. That was under Bill was no way possible for Wake to lose that football game. Two autumns ago Garrett was Tate's reglme ln the mid-8ixties. It was a funny loss because sure enough the Deacs did ln Oklahoma, running wild for tbe After the Tulsa-Garrett deal ·' come back like everyone knew they would, but when it Northeastern Oklahoma JWJior fell through, the Fayetteville came down to that final two-point conversion try, they College football team, drawing . native chose Wake Forest, where the attention of scouts he has remained. Since he played didn't make it. Cal Stoll's squad has regularly made everywhere, including nearby . only one year at Northeastern those two-pointers for three years now, and one felt'sure Tulsa. . . · Oklahoma, Ken came here as a they would make it then. But they didn't. After the season was over, soP~omore and wiD be ba~k in the And the strangest thing about this l<>Ss was that Garrett decided he didn't want to Deacs' backfield next year. use his second year of eHgibllity Garrett has flashed signs- of despite the fact that .it came so bitterly, so un at Northeastern Oklahoma and greatness off and on the .Jast two suspectingly, so unbelievably- it gave hope for the future. ~~~~~oooooo!~oooooao~oooooooo~~ Now one might ask, and with a fair amount of justification, how could a loss to a team as bad as State, A Portrait ••• :~~·give hope for the future, in what already shaped up as a very tight conference race. Deacon ,Harriers Up . It gave hope precisely because the Deacs did move the A Perfect Gift ball up and down the fjeld with regularity and controlled the ball, which is so necessary if Wake is going to win. Record With Win, Tie R Wake Forest's cross country State. It markS Wake's first gave hope because the defense continued to show team upped their record to 2-2-1 venture Into conference com For Any signs of vast improvement, especially among the after beating Davidson; .24-35; on · petition this year and will be their linemen. Monday, and tying High Point, toughest m~t thus far. And it gave hope because in the fourth quarter the 28-28, last week. . · . State . and Maryland finished · Occasion The High Point meet marked third and fourth, respectiVely, in Deacs were able to unveil a player who potentially the return of Jobn Gulledge, the ACC last yw-. Cross Country · ·· might be one of the best backs in the country, and who Wake'sleadlng runner last year: Coach Harold Rhea feels that this I • lOQked the part in that final quarter. The fourth quarter He had been hampered witb a leg depth makes the conference as running of Kenny Garrett has offered many hopes that Injury this season but is now· strong as any.· Stroll On Down To The ·Mall getting back into top lorm. MarylaJ_td is coming off an he and Larry Hopkins mighfstill yet combine to form an John· Schrock, Wake'a top undefeated season in dual meets 711ook for the Doubleknit Man awesome running tandem in the Deacon backfield. runner in every meet .so far this last- year·. and is ·a strong con McNabb Studio year,· led the Deacons against ten~ ~or conference honors this Higll Point, finishing seeond in year.· .1\lthougb All-American WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY ON THE MALL the field. Gulledge was close Otarlie Sbrader was lost by the CRANE'S behind in third ~ce. Terps ·.vi!l graduation, senior PH: 723·4640 fashions To Soothe The Soul In the Davidson contest, Wake· captain Russ: Talntor Is back. • I decided after last week's game that it was time to placed seven runners ln the top · Taintor possesses the con As They Clothe The Bod , • '. ten finishers. Schrock led the ference tWo and three mile demand that Garrett start, but now the word IS that he ·field with a time of zi:47 twenty- records ln addition to holding the will be starting against Tulsa, so no demands can be sewn seconds. aheait .'.ot ~~ _Mat:Y,~d c_ourse_ record. made. . . .· · ·. . · ·· lK'CQnd'place man. . ~-··...;:~ ·:.~.· . St4te~:ili··led :by sophomore x_he'oiily.reason G~rre~t has not ~i~ited.betore is'iiiS~···_ ~~:'~Jr~~~'" ~~ ~pi!:!:!: '\·.0.. <• ...... ""t ser1es of problems wttb his leg, and smce Gary Johnson . Rae sprained his ankle during the as a freslunan last year. always performs capably anyway, there was no reason race and bad to limp tbe last two · Next Saturday, Wake is again ·Why?.Oh Why Do Most to risk Garrett. · . -t~ow finds the Deacons ln- ·~~Ja~ciso~~~::S: Ken started durmg the last half of the season last · Raleigh for a challenging tr1 the North Carolina Cham year, after Johnson sustained a rib injury against North ·meet with Maryland and N;C. PJ,onships. · Carolina. His best effort came against Duke, when he ::::.:::>"A:;:;;;:~::::::::::::::::~:::;:::?.::::;:;:•:::::!::::::::::::~:::;:,::::;:::::::::::::~:,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::~ _Wake Forest Deacs Prefer . took pitchout after pitchout from Larry Russell and ~ · JJf ,J · · V [ ll~ gained yards after yards. 1::: L' eartess L' orecas :::, He underwent an operation for his leg after the season ~ . . :::! ended and was so long in recovering that be had to be ~GAME BARNES SEYBERT LYON · ;:~; held out of spring practice. In the meantime, Johnson ~3 .. . (29-20-1) (29-20-1) (25-24-1) :~:i won his job back. Now Gamtt is once again moderately .:~~Tulsa at Wake . .WII:ke Wake . Tulsa ~:~: healthy, and Wake fans and football team can only j;j;UNC at Notre Dame :Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame :i~ · his · th ta tin li :·:·:N.C. State at Duke ·DUke . . Duke . Duke :::, beneftt from presence m e s r g neup. ~:~Clemson vs. VIrginia . Clemson Vttginla Clemson ;:~ ;~'Maryland at So. ear. So. car. So. ear. So. ear. ~ cDon ds? * ;;~Colorado at Okla~· Oklahoma Oklahoma· Oklahoma : · *** :;~wm. and Mary at VPI . Wm. & Mary Wm. & Mary Wm. & Mary:~ WE THINK IT'S OUR *** ~;Tennessee vs. Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama ~ ~;:Texas vs. Arlamsas Texas · Texas Arkansas ~! Gilbert. McGregor. made his professional basketball ;!~Navy at Miami . _ · Miami Miami Miami :f.. debut Tuesday night and his Cincinnati Royals upended ·:::::=:::::::::::::::=:::::::=::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::;;::~::;::;;:;:::;:!:!:!:!:~:~:::::::!:~::::::::::::::::::::::::;::-;:::::::::~~~!!'"~;:;:-.:;~ the Atlanta Hawks, in the regular-season opener for both squads. Gilbert tallied four points, and get this - he fouled out. What a cbamD ...... ' .' ... Wake Forest girls are proVing just as competent as the boys in golf. Debbie Rhodes placed second, Buns Daniels sixth, and Janice Opalinski 17th in the Virginia 100% PURE BEEF Collegiate Invitational Tournament October 9... .. The I'm proud of . Old Gold & Black has written Charlie Davis about where_ he bought possibly writing a series of articles on his trials and .....__ ...... 11/l':lllll'JJmy diamond! tribulations as a rookie in the NBA. We are all anxiously • OR OUR FAMOUS "BIG MACS" awaiting his answer. • OR OUR CRISPY FRENCH FRIES I :• Dining At • OR OUR MOUTH-WATERING . ' Popular HOT APPLE PIES Prices! Will she be proud or embarras.sed when friends ask where you bought her · dian19nd? And, will you be Why Don't You Come To Tell Us I ·, embarrassed about the price you paid for the quality receiveif? Today; there are no "bargains" in diamonds. You save no more-often· Jose-when you try to cut Your Reason - Come See Us! · corners. Your knowledgeable American Gem Society · member jeweler-one with a local reputation to safe ' ' guard and standards to maintain-is your wisest choice. Open 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. Moreover, she will be proud· to know her diamond Sat. 4 • 11 P.M. EKcept on· Football weekemls came from us. Don't .disappoint her. 4 UNTIL! EnM.IiiRement Diamonds .' @ 5 t 6 S. Straliord Rd. From 1150. . MEM8ER AMERI~ ~M SOCIETY ~ Wmston-Sotem. N. C. M 27103 . 2900 REYNOLDA RD. • REYNOLDA MANOR Phone. 725-4688 .401 KNOLLWOOD AT STRATFORD- THRUWAY ' I 516 S. STRATFORD 507 CORPORATION PKWY.- CORPORATION PLAZA Near Thruway Shopping Center .. Hexl to StratforCI Garden Center Phone 725-4680 1:30: .'1:30 TAKE-OUT ORDERS WELCOME 11:30 PAGE EIGHT Friday, October 15, 1971, OLD GOLD AND BLACK. But 2 Nominees Rejected OG&B Directory Extensions· designate campus numbers. Full phone numbers designate home numbers. 725-9650 Organization Head Sig Ep Telephone Sigma Chi 723·9554 Committee Seats Filled Student Government Bill de Weese 269, 723·2594 Alpha Sig 725-9128 466 Sigma Pi 725-5833 . Senior class Jim Kirkpatrick 727-0944 AU but one student seat on or rejection of both, is made by Rosemary Russell, junior of pointments) are regarded so APO 261. faculty committees were con· the president of the University. Wmston~em, to the faculty highly is disheartening." Sophomore class Phil Tate 724-2210 College Union Clark Smith Phi Alpha Delta 725-6708 finned this week, but student Two students are seated on admissions committee; James He said that the time required 423 Phi Delta Phi 348 government president Bill each committee: an up Barber Banks, sophomore of of a committee member ls Old Gold and Black Russ Brantley 464 deWeese took issue with the perclassman allocated one vote, Pfafftown, to the faculty student ''minimal", and that he thought The Howler Dick Sutton 210 Band 250-~5 selection method, and said that and an underclassman who life committee; Fred C. Beyer his two nominees "know the The Student Vaud Travis Theatre 265 either of two rejected nominees serves an "apprenticeship" and ill, junior of Neptune City, New workings of the buildings and 386 ROTC 331-332 for that seat should have been may not vote. The apprentice Jersey, to the faculty executive grounds as well as anybody." M~C Lane HUJ'leY 727-0839 WFDD-FM 218 confirmed. member moves into the upper committee; Carolyn Cecelia DeWeese also said that a Poteat 725-9339 Davis, sophomore of Washington, nominee to the faculty student Johnson 428-428 Ur.der the present selection seat the year following his ap Kitchin 725-9511 procedure, the SG president prenticeship. SG nominations are D.C., to the scholastic com life committee had been rejected Bostwick ~21-328 Taylor 725-9222 nornil.aws two candidates for then made only for the vacated mittee; Deborah Anne French, on the grounds of a reprimand Babcock 521·528 sophomore of Cary, to the honors that he had received two Davis each vacant post on the seven apprentice seat. 725-9281 New Dorm 532 assume a committees on which students Apprentice nominations committee; and Ann Charlotte semesters .&go; and that it was Efird 725-9588 Ludlow, sophomore of Oakhurst, his und:.rstanding that such ll'essed in serve. Selection of one of the two, confirmed are: Camille Telephone numbers for the following organizations 0 New Jersey, to the library reprimands were to be removed Huffman (1st Floor)" 725-9243 keeping planning committee. from a student's record after a (2nd Floor) 725-9378 were not available: Junior class, headed by Sam Neill; university Those whose nominations were semester. Kappa Sig 725-9538 Student Judicial Board, headed by Fritz Heidgerd · and approved were notified by DeWeese cited the rejected Kappa Alpha 725-9273 IFC, headed by Sam Neill. ' President Scales in a letter dated nominations as examples of a October 13. need for more complete student DeWeese said that both of his control over student matters. nominees to the buildings and grounds committee were Asked how his nominees were Debaters Compete SHAFT's rejected. He quoted Scales as chosen, deWeese said that "some saying that they were rejected on helped me in my campaign, his name. the basis of low quality point naturally," but that he thought Students wishing to register for Examinations will · · begin ratios. DeWeese said, "that all those nominated were "good In Three Tourneys the men's physical education November 2 and will run through COOLER THAN· academic criteria (for ap- solid workers." proficiency examinations for November 22. exemption from P.E. 112 must · Tests will be given in tuml):ling BOND ••• Wake Forest debaters open~ The team of Becky Ar- sign up. in roo~ ~12C of the and trampoline, appara~ua. HOTTER TtfAN their season with competition in ~entrout, freshman of gymnasuun begmrung October volleyball, squasb, badminton; BULLITT ••• ABC-TV To Show three tournaments during the Thomasville, and Chuck 25. golf, bowling, soccer, wrestling, weekend of Oct. 1-3. Meyrick, senior of Bedford, Registration will be between . personal defense, tennis, ar. At the Western Dlinois In.~ · Mass., compiled a 2-1 record as the hours of 2 and 5 p.m. chery, paddleball, and handball. vitational Tournament in did Paula Potoczak, junior of H a student wishes to take a Persons desiring more in· Brian ° Piccolo Film Macomb, Dlinois, Lynne Garfield, N.J., and Clarence proficiency test he must register formation are asked to contact Eickholt, sophomore of Tolbert, freshman of Mt. Airy. for that test no later than 24 hours Dr. Case in room 212C in tbe Salisbury, and Elmore Jane Myers, sophomore of prior to the test. gymnasiiDD. "Brian's Song," based on a "BriJin 's Song" was flJmed this Alexander, sophomore of High ,1\ccording to Dr. R. Case, the Look magazine article about the year at the Bears' preseason Wmston...salem and Joe Bowman, Point, competed in the 50-team . freshman of Bluefield, W. Va. proficiency examination is, in late Brian Piccolo, Wake Forest's training camp. James Caan plays varsity division. general, a test in an activity 1964 All-American fullback, will Piccolo. also competed in the 20-team In the 37-team junior division, varsity competition. which covers the same contests be shown as ABC-TV's "Movie of In 1964, his senior season, Wesley Warren, freshman of as the regular course · ~·~=!i®T/% the Week" Tuesday, November Piccolo led the nation in rushing High Point, and Ben Martin, 'lbe weekend of Oct. ~9 Wake examination. FOU.OW'l'HE. ~RroW with 1,1144 yards and in scoring 30. fre&hman of Wmston.salem, won debaters competed in two 5E.f. TH~ U\iEST !~¥- A•trum ""•••able on with 111 points. E~fEfi.PRISE AECOROS Piccolo died of cancer last year 6rounds and lost 2 en route to the tournaments. At Washington and TWO PARTS "' Ausoeoahon wolh He set four Atlantic Coast ~;""~~ q~~;'\"EST SO'..Ib t.IGM RECORDS at the age of 26. octafinals, where they were Lee's Novice Tournament in The magazine story, "The Conference records and nine defeated by Capital University, Lexington Va., the teams of Gary 'lbe testing will be composed of ·•. ~l!-X.M:.lAARIN<4S Short Courageous life of Brian Wake Forest marks.. including Warren was first place speaker Kraus, freshman of l.Dulsiana, two parts. 'lbe first will be a A.~L.O~'COINP.\.. MolD Piccolo,'' appeared in the August most touchdowns and most yards and Martin was second place · and Randy Robertson, freshman written examination on rules, C.0\11\fU='tEL.'V "4eNJ 25, 1971 issue of Look. It was rushing. knowledge, strategy, and other speaker in the tournament. of _High Point: and Richard C::s:u:A,~t> 1-- "A-Nt> written by AI Silverman and Gale He won the Most Valuable At Middle Tennessee State· Whicker and Linda Kalmbach facets of the activity. 'lbe second Sayers, the all11ro back who was player Award in football twice, debated. Kraus and Robertson part will be a skills examination. ~P.o.~~ i!>Y and the Arnold Palmer Athlete of University Earlybird Tour· Welcome Piccolo's teammate and room· nament in Murfreesboro, the went undefeated in the four students cUJTent!y registered ti'AR<"NO~ or Bobby Joe. mate with the Olicago Bears. the year award once. teams of Pam carlson, round tournament to take second for or having already received Directed by Buzz Kulick, Sayers, speaking three weeks place. In addition, Kraus was credit for cilsser or ·handball in IHE. 'StERLING ANVIL. You mar never leave before Brian's death, was sophomore of st.Paul, Minn, and here alive. Mark Ethridge, sophomore, of named third place speaker. P.E. 111 will not be permitted to Dis making an acceptance speech at Madison, Tennessee; and Ann show proficiency in that activity Pollock Attends a banquet in New York, in whlcb to gain partial credit for P.E.112. he was being honored as the Most Wood, senior of Falls Church, Va. Wake· Forest was also Late Show Sat. and Keith Vaughan, senior of represented by two teams at the Case said that students are Courageous Athelete, for making encouraged to prepare for To Fitness Meeting a comeback after a knee injury muefield, W. Va., debated in the MIT Invitational Tournament in Night 11 :30 P.M. 64-team varsity event. Boston. Ann Wood and Chuck proficiency examinations during Dr. Michael L. Pollock, that threatened his entire career. their spare time. An outline of Instead he chose the occasion to Carlson and Ethridge compiled Meyrick compiled a 4-4 record. associate professor of physical a 4-2 record. Richard Kendrick, junior of each proficiency examination is talk of his friend's courage: He posted on the bulletin board education at Wake Forest 'lbe first of a series of North Middletown, . R.I. 0 ~d Janice said in part: . . . , adjacent to room 212C in the University, attended a meeting in ''He has the heart of a giant and Carolina Debate Conference Gruber, junior clf. Kingsport, Philadelphia this week to help mini-tournaments was held at Tennessee; ~n 5 roiDlds and lost gymnasium. write a manual for a new national that rare form of courage that Lenoir Rhyne college in Hickory, 'lbe information on the tests is Holiday Gulf North allows him to kid himself and his 3 in the 61-team competition. YMCA physical fitness program. with Wake · Forest being Today Wake debaters will also available at the reserve desk Pollock, who is director of the opponent-cancer. He has the represented by 4 teams. Linda in the lower level of the library. mental attitude that makes me begin competition in UNC's Tar university's physical fitness Kalrilbach, freshman of Pitts· Heel Debates. research laboratory, is a proud to have a friend who spells burgh, Pa , ant!. Rich:.•d NO GRADE member of the team which will out the word courage 24 hours a Whicker. .freslunan of Wmston ''Specializing with draft a chapter on physical fit. day every day of his life." -salem, won 3 rounds. students capable of exhibiting ness testing. Support proficiency in two activities Gulf The meeting of the research f"'*"~'_,_ offered in the required P .E. you at Wake Forest." and writing teams preceded a __, __ prograin,accordingtoCase,may l lJ Gold & Bla k O the; national YMCA physical fitness u C receive credit, but not a letter meeting to be held Saturday and Ad _.:A grade, for P.E. 112. STEJtLING Sunday. . Frat QPR's . ve, .. ,.,ers, students who show proficiency in only one activity will need-to an11il~ 3130No. register for only one additional They Support You oePT. ~~~ • SO)( 12.~8 for dependable: '------~ . activity for the spring term in· Cherry St. Rifle Club ~• The office of the Dean of Men has released ~f stead of two. HOL-t.AI:S \IEN:.K, IV.. 33500 Road Service :::: scholarship standing of fraternities for 197o-71. ~~ 723-9300 ~ ~ Minor Repairs Seeks Men » » WANT TO BECOME YOUR OWN The Wake Forest Varsity Bobby Disher Tune·ups ROTC Rifle Team is looking for I:~;~ Fraternities and their standings are as follows: !l~l; prospective new members, ac DEALER dealer Brake Work cording to Fred H. Martin, the I I We're looking for representatives to sell club's vice11resident. YEAR 1970.71 State Insp. Martin said that membership is RECORDS • TAPES • STEREO EQUIPMENT open to anyone enrolled in the ON YOUR COLLEGE CAMPUS University. RANK Fraternlty Average "right around the corner from "We are looking for firers who write or call: JEM RECORDS 1. Alpha Sigma Phi 2.7984 may or may not have had 2.7716 P. 0. Box 1167 Union, N. J. 07083 (201) 964-7947 previous experience," he said, 2. Sigma Phi Epsilon Wake Forest" 3. Sigma Chi 2.6195 adding, "all that is needed is a 2.6016 This Offer Will Not Be Repeated desire to participate." 4. Pi Kappa Alpha ~~ ALL FRATERNITY AVERAGE 2.5748 5. Sigma Pi 2.5555 2.5430 D 6. KAPPA Alpha Stat 7. Theta Chi 2.5292 Drink A Little Mash & Talk A Little Trash 8. Lambda Orl. Alpha 2.5251 ALL MEN AVERAGE 2.5139 On 2.4520 R 9. Kappa Sigma 10. Delta Sigma The followbt released 0 deWeese College Beverage student Spring Semester 1971 p 'lbe 722-3167 AVERAGE Forest Un Rank FRATERNITY ~ ~ govenunent We Deliver .. 2.8191 .•.. menton the 1. Sigma Phi Epsilon 2.7491 condition of 2. Alpha Sigma Phi We feel that Thanks for inviting the guy from College Beverage 3. Sigma au ~·= drastic rPw•rll.• 4. Pi Kappa .Alpha 2' 6067 action of to the Birthday Party last Sunday ALL FRATERNITY AVERAGE 2:5700 leaders. ALL MEN AVERAGE has been 5. Theta Chi ~·~95 How can you lose on this (Cut CHI ctottcd ,,., by those who 6. Kappa Alpha : ~ 7. Kappa Sigma 2 52 special offer? Just br~ng .i.iiillll~l beauty and 48 r: • • turf for evBllle!ll •••.~~ 8. Sigma Pi 22.4817• 14 ....:·:· In this ad ...pay for one ~ 9. Lambda au Alpha :::: order of pancakes