Homecoming Rocket Lifts Off Tonight

TODAY, INSIDE TODAY, EDITORIALLY • QUEENS • OPEN LOUNGES • DEBATE nlb aub lark • MORATORIUM • FRESHMEN " CURRICULUM A Prize.- Wlnning Newspaper * * * * NUMBER 4 VOLUME LV * * Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Friday, October 10, 1969 Babcock School Dul~e Game~ Concert !re, just Dedication Set , weird. Bug?" Disney. For Tomorrow hniques, 1ent. If Highlight Homecoming ;t.'' One Dr. John A. Perkins, president of the through The big Homecoming weeKend, highlighted of Trustees, Alumni Council and all Boards at 11 a.m. Wilmington (Del.) Medical Center. will be picture by tomorrow's football game with the Duke of Visitors for dinner, '7:30 p.m. Friday. A law alumni reunion will be held Sat­ the principal speaker Saturday at the dedi­ lchieve­ Blue Devils and a concert by the Iron Butter­ The Alumni Council . will have a break­ urday evening from 5 to 8 p.m. at the cation of the University's Charles H. Bab­ :ained to fly, begins tonight with a pep rally and bonfire fast meeting Saturday morning at 8 followed Sheraton, and a post-game party will be cock School of Business Administration build­ ~al. Who followed by a street dance with the Inmen. by registration in Reynolda Hall. Classes held for alumni and friends of the Univer­ ing. lywood's Tomorrow's activities begin with the dedi­ are excused on Saturday. Tours of the sity at Graylyn Estate beginning at 5 p.m. The dedication ceremony will be held at rton and cation of the Charles H. Babcock Hall in the Babcock School of Business will be con­ Saturday evening. 10 a.m. on the Magnolia Court behind Rey­ town of morning, followed by the judging of displays ducted at ll a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Women's dorms will host open houses nolda Hall. massive in residence houses, the game at 1:30 p.m., Men's Residence houses and fraternities Sunday afternoon 2 to 5 p.m. Perkins was president of the University 1 ancient and the conce-rt at 8 p.m. · will hold open houses Saturday beginning of Delaware and president of Dun and Brad­ d atop a Miss Demon Deacon will be announced street, Inc., before going to the Wilming­ that the at halftime of the football game. Fourteen ton Medical Center. He was undersecre­ fact, the coeds are competing for the title bestowed tary of health, education and welfare in e (Darby on the basis of a student vote taken Open Lounge Resolution 1957 and 1958. He also has been budget r during Thursday. director for the state of Michigan, control­ he diffi­ Penny Olin, senior of Springfield, Va., ler of the state's department of admin­ 'ilm. His represents Delta Sigma Phi fraternity: Mvra istration, and professor of political science re Bug." Delapp, freshman of Lexington, represents Approved By Legislature and assistant provost at the University of nd Janet Pi Kappa Alpha. ponsible and present during the hours the Michigan. ·echauns Nancy Cummings, senior of Jacksonville, BY DIANNE JONES He received the B.A. degree from Mich­ lounge is open. igan and the M.A. and Ph, D. degrees from thunders Fla., represents Taylor House; Betty Benton, Managing Editor Jim Cross, president of the student gov­ Wailing junior of Mt. Holly, represents Sigma Chi; the University of South Carolina. He is ernment, announced the appointment of Bill the author of three books and the director reat fun, Mary Bumgardner, sophomore of Cape May A resolution l:d.lling for limited open DeWeese, sophomore of Waynesburg, Pa., of several companies. · for ya! Court House, N. J., represents KappaSigma; lounges in the men's dorms was passed as head of an ad hoc committee to investigate Judy Kubik, sophomore of Orlando, Fla, without opposition Wednesday night by the Dr. RobertS. Carlson, deanofthe business other avenues of intervisitation. school, will preside at the dedication cere­ represents Alpha Sigma Phi. Discussion became more controversial Student Government. The Legislature also mony. The guests will be greeted by Dr. Rated "G" Other candidates are Carol Sue Jordon, enacted an amended resolution, which lim­ when Walt Snider, sophomore of Westchester, 11:45, 3:30, senior of Thomasville, representing Kappa Pa., proposed a bill to limit the number James Ralph Scales, president of the U­ ited the number of unexcused absences al­ niversity. The speaker will be introduced J, 8:45 Alpha; Mary Cunningham, junior of Hunt­ lowed a legi!:;lator to two per year. of excused absences allowed a legislator ington, W. Va., representing Theta Chi; by Leon L. Rice, Jr., of Winston-Salem, Susu Evans, senior of Eglin Air Force - The open · lounge resolution, pres11iited · to one. The bill was amended to allow two president of the University's board of Base, Fla., representing Sigma Phi Epsilon. by Mike Ford, sophon:ore of Alexandria, unexcused absences per year and passed trustees. Lou London, sophomor.:: of Shelby, is Va., will go to the Student Affairs Committee with moderate opposition. The Iron Butterfly Will Perform Saturday. William R. Lybrook of Winston-Salem, Lamba Chi Alpha's candidate; Jane Munro, for consideration at the end of this month. president of the Z. Smith Reynolds Foun­ sophomore of Coral Gables, Fla., repre­ dation, will give a tribute to the late Charles sents Davis House. Dottie Soper, junior H. Babcock, prominent Winston-Salem bus­ enhancein~;~~~~;dt~~~os~~~r: college life" ~eh~l~o~e!e;~;~~~and the "students Moratori·um Observance inessman and philanthropist in whose honor of Silver Spring, Md., represents Poteat House; Ann Roberts. freshman of Bur­ feel that improved co-educational relation- the school and building are named. lington, represents Alpt.a Phi Omega serv­ ships are conducive in obtaining the de- Music for the program will be provided ~fraternity; h d I d 0 d d the University band directed by Calvin R. ice and Linda Henshaw; fresh­ ~~ed academic atmosphere," Fordresolv- . s . w man of Greensboro, represents Kitchin c e u e . . n e nes ay Huber. The Rev. Warren T. Carr, pastor House. 1) That all men• s house lounges shall of Wake Forest Baptist Church, will give 'Jther events on the agenda for the ~annual be opened to all females during the hours The University is planning its own ob- 10 Vlew of the strong student support for . the invocation. The prayer of dedication weekend meeting of the Development corresponding to tne closing hours of the servance of the Vietnam Moratorium on the boycott, the administration here has de- November, three days m December, and so will be given by the Rev. Richard N. Otta­ Council at 4 p.m. Friday and of the Board University girl's dormitories. Wednesday as an alternative to the nation- cided instead to hold the Chapel p;:ogram on until th~ v1ar is en~ed. . way, director of the Church and Industry 2) Each men's organization will have a wide boycott of classes. and go on with classes. Here, J~m Cro~s 1s~ued a statement thlS Foundation. 'fl designated member responsible at all times The observance here will take the form However, no special policy on the cut- week urgmg Umvers1ty students, faculty, An informal social hour will be held for the action of that particular organization of a Chapel program, entitled ., University ting of classes has be~n. ado~ted .for that and. admin~~trators t.o j?in in th.e mora- following the ceremony. Tours of the new ill Homecoming '69 during the times a female is present. The Convocation for Peace;· and will feature day. Rather, the adm1mstrat10n 1s leav- tonum ~s our contnbutlon to brmg peace building will be conducted before and after open lounges will be conducted inaccordance pacifist speeches poems and readings from ing it up to the discretion of students and to Amenca. the dedication. TODAY wi!h University policy. the Bible ' ' faculty members-essentially the same policy "I hope that the 'Convocation for Peace' Construction of the business school was ~ 3) It will therefore no longer be necessary Classe~ will be held as usual here, but followed for class cuts on all ctays. and the other n:eans in which we will. il- completed in time for the beginning of the ; 7:30 - Bonfire and pep rally on the for the particular men's organization to reg- a student may cut classes without violat- "I have proposed to the faculty a dis- lustrate our desire for an end to th~ VJet- fall semester. The building was made 'football field, followed by a street dance ister open houses with the dean of women. ing any University rules. The matter of tinct Wake F.orest observa~ce," .James.Ral~h nam War ":Ill serve ~s a cata_lyst ~n both possible by two gifts of $500,000 each from with the Inmen. 4) Each individual men's organization class attendance is being left up to indivi- Scales, president of the Umvers1ty, sa1d thls the academic co'!l~umty and m Wwston- the z. Smith Reynolds Foundation and Mrs. Susan Reynolds of Greenwich, Conn. TOMORROW will have the personal privilege of decid- dual faculty members and students. week. "I don't see any useful purpose Salem;' Cross sa1d m the statement. ing whether to accept open lounges and The Vietnam Moratorium originally was to be served by missing classes. 10:00 - Dedication ceremonies of the how to conduct the policy j.1 accordance planned as a one-day boycott of classes "This is a more appropriate outlet," Charles H. Babcock School of Business to th.is bi~l. . . at colleges and universities throughout the Scales said. "It will be a service of pray- Administration (on Magnolia Court in front W_Jth llttle discussion ~nd no debate,. the country in order to gl\'e J,J .. rticipants time er and witness against the continuous kill- Faculty Will Vote On of the new building). Legis!a~ure accepted Ford s p~oposal Wl~h n~ . to devote to taking the ,, issue of peace" ing in Vietnam:· 11:00 - Judging of Homecoming decora­ oppos1t1on. If the Student Affaus ~omm1tte to the community. The moratorium is aimed Scales said he hopes the "distinctive Wake approves the measure, lounges m the fra- . . . . F t b •· ·11 b " · tions; open house in Fraternities, Societies ·t· d th n's residence dorms will specifically at Amencan w1thdrawal or a ores o servance wt e a more 10- Change In Curriculum and Men's Residence Houses. term 1es an e me . . . . negotiated settlement in Vietnam. telligent" one than "just missing classes.'' 11:00-12:30- Tours of Charles H. Babcock ~ open to 'Yom en ~tudents Wlth the hm1ta- Various campuses, however, are develop- The Chapel program will begin in Wait Second semester would begin Jan. 25 with School of Business building. hons stated m the bill. . . . ing their own programs, including silent Chapel at noon and continue for about an BY PATTI ALLEN spring recess March 21-28, reading period 1:30 - Wake Forest Demon Deacons vs. Under the present system, fr~termh~s~nd vigils, door-to-door canvassing through res- hour. Scales said he "presumes'' that Assistant Editor May 13-18, and commencement May 31. No Duke Blue Devils (Groves Stadium). members of the MRC must,obtamyermlssJOrt identical and business areas, and the cir- the faculty "will allow that one hour be Proposals for a change in curriculum mention was made of changing the Saturday 7:30 - The Iron Butterfly in concert froJT. the dean of women s .offlce. ~o have culating of petitions and leaflets. missed." arrangement. The new semesters would be fWait Chapel). open lounge and must state m wntmg that Although many colleges have decided to The program will open with a "peace" and a revision of the school calendar-one facet of which calls for a "dead week" two weeks shorter than present ones. an o1uco::r 01 tnat orgamzauon will be res- call off classes for the day ofthe moratorium speech by David W. Hadley, instructor in Up for "deliberation'' are reduction in history, followed by a reading of Willfred before exams-will come for a vote before the total number oi courses, more ,. op­ Owen poems by Dr. Edwin G. Wilson, U­ the faculty Monday. Final approval rests with the University's portunities for seminars, tutorials, and in­ niversity provost, an Old Testament les­ dependent study and the possibility of a son by Scales, and a New Testament les­ Board of Trustees, but if it is accepted "minim ester" of one month between the Asian Studies Grant Runs Out the new curriculum will become effective son by Jim Cross, student body president. two four-month terms. Also, the chaplain, Edgar D. Christman, in the fall of 1970. T ri-Co/lege Program May Fold In the words of one professor, the propos­ A student government committee has been will lead prayers of "intercession,·' the es~blished to parallel the faculty work on choir will sing an anthem, and the Uni­ als are "almost not debatable," though program. SU!Jport in non-western studies, he said, be­ curriculum. Members are Ted Blanton, BY DIANNE JONES cause therE> "was more interest in domes­ versity will play a music meditation. reports from a meeting M:mday of the sophomore of Salisbury; Don Shafer, senior Scales added he was interested mainly American Association of University Pro­ Managing ~ditor According to the plans of the Vietnam in doing the "greatest good for the great­ tic problems, such as black studies. In­ of Coral Gables, Fla; Jim Butler, senior ternational studies are bound to suffer," Moratorium Committee, led by former aides fessors on campus indicate some of the of Arlington, Va.; Sam Long, senior of A five-year $50,000 grant from the Mary est number" in allocating the budget. faculty members feel the changes are not he said. of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy in his presi­ Elberton, Ga.; Barbara Snedegar, sophomore Reynolds Babcock foundation for the Uni­ "I'll have to look at the enrollment fig­ But Gokhale said the Babcock foundation dential bid last year, the one-day October ''sweeping'' enough. He said more changes of Elkins, W. Va.; and Bill Miller, junior versity's Asian studies program expires this ures," he said, before making any final seem to be promised but the policy right boycott will be expanded to two days in of Bethlehem, Pa. year and will not be renewed, according to consideration. Continued On Page 5 now is to take it slow. Dr. James Ralph Scales, president of the The Asian studies program was irutiated The recommendations were made by a men's University. in 1960 under the direction of Gokhale. Curriculum Study Committee established in ItS of Scales described the grant as a "wind­ At that time the Babcock foundation made 1967 and headed by Dr. Thomas J. Turner, Slater Opens the first of its five-year grants of about them. fall from the Babcock foundation." He also professor of physics. said the usual foundation grant was "not $50,000 each to cover the administration The first recommendation calls for a Then a permanent thing,'. rather it was given for costs of the program. The grant was re­ re·rised curriculum for qualified students New Facilities re out. a ''certain purpose for a fixed term. That newed for another five years in 1965. beginning with their freshman year. This ashion was the original understanding" about the Gokhale said without the grant the U­ program would by-pass some of the basic Jair of Babcock grant, he said. niversity would not i;;J.Ve funds to support courses now required and would be under Dr. B. G. Gokhale, professor of history the entire program, and he listed several the guidance of a special faculty committee. This Weekend and director of the Asian studies program, areas where the program would have to be The number participating the first year would BY JOHN ELLIOTT said without the Babcock money, the tri­ cut back. be no greater than five per cent of the Staff Writer eollege Asian studies program between Win­ "We have made our mark," Gokhale said. freshman class. ston-Salem State, Salem College and this "We are no longer that little Baptist school. A second recommendation suggests the The new A. R. A. Slater cafeteria facil­ University would definitely be out for next We have changed in the last decade. We establishment of "pilot programs'' in various ities will "hopefully'' be open at least in year. can't stop at this point, the program will University departments to broaden the basic part by Homecoming weekend, according Gokhale explained the Babcock grant had continue of course, but it will stagnate. curriculum. This program might also em­ to T. T. Armenaki, director of dining serv­ been used to finance the visiting professor "We need foundation support for the next phasize two or more basic disciplines" within ices. Construction difiiculties prevented program in which four professors from Asian ten years to get on sound footing. The next a given broad division of the curriculum." the original deadline of September 15 from ~ICARD. I universities lectured at the three colleges five years are very critical,'' he said. The final recommendation deals with the being met. • When the main cafeteria is completed, during the year. "We'll have to make do with the exist­ yearly calendar. Orientation is scheduled But Scales said the visiting professor pro­ ing faculty,'' he said. "We' 11 have less money to start Sept. 1, with classes beginning Armenaki said, students will be served from gram had not been well received at Win­ to buy books which we need very badly, Sept. 7. Classes would end for the fall 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. He reported that "at - ston-Salem State and at Salem. indicating and if I don't get books and source material, tcrrr. after bland one-lla If weeks. A" read­ least one area will remain open for the FICE that the number of students participating in I can't accept as many students in graduate ing period'' would be hel•l after the return entire day." the program at those two schools was not school,'' he said. from Christmas hnlirlays and would last Ray Davis, regional operations manager gre.at enough to compensate for the amount And Gokhale said the junior year abroad one week. It would precede final exams for Slater in Atlanta, Ga., said recently of monev spent in the program. program now in the planning stages would and would De devoted to "review al)d re­ that the University cafeteria will be "one Scale~ also said the amount of money have to be "dumped.'' flection" of work dnnt' during the sE'tnester; of the finest facilities in the South." donated for the program by Salem and Win­ Gokhale explained that money from na­ howevPr, tht:: recommt:>nnatiuns give profes­ · · • Aririenaki said that while n larger variety ston-Salem State was not great enough to tional foundations was "hard to come by." sors the option of assi~ning additional read­ of food items will be offered, there will be a consideration in the financing of the The federal governmo;!nt is also cutting back Beat The Blue Devils! in!! during that wet>k. Continued oii Page 5

\ PAGE TWO Friday, October 10 1969, OLD GOLD AND BLACK After A Month, Hearty Approbation Kole Mixee Magic, Religio How Do Frosh Lil~e WF? Predicts Christ's Comin~ as predicting a thermonuclear BY NANCY ANDREWS are blue/ I am a fraud/ And EY JOHN ELLJOTT town, Md. "I'm especially Wake Forest, it should be on Jay Preslar, of Hickory, la­ so are you." war and the invasion of Israel Staff Writer From this Kole stepped into by Russia. A~;o DEBBIE HARTIS pleased with the house system.'' the same level rule-wise as the mented, "I love it, except the Kathy Pep!, of Charlotte, said, top shcools in the nation. I find scholastic work is too hard!'' Illusionist Andre Kole mingled · a religious sermon in which he Though most of what he pre­ "I like Wake Forest beeause the people here apathetic. Change Praise, however, largely magic tricks with predictions of predicted the future of the world. dicted foretold tragedy and de­ The class of 1973, after al­ it's middle of the road-it's not is in the air but it's taking a drowned out criticism, and the the second coming of Christ and Christ, he said, promised his struction, he remained optomis­ most a month of orientation, too liberal and not too con­ lot longer than anywhere else. consensus of freshman opinion a thermonuclear war Tuesday own return which would be im­ tic about the future, explaining parties, quizzes, football games, servative. I like the location I would be happy to see an ex­ seemed best expressed by night in Wait Chapel. mediately preceded by a series that the important message of and those first English themes, and the size. One isn't a num­ panded seminar program and Shaun Riley of Kingsport, Tenn. The show began with a simple of occurrences. Kole explained the Bible is love. Hand in gives a hearty stamp of approval ber here, but it's large enough more independent research." "I like Wake Forest. I like exhibition of so-called extra­ that there are 27 such signs hand with a disastrous future to the University. to meet a variety of people." IMPERSONALITY the people. I feel like a person sensory perception. He then cov­ mentioned in the Bible and wl!l be a revolution of love which When asked ''What do you think LADISLAS ered his eyes with two half dol­ declared that Christ would re­ will sweep the world and save Sue Marshall of Virginia Echoing some of her opinions can fit in here,'' •••African Art Expert ••• of Wake Forest so far?", Beach, Va,, said emphatically, lars, adhesive-taped them to his turn during the present gener­ mankind, he said. many new students were content was. Dick Delanoy, of Silver face and blindfolded himself. Kole ation's lifetime. The lecture was sponsored by "I like the serenades the best.'' Spnng, Md., who complained a­ simply to reply as Lee Shock­ called forward five members of Kole also interpreted the Bible the Campus Crusade for Christ. One brave coed, who asked bout the impersonality of large ley, of Snow Hill, Md., did: "I that her name not be disclosed, Expert On African the audience. Three pulled think it's great and I love it lecture halls and even some admitted shyly, "I like the cafe-. smaller classes. "There's not various objects from their poc­ here." Others weremorespeci!­ teria food." kets, the fourth wrote a four­ much ~mmunication between Panel Gives ic. Among the things that im­ Complaints, which were infre­ Art To Talk Here letter word on a card and the Facts, students _and teachers,'' he said. pressed then about the Univer­ quent, centered largely around Pat Wtlson, of Tar Heel. ex­ Ladislas Segy-;- an expert on Segy will show slides or films fifth mixed the arrangement of sity were its ''atmosphere of dormitory re~Iations and the African art and sculpture, will ·at bo1h sessloris. four colored scarves hanging Opinions On Drugs friendliness," serenades, and pressed an almost universal from a pole. Kole proceeded to rigors of classes. Nancy complaint. "I dislike Saturday present two programs Tuesday \ nrt!i ve of Hungary, he founded the house svstem. the Segy Gallery, specializing in determine their identity by BY SUE ENGLISH Andrews, of Virginia Beach, Va., classes. I think Tuesday and at the University. The first, at cussion and student body 'FRIENDLIEST CAMPUS' protested: "I think the rules ThuFsday classes should be 4 p.m. in DeTamble Auditorium, African art, in 1950. The gallery ''feeling" them with his finger­ Staff Writer questions at 10 Tuesday in Wait · "It's got to be one of the are tw restrictive. For a school 'lengthened. Even every-other­ will be a seminar discussion. The lms already organized over 400 tips from a distance of six to Drugs and their implications Chapel. frie.naliest campuses around '' which is supposed to have an Saturday classes would be an second, at 8:15 p.m. in DeTam­ exilijitions, with five circuits 12 inches above them. The ob­ were the .subject of panel dis-. Dr. Tim Pennell, assistant said Rich Englar, of Reistcrs- academic record as excellent as improvement.•' ble, will be a lecture. ea.::h year among colleges, mu­ jects were rightfully identified professor of surgery at Bowman seums and civic art organiza­ as a piece of gum, a ring and Gray Medical School; Dr. Bert tions. a key. . Webber; University professor of BETHABARA SELF He has been writing papers · EXTRA-SENSORY DECEPTTON Asian Prof biology; J. A. Faircloth, of the COME SEE US and books on African art since '!'hen, bowing the index card Greensboro police department; SERVICE LAUNDRY 1930 anct has delivered lectures by its edges in one hand. he and Bart Charlow, senior of South - at over 250 educational insti­ Is Teaching For the Best Car Wash In Town Near Wake Forest University sensed the word written on it Fallburg, N. Y., each spoke for tutions in 30 states. with his hand which came no five minutes on the drugs in Segy also maintains an interest closer than a few inches from At University our society. and Receive a Frae Wax Job B Fort in the phenomenology or percep­ it and identified the word as Webber opened by comparing ••• tion. Two of his manuscripts, "time." After all this, Kole the mind-altering drugs to the ness. Clip this ad cind bring it to Bethabara Rd. Dr. Pandam Guritno of Dja­ "Being aud Meaning" and "The revealed to his audience that what karta, Indonesia, is teaching a more common drugs such as With the Identity of the Self" are pres­ alcohol, nicotine, and barbit­ the law s Laundry he had presented was, instead course in Indonesian culture this Reynolds Mini t Car Wash ently being considered for pub­ of ESP, "extra-sensory decep­ uates. "Our ignorance of the the fall at the University, Salem the "triad" lication. tion." Coltege and Winston-Salem State effects of drugs keeps us from institutions Reynolda Manor Shoppir'9 Ce.nter 3 minute drive from WFt' Forty-Iive years ago he began After the world-famous dem­ University. reaching any conclusion about collecting art, modern as well as onstration of the guillotine which Gurttno, a professor at the their long-term effects," Web­ He e its African relative. An active passes through flesh but does University of Indonesia and an ber stated. a rate painter, he has had eight one­ not cut, he introduced the aud­ Faircloth said that (:roper ed­ offered in expert on Japanese puppet thea­ The regular man shows in the United States. ience to Glorpy, his personal ter, is the ·first of four visiting ucation was the key to success­ Examples of his work are in over ghost or spirit. Glorpycomposed ful control of drugs. · be offered professors who this year will be offered 20 museums, public collections a poem for the audience which concluc:t a course in Asian thought Three points made by Dr. and in 150 private collections, read: ''Roses are red/ Violets and civilization at the three Pennell were: schools. l-It is important to separate Guritno received the Ph.D. de­ hard narcofics from "head gree in anthropology from Cor­ drugs." OF. WINSTON •SALEM "Sleep ••• nell University. He also has 2-Good pot may not be any taught at Michigan State Uni­ more harmful path-physiologi­ t•e most versity. He will teach in Win­ ~lly then caffein, nicotinP. and ston-Salem until Nov. 1. Continued On ~age 7 This is a perso~al invitation for you tojoin beautiful uperi'n" our own AN·CHOR CHARGE PLAN i• life ••• ONE CHARGE CARD WILL DO! except driuk" AAA ALL THIS! 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BY SANDRA LOWDER qualified representatives. N pat!on" are no more meaningful to the individual. A university should allow its stu­ doctorate in biology at W. F. U.? The ls lt wrong that the basic humanity in today' s In provost Wilson's article "Student Par­ development of individual student responsi­ dents to actively face the values from outside UnivPr,.itv. ideally llnd theoretically, is a youth should be stirred to the nnint nf action Provost Wilson has presented four in­ ticipation m Ins!itutionai Affairs," which bility than a totalitarian state's permit to teresting principles for the formation of T its immediate acreage. No university, for uoera• arts school. However, the Bowman against the waste of lives? lJecornm l!nrl na­ appeared in the January , 1969, issue of exist would be. example should confront its population with Gray School of Medicine forced a vote University policy. His tone implies, uncon- "The Wake Forest Magazine," the Provost Provost Wilson• s first principle states uonal pr1de corner the valua1:>1e ume for 0 the thre~t of expulsion for possessing alco­ which overrode any pleas toward institutional action. Today's college campus is, by defini­ sciously I trust, that the maturity of the 1 recommends four principles for the estab­ "that each institution has the right to be ho!ic beverages on campus. It is contrary idealism. Now, in this liberal arts school, college student is equal to that of a seventh lishment and maintenance of University uniquely itself. There is no prescribed tion, a seat of ideas. As new means of ad­ to our national ideals to prohibit an in­ one can obtain a doctorate in biology while. vancement are discovered, refusal by con­ grade child's. Although his intentions are w policy. Although Dr. Wilson has presented pattern of values to which it must conform. dividual at any time or any place from in the undergraduate division of the lan- · acknowledged as noble, his support of the Intellectually, morally, socially, it can es­ trolling agencies to acknowledge and attempt freely choosing his own values. Wilson says guage department, Xlfle must learn the entire these ways causes student spirits to smolder use of student committees and news media tablish its own goals and pursue its own N An Analysis that "to insist that there is one, and only laP:<~~age in ord~t to take a cours_e in Rus­ to ::ombustible level. At this point a statement bas the same bmuendoes as a grade school destiny - so long as it is faithful to the one, way to manage a college is to imply sian, Spanish, French, or Hindu. literature. such as Dr. Wilson's "but on the campus, teacher's curriculum of" constructive" busy academic standards of the collegiate broth­ that all institutions are alike and that we What sort of values of this hberal arts order eKists in thewaytheinstitutionchooses work which is duly ignored as childish E erhood to which it belongs." What comprises an orderly platform for insmuuonal policy must move increasingly toward conformity university forces it to place so very much to define order," tends to create violent play. UDfortunately, Dr. Wilson has missed· formation and for student integration into the academic standards. to which loyalty must not only in education but also in habits and more emphasis on its technical studies reactions. the current wave of thought on the college R such policies, he has constructed this plat­ be given? I maintain that these standards in­ manners." Does this statement not also than on a broader, more encompassing cur­ Dr. Wilson's fourth and perhaps weakest campuses. Today• s college student is not form upside down. He stresses the view­ clude the congruence of the university's pro­ apply to an individual within a university riculum of world literature studies? Appar­ principle states that "when student opinion merely asking for his human rights, he is point that the administration's repression posed norms with the individual student's heirarchy? Wake Forest University insists antly, the "values that transcend the f~ds is sought, it shall be looked for throughout demanding his right to be responsible for or the students• freedom to be responsible need for personal development, expression that all lives be directed according to Bap­ and fancies of the moment" are those wh1ch the student body, and the institution ought his own actions. and fulfillment. With its right to be uniquely M is justified by the premise of protectively tist doctrine. Wilson continues, ''I think we emphasize the necessity of the dollar. not to make the mistake of assuming guiding students to an unidentified age of itself, each institution must bear the respon­ should welcome diversity as a source oi The role of the college campus is the sub­ tnat any single group of students • • • is maturity. After stating his four principles, sibility of helping the individual to be unique­ strength, not abolish it in the name of ject of Dr. Wilson's third principle. He de­ spokesman for all their classmates!' Al­ 0 Dr. Wilson consequently issues four per­ ly himself. clares that the campus ,. is not a battlefield whatever nractices are currently fashion­ though some may appreciate the mock pr~­ mits for student involvement in his prin­ Even as there is no prescribed pattern of able.•' Wake Forest, as 1 mow ·it, does not where opposing armies fight, nor is it pri­ tection of individual welfare outlined in this Apology T ciples. However, con.Sidermg certain fal­ values to which an institution, such as a !lave sufficient diversity in its dogma to marily an arena for political and social statement, most will recognize the all too lacies within the basic principles themselves, university, must conform, it must not either consider it a source of strength or to action. It is a place where men study and frequent overtone of lack of trust in student Dr. Wilson's proposals for "student partici- prescribe only one pattern of values for the consider abolishing it for current fashions. argue and learn, where they gain convictions, responsibility. As Wilson himself seemed The Old Gold and Black wishes to apologize 0 The second principle PFovost Wilson sug­ where they prepare, often contemplatively, to suggest, a campus wide referendum or for the delay in the mailing of subscriptions. ------~----~ gests states. ''the institution. thnughitshould for challenge and conflicts that lie ahead." Due to the chane:es in oublication date, th~. Founded January 15, 1916, as the stuaent newspaper of Wake Forest University Old poll could be held when head counts of opinions R be responsive to the times and ready to in­ What about the challenges and conflicts printer, and the mailing procedure~, the first Gold anct Black is publlsted each Friday during the school year except during ex­ are required. However, when the equivalent terpret them and to come toanunderstanding that exist today - the ones people enjoy of a world conference to decide if a dollar issues will be mailed to subscnbers this amination and holidav periods as directed by the Wake Forest PublieatiollS Board. with them, should not be the creature of the discussing at cocktail parties while sipping Mailed eacn Monday morninl!'. is to be spent to feed a starving child week. Further issues will be mailed on the age, much less of the decade or the year." their favorite brandy? It is a well-estab­ seems inpractical, would it be too much to Monday following the Friday publication date. I .llembers ot the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented for Nauouat Advertising In this statement . he is supporting the lished ritual "among administrative cfrcles ask to have the opinions of duly elected Subscribers not receiving the Old Gold by_ National Educational Advertising Servl:Ce, Inc., a division of Reader's Digest ·•values that transcend the fatis ana rancies in government to cautiously and reflectively student representatives respected and acted and Black regularly should contact Robert N Sales an~ Service. Subscription rate: $4.00. Second-class postage paJd, Winston­ of the moment". I wonder if he includes discuss future·· possibilities of temporary upon? It is the lowest of insults to the uni­ Nixon, Box 7567, Reynolda Station, Winston­ Salem, N.C. Form 3579 should be mailed to Box 7576, Reynolda. Station. Winston­ in these values the subservience of ideals harmony and then to appear duly astonished versity society to distrust the students' Salem, N. C. Subscriptions are $4.00 an­ Salem, N.C. 27109. Printed by Community Press, Incorporated, King, N.C. to the pressure of financial endowments? at the thousands of young men murdered responsibility in using the one freedom we nually. N Specffically, 1 refer to the newly offered on foreign soil during that particular parley. share nationally - the freedom to elect PAGE FIVE Friday, October 10 1969·, OLD GOLD AND RT !\CK Says Virginia Professor New Cafeteria es De~ate Probes Validity Of Two Political Ideologies Black Leaders Unsung May Be Ready ety logues and all concentrations of power through For Homecoming which man's built-in capacity for error may BY FREEMON MARK in history about black leaders in local poli­ do more harm." Staff Writer tics. In the question-answer period foll:Jw- Continued From Page I Buckley's argument then began to re.volve ing the lecture, she said those doing re­ around the dual nature of man...... be no immediate rise in the cost o! any Dr. Willie Lee Rose, associate professor search such as herself must rely greatly The conservative, he said, tends "to exalt items. Prices for new items wlll be or emphasize the spiritual over the material. of American history at the University or on the local newspaper~ w get a more comparable to existing prices. A special The proper object of government is to foster Virginia, spoke in DeTamble Auditorium concise view of the actual involvement of complete dinner will be offered each evening the good society, not the society of goods.'· Tuesday on "Black Leaders in Southern blacks in local politics during the period for $1.25. '3ecause of his alleged belief in the falli­ Reconstruction." The lecture was sponsored of Reconstruction. bility of man, the conservative is partial to by the Visiting Scholars Program of the Speaking of the records which the black The cafeteria will be divided by an imaginary line with a free flow service government which permits a maximum Piedmont University Center, leaders left, she said, "We are dealing "With the rough treatment of black lead­ with people who didn't leave their own area on either side and identical service amount of personal choice, Buckley said. equipment. Students will enter the service Schoonmaker, a debator and student body ers, black men would have been advised records.'' president while a student at the University, to steer clear of politics,'' Rose said. Rose cited several blacks during Recon­ area through the east and west doors and countered with a plea for " more substance . . Black leaders, she said, wanted to separate structir.n who were prominent in politics pick up their trays and silverware before and Jess style. • •• Umvers1ty Professor ••• from white churches and other such organ­ especially in the Southern states, and i~ entering the free flow area. izations l.Jet:ause the opportunity for leader­ South Carolina iu particular. Of these she Schoonmaker admitted that man was (Which Shoonmaker declared was the gen­ Inside the serving area, there will be fallible, but argued that "the ditference be-- eral dtrection of history. ship development was missing. said political corruption existed but not to the extent it did in their white' superiors. salad and beverage sections, while desserts tween liberal an~ c~ns~!vative on this was "If we take liberty from some and pass Rose said the danger of ignorance ex­ ists and has already occurred in the writ­ The blacks were less educated in many will be displayed on a large automatic Lazy th~, degre.e of falllbillty.. . it on to the many, I think we are moving with Susan. Students can order hamburgers, . Man 1s a human ammal ":1th reason. but history," Schoonmaker said. ing of the history of blacks during the Re­ instances and actually were unaware of many of the conditions of political activi­ grilled items, and a variety of hot meat th1s .pow:r doe.s not ;,nable ~1m to construct During the rebuttals, the focus of the construction period. Such an era of ''great ties in which they were engaged, she said . sandwiches from a special sandwich and REID BUCKLEY u~op1as 1mmed1ately, he sa1d. Nonetheless, debate shifted to the validity of liberal pro- turmoil and emotion" was palgued by This was the first lecture sponsored by the griH section. • • • Conservative .•• h~s knowledge of his rational limitations has grams. "cliches and stereotypes,'' just as the "Stokley Carmichaels and Rap Browns'' University department of history this se­ ~wo political and historical ideologies met g1ven man a better understanding of his "The conservative is flexible whereas Four checkout lines, two on each side of abilities t~n the unqualified optimism of the liberal is an ideologue wh~ tries to may dominate today•s history by minimiz­ mester. bead-on yesterday as Reid Buckley and Dr. Rose received her undergraduate and grad­ the serving area, will lead out of the sell­ utopia~ thmkers of the lGth, 17th and lBth stuff all society into a program, Buckley ing such leaders as "Martin LuthP.r King Donald Schoonmaker debated the question, and Bayard Rustin," she said. uate degrees from the University of Vir­ service flow area into the main dining ''Does liberalism doom society?" cent_unes, Schoonmaker added. ·said. Liberals tend to support programs room. A water and condiment section will . H1s next point, aimed at Buckley's asser- which by their nature are doomed to fail- During Reconstruction, Rose said, "The ginia, and received the Ph.D, degree from Laughter and occasional applause broke Johns Hopkins University. She was awarded be between the two pairs of cashiers. The t1Dn that the future should not be shackled ure. The greatest anomaly in the liberal churches and the schools •••became more out in the small Wait Chapel audience when or less vehicles for organizing the black the Allen Nevins Award in historv and has soiled tray deposit area will be totally the two men bantered between themselves with laws serving only transient ends, program is this: their programs are not automatic, with a conveyor belt that spirals referred to the proliferation of freedom ef!ective," he said. vote." published a book entitled "Rehea'rsal for as they discussed the differences between Reconstruction.'' down to the basement wash room. a liberal and a conservative. Rose also said that too little is known The debate was broken down into a ten­ minute preliminary speech from each Asian Studies Program's debater, followed by a brief period devoted SpDrtsman's Supply Chars Hamburgers to questions from the audience. Two five­ Stnke Wit. A S.lle minute rebuttals ended the program. Grant Is Not Renewed Buckley, a 1952 graduate of Yale Uni­ Company, Inc. Ho•• Of Tile versity and the brother of "National Re­ Charburger view" editor William F. Buckley, Jr., de­ Co_ntinued From Page 1 and Asian study courses at other small Soft-Served Ice Cream, Hot Dogs, colleges and universities. "We are listed minor flaws: fended the conservative position. "Many of had been very generous. "I'm not com­ Your Complete Hamburgers~ you may not be willing to accept many of in all international directories," he said. ~lJacll

concerns a Preston Studio pilgrimage •Western. Of Photography with verve in draw­ ReJnolda Manor Shopping Center as in this * I

l ~ D ··~•l'•'J~Ilel'•'J~I::I:• R 0 lMOTOR INNS E 2nd & Cherry Street w s And love is what your Phone 723-8861 N T wedding ring should be all RESTAURANT OPEN DAILY about, too. If it's one of A our ArtCarved Love Rings, T 6:00A.M. to 10:00 P.M. it will be. u You may choose your .. 0 Love Ring from our spec­ FEATURING: R tacular selection. Yellow w and white gold ribboning. Open Hearth Steaks Deeply etched scrolls. A :; ' Floral patterns. N '.,. Live Main lobster N Geometries. With antique, E traditional or T· contemporary accents. R FOUR FLAME-S You will know your own Love Ring the first RESTAURANT time you see it. Tie one on CHUCK NOE M And you're ready to go a Trained College Specialist from k!Carvea: anywhere in this kicky, 0 Phone 723-8861 the LOve Ring L peopI e.TM casual , littl~ plaything JOHN ROBERTS wants to meet you from Susan Petite. Her­ T 0 A-ONDINE SET DOWNTOWNER LOUNGE ringbone stripe of wool Date OCTOBER 13-14 Time 9 a.m. to 5 p.11. B-GAMIN SET 0 u C- D'ORSAY SET blend .•.. White pilgrim ArtCoru~d wnld1n6 rin•• 1n UK •olu:i told tJrr ava,lat»lr /rom in the .: ... ·.· '• .:··· . collar and cuffs. In wine $12 50 toovrrl250. . .;; " .. .:.•::· R· • 150 Seats N and black. 3 to 13. $22. • Foun~ain Bar COLLEGE Kay Jewelers I • Live Entertainment G Nightly E BOOK STORE 214 WEST FOURTH STREET Say charge it-ROBIN'S, FBC, NCNB • No Minimum (Oee lllock from Montaldo•) N II ON THE CAMPUS" 725-4266 and Master Charge • No Cover Chor~e owned and operated by Wake r orest University for N * ~oat and Tie Strictly Enforced convenience of students and faculty _PAGE SIX Friday, October 10 1969, OLD GOLD AND BLAL.l\. r·"' ...... , ...... ·~ t · I

; "

SCHOOL AND COLLEGES ------ANNOUNCES------~- THE BEGINNING OF NEW AND IMPROVED 7 TO 7 DINING PLEASURE

HOURS

BREAKFAST- 7:00 A.M. to 10:00 A.M. - SUNDAY 8 to 10 BEVERAGES - 7:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. LUNCH - 11:00 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. (All Stations) DINNER - 4:30 P.M. to 6:30 P.M.

EAST STATION - - - SPECIALTY MENU TUESDAY WEDNESDAY .... MONDAY FOREIGN NIGHT '. .: CHICKEN FRY

FISH FRY , Scheduled: Italian Nigh~, Chinese Night. Italian Night, . ·•\, ' ~ * i/4~ ~f 3 1/2 lb. Chicken Bavarian Night, Italian Night, Polynesian Night * Whipped Potatoes This is a BUFFET allowing a portion of 3 or 4 entrees 10 oz. Breaded Filet * and all foods served for one price *Cole Slaw * French Fries *Cole Slaw Example: Italian Night *Biscuits- Honey * Tartar Sauce * Snaghetti *Egg Plant Parmakaina *Gravy * Rolls - 2 ·Oleo * Green Beans with Olives *Lasagna *Beverage *Beverage *Ravioli "' Garlic Bread ·• Italian ~alad $1.25 *Beverage 153 THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY CONEY ISLAND NIGHT SEAFOOD NIGHT STEAK NIGHT NOON DINNER For OLD FASHIONED SOUTHERN D~R Your Choice of 3 of the following AN ARRAY OF SEAFOODS *Steaks Chili Con varne * with the option of a seafood platter * Hot Dog I Chili * Baked Potato * 1/4 Fried Chicken or individual serving - including slaw, *Hamburger * 2 Ham Biscuits French fries, and beverage * French Fried Onion Rings * Cheeseburg;e!" * Sausage Patty *Salad *Apples * with Pickles, olives, relishes, *Beverage *Homemade liush Puppies oopcot'n potato chips, peanuts Seafooa .Platter # 1 ------$1.25 Seafood Platter# 2 $1.60 *Slaw *Beverage Filet of Fish $ • 85 $1.25 *Beverage Fried Oysters $ • 95 (depending on Fish Cakes $ .75 size of steaks) Crabmeat Cakes $ 1.10 $1.60 Fried Shrimp $ 1. 25 $2.00 GRILL STATION - - - DAILY ITEMS ~ • * ROAST BEEF SANDWICH------· .iO * CHAR-BROILED SLICED FLANK 3 oz. STEAK ON TOAST __ $ .80 ·1 * SLICt::O CORN BEEF______$.80 "'CHAR-BROILED CLUB STEAK ______$1.50 i * GRILLED CHEESE SANDWICH $ .30 ~ *CHAR-BROILED ;:s St.EFBURGER ______$.35 oz. * GRILLED REUBEN SANDWICH ------­$.90 ~ .$.45 *CHAR-BROILED 5 oz. BEEFBURGER $.60 *GRILLED HAM AND CHEESE------I WEST STATION--- REGULAR MENU CHOICES . GO GET 'UM DEACONS · j·· L...... -.. ... ~.--& ...... - ...... _...... ·••. .. . ••·••••·•·•e .ee· .. • •·-···o· ... e·• W+ oe•• .t A PAGE SEVEN Friday, October 10 1969, OLD GOLD AND BLACK 'The Student' Due Lynch Given r'WFD'ii-Thi:-W::k·«J-~-·-u_e_d_~v-y_i_~_g_a_•_~_n_T_u_G_"_~_:-i:-s--A--b-r_o_a_d--i~~Efi~~;~l~i!~~~ Award For TODA":.' J lcs and throughobservlngandus- ·Week Of Nov. 17 WEDNESDA Y ing facilities of the medical cen- The first issue of The Stuctent The center section sent in Illustration Davld L. Heymann, a fourth- !cine for two weeks in the pub- ter. magazine is "slated to appear" last WE>'~k, features a full color 7:15 - Freshman Football: George C. Lynch, director of 2:00 - Concert Hall: Poulenc­ year medical student at Bowman lie schools, Heymann moved to Heymann, the son of Mr. and MwJday, Nov. 17, according to J?icture. A sampler of Prohaska \.'ake Forest vs. N. C. State, Gray School of Medicine, has be- the American hospital ship, S.S, Mrs. William A, Heymann, 11 AI Shoaf, editor. Illustrates poems by Harold the department of audio-visual 8:00 · Special ·of the Week, Concert Champetre; Debussy - resources at Bowman Gray The Martyrdom of Saint Sebas· gun three months of study and HOPE, in September when 1t ar- l\l"ler St., Galeton, Pa., received It features a new section called Cra.Jford, a senior at the Uni- 10:00 - Jazz Spectrum: Char­ training with Project HOPE in · rived In Tunisia from Wllming- the B.A. degree from Pennsyl- "Contemporary Essay" with the versi~~ of North Carolina, high- School of Medicine, received an tlon. award for the best illustration lie Shaver. 7:30 -Netherlands Composers: Tunisia. ton, Del. He wm return to Bow- vania State University in 1966. first contribution by Charles ly praised by University faculty. After teaching preventive med- man Gray Nov. 26. He is the second Bowman Gray Kirkpatrick, graduate student of The second issue will follow presented at the 24th annual SATURiJAY Dutch music of the 2oth century. meeting of the Association of 8:00 - London Echo student to take the elective quar­ Wim;ton-Salem, who expounds on tll(! first on Dec. 15. One month ter of the senior year with Proj­ a mo(hrn theme of the relation of is allowed for printing and work Medical Illustrators. 2:00 -Saturday Afternoon Op­ 8:15 - European Review 10:00 - The Scope of Human ect HOPE. L. Thompson Heffner thP. m

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One of the 14 lovely coeds pictured here will be crowned uMiss De­ . mon Deacon'' tomorrow during the halftim3 of the Deacs' game with the Duke Blue Devils.

The candidates represent nine social fraternities. a service fra­ ternlty, and four Men's Residence Council houses. Students voted for the queen of their choices Thursday in Reynolda Hall. Results were compiled by the Mo~1ogram Club, which sponsors the contest. Now all we--and they--have to do is wait until tomorrow. . . .

The Deacons Staff Photos By son. They many games year under the Claude McNeill Tate. BETTY BENTON LOU LONDON Two of the .•. Lambda Chi Alpha ••• regional • 0 0 Sigma Chi ••. State victories sets, for S some pre 1 M~RY tain the A ence crown BUMGARDNER posed to have ... Kappa Sigma ... several years. hand, Wake F

To begin just do not they have had are Freddy White, Jim Laughridge, Car Iy le Pate, starters. This not as big as est teams, LINDA HENSHAW JANE MUNRO Last year the ••• Davis House ••• posed to have 0 •• Kitchin House ••. Wake's best yet they won Time and under JUDY KUBIK How then, have already , .. Alpha Sigma Phi ••• as last years's The Deacons ad·13.ntages discredited.

In almost Deacs will be dogs, but they chological their oppcmen.ts little to with the '"'""'ll''u ers, but with MYRA DELAPP a new outlook, DOTTIE SOPER ••• Pi Kappa Alpha ••• this season as • . • Poteat House ••• for Wake F game will be victory, but always be in In addition SUSU EVANS mentally, physical c ••. Sigma Phi Epsilon ••. stressed puy>;H:a~

land, cont

.'~··~.... \ . ~.·::~ '· ; ~~;f. .. - I1

-~{ :r ;·~' ANN ROBERTS NANCY CUMMINGS ••• Alpha Phi Omega••• . . . Taylor House •• , most Wlil ·"'·~··· ... • 4,4Wn'>f~'''"' .- •"'it · v •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• V--IEWING ®lb ~nib utW iilark the DEACS HOMECOMING SPORTS EDITIO GOLD AND BLACK, Friday 10, PAGE 1-B

BY TOM JENNINGS Associate Sports Editor Stnll Adopts Different Tactics Establishing Winning Tradition

BY CHARLES DAYTON dence of the change from yellow has been good, in Stoll's opinion, back to old gold. to these efforts to get the com­ Staff Writer Another change has been the munity involved in WFU foot­ Winning At Football Establishing a winning tradi­ placing of green mats around the baH. tion is not an easy task, but practice field while the team is Another change has been the new Deacon mentor Cal Stoll has practicing. Coach Stoll empha­ complete renovation of the coach­ already made several changes to­ sized that this change was not ing office. This renovation is The Deacons are 2-2 this sea­ be weaker than usual. Both ward this end in his short time made in order to keep people only a small part of Stoll's over­ son. They have already won as games were close and the out­ as head coach. And the -re­ out, but rather, "to give a con­ all plan to project a good image many games as they won last come was up in the air till the centrated pratice without dis­ of Wake Forest football. sults of his early efforts may tractions. year under the coaching of Bill last second, but they were readily be seen as one views Coach Stoll believes that a good Tate. victories. That• s what counts. the 1969 edition of the Demon "The game of football has be­ image is a necessity in building Two of the victories were over Against Maryland, the Deacs Deacons. come so complex that if you do a strong program He explains, regional rivals, North Carolina '!!ere r>!~ked to win, but they lost One of the most obvious chang­ not conc~~trate all week, you may "If we intend to recruit the first State and Virginia Tech. Both m a 19-14 thriller. It was a es has been the new uniforms make cnhcal mental mistakes on class athlete, we have to present victories were regarded as up­ cliff-hanger down to the end of worn by the Deacons this year. Saturday. This gives me an op­ a first class program.'' sets, for State was picked in the game. Most people thought Need was the primary reason portunity tp g€t the undil·ided at­ There are stm many more im­ some pre-season polls to re­ Wake Forest would win easily Stoll cited for the acquiring of tention of the· ·players '' · Stoll por4!nt steps to be taken before tain the Atlantic Coast Confer­ in light oi their two previous the new uniforms. Another rea­ explained in discussing the rea­ Wake Forest has an established ence crown and Tech was sup­ victories, yet the Terps man­ son for the change was that the son for the change. first cliss fpotball program, but posed to have its best team In aged to come out on top. Just colors of the old uniforms were "Cal's Club," whose aim is to Coach Stoll has done much to lay several years. On the other what did happen to the Wake black and yellow rather than .interest the younger citizens of the foundations of such a pro- hand. Wake Forest figured to Forest team? black and old gold. the area in the Deacons is anoth­ gram. · "We wanted to go back to er innovation of Coadh Stoll's. Stoll pointed out that the chang­ traditional Walke Forest oldgold He pointed out that the purpose es thus far are not complete rather than yellow,'' commented of organizations such as "Cal's but they are a start. "It isn't Stoll concerning the new u­ Club'' is. ''to get everyone in­ going to happen over night. but niforms. The helmets ;yorn by terested in football involved in we are going in the right direc­ *******" this year's squad are also evi- our football program." Resoonse tion.

To begin with, the Deacons is a new coaching staff. A new just do not have the material coach brings new plays, new they have had in the past. Gone plans. and enthusiasm. This are Freddy Summers, Rick gives the team an added psy­ White, Jimmy Clack, Digit chological advantage over their Laughridge, John McQueeny, opponents. The players have a Carlyle Pate, and several other whole new outlook towards foot­ starters. This years's squad is ball. not as big as former V.'ake For­ When Bill Tate first came to est teams, either. Wake Forest as new head ~ 1111 ChThriJler game and seem~d well on their Last year the team was sup­ football coach in 1964. he led .1...1...1.. way to another Vlctory. Terps Cl Leavitt, who gained 106 yards posed to have been one of the team to a 5-5 record and Wake's best in recent years, received Coach Of The Year to lead the Deacon rushing at­ yet they won only two games. honors in the ACC. The year tack, sparked the Deacon attack Time and again, they gave in before the Deacons were 1-9. during this scoring thrust and under fourth quarter pressures. Tate never had as successful As Wake Rally Fails eventually got the score on a How then, could this year's team a team even though he brought four yard run. have already won as many games many outstanding players to Wake BY DOUG BUCKLEY land safety Kenny Dutton ~'.s Rus­ However, the Terps came right back with their second touchdown as last years's stronger squad? Forest. Coach Cal Stoll would Sports Editor sell's pass intended for Leavitt The Deacons do have certain probably be pleased ii he could was underthrown. of the contest. The 76 yard drive took only five plays as both ad·;antages which should not be have as successful a first year The University of Maryland In gaining their first win of Mlller and O'Hara picked up huge discredited. The biggest asset as Bill Tate had. gridders broke up three straight the season, the Terps utilized a powerful ground game that chunks of yardage on running passing plays and intercepted a. plays. fourth to thwart a last minute recorded · 364 yards during _the evening. In fact, the Maryland After O'Hara had gained 19 RUSSELL sneaks through for second touchdown in victory ·over State. Deacon drive on their own nine yards on a bootleg to the right, yard line, and record a 19~14 ground game was so effective Photo bv Hux. that quarterback Dennis O'Hara the Maryland quarterback got the win before 16,000 fans at Groves score two plays later on a 34 ******* Stadium Saturday night. threw only one pass in the en­ yard jaunt on the same play. Trailing by five points with tire game. O'Hara led the Terrapin run­ The Terps muffed the extra about three minutes to play, Wake point when the center snap was quarterback Larry Russell drove ning attack while gaining 158 In almost every game the attitude enabled Wake Forest to yards on 25 carries using a bobbled and a desperation pass Deacs will be rated as under­ his team 56 yards to a. first misfired. This miscue left the win their opening game at N. C. down on the Maryland nine. variety of rollout and quarter­ dogs, but they will have a psy­ back draw plays. Not far Deacs with a short-lived one chological advantage over most of State and the game with VPI. After the Deacons had picked point lead. The Deacs could never have ral­ up a. first down on a fourth behind him was 5-9 sophomore their opponents. They do have fullback Tom Miller who gained Maryland dominated the first little to offer in talent and size, lied in the fourth quarter ii they and two situation with an ll yard half of play running off 32 plays had not been so well conditioned. pass to Buz Leavitt, every Deacon 115 yards on 29 carries. with the exception of a few play­ The Terps scored their win­ to the Deacons' 17. ers, but with a new coach and Wake Forest also used new fan in the stands envisioned a Since the Deacon defense plays which the two teams had comeback similar to the exciting ning touchdown midway through a new outlook, they can look on the fourth quarter after Gary simJ:lY could not stop the Terp this season as a new beginning never seen before. Since the win over State three weeks ground game in the first half, State game was Stoll's first game earlier. Van Sickler had recovered a Steve for Wake Forest football. Every Bowden fumble on the Deacon the Wake Forest offense never game will be a hard fight for as a college head coach, theW olf­ Unfortunately, the Deacons had 45. had the ball enough to do much victory, but the Deacons will pack did not know exactly what two things working against them scoring. plays the Deacons had. The ele­ in their endeavor to score the Following a nine yard pass always be in there fighting. from O'Hara to halfback AI Wake did manage a 30 yard In addition to being conditioned ment of surprise helped to bring winning touchdown. field goal by Lounsbury the first victory. First, there was only about Thomas, the lanky Maryland mentally, the Deacons are in top quarterback picked up 19 yards time the offense had the ball. physical condition. Coach Stoll Leavitt's winning touchdown a minute to play and they had Immediately after the field run of 27 yards against Tech no time outs because Game on a bootleg to the Wake 17. stressed physical conditioning as Three plays later, Thomas goal, the Terps scoredtheirfirst a main aspect of the game. The came on a play which the Deacs Captain Ron Jurewicz had to use touchdown on a 74 yard scoring had never used before except in a valuable time out when he dashed eight yards around right Deacons' excellent physical con­ end for the score. drive. O'Hara scored the touch­ dition combined with their mental practice. found there were only ten men down on a three yard run to the The Deacs had scored 11 on the field in a punting situ­ right side. ation. points in the third quarter to convert a 7-3 deficit into a While Maryland threw the ball Wake Forest had another big only once during the game, the disadvantage in that the ball was 14-7 lead. Steve Bowden led the Deacons Deacs seemed to fall into the on the left hash mark. This Terps style of play throwing only meant that the left-handed Rus­ to the field gcal as he picked up 57 yards on a 70 yard drive ten times with three completions ******* sell would have to roll to the and two costly interceptions. right side if he wanted to run that stalled at the Terp 11 MARYLAND'S Tom Miller breaks away for another long gain. when a touchdown pass to The Deacs never did test the the play to the wide side of the Maryland secondary with any field. Don Kobos was nullified by a When the Deacons faced Mary­ land personnel is fairly equal. penalty. Tracy Lounsbury then kind of long pass. ln the second With not enough time left to half of the game, the Terps land, conditions were different. The teams were picked in pre­ booted his second field goal of 1969 Baby Deacon Football Team score on the ground, Russell moved their defensive backs right Maryland was in the same pos­ season polls to finish seventh tried four straight sprint-out the game, a 28 yarder. The next time the Deacs had up to the line of scrimmage in ition Wake Forest had been in and eighth, respectively, in the pass plays to his right. The order to stop the expected run­ before the games with State conference. Last year the Dea­ the ball they drove 88 yards first three were incomplete and ning plays. Much Bigger, Better-> Faster and Tech. Maryland had a new cons rolled over the Terps, 38-14. the last was intercepted by Mary- for their only touchdown of the head coach, Roy Lester. who The difference this year was brought new enthusiam to the that Maryland was more Terps. psyched up for the game than Than Prior Freshman Squads were the Deacons. This men­ Wake Forest was rated a slight BY TOM JENNINGS quarterback Jim McMahon, full­ favorite, but Marylandhadmoved tal advantage enabled them to The Wolflets lost their opener score twice in the second half After being rained out in their to Big Four rival, Carolina, 24- back Jim Koehmen, 6-0, 170 the ball well in both their losses pounder of Dayton, Ohio and run­ this season. They knew they could and stave off a late Deacon rally scheduled opener with the Blue 16, after leading late in the third to win against a team which was Imps of Duke at Groves Stadi­ period 16-7. ning back Jumor ~oore. run with the ball, and they were The defensive unit is as fol­ psychologically up for the game. supposed to be a stronger sec­ um on October 1, the Baby Deacs State allowed 308 yards rush­ ond half team. The psychological open their season tonight at Ral­ inb. All aspects of their kick­ lows: end Rich Carlson, 6-2, They wanted a victory as much 220 pouuder of Brooklyn, N.Y., as Wake Forest had wanted vic­ advantage enabled Maryalnd to eigh ir! a scheduled tilt with the ing game were poor. The Wolf­ win its first away game in five North Carollna State Wolflets. lets' defensive line needs to im­ tackle .Johi! Phillips, 6-3, 220 tories against State and Tech. pounder of Le·:tttown, Pa., tackle ":'he Wake Forest a~d Mary- seasons. The starting offense has six pro·•e on their rushing defense, and their offense could be more Tom Collucci, end Rod Duke, linemen and a fullback weighing 6-5, 210 pounder of Kinston, line­ over 200 pounds. The defensive co!l:iistent. starters include only two play­ Pat Kenney caught twv passes backer Don Brown, 5-11, 190 ers under 190 pounds, with the for 50 yards and a TD, while pounder of Butler, Pa.,lineback­ biggest being 240-pound tackle rushing nine times for 41 yards, er Randy Cox, 6-2, 190 pounder ******* and Allen Guyer caught three of Monroe, linebacker Mike Rose, Tom Cellucci of Milford Conn Ernest Jakubovic a 6~2 186~ passes for 44 yards and a TD. 5-ll, 190 pounder of Olympia pounder of West Mffflin, Pa., is The offensive lineup for the. Fields, Ill., linebacker Tony The phychological advantage top. Baby Deacs is as follows: tight Mangiaracina, 6-2, 200 pounder that one team has over another the team·s workhorse He plays olfensive split end defen­ end Neil Godfrey, 6-5, 2C'5pound­ of Bristol, Pa., defensive back can make all the difference be­ Just because Wake Forest lost er of Sanford, left tackle Bryan Sammy Rothrock, 6-1, 185pound­ to the team picked to finish in sive safety, and handles the kick­ tween winning and losing. The ing chores. Cobb, 6-6, 225 pounder of Kin­ er of Enfield, defensive back Gary outcome of contests like the the cellar in the ACC, sup­ ston, left guard Sid Geibel 6-1 McCoy, 6-0, 170 pounder of Ali­ porters should not give up on Tl:e> Deacon running attack is Duke-Carolina or VPI-'YMI ri­ spearheaded by elusive Junior 210 pounder of Chicaro, Pa.,' cen~ quippa, Pa., and defensive safety valries usually depends on which the team. They will give 100 Ernest Jakubovic. Moore, a 5-9, 175 pound product ter Gary German, 6-4, 200pound­ team is psychologically up for per cent effort in every game. er of Ketterling, Ohio, right guard The Baby Deacons have won They will be ready physically of Wheeling, W. Va. The of­ the game. The outcome is Craig Hiatt, 6-1. 203 pounder of only one game in the past two hardly predictable from the rec­ and mentally for the remaining fensive unit has Jim McMahon seasons. This year's squad. un­ of Chicago, Ill., and Jim Ryan Mount Airy, right tackle David ords of the two teams. games. And they will win more Teague, 6-2, 210 pounder of Rox­ der the coacnmg of Norman Park­ The team that wants to win the games, for a team so set on of Levittown, Pa •• to do the signal er, hopes for better results. winning cannot fail. callinp;. boro, split end ErnestJakubovic, most Wlil usu ... ily come out on AUBURN'S Pat Sullivan bootlegs for one of the Tigers' 8 touchdowns. OLD GOLD AND BLACK, Friday Oct. 10, PAGE 2-B \!~R~N~M 1!~~!~.~ .!?~.~~.dd .. ~!!ll ~~~!:~Dling Contest Assistant Sports Editor bowing before South Carolina, have played his last grid con- le posts, while the other slot do his JOb, . ley battling it out for the tackle Virginia, and Pittsburgh. test for Duke. will probably be filled by Tom When Hart 1sn't throwing the spots. Injuries could be disas- Before the start of the 1969 There was much optimism in Offensively, Duke has a much Cain or Jim Tomanchek. This ball or running with it, he Is trous since this area is so green. football season, many sports en- the Duke football camp this fall Improved running attack and with is a young, inexperienced de- content to hand off to fullbacks Dick Biddle's loss is incaicu- thusiasts had picked the Blue concerning the fate of the Blue Leo Hart's arm and ~ healthy partment. Phil Asack and Don Baglien. able since he was the team's Devils of Duke University as this Devils, butinjuries have de!inite- band of talented receivers, the Ken Bombard has speed and Asack grounded out 690 yards defensive star. Joe Compltel- year's possible Cinderella team. ly hindered the chances for the passing game should click. two varsity letters at one of the last season, and Baglien doubles The Dukemen logged a 4-6 rec- 1969 season. guard posts, and Mike Garner, an up as a competent pass receiver. lo and Paul Johnstone should han­ ord against last year's foes, but Duke's super quarterback Leo DEFENSIVE LINE WEAK Air Force Academy transfer, John Cappellano and Pete Schafer dle the other two linebacking po­ this se~son's squad has yet to Hart, has been playing 'with seems set at the other slot. provide more ground artillery at sitions, but Biddle's right line­ gam a VICtory. swollen hands and the blue and Defensively, the secondary is Jim Musselman and Fred Ro-· the tailback spot. backing replacement will be de­ The Durhamites have lost their ancl white's ati-Acc middle line- stronger and faster, but the Duke jas provide adequate depth. Bob If there is one thing head coach cided on this week. Backup defensive line may prove to be Morris is set at center. Harp set out to do last winter, it help is not adequate to do a HELD OVER 2nd BiG WEEK the weakest area on the Duke was to bolster Duke's porous first rate job. Not that it matters. but most af It is true. squad. HATIT IS QB defense. The Blue Devils were The loss of Biddle at middle As mentioned previously, the much too lenient in allowing op- 20th CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS linebacker is bound to cause Dukemen have all-ACC quarter- ponents to gain yardage. Although the freshman basket­ problems. Not only was Biddle back, Leo Hart, to do the signal ball team has four scholarship PAUL NEWMAN players and some good non­ the leading tackler for the past calling. Hart broke 14 Duke and DEFENSE CHANGED ROBERT REDFORD two sea.sons, lJut he was an ar- ACC records last year. The Kin­ scholarship performers, Coach dent student of the game and a stan native ran last season for Harp abandoned the 5-4 defense Neil Johnston wants anyone else KA11iARINE ROSS~ fine leader on the field. over 2,300 yards, and he was the for a new 4-3-4 alignment. Six interested in trying out for the Hart's receivers this year first ACC player ever to sur­ starting members of the 1968 team to report to the North Gym BUTCH CASSIDY AND at 3:30 on October 15. Anyone are among the conference's best. mount 2,000 yards in total of­ defense are gone, but this may THE SUNDANCE KID Wes Chesson and Marcel Cour- fense. not be such a big loss consid­ unable to attend this meeting tillet are the wide receivers, I.'espite injury this fall, Hart ering the fact that Duke gave should contact Johnston before PANAVISIONto COLOR BY DELUKE next Wednesday if he wishes to and Jim Dearth is set for his is still completing over 50% of up more yardage than ariy other play. ~IMI~:.7.~=1 team in the conference. Defer third year of varsity ball at tight his passes, but he has also been Naturally the scholarship end. This trio hauled in 96 hampered by poor pass protec- The interior defensive line Is Winston-Salem'a Finest players get most of the playing tosses last year, and Chesson tion. In last week's 14-12 Joss the number one problem. Bob time, but many of the fresh con­ One of the Funniest Comedy and Courtillet have already to Pittsburgh, Hart was dumped Shinn and Gene DeBolt should tests are runaways which gives Can hauled in ten or more passes ten times by the Panthers. Hart start at the ends with Joe Sciul­ Westerns of the Year! some of the bench warmers an -n ;.·:s·t":. Cr d BYWAYri I each this year. must have decent protection to li, Rob Strickland, and Curt Raw- opportunity to play. 1:15 3:12 5:09 7:16 9:18 6'1.¥!~-.i:ii!!50DIIJIn Parkwr;zy Plaza Guy Johnson at 250 pounds is Q:l Leo Hart Leads Duke Saturday Photo By Dt!t:1 1 I Although thE fense is not in stopping thE been highly ' WAKE FOREST BARBER SHOP its job when One of the tea XL CLEANERS ·-catering To The Wake Forest :\late On Campus" . Fearless Schubert. Forecasts Schubert i HAIR STYLING AND ALL TYPES OF 1 seniors, alan~ and John Maz EXCELS GAME BUCKLEY JENNINGS BINGHAM FORD WRIGHT for Wake Fe ~------=--H-Al R CUTS ____j (25-5) (24-6) (21-9) (21-9) (25-5) He leads thE IN PROFESSIONAL WATCH FOR BIG GRAND OPENLNG SOON! recovered, wil Duke at Wake Forest Wake Wake Wake Wake Wake it, and has i1 The defensive DRY CLE.ANING game against he accounted and two fumbles tion. SHIRT LAUNDERING PASCHAL SHOE ,I ~~i~t~::: ~t;st. ~-st. ~::· ~E~ ~;st. I The Manch ;:;:;:;~ Neb. at Missouri Missouri Missouri Nebraska Missouri Mta1snfsoudn ~:1:1; shire, senior REPAIR ::::::;. Stanford at u.s.c. u.s. c. u.s.c. u.s.c. u.s.c. 8 or :·:·:·: fensive end. :;:;;:;: Texas vs Okla. Texas Texas Texas Okla. Texas 300 1 North Cherry - Near the Campus Est. 1931 ;:;:$ and 185 poun to beat his 01 PAIUtWAV PLAZAt REYNOLDA MA.. OJl brains, and, SHCPI"INIJ C£NTERB !~M~H~WT#.i€®'5~ Schubert s' PA56361 PA 49422 game of psy to be physica ltlore comfort, lonQer wear, better looks logically reac Ferrum (V For Excellence ln ,very Job·/ has long bee1 suppliers of t to major univ4 Schubert an4 In came to W~ Fer nim_afte Lighthouse ·Grill there for t' Hair three years i Styling Schubert I • Where You Meet Your Frienda in high schc • Good Food at Economical Pricea but was swi by Coach T M'!"' brea

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Join The Crowd For Lots Of Fun SING ALONG Student Discounts AT Present Your Wake Fo: ""• Stuuent I.D. Card For Discounts On Mondav, Tuesday, Thursdays 25~ Off Single Pizza - 50~ Off Double ::?izza - 75~ Off Family Pizza We Serve Fun (Also Pizza) G 0 S.H 0 P PING .C £NT F. R) - ----, -~·· lU, .!:'AGE 3-B Make Your Appointmnt Now WF Backfield Coordinator Says, for A 'Football Is A Game Of Emotions' Christmas Portrait BY WAYNE FORD use them.'' staff of John McVay at the U­ Staff Writer On the other hand, he spoke niversity of Dayton. Before that McNABB STUDIO "Football is a game of men, of coaches expecting too much he had served as freshman coach Wah forest Unlw. not of systems," This statement from their players. "Don't ask for one year at his alma mater, basically expresses assista11t your team to do something you the University of Iowa. Call Today 723-4640 coach Tom Moore's football phi­ ha·re not prepared them for. losophy. When asked his opinion of Wake ": 0 0 ·- H ·~'- ; 0 0 ;J., 0 U .... c. ,., "''':"'"'"'"·"" ,,~,·····=q "Football is a game of emo­ Forest, Coach Moore spoke of tions. The team which is in the highest emotional state is the the Baptist school as "a first The St. lves blazer team that wins," says Moore. class school with a first class The 30-year-old coach is in athletic department." He praised his first year as assistant coach the school for offering its stu­ for double the on the Deacon staff under Cal dents ''some of the best facil­ Stoll. Coach Moore serves as ities in the country. fashion fun offensive coordinator for the "Winston-Salem is a fine town. backfield. He works with such _The people are friendly and hos- Deacon 'starters as soohomore pitable.'' When asked about the quarterback Larry Russell, city's support of Wake Forest swift back Jack Dolbin, Ron football, the young assistant Jurewicz, and workhorse Buz coach that filling the stadium Leavitt. "will take time." When the people COACH Tom Moore Instructs La'FJ;Y Russell During Maryland Game When asked his views on play­ of Winston-Salem see Wake For­ er-coach relationships, Moore est as a winner, every game will Bring on Fall leisure with plus spoke of it as a job of teaching. hP. l<"lrl out. pleasure in a blazer that's a Defensive End Jim Schubert "We can give them the tools, Coach Moore carne to Wake but they have to know how to Forest after four years on the winning parlay of fashion and function. Fastidiously tailored by Can Do Best When It Counts HERE'S OUR NEW WORLD-BEATER! St. lves with soft shoulders, six I BY WAYNE FORD Forest, "Schubedoo," as he 1s change, too. They will look buttons and new wider lapels. By Dt!C!J Although the Wake Forest de­ known by his friends, was dis­ up at him (the athlete) instead In navy and a range of vibrant fense is not leading the ACC satisfied with the school. "I of down." new colors. · / in stopping the opposition, it has didn't like it here last year, Last year, Schubert started been highly efficient in doing but that was because I did not the last five games at lineback­ 1 its job when it really counts. know anybody. I like it here er in place of the injured Car­ One of the leaders has been Jim now, since I feel a part of the lyle Pate. He considered Flor­ Schubert. school." ida State as the best team Wake Schubert is one of three Wake Forest's athletic 'rep­ Forest played, when asked about seniors, along with L~rry Pons utation and the often discussed it. The Florida State players and John Mazalewski, who start "losing attitude" have been of were "a lot quicker than Pur­ for Wake Forest on defense. importance lately. Schubert says, due or Minnesota. They wanted He leads the team in funbles "Football has been holding the to play ball, and were not cocky," recovered, with three to his cred­ school's reputation down. Wake even though they were favored it, and has intercepted a pass. Forest has not won, football­ by a couple of touchdowns. The defensive end had his best wise, in so long that they don't "' Schubert played high school game against Virginia Tech when know what it means." ball at Manchester Central High he accounted for three thefts­ But he feels this is definitely along with two other Wake For­ two fumbles and one intercep­ changing. Likewise, he feels est players, Dick Bozoian, a l!!.~-' ..&JM~- 9 .. .tf- tion, the whole school's attitude toward defensive back, and JohnMaza­ The Manchester. New Hamp­ football players is changing. "He lewskl, a middle guard. He wQuapllsSM:p shire, senior is small for a de­ is becoming thought or as a won all-state honors and was fensive end. Being only 5'11" student athlete instead of an voted the outstanding player in and 185 pounds, he usually has athletic bum." the 1965 New Hampshire-Ver­ -'24 West fourth Stnet-T.,..DI 722·7030 to beat his opponent with speed, "The faculty will feel this mont All-Star game. brains, and, most of all, desire. Schubert sees football "as a ONLY The finest hot roast beef in the world is game of psychology. You have piled on a toasted sesame seed bun, to be physically fit and psycho­ topped wi_th your choice of horseradish, logically ready to Win." Ferrum (Va.} Junior College 69~ barbecue sauce or catsup and flavor· has long been one of the biggest sealed inside gold foiL Love that brand • suppliers of top football material new Hot Roast Beef Sandwich, the to major universities in the South. Schubert and Mazalewski both world's best, available only at Burger came to Wake Forest from Chef. Try one today! Fernim_after being_ teammates there for two years, and for THE FASHION STORES three years in high school. DOWNTOWN e THRUWAY e PAAKWAY PLAZA Schubert played quarterback Before or After the Game Deacs Meet At in high school and at Ferrum, ~ but was switched to linebacker 820 S. STRATFORD RD. · · ~ by Coach Tate. After trans­ ferring here, he injured his Phone 765-8088 shoulder in practice and cannot throw a football any more. Luck­ (Part Time Help Wanted) ily for Wake Forest he has prov­ ed just as compett:]nt at any · LET'S A:LL GO TO BURGER C F position he plays. This fall Coach Stoll switched Schubert to defensive end to fill a big defensive need. Coach Stoll praised him for adjusting so well AT BYERLY & STEELE to his change in assignment. When asked before Saturday's game about Maryland, Schubert described the Terripans as "big, Unforgettable gifts a lot bigger than we are. They, for every occasion! like Tech, run a lot. They' 11 come right at you." Sadly e­ DIAMOND CREATIONS nough, his description proved by quite accurate. In his first year at Wake JJm :scnuoert Makes anotoer Tacttie t?~~~ 75.00 Welcome Back Wake Forest!

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SATURDAY, OCT. 10 FUN SUNDAY, 00. 11 THURSDAY, OCT. 15 11:00 A,.M. To 12:00 P.M. Mo1. ·'11l1rs. FRIDAY, 00. 9 ~~.. TGIF -COUPLES ONLY - Swinging COED NIGHT 11:00 P.M. To 1:00 A.M. fri,.· Sat. ~~~ THE ~;t . FLAIRS Collegiate Medallion To 11:00 P.M. & INMEN 4:00P.M. Sui. ..C~ THIS REVUE Men WEEK Billy Jo Royal LTD. CLD GOLD Al"D BLACK, Fnday Oct. 10. PALiE 4-B the unlarn!liar High Point course. the unusual position of L>cing fa­ talt!llt Saturday wh~eu he flashed Coac:h Hl1ea was ~en•1ra!Jysat­ to a sixth pl~c'-' finish in a i:::fied with his squad's (Jer­ Beavers plac•'rl second iu vored Tuesday when they visit 2fl :46, whil!1 Hagenbl!Ch was r•ul Men"s Cologne And Harriers Still Winless, Davidson, one of two teams Wake field of 47. Hagenbuch's tinn~ formance in thut courageously Pope was still hamperl.'cl by his "4711" ONYX p Deacons· course. tory. NUMERO UNO JAGUAR Tile Deacons dropped a dual Following today' s meet, Wake Winston-Salem's meet to High Point 21-39 Mon- Forest will find themselves in N-0-W HAl KARATE JADE EAST Finest New Theatre PUB Studen~ Display Interest REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTER Playing I In Intramural Programs SHOWS DAILY 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 1-WEEK We Have Ladies' BY LARRY LYON dents. TECHNICOLOR Staff Writer Sixty-five golfers and JOB ten- ONLY! Wakl' Forest's expansive nis players are also presently Cosmetics Also intramural program, under the engaged in single-elin;ination new leadership of Coach Glenn tournaments. The participants Dawson, is currently well under schedule their matches at their •, . wa) with over 400 students par- own convenience, but of course RoMEO ·:· ~-~);~; ~~-;; :. "' AN DREWS PHARMACY ticipating. have a deadline date to meet so S~ Hawthorn"' at Magnolia Winston .. sale-m, N.C. With the une>.:pected death the tournaments can progress. Phone 723-1679 of tlu.' former director of in- Crosscountry, bowling, and DAZZLING- LIFE ~JULIET tram ural sports, Dr. Taylor Dod- track intra murals are all slated ANDREWS-SUMMIT PHARMACY son, Coach Dawson has stepped to start later this month followed BEAUTIFUL- PLAYBOY 1214 Reynolda Road Winston-Salem, N. c. in tu try to fill the position Dr. by a host of others all year iong, Phone 722-1144 Dodson handled so well. The lack ofparticipation b:< day SAT. REVIEW Coach Dawson expressed the students thus far has caused STUNNING- feeling that "Dr. Dodson will be Coach Dawson to especiallv en­ au impossible man to replace. courage these students to ~orne He was involved so much in our out. No affiliations whatsoever "::·~!~: :~::•!.:.' :;:~~·:; .. :~~~:--:: >::~~:: ::~~;:-:~·::~: .:~~{:: ::<~·~=:·:~:···.-.'~·.·:·"""'·''····"""'-"•''···· ...... ,·.•:·.·-=->:·····--"·····,_;.· ..,., Larry Russell, has run hot and '"· ·"' '·· ·· ,..... ,, ...... · ,,..,..,,., ... ,,...,.,, ...._,_-__. ...,.,.,.,; ... ,....,.~;.,;,.._,... ,.,~.....,.;.:·."""'··· .-:~1 · cold with his passing attack. Stud Great Go-to-Gethers :;:;:;:; RJNG OF BRJGJIT 'WA'J'ER" ;:;: the most endeanng and captiva- ;:;:;:; ;:;:;:~ :::: ting film of the year.'· :;:;:;: for the Fair or @ THE VILLAGE SHOP ;:;:;:j :~;:. New York Times :;:;:;: ANY TIME! STANLEYVILLE, N. C. m ~ • ~;~;~;~ i:i: "P.ing of Bright \'later is;:~;~;~; Men's ;~;~;~; ;j;~ pure j~y. One of the mosq~;~;: 0 MDI'S WEAR LADIES' WEAR :::::::: :::: enchantmg I've ever seen.'' :;:;:::: Jackets from 13° :;:;:::: :;:; Rev. Reed-Holiday Magazine :;:::;:: MEN'S AI..PACAS Boys' from 7.99 LADIES' ALPACA ltn~: @ ''Ring of Bright Water is ~1~1~1~. 100% 2 PLY ALL COLORS ~1@j:j ~~1; quit.e unforgetable! Takes on ~Ml~: Bell Bottoms SWEATERS :·:·:·:· -:· a kind of Grandeur! :-:-:-~ ;:;:;:;: :;;: Family Circle Magazine ;:;:;:;: 7 99 $13 and $14 $7 - $10 frem I\~m ~~jj "Ring of Bright \'.'ater was j~jj~j~\ itsdl, he :;:;:;:; :;:; filmed entirely in the beautiful:;:;:;:; PCJoled ~e you're at it sociations, MEN~S TOPCOATS ;:;:;:; :;:; Loch Highlands of Scotland and:;:;:;:; WOOL SKIRTS and ;:;:;:; :;:; directed by Jack Coucfer, famed:;:;:::: o~ the com CHECK OUR net.:ler1 loan LATEST DESIGNS-GENUINE ·:;:;:;: ;:;: wildlife expert and Disney di- ;:;:;:;: SCOOTER SKIRTS :~:~;~;~ ~~~~ rector. The screenplay is from!~~;~;~ SELECTION OF- to !>~; a ta SUEDE ;:;:;:;: ;:;: the auto-biographical best sel- ;:;:;:;: the same I $6.95 up :;:;:;:; :;:;: ling novel by Gavin Maxwell. ;:;;:;:; years ag•J, $20 - $65 ~;~;~;~; ~;~;; The story recounts the close ;:;:~;~; • KNIT SHIRTS 50 per c:ent :;:;:;: :::: attachment that develops between :;:;:;:; ne~:cled to bu :;:;:;: ;:;: London businessman Graham :;:;:;:; ·SWEATERS hy sulir:iting p MEN'S DRESS SLACKS LADIES' 3-PIECE ;;;;;;; ;:;: Merrill and an otter named :;:;:;:; If tl1~e r8rn ;:;:;:;: ;:~~. "Mij" that he buys from a :;:;:;:; ten~e1. pay BRAND NAME~ WOOL SUITS ~.-.APACHE ~~~~FS in trr;uiJ!e, ;:;:;:;: ::;;: pet, shop on a whim. So great :;:;:;3 With RINGS ;:;:;:;: ;:;:. does his regard for the animal :;:;:;: f!rst Y"ar $7.50 up $29.00 ;:;:;:;: :;:;: become that he quits his hum- ;;:;:;; • LEVI & WRANGLERS over :,4CO. :::::::. ::;:; drun, offiee job and goes off .::::::: sah·s. This ;:;:;;;: :;:; to the Scottish Highlands to make ;:;:;:;: JEANS MEN'S SHIRTS CORDUROY ;:;:;:;: :;:; a proper home for his carniv- ;:;:;:;; :~:~:j:: ~;~; orous friend. Excitement and ;~;~;~~ • BUSH & ALL­ NATIONAL BRANDS CAR COATS ;;;:;;~ :;:; adventure abound in this movie. ;:;:;:; We Honor all ;:;:;:;: :;:;. .Verrill Harpoons an enormous ;:;:;;; Bank Charge WEATHE•R LONG SLEEVE $4.50 :;:;:;:; ::;:; shark from ·his dory and the ;;:;:;: Cards COATS $16.98 :;:;:;:; :;:; resulting '·Nantucket Sleigh:;;:;:;: FRENCH CUFF $5.-$7. 50 up :;:;:;:; :;:; Ride" is one of the most ex- ;:;~:;: :;:;;;:; :;:; citing sequences ever seen on ;:;:;:;: MEN'S SUITS AlSO LARGE SELECTION OF m ~~~ m w ~ m 6 BUTTON DOUBLE BRESTED .~E BRAND BLOUSES AND 2 3 THE STARS, THE WARMTH, or BUTTON 3-PIECE SUITS LINGERIE AT s"atint: r:apar; DISCOUNT PRICES THE PLEASURE OF BORN FREE numb•'r qf ' $35 - $75 i~ filJUI!', tlu staning BILL TRAVERS· VIRGINIA McKENNA ': r. .fa rTI"'~ STOR!:!. HOURS Ba~ed on tht· book by GAVIN MAXWELL • TECiiNICOLOR Cmv•·r~it\·, MON. - FRL 11:00- 11:00 SAT. 10:00- 6:0CI !Jl':'d~~·:~ ' '!H DOWNTOWN NORlHSIDE SHOPPING tEltnR :)38~.000 .':it! II THE VILLAGE SHOP IS ONLY SMILES FROM CAMPUS. FOR THE Shows at: 110 W. Sill & 445 M. Tr•de Op•n Every Night "til 9 lJ':' ' <>ll~r:t~·d '~ BEST BUYS IN TOWN ON TOP NAME CLOTHING JUST TAKE CHERRY 1:15, 3:10, 5:05, (Except Saturdoy 'til 6) Williarrl has · Open 'til 9 p.m. Friday STREET NORTH TO STANLEYVILLE. AFTER TAKING CHERRY STREET ACROOS ~AROLINA 7:00, 8:55 pair! bef•Jre (That· s Granny!) 52. LOOK FOR THE VILLAGE SHOP JUST AFTER THE COMMERCIAL AND FARMERS BANK ON THE HIGHT. BE LOOKING FOR YOU! ~~~~------