ALON OF Polltical Activity · Coach Hildebrand Much In Evidence Optimistic A.-bout Man&r On Wake Campus .mpu.s. '!~ Football Outlook Page Three Page Seven
Visit VOLUME XLIX 1 * * Wake Forest College, Winston-salem, North Carolina, Monday, October 28, 1963 NUMBER 6. New Courses ONAL ·:scheduled Trustee Proposal Draws J . its iFor cl964-65 By LINETA CRAVEN Additional· Baptist Support MANAGING EDITOR The addition of J.3 new courses t.o the cur.rdcuJ.U!ID. for the 1964- 65 academic y;ear 'Wias passed by the Wiake ForeSit mculty during Baptists Asked To Sign* Wake Forest a special meeting la:st Monday. * * 'I11rough the regulm- montbJy meetmg waJS lheld Octobelr 14 to Sentiment r dliscuiss the proposed college cal Statement Supports Proposal endars· :for the ;ne:ld; lflhree years, ia !SeC()(ld meeting was necesoory Increases A statement i!s being circulat· Carolina Baptists calling for m order that the catalog for next cation to thO!Se whom it (Wake ed among North Carolina Bap· the passage of the proposal. Forest College) serves."· By CHARLES WINBERRY year couJd be sent to press. MOSCOW CHAMBER ORCHESTRA SENIOR EDITOR tist ministers and laymen ex. The Maddrey petition calls The faculty resolution fur New science courses to be add • conducted by Rudolph Barshai pressing support "in principle·• for the convention :to allow the ther calls attentioo to the rela ed will be Special Problems in North Carolina Baptists. con for the Wake Forest Trustee college to accede to its mandate tion of the college to .the con tinued to debate the relative Biology, an independent library proposal. to become a full university. ·n vention. It .states "whereas the 8dld tabo:rartory investigation. 1nerits of the Wake Forest trus The statement is expected to asks that the CIOllege and the Faculty fully shares the con tee proposal lthat will be con The Department of English will Moscow Chamber Group counter the petition which aP convention continue to work to viction of the ConventiJon that sidered by their State Con offer The Age of P~. The Age peared recently in state church gether with ties "nurtured by a vital relationship between the BROWN of Johm;on, Blake, Yleats, and vention meeting in Wilmington publicatioDIS signed by 286 min Christian love and understand Convention and the College is ller \i Thomas, and From Vd.clori:an to Nov. 12-14. ii;ters and alumni in opposition ing." essential to the proper pursuit !Mod&n, a study of English, Marse Grant, editor of the To Perform Thurs. Night to ·the proposal. The college faculty meeting of their joint aims" it (the Fac prose, poetry and fiction from The movement is urnder the in .special session on Monday convention publication, the Bib ulty) recommends the adoption lical Recorder, commended 1860 to 1900. The Moscow Chamber Or- had· their works first perform. trakh, Emil Gilels, Zara Dolou- direction of an eight-man com. gave its unanimous approval to hiS of the proposal. readers for the "high level" on 1.1" Adds Geometry chestra will presetnt the year's ed by this group. khanova, Sviatoslav Richter and mittee headed by Julius Corp a resolution favoring the pro Earlier in the week tile Alex first Artist'·s Series Concert at The Moscow Chamber Or- LeOI!lid Kogan. The group has ening of Durham. Other mem- posal, saying that the trustee which discussion of the issue ander Baptist Association pass hals been kept, Grant said, The Mathema;bioo Department 8:15 p. m. Thursday in Wait chestra has had many dils- undertaken tours in Austria, bers of the group are ntinis- modification can be "of signifi ed a resolution calling for de will add Geometry, including Chapel. tinguished musiCians as its Germany, Eiolland and Great ters Herbert W. Baucom Jr. of cant assLstance to the Conven "Discussion on the Wake For dio" feat of the proposal. The Pilot est College · trustee proposal is higher geOmetries, ruler · and Th Or b tr . f soloists, including David Ois- Britam·. Oxford, James S. Potter of tion and the college" in carry MoWltain Association tabled a ' e c es a WaJS ounded Charlotte, Howard G. Ford of heading into the home · stretch compa:s!S' construc-o~tion, and Re ing out a program of "fuller resolutiOill oppe~sing the change search, a cotiDse for· outstanding in 1955. At first it was a pri- Wilmington and Calvin s. Knight at associations and elsewhere. vate musical group, whose SSL I • B d opportunities for Christian edu- by a vote of 125 to 3. Poses studems in :this field. members, eager to play the nterim 0 y of Weldon; and laymen Egbert Develop Support _ Personal MJ.d Commumty H.Y kind of reper.te~ry JJJOt frequently L. Davis Jr., of Winston-Salem, es giene !has been added to the phy L. S. Inscoe of NaJshville and "Whether it can receive t:he sical eduC'ation curriculum, and performed in the regular con- G L 0 d Dr. J, 0. Williams of Concord. two-thirds majority necessary cert series, gave to it what- 'P~ose W. R. Culloin Dies; politiool science courses will in ever time they had free from a:g aw The accompanying statement for a constitutional change re clude . Geography and Politics, their work in opera· or ISYm- calls for strengthening the col- mains in question but the Wake OU'LL and :Asian Political Thought, phony orchestras and in the The interim coun.cil of the Other delegates questioned the lege and developilllg its total Forest administration and trus-. . · A course in Perception and music schools. No_." o~~lin· a S"-:l-e S"'-·dent ..., . " ...... 1 ..., . di program in accordance with tees continue unabated in their. >UR =~ •wcmang PA 2-1027 , , , I• Shop at Sears 8~1 W.FOURmS'.f~ . SHOP MONDAY THROUGH P.l'n••'io::! From Tavern On The Green On Chetty St. and Save SEARS PHONE PA 4-«61 SATURDAY 9:30A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M. OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Oct. 28, 1963 PAGE THREE - MilitaryFrat WF Political Activity Flourishes Maps Plans Bell Brother's ScabbaTd ·and Blade, honol'aey Cafeteria military fraternity, recently launched its 1963-64 program YAF And Liberal Group Add Stimulus u.'lder the lead8rship of Cadet Monday-Friday-77c Captai:n David Zacks, senior of CLOSED SATURDAYS pendent and will not affiliate ticipants will be leading mem New Bern. Oapta.in Norman By ALBERT HUNT AND SUNDAYS STAFF WRITER oUIISelves with any national bers of the state party or Cline, assistant :profeoSsor of groups, but will correspond ganizations. Political activity is flourish military sc•ienoe, will serve as Left off of Reynolda Rd. with · such national organiza Adrian King, senior of Kin faculty adviosor. ing at an all-time high this tions as· the Americans for at Reynolds High Schoo) year on the Wake Forest ISton, is president of ·the The chrupter p!lans to conduct - Democratic Action (A.D.A.) Y.R.C. King said the purpose a commtmi,ty project to streng 831 Chatam Road campus. The Young Demo Our membership will be open crat and Young Republican of the club "i.s· to provide then rties between Winston-salem clubs have been ,supplement to all pensons who are inter political education and to pro llmd Wake Foi!'est. ACROSS FROM ested in fundamental liberal ed· by a Young Americans vide through speeches, de In •addi1Ji.on to Zacks, officCTs WESTERN ELECTRIC N -for Freedom Club and a thought and action. We wi:sh bates and films the Republi include Dick Beal, vice-presi to have their thoughts articu can party position." dent, Paul T.l!l'lrler,' secreuy, lilleral organization. lated through such 'an organi Edwin G: Wilson, Dean of King •Said ·the club would •and Tom Lem·ke, treasurer. the College, said the new zatior.," Arnold said. work with the Wilnston-Salem organizations would have to Amold said he felt there Republican Party in trying submit a request for recog was a great need for an or to elect local officials. "In nition to' the faculty. The re ganization that pursued in the 1962 elections, the Wake quest would be studied by the telligent, po.si.tive goals rather Forest club was the center Lighthouse Grill Stti.delllt Affairls• COmmittee, than negative, reactionary po of ,the campaign to get col · which wculd then release its licies. "This group derives lege · young Republicans to • Where you meet your friends findings to .the faculty. its confidence from the belief vote in the 8th, 9th and lOth that liberal ideas are an in districts. We feel that our Could Operate herelllt part of :the American work greatly aided the vic • Good food at an economical price If the organizations were political tradition and these tories oi Charles Jonas arnd n1ore b:!.·ead. etc. at no extra charg~ app1·oved, they could operate -VERNOR PHOTO liberal values are the beist Jam.es Broyhill in the 8th as an organized club. The REPRESENTATIVES of the . College politcal Larry Arnold, liberal; Jim Martin, Demo- guarantee for the preserva a!lld 9th districts," he said. • Quick Service next meeting of the faculty spectmm politely discuss the Kennedy ad crat; Adrian King, Republican; and John tion of freedoms against en King, who served as chair will be in the middle of ministration. From left to right, they are Patton, YAF. croachments from anti-demO man of the North Carolina ~omer Burke and Brookstown Streets-! Block from Sean November. cratic Communism as well as Y.R.C. council last year, said . John Patton, sophomore of of the Y.A.F. He said the organization on campus. of issues both he and the anti-democratic nco-fascistic there were approximately 165 Pompano Beach, Fla., is serv club was organized to fulfill "This· is DOt only a politi Y.A.F. were in oomplete ac right wing coll!Servatives." members in the club this . mg ' as temporary chairman the need for a conservative cal organization, but also an cord with . Goldwater. "We definitely believe iJn year. He also ·said Repre educational' group, as mem individual freedoms, but Not Birchers to sentatives Jonas and Broyhill bers will be provided with a paraphrase from Walter Reu had made tentative agree book !service, campaign ma "We arc not aJSsociated with ther, we feel no one can have ments to .speak to the club Mr. Barbecue terials and an up-to-date re the John Birch society and individual freedom as long as this yeal'. * * * cord of liow senators are vot are not a Fascist group. Al there are others who are de Jim l'J[artin, •senior of Li HAVE YOU GOTTEN TO KNOW MR. BARBECUE? ing. though we feel Presidents Ei prived of thls freedom," he IF NOT, YOU'RE MISSING OUT ON SOME MIGHTY Student'o •' ~- ' ' I ,• < • • Politicians~~ • ~' ' •-' berty, is President of the ' We. also hope to be able to senhower and Kennedy could said. Y.D.C. Martin said the pur DELICIOUS FOOD! YOU'LL FIND MR. BARBECUE get ·some conservative speak have done more to stop the There will be an informal pose of the club, which cOIIl OUT ON PETERS CREEK PARKWAY ••• UNDER Oornlllent Op ·Issues· em in Chapel, in contrast to rise of !socialism :iJn this coun dinner meeting at 6:30 p: m. sists of approximately 200 NEATH A UNIQUE SIGN AND IN AN A'ITRACTJVE the steady flow of liberals try and are convinced that today in the Little Magnolia members, "is to ·Stimulate ac NEW BUILDING. 1. What are your views on the eurrent Civil Rights issue? that have been presented for Earl Warren and theSupreme Room. Armold invited all tivity among students inter KiJlg: The problem can best be ·solved ·if local and state the past two years," Patton Court have ·Socialiistic ten thos~ interested to attend. ested in the Democratic party added. The club held its first dencies, we do not think that officials will ~&top neglecting their duties. He •said several members. of and make provisions for them meeting Oct. 14. any of those people are Com· Martin: We have ·Supported .the Kennedy administration on the faculty had expressed in to hear about the party and Patton said the club hoped munists,. "Patton aJS·serted. terest in such an organiza their civil rights program. an opportunity to work with to stimulate 'political activity Larry Arnold, senior of Bla tion and would lend assist local ;md state Democratic ~atton: We believe the problem should be dealt with on the and thought on the campus. de!llsburg, Md., has started a ance to its activities. leadel1S. local and state· level with no federal intervention. The Y.A.F. is a political stu liberal organization on cam Making Plans "We try to provide a well Arnold: Gradualism in the realization of civil rights results dent group which was foumd pus. Arnnld said the organi rounded program for all stu only in gradual democracy. ed in the fall of 1960. zation has yet .to establi!sh a Tho: a 1 ready establi:shed dents who would be interest 2. What do you believe should be the role of government in ·"We feel ihere is a great name, but was considering Young Republicans md Young ed in politics. We have both the U. S.? deal of political apathy on the ·Such titles as Liberal, Equal Democrats are making plans liberal a!lld conservative De (Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys" King: Local and state governments should utilize all their Wake Forest campus, and and Free Thought (LIFTJ and for the year. The clubs are m!Qcrats. Of course one of our and "Barefoot Bt;Jy With Cheek".) ,, resource!S to solve their problems. When these resources are working in coordination with student Organization for Li working together in an at major functions is to help in exhausted, then and only then ·Should the federal government local, -sta;te and national com beral Thought amd Action tempt to sponoor a debate getting more Democrats elect become involved. mittees of the Y .A. F., we •(SOLTA). between a prominent mem ed on a local, state and na HOW SMALL CAN YOU. GET? hope to get more people in ber of each party. The par- Martin: There are certain things the government must do ' "We wish to remain inde- tional level," Martin said. ter~ed in conservative poll- 1------ in the areas of welfare, business and government influence. tiCIS and help more conserva Today let us address ourselves to a question that has long rocked Patton: We believe the federal government is becoming tive members get into Con ; ~"' ;.:, . . ' ' . ~ : . . . and roiled the academic world: Is a student better off at a small more socialiistic in nature, thus straying away from the original gress," he said. ':r college than at a large college? constitutional prin.ciplas of limited govt:r.nment. Patton said Senator Barry To answer this question it is necessary first to define terms. What, exactly, do we mean by a small college? Well sir, some Anwld: In .the past strong statei.S rights were necessary but Goldwater was the national say that in order to be called truly small, a college shoul~ have with such advancements in communications, industrialization figure moot closely associated with the ·principles and ideals an enrollment of not more than four students. · and nrbai:lization, there is mote interdependance and ths coun SERVICE!_ I surely have no quarrel with this statement; a four-student of the Y.A.F. He went on to INSTANI try must be unified as a whole. say that both he and tile ·club college must unequivocally be called small. Indeed, I would · 3. What course of foreign policy do you feel the U. S. should were in agreement with most SERVING WAlE FOREST OOUEGE even call it intime if I knew what intime meant. But I submit pursue? . of Goldwater',s views, but that there is such a thing as being too small. Take, for instance, a · Kiilg: Our foreign policy should never forfeit. as an ideal, he dOCISl take issue with a few recent unfortunate event at Crimscott A and M. victory over Communism, although coexistence may very well of the Arizona Republican's HAMBURGERS • • • 15c Crimscott A and M, situated in a pleasant valley nestled be the implementation of this ideal. statements. between Philadelphia and Salt Lake City, was founded by Martin: I think cocxilstence .iJs the bes.t policy for this time, When told Goldwater had CHEESEBURGERS not that we .should give up anything but this is not the time said the Supreme Court de 20c to go for any all-ont victory. segregation ruling ·of 1954 was not neccesosarily the lawofthe FRENCH FRIES • • • 15c Patton: I think the-U. S. should stress victory rather than land, Pa;tton replied, "Where peaceful coexistence over Communism. as I may not agree with the DRINKS •••• 12c Aniold: It is the duty of all Natioos and individuals to \Strive ruliJng, I do recognize it as to eliminate war as a diplomatic instrument and decrease the law," Patton said, however, . relev:mce of vilolence in international · politics. .that op. the greater majority . ' ' -~ '. ' . WELCOME't'•· . ' I '·_,, WAKE FOREST STUDENTS A. and M. Crimscott, two brothers who left Ireland in 1625 to escape the potato famine of 1841. As a result of their fore sight, the Crimscott brothers never went without potatoes for MAKE one single day of their lives--and mighty grateful they were! only One night, full of gratitude after a wholesome meal of French fries, cottage fries, hash browns, and au gratin, they decided to show their appreciation to this bountiful land of potatoes by endowing a college. But their generosity contained one BOCOCK-STROUD stipulation: the enrollment of the college must never exceed four students. They felt that only by keeping the school this your hair knows small could each student be assured of the personalized atten YOUR SPORT~~G qQDDS HEADQUARTERS tion, the camaraderie, the esprit, that is all too often lacking in felilt11ring The larger institutions of higher learning. Well sir, things went along swimmingly until. one Saturday a few years ago. On this day Crimscott had a football game MOST ·GOMPLET·E LINE OF PIPES IN WINSTON-SALEM scheduled against Minnesota, its traditional rival. Football, It's there! as you can well imagine, was something of a problem at Grim scott, what with only four undergraduates in the entire college. For The It's invisible, man! You can't see it. She can't feel it. Only your hair It was easy enough to muster a backfield, but to find a good knows it's there! It's CODE 10 for men, the new invisible hairdressing line-or even a bad line--baffled some of the most resourceful FIN,E PIPES From $3.95 Football Games coaching minds in the nation. from Colgate-Palmolive. Non-greasy CODE 10 disappears in your hair, Well sir, oil the morning of the big game against Minnesota, By G. B~'D. Get its traditional rival, a capricious fate dealt Crimscott a cruel Your Blanket gives it the clean, manly look that inflames women, infuriates in blow-in fact, four cruel blows. Sigafoos, the quarterback, ferior men! Be in. Let new CODE 10 groom your hair all day, invisibly. woke up that morning with an impacted incisor. Wrichards, With The the slotback, flunked his taxidermy exam and was declared in Genuine Calabas~ an~ eligible. Beerbohin-Tree, the wingback-tailback, got his neck Wake Forest Seal tie caught in his espresso machine. Yuld, the fullback, was Meerschaum Pipes by Pion~r stolen by gypsies. Consequently, none of the Crimscott team showed up at the football game, and Minnesota, its traditional rival, was able to CHARATAN • score almost at will. Crimscott was so cross after this humiliating We Also Have defeat that they immediately broke off football relations with Minnesota, its tradtional rival. This later became known as The World's F~~est Pipe! FolClind the Sacco-Vanzetti Case. So you can see how only four students might be too meagre Stadiu~ Seats an enrollment. The number that I personally favor is twenty. Why? you ask. Because, I reply, when you have twenty students and one of them opens a pack of Marlboro Cigarettes, Best Line of Gym Shoes in all Sizes there are enough to go around for everybody, and no one has to be deprived of Marlboro's flavor, of Marlboro's filter, of :Mll.rlboro's staunch and steadfast companionship,. and as a.· '.I This Is The Pl-~e For All Smoking Acc~ories ' . result ·you have a student body that is brimmiD.g with sweet content and amity and harmony and concord and togetherness and soft pack and Flip-Top box. That's why. o 19113 MAX Shalmoa * * * There are twenty line cigarettes in every pack of Marlboros, and there are millions of packs of Marlboros in every one of 501 West'J. : ' F,, ourtb.. . Street. .•• the fifty states of the Union. We, the makers of Marlboro and tile spQ(lsors of this column, hope you will try our wares soon. I .:.:J ':. -~•.!( I ®l~ ~nl~ uu~ ~lark r------THE TRUSTEE PROPOSAL----.. Letters 1 PROPOSED SYSTEM PRESENT SYSTEM (All letters to the editor An All American Newspaper must be signed; names will ·, be withheld on request.) ~ 1 • • • Wake Forest College • • • ·-·.·. Tuition Plan Is Necessary CONVENTIOM WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., l\10NDAY, OCT. 28, 1963 CONVENTION To Tbe Edi ·~In View of the Campus" We Invite You All T ~Come In And Open from 10 a. m. to 1.2 p. m. See The All New Corner of Polo and Bethabra Roads Staley's Open Hearth LENWOOD AMMONS A. C. MOTSINGER Restaurant AMMON'S Reynolda Manor Cafeteria The house that service and quality ESS.O Servicenter LOCATED AT THE REYN·OLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTER built; the favorite of Wake FQrest Built with you in mind-The world's best food at prices the college stu• students and faculty. We specialize dent can easily afford. Come out and see our new q.ltra modern facilities. in steaks, short orders, sandwiches JUST REMODELED TO SERVE and dinners. YOU BETrER Pleasant surroundings! Music while you eat! Private tables! E.xcellent staff to serve you! Wake Foresters, this place is for you; Eat like a king 24 HOUR SERVICE ROAD SERVICE for less than a dollar-it's hard to believe, but we'll prove it. 2803 REYNOLDA ROAD Tires •• Accessories -· Batteries Say hello to the managers ••• PA3-9103 1ZOO Re:JDolda Road Comer Robin Rood Boa&l Lunch, I 0:45 to 2:15, Supper, 4:451o 8:00 SAM, ERNEST, and JllWMY AL DILLARD, Manager Phone 725-2681 Inc:. OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Oct. 28, 1963 PAGE SEVEN For Real Banking Service OS ;t Area COME LL TIMES By BILL BENTZ SPORTS EDITOR SEE US! tore A 76 'er No Longer When the big boy left W·ake Forest he left many NEW ENTER ·records behind. He rewrote six school records, to be exact. He was All-American his junior and sen ,s, gifts, ior years, Most Valuable Player in several tourna NORTH.BRANCH up plies, ments and MVP in the Atlantic Coast Conference his final two seasons. He deserved every one of the First Union National Bank honors he received. (Formerly City National Bank) Wake Forest thought so much of Len Chappell that it retired ~he number 50 jersey which he ,I wore. The Syracuse Nationals of the National Basketbal! Association thought so much of Chap pell that they made him their top draft choice. :cII: ~ t The Nats were happy. Len did not particularly [g NORTHSIDE y I share their feelings. "Lennie thought that he was \! :c SHOPPING ~ going to be drafted by the Knicks. He wanted to CENTER ',4, • . play in New York," says Deacon Director of Sports WHITAKER Publicity Marvin Francis, himself an All-American PARK {Publicity Director). "He didn't want to go to Syracuse, but under the drafit set up he didn't have ·I any choice." So the much publicized 6-8, 245 pound basket )NT ball player from Povtage, Pa. offered his services to the Nats. Lennie wanted to play forwai-¢1 with ON INDIANA AVE. AT PATTERSON (0~ the Nationals, but the Easte:rn division club had ( 4 minutes from the campus) already made plans for ChappeH. Lennie was used· .as a ·substitute for ·the Nats' huge center Johnny ~% "'Red" Kerr. Lowest Cost Checking Servioe in Winston-Salem Lennie did not see very much action with the ~uto, Personal and other Loans END N ats. He usually came off the bench to replace a tired Kerr late in one of the quarters, and aver Safe Deposit Boxes - Drive-In Banking 'RIP aged about nine points per contest. As Wake /) \1 Assistant basketball coach Charlie Bryant pointed 24 Hour Automatic Teller Sl out to this writer Chappell is a big man and needs plenty of playing tilme to reach any kind of peak. When Chappell was playing for the Deacs he sel dom hit All-American stride until the half-way Free And Easy Parking mark in the season. At the end of the 1963 NBA season the Syra Winston-Salem's cuse -team moved to Philadelphia and took the nickname of the 76'ers. One might have thought the Troc theatre was signing a new troop of chorus girls. But the name stuck. Deacs To Face Chappell did not. At the completion of the ex A M~OST PROGRE.SSIVE BANK hibition season Philadelphia, in a surprise move, I\IEB sold Len to New York. The Knicks, in one sweep In 'Death of the chess board, sold guard Richie Guerin to St. Loui,s. Guerin was New York's high scorer last winter:· · · So the Knicks were left with T·om GoJ.a, Jerry Harkness, and ex-Duke great Art Heyman in the backcourt. The forwards are Chappell, jumping J·ohnny Green, and former Wake Forester Dave Budd. Paul Hogue, Gene Conley, John Rudoment kin, ex-St. Louis star Bob Nord'mann, and Tom j ·! Hoover handle the pivot chores. ·At Least An Opportunity Most of the Knicks a·re green. "They're going for the youth movement," said Chappell in a tele phone intervie.w last week. "We're very young and we're rebuilding, but we have the material to surprise a lot of people. And Heyman can do everything Guerin can do, he's just not as experi enced." What about the sale? "This is the way it was," explains Chappell. "The Knicks wanted me ever since the first day of training camp. I did well in training cam.p and okay in the exhibition games. But I wasn't getting a real chance with Philadel --· phia. I wasn't shocked when they sold me. In a way I wanted this to take place. I'll get a chance to play with this club." ·COLLEGE GULF Too, Chappell will get a chance. to play with FEATURING TUNE-UPS, BRAKE JOBS, . Budd and Heyman. Wake Forest grad Bob Wool WASHING-WAXING-LUBRICATING HOFF '· lard survived the ~ut during the Knicks' camp and Specializing in Foreign and Sporb Cars was invited to their regular pre-season practices. "A Real Square Deal for College Students" But "he got cut real quick," says Chappell. "The Free Pick-up and Delivery Knicks had so many centers he didn't get very We Guarantee Our Work much of a chance. I'm not saying he could have 3315 NORTH CHERRY ST. PA 2 9584 beaten those guys out even if he was given the Bill Boner, Owner chance, though." There is no margin for error for a professional athlete. One ha~ to 'make good the first time around. Even if he is a slow starter Len Chappell .. should still be right up near the top when the NBA season draws to a close. FOR AI ICE CREAM TREAT i ~·======. WHERE ALL THE TOWN'S PEOPLE CAMEL PAWN SHOP, INC. MEET AID GREET Pardon me if I sound as if the 16 E. 4th STREET 422 N. LIBERTY executive position I've landed BARGAINS IN OUT-OF-PAWN MERCHANDISE deals with the whole future of the world. It does. Radioe ...... ,...... 9.95up WeddiDg BanciS ...... 4.95 up Phonographs ...... 12.50 up Birthstone Bbp Certainly, there's no organization today conduct Blnoeulan ...... 14.9& up Ladies' ...... 4.95 up ing more vital business than the business of the Watches ...... 9.95 up Men's ...... 7.50 up United States Air Force. And very few organiZa Guitars ...... 12.50 up Cameras ...... 3.95up tions that give a college graduate greater oppor Sultcaaes ...... -..... 3.95 up tunities for responsibility and growth. THERE'S 10 SECRET As· an Air force officer, you'll be a leader on the to Producing fine photoengrav Aerospace T.eam-with good pay, a 30-day paid ings. You sl.inply take generoua vacation each year, educational opportuRities. amounts of experience, sldll and How can you get started? For many, the best way COD:SCi("ntfous attitude and com is through Air Force ROTC. Bl:lt if you missed out & bine them with the best mech on AFROTC, or if there's no unit on your campus, PETER PAUL MARY anical equipment avanable to day, you can still apply for Air Force Officer Training School. This three-month course leads to a com Piedmont Ellgl'aving follows this Get Yours Tod~ At Kitchen-Fresh, Custom Packed mission as a second lieutenant in the United formula on ev.ery :lob. States .Air Force. Let Piedmont selve . your. plate REZNICk$ Problems .for. ,publications,· bro For more information about Air Force OTS, see' THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER ebures, c<,J.Or..i>rocess printin&. . Old Dominion Candies your local Air Force representative. See:. Clyde Lincoln Deae PIEDMONT ENGRAVING CO. PA z-9722, Winston-Salem, N. C. u.s. Air Force . l PAGE EIGHT Monday, Oct. 28, 1963 OLD GOLD AND BLACK Ill !!ill 1!111111111111 I lllilillill!llllii)m! 11 BARBERS SERVING WAKE MEN 11m :1 1111111111::11 lll!ii! 1111 mm m:tllili 111. G. Lawflig, proprietOr of· Wake Forest Barbershop and· X-Country West Fourth St. B:arbershop is serving Wake Forest men Football Forecasts with 11 barbers. The campus shop .iJs located conveniently Terps Whitewash Team Gains under D:avis Dormitory. ad the down1own shop is located Game Bents Hoff MUls one-half block west of Sears on Fourth St. 13-14-3 13-14-3 18-9...3 A beaut)' !Shop is also located at Wake Forest for 6th Victory Army at Air Force Air Force Army AmlY the coeds' convenience. Florida at Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn Deacons, 32 To 0 ]"o['est Cl"'OSS The Wake vamty Wake Forest at CleJnSOIIl Clemson Clemson Clemson Maryland controlled the ball short on the Maryland 23. CO'..IDtry squad won its si.:xt.h Penn State at Maryland Penn State Penn State Maryland and thus controlled the game. Mistakes did not cost Wake consecutive meet of the season, Texas at SMU Texals Texa!S TexaiS Notre Dame •~ the capsule story of the the game. Maryland was mere- last Friday •aJS they edged a de- Navy at Notre Dame Navy Notre Dame That ~ tem:rined Gamecock :team art; Syracuse Pittsburgh 32-0 whltewashing handed Wake ly a better club. U S C b , ·"'"·al 29 to 30 Syracuse at Pittsburgh Pittsburgh · thtD · · · ;y.amar.,.... Mississippi at LSU LSU LSU LSU Forest by MaryI an d a tBowman It was amazllDg a eacon score. Temple Bucknell Gray Staditun Sa'b..l!l'day. quarterback Karl Sweetan was TheDea:con:s, who have won six Temple at Bucknell Temple WiJs(!ons.iln Wilsconsiln Mich. State DOGWOOD INN The Terrapins ran 90 offen- able to complete 11 of 28 pass- of their seven meets this year, Wisconsin at Michigan St. sive plays while Wake only had es. He u:;ually had more TerPS turned m a "flat performance ~~~i~!:KM! all poSISeSISi We have your size. Ready to serve yo11 a eomplete BLACK CATS and GOBLINS variety of foods; speclalizfDg in We know what you want. steaks and short orders. will make the scene Use the convenience* * * of our Tete- Tray car hop service, or dme two pockets plus four pleats equals a very poP'!Ilar * * * inside in a quiet, eordla1 at skirt, jl.ll9t right for those active FRAT parties, your THURSDAY NIGHT, OCT. 31 mosphere. choice of. three colors, navy, olive or cranberry, me 8-16 Open 7 days* a* week* from 8 Complimentary Witches Brew A. M. until 10 P. M., ler'9'iq served to the brave ones breakfast, luncheons, aDd dill· Mother & Daughter ners. AU mau aDd phODe orders promptly filled- Write JloldD8. :all W • .Fourth st., W.lnston-Salem, N. C. PlloJie PA l-lai e CAFETERIA Oubide our regular delivery area. add liSe pcllltage. S per Store ctmt Ales tax required OD an 1tem.1 maDBII to :N. c. Mdnla e MAGN.O'LIA ROOM LOCA.'I'ED ,.T NOB.TIISIDE I!IBOI'PJNO CENTD Comer o:f Liberty & 3rd MR. IUid M&S. CAlli. WBBS1'BB, MUIQ'era Hall Bartlett has q:lite aware of thei:r responsLbili A story is told of an elderly During his speech, Dr. Cullom Bartlett and Jerry Paris from a" man who, near his death, said Ameriican-tllan the other. Ra the novel by Dariel Teller. Mus· Since .Stack and Miss Craw filled the screen with some ty as educetors. Perhaps I'm 0 said his ministry began in 1886, ic by Elmer Bernstein. Produced mis:tlaken but I feel that the "There have been many change~ ther the question is whether one ford add little to the film pretty disturbing scenes of when he gave a sermon in which set of means· to preserve de and directed by Hall Bartlett. At (partially due to their poorly mental patients, .,some of which same could •be said of Presideot f, in my lifetime, and I've been the Winston through Wednesday. Friday or ChaJD.cellor AycOck against every one of them." Dr. he stressed the necessity of fol mocracy is prefooable to written roles), most of the are definitely not for the ill low·ing Christ. another, set, and why? Or, even Hollywood has apparently fin .significant acting is in the squeamiJsh (bird lovers, be alt Ohapel Hill. Was the bill in s W. R. Cullom, who died last Sun further, the question is whether ilshed its internship and has hands 10f Polly Bergen and ware!), and, in all, has done tended .to ibe a vote of 1110 coDfi day at 96, was far removed from . He said he had been trying to one set of procedr.rres and moved. into the mental ward. Janis Paige, and capable hands a good job of directing Henry den uld replace !Should =k i,ts first concert up er than aJilY other man in the : the Old Gold Tassels i:s the women's honorary leadership llli~t with 1a recital by the New t h e i r occassionally strident as a reail. success. .An. enJthu.sda.s- !h!Lstory of the United States, will tober 21, 1963, organizati~m, formed at Wake Forest in 1947 to York Oolncer.t Trio. TbiJs was the sound by a more suave ap-: tic audieD>Ce and three outstand;.. 15peak in Wait Cllalpel a:t 8:15 p. . a "Dangerous fil'st pe.rfol"Jllance in the Wa:k.e proac'h. However, ~e gr"olllp'S ing concerts to come give every m. today. His s::.11bject will be corre:spond to ODK, the National men'·s honorary Forest Chamber Music Society's pLaying WaJS always marked by indication ltha,t it will have a "The Demands of Na,tional Se- leadership fraternity. eems rto be a series for the year ami . tt vitality and solid musicianship. very suoces'Sful se!ason. -curity Today." ' While Thea Shultze, senior of Brevard and pre ling amount of proved to be a novel and Ln sidemt of TaStSels, described the character Burke ~s Tegm-ded as one of a.racteristic of terestmg evening. istics of leadership required for membership in and its neiJgb.- For rtlre first tiJme the audi • t ' L tt America's . most important Tassels, the new members were tapped. Chosen tio.rium. of the Hllllll!Witi.es build B apt lS s e . ers :a~~~mili=~~~ for their pal'lticipation :il!1 religious activities were for needy stu ing was used for a concert. D J frequerut:ly appears on Capitol Nancy Howell, senior of Smithfeld, and Judy a. m-JSt in an Acousticailly this ll'OOlil is well one where an· Shallenberg, senior of Annapolis, Md. Martha suited to .chamber music, pro -VERNOR PHOTOS income is not Back Trustee .r ,an !: ·~~~~=entalhea= McClure, !Senior of Newington, Conn., WaiS re NEW MEMBERS of Omicron Delta Kappa, from left, are Dr. David Bills. bably more so than the Mag . in.gs rega.:rdrillig oivdl military re- .. I think: many cogmized for her work in the College Theater. iDOlia Room which bad been. (Contiuued from page 1) permitted to serve as a trus- latiO!IIIS and ·the role of 'the mill- David Zacks, William Straughan, Lee Silllstein, Dan McGinn, and William Lts are not hi! used lin the past for the con Mrs. Mildred Turner, housemother for Johnson B, Faircloth. President Charles Winberry is at the podium. rt in and out of of the proposal. tee?" Dark concluded that· such tary in a demoCl'aoy. certs. Prominent among the letter was not the case and the pro- He recently ·served as a ~em and Mrs. Margaret Perry, assistant to the Reg of lack Ot The 81UdJitorium is. somewhat writers was Dr. A. Douglas posal deserved to be accepted. i?er o~ 1lh~ top-level ~~ istrar, were selected as honorary members. ~ aan in schOol dead, 'but s:ince · it as a small :!- Aldrich, pastor of First Baptist Former Trustee PresidentLex .:the Bay Charles Winberry, senior of Statesville and of a tuitiou. I1'00IIl ;thi:s fact oan be r.JSied to mv~gasting ~e 10 president of the Wake FortS!; circle of ODK, ex eifect in my advantage in: chia!m.ber ' music, Church of Gastonia. Aldrich, a Marsh, member of the Myers of Pigs ~WIS :a.~al u · tions plailned that exemplary character, leadership, ew York. Pay• proV!iddng for clarity and bail former trustee of the college, Park Baptist Church of Char- As cl!def of , opera. ta.. )3ml!Sdoootbe ance. On the other ba!lld, the sc.id the college waiS the "in· lotte, made his views on the and as illhe n~7~~taff service, scholarship and fellowship are the qua raduatfon.. T!Je· fluence that brought to a eli- propt$al clear in a letter. Marsh ::_ve ons:-~~ B k presid lities necessary for membership in ODK. Named klli-ge tum.ou.t Thursday night 1 low and doeS· filled the room to capacity and max my experience of tralliSi- spoke of the many college alum- edam .... :..~n~n~ Na•"" to the fraternity were William Mosely Faircloth, Eter graduation,. till B tists over revoE ...... , ·., reyond, bwt ebaw m the amsres tion fro~ a parochial and pro- ~ that were .sf' Ids ap ts'd se:;- operatiO!IIIS :tin:ough the comrer- senior JOf Clinton, athletics; Max Daniel McGinn, seated everyone, if not too com vincial VIew. of life to a Chris- ~bog lind mri:myof 1~ r.th~ 1 ~ !; sion from conventionlal weapon senior of Lexillgton, !Scholarship; Neil Lelamd ticular fortably. tim world-VIew." ' un a es o; aro a.. ry to nucleaJr-pcy.vetred vesse!ls Simstein, senior of New York City, social affaim; Characterizialg the college as Marsh contended It was unfrur end mmssiles. John William Straughan Jr., senior of Warsaw, tion plan m :110 Unique Group "the denomination's favorite to deny these people on a place · he relaitionship student government and athletics; and David M. ~ New York Conoerrt Trio, 'whipping boy,'" Aldrich regis- of service. Developed Polaris and state. I ,, Zacks, senior of New Bern, debate and student consistinf of a flute, a harp, tered his approval of the pro- M_arsh closed ~ letter .~Y Under his guidiame such wea· 2y to attend a affairs. and a cello, is probably the only posal. He said ·the proposal adding that most unpor:tant . 1S pons as the 'I'errder, the Talos, IllistibtiDn Ou.t gave the college an opportuni- its (the colleges) sphere of m- and ;the Po1a!l."iis zniiBsi[es. were Winberry also reoognized Dr. David A. Bills, ·k State which orgariization of its kind in the TAPPED into Tassels were Mrs. Mildred Turner, Judy Sballenberg, Martha ICIOuntry. Lts three memlbers, ty to accept honest ·mooey from fluence, its academic standing developed He ds especially associ?..te profCSISQr of psychology, aJS an out :m't really prarr honorable foundations "who are and the service it might render proud of ·the sub:n:lllrin~e standing brotl:l.er of ODK. Mcanre, Nancy Howell, and Mrs. Margaret Perry. ut coll.ege I ArdYth Alton, cellist, Cynthia am Otis, harpist, and Paul Boyer, not seeking to ccmtrol the col· mankind when our people show Polarls. flutist, !l'eceived theia.- training lege, but wlro want the assur- the world that we are not afraid Born :flaJr from the sea m, list of line admiral-s and selected lrolli:Ja tuitloq at 8ome leading schools of music ance of the sound business and to elect centain of its .trustees Boulder, Colo., Burke was grad- hii!in as his cll:ief of naval opera d. for g;rants up educall:ional investment of their who are not necessarily res!- u.art:ed with ·the Cil!aiSs of 1923 of tik:ms. n, !Which is too and ihlave appeared as soloists, with sucih !lliOted orchestras as hard-earned money. .dents o~ our ~te and not ·the U. S. NaVIlll A~~Y· He Since hii:s retirement, Burke the New York Philharmonilc and "I am convilllced that there necessarily Bapttsts when those IS/t'~d!i.ed aJt the Umvers1ty l>f has .biad J!lime to reflect. Although .. i.s known as the NBC ~ony. They have ils no necessary conflici between trustees can help the institu- Micmgla!!l: am received the de- he is now servdng '8IS Dh:ector oo; ·e progressive joinled :thellir lllalimts together. ethical business, sound educa- tion in which they have a com- gree of :Mjaster of Science in tlhie Georgetown University Cen mth, however, !however, and form a Ulllique en tional practice, and Christian mon interest." Engiin