.WAIIIIoRtsr UNM!rwrtr UnRARY

Wake Foreat University, W.in8ton-satem, North-Carolina, Friday, September 9,1977

To ease tensions Committee meets today

cumulated over a period of years, but By Steve Futrell by the statement of the trustees last triggered by the 'Larry Flynt incident' of Editor year,'' he said. "And they established this year." they intend to maintain the historical Flynt, editor and publisher of Hustler A committee investigating ''the ten­ religious heritage and the tradition of magazine, spoke here last spring when sions now existing among North carolina academic freedom at Wake Forest." he accepted the Men's Residence Baptists over Wake Forest University" is Though he does not anticipate these Council's "Man of the Year" award. He meeting today in Reynolda Hall with the two objectives ever clashing, he ad­ had been convicted on an obscenity board of trustees, administrators and mitted, "If these two did collide, I would charge only three weeks before his ap­ faculty members. say the historical connection of the pearance. The 15-member group was organized university with its parent group would Other 'concerns, however, were this summer on the recommendation by have to make preeminence. But of revealed at the meeting. the general secretary-treasurer of the course, it is a moot point as to whether or Ray said the atmosphere at the North Carolina Baptist State Convention, not that might happen." university "needs to be distinctly Cecil A. Ray. "Instant healing" Christian." If it had "been, he said, the The Rev. Charles Dorman, chairman . Flynt incident "probably would not have of the· committee, said today's meetings Dorman -said he "appreciated the happened." will be devoted to "defining the problems concern" of faculty and students over a more sharply," though he anticipates possible threat to acadeniic freedom "Christian iuflaence" moSt problems are "in the area of here, but their fears are unjustified. communication." "I feel that if we can talk to one He also expressed concern over "the. -- Staff Pfloto by Ed Stahl "We just don't understand each other another things can be worked out, now quality of Christian influence set by the Bottoms upl that well," he said, meaning Wake that we have a means of com­ faculty" and the enrollment of more­ Forest and N.C. Baptists. munication," he said. North Carolina Baptist students, Students had an opportunity to cool off at a CU spowored water slide Saturday. ''The primary function was spelled out He also maintained that though the In his recommendation to the General committee cannot expect to quell much Board, Ray said, "The future welfare of dissatisfaction at the first meeting, long­ the convention and the university makes range difficulties will be removed. the clarification of relationships and As he said, "If I didn't think that we purpose important." could, I would quit now. In the meantime, Dorman said one of the primary fund faces revocation though, we're just sitting loose in the purposes of a WF education is "Christian NSF saddle, trying to get some com­ mission." munication between the .two of us." "One of the thing~ we'll be discussing By Steve Futrell services renaered comnuttee, IUlJlOunced The university's official position has standi.qg in the convention not to do so." Ray also admits he anQcipates no ·here," he said, "is how Christian mission Editor the group's investigation of the depart- been that the money is being held in He also. said the committee is "instant healing" of tensions. relates to the education provided by ment's receipt of the funds. escrow until a decision can be reached. reviewing the details of the grant with Wake Forest. The chairman of the biology depart- Lewis noted the convention's con- The department, however, is proceeding school officials· "to secure a fair and July meeting "You know how Christ said, 'I am the ment said this week his department has stitution allows schools to accept to utilize the grant. authoritative judgment as to the sum way and the truth,' and that's what we'll used "about one half" of a $300,000 government funds only when services Already purchased have been three that may be retained and that part of the At the July 13 meetilig of the General be looking for in this committee," he National Science Foundation grant that arerenderedinreturnforthemoney. He newDodgevans,anelectronmicroscope, grant that should be refused." Board and Executive COmmittee of the said . .is being reviewed by a North Carolina ,said the committee did not believe the a pontoon boat with a 3100 lb. capacity It was not mentioned at the meeting, convention, Ray sought a conunittee to: Baptist State Convention committee. department either "acted consciously in . and a trailor for the Belews Creek however, that Campbell College applied -"Assist trustees in understanding the Antipathy Gerald W. Esch, professor and violation of the convention constitution" biological station. The grant has also to the group for the grant after the concerns of the . people and of advising the chairman of the biology . department, or concealed the receipt of the grant. been used to construct additional rooms committee refused to allow it to apply. convention in decisions involved; Finally, the committee hopes to diffuse. said, •iwe're proceeding as planned on The university originally did not behind Winston Hall. The application was denied by the NSF - "Report to the convention in 1977, the anipathy toward WF before the the hope this thing will be ,worked out." submit the proposal to the co~ttee, Esch declined to comment on the and no other action was taken. 1978 and the 1979 annual meetings; convention in November, so as to avoid a The grant became jeopardized this Lewis said, because of the similarity of review or on the school's official position. ·One other member of the department, - "Understand that it will not assume floor figb,t. thef~· ...... : ...... ,... " ·s~er when. the Rev. John M. Le~s, o,f the NSF grant to other_ research_gr_iilits. Lewis reasaiied that thecoriiliiittee had who asked not to be identified, admitted nor interfere with the responsibilities Ray noted the discontent with Baptist ~ ..t h hft,.....lft- f th t d d est fro cam b numerous serio~ problems would arise assigned to the trustees by the con· .• ~'"!.t!~g_ .,, ..c "YUJ...,~.•. 0 • . ,_!!, c,0 nven 10· n.~.. · ·"" ·. · .. _...... -·· · .. · .... ~·-····-·---·.....;... ______~tUfll.e ·• own.a .requ · m P e11 if any ofthe grant were to.ile returiuid~ support of WF that has' surfaced- ·in· · Coll~ge to apply for a similar grant, ·and - vention, but will limit its relationship to "discussions in ass

Convocation speeches page eight Despite protests WAlt rvREST UHI'IEICSI11. EDITORIALLY ••• . UBRARY Wasting time Hooks anticipates completion Georgian monstrosity

Anew lease By Charles Butler the housekeeping matters we've been Deacon Club, athletic department Plans also call for a roll out synthetic Associate Editor taking care of. And we may see some business staff, ticket sales and Hook's carpet for use by the baseball football improvement on that this year,'' said office. · and field hockey teams. . --- - e - d A one-half million dollar indoor Ulery. The subfloor of the building will Hooks said the building would also be practice area is being b~t with athletic Ulery said while he is definitely not consist of four inches of concrete which available to the university for other P 0 e department funds beside the gym­ opposed to the building and sees the need will be poured within three weeks to a purposes. He mentioned such ro9 ram re rg an for it, he is concerned with the use of month. possibilities as concerts, dances, 'z nasiwn, causing eyebrows to be raised. proper proceedure in such matters. As funds become available, there are And among those concerned are mern- orientation programs, registration and r I e t According to Hooks the building's main plans for a polyurethane floor similar to other similar functions. · b~rs _of the fac~ty committee on in- f fer RA S Comp stitutiOnal plannmg. use will be as an indoor practice area for some in use at Virginia Technical Hooks said there would be a rental for a a'n the football and baseball teams. The According to Eugene Hooks, director of Institute and North Carolina State such uses, however. By Mary McLean passed in 1967, insures minimlllll wages athletics, the structure is being built with structure will also house the ofijces of the University. Associate Editor for students in an employee-employer a surplus in last year's athletic depart· capacity with a university. ment budget which resulted because WF A restructuring of the residence ad­ Legally, the RA position is regarded as and other Atlantic Coast Conference visor program followed a complaint from an employer-employee relati.onship, teams were in post-season tournaments the Wage-Hour Division of the Depart­ Ferrell said, as it has a defined contract and bowl games. ment of Labor in early April, 1977. and job description. Some members of the planning com­ A former RA filed a complaint shortly "We found ourselves in an unfortunate mittee felt they should have been con­ after Christmas break, 1977 to the Fair situation,'' said Ferrell, as the RA sulted before the construction was Labor and Standards Department in position was considered to be in a started. Washington, D.C. scholarship capacity, rather than a job The following appeared as the last The RA, who wished to remain capacity. paragraph in the committee's report to unidentified, said he filed the complaint Astudy by Ferrell, revealed that t~ere the faculty in the minutes of the last because he was not "receiving anything was a discrepancy between the reqwred faculty meeting: "The CIP is to advise resembling minimum wage:" minimum wage and the salaries received the Administration on the long-range "Many discrepancies exist in the pay by. the RA's. . plans for building and renovation which allocation," he said, as the men RA's are "We had to determine the munber of relates to the College; but on three recent responsible for two to four times as many hours people worked," said Ferrell, and matters the CIP was not informed of the .. people, yet the women RA's receive more the average was 13.6 hours per week. plans nor its advice sought: the Worrell pay. According to that aver~ge, _F_errell House in London, the new athletic facility James Ferrell, director of personnel, said the RA's were not paid mmtmum to be built adjacent to the gymnasium, said Railey Williams, frorri the Depart­ wag~. Subsequently, RA's from 1975-76 and the housing of students in Graylyn's ment of Labor, specifically asked for a and 1976-77 were issued compensatory main building." list of the RA's in 1975-'76 and their checks. Robert Ulery, associate professor of salaries. In order to comply with the Fair Labor classical languages and immediate past "He wanted to know why some of the Standards Act, a new proposal was chairman of the committee, said the differences existed in salaries," Ferrell made. The proposal, which was based on committee is currently trying to said. . the average of 13.6 hours, pays the determine exactly what its respon­ Ferrell refused to speculate about the present RA's minimum wage for the sibilities are. origin of the complaint. hours worked. He said there are two possible in­ "They respond to complaints, and "The thing we have to assure is equity terpretations of the committee's occasionally do audits of employers to in rates of pay. We think we have done responsibilities. One is that the opinion of insure compliance" with the Fair Labor that either by base rates or by the the committee should be sought on plans. Standards Act for Colleges and responsibilities assigned,'' Ferrell said. for any long-range plans for building or Universities, he said. Currently, the RA's are paid a straight renovation. "The reason for their visit could be minimum wage for desk duty, ~d The other is that the committee should either reason,'~ said Ferrell. . quarter time for duties performed durmg initiate ideas for campus development He added that Williams would not g\ve on-call hours. and send them to the administration. Staff photo by Ed Stahl the reason for the il.. estigat' .. n. "I know tl- ·.' is ~·tpport in the Tbe new facility to provide indoor practice areas for tbe university's intercollegiate te!Wls is nearillg its first stage of con­ The Fair Labor. St·· ....,rd· .\d fc•r (Continued on page Two J Ad.mn,, .. _.,._,, .ur , . .::ommittee's struction; Interior Improvements will be added as funds become available. Colleges and Universities, whtch was dealing with more important issues than Alcohol policy appealed

aspects of college life." By David Thomas Seniors, graduate students Dean Thomas Mullen will Staff Writer Dean of Women Lu Leake, who made the orginal an­ speak to seniors interested In . nouncement, was not available for comment. and faculty members in­ terested in being nominated graduate studies, fellowships An effort to appeal new alcohol policies was altered this Scales met with fraternity and society presidents Sunday assistantships, financial aid week by members of student organizations. to discuss the situation. fnr a Luce scholarship should At the meeting, Scales expressed sui-prise that students contact Marty Shore in the and the Graduate Records The polic~ which l_em~orarily bans mid-week parties by Foundations Office. The Eltamination Tuesday at 11 campus soc1al orgamzat10ns, was to be discussed at today's would consider attending parties on weeknights. He said the a.m. in DeTamble board of trustees meeting. decision resulted from faculty complaints regarding reduced scholarships provide a ten­ month professional internship Auditorium. The meeting is Student Gove~ent . President Keith Rogers expressed attendance at Thursday classes. not oriented toward students concern about the s1tuat10n and noted the decision is not final Inter-Fraternity Council president Ross Berlin sought to in Asia. Fifteen Luce scholars calm some fraternity presidents who accused the university are chosen each year, from considering law or medical as that university officials are negotiating with "an ope~ school. mind." of trying to force fraternities off-campus. At least one the sixty schools in the Describing the decision as "unfortunate", Rogers blamed fraternity \faS planning to contact their alumni asking for program. Two nominees will the situation on "genuine misinformation about what occurs help in a possible confrontation with the university. be made from Wake Forest. on campus. Most of the gains we will make on campus will Rogers, Berlin and Inter-society Council president Ann come through negotation; if a group tries to force the ad­ Grim all said thay did not feel the timing of the ban was International Publications ministration's hand, they simply will lay down the law." related to today's arrival of the Committee of 15, who will is sponsoring a creative In a letter to President James Ralph Scales Rogers said review ties between the university and the N.C. Baptist State . The · National Teacher writing contest. The deadline • "It calls into question the ability of every 'Wake Forest Convention. The convention annually donates in excess of 700 EKaminations will be given is November 5, and further student to personally balance the academic and social thousand dollars to the university. November 12, 1977, February information can be obtained 18, 1978, and July 15, 1978. All by writing to 4747 Fountain seniors preparing to teach in Ave., Dept. C-3, Los Angelos, North Carolina are required Ca. 90029. The new National to take the examinations. The College Poetry Contest, also Bulletin of lllformatlon for sponsored by International Tenure dispute settled Candidates may be obtained Publications, is open to all from college placement of­ college and university the faculty grievence com­ The Bidwell controversy ficers, school personnel students desiring to have their By Bob Boggs Bidwell will not contest WF's departments, o1· directly from poetry anthologized. Staff Writer decision to deny him tenure. mittee. caused several departments The committee had never National Teacher In return, he will receive to examine their own tenure­ ·Examinations, Box 911, Miles 0. Bidwell, assistant favorable recommendations met for appeal hearings. decision process. For in­ Some opponents charged Educational Testing Service, professor of economics, and and compensation if he can stance, the English depart­ Princeton, New Jersey 08540. the university have ended not find acceptable work the decision was politically ment has revised its program The WF Madrigal Singers their dispute over Bidwell's elsewhere. motivated. Bidwell founded of evaluating junior faculty will hold auditions for tenure denial. Both sides agreed not to the local Sierra club chapter members. prospective members on Bidwell will leave Wake report the details of the set­ and is a prominent critic of "My dispute has become a Monday and Tuesday. This Holding the Duke Power Company. Students interested in a six­ Forest in ~ay, 1978. He signed tlement as a condition of the private settlement that leaves small student organization is Tenure is decided on the week internship to learn about A new system of telephone IDsQillatlon was IDitiated thiB. a compromise agreement contract. the issues unresolved," the workings of state devoted to the singing of part· year. Students picked up tbelr telephones dUring registra­ with the university in June. The tenured professors in basis of teaching ability, Bidwell said. songs, principally of the scholarly publication and govemment.should pick up a tion and simply plugged them Into tbe wall. Some work. The agreement states that the economics department brochure at the Placement Renaissance. Interested voted against giving Bidwell community service, ac­ "1 would encourage the students who have supported Office. The intership runs persons are asked to leave tenure last February. cording to the faculty hand­ their names and telephone book. me to forget this particular from October 10 through 10 Per Cent Discount on Bikes, Happy Tenure is the right to November 16 and the deadline numbers with Robert Ulery remain at the school until Bidwell said last Spring he case and look at the student's (ext. 5332) or Teresa Accessories, and Repairs with thought he fulfilled all three role in choosing faculty, date for submitting an· ap­ Birthday, retirement, unless the plication is September 15. All Radomsky (ext. 5370) and-or Wake Forest ID. professor is deemed qualifications. He never evaluating courses and sign up for audition times on received written reasons for making policy on a more applicants will be notified of Duck! professionally incompetent. acceptance or rejection by the sheet posted next to the -Nishlfd • rakara Bidwell his case to the tenure denial. general level," he said. Motorized Bikes· September 30. music office in Wingate Han. Peugeot Right Guard® RA pay, responsibilities altered Anti-Perspirant Pump Spray OilOfOlay Value 3oz.Reg.8}49 4oz. spend more time with their receives quarter pay. '2.35 -Unsc. . Continued from page One only one-fourth of their wages Value$4.50 for the on-call hours. Thus, the residents, and lP•s time at the She said. tlie new -proposal desk. does give a little more ac- Soz.Reg. Value 8199 8269 On-call hours are defined as women RA's are paid for 3 ·Unac. S.'J.25 hours in New Dorm and "We do see the upperclass countability, but she added those hours in which an RA RA as having had ·more ex- that it· emphasized the RA attends to the needs of the Babcock, and the women RA's ANDREWS PHARMACY in Johnson and Bostwick are perience and therefore needs position as a job, rather than a "We also service all models and residents. less structure," she said. helping experience. s. Hawthorne- .at Maa::nolia Wintlon•Salem, N. c. The new donn and Babcock paid for 5.5 hours. All men Director of Residence Life . . " mahes of Bikes" Phone 723-1679 RA's work 7lh duty hours, and receive 3 hours pay. . Karen Smith echoed Leake's . SJIUth srud, _It sure dot;s ,Will pick up bikes and deliver, if needed. 12 on-call hours. Bostwick and Dean of Women Lu Leake sentiments. gt\~e us a g?Od tdea o~ who s ANDREWS-SUMMIT PHARMACY Johnson RA's work 3 duty said the reason for the dif­ Because the RA's are now . dom~ ,the JPb, an~ It ·does 12U Reynolda Road Winston-Sale!", If, c. hours, and 22 on-call hourSP!=l.r ference in onoetalt hours was ·expected to ·work a designated provtd~ ~m ~tomattc cbeqttup · Fred's Bicycle and Hobby Shop Phon~ 722-1144 week. Men RA's work.6 duty due to the: needs of ·the nwnber of hourk" per week, system whtch ~e woul9,w.t Pinebrook Plaza Shopping Center · : · ·hours and 12 on-call hours'per residents. they are required to keep time normally have. Telephone 767-2868 week. Leake said that generally sheets. The time sheets enable B?t on. the... other ~and, All RA's, however, receive the freshman RA's need to the RA to record the number Srruth sa1d, 1t negati~ely of hours worked so that they encourages one to cheat to 'Our doubts are traitors are insured a minimwn wage. get the nwnber of on-call "It'll be a little more dif- hours. neede~. and make us lose the good we oft ficult to practice the open door '' Smlt~ said ~~~ system might win by fearing to attempt' policy," Ferrell said, because le~ves no ~eXIb~ty. When • • • Shakespeare the RA's are restricted in the you re ~orkin~ '!lth people, number of on-call hours they you can t put limits on when We Speacialize In ~X:OTIC PLANTS can work due to budgetary you, ~ork and when you limitations don t. If the RA's on-call hours for Leake ~~d Smith. said the one week do account for less RA pos1bon, whtch .they than twelve hours the RA is regard_ as . an educatl?nal ~....:../!'''·-·- ~ still paid for tb full t 1 !llodel, ~s bemg made to t1t an h · f e. we ve mdustrtal model. ours. I overtlffie on-call "You just don't cut the job hours are worked, then the RA . ff t f' , S 'th 'd If You Like House Plants, You'll Love o a 1Ve, nu S8l • Hardi Gar:dens 3807 Reynolda Rd. at Oldtown 924-1116 Monday • Saturday 10-5 Phones: 724-7989 724-2327

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Assistant Editor · ching.'' He said most of the asked if they were WF Hooley said, "Jeff said at spectators came because "it students and then asked them the trial that he was not guilty Two nights of student was just a big show." to leave. Later, RA's Brad because Beth had followed demonstrations in protest of According to Reece, no Zebal and Bobby Glover him up and he had no visitation policies followed the disciplinary action was taken appraoched Gilley and Goas responsibility for what she did suspension of a Pennsylvania against the demonstrators. who were still violating as an individual.'' freshman, Jeffrey L. Goas, The students who were last May. drinking beer did; however, Goas was suspended for one appear before a Judicial Scales ann. ounc.es year for violating Wake Board for violating WF Forest visitation policies. In a alcohol regulations. related decision, Eli.7.abeth .The Gilley-Goas case was Gilley, a Winston-Salem heard by the Case Referral profeSSOf prOmOfi•OnS freshman, was placed on low Panel instead of the student housing prioritj'. Judicial Board. Marc Miller, On the first riight of co-chairman of last year's Promotions in the WF associate professor were Stephen Ewing, business and demonstration, Thursday Student Judicial Board said faculty and staff were an­ acountancy; Donald E. Frey, May 5, about 100 students the procedure was "entirely nounced over the summer by rallied on the quad. The within constitutional bounds.'' President James Ralph economics; David W. Hadley, history; Philip J. Perricone, students burned WF rule Miller said, "The case Scales. books and the wooden stakes normally would have gone Promoted from associate sociology and anthropology; and string surrounding the directly to the Judicial Board, professor to professor were and Timothy F. Sellner, lawn, which had been newly but it was during finals and Dean of the College Thomas Gennan. Brian Legakis, instructor in resown for the May 16 sorne members had already E. Mullen, in history, Robert graduation exercises. art, was promoted to assistant gone home so a quorum rould N. Shorter in English and professor. On the second night of not be reached. The case then Marcellus E. Waddill in David Gasque was demonstration Friday, May 6, went to the Case · Referral mathematics. promoted to assistant about 200 students gathered in Panel as provided for in the Mullen joined the faculty in registrar. StaH Phofo by Ed Stahl protest of visitation policies. constitution." 1957 and became dean in 1968. Registration blues An effigy of Lu Leake, dean of Goas and Gilley were tried He received h~ d?ctorate women, was burned, but the for housing violations. Goas from Emory Umverslt_Y. .. .. 1be new regls&raUon systeQl succeeded In providing a qalcker aud less paJnful process, according to the Reglst,rar's Office. Demonstration lasted less had been tried previously for· Shorter came to WF m 1958. I ACAPEMIC------RESEARCH I than an hour and no damage other infractions. He is chairman of the English was reported. Miss Leake was Dw·ing the trial, Gilley said ,department. He received his I All Subject~~ I one of the three members of she followed Goas to his room doctorate from Duke I I Stokes accepts director position the panel which suspended to get him to unlock his car so University. I Fut, prof... loaal, ODd provea quallty.l Goas. she could get some books she Waddill received his doc· ~~od 11.00 for the CWTeDt edition of. programming in church Mark Reece, dean of men, had forgotten. to_rate from the U~i~ersity of ...,. 2ZO - pqe mall ordrr w.Jos. By Mary McNeH the religion department to Forest, the University of 1 music, expansion of the said when he left Wait Chapel Rich Hooley, resident ad- Ptttsbur~h and JO'!Led t~e 1 Associate Editor pastors he visits within the North Carolina at Chapel Hill continuing education program state. · and Southern Baptist after being notified of the fire visor said he saw the two on faculty m 1972. He IS chrur­ I 12131477-1474 I for ministers and he noticed "only about 20 the stairs and called several man of the Judicial Council. I P.O. Box 25916-Z, Lo. Aaadh pwhkm:-. was created as a result of the should pick up petition in the Thursday, Sept; 22 from 9 HP cdcuirk lih· '"' >u think. he sa1d. Thev're efficient. HP t':Jkul.n,,r-.. 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ltb.~ j ••• ,.,. , .. : ... ,,. : ~ \ • ,.! f j " • Hanes Mall, Winston-Salem Mon.·Sat. 10.9:30 'l'· . , ... ;.,,.,.,., .. ,., 'll··. '1'1'' . REGULAR SIZE AND BIG & TALL MENSWEAR Chepel Hlll, flaJeJ8b, Greeneboro, Charlotte, Myrtle hch .• Nuclear power helps OLD GOLD ArtD BLACK 1

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Chari.•• Hull••r l.~·nn Knapp By Scott Blbl its own Plutoniwn 238 by high speed · CONCEB ~ar~ 'ld.t•an Jnn \\art! , . neutron bombardment, with perhaps Greensboro 'lar~· \k~t'il 1 he recent power blackout which hit enough surplus that we could enter the · (:nih) "tH~lina •ecaus~ of severed relations with their · downtown CJ .tereos, should serve to remind us of our 1basing reliance upon the people with Economy POETRY •ower. Quickly stepping beyond our read from 1 1eighbors at Duke Power, I entreat you The econ()my of so radical a change lectirre roor o recall the hackneyed issue of political has o~er rar.nUications which would LECTUR nstability in the Middle East which has please even the most parsimonious of professor 01 nade energy reliance all but impossible. trustees. The nuclear power plant would rhe fluctuating supply and price of oil generate our electricity by steam tm- ' Scott, chair 1as forced even such staid ad­ bines, eliminating the enormous annual ·science, wil ninistrators as those of OW' Castalia to debt to Duke Power, and the steam, • States and 1 Wasting time ower temperatures when the un­ labled thennal pollution by concerned ''p.m. in the ;easonably cold northern weather finds environmentalists, could be used to heat POETRY JS. . our rooms and warm our showers. members a A viable alternative to this deplorable Bucolic Lake Catherine could serve as a jependency lies in becoming a nuclear source of water, and excess steam could reading roo1 It would be too easy to Already, ominous signs have Jowered university. The construction of be covertly b11bbled up from the swamps nesday. ~ breeder reactor, possibly funded nearby and turned into a profitable prejudge the committe~ of 15 appeared, and a showdown t THURSDJ :hrou~h. a grant from some large in­ venture by prDmulgating a myth pm­ that meets here today, g1ven the seems inevitable. To allow the are held at :lustrlalist and fueled with Uraniwn 235 porting the medicinal value of the LECTURE circumstances under . which _it Baptist convention to coerce the procured from the Czechoslovakian geothermic spring water. charge d'aff was forme~; Orgamzed ~h1s Biology Department to return its ~overnment, would free us from the tyrannical clutches of world powerplays. Washington, summer to Ease the tensiOns $300 ooo National Science Research possibilities among North Carolina Baptists" Fou~dation grant would be The breeder reactor could regenerate ,.spective on t over Wake Forest, the com- tantamount to permitting a Thursday 'in mittee faces possibly in- . . - . Tile pancity of _physics majors relative CU FLICI surmountable difficulties. p~tent .viOlat_IOn of the umve~-s f • to the copious facuity members in that tonight and f . . Slty's mtegrity and academic discipline would cease to arouse question DeTamble; F1rst, a committee whose freedom The release of any ecre IVeness if a breeder reactor were acquired. The "Sleeping C chairman admits he gives · . . weakens decision research possibilities would be expanded hyperbolically, while the relatively "AndNowfo priority to a school's religious fu~ds would . b_e an mtolerably By Dave Nash The student is the focus ofthis process. is the student who must take thecoW'ses, pernicious isot4Jpes the reactor produced Thursday at heritage over its academic s~meless d~CISion- one we hope He or she is at Wake Forest to get an he should be close to the decision making would eliminate careless researchers. freedom conjures visions of Wlll be avmded. I would like to know why every ad- exposur~ to the accwnulated ex~erience process and not taken by surprise with it. This form of Darwinism would horror. While educational Finally, the committee minis~rative or po~cy decision around of~ankindandthenevaluatethe 1deasto Students are competent, conscientious strengthen an already fine department. }' t b d ted · ·f' th' s· '} here IS made durmg swnmer months Which he has been exposed. The student people for the most part. They deserve tO It would never do to overlook the ad­ Icense canno. e a . voca , s1gm 1es no mg. 1m1 ar ones when few students may voice an opinion. gets much of this experience in the be let in on the big secrets which are the ditional possibility that Wake Forest ARJ! more ~p~n att_1tude~ ~1ght. have been tried and long-range A~tually, I kn~w why decisio.ns are made classroom, but not all of it. Much of the decisions which affect them. This is not could use portions of the by-product Adm1mstrabve wtllmgness to satisfaction h~ b t- ·th1s ~~y, but 1t would be deSU"able for an value of th~ co~ege .experience comes to say that students should be the sole plutoniwn tQ construct nuclear weapons compromise would generally be . _ s een u!la adimmstrator to come out and say that from expertencmg different groups of policy makers, or even equal partners (necessitating the formation of a·n By Betsy" . . . d'ff It 't ti tamable. The waste of time, they do not care what the students people and fonning relationships with with the administration. Students are engineering department which could Stafff VI pbrotmtihsmg m t'I lCUf Sl ua f'o~als, ft t d h dl . . . . think; and therefore, since they know these people. These groups can be but do relatively inexperienced when it comes share honors with the business depart­ u e crea IOn o super ICI e or an worry ar y JUStifies what is best, the students will have to go not have to be Greek fraternities or the to professionalism in education, but they ment for being antithetical to the spirit of The Deacon religious posts and the increase the convention's intrusions. along. like, and the social setting is by no means do deserve the chance 'to throw in their Liberal Arts). Program wa of social restrictions are not the Even worse however is that The tactic of deciding important, or limited to beer blasts. two cents worth before a decision is made because neither answer. Infact they only serve ' ' · eve~ unimportant •. policy decisio~s One presumption that Wake Forest -whether it concerns social rules or the the student pos: t . til't d t another class of students must behind dosed doors JS to be deplored m makes concerning the students is that curriculwn. over the amoun 0 h 1 Recruiting . mcrease os Y. an ° suffer the burdens of an institution of this type. The latest they have enough discipline to do the Ideally,aliberalartsuniversitymakes meal cards 1 ahenate an already disaff~cted hypocritical game that com- proposal~oreachthestudentsfrom~e acadeiiJ!c.workexpectedofthemwithout learning a two way process. In this The effect of having nuclear • previous system student body. Where does 1t all promises their educations. col~ corr1dor~ of ~eynolda ~all forb1ds superv1s1on. Th~y are responsible, academic community, the student should capabilities wollld be beneficial for our Charles Hess, end? soc1al gathermgs m fratenuty or house competent adults m most cases and by not be excluded from the decision university in many ways. The trustees dining services. lounges dW'ing the week. This is absurd- most criterion set down by society are making process. Both administrators could elevate the Baptist ChW'ch to a Some studen purely and simply absurd. fully equipped to function on their own. and students could profit from a more position of equality .with Roman new booklets One may wonder why I am wasting my This university has held that its genuine exchange of ideas concerning Catholicism, and even issue papal bull. coupons look lik breath on such a petty issue as weekday students are in need of further social the operation of the community. President Seal~ could demand a seat in part tickets an< parties. Well, I'm not wasting my breath, supervision. Thus, the doctrine of "in The administration's secretiveness the U.N., to b~ successively filled by congestion in t: Monstro~ity becaus~ weekd~y parties ~r the Jack ·to~~ pa~entis" .has governed ·ad- and intran_si_gence ~admitting students members of tiJe politics d~P.~~g~..... the first two wE thereof IS not an tssue of any unportance. 1rumstratlon deds10ns. There seems to to the dec1s1on making process actually thereby imbuing that .q,epartment with., ... Hess blamed 1 The i~sue at stake_ revo!ves aroun~ ~e be a rell~n .w.hY: ~ ,~Wd~~\ ..~an be ,.e.x-.. ,.- ~\1~§, t:!J~ir., c!lus~. more. t~an it helps~ the vitality of e~e:ri.e~~ in in~.eJ:'IIatioWI~tlllrP which is an all time low would be a sad mistake for the said. Georgian architecture is university's general. fu~d to be "Last year,' lnm.on to be built on campus. use~ for the proJects com­ "the best we co Equally disturbing is that the plebon, and such use would Project cult offsets Elvis vacuum ~ people (per r .,.,.,.. ,. •., .. ., will offer very little to deplorable. foUr cash regi! By Jim Salntslng ari runrung fo If America can support a personality minute (per 1 cult, then certainly the project cult is Something more on the frontier. In to Panama, the U.S. should face up to its L with six cash worth a few minutes of its leader's time. fairness, too, the successful border­ new task. It was a necessity of the time to . ·• are actually : Firstly, big projects can ease the crosser would not have to bear the title. build the canal in what was bound to :. people this yea A new lease unemployment problem. No one would "wetback." Instead, viva Spiderman!" become a hotbEd of property-rightism. : sanely suggest that participants donate Coffee for the terraces of Appalachia. Now, suffer the .strongmen: we can build · their time, as the masses so generously Sigmund Freud is alleged to have a canal across America. It would be a big · do, for example, in Siberian hero­ remarked that, "a good cup of coffee can project, of course, but every July 4, projects. Secondly, just as Elvis could make a man forget about sex." If so, thousands could jump in. Dog-paddling, only have come from America, there are perhaps we should see that Mexico gets they could hold hands from one coast to undertakings in store that are big and more coffee. But whatever the drive to the other, thus fulfilling one of the meatier aspirations of the Bicentennial ~essy, . but inunoderately rewarding, coffee arises from, we should never ]ust swted for a gung-ho mentality. again find ourselves at the mercy of a planners. Seventhly (skipping some less in­ Brazilian hoar. Surely Appalachia could The list of pmjects could go on. There teresting points, or perhaps only giving grow this important commodity, and tea is so much to do and only a lifetime per the impression of doing so), we need not as well. Thousands of people could be participant to do it. Certainly, if we are look far for the requisite tasks, because employed terracing the mountains of going to devote time and resoW'ces to at least three present themselves right Appalachia, racing for time against the public-works projects, we should not faway to the ordinary observer of the researchers who would have to develop squander our energies lowering the scene, actually: plants appropriate to the climate. Such a height of street signs by two inches. We The Great Baja Wall. Mexicans have project could extend over a number of can go for the big jobs. developed a genuine sense of manifest years, as undoubtedly the Baja wall The age of tlle hero cult can pass destiny!_a_~ more and more pioneers would, and become imbedded in heed the northward call. This influx can Appalachian folkways. "Oh," you might without more ado. Adieu. God bless us, as only be called imperialism, and it hear: . we enter the age of the project cult. And demands a strong response. A per­ .if other co~tries follow OW' example, so I terraced the side of a mountain much the better, since, given a choice manent barrier should go \!P· During the For many a bitter hard day, high era of detente, one rich Texas elec· Til my true Jove ran off to Wheeling between exportir!g revolution and ex­ trornagnet magnate was reputedly Cause I perked in the old-fashioned way. porting insulation, the energy-wise willing to buy the Iron Curtain, to be <:boice is for th~ latter. Revolution ex­ disassembled and shipped to the border. The Great Yankee Ditch. Now that the pen,ds energy; iJJsulation conserves it. We can be thankful he was unsuccessful Panama Canal will belong, oddly enough,

fUWided Ja.au.&l')' JS, ltU, a.. the 1ludcJll n~Wtptlptt of Wdr t'omt Lal\'cnity, Old (iclld and.Hiark fa publi1hrd ... ,.h. frid.ty du.riq lhe adaool year u~pl duri.q ~l.&llliDatioo, aumm.rr 'a.ad holiday ~riod• •• dll't:ctt--d hy lht> 'A'akt> . ··ornt f•u.bUeaUou Board. Malled each torerek. Afelll.ben ofthr A.. oclatedCollePat.r P"''• Hr.prnt-nlf"d lor National Ad\'rttbiq b)' Natio.W EducaUodaJ Ad"rrtJdnr Senlce, InC', Sub.erlpUon ral.r.: 17.00 St-n..nd clAn J)(NII.q:t> pajd, 'l'ia.•lon·Salcm, N.C. Form SS79 •bould be- mall~ to Buk T'....tR, Rrynold.l Station, .,Jnl!llon·Smlr.m, N.C 27109. l'tintt'd by Smllrr Publi&hl.afr Co., lat:orport~ted, Kin&', N.c:. Opinions r11ph"11rd on lhl• PltV arr not nrr..rauril)' 1h01 .. ur 1h .. 801 ua.ivrnloyurllodenobod,. Production No. 407500 ' 409 WE 5 Churchill dedicates worrell~H·o;;;;ACK

By Mary Afieshouse the university participated in dirt:ictor of the program for "English Art from Hogarth to adding that fieldtrips will contacting the English highlight courses in London. Staff Writer the festivities. the spring semester; and the Present," "The History of university and arranging the , Oxford and Cambridge Provost Edwin G. Wilson J.ondon from the Earliest Students with requirements r:redits with the appropriate in other departments may Wake Forest's Worrell universities, the University of formed the first year's Times," "English Dramatic WF department. substitute courses from CONCERTS--Foreigner will perform at Eouse opened Its program in I .on don and the London School program around a basis of Literature and Theatre" and I<:nglish universities for up to Applications for the spring Greensboro Coliseum Saturday at 8 p.m. london this swnmer with of Economics were also art, theatre, history and "Georgian and Victorian semester in London are represented at the program. society and culture courses, Society and Culture." two of the Wake Forest of­ ART EXHIBIT--Carolina Art Competition is Fourth of July dedication ferings, according to Potter. available througJJ Friday, festivities. Opening the London Satisfying various Two of these courses will be ''This should allow the Sept. 2.1 in Potter's office sponsored by the Northwestern Bank in con­ Sarah Churchill, daughter program this fall as its first divisional and major taught by English faculty and major in Biology to take Tribble C204. Students ac: junction with Carolina Street Scene in the bank's of Winston Churchill, was director, David Hadley, requirements, these courses the others by the residing WF advantage of I.ondon without cepted for the program will be downtown office Saturday through Thursday. present at the ceremony, associate professor of history, are designed to allow the director. falling behind in credits," notified on Friday, Sept. 30. POETRY READINGS- Gal way Kinnell will which dedicated one room of is offering four courses student to take advantage of Potter said both he and the newly acquired study concentrating in the the London environment, Hadley intend to offer Potter stated. Interested students can get read from his works Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Potter added the student in touch with Potter at 761- center to her father. humanities. 1 according to Wilson. schedules to accomodate must take responsibility for lecture room of the Fine Arts Center. About 60 British and · Hadley; Lee Potter, The courses offered are travel in the British Isles, 5390 for further infonnatiot~. LECTURE--Percival Perry, associate American scholars, diplomats professor of history, and Lt. Col. William A. and other friends of the Scott, chairman of the department of military university gathered at the ·science, will discuss the significance of United luncheon program presided over by Pre.sident James ,,states and Panamanian relatio~ Tuesday at 8 Pettigrew leads reorganization Ralph Scales. p.m. in the Reynolda Hall ballroom. Churchill unveiled a bust of POETRY READINGS-- Students and faculty her father done by Earline a household name like fellow Project thus far have been the symbolic action that will set a through initiatives such as the members are invited to the readings in the Heath King, a Winston-salem By Jan Ward tone for further actions in Department of Energy, but Assistant Editor assistants to the President creation of the Deaprtment of reading room of Reynolda Hall at 4 p.m. W~d­ artist, which will be placed in Hamilton Jordan and Energy, the Executive Office reorganization," Pettigrew probably will slow down the the Churchill Room of the said. increase in the size of the nesday. As Assistant to the Zbigniew Brzezinski, Pet­ of the President study, which llouse. tigrew said reorganization is recommends cutting the Pettigrew said the government, rather than t THURSDAY MORNING WORSHIP-- Services A plum tree was planted in President for Reorganization, President has directed the making the present federal Richard Pettigrew's job is to an area in which Carter has White House Staff by 28 per are held at 11 a.m. in Davis Chapel. the front garden of the Worrell great interest and has given a .cent, and the elimination of Office of Management and bureaucracy smaller. LECTURE-- Ricardo A. Bilonick Paredes, House followed by the reading deliver a major plank of Budget to conduct 30 in­ "It is not going to be a single President Carter's platform significant amount of his 480 of the 1189 federal ad­ charge d' affairs of the Panamanian embassy in of a poem written by John time. visory corrunittees. terdepartmental reorgani­ global solution to all the Browning, a Wake Forest to the public. zation studies as well as to problems of organization and Washington, will present his country's per­ Pettigrew said that the "President Carter "There's a six million dollar graduate, to cornrnemorate demonstrated the importance savings in personnel costs as a moniter studies he has ap­ administration taking place at ,,spective on the new Panama Canal treaty 8 p.m. the event. focus of the study is upon proved that are being con­ once, in one bold an­ Thursday in Reynolda Hall ballroom. providing greater flexibility of the issue to the people, and result of personnel reductions The set designer of "Star it was very important to his in the Executive Office of the ducted elsewhere in govern­ nouncement," he said. "It will CU FLICKS--"Man with the Golden Gun," Wars" John Lang of Mid­ in administrating programs. ment. This is in addition to all be a long term project. The '.'Increasing employee election, his success in the President and · the White tonight and Saturday at 7:30, 9:30 and 12 p.m. in dlesex; Egbert L. Davis Jr., primaries particularly,'' House Staff, with drastic cuts the internal reorganization studies themselves will be . chairman of the Wake Forest productivity, the courtesy efforts that are taking place conducted typically over a one DeTamble; "Gaslight," Monday at 8 p.m.; with which people are dealt Pettigrew said. in personnel in permanent board of trustees; and Mr. The three major ac­ positions. This is not a within the agencies. year time frame, then. "Sleeping Car Murder," 8 p.m. Wed,nesday; and Mrs. Eugene Worrell of with and the responsiveness "Both in selecting Cabinet recommendations for · "And Now for Something Completely Different," with which people handle complishments of the significant amount of the total Charlottesville, Va., who President's Reorganization federal budget, but it is a members and in giving in­ reorganization plans w.ill go T_hursday at 7 and 9 p.m. donated funds for the house to problems is very important to structions to Cabinet mem­ forth to the hill. the kind of image people have bers, (the President) has of their government." he said. emphasized that much of "It's· a tremendous and "Government employees owe what will be accomplished in complex effort and it's going ea~h and every citizen being reorganization; · bringing to take time," Pettigrew said. ARA defends new touched .by government more effective delivery of Plan "At the end of three years," services respect courtesy and services to the people; good service." Pettigrew said, "we expect to ARA set:Ved $21,000 more in have printed smaller lightening the burden on the be able to demonstrate that By Betsy Wakefield Pettigrew headed the House private sector of regulation Stafff Writer meals than they sold last booklets, but that means committee in the Florida state major organizational and year. Hess did not blame the another cover for each group and paperwork, and so on; administrative improvements legislature that developed the will be a responsibility of the The Deacon Dining. Club cashiers, but said, "At the of coupons. In order to hold 1969 comprehensive have occurred or llave been down costs, we put 50 and 60 individual agency," Pet­ presented to Congress for Program was changed speed people go through these reorganization that reduced tigrew said. because neither the ARA nor lines it was a poor system for dollars in each booklet. 200 agencies to 23 in the state. action; and these will take the The size of the booklet will From a recent casework form of improved reaction the student possessed control controls and very inac­ "We had done our survey of congressional of­ over the amount punched off curate." not go down next semester, reorganization job before ·times tqhen clients of various but, Hess added, next year's fices concerning what con­ .government agencies apply meal cards used in the Students have co.mplained Governor Carter did his in stituents cite as their previous system, according to this week. Only one student plan will depend on how well Georgia," Pettigrew said. for services." students adjust to the system. problems in dealing with Charles Hess, manager of has demanded a refund Although he has not become government Pettigrew SC!id it dining services. because of the change. was very clear most of the You'll firul• friend •t Some students claim the The biggest complaint, problems people on the new booklets of tear-out according Hess, is in the size receiving end of government Margaret Mueller's coupons look like amusement of the booklet. The large plan Theatre announces· services or regulatory actions Knit Shop part tickets and have cause11 books have $65.20 worth of have can be corrected only by congestion in the Pit during coupons, and the small plan improving the administration Lower Mall Thruway Shoppl... Center the first two weeks of school. booklets have $53.20. "Knights" cast list of programs by an agency Wlnston-Saletn, N.C. Hess blamed the newness of One meal card was worth ,.. ..,.,., ... ' ' .. ' itself·rather than looking at it the system for·the ldnglliles at approximately li8lf of this 72.. 7978 theet\1!1f'i'\!gisters anli'Said;o"I· year!s .bookie!,·, al!~ ·sj:uden~s The cast';fiJ.~ .!fie;University .. JilnmY,;~#e.~I~; .. Jac.,Whatley; structurally or in- thirllt•'th'at the students are have complalhed to Hess that Theatre production of "The Brian Hill; Lou Sparks, Gerry· . terd~~rtmenta.lly.' . . Needle Point going to get faster and more they can not sell or buy the LastMeetingoftheKnightsof Cwens, Bill Rodgers, Paul ~~o. Pettigrew sa (d ~~uper.wel used to using the coupons." coupon booklets because they the White Magnolia" has been Batchelor, Jack Savage and IUellard Pettigrew Is Cbe Prellfdenfs Anlstlllltfor ReorpDI- reorganization was going to lM% wool KniHinsr Y'arnt~ He said, "We do have are so expensive. Hess congestion in the Pit right stressed the plan is still .selected. The play, written by John~!:Pik;·-;e,. ==·~~~~za;tkm; ...... ~ ...... lal"'lll~m;;ak;e~g;ov;e~r;n~m,e;,n;trs~im;p~le;r~iiiiiiii;:~ now, but we had it last year transferrable and students Preston Jones, will be and the year before last. will realize eventually they presented Octoper 7-8, and 12- People are blaming it on the can be bought and sold. 15 at 8:15p.m. in the Fine Arts lhey didn't smoke grass. coupons because it is a The new booklets are Center. Season tickets are still They didn't take the pill. change." bulkier than last year's meal available. They didn't do their own thing. The Magnolia Room, which cards. Hess said, "We could The cast is Chris Murrell, I They_ went to college in the Fifties. opened earlier this week, and They pledged fraternities. the Snack Bar, which will They celebrated Hazing Week. open in October, will take They were the buHoned-down, away some of the crowd, he Northern Style Pizza · boHied-up generation said. And sometimes they exploded. "Last year," Hess said, "the best we could do was six PIZZA ~ people (per register) with ~""\ four cash registers. Now we are runiling four or five a GARDEN minute (per register), but with six cash registers. We Corner of Cherry St. and 30th are ~ctually serving more people this year." 724-7600

A lively wardrobe for all &eaBOIIB. One-of·a-kind items at affordsble prices. Batik lops SI6-S25. Silk scarves $15-SlSO. From lhe !!hop at Bodycraft Galleries. Holllll: I 0:0()..5:30, Tuesday-Saturday.

SHOWS 2-4-6-8- .... Late •how Friday and Saturday night 12:00 "Encounter With the Unknown"

80409 West End Boulevard W1nston Solem -722-4396 ··Fu·rman·· ... ·eYOkes comic memories R~· Tu('kt•r Mlkhl'll gamt•s to nemson and Duke, intended to. Instead he just sounded ending. the game as fall Sports Editor lx1th of whkh included Deacon wrapped himself around the ·the referee signaled no catch. tnurhdowns. Wak!' eltploded ball and waited to be tackled Players from both teams Football is a type of en­ for 21 points against South which he was. I<'unnan didn't nwnbly left the field that had tertainment. and as such it Carolina before returning block the kick at least, but produced no real victory. l'an take many forms. Often it home. with an 0-10 record, for they did pick-up possession on McDo·nald was sure the is an artistic performance and the season finale against the Wake 37 with time for one Middleton didn't make the the entertainment t•omes Furman. last play. Wake, seemingly catch and wasn't' over the from a sense of awe. brilliant A massive crowd of about desperate to lose the game it goaline anyway. Middleton athletes performing difficult 7,000 poured into Groves of Hichard Boone, also con- run by Mike had won, had given Furman could offer only a tasks while in competition stadium that afternoon to tinued to fwnble the football. McGiamary, who hasn't one last chance. Apparently moderate disclaimer. with other equally fine per­ wateh what was considered an Furman totaled six for the looked that fast since. the Deacons didn't know how "I don't know, 1 dorJ't formers. This is what is excellent chance for a Wake game and added one in· Now in Furman territory to win. know," 'he said as he sat supposed to happen. Forest victory. Although the terception. the Deacs elected to have stunned in the Furman But the supposed and the Purple Paladins were 5-5, Two of the miscues set up McGiamary merely fall on the •· Jockeroom, "maybe I caught real are seldom in complete they were competing in the Wake field goals by the ball after the snap to protect Quarterback Charles it and maybe I didn't,. it agreement and sometimes then very weak Southern un l1.k e 1Y J oe Bunc h w h o th e 1ea d · N0 t b a d 5 t raet gy but Elvington dashed back into doesn't really matter they are even in opposition. Conference. kicked three in the game. The unfortunately there was still the pocket and looked deep. anyway... "th 4 45 · · 1 50 1 ft to pi Three Surprisingly flanker Kenny Wake Forest opens its 1977 The first hint of the comedv 1as t · WI : remammg, over : e ay · Its doubtful that the comedy k lclo 1 d b t Middleton was a little ope. n, to follow in the game's waning· gave wa e a u- ea , u McGlamary falls later, it was b and confusion of three years football season Saturday may e half a step beyond against Furman Universitv. It minutes, came in the second th e game was no t over yet; fourth and 13 from the Fur- wake cornerback Ed ago will materialize in Groves should be a respectably- ar­ quarter when Wake's Clark indeed, it was just beginning. man 39 and Mark Cregar, who McDonald. Stadium Saturday night. tistic performance. Wake has Gaines, eventually destined Wake held Furman after the did the punting for Wake Wake Forest football has good team, and Furman, for NFL rookie-of-the- kickoff and when the Deacons much of that fateful year, ehanged quite a bit since while an underdog, is not yearship, scored the Deacons got the ball they were able to entered the game. .Elvington fired and M.id- then; the players are without some strongpoints. first , more or less. move it into Furman territory Cregar never got the punt dleton was there, right on the professional and confident in But the last time these two Wake had first and goal on the power of a 3(J..plus yard away; however. he never Wake goaline. the gun their actions. Their talent and . teams met was a completely different story. It was a game i~~~~e r~~i~:~~ f~~~ ~~! mm ·~~tt=~=fi~~=i=i=~=~=i=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~:j:~=~=~=?~i~i~i~~~i~~~i~~~ti~i~i~i~i;~~~~;~~~;~Jit~i~~~i~;~ti~m~~n~;~ri;t~{;~~~@~~~~~~~~=~=i=~=~:;:i~;=~=~=~=i=~=~=i=W~ !~t :~e~:~mg~~e!~h~ in which the supposed and the Deacs were only slightly r~: F F recast j:j:::f;that have never matched the real were at complete op­ closer. ?n fourth do~ Mills :~:~:: u r m an 0 f;l~~:: ineptitude of that Saturday posites and it was a game sent Games up the m1ddle one :::~- · ::::::::afternoon three years ago. where the entertainment last time but the play was a ~=~=~ l~:j;j; But that game, as much as value was a function of repeat of the previous efforts ;:;:;. ;:[:;:;:anything else, is a part of the hwnor. with Gaines reaching a point ;~:;:.. ;j;j;:;: 1977 team. The players who There have been better near and possibly even over :;:;::l :~::;:; were freshmen then are the years in Wake Forest football the goaline. :;:;::l 1976Record(6-4-l) 1977Record(O.O,firstgame) :;:;:;::foundation for the rapidly history than 1974 and there The line judge that day gave :;:;:;l Game Time: 7:30 ~;:;:~;maturing Wake program. have also been worse .. but not a dubious signal that j;j;j;l Game-Time Weather: Mild, temperatures in the mid-60's ;:l:l:i: This Saturday the opponent Photo by Brown many. resembled "don't ask me" :;:;:;. PaladJn Outlook :;:;:~; will be the ssme, but the game 1111 Wake opened in moderately more than "touchdown." :;:;:;; :;:~;:;will be different. ThiS time Jue Satchell& one of tile leading frontcGurt players on the impressive fashion, losing to But the defensive backfield ;:;:::: . . . ;::;::::Wake Forest will know how t

·ship sophomores Mary-Nash Kelly H~ll Ht\ ~-" _j « ~1111-.Uf:f.UI:-. or est and Alicia Nance. Freslunen l~llh 'll..fllilld• \\llh hie· .. ,\ •I.&~ Sandy Barbour and Amy :klrh sfkH r 1·1,'11 1.\ \IOU I' 11.\llHI OL"I Ul;o\ 1yers ,•• rr. ~~~··· .

As a freshman in college, you are looking ahead to a good first year. Your ultimate goal is getting that col­ lege degree. To make that degree more the last two years in Anny Rare. meaningful, you should increase your Upon graduation you'll be options Trom the beginning. wearing the gold bars of an Anny Ap~ you can do that through officer. With the kind of experience Anny Rare. r.ou get in Anny ROTC, you're qual- Anny Rare offers practical tfied for anr. career, whether it's mil- leadership_ with on-hand adventure itary or civilian. Anny ROTC provides training. You'll8et management for both -active duty status with a experience, which aids in developing starting salary of over $11,300 or ~ ·-·t·" ...... '""' :~~.:~'!"... ~'g' 'nl:: :::;;~·7.. ·~~-i.~~:.. ~;; men and women to shoulder greater reserve status (Active Duty for Train- flll'IIC-1')(.11/Ioo .. ·•• I~'J'I "'N.~< ..,.,~.,, .. ,,.._,, •111'1 W~"'-" .... ti'IO "'IH-1., ~,..... ••'9! .,D.._I ... •ol•• W'll; .,,.,,,_..._ -· a.o ~ ...,..-; !JOI'!l .,.,. .. _.,."i ~ ...... ,.,,,ur.•nt'.> "'''•···•,..\·•·"1'·"~ ·"''"' ril(hl in your responsibilities at an earlier age than ing) while employed in the civilian ,.,,,sw. .... ~oo>" -J1Q .., ...... t•M-'IJ(r""l' "t- ·•r. T .. ,...... ,...... ~ tmu riHlm, mukt• an out· ... - ...... 40 1••·~ ..... - ...... "...... most other graduates. community...... , .... !)o.. ,,.. _ ...... dnur wundt•r uf plant:; und rluwt·r~ und . ~ou can~ part of this excit- Get a good start your freshman ••• Texa~-~~~~ ~..... ln>i'"" - a garttf•n a~ nwdt•l'lt ttr il~"~ l!rand ul'l ~ou '"'i~">h il mg cumculum m the first two years. y~ Increase your options from the t~t bt•. Enjo} it. Tulk to all tht• £rit•IHI:. wlm j.!W\\ IIIIIM,.o, ,, 0 ~ 0 JQ;.,..~ 0 ll/11' ,,_,.,.., , ... ,.,,,,.. '"''"'' Ill~ 1'( ...... _ ...... ~ ... •tto!l ·~ ...... , ...... ,.\••· 1)7.1 in it. In tlwir ttwnt·hurmin~ l':UY ycmr indottr And there's no obligation. You'll earn beginning with Anny ROTC. P1€€~~1:;~~:· ..... :1~ ~~~iJ~;.:.:::\·.:;; ... ~ ~~ plants frt'slwn tJu• nir,lwlp silt•JH't' nm•wlt•unu· $100 a month for 10 months each of tji\ ::'=~~-:.~:::.:·'· ·:~: :·~~~... · .. :·;,.'";,;, .. - ~: .. onnd .... nl'ah• yuur nwn dt•t•or no urli"''L t•tmld nwkh. II!III'P..,..I• .... ''" WI'. loti I-~ ...., 1•1 A•"•" \17.1 U--~·-· /'fl L-··~l .. l·ltloOO..... O/J!I ·~ :~~.... ~',':",."'t'"- ~:: u.,.~ro~ .. ·~~''"'""' ,,,,, 1•7.1 'e/Anny ROTC. · 25~. OH indoor Planta With Thls Ad & Wale& Forest I.D • ...... /.J''""''"''" Offer Good Thru Monday, Sept. 12 Learn what it takes to lead. ' Call:

Captain Floyd L. Griffin Military Science Department 761-5308/5309 • ... ·-~::: ~~~= ~;::::~·x:~:~;:.:.~ ...... • ~'1!':~:. ~=- :':~ ~.;7·.·:. ';;::::":!:';;·~~~~:·

•·~••••'•' •1- (,_, -··••·•·-· •u ... _.,_, ,.,..., ••-H""''''"''~'' ...... ,.,.,..,,.,,,, .. ,.,_..,...... , ..... Pill''"_.._,_,.,...,, •. ,.•. ,,,.,,,,,,.,~ .... ,,,, I' II; F FH; liT Frioln'. "•·pto·mho•r ~. I 'I~~. Ill II c;111.11 \'\II Ill \C:I\ Gilbert delivers address ARA. reoovating

B~·l.ynn Trihbh• ( 'omtctl fur ( 'ivil l.ibt>rlit•s. !'oll!'l'lflt•t•." Stafl Writ(•r ThP major thrusl of (: i lbet·t •·uu,·lndetl by snackbar location (iilht•t1's brit>f Spl'Cl'h Wr of dt>fense. delivered t hou~ht. "To stand up fur than unly a t'llllltnon . Staff Writer wall back 10 feet, and a stage th<' main address at the nnpopular ideas is difficult l;mguag1•. 1\lsn sha•·ed is the will be built. opening Convocation last anc! dangerous," he said. "Hut hclit>f in allowing dissent in ARA food services will The finish date of the Tuesday. re11 ffirming tht> long pain is the prier uf in­ "!'nntrovt•rsy with l'OUrtesy." spend an estimated 80 to 90 project is Oct. 1. t•stabli~hed ties of England dependent thought in a Also present at t•onvocation thousand dollars to ·com­ ARA administrator Chuck ancl tht> United States and democracy." was Lanny Wadkins, former pletely renovate the snackbar Hess said that the renovation l'Illphasizing the importance Also stressed was the joint WI<' student and recent winner and coffeehouse this fall. plans had been discussed by of independent thought. role the United States and of Uw PGA. Wadkins spoke · Over 50 thousand dollars ARA and the university Born in 1927, Gilbert at­ (ireat Britain play in NATO. about his days at the · worth of entif:ely new kitchen during the spring of 1976, but tended St. John's College. "WI! two countries devote the university and expressed facilities and machinery will that it was not until the end of Oxford, and New York highest proportion of our regrets that he never be installed in the snackbar, last April before plans were University where he received income to defending freedom graduated. He also wished the including new fryers, broiler, completed. A delayed a doctor of philosophy degree and we alone rely S()lely on freshman class well saying, grill, refrigerator and toaster delivery date on millwork in international economics. \'Olunteer forces. It is very "I hope you have as much fun . units. from subcontractors · to He is a member of the Fabian important that we preserve as I had." The snackbar's decor will George W. Kane, who is the Society, the Hoyallnstitute of the values that lead Il!en and Also speaking was Edgar E. be changed to a dark green contractor for the project, lntemational Affairs and the women to make such a Folk, WF professor emeritus carpet, bentwood chairs, pushed back .the work of English. After teaching woodgrain type tables and schedule from summer to this• Chaucer and journalism for gold walls. Entrances will be fall. Hours: Mon.-Sat. many years, Folk retired in made to provide access to the Hess was skeptical about 10-9 1967. ReDovatlon Is IUiderway for tbe new mackbar area~ n shoald be C8lpiete lly()etober 1: coffeehouse and the Kane's Oct. 1 projection date. Thruway Lower Mall Folk's speech centered on gameroom. . The floor plan for the snack­ lnexl to Hid'olk concluded with an refundable deposit of $150 bv Estimated costs are in mission is required. ($600) - German 150, ·Sellner - Thursday, Sept. 15. Par­ parentheses. persons and the coffeehouse OHer: homage for President James - Business 236, Hylton - "Man Spricht Deutsch Auch will seat 76. · Ralph Scales, pointing to "his ticipants should consult the - Anthropology 305, Evans - "International Business." In Osterreich." ($1000) tremendous list of ac­ course instructor prior to "Conflict and Change ·~:m Thursday he said. ($850) - History 173, Barnett • "The aim is more variety of complishments" and said, Roatan Island," Honduras. ..: Economics 172, Bidwell • "History in England." ($850- food, a nicer look and better An ounce of tobacco free with this ad. Offer "James Ralph Scales is Information concerning (Cost: see instructor) passports, vaccinations, ''International Economics." 950) service and supervision," said already listed among the -Anthropology 307, Woodall ($750) - Politics 241, Moses • Hess. good through Sept. 16 health insurance, visas and - "Archaeology of Meso- great presidents of Wake - Education 272, Preserlm • "Politics in Mexico." Food services will be ex- Forest." extra expenses is available America." ($600) from the course instructor. - Biology 345, Dimock and " Geography Study Tour." - Psychology 250, Beck • panded to inelude pizza, ice ($800) "Psychology in Europe." cream, frozen yogurt, Reynolda Manor Haircutters ·r·-,=>»%*->"«<··~7=:-ml i;E:.:.11..1·,!::.i ~Ai:;:~:: Welcomes Ridteie>p fl •" CITY You Wake Forest Deacons' !~!l~~ J~,~~~y. l. Mff17~tr-v I;:;: ..;;- "The ,l:~.;=::,""= Contemporary English ~Y:~:~ s~~Yo ;::: NEW to · $6.91 LP'S---' $4.99 RECORDINGS [j[j ~" L [~lltT•h•ea.tr•e•."•(•$85-0-.950-o•r•l•es•s•)•to-11.:30-p •. m•. •s•un•d•a•y.--. visit our staff $7.91 TAPES- $5.99 Records. Tapes­ Freddie King-( With E. C.) Linda, Debbie, W.H., Paul, Lloyd Stereo Equipment Heatwave-Too Hot to Handle HeadGear& Crawler-Crawler College Beverage *Blowcuts Clothes Bob Marley-&odi, - Next to McDonald's on *Perms ROL'TE40 Styx-Grand Illwion Reynolda Rd. *Haircolor Doobie BroThers-Fault LiM CHURTON ST. Linda Rondstat-Simple Open til 1'5(1 ~RIDGETOP Dres~m r 1:00 p.m. Both ladies and men's haircutting Friday and Saturday "JtNK RD. Andy Gibb-Flowing River6 Blue-Nighr-rime Flight Good Luck in Your This week's special. hot only: Season to Come! Foghat-Liue RESTAURANT and PUB Old Milwaukee ~lll 107 LOCKLAND AVENUE • WINSTON SALEM, N.C. • 725-6444 llll $5.91 por ccue plus tai Hours: 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily 1250Churton St., 722-0lll, :;:: Mo'tl:~n.Ur&.ll a.m. -11 p.m: "·· · !:!; • '"7'·.,_ Reynolda Manor Shopping Ce'!.ter 724-7231 · Winston-salem !;:; Fri. & Sat. 'til midnight !l!; *Offer expires September 12 ~ » :·:•.. Sun. 4 p.m. -II. p.m.. .•:•:•.. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~=~=!=~=~=~=~:!:~:!:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::

Open 'til3 a.m. Friday and Saturday Staley's Open Hearth Restaurant • night -By Tom- Across from Reynolda Manor Shopping Center on Reynolda Road. A Welcome Back Special Open Hours: for the Week of Sept. 9 through Sept. 15 6 aom. til2 a.m. Monday· Thursday 6 a.m. 'til3 a.m. Thursday•s Friday & Saturday Special 7 a.m. 'till a.m. Look here ladies! Sunday A lady's size J uliene salad -­ ham, cheese, turkey, boiled . egg, choice of dressing and iced te~ '1.30

We have "to go" orders Call 723-9703 and ask for Tom. If we have it we will wrap it. Old Gold and Black, Section Two, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. McGiamary leads . ' e 1n the Deacs • ACC football begins page 9 IS ea • ' Lon 1ve• roc

By'. J Fitzgerald years. Steeleeye Span is another highly successful Staff Writer . folk-rock outfit. David Sancious, former member of Bruce Springstein's E Street Band, and Tone is an The great national outpouring of -grief that exciting jazz-rock act. followed Elvis Presley's recent death was fully as However, none of these performers really have sig~ificantas the man's passing. Those long lines in anything to do with rock and roll, which has its own front of Graceland Mansion told something of the separate set of conventions. It is, first and foremost, state of our modern society -·what it has discarded music about being, young. It's about high school, and retained from a tune when our country was, cars, romances and sock hops. Crude, basic and . perhaps, more confident of its own future. exciting. To a generation of younger Americans, it was all a little bewildering. They could not, of course, The Ruin of Us All? possibly have _known what had happened. They · knew Elvis as a movie star in a long string of B­ .movies and later as an overweight Las Vegas en- tertainer. . The Beatles were largely responsible for a- trend He was popular with them, to be sure. Those away from those elementary, pounding patterns movies, as bad as they were, made huge amounts of toward a more complex style that borrowed from an money. But how could anyone familiar with only impressive array of musical sources. those aspects of Elvis' career understand a headline "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" like "The King Is Dead"? was the single most influential albmn during this But to millions of Americans, many of them change in direction. Even Leonard Bernstein was middle-aged, he was "The King," and each one of impressed by it. Almost overnight, rock was them considered his death a personal disaster. legitimized. Many of them couldn't have expressed the loss Most of the young generation were overjoyed; they felt.- Some of them, perhaps, felt a little of their they didn't have to be embarrassed anymore about . own vitality leave them. their music. Only a very, very few expressed This isn't, however, a history of Elvis Presley, nor reservation. is it a history of rock music. Elvis' death raises Nik,Cohn, in ~'Rock From the Beginning," quoted some questions about the evolution of rock and roll. Bert Berns, a successful pop songwriter: "Those A reappraisal may be in order. boys have genius, They may be the ruin of us all." Modern rock music needs to be measured by the The Beatles were an exceptionally talented group , criteria of its own fresh and exciting beginning. and their new style worked for them. Most of their imitators lacked that talent, and a lot of turgid, - psychedelic music went b~ the board. Modern Music The producer became a -superstar in his own Staff Photo by Steve Duin right, and mind-blowing effects became obligat~ry. If you choose to believe Don McLean, rock music The Beatles made some very good music after died a long, long time ago. There is "modern "Sgt. Pepper," but, to paraphrase Cohn, what did music," to be sure, but the peculiar phenomenon of rock ever have in common with "good music"? It rock and roll died during the cynical late '60s· wasn't vulgar, it wasn't funny, and it tried not to be It is true that rock and roll will never again have meaningless. It was, for the most part, just the tremendous sociological impact it had initially. cleverly-engineered sound .. But is the music itself gone forever? There are some taiented modem groups that iaii One of the problems in answering this question is into this category. Yes, Genesis and the Moody the tremendous proliferation rOck music has un- Blues are some of the more prominent examples, Inside dergone in the last 20 years. Since the early years, it each of which has spawned a nuniber of imitative has merged with practically every imaginable spin-offs, all characterized by the same dense or- · ·-="'" musical form. Elvis himself aided in the process by chestral textur~s and quasi-cosmic lyrics. fusing black rhythm and blues with white country Rolling Stone's John Swenson, in his review of Preseason aii-ACC and western. Yes's latest album, "Going For The One," makes We now have classical rock, rock opera, jazz- some perceptive comparisons between this brand of rock, folk-rock, raga-rock, space-rock, reggae-rock music and science fiction. Technology reigns. and any other hyphenated form you might care to· It isn't an indictment of technology per se. The invent. There was . a rv · ~roup, now mercifully modern studio is just a tool, and only when it takes The conference race obscured, that did an chui.Un of Gregorian chants. precedence over the music itself is it offensive. ·'Most ofthis·musicis tasteless and self•indulgent:. Boston's ·~More Than A Feeling" is an example of """'~-- ..,_,_ nf r>onrc:p · Tll)tAhlP P.xcent.ions in every how sophisticated recording techniques cai:l PAGE 'I'Wo rrida,;sep.e..i-•. i•n. ·owooi.o ANo aL..:a Rock reflects- U. S. culture

(Continued from page One) Maybe the kids don't have an That's really an impossible By their reasoning, the direction in popular music ..:.. a outlook at all. Perhaps they just thing to predict, however. tremendous acclaim that greeted movement away from pounding Happily, there is still a huge buy up whatever is offered to Several years ago, the national James Taylor's debut, along with hard rock and toward sensitive market for simpler, less them. news magazines fell flat on their the popularity of other pop lyrical messages. pretentious music. The Rolling Whatever the case,. there are faces by predicting the "cooliJig balladeers like Joni Mitchell and Stones, the Who and the Kinks, several performers who are of rock." Neil Young, signified a new (ContinuedonpageSix) still successful, are strong making basic, affirmative and reminders of rock's earlier era. commercially successful rock· Also, the Animals have been music. Bruce Springsteen, resurrected in a recent release. Southside Johnny and the Asbury In addition to the originals, Jukes and Graham Parker are second and third-generation three prime examples. performers like Ted Nugent, Springsteen survived the "rock Aerosmith and Kiss are living poet" buildup and two hit-or-miss Manifesto proof that power chords are still albums to produce "Born To economically lucrative. Run," which remains as good an A distinctly modern example as any of the "state of Lionel Trilling once said that the Wake Forest students tend to phenomenon, punk-rock, takes the art" in modern rock music. purpose of education is the shaping of communicate with one ·another on a the basic rock ethic, updates it His lyrics, though not simple, one'~ self. To be fully educated, howev~r, ''lowest common denominator" level. and carries it to the point of deal with commonplace teen reqwres an awareness of both academics And while we don't expect these few lunacy. It is a categorical concerns, and his music invests and nonacademics. pages to create an intellectual nirvana rejection of all things even the most painful messages In the past, students have been here, we hope they will provide topics for complicated. Brutal, direct l}Tics with a desperate nobility. unaware of the myriad cultural and discussion besides Lu Leake, beer or the are chanted over rhythm tracks He has already established artistic offerings nearby - by no fault of Baptists. . that cut like a razor. himself as one of the most their own (except, perhaps, their Obviously the limitations of time, The Ramones are probably the exciting and moving live indifference). They simply haven't had· space and money have prevented our best American punk-rock band. performers in a long time. Stories access to the information. Hence, The cover~ng all the possible events in the On the cover of their first release, of skeptical concert.;;goers being Gazette. area. But our planned four issues this the group poses in front of some reduced to actual tears are The Gazette, here in its glorious first year are a start. crwnbling tenement wall, four corrunonplace. edition, is an Old Gold and Black They not only should provide topical impossibly scroungy punks in Springsteen is now, of course, a supplementary section to generate that information, but stimulate interest in leather jackets and dingy tennis media superstar (those Time and flow of information and to create an similar publications. The rest is up to shoes. Newspaper covers ensured that), awareness of the available activities. It you. Inside, the lyrics are almost and his new-found fame brought covers not just the fine arts, but' also folk So start shaping. moronic in their bluntness. with it the inevitable problems. culture, rock and roll and sports. · Loudmouth'' is illustrative: Recently, he was involved in a Several book reviews · and essays of Steve Futrell lawsuit that kept him from the interest to (l!tudents will be included. Editor You're a loudmouth baby recording studio. His new albwn, You better shut it up due at the end of the year, is one I'm gonna beat you up of the most eagerly awaited rock Cause you're a loudmouth albwns in years. At the moment, babe there's nobody better. Well, rock songs have always been sexist- the Rolling Stones' Southside Johnny "Under My Thumb" is a classic . Southside Johnny and the example- but there's something Asbury Jukes connect less missing here. ' powerfully, but their good- Something with Style natured rhythm-and-blues sound is infinitely appealing. Rock and roll has always been Like Springsteen, Southside· affirmative, good-time music. Johnny came up through the New Even when the hero dies, he Jersey barband circuit; he and always goes in a great his band have never forgotten motorcycle flame-out their origins. something with style. On their latest album, ''This Punk rock doesn't make its Time It's For Real," the Jukes listeners feel good. In fact, they pay off some musical debts by are likely to start punching each inviting the Coasters and the other. They have taken to Drifters, two of the original good­ piercing their cheeks with safety time bands, to help on a couple of pins to signify their allegiance to cuts. the music and its message, from Bruce Springsteen, who grew the Sex Pistol's chart hit uGod up with Southside, once said that Table of Contents·· Save The Queen": "no future for Southside was the strangest you." character he had ever met, and As far as I know, Elvis Presley his favorite pasttime was or Chuck Berry never made their insulting anyone within earshot. page3 ••• Boo•• about the '601 are reviewed by Mark fans feel like mutilating Maybe he's just another punk Leuchtanbereger. themselves. redeemed by the music. The It can be argued that the music Asbw-y Jukes come through as a and the message aren't really at band of limitless good humor. fault -- only the audience's They're one musical step beyond reaction to them. Perhaps young · the vacuities of "beach music," page4 .... Winston-Salem has a number of worthwhile · people have merely incorporated but they're for warm summer museums to visit. the violence of society at large, nights on (or under) the and our rock entertainers are boardwalk. merely feecfuig back to them Graham Parker and his band page 5 ••• what they have learned to accept the Humour come out of England Laura Elliott previews concerts and recitals for and, eventually, to demand. with lean "R and B" stylings. the next month. Maybe "Loudmouth" is really Parker's messages are darker no more vicious than Elvis' than Springsteen's or "Hound Dog." Maybe it is Southside's: His music avoids page 6 ••• An Olcl Gold and Blade survey reveals some society's perception to the their tendencies toward romanticism; Parker adopts the predictable answen ~bout students' favorite message that has changed. restaurants.. When Elvis sang "Hound Dog," stance of the cool, aloof loner. ( it was raw and cruel, but There are many other everybody knew that Elvis performers who are making worshipped his mother and w~nt highly successful rock music~ page9 .... The 1977 college footbaU season starts Saturday. to church every Sumla·y. Maybe· other than the three I have today's kids have been whipped mentioned above. They deserve into accepting a violent, cynical special mention because they are outlook. Alice Cooper used to say all relatively new perfonners and that his audiences were crazier may represent the future of pop than he was. music. . ·' . ' PAGE THltEE t'ridny,Sept~n'b~·r9, 1917, OUJ GOI..D AND BLACK Books: Why 'did Sixfi~s fail? t: - a nding 1sitive By Mark Leucbtenberger ' more the work of a single year European existentialism and intellectual-as-technician ... l' well as the mutual effect that the ...- rather than a decade. I do n~t crisis theology became an in­ It was this rivalry that news of the day and the coverage . Mark Leuchenberger, of Uma, doubt that there were valtd calculably great influence on the Dickstein believes was the cause of that news had upon each other. ) Peru, is Managing Editor of The reasons for their lack of progress, mood of the fifties--shorn, for much of the radicalization of The subjective "New Jour­ Student and an honors' student in however. however, of their political the intellectual during the sixties. nalism" of Thomas Wolfe and English. At present, Wake Forest is matrix ... What makes all this "The ascendancy of the Norman Mailer, writing that headed by a board of trustees poignant is the simple fact that technocratic forces in the sixties Dickstein calls "a running ''Gates of Eden: American composed of blind reactionaries. though the intellectuals lost in­ would fuel the dissidence of autobiographical dialogue with Culture in the Sixties.'' Morris It is administered by a group. of terest in politics, politics itself academic intellectuals, the Nl'W the world," is explored. • Dickstein. Basic Books, Inc., people who pretend that the mo~ went marching on, shamefully­ Left, and the counterculturt'. There is also an excellent New York, 1977. · important proble~ on campus ts desperately in need of critical until that dissidence would bre~k chapter on the past four the destruction of quadrangle scrutiny and principled an­ up on the rocks of its own generations of black American HLoose Change: Three Women grass by foot and fire. It is at- tagonism." frustrations-its inability to af· writers, from the era of Richard of the Sixties., Sara Davidson. tended by apathetic students feet policy, to elect candidates, or Wright to that of James Baldwin, Doubleday, Garden City, New who, in cases where they do care What changed the intellectual even to preserve its o'\vn integrity then Eldridge Cleaver and LeRoi Jersey, HY/7. for something, either lack the atmosphere in the early sixties in the face of failure and .Jones. and most recently, Cecil courage of their convictions or was the polarization of two rival backlash''. Brown and Ishmael Reed. The When did the era of dreaming, degenerate into ludicrous van- American intelligentsias. On one author examines what seems to dalism. Any one .of these side was the group of alienated Dickstein's book is filled with scheming and high passion called writers-all kinds of writers. He be a recurring Oedipus complex "the sixties" actually come to an problems might have been intellectuals just mentioned. This in each new generation of black enough to prevent successful group was challenged and then profiles the progress of Jewish end? For some, it was in 1970, literature and Beat poetry of the writers--the compulsion of .. year of the Cambodia bombings attempts to make the college a superseded by the new class of writer·s to establish the value of liveable place. "'technocrats'~ - " 'technetronic' '50s. From Malamud, Bellow and and the shootings at Kent State. Ginsberg, he moves on to H(.lller their own work by negating tht· Others credit the economic Two recent books on the '60s, rather than humanistic, elitist impo!'tCJn<'e of their' then, may be helpful to aspiring rather. than participatory. In 1961 and Pynchon and the black hu­ crunch of 1973 with the renewal mor of the early '60s. His scope pn·dct·essors'. among the young of traditional campus revolutionaries who are the re1gn of the expert and the at a loss to figure out how it was whiz kid would begin in expands to cover the revolution in attitudes-e.g., the desire to have journalism during the decade, as 1( 'ontinut•d un pagt• St•,·en) a secure, ·well-paying job. No done in the good old days. "Gates Washington, the anointing of the matter which year one chooses, of Eden" is the highbrow volwne though, it is obvious that "The of the pair-a finely written, and Sixties" has been dead and tightly controlled book that seeks buried for some time now. to trace the origins of '60s culture The United States likes it this as well as to examine its facets. Street scene Saturday way, it seems. Recent attempts Dickstein, currently a literary • to preserve the sanctity of the critic and contributing editor of tattered corpse-the Kent State the "Partisan Review," was an undergraduate at Columbia work. protests over plans to build a By Al Fitzgerald a.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow and 1 University in the late '50s and :\ S<'hli t? offieia 1 termed tht• gymnasium on the site of the four Staff Writer p.m. to 7 p.. m. Sunday. The deaths-drew no national reaction early '60s, and he gives deser- featured performers this year c·onununity response excellent whatsoever. The tragedy that vedly close attention to the roots The Carolina Street Scene are Herbie Mann and the Family for last year's Street Scene. sparked a song and a rallying cry out of which the '60s grew. returns this weekend to the of Mann, Eddie Harris and the Herbie Mann and his band wtll for millions of students is of little The '50s are outlined as a streets of downtown Winston­ Mose Allison Trio. perform at 1:45 p.m. and 3:45 concern to today's students: they period of political and, less ap- Salem for two days of free music, In addition, there will be a p.m. on Saturday and at 2 p.m. are heirs to a different tradition. parently, cultural repression. displays and shows. variety of other attractions, and 5:30 p.m. on Sunday. The cold war and the Red scare This is the second year for the including the Winston-Salrm Times for Eddie Harris are Their adolescent years were had obviously restrictive effects Street Scene, a joint presentation Symphony, puppet shows, 1:15 p.m. and 4:45 p.m. Sat., 1 not marked by news of political upon American . .politics, says of Joseph Schlitz Brewing Co., acrobats, cloggers and a Spivey's p.m. and4:30 p.m. Sun. For Mose • rallies and campus riots, but by Dickstein, but the country's the Arts Council and other art Corner hollering contest. Over Allison, times are 11:15 a.m. and dollar crises and rolling waves of artistic and academic life suf- groups. 300 artists and craftsmen will be 2:45p.m. Sat., 1:30 p.m. and 4:30 inflation. They come to college, fered as welL Citing several Entertainment runs from 11 on hand with displays of their p.m. Sun. then, with more materialistic cases of university purges of goals than their predecessors, unhealthy free-thinkers, the and with the knowledge ·that author points out that the most practicing campus politics will do tragic result of such repression ·• nothing for their law or medical was the forceful depoliticization board scores. of American intellectuals, who Yet even though this year's •'while maintaining the cult of students may have no more isolation, simply abandQned conscious contact with sixties politics to pw-sue private myths culture than through their ·and fantasies, to d~vote their Beatles and Beach Boys an­ work to the closet intensities of thologies, the changes wrought the isolated sell or isolated by the previous decade affect personal relationships ... their daily lives. There are more courses devoted to· the study of ethnic minorities iii the average Fund 1977 college curriculwn than in that of 15 years ago. Some honors colleges no longer have ROTC programs, as they were removed during antiwar demonstrations. schqlar Most altered, however, is the social life of the average college A fund has been established student. The sexual revolution may be over, but the coun­ for Wake Forest students attending the Venice house terrevolution has been noticeably program. · · weak; the end of all-out ex­ The fund, established by perimentation has had no effect upon the vastly liberalized Bianaca Artom, lecturer in housing policies in dorms across . Italian is named in memory of the nation. her late husband, Camillo Artom. Wake Forest, of course, is a Provost Edwin G. Wilson different story. Uving here, one said the grants will be is sometimes beset by the feeling distributed beginning with the ~ that the campus, through some 1978 ~pring te.rm and \will unearthly time warp, has prirna:rily cover travel k* managed to extend the '50s right penses. Wilson encouraged into the '70s, thus skipping the any interested students to stop '60s altogether. at his office or to talk with Jon The heritage left us by the Reinhardt, director for the ''Well excuse me I'' college's "involved generation," Spring, 1978 Venice programs. dancing and non-mandatory ~hapel services, seems to bP.. Comedian Steve Martin wiD appear tn WaJt Chapel Sept.~ at 7:30p.m. t' A~ tUUK t'rida'. Sr-ptt'mber •• 1•77. OW GOLD AND BLACK Museums offer reptiles, homes

Reynolda House offers a visit B~· Lynn Knapp Assistant Editor into the old aristoricratic section of Winston-Salem. Special The history of Winston-Salem features to look for on the guided tour or on one's own are the a comes alive for the imaginative stately pipe organ and the n in the elegant rooms of Reynolda House and the crafts of Old American art collection. ~ Salem. The Nature Science Park d Museums in the area not only contains exhibits of live animals a as well as science and nature s recreate the city's history, but exhibits. A section of the animals also offer exhibits of nature and science, as in the Nature Science exhibits features reptiles native Park. to North Carolina. Special programs and lectures Old Salem features a bit of the are offered during the year; city's past in i~ reconstructed according to James Grant, an houses ~hich contain craftsmen artist who designed some of the who work their trades in the exhibits. same manner their ancestors did . ;·:·'.:i: : .. · ..-.: 200 years ag~- A garden, A museum which will open in Staff phot.o by Charlie· Prothro costwned hosts and hostesses October will feature Depression U you to go chasing white rabbits, then go the Nature Science Park on Museum Drive •. and graveyard also add to the era glass. The Blake Museum waDt to atmosphere. A slide show is will be connected with the offered for those interested in a present antique mall at 326 S. detailed history of Old Salem. Main Street. little Theatre premiers

By Laura Elliot professional directors keeps the Goldman. Special student prices 1 Museums Staff Writer theatre current in new acting are available for the two dress r styles and ideas. rehearsals, Sept. 21 and 22. Winston-salem boasts one of The Little Theatre also Blake's Museum of Depression Era Glass-326 S. Main Street; 10 the oldest and largest community maintains the largest costume· The second show, "My Fat a.m. to9 p.m. Monday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday theatres in the nation. The collection in the Southeast. Friend," will be cast in ea.rly and Saturday, and Sunday 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Winston-Salem Little Theatre October. The theatre still needs opens its 43rd season this month Actors and backstage crews actors, backstage workers _and Nature Science Park- Musewn Drive; 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sundav, 9 with its usual series of four plays are all volunteers. WF students . ushers for each production. a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Saturday. · and one musical. frequently audition or work on · The Little Theatre is one of the the productions. Other productions include "The Man Who Came to Dinner," few community theatres in the Master classes are often "Nightwatch," and "Musical Old Salem--1:30 p.m. to 4:30p.m. Sunday and 9:30a.m. to 4:30p.m. nation rWl by a professional staff. offered for adults and are taught Gypsy." Monday to Saturday. A visiting director, usually from by the visiting directors. New York, is hired for each Student rates for season tickets production. Clyde Rader, Reynolda House- This year, the Little Theatre are available. All performances managing producer for the will open its season Sept. 23, with are held in the Hanes Community theatre, said this importing of "Lion in Winter." by James Center, 610 Coliseum Drive.

Theatre Dinner Theatre- "The Mind with the Dirty Man," at Greensboro's Barn Dinner Theatre Sept. 7 to Oct. 9. University Theatre-U.S. Institute of Technical Theatre Conference and Workshop will meet at the Fine Arts Center, Sept. 16 and 17. '" Little Theatre- "Lion in Winter," at Arts Council Theatre. 610 Coliseum Drive, 8:15 p.m. Sept. 23 to Oct. 2. University Tbeatre-"Last Meeting of the Knights of the .White Magnolia," at Fine A.rts Center, 8:15p.m: Oct. 7 to 8 and 12 to 15. Dinner Theatre-"The Saga of Roaring Gulch," at Greensboro's Barn Dinner Theatre, beginning Oct. 12. Arts Council Theatre-"Rumplestiltskin," will be presented by Fanfare productions at Arts Council Theatre, 610 Colisewn Drive, Oct. 12 to 14 and 17 to 21. Drama-"Much Ado About Nothing," will be perfonned by the Pierettes of the Salem College Drama Deaprtment at the Fine Arts Center on Salem campus, 8 p.m. Oct. 13 to 16. Adventure Theatre- "Young John Kennedy," performed by the P.A.R.T. Foundation in the Adventure Theatre at 610 Colisewn Drivest Oct. 25 and 26.

Play-"Private Lives," at Reynolda House, 8:15p.m. Oct. 27 to 30. Theatre- "Cabaret," ·presented at High Point Theatre and Exhibition Center at 220 East Commerce Street, High Point, Oct. 28.

University Theatre-Series of lab shows will be announced at a later date.

Staff Photo by Ken Magic-Magic show will be presented at the Hauser Student Union of ~a'lliS Winston-Salem State University, 7 p.m. Oct. 31. - Mushrooms, 88 well as many other plants and animals, dwell in the realistic e:lbibits of tbe Nature ScfeDee Park on Museum Drive. .PAGE FIVE Friday, Septemher9,1977. OLD GOLD AND BLACK

••• • • ommun1 0 ers mus1c

By Laura Elliott Staff Writer

For music lovers, Wake Forest and Win~ton-Salem provide many excellent concerts and workshops. All programs by the WF music department, the Artists Series and Reynolda House are open to students. · Off-campus are the Winston­ Salem Symphony, . SECCA. Chamber Series, N.C. School of the Arts music department and Salem College music department. According to Jim Johnson, business manager of the Winston • Symphony, "There are very few nights during the season that you can't go to some type of performance in Winston-salem." In addition to student and faculty recitals, other WF concerts will include programs by the jazz pand, orchestra and wind ensemble, under the direction of Davidson Burgess. The touring choir and chorale wiD. Symph~ny in Artist union are directed by John The Milwaukee Symphony replace the Royal Philharmonic the Series Oct. 20. Mochnik. •· The Wake Forest Artist Series opens its twentieth season this .an~ . McCraken and pianist The orchestra has both This month, Janice HarsanyL Ph1hppe ·· Entremont. All from Chapel Hill will also year with violinist Itzhak perform next month. professional performers and soprano, will perform Sept. 23. Perlman on Sept. 20. The series performances are in Wait Chapel The Winston-salem- Symphony, teachers as well as amateurs. On Sept. 31, the school's first began at the old campus and at 8:15p.m. · directed by John Iuele, will open The concerts are all performed in orchestra will perform works by traditionally features Reynolda House also offers a its thirty-first season Oct. 11. The Reynolds Auditoriwn. Beethoven. internationally famous artists. chamber music series. Their program will feature Peter Orth, ' Another large source for The orchestra will perform The series also will include the season will open with the Trio a finalist in the Van Cliburn concerts is the N.C. School of the Oct. 8, and the Chamber Choir Milwaukee Symphony, Ramson D' Ansches from Cologne, Piano Competition, in a Greig Arts, the first state supported Oct. 14. All performances are in Wils~n (flutist), Christopher Germany, on Oct. 15. The piano concerto. Crawford Hall on the campus. Parkening (guitarist), Warfield Carmina Consort of early music school of arts in the nation.

Music Recital--Eugene Crawford Hall, 8:15 p.m. Oct. 8. Maupin, harpsicordist, will perform in Shirley Recital Hall in Orchestra--Peter Orhh. guest the Fine Arts Center on Salem pianist, and the Winston-S,alem College campus, at 8: 15 p.m. Symphony will perform in Sept. 20. Reynolds Auditorium. 8:15 p.m. Oct. 11. Artist Series-Itzhak Perlman violinist, will perlorm at Wait Concert--Moravian Chorale Chapel, 8: 15 p.m. Sept. 20. w~th Hohn Mochnik, conductor. will present the Moravian Music Chamber Mosie-N.C. School of Foundation Friends Conc~rt in the Arts will present a Beethoven Hanes AuditoriWl1 at the Fine memorial concert at Crawford Arts Center in Salem College. Hall, 8: 15 p.m. Oct. 1. 8:15 Oct. 14. Workshop-American Guild of Jazz Quartet-St. Loms Jazz Organists will present a choral Quartet will perform in High and vocal workshop for local Point Theatre, 8 p.m. Oct. l5. choirs and directors on Oct. 1. Chamber Music-Trio d'Anches Recital-Franke Haasemann from Cologne, Germany will will perform at the First present the \Yake Forest Presbyterian Church, 8: 15 p.m. Chamber Musk· Concert at Oct. 2. ~~ynolda House. 8:15 p.m. Oct. Faculty Recital-N.C. School of the Arts will present the recital at Artist Series--Milwaukee Crawford Hall, 8:15 p.m. Oct. 3. Symphony Orchestra n·iiJ perform at Wait Chapel, 8:.15 Harpsichord Recital--Marie p.m. Oct. 20. Jager will perlorm in Shirley Recital Hall at Salem College, Organ Recital--Margaret B;J~;m. Oct. 3. Mueller will perform in ShirleY Spanish Music-For voice and Recital Hall at Salem Colleg;, guitar, Elizabeth Suder burg, 8:15 p.m. Oct. 24. soprano, and· David Starobin Ramsey Lewis ('o!lrer.t-­ guitarist, will perform i~ Lycewn Event will perform at . Crawford Hall at the N.C. School Winston-salem State Universitv of the Arts, Oct. 7. · in Kenneth R. Willium's Auditorium, 8 p.m. Oct. 27. Violinist, Itzhak Perlman will perform at Waft Chapel, 8:15p.m., Sept. 20. N .C.S.A. Orchestra--At Rock and roll faces Si. unc;ertclin future Con1 Dick~ job of tellectu Continued from pase two Peter Frampton is capable of . . . - making some good rock music, as to adr . Well, it didn't happen. There's '.'Do You Feel Like I Do'.' from his events an incredibly ·large young teeord- _live albwn illustrates. But ·ms had lit1 buying public out there, arid any latest, "I'm In You," is one of tbe love-in~ attempt to predict the buying more emotionally vapid of tbe charac1 safe to patterns ot that group is doomed recent releases. It sounds to failure. · pleasant enough, but it isn't good They also forgot that the rock and roll. , perfonn~rs themselves change The limitations of thiS type of· their musical orientation. Neil· music shouldn't ever be Young went from the melodic, forgotten. It's really just the ballad-dominated "After ·The aural equivalent of the comic·. Gold Rush" tQ record some of the strip. The Rolling Stones rawest, most emotionally brutal recognize· it-"lt's only rock and reco~ in rock history. · roll, but I like it.'' . · The ljstener, then, is faced with . Yeah, I like it too-and I'd a huge, endlessly varieg market. rather read the comic strips than . Tb~ problem· is to separate the "Ethan Frome" any day.. solid stuff from the dreck. Pop culture is with us to stay, · If. all the people that ·bought and the best of it may· be more Elv1s records actually ·liSten to indicative . of the state of · ow- AI them,· it might help. . society than almost any other Passion is the· vital element. source. According to the·age-d~ test, if a Rock is the most widely roc~ ·song . does~'t pick you up listened-to musical form today, it bodily and move you downstream record sales are any indication. a- little bit, then it isn't any good. For the past 20 years, it · has . Reek ll11llle II eva)wkte-eva rlglat llere 011 urpas. CeBege UDioa Cefteet.H freqMidly pnHidl measured the pulse of yo~g · performen during weekends. See future announcements. staff Photo by H. Jones people everywhere-their hoJ)es, fears and aspirations. And, as the collective shudder that ran through this nation recently . illustrates, age never ,. City offers {ood variety really removes those feelings. Complete listing of· albums ·· mentioned in article: . The Animals, "Before We Were By Lynn Kanpp Garden, and Hardee's steaks. more· towards a late nineteenth So Rudely Interrupted," Jet. Assistant Editor Hamburgers. Aside from the normal century effect. Darryl's· will The favorite restaurant in the selection of hamburger, pizza suggest a "1913 prison Graham Parker, "Howlin' · Wirid," Mercury; "Heat From the nearly 200 eating medium price range for usually and steak restaw·ants, Winston- atmosphere.'' three to six dollars was The Salem also offers a number of Restaurants which offer foods treatment.'· Mercury. est.a biishments in Winston-salem Ramones, "The Ramones," an,..:. surrounding communities, Station, which speciaJizes in restaurants with unique not often found in the Winston­ atmosphere or seldom found Salem area as well as a unique Sire. W;.J k e Forest students may Italian food and salad bar. David Sancious, chvose a variety of foods from Tuesday's Eating Establishment foods. · atmosphere are Pollirosa and ranked a close second. Also in the Several restaurants such as Berry's. · · · · ·'Transformation 1The Speed Of crepes to roast beef sandwiches. Love) '' Epic. Everyone has his own favorite top five were Sam's Gourmet, K Zevely, Hou~e, T~esday's and ·Pollirosa features a pioneer Southside Johnny · and the ._.:.ting place, and in a survey and W Cafeteria and 220 Seafood. Darryl s •. wh1ch w11l open soon, . atmosphere along with base the1r appeal not only upon -Grandma's Homecooked Food. Asbury Jukes, "I Don't Want To t~onducted by the Old Gold and Hugo's Rotisserie in the Hyatt House and the Staley's food but also on atmosphere .. The European atmosphere of Go Home," Epic,_ "This Time It's Black 100 students discussed For Real/' Epic. _ their preferences. restaurants ranked first in Both Zevely House and Old ·.Berry's blends · with s'uch Bruce Springsteen, ''Greetings McDonald's hamburger chain students' preferences of Salem Tavern ~raw their decor offerings as crepes. · · From Asbury Park", .Columbia; : headed the list of favorite fast expensive restaurants. Other from colonial times. Other restaurants, · too "The Wild, The Innocent and the ·· ..· food places. Others included, in favorites included Jordan's Le Tuesday's and Darryl's are numerous to mention, offerlheir E Street Shuffle," eolumbia; : order of preference: Wendy's Old Chateau, Jordan's Le Charolais period restaurants. Tuesday's .own specialties - .. each to suit a "Born to Run," Columbia. Fashioned Hamburgers, Pizza and Le Bistro, all noted for atmosphere, however, is directed ·starving student's needs.

Restaurants

Be.r-ry's- 514 S. Stratford Road; Sunday through Thursday, 11:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. and Friday and Saturday, 11:30 a.m. to 1 a.m. Darryl's 1913 Restaurant- Brownsboro Road. Hug~·s Rotisserie- Hyatt House, 300 W. Fifth Street. K and W CafeterJas.;_ 720 Coliseum Drive and other locations. Le Ckiteau-147 S. Cherry Street. Pomr~sa- Hollyberry Lane; King. Salem Tavern- Sunday, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Tuesday through Thursda ::, 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and Friday and Saturday 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sam's Gourmet- Thruway.Shopping Genter. 22fl ~"-"'-1food- Pfafftown. Sta.ie~··,s Restaurants- 2803 Reyriolda Road and various locations. TI1e :;~ation- 1796 Silas-Creek Parkway; Ste'·~"'•; Itali_a Restaurante- 112 Oakwood Drive; Monday through Saturri2: -,', 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. . . Tnc.;;/:;.y's Eating Establishment- Hanes Mall; Monday through SaturJ:-.y, 11:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. and Sunday, noon to 10 p.m. Ze1"·,·~ :: House- 901 W. Fourth Street; Sunday through Thursday, 11: :10 LJ.. , '1. to 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., and Friday and Saturday, 6 +(' ·fi am P• m • ..~. ·' . I • •

. StaH photo by Charlie Prothro European atmosphere and crepes attract. customers of all ages to Berry's on South StraUord Road. PAGE SEVEN Friday, September9,1977, OW GOLD AND BLACK es Sixties viewed realistically Continued from page Three involve the reader by enveloping the same reasons, only to him in a medium of sights, discover after several years that Dickstein does an admirable sounds and news of the period. she was not even physically at­ job of outlining the '60s in­ One chapter begins, "The times tracted to him. were chan gin', the waters had ; capable of tellectual history. He is the first The "revolution" then became ck music, as to admit, however, that the grown. President Kennedy was an out: ''Susie was attracted to events in this sphere · probably shot. The Beatles arrived. We'd )o" from his the hippies for ~ifferent reasons: es. But ·rus had little to do with the riots, better start swimming or sink being a hippie meant you could love-ins, sit-ins and be-ins that like a stone. Timothy Leary and run naked in the forest, get away is one of the Richard Alpert were run out of apid of the characterized the decade: "It's ·from your husband and fuck safe to say that few kids became Harvard for fooling with everyone else." Her eventual It sounds LSD .... " it isn't good u.u~o...cuo, hippies, or freaks in the separation from her husband and sixties from reading ''Eros and Or "Jackie Kennedy married her efforts to find a home for Aristotle Onassis. Russia invaded thiS type of Civilization" or "Growing Up herself and her little son Sam are Abusrd." Czechoslovakia. Civil fighting not painted with the rhetoric of ever be broke out in Northern Ireland and ly just the Similarly, the rioters of Watts, the "free'' '60s, but in their wan the comic·. Detroit, and Newark had not Biafra and everywhere we heard somber colors. Unlike the other ng Stones learned their discontent from the sound of marching charging two inore establishment-oriented lly rock· and LeRoi Jones, Stokely Car- feet." Boy. The author's pen­ women, Susie is an authentic . , or even Martin Luther chant for using rock lyrics, example of how far the revolution Like the children of the especially Stones' lyrics, as ~oo-and rd . often was from ideology or ideals. middle class, they were commentary on news events, Both books generate a kind of :: strips than probably causes the book to lose day .. out of the logic of their own nostalgic longing for susceptible though it sometimes took · effectiveness for readers u.nable readers, regardless of ·whether t us to stay, · language of ideology to to win the guessing game. they happened to be in junior high ay·be more them that their But journalist that she is, ;ate of · oar "' school when the ·~os ended. To mattered.'' Davidson is determined to fling any other latecomers, the era is a state of For this reason, the book is well facts at us and allow us to make mind rather than a collection of conlPll~mtmtE~d by an Everyman up our own minds. Thus we are rri(!mories, renewable anytime llst widely ""'"''"'"'t such as ."Loose Change." told about everything. Sexual "Street Fighting Man" or "Ohio'' rmtoday~ it Davidson's book is no more episodes are frequent, and if the are played at top volume. The r indication. emphasis seems to be mostly the ars it bas. · less than what it purports to state of mind ends with the 1 : the stories of three women author's. music, however, and it's time to ~ of yo~g. attended Berkeley in the · Of the three women, Susie is hit the books again. The l.SAT's their hof)es, '60s and went on to careers the most interesting. A Berkeley ;. and MedCAT's are never easy, A Dix.ie Classic the fields of art, writing and radical who knew absolutely but once one learns to ignore the iv~ shudder nothing about politics, she simply whittling away of social and students anxiously await the arrival of the Dixie Classic this nation admired the way her boy friend ~me age never Writing in a straight jour­ academic freedoms, it becomes Fatr. Few, however, go to play bingo. style with almost no spoke to crowds. She later much. easier to concentrate. ~ feelings. lysis, Davidson attempts to married him for approximately of. albums »reWeWere !d,u Jet. , "Howlin' · ·· "Heat Miscellaneous ' The PooP Sheet ·y. Ramones,'' Fair will be held at Greensboro 1cious, SPORTS NEWSLETTER OF NORTH CAROLINA he Speed Of Coliseum Sept. 26 - Oct. 2. Garden-"Falling into Winter" AND THE y ·and the will be William Griffen's topic for . his one hour lecture, Reynolda n't Want To ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE Gardens, 7 to 8: 30 p.m. Sept. 27. 1is Tirrle-It's Poetry Reading--Frank Steel, a poet sponsored by "College , ,"Greetings 'Over two thousand fans ha\'L' Jii'L'ady subSLTib~..'d tu rhl' Friends," at Reynolda House, , .Col~bia; . at Oct. 3. PooP Shl'd. thl? first sports ncwskth.'r of \t)rth _C~1rolina and ::ent and the -A. - 4 Ice Show-Holiday on Ice will the ACC. availabk to you L'\dusivl'!y thrnu~h first-d~hs m~1il eolumbia; : - . . present "Refle~tions on Ice" at unbia. Agricultural l"L'~ruiting. prl?diL·tions. notes and quotL'S that L"~ln·t bl' Greensboro Coliseum, Oct. 11-16. found anywhl?rc but in The Pt)oP ShL'L't.

(id thl' INSIDF story with Til~..' Pl)t)p ShL'l'L bi-\\\'L'kly throuuh thl' school \'l'ar and monthly durin~ tlh' sum.nwr. ~ . . TWL'nty-four isSUL'S for S~-t.OO or S 1b.OO if paymL'llt is L'IH;lOSL'd with S}1L'L'iaJ Sllllkllt (lHIJ"t111 hL'il1\\.

1t Per Cant Discount on Bikes, The 1\)np ShL'l't cannpt h~..' purchasL'd ~tt 111..'\\·!-\~t~tnds.Ot"Lkr Accessories, and Repairs with nnw in timL' for thL' fot)tball '-'ditit)n. Wake Forest ID.

Nishi lei· ralcara Motebecan .. Peugeot

Motorized Bike ; ··

IM\.~ •••••••••••••u••••••••••••••••••~~ ~,, Make check payable t0 "We al:!to service all models and makes of Sp0rtslett£>r. Inc Box 647 Bikes" Durham, NC 277('2 Also have o wide selection of skateboards Logan Earthsltl Nome lie Prothro Bunger with precision wh.. ls Fiber Flight AddrE."~'S ------oad. Fr~d's Hobby Bicycle and Shop (it\ State.~ ?ir ------· PinehrfK)k l'laza Shol)l)in~t «:t»nter Tel•~1,hont> 767-2868 S 16 Student Prire PAGE EIGHT Friday, September 'J, 1977, OLD GOLD _AND BLACK

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Box 22 1 F I Morrisville, N. c.. 27650 I .1'1 I _ Please allow two to four weeks for delivery - - - · I 1 L------·------·---~-: • PAGE NINE Friday September 9, 1917, OLD GOLD AND BLACK 'Weil mixed education, labor paid by the poor to support the Attention is cultivated by one's intellectual effort eventually will The disparaging tone given to By Bill Roebuck standard of living enjoyed by the removing the distractions bear fruit, she says, ~~certainties words like "apprentice" and Staff Writer middle- class. waiting patiently to receive the of this kind are experimental. But "trade" is appropriate to her After her two brief stints as a truth or beauty'from the object of if we do not believe in them view, though it may seem un­ Last Tuesday, . August · 29, laborer were cut short by bad his attention. This power of at­ before experiencing them, if at necessary to many at Wake · signals the approaching three health, Weillater went to Spain t~mtion ·aids one's. spiritual least we do not behave as though Forest and other institutions. and one half decade mark since and served as a non-combatant development. we believed in them, we shall Says Weil, "Students must work the death of Simone· Weil. Born in with the Loyalists in the Spanish. · never have the experience that without any wish to gain marks, 1909, Weil .'was French a Civil.War, in an attempt to defend This has nothing to do with the leads to such certainties. There is to pass examinations, to win philosopher and Christian mystic her belief in freedom. An ac- evangelical tongue-talking or the a kind of contradiction here. school successes... applying famous both for her brilliance cident and Nazi occupation. puritanical piety common to so Above a given level, this is the and for her near-total iden­ themselves equally to all tasks prevented her return to France. much of the American student's case with all useful knowledge with the idea that each will help tification during her lifetime with She came to the United States in religious heritage. Nor is it one concerning spiritual progress. If form in them the habit 'Of at- the poverty-stricken, oppressed 1 force among numerous con- we do not regulate our conduct by workers of Europe. . 1943, and sailed then to Eng and flicting influences. It IS. the end of tention which is the substance of where she ate the near star.:. it before having proved it... we prayer.'' She scarificed a promising vation rations then allotted man. shall never transform it into academic career after attaining French workers. She caught Weil herself never joined the certainty." Certainly such an approach a graduate degree tuberculosis and died at the age Catholic Church despite her deep will be less successful than a in philoso~hy, having been religious sentiments. To her, the Another key concept for Well's pragmatic professional-school recognized as "far superior to the of thirty-four. Weil wrote essays and religious-secular dichotomy was conception of education is desire. approach. But its greater success rest of her generation." Instead, 11 epigrams on a variety of subjects a false one. One .finds the According to her, The in­ will be unrelated with its she chose the life of a· factory (four books of these have been religious in the world th~t is: call telligence can only be led by educational value. For Weil, an worker and, later,· fruit picker. it secular' if one pleasesJ This desire. For there to be desire awareness of one's failures is as This decision to live as did the published since her death). Her remarks on education, in her must be understood in order to there must be pleasure and joy in rewarding and as necessary to poor was an attempt to get essay on "School Studies" are appreciate both the distance the work. Where it is lacking one's education as success. beyond the patronizing efforts . between her concept of "spiritual there are no real students, but Failure develops the quality of common to most socially ·con­ ·especially appropriate for WF edueation. The full. title of the development" and th~t of most only poor caricatures of ap­ humility, usually a healthy sign scious intellectuals. essay-"Reflections on the Right traditional, organized religions, prentices, who, at the end of their of self-knowledge. As she clearly To live a middle class, and her affinity with many apprenticeship, will not even professor's existence in the midst Use of School Studies with a View to the Love '()f God" suggests her preoccupations of the modern, have a trade.'' of the suffering of the poor was existential literature. not only . morally repulsive to direction. For Weil, the central task of Weil,. but intellectually Though studies only ·develop a irresponsible, in its ,refusal :to education is· to develop a _ student's ·power ..; of attention. power of mental attention, the HENNY PENNY FRIED CHICKEN ·~ acknowledge the economic cost development eventually will affect the spiritual plane. Says College Plaza Shopping Center .Weil, "It does not matter much whether we succeed in finding the Department, .CU h 0 S f solution or understanding the Specialities: proof, although it is important to try really hard to do so. Never in homemade spaghetti, plate lunches any case whatever is a genuine ,Americ,an poet effort of attention wasted. It Eat In or carry out always has its effect on the spiritual plane." We take call-In orders Galway Kinnell, an American consummate :r:nasters in poetry." poet, will read his poetry at 8 Kinnell, who lives in V ennont; Weil establishes an equilibrium p.m. Tuesday in the art lecture is a graduate of Princeton between intellectual struggle and room of the Fine Arts Center at University and received his an experiential testing of . that Wake Forest University. master's. from the University ot struggle. -Involvement with. ideas J.:,,Y/f' ~.{.., /io, The public is invited to the- Rochester. He has held Fulbright is not a boxed-up game that is put away when the bell rings or when program, which is for the and Guggenheim fellowships, a _A,u ,{1 "Writers Reading" series Rockefeller Foundation and the ~ploma Is granted or when 9 sponsor~d by the English . other grants, and has received a tenure is received. The in­ department and College Union. A number of awards including two volvement implies a com­ ;});cunonc/J~,!jJ reception will be held afterwards. _from the NatitQal Institute of mibnent of one's entire self . Speaking of the certainty that .Kinnell is the author . of : six . Arts a.nd Letters:~ · .... ·. bOoks: of P.l~ry, the ·mosf r~cent. · .,. · · · ·· ·. · "The Avenue Bearing the Initials of Chirst into the New World" and "The Book of Nightmares." His other books include a novel and a. translation of "The Poems of WESTERN SIZZLIN· Francois · Villon. '' His work is represented in numerous an­ thologies. Steak H'Ouse A recent review by John Logan in The Nation said, "Each ·generation looks about to see who· the great ones are in the arts, and in our time we . can single out Galway Kinnell as one of the. few

For nice things to wear and . relaxed ·submf:Jan shopping \isil

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creative, intellectual, moral stitutjons are already hopelessly dividualstudent. Weil understood her thought. Perhaps for the (Continued from page Nin~) creature. It should serve this compromised (which may be an this and manifested this un­ student interested in beginning purpose and not be diluted, intrinsic part of the definition of derstanding through the his education, an acquaintance sees, the approach to studies prostituted, or perverted into an institution), the real burden of profoundly independent spirit she with Weil would be as good a start determines whether they lead to anything less. Since most in- education falls upon the in- exhibited both in her life and in as any. true education, or to something else--leisure class hobby, professional training or propaganda promotion .. The power of attention that ' . studies can develop maY also assist one in relations with his fellow man. As Well puts it: "The ( .Yov -S£-~- . 1atH, ~rNu A love of our neighbor in all its , I hii~Scl,y( \ fullness simply means being able \ A Pic/Ll€ to say to him: 'What are you • lfA ~tAl/ going through?' This way of IS ~LYA \ ~tr'lft t:'i{f looking is first of all attentive. \ Cvcv~ Bl7Z The soul empties itself of all its . F~' . own contents in order to receive lt..· i r-11 ,4. into itself the being it is looking -\ ( (...... f-(~l-1:- 7tJO IIANY at, just as he is, in all his truth.'' ~ . 1/( /1.1.£ s1IIIIIYI..,. Education is one of the best c..-{~ means man has for developing "\. his full hwnan potential as a

Roc·k. concerts Upcoming concerts in the Winston-Salem area: Foreigner-· Sept. 10, Greensboro Coliseum; Heart--Sept. 25, Greensboro; Training session to be- held here Fats Domino--Sept. 10, High Point Theatre and Exhibition Center; Marvin Gaye--Bept. 11, A two-day training session ·for The programs will be Sept. 16 for the session. There is· a class · · · t" Charlotte Colisewn; Tom Jones­ 10 scenery pam mg Oct. 2, Charlotte Colisewn; John theatre artists and technologists and 17 in the Fine Arts Center. registration charge. . . ·Saturday and watson will lead a Sebastian-Sept. 28, Wait Chapel; will be held here by the southeast About 300 members, advanced Masters classes Will be. con- students, and other people in­ ducted by Leland Watson, frrst two-hour . seJssion on scenic Jesse Winchester-Oct. 4, Wait section of the United States projection Friday night. Chapel. Institute for Theatre Technology. terested in theatre are expected vice president of the U.S.I. T. T. and professor of theatre arts at The 'shorter workshops will be Purdue University, and Robert by John H. Miller, technical 0. Moody, scenographer who is director of the school of design and production at the North associate professor· of theatre Carolina School of theA$; Mark WE FEATURE U.S.D.A~ CHOICE BEEF arts at Brandeis University. Pirolo, head costumer· at the There also will be six IJO..minute sessions by theatre experts from School of. the Arts; Robert the region. Thurston, technical director at Russell E. Houchen, technical the University of North Caroliila director for the University at Gr.eensboro; Jack Suesse of Theatre, is president of the in­ J. R. Clancy Inc., a theatre stitute's southeast distnct which hard ware manufacturing includes North Carolina, South company; James P. McHugh of Caroliria and Georgia. Kliegl Bros., a theatre lighting Moody will hold an ali-day company; and Houchen.

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WAKE FOREST College Kabob - U.S.D.A. Choice Sirloin Reg. Value Brochette, Onions, Green Pepper, Tomato, marinated - Reynolda 12.79 Dinner on a skewer. Manor '1.99 Shopping Center Includes: Baked Potato, Texas To~st & Salad Bar * Profeulonal Cleaning & Laundry * Offer Good Thru 1977-78 Season at 513 30th St.. Store Only INBY9 A.M.- Students Mrut Present Their Wake J.D. Cards to Participate READY,IY 5 P.M& . PAGE ELEVEN Friday, September 9, 1917, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Deacon corporation a winner A new corporation is being McGlamry, who enters the behind McGlamry at the Deacon formed this fall. Its parts are helm. for the season as Wake's fourth all-time being collected -from the ashes The Deacs · leading passer, is not an ac- Bill Armstrong is gone from the beginning and memories of a similar unit Wake defense and that alone uaintance .______•B•y•Tu•c•k•er•MI-tc•h•eu ______. ·complished nmner. If the Deac's created last year, .and the year .were looking for that from their would be cause for concern. The good a start before .... and the year before nardo, who saw a lot of action last . . Zeglinski, who started last quarterback then Bob Hely would incredibly hard-hitting safety that. made semmingly more all­ ~ason, fills in the gaps between season at tailback,. is now back at likely start, but MCGlamry's on It is a corporation that is based the -potential all-conference and receiver, his more natural field poise, aided by two ·years America teams than there ap­ upon success, experience. and all-American linemen.· position and one where he· can use experience, and accurate if not pear to be and was vital to last most of all confidence. It will not his greatest talent - pass c~t- rangy passing ann make him the year's ACC second rated defense. be a fly by night affair l jt is . Tim Davis will be at the other ching ·- more often. first choice. That ann, which Armstrong's loss, plus a rooted · in very businesslike guard, and at "only, 6-2, 230 lbs. Behind Zeglenski and Everett· completed . 50 per cent of its complete graduation wipeout at operations. Jt has a dependable \ appears to be the weakest link 1n is junior- college transfer Tom passes last season, may find the defense end where Dave leader and many employees, all the Deacon front. But the durable Smith who could start on oc- go~g easier this year with op­ LaCrosse and John Sabia both \ of whom know their job and do it Davis is no slouch, and many had excellent years last season, I casion. The 6-4, 185-poWlder has posmg defenses keying on \ well, and it has numerous the Speed to go deep and the McDougald. leaves the Deacs with some stockholders anxiously waiting teams ·would like to have such a problems, but the talent is there for long overdue dividends. · player as the· strong link. savvy to piay immediately. The same could be true for the Also in the Deac's receiving hard-blocking Rolark who is to fill the holes. But most of all it is a cor­ Ron Everett, returns ·at Filling the shoes that Arm­ poration that will succeed.' It is wideout for Wake this year, and if. corps are lightning fast Derek running ·much better this year, or Crocker, Frank Harnisch and any of three other possible strong used to propel himself Wake Forest football. - nothing more will draw the same 'headfj .. st into opposing freshman~ Ingram. starters from amongst James Confidence and the aura of stifling double coverage he has ballcarriers last year will be Kris success hangs over the Wake for the past two seasons, taking , McDougald's prombience may Hargraves, Bob Ventresca or the create better opportunities for his injured Mark Cregar. Spi! sbury. But neither team and its. 100-odd members some of the heat off Young and Spil.sbury, Mills or anyone else like tobacco aroma over Winston- John Zeglenski, the Deac's backfield counterparts~ Mike : Strong-armed Ken Daly and McGlamry and stan Rolatk. the multi-talented Hely lineup really expect Armstrong's ab­ . Salem and every member of the versatile flanker. sence to be plugged completely. organization seems to feel that "Replacing Armstrong is no. this is the year. problem, because there's no one "We saw last year that we · who can replace him,'' Mills said . .could do just about anything "We can make adjustments to possible," said James physically compensate for his McDougald, perhaps the· loss, but psychologically there's "keyest" of a number of key cogs no way." on the - Deacon team. ·"The The Key Deacon losses at coaches bilk about electricity in safety and end will place more the air. We can feel it when we responsbiility on the Wake line play." · and linebackers. Fortunatelv That feeling may spill over into that's where the Deac's defensive the stands this season. For the strength lies. first time in what seems like the - Don Cervi is a strong 6-2, 225 painting school's 143 year history there is lbs. senior and will start at one will lead a talk and hope of a winning season linebacking spot after being and more importantly there is picked to the all-conference t<:am talent to back it up. · last year. Second Stringer Ed In many ways. the quiet con­ Walker, who saw a lot of r :ng fidence that is central to Chuck ~ . time last year is the likely .ch Mills' fifth edition, was born on a for Cervi. slightly muddy Groves Stadium Ken Carter, big, 6-{), 23· os. turf last autwnn against the . ·Rick Dadouris, Marc Hesh nd - Clemson Tigers. On that· day, ,·:·: · blue chip recruit Carlos B1 :. ,.. ey young Jaines McDougald rushed ·· give the linebackers a dep; ;1 f hat for 249 yards on 45 carries and is better than in years past E ':ill proved that Wake Forest is a little shaky. capable ~f big things, in· •· . . : The middle of the 1· on dividually and teamwise, on the defense looks even bette. v,:ith football field. It is arourid the noseguards James Parker and powerful sophomore from Reuben Turner returning. Maxton that all Deacon efforts Together the two make one super both big and small will be con· lineman, unfortunately they both structed this season. cannot play the position at the ''We've got to build around him same time. (James McDougald)," said Parker is incredibly quick Mills, "We'll give him the ball as Photo by Bill Brown many times as he can take it, as . (Continued on page Twelve} long as he gets his yards." Wake's offeDSe wOl be ba.llt arotmd James· McDougald thJs year. That could be for a -long, long time with the offensive team­ mates McDougald has. - Four players return to the McDo-ugald returns for encore Wake offensive line that netted McDougald 1,018 yards last year, making·him just the fourth fresh­ By Tucker Mitchell portantly, he has the mind to do it man season at Maxton High games, brea!Ong a couple of long man in NCAA history to crack the as well. James McDougald is School. During that first year, he runs, and rushing for over 100 1,000 yard barrier. ne51rly indescribably good progressed to noseguard, yards against Vanderbilt. Steve Young may be the best of Perhaps it was fitting that football player but he is also a fullback and finally, his present But it wasn't until game six the group. The 6-5, 215 lbs. senior Beattie Feathers · recruited mature and sophisticated person. position, tailback. His Maxton against Clemson that McDougald is being billed for national honors James McDougald. One legend teams were nearly unbeatable rec~ived his first starting after gaining all-conference should beget another, the NFL's The added pressure that he during his stay and once captured asstgnment and brought the laurels last' year. first 1,000 yard runner signing the faces from media, fans and the North Carolina 2-A crown by legend to life. YoWlg is a pro prospect tight ACC's first 1.000 yard freshman. possibly even teammates doesn't the ridiculous score of 86-6. "You know its a funny feeling It was· something that should -phase last year's "Maxton Last year McDougald came to about starting, you're out there end who doesn't possess great messiah." speed, but has brilliant hands and have happened. Chuck Mills' rapidly expanding Wa~e Forest football program the first thing, it's different. you good blocking technique. He led Now after a stunning freshman Wake with 36 · receptions last and gradually worked his way feel like vou have to perform." year, McDougald returns to build "I just try not to think about into it. And perfonn McDougald did season. upon a legend that was created The Deacon line also contains pressure·," McDougald said with that day, gaining 249 yards on 4~ the very first time he touched the an emphatic shake ilf the head carries, both school records, two other players who should see ball in a Wake Forest game. The action in the pros. ·Jackie and then silence. The subject "They told me I could play as against what had to be a tired quiet, solidly built sophomore appears almost taboo. But that much as I wanted to, but I would Clemson defense by the game's Robinson, a 6-3, 250 lbs. junior faces a difficult, pressure-filled tackle and i-3, 255 lbs. Larry may be because McDougald, like have to earn it," McDougald end. season in 1977 but it is nothing he all super athletes, has faced said, "and when I came here After his day was over, Tearry, most likely th~ ACC's can't handle. best center this year. pressure many times in his that's pretty much what I had in McDougald, who may have been career and ·the subject now mind, I would play and that's. too tired to talk, told a massive Hydrant-like Carmen all." · Frangiosa, a 5-10, 250 lbs. He has the talent to take care of boring. .. returner to the guard spot and almost any situation on the McDougald started his career McDougald showed flashes of (Continueti on page Twelve) strong, 6-4, 250 lbs. Steve Ber- football field and more im- as .a defensive tackle his fresh~ brilliance in Wake's first five PAGE TWELVE Friday Seplemher9, 19Tl' OLD G()LD ~BLACK ·, . .: McGI·amry finally ;able to relax

...... ' .~ By Tommie O'Toole frustrating, might have done him )\ ...... ~ ...... , .. ~ ·.: :.1: Sports Editor more good than bad. . ~;;· ~ \ "Having Jerry there made you Mike McGlamry is a deter- · work harder," said McGlamry, ~ ' mined man. But, more than that, the ACC's second-leading passer . . .~··. -~~.... ~. he is relaxed and confident. in 1976. "The competition helped And, as the Wake Forest me to stay stronger. But, now I'm startinB quarterback) he com- more relaxed. I don't have to mands a group of detennined worry about the position-just the players who have suffered assignments. Before I was. through three years of em- worrying about where I stood." barrassment, frustration and With McManus graduated, pain. McGlamry is in full control now, "If I had to pick one word to which is certainly a better describe this team,'' the senior situation for the te~. They now from Colwnbus, Ga., saidt "it have one quarterback who is a would be determined. We're solid team leader, one who can determined to win games and analyze the strengths and have a good time." weaknesses of not only his squad Since his freshman year when but others. the Deacs were 1-10, the good "We're going to have to throw times have been limited. The more @nd be more effective with team, however, has improved our passing this year," he said. remarkably over the past three "We can't give (James The ... seasons, just as Messiah from Maxton) Chuck Mills predicted. All Wake McDougald the ball every play. needed was some blue chippers We have to go to the fullback and a little time. They got both more and do some other things. and the result could be a very The more things we do and the rewarding 1977 campaign. better we do them, the better the "The thing about out schedule situation will be for McDougald." this year,'' McGlamry said, ''is Except for maybe last fall, the that we can beat everybody we whole attitude of the Wake team play. There's no team like this year is much better than it Michigan. Realistically, if we has been in recent memory. And start off well, then we're going to there is good reason for that. , .. have a good shot at having a very With three all-conference per­ Now 88S1II'ed of a starihJg posiUon, Mike McGiamry has time to relax. Photo by Bill Brown good season. formers and a top-rate offensive "There are no games like the line returning, the Deacs are :gaining it when they played well, fident, excitable leader who has Maryland one this year either," confident. And while their main losing it when they played poorly. gift~d quarterback. He doesn't given Wake Forest fans some of possess blinding speed or a McGlamry added about the tough goal is to win football games, This year they will take con- their- most memorable moments. 17-15loss in College Park. "If we they want also to have fun- fidence with them into the . passing arm like- Johnny Unitas. had beaten Maryland last year it something that was less than . opening game. One of the major. Instead, he runs the team with a ''The position I'm in makes me finn, yet gentle hand and a would have been remarkable. abundant two or three years ago. reasons for that change is the. assume leadership respon­ But, we can beat them this year." "It'4c; a lot more fun this year," firmr poised leadership of commanding, yet quiet Georgia sibilities," McGlamry said. ·"I drawl. His senior year will also be the McGlamry said. "We have an M~lamry.· can be relaxed and quiet in the first that McGlamry can con- older group and we've all been His boyish good looks and donn and I have to carry part of cent rate solely on quar- here together for four years. California ·blond hair are an that onto the field use . . "The thing I think I do the best terbacking. During his rookie We're a close team. This year anomaly among the hard, tough bee~ y~ur· teammates tell 1f you re is run the team," McGlamry campaign, he sh8 ...ed we're going into the season with faces of the offensive line. Yet, ca~ signalcalling duties with Solomon confidence. Last year we ·had to McGlamry. controls his squad ~hony. But, I still c~ get myself said. "I'm not a great passer or Everett, now a top-rate receiver. build -confidence as we went with uncanny leadership f1red up. The game Itself gets me runner. But as coach (offensive Next, McGlamry had to battle along.'' · abilities, going quickly from the fired up.': . . COQrdinator Eddie) WilsOn puts with Jerry McManus, a battle- In 1976, Wake Forest rode a calm, subtle history major who By his . own admlSSlon, it, I'm like the guy up front in a Mc<;Jlamry 1s only an adequate rowing race ·who keeps ·the whic.h, even though very roller coaster of confidence, made a· 4.0 last year to a conD passer and runner. He is not a count." · Linebackers, linemen lead Wake defense

the group. {Continued from page Eleven) Royster and tough Dan Smading, who like Sabia, is suffering from . a fine~ season· and the playtrs . Mac Haput and Steve Vance bring experience to the Deacon injuries are other possibilities. even more clearly have the will likely start but converted secondary. Hely will return to handle the confidence to u·se that talent. while Turner, who played the runningback C. D. Osborne, field goal chores for Wake. He set · Some problems do exist but they most last year, is a bullish, Chuck Kraft or freshmen Eddie a school record with nine last hardly appear insoluble and the consistent individual. Behind Yarnell and Mike Wisher are all year and has good but not out­ them 11:1 prize recruit Dwayne talented possibilities. Royster · and Smading both schedule is more o~: less Crayton, a 6-2, 250-pounder who standing range. After a disap­ favorable. For the first time' in·. · started last year and Tice played pointing punting year last season, has the speed to play linebacker. Spil..lsbury at least will be in a lot on the second team. Charlie many years, Wake enters the Hely will have to earn his job season with a chance for a per- Flanking the strong noseguard good company when he starts Viana, a junior college transfer, spot is a pair of seasoned tackles trying to replace a Wake legend from burly Barry ·Sikes who ·fect year. 1~ is highly im­ Don Sabia and Bruce Lovato perfonned well in Wake's last in Bruce Hopkins and Steve this fall. Reggie Tice, sohpomore could also play in the secondary. probable, but it is not impossible, three games. · ·and the new corporation will have Check. Hopkins is 6-2, 250 lbs. and all-America of a year ago, James · Mark Mattiko and Rich Burr, has the makings of an out­ Wake clearly has the ialerit lor a very successful year. standing player although he was somewhat inconsistent last year. Check doesn't have great size but has the kind of personality to play McDougald back for sophomore year the position - mean. .· (~ntlnued from page Eleven) what they do, I could get a lot, or I them, but then other times the flows through opposing teams. Jim Dwnser returns to back could get nothing." back had to make it on his ·own," He is at one place one moment the starting pair and should see a group of reporters huddled McDougald's coach, Mills, McDougald said. and ·at anOther seconds later, lot of action. Sophomores Jo Jo around him simply "I got some does,:'t. agree entirely: seemingly without any . Ferraro, Frank Armstrong and good blocking." McDougald will obviously need movement. Sid Jackson add depth to the It was almost too good. to be "Usually its the line that makes the help of Wake's fine offensive "What is it, Instinct?,"' ppsition that was one of Wake's true a great player who was the back, but with McDougald it's line, just as any back, great or McDougald asked as he searched weakest three years ago. hum'ble besides. But such is just the other way arowtd," small would, but once past that for a description of his own James McDougald, a superior Mills said .... point he is something special. talents, "Yes, I guess that's it, Six players lineup at defensive . 'runningback, who has no qualms ·aut Mc'bougald refuses to take it's just a gift from God." end for Wake and before the · about giving credit to his helpers even that much of the credit. McDougald is not blindingly From God to James season is out all six could be in the offensive line. . "One hand washes the other, fast or overpoweringly big, his McDougald and then to Wake ·playing or have played regularly. ''I have to have the hne,'' last year some holes were so big I physical attributes are good, but Forest. Maybe the Carolina Blue There's no clear leader among McDougald said, "depending on almost didn't want to go through he is a different runner, one that sky is finally changing color. PAGE miRTEEN Friday, September 9, 1977, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Quiet Cervi~ .not:. a s-tereotype ....- .,. .-: .. blocked punt returned for a Cervi's experience also allows By Tucker Mitchell touchdown against Duke and a him to talk confidently and - game-saving end zone in­ knowledgebly about this year's ·Die~ Butkus once threw terception against South Carolina defensive squad. The top four. bowling balls into obilvion in a in last season's final two games defensive ends are gone from last \• comtnerciill and Ray Nitschke's propelled the Egg Harbor, N.J. year's team but the newcomers biggest movie· role so. far was native onto the all-ACC team. appear capable and are only knocking hole in a wall by a "Yeah, that was kind of untested. "They'll improve with butting it with his head. such is strange,'' Cervi said with a smile, playing time," Cervi said, the stereotype· linebackers that "except for that one big play (the "they're playing very well right receive. · now.'' .. Like most stereotypes it blocked punt) I had played much A much bigger loss is the · seldom fits reality and it doesn't better games, but we won and I disappearance of all-American come Close to matching the started getting the publicity." safety Bill Armstrong. personality of Wake Forest's Don But publicity is · not a Cervi "That's a big gap, but you can't Cervi, an~all-ACC linebacker who worry. "I'm just going out and contrasts his brutal manner on playing, the publicity will come if look back." Cervi said, "We'll the field with a soft-spoken, well­ the team progresses, I don't let it just have to go out and play like we did last year." mannered ease off. bother me." Actually Cervi is hoping like "I'm just not the loud type," Cervi's career could have - - ,. . Gervi said, "but then we're not a taken several different turns. the rest of the team, tor lm­ loud team." First, ·he might have signed to provement. Cervi's quietness belys an play basketball at Temple "We've got a good team, and ¥tward excitement that over­ University; although, that was we all know that. But, we have comes hinn before games never a real choice, not proved that we're a good ''i'm excited on game days and Once he came to Wake, it was team, that's what we'll have to do I feellil~e I'm .up for every game, only through his own work that he this year." Cervi said. but I'm just going to go out· and . was able to play linebacker at all. One of the ways that the team play football.'' Cervi said. He was recruited as a defensive will improve is through the exa That's just as well. Playing back, his high school position, but perienced actions of players like football is something Don Cervi has since added 40 pounds to his Cervi. . · does very well. At 6-2, 225 he is a well-constructed frame. "Any team has great ex­ definite pro prospect. He has Finally, Cervi got to play only pectations at the season's good strength and if his speed is after series of injuries stripped beginning," Cervi said "but ~'< ~ somewhat questionable, ·he the Deacon linebacking corps his you've got to keep that makes up for it with experience sophomore year. -He probably throughout, this year when I and a sense of his position. would've started last season something goes wrong, we won't ''I know what I'm doing out anyway but the experience get down." Photo courtesy University of , there.'' Cervi said. Don .Cervi may not destroy .any Maryland i gained was invaluable last year Cervi knew enough to make all­ and ~hould be even more im­ bowling alleys or butt down any conference .last year although· he portant on the graduation-injured walls this season, but opposing doesn't kind ·· of stumbled into it. A ·Wake defense this season. teams will still know that he is a Wake has some defensive problems but interior players Don or a linebacker. . Cervi and James Parker return to form a solid nucleus. Unitas. with a and a Wake on paper ~eorgia 1976 Results Roamer Spilsbury returns (~) te best 23, Wake Forest 6 aamry Wake Forest 20, N.C. State 18 ISer or Vanderbilt 27, Wake Forest 24 to fill i~ for Armstrong 'ensive Wake Forest 13, Kansas State 0 r1 puts Michigan 31, Wake Forest o By Tommie O'Toole 1t in a Wake Forest 20, Clemson 14 concensus all-American and for the DB's, an intramural Sports Editor campus legend. s ·the Maryland 17, Wake Forest 17 basketball team which won the Carolina 34, Wake Forest 14 campus championship two years Wake Forest 38, Duke 17 Kris Spilsbury is a roamer. At ago and came in second last year. Wake Forest 10, South Carolina 7 24, he is the "old man" of the "The comparison is This lS the last year ·of Deacon football team, and can inevitable," Spilsbury conceeds. eligibility for the Spanish and Offensive Leaders truthfully be tabbed as the Deacs' "Bill has his strong points-which Education major from ultimate journeyman. were a whole ·lot-and I got a Chihuahua, Mexico. Even though -: TB-James McDougald He started his career at the couple which I hope to take ad­ he is a senior, he did not suffer QB-Mike McGiamary University of Arizona where ·he vantage of. I won't be able to do through the 1-10 season three ay~rs. TE-Steve Young stayed on scholarship for one all the things he did. But, we have y~ars ago.He was hurt and ! the C-Larry Tearry semester. Then, he transferred to a lot better linebacking crew and redshirted for another season alent. · OT-Jackie Robinson Mexico City for two years. Then, more experienced cornerbacks after that. tthey Defensive Leaders he went to a junior college for a this· year." .d the year and finally wound up at '·As a red shirt you feel all the LB-Don Cervi Wake Forest. emotions of the guys who are less Like Armstrong, Spilsbury is a ne' in· · DB-James.Royster playing, but not as much.'' i>T- Bruce Hopkins · converted quarterback. a factor ~ the He joined the Deacon squad as Spilsbury explained. "You try to which he hopes will aid in pass 1 per- a quarterback. During his first · fe~l it but you can't. You're more coverage. im­ 1977 Schedule spring practice here he was in­ of a fan than a participant.· .sible, jured. After years of roaming and .have September "Situation wise, my quar­ spectating~ Kris Spilsbury terbacking experience will help," firtally will be participating. 10-Funnan "I hurt my ann and didn't he said. "I'll have a feel of what 17-Vanderbilt throw much," Spilsbury said. "I to expect from the other team." 24-atN.C. State couldn't catch up with the other after that." Despite the journey-man label, October Spilsbury insists that his off-the­ Thus, Spilsbury is roaming field life style is more relaxed Intramural !8IDS. 1-atPurdue again. This time, after years of and "totally different from ment 8-at Carolina transferring, injuries and red Armstrong's. · · later, 15-Maryland shirting1 he js roaming in the any 22-at Virginia Deacon defensive secondary. "On the field I roam," he said. 29-at Clemson And, whether he likes it or not, "But, off the field Bill and I are "t?~ . , ,., Kris Spilsbury could be watched not at all alike. I'm usually low­ Signups for intramural ~ched November more than any other man on the keyed--until I get on the football close Tuesday Sep­ own squad. basketball court.'' tE~mber 1l.""Rosters should be ;'s it, 5-atDuke He is not just playing free turned into the intramural 12-South Carolina safety. He is replacing Bill Spilsbury has the build.to be a office. Play will begin the ames 19-at Virginia Tech 1\rmstrong, Wake Forest's first basketball player. He has-played following week. Wake Blue If. PAGE FOURTEEN Friday, Septemher9, 1977, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Wide tackle Terps too tough

At the University of Maryland, Salley lettered as a freshman keys to the season. the yoWlger Claiborne sported a ''patsy" schedule will hang over "wide tackle" is not just the guard on the Terps' Liberty Bowl His immense natural ability nifty 4.0 average last year while Claiborne's head like a flock of description of. many of the team. should enhance the learning majoring in accounting. He has vultures, ready to swoop down for Terrapin linemen. It's also the ··He used to dominate our process. Nevertheless, in case his been on the ACC honor roll the the kill should Maryland lose this name of coach Jerry Claiborne's scrimmages before his injury," injury· bothers him, Salley has last two years and was the ACC fall. defense. Claiborne said. "Now he's more-than-adequate back up all-academic safety in 1976. And, the Terps have a very Maryland returns all but four switching t(\ tackle and on our among Claiborne's plethora of The elder Caliborne also ex­ good chance of losing at least one lettermen from last year's celled in school. He was game. On Sept. 24 they travel to defensive squad which ranked graduated from the University of University Park, Pa., for a second in the nation in total Kentucky with ''High Distinc­ regionally-televised battle with defense and third in scoring The Terps tion," accumulating a 2.7 out of a Penn State. The Nittany Lions defense. If Claiborne can possible 3.0. A member of had been on the Maryland adequately replace all-America Omicron Delta Kappa, Claiborn.e schedule for eons - until last tackle .Joe Camp be II and By Tommie O'Toole set the existing NCAA record for year, afact which prompted most defensin• back Kenny Roy, then pass returns in his of the ballyhoo. 'senior year. He is quite conscious Furthermore, the Terps will be the Terps. 11-0 and Cotton Bowl good defensive players. participants last year, should defense the guard and tackle of the seemingly euphemistic putting on the line a 20..game ACC The secondary is virtually take easily their fourth con­ spots aren't at all similar. He's student-athlete tag. win streak. That streak, by the intact. Lloyd Burress, who secutive ACC football cham­ going to have to learn all over "I always tell players that only way, began in Winston-Salem played the final three games of pionship. again." one per cent of the college when Maryland shut out Wake last season, will replace Roy. And, even if he can't replace In Claiborne's wide-tackle-six players make the pros,'' Forest 37-0 during the 1973 Coach's son Johnathan Campbell and Roy, Claiborne's defense, the tackles actually are Claiborne said. "Chances are campaign. It might end here as Claiborne, a walk on who had to wide-tackle-six defense, which is defensive ends with many more slim that they'll make it. We try well. · earn a scholarship, returns as the unscored upon in the third assignments than most interior to impress upon them that they Claiborne's conference record starting safety. Gifted not only quarter of 13 consecutive games, linemen. Salley's ability to move have to use their four years here, is 24-3-1 since 1972. Maryland has athletically but academically, should be strong enough to secure to the outside will be one of the to find a livelihood. We try but outscored league opponents 806- the conference crown and '<\; 286 in the 28 games while perhaps a major bowl bid. ~-' producing nine shutouts, three of In the past, Maryland's F~~~~~~ ..... which have been over Wake

defenses usually have had one ·.. •.: Forest. ~mtstanding player, such as Even though his· 1977 defense Campbell, Randy White, Paul . _.-.~· may still earn its share of Vellano or Tony Greene. This shutouts, Claiborne's 1977 offense season should be no exception. could have trouble scoring. Gone Linebacker Brad Carr, last year are eight of the top 10 interior a first-team all-ACC and offensive linemen, which does not honorable mention all-America include tight end. Three-year selection, will be the leader of the starter Ron Raba is gone at that Terp defense. · position as well. "Our defense played pretty Conse·q uently, Claiborne's well last year," understated major'concern as he prepares for Claiborne. "We're generally · the season-opener in Clemson is strong this year, too. But, I like to not rebuilding but finding an think of Carr as an outstanding offensive line. player. He will play a major role ''The offensive line is pur for us. He is one of the premier number one priority," Claiborne linebackers.'' revealed. "We have a lot of work At 6-1, 215, Carr is a pre-season to do. Besides losing so many, we all-America pick by at least six had a couple more men who were publications. He was the leading injured and missed the entire tackler for Maryland last year spring practice." and twice the ACC defensive back Only strong guard Mike Yeates of the week. is a certain starter. Candidates An almost equally prominent for the openings all have several figure on the Terp defense will be things in· common: They are big tackle Ernie Salley, Campbell's with potential but they are all replacement. '•':- WItested. ··Salley will be very im­ "I really don't have any idea portant," Claiborne said. "He· ..-:,..;:;..~···'' how the offensive line· will work

hurt his ankle a few years ago ···' out," Claiborne said. "That's ...... : .:· .;: . and before that injury I thought why we have swnmer practice. he could be the best defensive The gtiys who haven't played are player on our club. He missed two going to have to come through." weeks of spring practice because With all-ACC Mark Manges and of it and he hasn't played as well Maryland Unebacker Jolm Douglas, who teams with all-American candidate Brad Carr, jars the ball seasoned Larry _Dick returning at , as he could have." from Houston quarterback Danny Davis in last year's Cotton Bowl. quarterback, the team can be as diverse as it wants. But, the new don't always succeed." line will force some changes, at In his office adorned with least early in the year . . numerous trophies and plaques, ''An older line can pick up Claiborne is relaxed and easy adjustments better," Claiborne Maryland on paper going, talking with a good­ said. "I don't plan· many natured yet confident Texas changes, just try to keep things drawl. Like most coaches he basic." understates his chances for the Keeping things basic, though, Personnel coming year. At the same time, 1976 Results 1977 Schedule will hinder Maryland's out­ though, he can be realistic about standing collection of backfield the past season. Realism, for (11-1) performers. Besides Manges and many teams, is not counting on Dick, the Terps return seven Maryland 31, Richmond8 Lettennen Lost - 14 September an 11-0 season. For the "1976 lettermen at the rWlningback Maryland 24, West Virginia 3 Lettennen Retumirlg-36 Terps, that unblemished mark slots. Steve Atkins, the 215-pound Maryland 42, Syracuse 28 Starters Returning-Off. 5, Def. 7 10-at Clemson was not an unreachable star. Maryland m, Villanova 6 17-West Virginia tailback who was injured halfway Maryland 16, N.C. State 6 24-at Penn State One of our specific goals last through last year, is reported MarylaDd11, Wake Forest 15 Offensive Leaders year was an 11-0 season," said healthy. Should he stay that way, Maryland 30, Duke 3 October Claiborne, one of about 20 Maryland 24, Kentucky 14 QB-Mark Manges Atkins could be orie of the top Maryland 21, Cincinnati 0 ·m-Steve Atkins 1-atN.C. State coaches in the nation who can backs in the nation. TB- Alvin Maddox Maryland 2D, Clemson o 8-Syracuse truthfully expect perfection. "We The Terps, despite the Maryland 28, Virginia 0 Defensive Leaders 1Z-at Wake Fore~~t thought we had a · real good 22-Duke presence of fine wide receivers LB-Brad Carr chance of going all the way. Our CoUoDBowl 29- North Carolina like Vince Kinney, Chuck White DG-Larry Seder program right now is on a solid DG-Ernie Salley and Dean Richards, will use the Houston 30, Maryland 21 DE-Keith Calta November foundation. But, even though we double-tight formation much of DB-DougHarbert are contenders for the title and a 5-Villanova the year. That is the set up which 12-at Rictunond bowl bid, we have to continue to proved pivotal in the second half 19-Virginia prove ourselves every Satur­ of last year's Wake-Maryland day." Critics of last year's so-called (Continued on page Eighteen)

__ .__ ..... __ ..,_.,..~ ...... - ..-- .... --~""' ...... !lt ..... -...... -.'\0.-~"'- -·-- ... ·-- ... - ...... ______4 _____ ,. _____ ._ ___ ..__ ...... ___ ,_ .... ~-~~ ...... , ... _ ... _._._:r_.~..n!' ...... " ...:~.)Hi:J.i...... /;;{, . . i t • PAGE FifTEEN Friday, September9, lt17, OLD GOLD ~p BLACK Filling a 'Voi,ght' UNC worry . ',•' ,· Last year North Carolina The biggest problem facing transfer who was injured all scored impressive wins over Dooley and his staff is replacing season. last year, looms as Miami of Ohio, and Florida in its Mike Voight. Football is a _team another possibility, but it is opening gaines, finished with a 9- game and Voight was,only player unlikely that he or anyone else 2 record, went to the Peach Bowl but even if the Tar Heels can will handlP: the job fulltime as and generally had an outstanding if somewhat surprising· season. Fifteen players are back from that team 'inCluding four fifths of The Tar Heels the ·defensive line and three By Tucker Mitchell fourths of the offensive backfield. But, in a game. of inches, frac­ tions can make the difference and replace his bruising and tireless Voight did a year ago. the missing pieces, particularly running, they wiQ not benefit the departed "fourth" in the While they key tailback slot is from his leadership. Last up for grabs, the other three Carolina backfield, could leave season's Carolina team rallied the Tar Heels with some serious around the now departed two­ problems. time ACC player-of-the-year. backfield spots appear to be set, 1976 was a · very successful Mike Voight was North Carolina season for coach and providing ~ollins isn't moved to last year, finding someone to fill tailback on a permanent basis. staff. The Tar Heels came away that role will be quite a chore. big winners in the one statistic Collins, a diminutive senior, ._, Carolina may however find the averaged 11 yards per carry on that overrides all others the wo~ ·solution in ninnbers. What lloight lost column, ·but Carolina's reverses and the like from success of a year ago· was highly did alone last year, Dooley hopes wingback last season and led the a group of varied runners can deceptive~· Dooley's tenth Tar Carolina receiving crops with 14 accomplish this season. · catches. Heel team made the plays it had "Certainly we're going to .need to make ·to win, certainly the ·mark· of SQlid club, ·but they more .than one tailback." Dooley a said, "rm nofsure how we'll play Massive Billy Johnson, who were plays· that· a legitimate 9-2 them however, that will, be started most of last year, though team wouldn't have had to make determined later.'' only a freshman, will handle the against Carolina's 1976 schedule. Doug Paschal, Terence Burrell fullback chores. At 250 lbs., Of the Tar Heers 11 regular Johnson is begin a touted as a season opponents, only three, and Phil Farris all retur.n as possible deep men in Dooley's !­ ·future all-American and · could Florida, Missouri and East formation but none have any end up as th~ Tar Heel tailback. Carolina -had winning records,_ Matt Kupec, starter after and four won less than four . experience except Paschal who rushed all of nine times a .year recovering from an injury last games. year, will return to lead Carolina Yet against that opposition the agl~ addition to the ·returning at quarterback. Kupec, the Tar Heels were outgained six players at the position, Dooley second of two brothers to call times and allowed over 400 yards has also been experitnentiilg with signals for Carolina, completed by their foes on five occasions. . Delbert Powell, who returned a 52 per cent of his passes last year Carolina was outgained by over kickoff 98 yards_ for a touchdown and rushed for 163 yards in three hundred yards . for the against Wake Forest last year, between handing off to Voight. season. and \a.!)t season's wingback Mel P .J. Gay, fjnally off the red The Tar Heels do have some t 'ollins at tailback. Both possess shirt list, is behind. Kupec. talent, but a repeat · of last · Pxtraordinary speed, the kind season's performance, par- that Voight nevt>r brought to the As good as Voight was, he ticularly with Kentucky. J'exas positior1. hut then neither has couldn't have rushed for 1,407 last Tech and Maryland on the Voight ·s durability year without some help up front •,,. schedule. this year. seems 11 t 'arey Casey. a Jumor ro ege Photo courtesy of UNC unlikely. and whoever r¢places him mav Junior quarterback Matt Kupek wontt have Mike Voight to hand off to this year, but the Tar Heels should be tough nonetheless. Carolina on. Paper . 1976 Results· find tne going just a little bit traditional Carolina ·failing. lost tougher. Carolina lost three out of two players from the group that (9-2) five interior linemen from last turned Army's Leamon Hall into season's team. including all-ACC a national passing star in. one Carolina 14, Miami (Ohio)lO players Craig Funk and pro afternoon. Carolina 24, Florida 21 draftees Mark Cantrell and Mark Dee ':Hardison and Broadwav Carolina 12, Northwestern 0 Griffin. should start at tackleiri Dooley;s Carolina 34, Anny 32_ 5-2, but Broadway will find Missouri 24, Carolina 3 - John Rushing ancfBobby Hukill himself challenged to regain his N.C. State21, Carolina 13 Personnel startm·g l>ost from Burin Rhames Carolina 12, East Carolina 10 return. along· \\·ith Brooks William at tight end, but the real who took over last ye~r when the Car6llila M, W~ Forest 14 6-3 249-pound senior \\"as injured. Carolina rn' Clemson 23 leader of the 197i Tar Heel line Carolina 31, Virgina 6 Lettermen Lost- 21 mav be Mike Salzano, a 6-3, 235 ··. Caroliria ~, Duke 38 Lettermen Returning- 35 .. lbs." junior \Vho ·sat but last year Ken ·Sheets returns at· one end Starter Returning -Off. 7, Def. 8 with a knee injury. Already he is and fast ( 4.6 in the 40) Da\"e being compared to all-time great Simmons will be back at nose ·1977 Schedule Offensive Leaders · Ken Huff. guard.· September Linebacker, not a Tar Heel WB-Mel Collins Walker Lee, Bill Mabry and strong suit last season, resembles TB-FB-Billy Jolmson Wayne Tucker, all seasoned an 10-at,Kentucky the tailback situation ·and five 00-Mike Salzano explosive player~ return as .olayers; Buddy Currv~ Ronnie 17-Riclunond targets for Kupec. 24-at Northwestern ·Defensive Leaders The Tar Heel defense played . . well enough to win nine games Dowdy, Mike Finn, Bobby Gay October last year, but then with Voight and Larry Tedder should split DE-Ken Sheets controlling the ball, they didn't playing time. 1-Texas Tech DT'-Dee Hardison spend very much ·time on the Bobby Cale will be back at one 8-Wake Forest ·DB-Alan Caldwell field. While they were there they corner in the lea_ky Tar Heel deep 15-atN.C. State DT-Rod Broadway managed to give up 5.2 yards a defense an·d hatchet man Alan 22-South CaroUna play and slightly more than 18 Caldwell, who is something like 29-at Maryland points per game~ the George Atkinson of the ACC, The defensive line was the returns at strong safety. · ·November heart of the Tar Heel defense last Bernie Menapace, who started year. It returns almost intact and . at quarterback last year while 5-Clemson should be better with the return everyone else who possibly ·· 12 -at Virginia could've played there was hurt, 19-atDuke of Rod Broadway at defensive has been moved to the secondary -.: tackle. But the secondary. a (Continued on page Twenty) PAGE SIXTEEN Friday, Septem~r9, l977,0LDGOLDANDBLACK Dunn leads coach-plagued Duke • After coaching his extremely Rounding out the offensive non-starter last year who saw Devils since none of the reserves · of the defense. Brooks, a safety in talented 1976 Blue Devils to new backfield will be either Winston- plenty of action nonetheless. has va~sity experience. ·Manning 1976, will join Cook at the levels of mediocrity, Duke head Salem native Tommy Thomas or Should any of the starters suffer the ends of the line will be cornerback position, leaving two­ coach Mike McGee probably Craig Dallas, as each competes injuries, they will be replaced by reliable Jeff Green who won the year letterman Tom Knotts as \ wonders just what he must do in for the slotback position. Though ·John McDonald, Derek Mashore, 1976 Brian Piccol~ Award for the starting free safety. Playing . order to lose his job in 1977. Last both are only sohpomores, Coach the strong safety will be Rick season impressive wins over McGee foresees no problems Sommers, who has also won two here, since the slotback spot in Tennessee, Georgia Tech and varsity letters. Duke's offensive scheme The Devils N.C. State were inexplicably Finding capable replacements requires less skill than the other squandered with shellackings by By Woody White for .Al~CC placekicker Vince backfield positions. South Carolina, Maryland and Fusco and punter Grupp, who The greatest asset to Duke's Wake Forest. But with 13 starters holds virtually every Duke ·and 28 lettermen returning, the offense could be its experienced punting record, could prove to be and proven line, where 5 starters or Bill King, all of whom lettered Blue Devils may succeed in courageous performance, and an impossible task for Goach return from last year's squad. in 1976. · improving their 5-5-1 mark letterman Jim McMahon. McGee. At present, senior .walk­ Leading the way up front for the Up front, Duke will count despite inept coaching. on Scott Wolcott will serve as the Blue Devils will be All-ACC wide heavily on veteran tackle Lyman Barring injuries to key placekicker while s~fety receiver Tom Hall. In addition to Smith who, at 6-6, 242, has the size performers, the Duke offense, Sommers plans to handle the and strength to become a good which gained over 900 yards in · leading the league in. receptions Though the defensive backfield punting. At any rate. look for pass rusher. Andy Shoenhoft, a the final two games of 1976, with 44, Hall also proved his lost twice All-ACC performer Bob Duke's kicking game, long a starter last season at defensive Grupp graduation, returning · should be the strongpoint of this value as an excellent downfield to strongpoint, to be a weak link on end, has moved over to the other. starters Earl Cook and D(}.n year's squad. Junior quarterback blocker. Two year starter Glenn this year's squad. Mike Dunn, perhaps the best in Sande lfur, an able, if tackle position. The loss of either BroQks should help make this the ACC, returns to lead the . unspectacular player returns as player would hurt the Blue season's secondary a solid facet For many years, Duke loyalists option attack. Last season Dunn Duke's tight end. passed for 1078 yards and rushed Anchoring the interior line will for 757 more, figures which be senior center Frank enabled him to capture league DeStefano. After a fine season at honors in total offense. Dunn also tackle last fall, DeStefano moves provied to have a nose for the over to tcike the spot vacated .by goaline as he scored 80 points, All-America Billy Bryan. Though tops in the nation for Bryan de~erves a great deal of quarterbacks. Contrary to the credit for Duke's successful rwnor, Duke will not cancel its inside running last season, schedule if Dunn is injured. DeStafano is a proven player and Ready and willing, if not able to should perform well at his new play, are senior Dale Oostdyk position. Senior Mike Sandusky, a and sophomore Stanley Driskell. good bet for all-conference Neither of the two has been tested honors, · returns as one guard. under varsity competition, and Opposite him will be Tom the loss of Dunn would surely Luongo, a converted slotback dampen the Blue Devil's who was moved to take offensive spirit. advantage of his size and Expected to bear the brunt of blocking ability. Battling for the rushing chores is veteran DeStafano 's tackle spot will be Mike Barney. While sharing two unproven players, Marty tailback duties with now Morris and Radny Bicke. At the departed Art Gore last year, other tackle will be John Barney grounded out 373 yards on Patterson, a starter last season 71 carries in 1976, averaging 5.3 who made great improvement in yards per carry. As with Dunn, spring drills. Duke can ill-afford to lose A defense which in 1976 coupled Barney, since back-ups· Greg occasional displays of brilliance Rhett and Bob Pruitt saw only with several poor showings will limited action last fall. be looking for more consistency Another weakness in the Duke in 1977. Forming the nucleus for offense is the fullback position Duke's defense will be its strong where the graduation of iron man corps of linebackers, possibly the Tony Benjamin creates a huge best unit in the ACC. Junior Carl void. Benjamin, a four-year McGee, an all-conference starter, rambled for 2251 yards selection in 1976 and an All­ during his career, second only to America candidate this season Photo courtesy Duke Univ. Steve Jones in career rushing returns, shifting from the outside yardage at Duke. Facing the to the middle linebacker position. Mike Dunn may be the best quarterback in the ACC. unenviable task of trying to fill He will be flanked by Jim Reilly, Benjamin's Shoes is untested who led the Blue Devils in tackles sophomore Ned Gonet. last season, and Derek Penn, a

have pointed to the demanding non-conference schedule as the Blue Devils' worst obstacle. With Duke on Paper the exception of ever-powerful Michigan, this year's squad 1976 Results Personnel 1977 Schedule should at least be able to compete (5-5-1) evenly with every opponent on its schedule. In addition to the Lettermen Lost- 21 September usual six conference encounters, Lettermen Returning- 28 Duke will face an East Carolina Tennessee 21, Duke 18 Starters Returning- Off. 6, Def. 7 10-East Carolina squad which should be no better, South Carolina 24, Duke 6 17-at Michigan and possibly weaker than last Duke 21, Virginia 6 Offensive Leaders 24-at Virginia fall's version, and an adequate, Pitt 44, Duke 31 but by no means outstanding Duke 21, Miami 7 South Carolina team. Rounding October Duke 18, Clemson 18 QB-MikeDunn out the opposition will be also­ Maryland 30, Duke 3 SE-TomHall ran:;; Navy and Georgia Tech. 1-Navy Duke 31, Georgia Tech 7 TB-Mike Barney Overall, the on-paper strengths Wake Forest 38, Duke 17 C -Frank DeStefano 8-at South Carolina of this year's Duke squad Duke 28, N.C. State 14 15-Clemson ... outweigh its liabilities. The Blue North Carolina 39, Duke 38 22-at Maryland Devils have as much first team Defensive Leaders at Georgia Tech 29- talent as any team they face, with LB-Carl McGee the exception of Michigan and November LB-Ken Reilly Maryland. Of course, the same DE-Jeff Green 5-at Wake Forest was said of last year's DT-Lyman Smith 12-N.C. State disappointing teams. Depth and 19-North Carolina questionable coaching once again are problems that Duke must cope with. . 1). !, f f (' I. •• I. •. 1\o '\ ' 1J • l"o " •• h ':' -. ~, ., , , ,, • • ,, -• ,. -,• ,. 1 PAGE SEVENTEEN Friday, ~pt~:m~ 9, J9"l7. OUJ (,(JUJ .\.'~U BL\f.K Death valley days at Clemson?

A funny thing happened to first year. It will not be easy for from last season when Clemson that unit except tight end Harold 190 1 • a nrJ a l m r) s t as m uc :-. Clemson football coach Red the Tigers this year and if Pell is fielded one of the conference's Parker on the way to this season. given the same chance as his Cain, but only massive f6-4, 258 experience ~illl see a lot r)f actwr. youngest teams, but questions lbs.) Joe Bostic appears really as well. He was fired. Despite a relatively predecessor, there will be an remain in the areas where disappointing 3-6-1 season, opening in Clemson this winter. starters do return and help in the Place klck1n~. a Clemson sorE: sprJt a year aw). should b.:: Parker's 1976 club had just closed Pell's squad looks very few graduation depleted positions improved although .Jimm} its campaign with a stunning 28-9 defeat over arch-rival South ready. He'll be at a guard and Russell vnll · still handle the Carolina, a win that usually should be one of the conference· s assignment. He'll receive help would redeem even the dreariest The Tigers best. from Obed Ariri. wha ts n0t a of Tiger seasons. But, it was not His brother Jeff will be a native South Caroliman. He 1s a good enough ·and Death Valley By Tucker Mitchell product of Oemson ·s bigti.rY.e soccer program and hails frorr. took on a new meaning for ,\:igeria. Parker. respectable, possibly even good, appears to be minimal. center, a position played by Clemson was fifth m total Charley Pell, Parker's former on paper, but pap~rTigers have a The offensive line turned in an current tight end Trav Webb last defense in the :\CC last seasor assistant, is the new Clemson habit of not living up to their real impressive showing in its final season. · coach and, while there is some life counterparts, and Clemson outing of 1976, allowing the Tigers Huge Lacy Brwnley and mere talent available, Pell faces the . may find itself coming up short to roll up 280 yards rushing on 240 powtders Steve Kenny and and there was a good reason for inevitable difficulties that any this season. theoretical national power South that, the Tigers didn't have many major college coach runs, into his The Tigers return 17 starters Carolina. Everyone's back from good players on the defensive Jimmy Weeks will fill out the rest team. The situation has of the big Tiger line, but all are improved, particularly along the coming off injuries and their line that yeilded 249 yards to effectiveness is questionable. James McDougald once last Clemson's receiving corps was year, but the secondary, the weakest part of the Tiger defense last season, may be even worse the most severely hit spot on the this year. entire team as Joey Walters, who· had 26 catches in 1976 and Cain, the tight end, are both gone. Only one player with any Jerry Butler does return at split experience is back, and the end where he had 33 receptions newcomers are not progressing last year. fast enough to suit Pell who is known as a defensive specialist. Rex Yarn is the leader but after him, there is little more to be The tight end position is still up said. Roy Eppes, Bubba Rollins for grabs but Rick Weddington, and Brian Kier are the other who saw some minor action in three most likely starters from 1976, appears set at Walter's qld amongst a cast of thousands. rlanker position. Willie Jordan a starter at · · Steve Fuller started nine times at quarterback for Clemson last season and he's back again. The cornerback last year has been rangy 6-4 junior completed 50 per moved to wideout, but if things cent of his passes last year and don't improve he may become has adapted well to Pell's new I the first two-way ACC player in formation after directing the the past couple of years. Once past the secondary, the Oemson defense looks sound . . Bubba Brown and Randy Scott Parker veer for two seasons. are back a lineb.acker and both a Fuller also found time to run for solid if not spectacular 503 yards last year. performers. But Fuller should find his ball carrying time cut into this season. The Tigers possess several experienced backs, led Jonathan Brooks. whom Pell by little Warren Ratchford, the calls the ACC's most underated team's leading rusher a year ago. player leads the line from He will likely start at the tailback defensive end. He '11 be joined by position for Pell's team. tackles Jim Stucky and Archie The fullback slot could go to Reese along with end Mark Ratchford's main companion last Heniford, ali returners. year Harold Goggins, but Tracy Rich Tuten will likelv start in All-around a&blete Steve Fuller, the Tigers' quarterback, will try this year to lead qemson out of Death Perry who has better size ( 220 to Nelson Wallace's old ~oseguard valley and into the first division in the conference.

1976 Results 1977Scbedale Clemson on Paper . spot although Toney Williams (U-2) should see some playing time. September Punting has no current leader for the Tigers who finished fifth 1~- Maryland (H) last year with departed Mark Offensive leaders) 17-Georgia O'Cain. 24-Georgia Tech

QB-Steve Fuller October Clemson 10, The Citadel7 OG-Joe BOstic The Tigers could jell and save Georgia 41, Clemson 0 SE-Jerry Butler Pell the anguish that Parker Clemson 24, Georgia Tech 24 1-Va. Tech faced last season but Clemson Tennessee 21, Clemson 19 Defensive leaders 8-Virginia (H) appears just a little too fragile to Wake Forest ZO, Clemson 14 15-Duke be considered a good team. Clemson 18, Duke 18 22-N.C. State (H) ·'"!'·DE- Jonathan Brooks The secondary is too big a hole N.C. State30, Clemson21 %9- Wake Forest (H) and neither the offensive line or Clemson 15, Florida State 12 LB-Bubba Brown the backfield, although UNC 21,-Qe.,.. 23 November experienced, appears Maryland·~ 'Qem8on 0 outstanding. Clemim 21, ClroBna 9 5-UNC Sauth 12-Notre Dame (H) With out alot of surprising 19-South Carolina performances, Death Vallf:v could be an ironically bad jc' ~ for Clemson again in 1977. ·.· PAGE EIGHTEEN Friday, September 9, 1917, OW GOLD AND BLACK Where are you gOing Virginia?

As Johnny Carson would say, is under construction. With one­ Bestwick, "we're. still not tough foundation. were first-year players. The the University of Virginia's point wins over Wake Forest and enough to .compete successfully ''!thought we had more quality squad yielded 446 yards and 24.2 football team is so bad that it's Lehigh last year's only bright in the Atlantic Coast Conference. players here than we had," he points a contest. not even mentioned in its own spots, the Cavaliers' blue prints The progress is evident in said. "We might have only 14 Depth, despite a young and press guide. are not very clear. practically every aspect of our juniors and seniors playing this experienced line up, will plague Well: that's not exactly correct­ program, but we still have a long season." - UV a on defense as well. -but it's close. There is a short Confusion is king in this college Grant Hudson (6-4, 264) and two-page preview of 1977 with an town nestled among the hills of Lee Browning (6-2, 235) will play agonizing look back on 1976. At western Virginia. Cavalier fans the ends. Sam Plabe and Joe the same time, though, there are are asking where are you going Turner are the linebackers while · 14 pages abOut the campus and Virginia, and Virginia how far The Cavaliers a good group of tackles competes UVa's tradition as an "institution will you go? for the linemen spots. By Tommie O'Toole of national stature." There are UVa 1s major strength will be also numerous pages of statistics its secondary ... and records dating to 1888. Truly The answer, of course, lies with interesting reading. the 33 returning Cavalier let­ way to go." (Shades of Chuck To begin with, Bestwick will Thus, the indication is that it's termen and head coach Dick Mills just a few short years ago.) have to resurface his offense ''Our secondary is composed of some highly dedicated, hard rebuilding time in Charlot­ Bestwick and his frustrated staff. Bestwick's rebuilding process which lost nine starters including ''Although we are ·better than may take longer than he thinks Andre Crier who caught the last­ working and talented individuals tesville, and from the football because he is virtually without a who have experience," said · team to Scott Stadium everything we were a year ago," said second TD pass against Wake Forest. Only tackle Hans Bestwick. "They could be the­ Baumann and guard Rick best in the ACC." Zimmerman return. Also back is All four starters return and punter Russ Henderson, a junior only one, Jay Morris, will be a who last year _averaged 45.9 senior. yards on 69 punts, which was fourth best in the nation. The .Cavaliers seem to be building not a team, but a Skip Browning, Vince Maddox foundation, which is, at least, a and Paul Izlar, a transfer from. start. Twenty-four freshmen Vanderbilt, will work the back­ (only seven from the state of field. Virginia) join the team this fall. As was the case at Wake Forest not too long ago, the newcomers Rising sophomores Tim Moon will be ct)unted on heavily. and Mike Newhall earned the first team be~hs at sp~t an~ tight , "It's never a healthy situation end, respectively. Grier w~ll be to cooot on first-year performers replaced by Tom C~amplin, a in order to get the job done we walk-on w~o lettered last fall. want," Bestwick said. "But, that The ma]or problem for the remains a necessity for our Cavaliers on offense is the program." quarterback spot. The Cavs lost Andy Hitt, the conference's leading passer in 1976. Consequ2ntly, there will be a constant shuffling of players throughout the fall. Thus, while ''Quarterback is still QUr the fans won't know where number one problem area," Virginia is going, the players Bestwick said. "By necessity, won't even know where they are we'll take a very long look at the going. four first-year players at the "You're never really satisfied beginning of fall drills. No one with your football team as long as candidate emerged as a · you have to play people where dominant force following spring you need them rather than where practice." - they can best perform," Best­ wick said. "I'm afraid- that we're . The Cavs have no lettermen still in a position where we have back in the signalcaller slot. Of several people who will have to three upperclassmen, only Phil move around in order to get them _ Spencer has seen any varsity in a position where the team · action and that was extremely needs them most, where they can limited. best contribute to the team rather _ A lack of depth, speed and size than where they might function plagues Virginia's offense. best as individuals. Hopefully, The defense, however, returns the day will come with another Photo by Julia Drake 17 lettermen, including 12 who year or two of recruiting when we Dave Sloan, who graduated last year, left only one of the many boles in Virginia's squad. started at various times during can use people where they, can the season. Five of the starters play best." Virginia on paper . Maryland offense 1976 Results 1977 Schedule (w-9) • September weak 1n Washington 38, Virginia 17 Offensive Leaders 10-at N.C. State Wil1iam & Mary 14, Virginia 0 OT-Hans.Baumann 17-atTexas Duke 21, Virginia 6 (Continued from page Fourteen) preseason top 20 poll and tenth in OG-Ric Zimmerman 24-Duke the other. Georgia Tech 35, Virginia 14 P-Russ Henderson South carolina 35, Virginia 7 game, won 17-15 by the Terps. Claiborne, whose 102 career Virginia Tech 14, Virginia 10 October ''Two tight ends is a good coaching victories ranks him Virgjn_Ja 18, Wake Forest 17 Defensive Leaders 1-West Virginia formation · for us," Claiborne ninth among active coaches, has VMI 13, Virginia 7 8-at Clemson said. "We ran it more than we did put together a team capable of Vir . . 21, Lehigh 20 DE-Louis Collins 15-at Virginia Tech wide receivers last year." playing with -anyone in the ear: 31, Virginia 6 LB-Sam Pfabe 22-Wake Forest No matter what formation it country. Maryland 28, Virginia 0 DB-Tony Blount 29-at Syracuse uses, Maryland is a very good The offense, though, may not DB-Derrick Glasper ..... football team, perhaps not a be able to score at will against Personnel DB-Jay Morris November great one, but one good enough to maoy of the perennial powers. be ranked 14th on the list of most Lettermen Lost-20 But, it won't have to. Maryland's 5-VMI successful college squads over defense, that wide tackle six, is Lettermen Returning- 33 12-Carolina the last five years. This year, the Starter Returning-Off. 4, Def. 11 capable of stopping just about 19-at Maryland Terps are ranked ninth in one any college offense in the world. ' ' I , • , • ~ ,.. ~ PAGE NINETEEN FridaySeptember9,1977, Ol.DCAlLIJ A~D 81.. A(;K . . . . State may be e:1n bottom ten . As Wake Forest fans know all have enough to get the job done." "If we accomplish the first, working. And, given :une, he just State, as well as the conference too well, the Los Angeles Times · The offensive line, decimated we:n be improvedt he ad~ed. "If may produce ,a goOd team. teams. picks every week a list of the ·by graduation, poses one of the were successful m the firs~ and "If we can pick up where we bottoin ten teams in the nation. big concerns for Rein and his sec~nd we'll be goqd. And, If ~e left off in spring practice, we'll be The Deacons won't receive that staff. achieve all th~~e, rh boy, you d in great shape," he said. "I felt At worst, it's been a break-even dubious honor this year and per- Even with · Evans back at better lookout. we accomplished an awful lot year. This holds true for the haps never again. But, other quarterback, the Pack is thin at Those three ·goals, though, during the off season· drills. But, school's 85 years of participation squads in the conference could be that position, too. . . sound like· those :of an inex- the time is short and we've got a in collegiate football. For in­ tabbed this fall. Brown, one of the premter perienced team lad~m with fresh-· lot of work to accomplish." stance, in 1967, the Pack was 9-2 The L.A. Times picks also a runner~ in the nation, ~ill ·men; Attaining them may not Rein and the Pack will need all and earned a trip to the Liberty game it calls the "Rout of the provide most of the . ~rtght cause other squads to "look out." that work as they tackle an im­ Bowl. Week." This year's first rout, moments for the 1977 editiOn of It may just mean that State is pressive ~chedule, featuring Yea, but then there's that said the Times, should have been N.C. State football. The 5-10, 188- merely improving ... ~ut, Rein is South Carolina, Auburn and Penn rout .... on September 3 in Raleigh when pound speedster rushed for 1,088 East Carolina was supposed to yards last season. He averaged. have devoured N.C. State's 5.9 yards a carry. be Wolfpack. ECU won, but by a 28- Both South Carolina's Jim 23 score. Hardly a rout. Even so, Carlin and Clemson's Red Parker N.C. State should be the victim of ·called Brown the most dangerous at least one rout this fall. . back they faced all year. Just two years ago, N.C. State · The backfield and receiving played West Virginia in the 1973. corps is sprinkled with fine Peach Bowl. That was the performers; however, depth and Wolfpack's fourth consecutive inexperience lurk over State's post-season appearance. Now, campus like the smell of tobacco though, State is coming off a 3-7-1 on a clear morning in Winston-. a record and fifth-place ACC finish. Salem. The Pack has virtually no ·chance The wide-receiving tandem of for a winning season and bowl bid starters Elijah Marshall and be · is a near impossibility. Dave Moody returns. At tight a Despite the return of some end, Jimmy Stowe should- do an outstanding individual per- adequate job. formers like Ted Brown, Ralph "We've got· to eliminate Strigner and Johnny Evans, State fwnbles,'' said Rein, who last is inexperience.d and thin. year at 32 was the youngest . "Sure we would like to have major college head coach in the more · experi~nce in certain nation. "Also, we must get away areas," second~year head coach from the penalties and we've got Ro. Rein said. "But we figure we to stop giving up the long gainers. State on paper 1976 Results (3-7-1)

Funnan 17, State 12 Wake Forest 20, State 18 East Carolina 23, State 14 Quarterback Jolumy Evans headS a stenar backfield bat tbe offensive line won't afford them too much State 31, Michigan State 31 protection. State 24, Indiana 21 Maryland 16, State 2 · · State 21, North Carolina 13 State 38, Clemson 21 South Carolina 'll, State 7 • Penn State 41, State 20 Duke 28, State 14 erse zt Offensive leaders RB-Ted Brown ·QB -Johnny Evans Where You Will Find The Most FB-Tinuny Johnson

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5-Penn State 12-atDuke

A'Jt!.J' 011.•1'1.• .1.~1 ...'." .._• .... ~"·' "''' r"o~' _ • .,.,...... ,• .t' _.• ,..• ~~ ... • :¥'~-;..• "'-' •"'' ,_, ,,• .,._• n• -"' ···' ,. • .....• ~· \ •' ~ ' ' ~ • ' • " • ' • PAGE TWENTY Friday, September 9,1977, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Terrapins favored in ACC race

l n tt ~ race between the tortoise 'Duke's Mike Dunn is one of the an the hare the hare was the country's premier running cle; r favorite but allowed the quarterbacks and James tor'-.;_ · to catch up. In the ACC McDougald was the ACC's rookie thL ,·ear however, the Tortoise is of the year last season. Wake in the favorite and seems unlikely particular has a fine offensive that anyone will catch it. line that may be able to handle Mo.~·y land· s defensive-minded the hard-charging Terps. Duke's 1977 r\ub should win, with some defense however rates it slightly difticulty, the conference ahead of the Deacons. championship, their fifth straight North "carolina has alot of under coach Jerry Claiborne. quality people back but the loss of Maryland is not the seemingly Mike Voight and of four offensvie .. ACC-invincible team of years linemen will make the Heels· a ' past however. This is not a true much weaker squad than a year "up" year for the Terps and in ago. A tougher schedule won't many ways the competition in the help. circuit has caught up with the Clemson and N.C. State are two nationally-ranked Terps. very similar teams. Both had lots Maryland lost eight of its top 10 of problems last year and both offensive linemen from last could be good this season. The year's team and the Terp scoring Tigers' offense looks good but the machine may suffer but defense is questionable. State has Maryland's defense may be offensive line problems and nearly unbreachable. The Terps defense that may-be inconsistent. will be especially tough against Virginia is in the same place the run. that Wake was about three years I'wo other teams Duke and ago and the possibility of a above Wake Forest may have the cellar finish is unlikely for Dick fi P 1 .ver to challenge the Terps . Bestwick's team.

.... :. :. :. :. :. :. :. :. :. :. :. :· :· :·: ·:. :·: ·:.:.:.:.:·=.:.:. :· :·:. ··:·:-. ·= ...... · ... ·.·... ·. ·.·... · ..... · ...... ·...... :::::.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:-:·: -:.:.: ..: -: ·=· :-:-:·=·=· :- :-:·:·:·:=:·:· :=:-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ·:. :::::.:.:.:.:.:.:.:·=·: ·: ·: -:.:. :-:·=· :-: ..:·:·.- ...... ·-.... _... " ...... -~.· ..... · ...... ·.•.·.· ... ·...•. ·. ·. ~-~·~-~· ~-~·: Old Gold & Black _predicts Order Ted Brown is ooe of tbe ACC's top mnningbacks. Photo courtesy N.C. State of finish Old Gold & Black 1. -- Maryland 2.-- Duke 3. --Wake Forest 4. •· Carolina Preseason aii-ACC team 5. •• N.<:. State - -·- 6. -- Clemson 7. -- Virginia Offense

End-Tom Hall (Duke) End-Steve Young (Wake Forest) Tackle-Jackie Robinson (Wake Forest) Tackle-Lacey Brumley (Clemson) Guard-Joe Bostic (Clemson) Guard-Mike Salzona (Carolina) Center-Larry Tearry (Wake Forest) Back-MarkManges (Maryland) Back-James McDougald (Wake Forest) Back-Ted Brown (State) Tar Heel Defense Back-Steve Atkins (Maryland) . ' built around line ~fense Line-Ernie Salley (Mary1and) Line-Dee Hardison (Carolina) (Continued from page Fifteen) kicks again for Carolina. Line-Ken Sheets (Carolina) where he can bat down aerials Bill Dooley's team was held on Line-Larry Seder (Maryland) instead of trying to throw them. its winning track last season by a. Line- Lyman Smith (Duke) Ricky Barden, who has some Backer-Brad Carr (Maryland) experience, returns at the other Backer-Don Cervi (Wake Forest) deep back. very thin thread, a thread that was severely frayed by the loss of Back-Ralph Stringer (State} Johnny Elam will be back to Back-James Royster (Wake Forest) handle the punting duties for Voight. Carolina may recover . from his departure, but it will Back-Jonathan Clairbome (Maryland) Carolina and Tom Biddle is K-Mike Sochko (Maryland) returns to kick field goals, an mean improvement throughout . - - the Tar· Heel lineup if Carolina is P-Johnny Evans (N.C. State) to match the glories of 1976.

area wnere ne set a scho( -~ record last year. Powell and Colins · wm return r • • • • . 1 , , , , , \ . ~ +, . ' ' ' .,.. '01 • I - • ' ) '•.'!·!·._ 1 .. 1'Y f''.~l.,,(", ,. ' .•. . : . r. '· \. • ' "" .. '; ·,..' ~: ( ':"- ~ , ) t { 't .. ~- ~ ~ ' t ·,. ~ ~ : l !_ f I 1... ; ""·•. l ~ ~ ~ ',' I \ . -~ ·_.' • .: •.• -.· ,\ . • • . 't ... J • 1 ' • •/ o ,C : I ' : ' ~ \I t I a ' f t ' ! "': ' 1 . .