TODAY INSIDE TODAY EDITORALL Y *INSURANCE * TRIBBLE FOR STUDENTS LANDSCAPING * NATURE * TRIAL AND ERROR- Best Newspaper In The Carolinas . ' VOLUME LVD *** WakeForeatUmversity, Wlnston-Salem,NorthCaroUna, Friday, March 3, 1972 *** Number 2% .CU Faces Quorum Lost Big Loss SG Rejects On Byrds All the bills. and ticket receipts. aren't In now, but the College Vote Delay Union is expecting to take a "substantial" loss on last By SUE CARTER Saturday's concert by the Byrds Staff Writer In Memorial Coliseum. "The turnout was not what we Mter lengthy debate, the Student Government legislature Wed­ expected," said Bill Briggs, nesday night defeated a propossl to postpone student body elections chairman of the CU major func­ one month until the proposed new student comtitution could be con­ tions ·committee. "It was sidered. disappointing." Legislators also voted to accept "with reproach" a fund allocation of Last year at Homecoming, student government money made by Student Government President when CU .sponsored Three Dog Bill deWeese without consulting the legislature. . Night In the coliseum, the bouse ~e election postponement measure was defeated 20 -19. A two­ was nearly sold out and CU thirds vote was required for passage. almost broke even. The electiom will be held at their originally scheduled time on y March 28. MAYPLANSSTDLON Legislator Bunz Daniels proposed the postponement, saying that the delay was necessary because the new constitution would "create new This loss will be big enough to offices and committees and delete others." 0 burt the CU's budget, but ''hopes "The government elected before the constitution is approved may haven't been shattered for a May not fit the new structure," she argued. 6·8·10 concert," Briggs said this week. Photo By Hiesty Severai members then He's still "looking forward to a challenged the proposal on the big concert then." grounds that the comtitution was Briggs said that last weekend, February, And Sundecks Go Coed still in the preparatory stage and which also included a Friday night concert by Livingston had yet to go before the Student Taylor, gave WFU students "an Life Committee or the faculty for owortunity to hear tWo quaHty 'Illegitimate' Request Denied approval. . concerts which would be hard to Speaking for the opposition, beat anywhere." 'Teach-in' Legislator Phil Tate remarked The Livingston Taylor- conceri that the elections should be held In Wait Chapel was sponsored as previously scheduled "in case jointly by the Men's Residence Men's Open House Policy Unclear Scheduled the constitution is not ready by Council and the Inter-Fraternity the end of the year." Council. representatives today, on the JI'Oper behavior on the part of the students and the trustees at the For Arts The legislators also heard a MRC.IFC ALSO LOSE By CARLA GARDNER basis that the Atlantic Coast students. same times. The Southern report by de Weese explaining his staff Writer Conference tour­ Hurley agreed, "Everyone Baptist State Convention bas the Four graduate students in action in giving $50 from the seemed to enjoy it and in general, real power." "community services" allocation · Constantine Kutteh, MRC vice­ nament constitutes a special architecture from Princeton GORDON A. CRAIG president, noted that even though With the new open house policy weekend. the girls left when they were "The girls have a much better University will lead a "teach-in" of Student Government money to "we were just a few short of only two weeks old, confusion has Reece had previously in­ supposed to." policy," Hurley said, because Monday and Tuesday to talk a fireman's carnival for un­ selling out the Chapel, there will already arisen about what dicated, however, that he did not He said he is "disappointed "open lounge is strictly for girls" about architecture for the derprivileged children. Historian be a $300 to 500 loss ort the con­ constitutes a "selected occasion" think the tournament would with the guys' rules," but he and "women also have the right proposed fine arts building. during which an open house De Weese smd he acted by cert." can warrant an open house. "To me, blamed the trustees, rather than to petition for an unlimited The teach-in is the first step in "executive perogatlve" and did "Before the concert we had be held in the men's dormitories. (intervisitation) would be a the administration, for their number of open houses." a plans of Dr. Charles Allen, not feel that consultation with the To Talk On hoped at'best to break even," he Dean of Men Mark Reece logical conclusion if the purpose severity. "Technically, the ad­ "Girls should encourage guys chairman of the Fine Arts legislature was required. ·added. turned down a request Wed· was for girls to go to the boys' ministration is going against the to come into the lounges," he Commission, to get maximum Diplomacy In explaining the loss Kutteh nesday for an open house this room and watch the ACC tour­ trustees" for allowing any type of said. Open lounges should be ''not student input for the commission Legislator Robin Hinshaw said, "We were not told about a weekend, but Lane Hurley, nament," he said. open house policy, he said. especially for daters," but they before the March 21 and 22 proposed that the legislature Historian Gordon A. Craig will ~resident of the Men's Residence used $300 fee to the booking,agcm9f,.~'. neweese said .that he was "Many of the deans want us to should be as "an op­ heaiings on bUilding plBns. accept the action, but agreed to speak in the courtroom of the lllw Council,, ·admitted· ·that· the "positively· llripreilsed' Wltb · the be jrogressive," he added. "The portunity tomeet-more people," Allen said the-Commission has the suggestion that'. the ac­ building Monday at 8 p.m. on new He also noted-that a free sound request was "illegitimate" system · which had been an­ smoo!Ju)esa. ol ~ .~peration of . trustees are in such control, that he explained.· ·. · · got "enthusiasm and in-put know­ ceptance be amended to read dimensions of international ticipated did not ·materlalize: · because it was not made early - open house-' last: week~" He ex" the administration does not have "The girls·are aoing a great job how," but needs more input. "accept with reproach" in order relations in the twentieth cen­ "There was no way, with the enough or by the proper plained that he had toured the that much power, as I see it. The by limiting the guys that come He hopes to make the visiting to signify the legislature's tury. new expenses, to make a profit," representatives. campus during the open . house administration is in a terrible in," he said. "The open lounges graduate students available for disapproval of not being con­ Craig will also lecture Tuesday Kutteh added. ''I'm just glad that Hurley Said he is concerned, and was not aware of any im· position, trying to appease the help build Cfl'llillunity." bull sessions, visits to the various sulted. at 11 a.m. in the DeTamble series oowever, that Reece ·will in· on ''The Historian and the we were able to sponsor departments and one formal In other action: terpret "speclal occasions" so meeting in De Tamble. Twentieth Century: Some New something together and that it narrowly that the student · ( 1) Dick Sutton was went over so welt" The s~dents would serve as a Problems and Some That Are Not organizations will have a hard panel for the DeTamble unanimously confirmed as editor So New." time even getting ''legitimate" SLC Defeats SG Request gathering. · of next year's Student Handbook. A Phi Beta Kappa visiting requests approved. _ All this activity would "provide (2) Student Government vice­ scholar, Craig has been a "Dean Reece listed events such a base of technical infonnation" Jrofessor at Stanford University Pit Opens as homecoming, Parent's president George Bryan an­ for students and others at the nounced that Steve Holleran, Jeff since 1961 and is presently J.E. Weekend, Red Garter weekend, For Election Of Trustee university who do not work in the Wallace Sterling Professor of Hunt, and Ken Nodes were being and Greek Week as four oc­ art, music or theatre depart­ Humanities. casions that would warrant dropped from the legislature and a member of the SLC, asked possibility mentioned was ments. because of excessive absences. His particular interest is in To Study special weekends," he said. With The Student Life Committee the committee exactly what referring the matter to the These graduate students are in modern diplomacy and German a policy restricted to only these turned down· Wednesday a "going underground" would faculty again. the area to plan solution ar­ (3) A bill proposing remodeling history. The west section of the occasions, he noted, the men's Student Government request that mean to societies. · "It's a very serious problem chitectural solutions to problems. of the old legislature room was He is author of "The Politics of cafeteria will be open for study dorms could have been opened the student body be allowed to The women are considering involving both ideais and prac­ "They're exploring, and we want deferred until next week when the Prussian Army: 1640-45," from 8 p.m. to midnight every more frequently under a bill elect the SLC's nominee to the this measure, since the faculty ticalities, which has got to be to do some brain-picking," Allen actual figures and sketches for "From Bismarck to Adenauer: Sunday through Thursday rejected by the SG legislature university board of trustees. refused to allow SLC recom­ talked about," Gunderson said. said. the remodeling could be ob­ Aspects of German Statecraft," beginning Sunday night, ac­ that allowed six open houses each To comply with the trustees' mendation that the women's Steve Grossman, sophomore of Most of the commission's tained. "Europe Since 1815," and other cording to Steve Schreiber, year. request for a student nominee to clubs shift to a selective rush Greensboro who headed the SG activity before the hearings will historical works: assistant to the dean of men. the 4-year post, the SLC will system (all rushees would not committee which prepared the be carried out by the steering (4) A vote on a bill proposing Craig was president of the choose one student from that the Student Government Pacific Coast Branch of the Schreiber said that the ad­ 'DEANSHAVEPOWER' nominations made by SLC receive bids). bill of rights, met with the SLC committee, since there are many ministration had been con­ Gunderson said it was stated in for 45 minutes to answer community representatives who apply for membership in the American Historical Association sidering the possibility of Under the undefined members. The fmal nomination the meeting that underground questions about his project. cannot easily be involved in a National Student Lobby was for the year 1970-71 and is now will be sent to the board of utilizing the cafeteria for study requirement for a "special trustee be clubs would not be able to use One major objection to the bill large number of activities on postponed for a week due to lack chairman of the Central since the beginning of the year. A weekend," Hurley said, "it looks s fore their April 21 university facilities, to use the is that the faculty passed a bill of campus. of a quorum. European Section of the AHA. I , meeting. donation of $150 from the to me like all the power is back A discussion of the dilemma of Wake Forest name or otherwise rights two years ago, and "that is Women's Residence Council for with the deans." identify themselves with the still a live document,'' Gunderson the purchase of doors to off Reece said,· however, that he societies which must give school and to collect funds. said. the kitchen and serving areas of ha membership bids to 200 rushees "'fhe faculty has given us no d not Intended the four OC· was the "hottest" item on the Consideration was postponed SJB, Deans Define Duties the cafeteria made use of the casions he mentioned to be an latitude in which to move," until the SLC·meets next month, dining room possible. exclusive list, but merely . SLC agenda at the regular Gunderson said. "And 200 girls primarily because ail members ' Originai plans by the ad­ examples. monthly meeting, according to will overload the system." of the committee did not receive By JOHN EILIO'IT violatiom anyway, to handle "That could be much more ministration included the em­ The MRC had requested an chairman Gary Gunderson, The committee voted to talk copies of the bill before the Managing Editor automatic penalties in cases for serious," he said. \ ployment of a monitor to open bouse this weekend on the Action on the society problem ·informally with the girls and to meeting. which a clear precedent has Heidgerd explained that the maintain order and guard basis that the darice it is spon- and the SG's new Student Bill of meet Wednesday for further "We didn'tkill the issue at ail," The Student Judicial Board will been set. Students who are different penaities were a result against vandalism, but a monitor sorlng on Friday night. and the Rights was postponed. discussion of the problem. One Gunderson said, "and Grossman allow the Dean of Men and the dissatisfied with the dean's of the different regulations under would cost about $300 each year, N.C. state basketball game on MissLuLeake,DeanofWomen will meet with us again next Dean of Women to handle most rulings would appe81 to the which the two students were Schreiber said. Satur~y~twmddcomtitutea ------~------month. conduct violations after the board College Review Board, a student­ prosecuted. The maie host was With the present plans, the special Weekend. · In other action Wednesday the has set precedents for penaities faculty board which also hears warned by Reece for having administration is "depending The open house policy specifies SLC fonned a sulrcommittee to for specific offenses, SJB appeals from decisions of the violated a provision of his room upon student responsibility," that a request for an open house deai with the generai problem of Chairman Fritz Heidgerd said Honor Council. contact, while the woman was charged with violating a "social I ,, Schreiber explained. must be made seven days prior to student involvement in campus this week. The SJB will thus hear the proposed date by represen­ life, with an aim toward iden­ SJB members met with the two Jrirnarily cases involving "new" rule." tatives from all the following tifying the barriers to in­ deans Monday to discuss areas of offenses, Heidgerd said. A rule which would apply to the organizations: the MRC, volvement and interaction. jurisdiction in conduct cases. The As for intervisitation, "I think visitor rather than to the student Women's Residence Council, "The committee will be con­ meeting was scheduled after the deam will let the judicial who signed the room contact Committee Interfraternity and Intersociety cerned not only with intervisitation trials three weeks board decide the punishment, but apparently is not listed in any Councils, and Student Govern­ organizational activity but aiso ago, at which Heidgerd admitted the deans are stipulating that code of regulatiom, aithough ment. Hurley submitted the with trying to look at the barriers later the board was unsure of its such and such will be a Miss Leake noted, "It's written Asks 4-1~4 down in the minutes of the board ' I· request for this weekend alone. to interaction among students as exact respomibilitles. minimum," he said, adding that Hurley said that he was "not individuals," Gunderson said. This iB the SJB's first year of the "such-and-such" had not of 1rustees." surprised, but disappointed" that The SLC nominated two operation, and Heidgerd said­ been established yet. The trustess have voted each of Extension the open house was not granted. members to the College Review part of its confusion resulted Unlike the Honor Council, the the last two years to prohibit "They have the right to turn Board, as required by the SG from the broad and vague duties SJB has no statutes prescribing women students from visiting in Acommittee of administrators, down every request we have," he constitution. These were Dr. John it was given in the Student maximum and minimum men's rooms. professors, and students has said. Rinehart and Dr. George M. Government constitution. penalties for specific offenses. Asked whether the board voted to recommend to the Bryan. According to the constitution, In the intervisitation trials planned to give the same faculty executive and ·curriculum DEWEESE DISAGREES It was decided that the senior the board must "receive, prefer three weeks ago, the board penaities to host and visitor in committees that the ex­ oration competitions will be and try ail charges of social provoked some criticism from future intervisitation cases, perimental 4-1-4 calendar be On the other hand, SG conducted by having each misconduct and ail violatiom of students by putting the female Heidgerd replied, "That's • \ t I extended "for not more than two President Bill deWeese said department send the SLC the University rules and regulations visitor under social probation, something we'll have to consider additional years in order to under the present policy the dean names of two nominees and for individual students and while giving the male host a when tl)e trials come up." assess the effects of the program has _no authority to overrule a outlines of those students' senior student organizations not warning that he would have to "There is some sentiment on more thoroughly." request on. the basis that the speeches. covered by the Honor Council." move off campus if he were the board" for equalizing the weekend is, In his opinion, not a With the cooperation of the "This would cover everything convicted again. penalties, he added. speech department the com­ Both he and the deans I I A spokesman for the com­ special· occasion. down to coffeepots (the rule Reece said he was surprised mittee said the members felt they Reece said that under the new mittee will screen those prohibiting cooking appliances in that students seemed to think the described the meeting as would be too rushed in making a policy "the decision is reached by nominees to :~elect four orators donn rooms), and I don't think it woman had gotten the worst end amiable, with no real conflicts of decision if the experiment ended several people," but he admitted and two alternates for com­ was the sentiment of the people of a "double standard." He noted opinion. as originally scheduled after the that in effect he held veto power Photo By Hiesty petition in May. who designed the board to be that that while social probation "We hope we can do something 1973 spring semester. and could not be "outvoted" by In a recommendation to the picky," Heidgerd said. "We'd be merely means some kind of so that future boards will not student representatives. administration, the SLC asked meeting four nights a week." stiffer penalty for a second of­ have the problems that we've The committee thought the 4-1· A proposal for an open house Lee Waits For The Fall that the top speaker (who wins a Therefore, the board has asked fense, another conviction for the had," he concluded. "But I really 4 should be extended at least one next Friday and Saturday was medal) be a commencement the deans, who receive most boy would mean forfeiting his don't think we deserve all the year, the spokesman said. sulxnitted to Reece by the proper

' ' PAGE TWO- Friday, March 3, 1972, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Singles Want To Invest Now Nature Science Center Students Like Life Insurance Moving From Gardens By NANCY ANDREWS . Assistant Editor collegiates to purchase life in­ surance comp~y "repays" itseif deferred premium policy. other salesmen he contacted By SUSAN GILLETI'E before selecting his own policy. Assistant Editor surance. Even students without a ~fter four or ftve years, deduc­ In August Steve Rainey, senior Squeezed In between a natural spouse or children who would ting the loan balance from the of Lexington, purchased a dif. Ed Ferguson, a Winston-8elem senior who bought the regular foods store and a dress Shop in Consumers Union, the white lack financial support if the head cash value of the student's life ferent deferred payment policy, a Reynolds Gardens is the nature knight of American's buying of the household died have in­ insurance policy. College Master plan sold by College Master life pollcy, science center, an independent, public, claims that life insurance sured their lives. One recent graduate working Fidelity Union Life Insurance of scoffed at the deferred premium jriyately-nm museum boasting a is a frivolity most college Some single seniors took ad­ the Wake Forest market is Ed Dallas. plan ( "In~sl: would be a big number of exhibits on topics vantage this fall of deferred Wooters, Student Government Rainey said he 'knows be isn't mistake.") hut praised the students can't afford. benefits of hb policy. ranging from .. the moon, lo heart payment plans with provisions president last year. Wooters sells getting the first year free,' and surgery~ to ecosystems. for a loan to the student at 6 to 8 the Senior Plan of Pilot Life thinks the policy offers good "If thert' ilad .been high Many insurance companies pressure I wouldn't have The museum Is moving frOm and a number of Wake Forest per cent interest to cover the first Insurance Company, and benefits for the price he's paying. the gardens, and expanding its annual premium. "believes in the value to the His major reasons for pur­ bought," Ferguson said. "In· students are convinced, however, surance was an illvestment that facilities Into a ?:1 acre plot of that there are good reasons for In most such plans, the in- student" of Pilot's special chasing the policy are that his land off Hanes Mill Road. It's age and current physical con­ would eventually be needed and it director, Lee Firnmeron, views dition enabled him to get a lower was~now." the change as an opportunity to . premium rate than he would have A business major, Ferguson afford the Winston-Salem obtained later, and that this is a consulted with one of his professors, community · with a special Report Raps Policies "preferred rating" which will be who was "quite learning experience. maintained if he increases the pleased" with the policy's benefits. He illtends the plans for the amount of his · policy after a new center to be geared toward (Prepared by Consumer Reports) Insurance men have their sales $151 comes to $76.07. decline in health. Most insurance salesmen. From the creditor's standpoint, consciousness of the en­ pitch so programmed to this Rainey also said he'd "hate to working the WF students are vironment, including features Unless a college student has hurc.Ue that they can often turn it such loans are among the safest think" his parents "would get no obeyillg the university rule imaginable, says Consumers against "knocking on doors." A such as night lights at eye level so children, as a rule he should not into a selling point. Says Con­ monetary retribution" if he died that visitors can look at the sky, buy life insurance. In fact, says sumers Union, they approach the Union. within a year or two. number of first-year graduates One element involves a are handling life insurance and non-asphalt parking lots, the nonprofit Consumers Union, tremium paying problem by Although Wake Forest friends things that "people always talk "the last thing most college offering to finance the first an­ miniature endowment policy to whom Rainey referred his own policies designed for collegiates, built right into the insurance and Rainey says during the first about and nobody does." students need is life insurance." nual premium, and frequently College Master salesman thought Firnmeron Indicated that the The exception would be the the second, with a loan to be paid policy. At the end of five years, the insurance sales pitch was montlls of school "friends of the the insurance company gets most old seniors would buy from the tiggest Improvement would be breadwinner on whom children off perhaps five years later. "high-pressure," Rainey said it the center's "control of the land." The Interest on that five year of the cash value in payment of compared favorably with that of agents they knew." will be dependent until they grow the policyholder's debt. Presently, they cannot manage up. Despite this atypical cir­ loan? It's payable at an annual even the parking lots outside the ·cumstance for a collegian, CU rate of 6 to 8 per cent or more. The promissory note itself has built into it an acceleration building. "The nicest thing about says "the life insurance agent And, says CU, in many plans the leaving Is that we can do has become a familiar figure on policyholder pays interest on the clause, a typical feature of retail installment contracts. If the Policy Check-up something about the en­ many campuses." interest, too. viromnent,'' he said. Bearing this out is an industry As an example of what-life­ student fails to pay any premiwns on time, the lender can The new center will take over survey of more than 300 life­ Insurance loans can cost, the '....------. land and buildings from a defunct nonprofit consumer organization demand immediate payment of insurance companies which the entire loan. With the county home for the aged. turned up 20 per cent with sales tells of a $10,000 policy sold by Although plans are at least five Fidelity Union Life of Dallas in promissory note, he can also . "'·~' programs aimed at college readily obtain a court judgment months from completion, Fim· . ...s:: students and young professionals 19'70. The 21-year-old student : f4 ', .),:.:;.~ ordering payment. I'll meron Indicated that a lake, two :JA x,(.'-", ,i"'~':i'l who are not yet earning enough to purchaser paid an annual in­ INSURANCE to four acres In size, would be pay the premiums. terest rate of 8.5 per cent. The None of the policies or CG constructed. He plans to build .. A visitor to the Nature Science Museum's mini-zoo gets a handful Isn't it difficult to sell a pollcy compounded finance charge on promissory notes examined by nature trails through the woods from a shetland pony. . Photo By Jones to someone who can't afford it? the first year premium loan of Consumers Union had a provision on the property, and he is con­ for refund of premiums during sidering simulating an Indian consciousness. "The message perience, Flmmeron challenged ·the first year. And, says CU, the vl.llage on one part of the land. will be that learning takes place ·the average person to remember policies examined tended to be Besides its existing natural everyvvhere, not just inside how a mocking bird looks. They relatively expensive cash value history exhibits the museum will · walls," he said. As a culture, we are the most common birds in policies with lots of extra-priced include an environmental leader have been raised to believe that this area, and absolutely im­ features. center, for symposiums and the most authentic learning possible for people to avoid. MOBIL speakers, with a science and comes from books, from "white "Somehow, people have stopped industry building, featuring middle class linear print," he looking," be said, adding that his SERVICE STATION displays on the role of science said. project emphasized awareness SUMMER JOBS and industry in the culture. However, Fimmeron believes on that level. Reynolda Rood "We want to really return it that there are two ways of Understanding of the en­ Guys & Gals needed for summer (the land) back to a natural learning, from books and from vironment tends to be a theme for employment at numerous loca­ setting, which is a big order. experience. With his museum, he the museum, in its attempt to Welcomes All WFU Students! tions throughout the nation in· We're attempting to avoid hopes to provide experiences as Iring nature home as a personal eluding National Parks, Resort classrooms and teaching. This valuable as classic book­ experience. However, Fimmeron Areas, and Private Camps. For "On the othel' hand, if you should institution is going to turn into a learning. "The purpose of this is expressed his belief that many r:et elobbered, say, in a demonstration, we don't pay oil'. criticisms on the home front are Quality Service and Tender Loving Care free information send self-ad· We consider thai an ael of God." series of experiences," Fim· to provide a learning experience dressed, STAMPED envelope to meron said, explaining the total other than what you get inside a met with apathy, while everyone For Your Jags, VeHes, and classroom, for people to learn at is willing to accuse everyone else Opportunity Researeb,. Dept. Next week OG&B examines the features· good and bad purpose ofhis project. SJO, Century Bldg., Polson, MT He stressed that his program their o"Wn rates." of pollution. "Once conservation Other Transportation - of life ins11l'811Ce plans beiDg promoted by local Emphasizing Jlis point on:the gets. personal,. ~t goes 9ut the 59860. APPLICANTS MUST salesmen for coDege students. did not .lleC!lssarlly carry a A.PPL Y EARLY .•. message about envi,r~ental nee4: fgr l~g .~~ljgh.,:,ex- ~~o:~/~-,.. hf~: ~9· -..: .;~:.; ·~:r .

After an evening out at a movie, or a meeting, or bowling-make your last stop a Burger King" for a snack. And live it up a little. Try something deliciously different-A Yumbo' Lean slices of smokehouse ham and slabs of golden cheese heaped on a fresh-baked egg roll, popped into our microwave oven-then served to you. piping hot. in a special thermal container. with all its flavor sealed right in. If you think it sounds good. just wait 'til you taste it! Next time you want an evening snack, stop at a Burger King" and ask for a Yumbo" . ~ BURGER .._.®KING

major, Op. 5, inGminor; B minor, Op. Derivations Bach: Bach:

BP.M.S. ~RC'lWC ···:•. 9:30 p 10:30 FREE. COKE 11 P.M. WITH THE PURCHASE OF A VUMBO·"' .t!leUI!I!!RII!II!GE~R Delicious hot ham and cheese sandwich KING ,,, 2897 Reynolda Rd. Aa=T~I2 Tti~ Jtl()W Offar expires March 9, 1972 ···. ~J~~CI\ f)~ ~ ,UM13(J __, OTHER LOCATIONS: 2100 Peters Creek Pkw. 548 Stratford Rd. PAGE THREE- Friday, March 3, 1972, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Documentary To Show Agnew Aide Will Speak Campus journalists.. will be workshop coordinator Susan Wake Forest, the retired jour­ exploring techniques and Gillette. nalism lecturer for whom the R. E. Lee's Implosion · Jililosophies behind their work "We're trying to find areas workshop is named; Mrs. Helen during the fourth E. E. Folk where the staffs' work overlap, Tucker Beckwith, a Wake Forest By BETSY GILPIN Journalism Workshop, April 21- for example news coverage for alumna who is a newspaper­ Staff Writer facilities and resulting lack of hear the ·wind whistling through 22. radio-TV and for a newspaper, so finances. A former winner of the woman turned novelist; and the cracks in the walls." Highlighting the Friday and we can give students some fonner WF students working The Implosion of the Robert E. "Hotel of the Year" award, the "The saddest part is the Saturday programs 1rill be a lessons and some perspective on with newspapers and radio and Lee Hotel is the subject of a film trend to modernize called for Its ballroom," added Hiester. "It discussion of government and the total range of public com­ television stations in the area. documentary being prcduced by removal in the name of progress. was once known for its social press relations, led by Mr. munications." "We want to represent nearly students, but the students ran The boys first decided to make functions and now its empty­ Herbert Thompson, a university "An important part of the every profession related to into trouble this week when two the documentary because of their except for the .pigeons which alumnus who handles com­ }X'ogram will be meeting the journalism work," Ms. Gillette campus organizations delayed interest in films and because they come in through the boles in the munications for Vice President people who'll be on campus to consider the removal of the hotel said. action on helping .them fund the roof." Spiro Agnew, and Miss Marjorie share their experience and !mow­ Other tentative participants (rOject. · · a historical event of social Most of the furnishings for the Hunter, Washington how with us." significance. are Bud Lee, a New York City Appeals for funds had been building were 9old last year soon correspondent for The New York In addition to Thompson and photographer who works for made to the Student Government The project itself will be after the hotel was vacated. The .. - Times. Miss Hunter, participants will treated as a course in the ex­ Esquire, and Dave Rush, a and the Men's Residence Council. only signs of what the building That program will be open to include Dr. Edgar E. Folk of Washington TV newsman. The first body was unable to act perimental college. ~ to be are the bar .which is the public, as well as to jour­ on the measure this week for lack The film will be developed still in the ballroom and a few nalism students and of a quorum, and the second bOdy chronologically, showing the scattered coat hangers and shoe }X'ofessionals who 1rill assist in delayed action unW the film. building in each of its stages of boxes. . workshops and seminars for the makers had exhausted other . demolltlon. It will also include The implosion . itself is student staffs of Old Gold and STEVE'S possibilities. still pictures and interviews With scheduled for 7,:30 a.m. Sunday, Black, The Howler, The Student Members of the student film people connected with the hotel March 26. If weather or lack of and Caesura, and radio station team have already sunk about or with its destruction. completion force postponement WFDD-FM. Italian Ristorante fifty dollars of their own money in Allan Paul has collected ·ex­ . the Implosion 1rill be rescheduled "A lot of the program is the project. · teltsive background material on for the first week in April. planned for fun as well as Best In Italian Food Allan Paul, Jim Westbrook, · the hotel's early history, using education," according to· Mike Hiester and Hobart Jones the Winston-Salem Journal and PUBLIC CAN EXPLORE SPAGHffil And PIZZA are . currently filming the Sentinel archieves and personal ALSO AN AMERICAN MENU destruction of the landmark hotel interview as references. The grounds will be closed for whichis being removed to make "If anyone has access to or one day in order for the dust to Open 11:00 A.M.• 10:00 P.M. room for a new, modem facility. knows where we can find old settle and then the public will be The students have already used photographs or old movie footage allowed to explore the l'Uins. CLOSED SUNDAY about 400 feet of film in their of the hotel we would appreciate The boys have obtained per­ explorations into the it," Hiester remarked. He said mission to film the event from the preliminaries of the upcoming they could be contacted at the rooftops of First Baptist Church, 1.12 Oakwood Drive Howler office. · and the Wachovia and First Implosion. ACROSS FROM THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER The black and white The boys have already begun Union National Bank buildings. documentary 1rill be ready for· filming the demolition of the Additional crews will· be among showing no later than April 15. It inside of the building and of the crowd and with the man who wifi be narrated and ac­ surrounding structures. On three lights the fuse. companied by and original occaslons they went inside 'the "We are really interested in this film musical score. The film wlll be building, examining and sur­ making and would like a with this project or anyone who entered in the May 1 North veying the wreckage. lot of campus and community support," Hiester commented . would like to learn about making Article Probes Carolina Film Festival. ."It's really sad when you films should contact one of us consider what it once was," "We have already generated sometime this week. 50.~EAR..()LD PRIZE WINNER some support In downtown Jones said. "There's about a half "We have room for about 15 or The hotel, which is ap­ inch of paint chips on the floor Winston-Salem and would like to see some students involved. 20 students and it will have to be proximately 50 years old, fell and the walls are peeling. It is get on a first-come, first-serve victim to its lack of modem dark and damp-you can even "Anyone interested in helping basis."

Friday' March 3 Monday, March 6 Schubert: Sym. No. 2. Vivaldi: Concerto in C minor 5 P.M. ALL THINGS CON­ 7 A.M. RENAISSANCE ~yd 5 P.M.· ALL THINGS CON­ for flute, strings, cembalo; the en­ SIDERED Joyce SIDERED Bach: Chromatic Fantasia and a theme for 6 P.M. MUSIC AT SUNSET 1 P.M. PERSPECTIVES ON 6 P.M. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) Fugue in D minor. attempt to Brahms: Serenade in D, op. 11; VIOLENCE Ravel: Sonatine; Bax: Sonata 10 P.M. FffiiNG LINE a personal Schubert: Sonata in A minor 2 P.M. CONCERT HALL for Clarinet and Piano; Bach: 11 P.M. DEACONLIGHT Fimmeron Copland: Concerto for Clarinet Peter : Quintet No. 3 in G Cello Sonata in G major; with Jay Banks that many and string Orchestra; major; Bach: Toccata in D Tchaikovsky: Suite No. 4 for front are Prokofiev: sonata No. 7 in B major; Orchestra "Mozartiana"; Thursday, March 9 everyone flat major, op. 83; Londonderry Holst: SUite No. 1 in E flat Schwnann: Traumerei; Chopin: •Eirvo·ne else Air major; Courbo!s: Don Quixote; Nocturne, Op. 9, 7:55 P.M. ARTS FEATURE _.. Pr!l}cQfi~: V:iolin Col!~ ~o. No. 2; Saient-Saens: The Swan 8 P.M. EVENING CONCERT· · 2'in G tninllr nn, 75• Soi'':' " · rrom'the ''The C8rhlVal,of the Carter: Piano· ConCerto;- Rach­ - 'l>lvert~Ssenierif r:fff. 1; · Bii.'C1!.: ~Anlmals11t; ,.~.~ ' .. ~.(l. .,( ·J!r~,}.,:..~ .,:-[~ maninov: Symphony No.2 in E Toccata in F sharp minor. 7:55 P.M. ARTS FEATURE minor, · 5 P.M. ALL THINGS CON­ 8 P.M. EVENING CONCERT op. 27; Bach: Fantasy and SIDERED (ST) Fugue in G minor; Lalo: Sym- 6 P.M. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) "An Evening With Ravel" - phonie . Scriabin: Sonata No. 3 in F Pavone for a Dead Infanta; Espagnole, op. 21 sharp minor, Op. 23; Copland: Sheherazade; Rapsodie 10 P.M. RADIO SMITHSONIAN Sextet Espagnole; Gaspard de Ia Nuit; 10:30 P.M. JAZZ REVISITED for Clarinet, Piano and String Valses Nobles et Sentimentales; 11 P.M. DEACONUGHT with Quartet; Rachmaninov: Piano Ma Mere l'Orge; Bolero; Wally Boyd and Drew Joyce SonataNo.linDminor,Op. 28; Tzigane. Honegger; Sonatine ·Pour 10 P.M. MASTERWORKS OF Saturday, March 4 Clarinet FRENCH MUSIC 2 P.M. SATURDAY OPERA et Piano; Handel: The Water 10:30 P.M. CAMPUS REPORT Music Suite; Sonata No. 3 in D 11 P.M. DEACONI.JGHT (ST) MATINEE (ST) with Bill Beery Werther (Maf!senet) minor. 7:50P.M. FOCUSING ON THE 6 P.M. MUSIC AT SUNSET (ST) Wednesday,March8 . Schubert: StringTeioNo.l in B ARTS Bat; Mendelssohn: Trio No. 1 8 P.M. EVENING CONCERT in D minor, op. 49; Mozart: (ST) Sonata No. 7 in F major Grieg: Piano Concerto; 6:55 P.M. ARTS FEATURE . Dvorak: Romance in F, Op. 11; 7 P.M. D'QTCH CONCERT HALL Mozart: 8 P.M. ON THE DUTCH BAND­ Fantasia No. 14a in C minor; STAND' Copland: Las Agachadces; 8:30 P .M~ MUSIC FROM Copland: ROCHESTER Lark; Mendelssohn: Sym­ 9:30P.M. EVENING CONCERT phony No. 4 in A, Op. 90; Percell: 10:30 P.M. NOCTURNE Music from "The Fairy Queen". MARCH SPECIALS 11 P.M. DEACONUGHT with 10 P.M. REYNOLDA HALL Joel Rappoport LECTURE SERIES 11 P.M. DEACONLIGHT (ST) SODday, March 5 with Georg Bryan 11 A.M. WAKE FOREST BAP- TIST CHURCH . Tuesday, March 7 12:30 P.M. AUDITORIUM ORGAN CONCERT 1:00 P.M. CONCERT OF THE WEEK 3:00 P.M. FORUM 4 P.M. COLLECTOR'S CORNER (ST) 6 P.M. MUSIC AT SUNSET ~i,>{\.f:!:v~?.vh/~<... ;':':·. )::fi~,.. fJ;;...;.>\,:;';.-.,ti:'l Beethoven: Sonata No. 1 in F major,Op.5,0p.1; Bach: Sonata in G minor; Brahms: Quintet in B minor, Op. 115; Gould: j M!~~gx ,.. ~ .... ~::·,~...•.:_:, ..i. Derivations for Clarinet and Bach: Bach: Air from Suite No.·· a Suspension 1.09 ~,, 3. ~ ~ 8 P.M. SHOWCASE (ST) 'h7~i!T4i"~tT~Y::~!T{;'l'7'

20oz. 1.59 Value 1.19

College Group ANDREWS PHARMACY 9:30 S. Hawthornt 21t Ma~nolia Phonr ';23-1619 Worship 11 :00 ANDREWS-SUMMIT PHARMACY l214 Reynolda lload Winston.•Sale-m, N. c. Phvnr 122-1144 PAGE FOUR- Friday, March 3, 1972, OLD fiOLD AND HI.A('K

11 tJAI TNE .sNT AEI'IJkrtNtJ, Contestants kERI:1.s TN/! /tiS'f'~Ait:./fL. SITIE WII·~G. '14/IAS 14' 0 1Blurk flllfST SRifVR ·show Stuff ' j 7'110~1. 5T~ENI$ BLA~S'D .t P"Tif. "TOMY THEIA JA£~M IS IIIDIJT 'TO COMii u ,, For Judge RUSS BRANTLEY JOHN ELLIOTl' FRrrz HEIDGERD llttJS ... A .S I D'EWAL,..., Editor ManagiDg Editor BuaiDess Manager ByWALLYBOYD NANCY ANDREWS SUSAN GD..LETTE HELEN TYREE Beauty ·contests are a great American Assistant Editors tradition- just like war. The only differerice is that in one you face the enemy and In the other you stab them in the back. Winston-salem, N.C., Friday, March 3, 1972 Recently I had the honor of judging the "Miss Baby Mind" contest. This contest gives all interested WF coeds a chance to show what they are really made of. The winner receives a book on ecology and a chance to compete In· the "Miss Baby World" contest held annually, on the good ship Hope. The night of the pageant I was surprised to learn that Instead of the traditional judge's Buck Passi~g table, I would have to sit on a brick wall in the qtiad with the "brothers". They would teach me everything I needed to !mow about wat- ching girls. . It was nice to hear that a meeting the board has set a "precedent." As The first category was the bathing suit its chairman said, the SJB "would division. All the lovelies were herded on to the between a student organization and stage before me. There were 10 contestants two deans who have often been the be meeting four nights a week' if it and some of them bad great personalities and object of student criticism went had to hear every case of a coffeepot made their own clothes. swimmingly, according to both in a dormitory room. groups. We aren't averse to having the . BEAUTY MARK And it was nice to hear that the deans do this. But why was the board Immediately I dismissed, No. 8 because of Student Judicial Board and Deans so eager for appeals from the deans' an exceptionally large beauty mark which Reece and Leake have agreed on decisions to bypass the SJB and go to covered the entire left side of her face. I especially liked No. 2 uhtll she turned around their respective roles and areas of the College Review Board? and I noticed a large tatoo on her upper thigh jurisdiction in conduct cases. which read "the end is near." But we wonder whether the board The problem is that "precedents" Letters To The Editor Nevertheless, from these 10 I picked three is not being just a trifle lazy, and for penalties for specific offenses top finalists whom I felt were in shape to are going to be a little shaky when advance to the talent· competition. thus partially defeating the purpose In this final crescendo, the first contestant for which it was set up. offenses are not clearly defined. Legislator Raps SG 'Appeasement' aroused the crowd with a heart-warming Of course, the student government Cases are not all going to fall into whistling routine as she ate several saltines. neat categories. And who is going to Then, the crowd went wild as the second committee which drew up plans for Dear editor and student body, I fail to see why men cannot. We are old professors about this matter, and I urge the contestant, a former high school cheerleader, the SJB last year didn't help things decide whether a "precedent" In last week's Old Gold and Black, the lead enough and mature enough to be responsible faculty and administration to keep the above performed several inspiring cheers. for her any by defining the board's applies to a particular case? story contained a reference to my opposition for our actions if we are wrong; why cannot consequences in mind before contemplating old alma mater. The excitement was We're inclined to think the SJB of the men's section of the new open house­ we be trusted to do something positive our any further moves toward a graduate unimaginable. jurisdiction as everything outside way for once? I don't see any harm in that. should live up to the "student open lounge proposal quoting me as declaring university. H. WilliamdeWeese The real showstopper, however, occurred the Honor Council's jurisdiction. that part of the policy a "farce." I was quoted Yes, I do think we are "appeasing the ad­ President of the when pretty little Miss Georgia Sweetlegs, the Unlike its sister judicial responsibility" which was so correctly. ministration." Maybe everyone is not aware Student Body eventual winner, arrived on stage dressed in organization, the SJB has no ballyhooed when it was set up by Throughout this year, we have supposedly of the fact yet, but I simply cannot believe all an Uncle Sam costume. For her talent been moving toward elimination of the double the "facts" which come from a committee presentation, Georgia assembled a ·Lion's statutes defining offenses and agreeing to hear appeals from meeting held by the bill's sponsors which few "precedent" cases itself. We doubt it standard· or so I thought. Under the new open Pit Praised Club American flag on stage and then led the prescribing minimum and lounge policy, however, the women have people on campus or in legislature knew audience in the pledge of allegiance. maximum penalties. would be meeting four nights a more freedom and rights concerning about. I was very pleasantly surprised Monday, Needless to say, the crowd was won, and so It's understandable, therefore, week. visitation. Highly unusual on this campus, I only regret that I did not speak even more Felruary 28, to find the presence of music was I. this situation does move toward equal rights vehemently against the bill- not that it would and the absence of dogs during the noon meal that the board wants to give the Students look a little silly when have hindered the brainwashing we got "I never woulda thought you woulda picked they want to give up responsibility regardless of sex from the female point of at the "pit." little ol me," she sweetly admitted af­ deans the authority to handle "cut­ view; but the men get the short straw this anyway, I do so hope this may become a policy, as it terwards. and-dried" conduct violations after as soon as they get it. time. I believe this to be a step in the wrong Sincerely, aids in making meals enjoyable. "I never would have thought so either," direction • I fail to see why men and women Steve Grossman J.E.Husted said Mr. Sweetlegs as he handed me the thirty cannot enjoy the same open lounge privileges Kitchen Representative Graduate Student pieces of silver. - suites, balconies, etc. Class of '74 I feel the student legislature made a faculty move in saying yes to a bill which will promote the double standard and further Graduate School alienate the men's donns on this campus. I do Shoe Salesmen Wept .not oppose the women's new policy; I only oppose the continuous farcical policy in the To the Wake Forest Community: I feel that Wake· Forest should d~ men's dorms which exists now and is fur­ JTJ Praise Of Loners: thered by the resolution. emphasize its graduate academic program, Mr. Lucas has announced that and seriously reconsider any plans to expand Moreover, what worries me more is why it in the future. I realize that more research brick sidewalks are going to be laid the student legislature chose to adopt a facilities sometimes means a more com­ in front of Tribble Hall. We can only "selected occasions" measure for men's open houses when that is not the goal of the present petent faculty, but it often means worse Neil Young And Others observe that after leaders. I realize the new policy can be ter­ teachers-at the expense of the un­ dergraduates. LIBib.,~ med a start but we have not been told how the A student may go a year or two (e.g., li.trJE 7 years, administration can veto any "selected oc­ Chapel Hill) with only graduate students as The third still goes to school and is casion" at their discretion. Funny- this not By MARK HOFMA.IIlN 2,539 ruined pairs of shoes, being publicized. IX"Ofessors in 211()..member classrooms, which currently writing a snotty little column in the puts his college education on a dull, colorless campus newsrag. He has adopted a totally Furthermore, the new policy bad already Picked up the new Neil Young album on a 2,539 dark suspicions that the been accepted by the administration prior to start. The professor may try to avoid the less cynical attitude toward everything and {restigious lower level courses, or neglect the trip to Jersey last week. It turned out to be everybody, doubting all motives and greeting legislative discussion. It is questionable what proper preparation for, and interest in, his quite a surprise; Nell the Loner has a few new part SG even played in this bill. I realize Mr. the world with a sneer. University was in cahoots with the students in favor of his research. tricks up his sleeve. He even has the London Degpite society's efforts to squelch the de Weese and Mr. Taylor in particular worked Symphony Orchestra backing him up on a few shoemakers of America, and quite hard on the proposal; but, for some And most of yeu are aware of the time­ loner, it couldn't exist without him. consuming "publish or perish" syndrome, of the cuts. Throughout history, the loner has played­ unknown reason, the legislature never which means less time for students. I would But even more surprising, the man who 12,492 miscellaneous curses, received it until after administrative ap­ more than a simple observer's role. Take the prefer to see a top quality undergraduate gave us "The Loner" in the late sixties is now moody, sullen man who preferred his own millions of blades of grass JX"OVal and publicity. school, from which students can go on to do singing that "A Man Needs A Maid." The I fail to see why the legislature could not company to that of others and still brought a well at excellent graduate-directed univer­ baleful individualist twangs that "To give a six hundred year old social system toppling. ruthlessly slain each fall, have said no to the policy which we had no sities to the north and west, rather than have ,love, you gotta live a love- To live a love, you hand in and requested what we bad pledged His name was Wllliam of Normandy, bastard a mediocre graduate school which could gotta be part of- When will I see you again?" son of a backwater feudal lord and a tanner's I ,. it's about time. beforehand to constituents -open house at the detrimentally re-orient the undergraduate What makes a loner? What drives a man house's discretion - if not total visitation daughter. program. (or a woman) out of society? Consider Thomas Edison, whose teachers (which seems obviously out of the question at I urge you students to talk to . your The answer to the first question generally this time). If wome1. can vote for open houses, found him silent, unsociable, and probably begins in the school system. The damnedest "addled," who managed to revolutionize the efforts are made to "socialize" the kid who world through his inventions. Or examine the wants to think his own thoughts. His teachers first men to push across the Alleghenies in the f ~· tell him that he's not normal, that in­ 1760's, a motley crew who bad no vested in­ trospection isn't good and that he's a selfish terest in things as they were. They shoved A Romantic Finds Himself Quenched By Time little pig for not "sharing" himself with his back the frontiers only to find themselves classmates. being forced out by establishment settlers If the kid can't see the truth in the arbitrary who set up false-front Philadelphias and "progressing" in a conscientious problem­ idealism of my earlier years. Whereas two tate of their youth. values of "enlightened, progressive" By TOM PHILLIPS Bostons amid the forests. t '• solving manner. Marches turned into bom­ years ago I wanted to go out and change the To feel the motion of wheels underneath; to education, he is introduced to things like The loners got fed up with things as they As man has advanced along this thorny bings, bombings into spent youth, and spent world, campaign for a winner, clean up the drive anywhere and listen to blaring rock detention, suspension and expulsion. If he still L music (the only time it can be tolerated): the were and got out, at least in the past. Each ' road we call civilli:ation, an increasingly youth into conservativism. air, and "make a name for myself,"- my fire hangs in, chances are that he'll change into man bad his own vision of what was right and cyclic and potent phenomenon has found its Much has been written about the decline has gone with the sixties. I search now only two together comprise the only lasting something rather unpleasant. good and tried to realize that vision. But place in past and present archives. It has and fall of this most recent of the romantic for security, a suitable artistic vocation, romantic trait I possess. I have three friends back home who found today's loner has nowhere to go, no frontiers come upon us almost as a silent non-entity; eras, an era in which the "romanticism" of friends and lovers, and a place to spend this When I drive off to the sea or the hills or out what happened to self-styled loners who to push back, no place to turn to except his yet its power has been felt for some two past years became an increasingly collective short hell on earth as unassumedly and as even just down the road to get some beer, I continued their education In spite of the own mind, if the educational system has let hundred years now, and the consequences of and self-conscious brand of "let's-confirm-to­ happily as I can. can close my eyes and imagine nicer things, contempt showered oli them by system. One him keep it. its true being seem more and more to play a our-individualism-ism." So many young And what is perhaps most shocking to better worlds, less dying. My Imagination is lasted a semester In school, dropped out and So the 1972 version Daniel Boone keeps role in the development of youth. people with so many ideas, and many are now myself, I no longer feel the guilt I would have asserted and I once again can see less of the drifted into a dead-end job, where he rots moving, trying to get away from the It somehow brings contempt to those of wasted. felt two years ago, had I decided to stop futility of man, this mental entropy of awaiting word from Uncle Sam. He sup­ pressures and tyranny he sees around him. another era, while infiltrating the lives of The strains of a free-spirit liberty tend to participating and working for public good, emotions in which all is reduced to the one posedly had the highest !Q in my class. His friends either view him as having a sort of present impressionables. It breeds a fl.l'e in throw one back into regressive cycles of etc. I, too, am spent, and it stems, in a large equalizer, death, and more of the hope for Another one managed to get through a year aura of evil or else being somehow inherently the soul which can only be quenched by time. childhood upon childhood, caring less and less part, from the historical change in which I (I"Ogressive change social and, specifically, of school, joined the SDS because he thought it tragic, possessing a fatal flaw. He does have a And it goes by the name Romanticism. every step of the way. The young man now, now function and, hopefully, will continue to governmental forms. . might be able to make things better but found It that fatal flaw, at least fatal under the current As Webster states: of his own volition, learns to crawl again, and do so. It is death not to accept the inevitable is then I want to drive forever, to it to be more of the same and finally ended up system of things. He's too sane for his own Romanticism: the reassertion of history and historians can relax in smug changes in man's thinking which occur and plunge through and out over the sea, higher strung-out on bourbon and acid more often good." imagination and sentiment and the em­ poses. The idealism; whatever Its brand, is recur all the time. The lost citizens, artists, and higher and ever away from the land than not. phasizing of individualism in thought and now lost. students-they grow old by trying to tempt the below. expression as against more restrictive fonns I am sorry that it must be this way, but I '· tempting with mankind's natural inclinations (classicism). · DUNNES' History has shown the recurrence of the is a bit too much for cub reporter here. One romantic strain, roughly paralleling sixty­ thing we can learn from bistory is that it is DO YOU WAAI"f] wasted energy to try to alter the Wialterable . oooo... !IE SINGS So••. t-f E 5 Ef:S. M£ .1/ liE'S LOOJ\ .'I LOOk l.Jf/AI .year spans since the Ume of Geothe (1780), H£1$ DOING-.!/ I.JI(AT with the most recent beginning in the early The revolutions of past, present and future SHILINGI! ooo ... TO GO .STfADY? sixties, on paper at least, continuing through were not detern$led by individuaJ.s, but by SING 'lOVE ACHE DO YA TH/Wt OP THAT!/ time and circumstance. The ·times do make Phone the present day. The fire-brand radicals and WHAT DO Y'A the man, and not vice versa. oooo ... Nl'!----- 767-8505 early, vociferous "liberals" came on at SAY TO ...... ,~ Berkeley and continued through Chicago, The "reassertion of imagination and sen­ lllfHFALI while feeding the causes of major and minor timent" is very bard to grasp and initiate, splinter groups (as Watts and Detroit) and when history seems to lean in entirely the sending millions of middle-aged citizens to opposite direction. Man is doomed to Nietz.. the local fireanns store. sche's Mitternacht, the midnight of personal America found itself descended upon by uncertainty and non-commitment, and amor angry, young idealists with goals to fill and fati seems the only sane conclusion to make. · little time u seek change through a system Personally, I find myself, quite disgustingly which for tl dm held little hope of chan~g, and yet unavoidably, turned away from the 0.. Ntw Hwy. 52 Foundel! January 15, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest University, Old Gold and turn onto llwy. 8 Black Is pu/)lished l!ac:h Friday during the school Y!!llr except during examination, summer and Go Norrh on 8 to H holiday perrods as d1rected by the Wake Forest Publications Board. Mailed each week. Jurn Right - 700 f Members of the Associated Collegiate Press, Represented for National Advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription rate: $5.00 Second-class postage paid, Win· ston-Salem, N.C. Form 3579 should be mailed to Box 7576, Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109. Printed by Community Press, Incorporated, King, N.C. PAGE FIVE· Friday, March :s Pianist Otaracter Study Succeeds

f ~ ... Scheduled 'Dirty Harry' Merciless

ByMALCOLMJONES aforementioned rifle that morally excusable. Chances are TUesday domiiiates the screen . at the it would take a saint to respond In Bruno Celber, Argentine "Dirty Harry" starts out by beginning of the movie while its any way different from Lhe cold· pianist from Argentina, will dedicating itself to all the men owner remains out of focus blooded fury that Harry shows In perform Tuesday night, at 8:15 in who have died on the San behind.it. the Kezar Stadium swquence. Wait Chapel. His appearance is F'rancisco police force, and .ends But despite all of the$e well- The film is about aman who M1erican sponsored by the Artists Series. up being one of the best action done things and ace acting all finally realizes that he cannot UHererice Gelber made his American pictures ever about a man who around, "Dirty Harry" has been exist within the framework that md in the debut in 1967 and has toured just incidentally happens to be a getting all kinds of flack about its society has set up for him and successfully since then in every cop. In between, the viewer may .being .a fascist, support-your- that he must abdicate that jglng the major city both here in America be more than slightly confused if local-pig movie. In fact, while it position if he is to succeed as an test gives and Europe. In addition to solos he insists on seeing the film as does make a case at times for Individual • symbolized by his to show with the New York, Cleveland, being about police in general. unh~esslng the police in cer· throwing his police badge Into the 1e winner Instead, it is one of the best taln Situations, it IS really not water at the end of the movie. Detroit, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and about the rights of cops or :hance to Bo~ton Philhannonics, has made character study-action genre "contest films to come out of Hollywood in trutality or constitutional rights "Dirty Harry" is a violent 120 recitals in the past two years movie, but it is not a movie that our engagement­ )8, alone. ' a long time. or any of the other heavy topics that it has been accused of glorifies violence. Instead, every Critical acclaim has come from From the first shot, of a high­ ~~~~;JI in Profile. powered rifle aimed at a covering. It is first and foremost piece of mayhem in this movie is r=e~ both sides of the Atlantic with so repulsive as to make anyone ~all in the some even Cf,lmparlng · young beautiful girl in a rooftop an entertainment movie for The diamond, lifted to uld teach swimming pool, one knows that people who like their action realize that killing is a rotten, Gelber to "an early Rubenstein dirty business, not always new light and beauty. ilout wat- or de Larrocba." Irving Kolodin violence, implicit and explicit, is straight with no chaser. the keynote feature of the movie. As for fascist tendencies, I morally wrong - push a Oower In "The Saturday Review" said down the barrel of a psychotic bing suit . of Gilber ''He possesses With treathless speed, director don't see any. The bigwigs in the ion to the Don Siegal ("Riot in Cell Block police department constantly try killer and you will probably get it ll'odigious technical facility and blown back down your throat - 'ntestants the judgement to use it always 13," "Madigan," "Coogan's to make sure that Harry does not lltiesand overstep bis bounds and Harry is but brutal and sickening all the within the perimeter of good IDuff") pushes his hero, Harry same. pianistic sound. He also bad the Callaghan (Clint Eastwood), and simply a man that cannot see eye equilibrium to season physical his audience through a grueling to eye with police regulations and "Dirty Harry" is a good film. It A Family· A(fair excitement with emotional and visciollS search for a crazed structures. Everything he does in never tries to preach but ends up murderer called the Scorpio the way of violence is un­ .. The Antrobus famUy comes to the University theatre next Friday truth." . delivering a strong piece of ecauseof The concert in Wait Chapel is killer. · derstandable if not always thought. It has no one known as a rk which with the openiug of Thornton WBder's "Skin of Our Teeth." With the exception of a few Pictured above (clockwise from top left) Is Bruce Beck, as the free to students with I.D. cards. great actor but has one of the r face. I Others are admitted by the sidetracks that could have been finest collections of acting in any id around Antrobus' son, Kathie Brantley, as Mrs. Antrobus, Keith Griffin as excised· a brutal shootout where Mr. Antrobus, and MeUssa Bowers as the Antrobus' daughter. season ticket and tickets will be Columnist recent movie. It only tries to per thigh on sale at the door. Harry breaks up a bank robbery entertain. It does that and more, . Photo By Jone~ and a scene where he talks a but that's enough. (ed three suicide down off of a building- the shape to movie sticks with merciless To Discuss ! I· directness to the search for ontestant !Brick Sidewalks Planned J Scorpio. However,. something warming goes wrong, and I suspect that saltines. the major virtue is also a major Elections e second Brick sidewalks will- be laid across the sidewalk meets the "hill" around the Oaw: in making "Dirty Harry" erleader, plaza in front of' Tribble Hall as soon as perimeter of the plaza. , more of a character study than a Political columnist and 1 for ber possible this spring, according to Gene Lucas, In addition, the asphalt walks around the straight chase, Siegal obscures campaign analyst Samuel Lubell STALEY'S !nt was vice-president for business and finance. top of the perimeter will be replaced by brick, some of the tenseness of the will discuss the upcoming The contractor who is building the addition and another walk will be built to join the front situation. national elections Thursday at 8 occurred to the law school building will fit the sidewalk of the library with the parking lot west of A director like Hitchcock would p.m. in DeTamble Auditorium. tlegs,the construction into his schedule at his own Reynolds. have made the search for a His talk is sponsored by the Open Hearth Restaurant ressed in convenience, Lucas explained. Flowering trees will be planted in the kidnap victim whose life depends Department of Politics. 11' talent Ever since Tribble was built in 1964, grassy area of the plaza, Lucas said. upon the speed of the detectives a ·uon's students seeking direct paths across the plaza Robert Campbell, the landscape architect that are searching for her much Noted for his biennal ''post­ nled the have had to form their own, creating large who designed the landscaping for the new more tense. Siegal places most of mortem" analyses of national !. bare tracks which turned to mud in bad dorm, worked out the plans for the plaza in the emphasis instead on the elections, Lubell considers this Invites All Connoisseurs of Prime n, and so weather. consultation with Lucas and a student suspense of the confrontation year's elections to be "par­ The center of the new "Tribble Plaza" government committee headed by Jim between Harry and the killer. ticularly critical" in terms of Beef To Try The Staley's Special! Ia picked design will be a circle 50 feet in diameter, Haynes. . Despite such laxness and shaping the future, believing that itted af. which will probably have tables and chairs, The reason the University waited so long to misplaced emphasis, the film every possible means is being Lucas said. F'rom the circle, a sidewalk 10 put sidewalks in front of Tribble, Lucas said still has moments of sheer used to persuade voters on issues either," feet wide will extend to the concrete area in is that "the original plan was always to put ~ horrific brilliance • the con­ which run the gamut of political The House That Service and Qutllity Built - he thirty front of Tribble. (See diagram below) building there." Only after the faculty voted frontation between Harry and concerns. Three eight-foot walks will extend to the last year to ask that any new building not be Scorpio in Kezar Stadium where Lubell is presently an adjunct !'he Favorite of All WFU Students and Faculty corners of the library, the parking lot west of put there did planning begin. both shed their roles as professor at American Univer­ Reynolds Hall, and the corner of Reynolda, The project is estimated to cost between policeman and psychotic and sity in Washington, D.C. ~ N respectively. Stairs will be built where each $15,000 and $18,000, Lucas said. become simply animalistic hunter and victim; the takeover ~~;.::::::::::;;:%:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::)J) of a schoolbllS full of chlldren by Scorpio·(Andy Robinson-has got ·~ -. ..;.. .:~ ·~- .to get credit for :one of: the • . ...., f·.-•• ·:...-. -· ... ·-. scariest· psychos since Robert MitchlUD in "Night of the Hun· ter"). Little things also add up: the ~rs tasteful use of music in just the right places - in the Kezar LIBiL •. ,:: StadilUD shootout, there is no McDonalds u.mrj!; music at all, much like the I and is silence in the end of "McCabe mnln the and Mrs. Miller"; the subtle a totally photographic touches - the ling and I greeting ~etch the THE ~ut him. IS played­ MONOGRAM Take the I hfs· own SHOP brought a toppling. r, bastard (Inside The Deacon 1 tanner's Shop In · teachers probably Kitchin Dorm) ionize the uninethe .sunclial lies in the f ~- 724-3129 ~ested in­ iY shoved 9·12, 2-5 Mon.-Fri. 1emselves Shaded areas will be new brick sidewalks. tsettlers bias and s as they et. Each Ethics Program Set right and sion. But The Rev. George Keck, pastor question of ethics. frontiers of the Lutheran Church of the Gordon Craig, a historian who xcept his Epiphany, will present the fourth is visiting here Monday and in a six-part series caned "Laugh n has let I. Tuesday as a Phi Beta Kappa and Seek" for next week's lecturer, will speak at the 11 a.m. Acareer in law ••• ne keeps Thursday chapel program. The Tuesday chapel period on "The rom the program will be at 11 a.m. in Historian and the Twentieth und him. Davis Chapel. Century: Some New Problems WilhOUIIIW SChOOl. Keck will use cartoons from 5a sort of and Some That Are Not So New." When you become a Lawyer's Assistant, llherently magazines such as Playboy and (See story on page 1). The New Yorker to focus on the you'll do work traditionally done by lawyers eshavea - work which is challenging, responsible ! current and. intellectually stimulating. Lawyer's ·his own Ass1stants are now so critically needed that The Institute for Paralegal Training can . ...!.:~1~ , offer you a position in the city of your choice I •• - and a higher starting salary than you'd :r,: H::i":'l'"kCf expect as a recent college graduate. Here DUNNES' is a career as a professional with financial :l . ~ _; 1-~~:· rewar~s that increase with your developing .,. . ·''" expertise. I ~ If you are a student of high academic ~· standing and are interested in a 1ega I i ~~ Phon• ··~ •. .• if DUNNE~ :1~1 career, come speak with our representative. 2900 REYNOLDA RD. • REYNOLDA MANOR I ::?. 767.8505 ' : ,{:. :· .. \ - :::: :::: J,t:.-;:i.J ~ ' ·:·: Contact the Placement Office. I ~!:! MOUIS .. ·~:.:J. · :::: ;:;: I p.m.-10 p.m. ;:;: A representative of The Institute I will visit your campus on: I ~~ I :::: 1:1:30 ::;: TUESDAY, MARCH 21 507 CORPORATION PKWY.· CORPORATION PLAZA

l!ll •~ . · ,. r __ :11: NOTE: If the above date is inconvenient lor you. '~ ·:•: lllown laggong 1~. ;.;. please call or wrile The Institute for information. -1 Q ~i~ Go Now Hwy. 52 ~ . , ::·: ·.· ~~: :·: turn onto tlwy. a - ·:· :;: Go North on 8 to Hwy. 66 - ;:: The Institute for 401 KNOLLWOOD AT ·STRATFORD. THRUWAY :;: Turn Right - 700 foot on loft •: I Paralegal Training 13th floor, 401 Walnut St.. Phila .. Pa. 19106 ;z: ~ l_ (215) WA 5·0905 t.. W.«»"""'-''~OX_,,.,._,.,.,.,.,.,_M·»W''""''"""""_j ·---. - ... ·-. ------·---··--- __ j PAGE SIX· Friday. March 3, 1972, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Lighthouse Grill Thompson, Burleson Invade ·Coliseum • Where You Meet Your Friends • Good Food at Economical Prices Dazzling Dave Leads Deacons Close Out More bread etc. at no extra charge • Quick Service ~~ Comer of Burke and Brookstown Slreets Explosive Wolflets Against Tall Tommy ONE BLOCK FROM SEARS By LARRY LYON especially since the 14-9 Wolfpack Sports Editor are coming off their own stunning upset of North Carolina's number Coach Jack McCloskey's two ranked Tar Heels Tue.sday surprising Deacons get their final night In Raleigh. It would also opportunity to pull off the big leave Wake In the position of upset before the home folks having to pull off two giant tomorrow night when North surprises In a row if they wish to Carolina State and 7-4 Tommy advance to the ACC tournament Uurleson invade Memorial semifinals next week, since Wake Coliseum. will be a decided underdog no Wake has been hinting at an. matter who they play Thursday. upset for weeks- losing .closely· Tomorrow night's game is similar tight games to North actually of little importance in Carolina, Virginia, State, and the ACC standings. Wake is · Wednesday's overtime loss to already assured of sixth plaee '· Maryland all during the last and State is stuck with fifth or a . month. During that period the tie for fourth with Duke. Deacons have knocked off Clemson twice and Duke once, But that does not mean that but those wins could hardly be both McCloskey and State coach classified as "big" upsets. Norman Sloan would not dearly McNabb Studio Perhaps the one "big" upset­ love a victory, since both are the 57-51 triumph over Temple­ seeking to acquire or to maintain WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY went unappreciated by most momentum for next week's Wake followers who knew little of conference tournament. PH: 723-4640 Temple's quality. The two teams met two weeks But a Deac victory tomorrow ago in Raleigh, with State beating night in the final home game of back repeated Deacon rallies and the seasan would accurately be winning M-76. In that game it was labeled a surprising upse.~, 6-2 Wolfpack guard Joe Cafferky who did the Deacons In, con­ tinuously bitting long jumpers from the corner against Wake's 3- . Haddock Signs 2 zone. swer. Wake held Burleson to 15 points Driesell in the first encounter, but in so Junior Golfer doing left Cafferky and Rick said he Holdt open for jumpers, forgot the something they are both very last year, good at. · Despite Cafferky's success, McCloskey plans to play State With the about the same "with a few night, it is minor changes." The Deacs "will ACC !IUT!II1•,. cover Cafferky a little more than we did· but at the same time you gotta watch them inside," Me· Closkey points out. The game marks the final home appearances of Wake co­ captains John Lewkowicz and Richie Habegger, the lone seniors on the squad. Lewkowicz enters the contest with 432 career points and Habegger 335.

311 W. Fourth St., Wfnston&Iem, N.C.

The finest fashions The tournament gets under way Thursday in Greensboro, with number two playing and accessories Clemson at 1:30, number three playing Wake at 3:30, and number four playing State at for the 8:00. Semifinals are Friday night and the championship Saturday well-dressed night. lady. Football Recruiting Stores Hours: 9:30 • 5:30 · Remains Top-Notch Monday Through Saturday months. Recruiting was Harper's By TIM BARNES first concern when he assumed Assistant Sports Editor the top job, and Mills says the staff has been quite successful so McMillen. Cal Stoll's departure for far. All-ACC Minnesota on January 7th, and "Recruiting is going real well," Cafferky, Tom Harper's ascension to the he said. "If we can get the people Na tore's Air Conditioners top coachlng spot the following A tree leaf, an evergreen we're after, we'll be real happy." day, did not mark an end to the "We feel we have the needle, a grass blade. improvement of Wake Forest possibility of getting the best After his football. group of people, as far as talent is night to They are quiet. They have This, according to assistant concerned, ever signed here. his usual coach Brad Mills who en· April 19th is the national signing no moving parts. Yet in Carol Myers of Wake's women basketball hits her jump shot against chosen Salem College Tuesday night, In a game the Deacs won 69-27. Today thusiastically spoke about the date, and we honor it." their growth processes, SHERWOOD PLAZA the women play Meredith in the state tournament at HJgb Point progress Harper and his staff "We have thirty-eight . !say's, they take in polluting gases College. Pboto By Jones have made in the last two available scholarships this year himself from the air and return and would .like to give out all word. RESTAURANT thirty-eight. Included in that pure oxygen--the very total, we hope to sign between six Jack breath of life. (Where quality prevails) and eight junior college players Maryland Captures Track Title whom we feel could possibly start They also help to cleanse for us next year." SERVING THREE COMPLETE MEALS A DAY Harper has also had to recruit and freshen the air. Ac­ By BILL SM-IS mile relay team broke school came when their 600-yard runner some new coaches since former tively growing greenery OPEN 6:30 • 8:30 MONDAY.SATURDAY . Staff records, was unable to better last fell out of competition after he assistants Ron Stark and Norman SHERWOOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER Writer catches dust, soot, and year's five point last place finish. was unable to contribute the Parker have joined Stoll at The Maryland Terrapins North Carolina lost valuable s}X'int pace at which he started. Minnesota. obnoxious gases and the Scoring points for Wake Forest =w======:==:===:====:=====:=====:::;z:;:;ili:;!;·~·.·~·;·;·;·;·=···=-:~..:~:=~=;:;:;:::=:=:::=~=~:~=~=·:·:•:•=;=•=::======:======:==:=====:~ continued the longest reign of points in two events through a "Our staff is now 80 per cent odors attached to them. In dominance in any ACC sport by lack of strategy. They lost any was Ken Garrett, who placed complete," said Mills. "We hope • time, these are washed into ~ winning their 17th Atlantic Coast chance of points in the high jump third in the 60.yaJ:d dash, while to have it filled in the next two .~ ~ the two-mile relay team finished the soil by rain or sprin­ ~ Conference Indoor Track when their jumper passed until weeks, so we can give the new d Championship, soundly whipping the bar was placed at 6'4", and fourth and the one-mile relay coaches time to get acclimated to kling. - ..t.~ runner-upUNC 66¥.! to 51¥.!. then failed to Clear· thaf in any of team finished 6th. the school and the football ·=-· .. Wake, though its mile and two his attempts. The second mistake This had been the year in which p-egram and to get to know the In the process of transpi­ UNC was given a chance to upset players." · the Maryland hold, but in the ration, greenery in contrast Spring practice for the entire ''"Jf words of Coach Rhea "they football squad starts April 11. to pavements and barren choked it." Harper will hold practice four land, tempers the heat from In winning the meet, Maryland days a week for five weeks until the sun and provides nat- bas now won 17 out of 18 cham· the final spring scrimmage on pionships, losing only in 1955. . ural cooling. May 13th. With every shrub, tree and blade of grass you own, you are making a worthy contribution of life-sustaining greenery. DEACON DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT Next To The Coliseum Visit HARDI-GARDENS 3: ( :;:~ authorized ~ retailer PIZZA Qrmlity Gnr1len Sr•p11lie•-Frie11Jly, I! If l cou.l only rt"tember ~~~~ SANDWICHES l:o11riPar1s Service ~:wiia£ I for9'* io bu.~ at ~~~1 ALA CARTE RE:\IEMBElt WE SEI.L BEA.t:tY-1'\0f·' BUSBE6 3!107 Reynolda Road Tel. 92~-!11116 . , •.J 10:30 A.M. To 10:00 P.M.· Tel. 725-3311 ::~j Yqu,rs Jr:'T'ulu,..L~-LtJl...llf'"ITI4J "'Jll'ff'llj ~ f.,up.tf':::=~: Weekdays 8:30 lo 6:00 1'.>1. FRI. 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.I~ PAGE SEVEN. Friday, March 3, 1972, OLD GOLD AND BJ,ACK Viewing The '~'''Yf~'.!!;'':IO: ·... · ·· ·.. T ankm.en Firiish With Split, By LARRY LYON ·' • > · · Conference Meet Today D eacs Sports Editor ·m By RICK LAYTON laden Pack was just too much. Friday, and Saturday, it will all Staff Writer Andy Anderson turned in a be over. winning time of 2:01.8 in the 200 Looking ahead to that event, Emotion AtMaryland The 1972 swimming team butterfly, but that is still almost .Wake has its sights set on a fourth closed out its regular season last two seconds off the school record place finish, which would be Wednesday's Wake-Maryland struggle, expected to be Saturday with a 70-42 losa to set by him here two years ago. excellent. State, Maryland, and rout by most of the 12,500 fans that showed up at Cole powerful N.C. State to put the Steve Billings finished third in UNC are almost assured of the a final mark of the squad at 11-3, the that same event. Field House, turned out to be the most highly emotional, first three places, while the best finish in Wake Forest Mallette and Chip Bach Deacons will battle it out with bitterly-fought contest Wake has played this year. history. finished one-two in the 200 Duke and Virginia for spot The loss to State followed an backstroke, Mallette's time at · The Maryland students, Uninspired before the game 2:06.4. number four. despite their pep band's rendition of "Rock of Ages" . impressive 77-35 triumph over "If we swim real well - and I Clemson on Friday, when the Charlie Glass took second in see no reason why we shouldn't­ when the Deacs came out, soon ·uved up to their Deacons Smashed the school the 50 freestyle and third in the we can do it," Ellison stated. · reputation when Wake· began playing their slow style of record in the 400 yard medley 100 free behind teammate George Bell. The regular season is over; but basketball, and ~aked when the game reached its final relay, with Bruce Mallette, Tom the championship meet and next Alm, Andy Anderson, and Bruce The coaches and swimmers tense moments of regulation. It can.be accurately stated undoubtedly hate to see this year offer new challenges. And Cooper each swimming a leg. the caliber of this year's club has that Lefty has recruited the most fans with the least The new record is 3:47.5, stupendous season end, but after given every indication it can class. beating out the old best of 3:49.6 the conference meet to be held at Chapel Hill this Thursday, meet them. Lefty's strong distaste for losing has apparently by more than two seconds. .'· "We were real happy with the rubbed off on his fans, with the result that everyone- the Clemson meet," commented crowd, Lefty, and sometimes the team, loses their cool head coach Leo Ellison. "Both when a Maryland victory is in doubt, as it was Wed.: teams usually get fired up for that one." · nesday night. Against the Tigers, the Deacon An example of Lefty blowing his cool came in the final tanlanen took both first and three seconds of regulation, when Maryland had 6·9 second in four different events, to Lenny Elmore jumping against 6-1 Bobby Dwyer at the aid in running up the 77 points. The win was a true team vic­ Wake foul circle and Maryland leading by two points. tory; it would be almost im· After calling timeout, Lefty bad Elmore. tap the ball j)ossible to single out any in­ behind him, towards the Wake basket. Standing there dividual stars. Russ Patterson was Pat Kelly, who registered surprise for two seconds, placed second in boUl the 200 individual medley and 200 and then turned around and laid the ball in during the · backstroke. Aim took first in the fmal second. Why Elmore didn't knock the ball as far 200 I.M. as well as helping break downcourt as he could is a question only Lefty can an­ the 400 medley relay record. swer. "This was a fine tune-up meet for the conference meet,'' Ellison Driesell was al!lked that question after Ute game and said. said he considered it, and left it at that. Apparently he The Deacs then traveled to forgot the UNC-South Carolina ACC championship game Raleigh to face the Wolfpack, last year, when a similar fate befell the Gamecocks. . Photo Bv Preslar where they did not swim ex­ Deacon diver Bill Mitchell executes a dtfflcult dive in diving duel last week against Clemson. tremely well. But then again, State has just too much power With the close of the ACC regular season tomorrow 7\ T T. k U • h U h anyway and is almost a sure bet night, it is time for this column to make its annual All­ 1 letterS . 8, e ~~_ lU flj(Jines sOUt . tocapturetheconferencemeet. ACC awards, this being the first year. Here they are: 1 e I .r Although Wake had some good AU-Cocky- a Carolina dominated squad, headed by the ~fi~~~-~h~~a!gainst~·~~S~~te~,Jth~e~tal~en~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Heels' George Karl, a unanimous choice. Also making it By RICH SEYBERT. face their toughest competition Wake Forest could not have are Heels Steve Previs and Bill Chamberlain, AssoelateSportsEdltor when they meet Mississippi chosen a much more difficult way Maryland's Jim O'Brien, arid Mr. B.P. himself, Barry State. Coach Leighton says, to open the season. This rough Camel ·Pawn Inc. Parkhill. Tennis buffs .have · been "Mississippi State is a nationally start may have some advantag~ anxiously awaiting the start· of ·renowned team. Every year they though. Any weakn~s in the SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR All Muscle- there are no Gilbert McGregors in the the '72 tennis season. Coach · do well in the NCAA tournament Deacon's play will be made bunch, but Clemson's Dennis Odie, of Leighton has called this year's play." evident, and give the players an _,ewr~t~en WAKE FOREST STUDENTS Maryland, Paul Coder, N.C. State, and Wake's Jolui squad "the best I have coached at Coach Leighton has decided opportunity to strengthen their Electrlca from 19.90 Wake For~t." The Deacons will that the positions for the first games early in the season. The AccoultlCI from 12.50 Orenczak are sizeable hunks. North Carolina's Dennis flndoutjusthow good they really match will be: 1) Eddy Prybil 2) early matches will also serve as a Wuycik also muscles in. are when they open their season A;udley Bell 3) Peter Posposil 4) good challenge before the team All-Hair- Robbie West, Duke (the white man's Afro); with ·a road swing through the JIJDHaslam5) Dean Mathias and fac~ the perenially strong ACC ·· ·· -Tape Reeorden Elmore (his Afro goes straight up and not out); O'Brien south this weekend. 6) Gary Cooper. These positions competition. ·aueu.IND ( h I ? ) G M 1 h' • . In thelf opening match against are only experimental. Today the After recovering from their w at can say . ; ary e c IQnni (the league s long- .Samford University on Thursday players will reverse their order of· opening match~. the Deacons hair), and Bobby Dwyer (the ieagUe's short-hair). · theDeaconsfacedthreeofthetop play with the number six player will begin an extremely long Reel_ tape ,a h fin.d th- · 1 · th pl,ayers in· the southeast Sam· moving to the number one slot. home stand;· They will play 12 fnlm.JUS- All Fl (the --. oor . . P1 ye_r~ w o· .... .: · . e~s.~ v~~ .C)n.. e fOrd's top , three -playe~ are ·Mathias has been bothered by cdnsecutive· home · matches · ·· " .. Radlea Doo:f.the'most, for·onerea8on or another: Wliy:they are' ranked numbers two; twelve; and an Illness which required him to beginning with' N.C. State on -eloek Ina ... there did enter into the selection)- Karl Dwyer, and fourteen in men's rankings for spend one day in the infirmary March 15, and ending with e N. Ulrerty . -cable modek lnlll ... -tnulltort ...... i •• Virginia's Steve Morris. (''didn't I do my flying leap the southeastern United States. earlier this week. For this Wisconsin on March 31. All home JlupfM Ia Osri«-Pan Mereb•ndiH . ?") O'B · ("b t ef h h ed 'gh This afternoon Wake faces the reason, Mathias may play in the matches will begin at 2 o'clock. we11th at tlDle. , nen u r ' e c arg ri t University of Alabama which number six position in the ffrst into me"), and Wake's own Pat Kelly (oops, I fell down Leightond~besas "an evenly match. again") . . balanced team." "They don't Bell, who~ been bothered by All-Most Intriguing Moves- a Deacon-dominated have any really outstanding a shoulder mjury, appears to ' 'th S J ck J hn Le k · J hn players but they· are somewhat have recovered, and should be at squa d , WI am a son, o W OWICZ, o stronge~.overall than Samford." full strength for this weekend's Orenczak, and Kelly. Howie White of Maryland breaks 0n Saturday the Deacons will match~. the Deacon domination. And in a more serious vein: All-Defense- Previs, Elmore, Melchionni, Clemson's - .. Bud Martin, and Carolina's Robert McAdoo. Spring Sports Scene All-Rebounding (inch for inch)- Alan Shaw of Duke, ~~-~-~ ;:-:__cc_c-=-:::~;.~~ -:~ _-: Tommy Burleson, Elmore, McCandlish and Richie ~:::<-~:_;.:.. :._-' -';j;~ tch Habe~er. All-Pure Shooting- Willie Griffin, Joe Cafferky, TENNIS Parkhill, McAdoo, and McMillen. March 2 ·at Samford University Birmingham, Alabama All-ACC·-· McAdoo, Wuycik, Burleson, Parkhill, · March3-atAlabama Tuscaloosa March 4-at Mississippi State . State College McMillen. March 9-12- at Sugar CUp To'urnament Sugar Mountain, N.C. All-ACC (second team)· Shaw, Melchionni, Griffin, Cafferky, Chamberlain.

TRACK After his team's tenth straight ACC loss last Saturday March 11 - at Winston-salem State night to Wake, Clemson coach Tates Locke appeared for his usual post-game press interview. After a few well­ chosen sentences interspersed with his usual "What can . I say's, Tates said his final "What can I say?, thought to himself about it, and then walked out without another word. Apparently he had nothing more to say. Jack McCloskey, when asked after the Maryland game about id9lized Lefty Driesell, said "I was sur­ prised to see him. I thought he was still in China." For Your Convenience ••• On Campus!

How can you lose on this- rcut on aotted llnfiJ special offer? Just bring r: • • in this ad ... pay for one I order of pancakes (does not include ineat or-1 ders) get a second order 1 of the same value, I FREE Choose from 16 different I pancake varieties from around the world. - Attenthnt: Mrs. Ruth Cigliano - Limit: one coupon per Our foods come from the nation's. best suppliers. couple. We demand top quality in all our foods. And suppliers go to any lengths to "'eet our requirements. COmplete! At any ?am pus location-:- The Pit. lvlag Room, Snack Bar- you get the best possible food for the Good Only On · lowest poss1ble cost. Check 1t out with any other place 1n town. * Professional Cleaning & Laundry * By the way. have you tried our seafood lately? Mon., March 6 ( < ., IN BY 9: A.M. - Tues., March 1 Wake Forest Dining Service.~~&'; READY BY 5: P.M. -~r".r-' ;·./

v . ' \l ' < PAGE EIGHT. Friday, March 3, 1972, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Sophomores, PMA SG Elections March 28 TODAY Set Talent Show Campaigners Stirring ,., ., * 'SCHC ' . ' What kind of talent does it take 50 cent tirkE'ts, and from talE'nted PROPfi to get the sophomore class out of contestants, who should consult By HELEN TYREE Grossman said that he iB con­ "Student Government to become the red? Cheri Woford, class treasurer, Asststaut Edltor sidering candidacy for either the presidency or the vice a challenge to each student for Wake Forest may have a before March 15 to enter the his . involvement and par­ show. Petitioning has begun for Jl'esidency. ticipation." chance to find out when the candidates for student body of­ VOLUME I sophomores and Phi Mu Alpha Gr~, a sophomore of "Student Government cannot For a $2 entry fee, any con­ ficers and class officers, who will music fraternity co-sponsor a be elected March 28. 1Greensboro, formulated the afford to be an out or an excuse talent show on March 18. Ad­ testant will get a chance to win student bill of rights and iB . for the problems we face," he mission will be charged and the one of four trophies. And their Petitions are available at the said, adding that SG ''must proceeds could eliminate the odds are better than the infonnation desk and at the a member of BSEC and the ·become a nieans to solve these remainder of a long-standing sophomores. Even if there's no student government office. Winter Term advisory com. Jl'ObleriJs." . audience, contestan'IS will get March 17 is the deadline for mittee. A member of BSEC, Dew was a class debt. trophies. obtaining the necessary "SG should be more open to delegate to the ·North CaroUna It all began at a Christmas signatures on a petition. student legislature. ByJO dance in 1970 .•. "about four student participation than it currenUy is, s~cally in ad­ Annie Ludlow, sophomore of couples showed up. It was the Several students indicated this Oakhurst, N.J., said that she is ThenewHt week that they are considering ministrative procedures " fiasco of our freshman year," CU Flicks Grossman said. ' consideririg running for student launched th' Phil Tate, sophomore class candidacy in student body body secretary. . hopes for sue president said candidly. elections. He added that "it iS necessary Ms. Ludlow, who has assisted revised proo to bring SG more into contact and Things were looking up last To Feature Marylou Cooper, sophomore of in the student government some rough Wilson, and Costy Kutteh, junior on the same level as the students. Jl'esident's office last year and Highly year when the class's Miss Baby It has lost this student par­ Deac contest earned $160. of Statesville, are both this year, also favors "trying to sometftnes 1 - ticipation now because of its give students a lot more say and the smaller 'M*A*S*H' Student operator of 'Son of Pit,' Roger McManus. Photo By Jones possibilities for the race for SG political policies." ' .( And there was the popsicle sale president. . getting students involved." and logistic .I among the this fall: total profit "between Ms. Cooper, who gained fame Freshman Bill Taylor of five and ten dollars," Tate said. Freeport, ru., and junior Frank Council m1 last year advocating a bill that Dew of Lumberton may run for countered, ~ The books were reversed at the would either abolish women's man David I Student Manages Shop curfew or give the men a curfew, the office of vice president. junior class carnival in the fall. r===l~= Your Host: ::: .J' The new said she feels that im­ Taylor advocated a policy of ·!. ••• resulted fr1 "We had a silhouette booth. plementation of a new student "constructive activism" for SG. ,...,;11 Pete Cromer. :-:·ill I which arose Three people had their government constitution is "We're not out to be an­ cases two ye1 silhouettes made ... and somebody essential to the survival of SG. tagonizing ... but the idea is to get some stude1 stole all our equipment so we lost -1~ Waitress: AnnUarreU 1~ things done," he said. :~ :-: HonorCounc money." She added that the proposed :-: Beer, Pizza & ::: . , . new SG constitution contains A leading supporter of the Open a "kangaroo Now the talent show may put ill in which thE the sophomores back in the '·'different fundamental ideas" House Bill, Taylor has also Sand-wiches 1~ participated in the national students we black. "There hasn't been a show from the present constitution. ~~ _ Happy Hour 1~ protected. since spring of 1970. The music student lobby, protest against Currentiy sophomore class vice nuclear bomb testing off Alaska, ::: 3-7 ::: A Student fraternity is small and kind of president, Ms. Cooper said she mittee appo lost interest in their project," the SOS Charette, and the March Ji Beer Reduced 5c i~ would like to see extention of of Dimes. HonorCounc Tate said. open houses, implementation of .ill 4457 N.·cherry·st. 1~ new plan ft The sophomores need help residential college, and voting Dew, who chirired the com­ ::~ 10 A.M. ·12 P.M. :~ chosen at from the audience, which will buy and political activities on cam­ mittee to lower the foreign iljj Mon. • Sat. ~ student body pus. language requirement, wants Council, wl And the class could go more :::~·;·.. ·····l· .. ··········~-~-!.-~·=·:·:-=·:·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·~:·:·:·:~:::~:::::::~: lroke. reduced larg

~ r l Jobn Pato1 was fired Department Carthyera"o urged Amerl Communist · Tuesday at ~ fl'oom of the 1 As political "Vmegar JD! China-Burm · . Davi..es predi Chiang Kal-i mainland c mended that face up to th power of tl munists and wouldbeemb backing of thE Chinese civil He rejoinecl m.ent after th1 of the Policy came under "McCarthy e1 on China. He underwt investigatioru each instancE 1955 by SecrE Foster Dull judgment." In 1969, the reexamined] him security Davies wru China of A missionary : educated in Cl States and ent Foreign Servi He served i India, Russ~ Peru in additi At the initta· C. Marshall, State, he w~ • of Freedom, t honor grante

John Jeli1 Mineola, N.Y. candidacy I treasurer. Jelich is with the Mar paign and thE drive. He said th1 government 1 activities, ant make known 1 SG's use of ft

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