Student Efforts To Alter Rules -On Former Student Registration Fail Here Has Noted Page Five Art On Display 'l ~: nlb nub lark -·.. _.,· Page Three
VOLUME XLIX * Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Monday, January 13, 1963 * * NUMBER 14 Deacons Trip Tar Heels Societies Sixth Straight Time, 80-71 Petition Trustees Activate Plan By JAY MARTIN SPORTS WRITER Wake Forest's erratic Dea Approved cons snapped a holiday slump By LINETA CRAVEN For Boards Of Visitors and won their first Atlantic MANAGING EDITOR Coast Conference game with a A petition requesting the re stunning and convincing victory cognition of Wake Forest's three over nationally-ranked North coed societies, Stringls, SOPH, Athletics, Faculty Carolina at Memorial Coliseurq and Fideles, and their coordina Desire For Strong Thu~sday night before a capacity ting organization, the Inter crowd of 8,200. Society Council, was approve& Although the margin was only for a trial period of three year& _ nine points, 80-71, the Deacons by the Wake Forest faculty in a Motion Hits Snag Athletics Is Evident dominated the contest from start meeting Dec. 21. to finish, defeating the Tar Heels - Terminating a 14-month con The College Board of Trustees Friday endorsed for the sixth straight time. By ADRIAN KING morale of the College. That this a plan providing for boards of visitors at the Col sultation between the office of ASSOCIATE EDITOR Had it not been for two fabu the Dean of Women, the Inter committee, in the course of its le.ge's Schools of Arts and .Sciences and Law, indi lous hot streaks by Mike Cooke Society Council, and the Student study, shall call upon pertinent cated its desire that the College have a strong The Wake Forest faculty has · f t"on1 from· the Tr in the first half and Ray Res Affairs Committee of the faculty, m orrna easurer athletic program and approved the appointment of pass_ in the second half the Dea tabled a motion concerning ath- of the College and the Directon the action enables the societies letics and the College's partici- of Admissions. That the member- a number of committees. cons would have run the Tar to continue their rush program, Heels not only out of Memorial pation in Atlantic Coast Confer- ship of this committee shall be At present the College's School :flavored a strong athletic ~a for underclassmen and provides ence competition. entirely different from the mem- of Medicine has a board of visi- Coliseum, but all the way back for the formation of two new: gram. to "Whiskey Hill." The action came at the facul- bership of the standing Commit- tors which ac.ts in ·an advilsory Tribble said la.ter: "It is societies. This will enable any ty's Dec. 21 meeting. The mo- tee Athletics." capacity for the school and the (Continued on page 8) 011 obvious thart; the trustees strong coed who so desires to have an tion was· presented by Dr. Justus Informed sources said that trustees. Under the pl1m- ap opportunity to become a mem ly support the adm1mistration's ber of a society. e. Drake, assistant professor of immediately after Drake's mo- proved yesterday the new board policy of bringing men of out English. tion was presented, Dr. John pr~sident, Irving ~· Car~let of standing ability oo fill these Singers Get Ammendment Added Drake's three-part motion Sawyer, professor of mathema- Wmston-8alem, ~ 3-IJI.P:OID . a two positions and that they called-for the Faculty Committee tics and chairman of the Com- thre:-man committee which will endorse the policy of keeping The petition as presented to on Athletics to "make a report mittee on Athletics, spoke ·n?I~lllmte 15-pemon boards of our ·athletic program in •a pro 2nd Place the faculty was discussed at to the faculty at the January against the motion and moved it VISitors _for the Schoo1 of Arts per relationship to the to-tal length by faculty members, after meeting concerning recent de- be tabled. (See Faculty, page 5) arnd Sc1ences and the Law educational services of' the col- which an ammendment was add velopments in athletics at the S , ti t dl School. - lege." In Contest ed and approved that postpones College; awyer s mo on repor_ e. Y The nom in a tions will be defintte action until 1966. "That the Faculty Committee was passed by a clear ma]onty brought to the board for ap Carlyle nominated and the board approved members for The Huntsmen, Wake Forest's The ammendment, proposed on Athletics shall without ex- of the approximately 100 faculty. proval at its April meeting. It folk singing group, won second by Judson B. Allen, instructor ception be· required, as other members present.. . was pointed out that the board a number ~f commtttees. By place in the southeastern final!! in English, Dr. Thomas Elmore, virtue of his office Carlyle is committees of the Faculty, to Drakek last Friday gave his of visitors for the School of ch-airman of the board's execu of. the College Folk Singing Con- Dean of Students, and Dr. Keith pring its recommendations back motives in presenting the mo- .Ar1s and Sciences also will tive committee and Dr. Claude test held Dec. 28 in Jacksonville, -GRIGG PHOTO Pritchard, assistant professor of to the Faculty for approval or tion: work with the School of Busi U. Broach, Charlotte milni.ster Fla. BUTCH HASSELL shoots over a screen by Ronny Watts for education, stated "That the so disapproval before the commit- "It (the motion) was to make ness Administration and the The male trio, composed of two of his 19 points against North Carolina. cieties be given approval for tee shall have the power to act; an attempt to bring athletics, graduate program who is vice pretsidenrt of the Wayne Burroughs, Bob Hicks. ------ trial period of three years, after "That as part of the College especially football, into better · board, is vice chairman of the and John Memory, won $400 In which the question of their status self-study project for the eoming perspective. In my point of view, Presented In November committee. the first annual competition.. will be reconsidered, and that year, a five-man committee athletics are extracurricular, Other members •are Joseph The Cumberland Trio, a similar Legislature Hears the faculty understands that the shall be elected by the faculty somewhere out there on the peri A proposal for boards of vi!Si Branch of Enfield, Guy Cars group representing the Univer existence of these societies dur from a list of ten names sub- phery of academic concerns, and tom 'at the A DECEMBER RADIO LISTENING SURVEY OF STUDENTS AT WAKE FOREST COLLEGE SHOWED * Station Per Cent of Total WAIR 51.10fo WSJS 30.90fo WTOB ·9.20fo WFDD 6.90fo WAAA 1.50fo WPECi The price is inspirational, too! BIC is the world's finest writing instrument-costs 0.40fo onlyl9¢.0nly81Cisguaranteed*towritefirsttimeeverytime.BIC's"Dyamite"Ball vo. all."'•(:J~~@ Point is the hardest metal made by man. Get a BIC, now at your campus store. . :¥Percent of audience shared by each station BIC "Crystal" 19¢. BIC pens available with blue,- red, green, black ink. Made in U.S.A. *for replacement send pen to: WATERMAN·BIC PEN CORP., MILFORD. CONN. OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Jan. 13, 1983 PAGE THREE ~ard ...... ~ --... r 1!-~ .. J~ Speight Exhibit Opens 1DDDLi ELLIS CYCLE ency ~ou.s~ 1%6 N. MARSHALL ST. Noted Artist· ~ chard, Deputy e Washington of the Inter- Is Former 6 BARBERS TO SERVE YOU Orgalllization, At mdience Tues anization plays WF Student WEST 4th STREET BARBER SHOP 1le in making One Half Block West of Sears United States By JO DEYOUNG ASSISTANT EDITOR lhe fact that "My paintings .are not ver:y or Conferences housebroken," commented n the balance Francis Speight, noted artist !r, Blanchard and teacher, as he surveyed CARTOON drawn by artist Francis Speight for the 1916-17 are 25 of his works now hanging delegates edition of the Howler mig'ht have been titled: "Throwing the :for in the gallery of the Class He called bull on a slow curve." ttion between roojm Building. ~s government NevertheleSIS, Wake Forest oup. The Unit will be able to view the vi performalll.ce on Friday evening. them seems only an illusion gned only 8 of brant Pennsylvania and Nortb ing reminiscent of .Van Gogh, in the £ace of rthe approach . treaties /that Carolina ~andscapes Uilltil Jan. and his latest "Red Earth, mg storpn. clouds. The mills, [Xl(Sed by the 31 during the exhibit spoil!LSQr Roxboro, N. C.," a more real :as always, smoke black and ed by rthe College Union. istic treatment of Nortb Caro purple in the background. nal Labor Or lina's rich red clay, tobacco e the iniltial Former WF Student sheds, •and :Spring slur. River Scene ;h an Perhaps the most outstand interna- Speighil;, whose work is in "Schuylkill at Manayunk" wage, •stand• ing Characteristic of all rthe cluded in the permanent col is his most widely acclaimed protection of paintings is Speight's striking painting, having won over and women lection of .the Metropolitan alll.d appealing use of color. Museum, New York, and in $3,000 in prizes. A river scene, e beginning of His subjects have a luminolsi more than '13 other museums ;typically Pennsylvanian, it 1chard said. ty which gives them life and in the United States and hns a restraint which de ns to member motion. His paintings l:ack Canada, began his study of mands attention. The !Sky is ~ :and treaties neat line!S, the color.s' making -GRIGG PHOTO • art while a student ·at Wake one of hils: mast beautiful. o lthe govern- RED EARTH, ROXBORO, N. C. is the title ,a fluid transition into one the Humanities Building. Speight is a former Forest, where he drew sev ICONCHA! he said. another without losing the "Hillside with Dogwood," of the latest work by Francis Speight, whose Wake Forest 11tudent. erral cal"'tooln& for the "Old 1e personal re II"ealism of :the total effect. an attempt to include •as Wherever you go, go first your Shell. paintiings are on exhibition in the gaUery of Gold and Blac~." to the Direet.or- Yet for all their color, para much white :as possible, has service dealer for expert, dependable ser 0. and serves He ,taught from 1925 to 1961 doxically most of_ the scenes, unusual depth. In "Hallo at the Pennsylvania Academy ween," one stands in the vice and fine Shell petrolellln American ob 1963ln Review even the street sceneiS, lack products: Grady Newsome at !d sessions of of Fine Ar:tls, and his paint people and are, in that sense warm afternoon shade, look Reynolda Shell, Dennis and IRS. ing ground was in iManayunk, only, lifeless. Once when ask ing out on capering children, a hilly industrial section of ed why he painted lalll.d almost blinded by sunlight. Ray Speas at Varsity Shell, Philadelphia along the Schuyl Dick Lord at Quality Oil Sta is one of the Critic Selects Best Filins scapes, ·the artist replied, The works on exhibit at kill River. in ·this college "It's not so easy for me io Wake Forest indicate that tion No. 1,. D. L. Bean at In 1961 he returned to Nortb have a model, but I can Speight richly deserves the Bantam Food Market. le of the best. By JIM SHERTZER ardson-"Tom .Tones.") 3. ''L&nliness of the Long Dis Carolina aiS Artist in Resi always paint nature." Build ·acclaim he has won tas :an mding the pro ENTERTAINMENT COLUMNIST 'l'llis was also the year .in tance Runner" (England) dent .and teacher of dra~ ings of 1910-1920 vintage make artist. In 1960 the PeimJSyl ring term will which Hollywood took a few 4. "David and Lisa"(U.S.A.) txt week. · The The year 1963 was, generally new steps, •albett timid ones, at East Carolina College. He up much of -the subject mat vania Academy of Fine Arts 5. "S u n d a y s and Cybele" has painted in Roxboro, Leaks granted him its highest award, b.e responsible speaking, a rgood year for the forward in dealing with serious ter; everywhere the mills m-e (France) ville, Spray, Pitt, and Bertie visible. the Academy Gold Medal of e, have · some movies. It wals a rosy year contempo11ary problems. Blake 6. "Hud" (U.S.A.) Counties since returning to "Shawmont in Spring," the Honor. Among prizes present ~ram content financially, one in which at Edwards studied alcoholism in e · students in 7. "Mondo Cane'' (Italy) the state. earliest painting on exhibit, ed to him in nation:al exhibi tendance increased and the "Days of Wine alll.d Roses" and tions of painting are the rhaps .think of Robert Mulligan explored ra 8. "Lawrence of Arabia" ca:ptureiS the dream-like qua with box-office boomed with iSuch 34-Year Period oooying news cial prejudice and hatred in (U.S.A.) lity of rul'lal life at the turn First Altman Prize for Laind films as "Oleopatra," "Irma scape, the First Hallgarten Matghu]man ltion. his "To Kill A Mockingbird." 9. "8%" WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, JAN. 13, 1963 l To the Editor: During the brief period allot~ The registration program de ted for dropping and for chang cided upon by the registrar's ing courses many professors office gives no consideration to submit to their students their I the factors of the proven degree teaching processes and there~ of low efficiency of the pre after the student is expected to \Religious Discrimination viously UJSed system; ,to the pursue the study within defined -rcJ boundaries. Laboratory work value of immediate post-regis~ Wilbur Storie of the old Chica -It is apparent that a great \ CDll£GE I \ tration time to the student; and continues during the "drop go Times once said a newspaper's deal of the responsibility for this I to the relationship of the regis period" and often becomes dif I highest duty is "Printing the news situation rests on the shoulders I trar; a policy administrator, to ficult or impossible to make~up~ and raising hell." of the department chairmen. It I I the student, the individual for Supplies of texts are frequently We hope that we have done IS their duty to seek out candi wJ:om. the institution, college,' exhausted during or shortly an adequate job for filling' the dates, and their willingness to eXlSts. · .after the registration period. first part of this duty so far this To those who have ·register Those factors are unnecessary succumb to what some feel is an I burdens to the student. A well year, but we realize there is unwritten policy of discrimina ed for courses here at Wake I Forest and who have observed designed registration process much to be done in terms of the tion constitutes a non-intellectual that operates to satisfy 1ihe •second. Not that we plan to stir :the sy,stem that resu!11s in te and non-academic approach to dious waitin:g, replications in needs of students would not en~ ;up hornets' nests just for the an intellectual and academic pro forms, pensonal cOIIlflicts be tirely eliminate :possible dis· ·sake of raising hell, but there blem. tween students and 1he tsection ruptions of the early portion of •are many areas of life at Wake -This policy, if it exists, is ers becaUJSe at fmyed tempers the semester, but it would not iForest which are overdue for add to the student's burden or not a result of administrative and the unique chal"acteristic in all probability it would lighten · ;close examination, and it is our prejudice, but rather a fear of whereby the fu.st few letters the burden. iintention to examine them during of .a student'.s last name usual repercussions from the Baptists The greatest respect for ad ithe remainder of the school year. across the state. We ,are confi ly determi!lles whether or not he will be able to enter courses ministrators at Wake Forest is :This week, in the first of a series dent, however, that the majority :earned by ·those who conduct jof what we hope will be indebt, that he needs 101' desires, it of the Baptists would encourage appeam that the proposed sys their office so that the motive of :comprehensive analyses, old Gold and support any move that will tem will include and intensify our institution is realized with !takes a look at alledged dis aid Wake Forest in providing; a the proven faults of the "two harmony, efficiency and ·con criminatory practices in the hir better educational institution of day" process: sideration to the virtue and to ing of faculty members at Wake higher learning, as evidenced by If inefficiency and confusion ilhe balsic Vialue of the motive. :Forest. In future weeks we plan exist in the process that requires the motive. the support given Wake Forest To improve such a vividly .to examine such issues as sus in the November Convention. two days, how can condensing pension of the Student maga cthe process to 1.5 days do WlY faulty program as is our regis .zine, the honor system, the fra If the allegations of discrimi thing but further disrupt the tration would certainly create nation are accurate, some ex basic purpose of entering courses more respect and confidence :ternity system, disciplinary me tremely undesirable ramifica . that are degree requirements among the students and among ;thods, social rules and atti tions would seem to follow. and of choosing subjects that those who wish to contribute ltudes, and academic philoso L SKELETON IM OUR CLOSET will broaden one's educational financially and philosophically lphies, among others. We hope First of all, it is quite con spectrum? to the college for the administra ~he sum total of these studies ceivable that the college would tion. ~viii be an accurate picture of select a mediocre Protestant Robert Bem'8l'd Morehead, Jr. how and why Wake Forest teacher over a highly qualified Class IOif '64 works. instructor who may be non Current Affairs · To a newspaper, verv little Protestant. falls into the category of· "some College Men thing that is 'better left unsaid." Secondly, *such * a *policy would yYith this series, •ve hope to say limit the education and sociali Claim To Be what we feel Wake Forest peo zation of the student body. Cyprus Crisis Deepens ple should know about their col Whereas the college would not lege. try and proselytize a Je,vish or Sex-Scared Catholic p1·ofessor, we feel cer By JIVAN TABmiAN sure Great Britain is not .sur system among all ethnic groups, while the Turkls were sitting * * * on the fence. Policies of com (Editor's Note: This column With regard to this week's tain such professors in turn The cris~s in Cyprus is -about prised to fillld it so hard to or three, free emigration to promise, suggested by London article, we feel any policy that would not try and proselytize to become the crisis· of a new solve. If any, surprise came Turkey or Greece by those un by humorist Art Buchwald is prevents Wake Forest College the community. At times, how sick ;man in ithe Eastern Medi becaUJSe honestly London should willing to -accept ·the final out or W ashingtx:>n, and tending at reprinted from the New York from selecting the most qualified ever, a man of different reli terranean. Two old enemies, have expected thi!S much soon come 10£ the vote, e1ther one equal lOISs-, equal with formulas Herald Tribune and is copy temporarily and superficially er. or two. 'are both unrealistic and Ulllfair. righted by that newspaper.) faculty, regardless of religion. gious 'beliefs may present a some The Tm'ks have little to lose united in the Western camp on ~t is a miracle that the pre In this situation iit will be limits the academic progress of what contrasting approach to a hard to deny to ;the Greeks because they are ellltitled to There has been a lot of dis the college and violates all the NATO, .seem to take rather 'sent disturbances were so late cussion lately about the · collegE! problem. By employing Catho seriously this last manifesta in happening. certain advantages, especially little gain. They cannot lose principles and ideals of higher lics and Jews on the faculty, since they were fighting for what they did not have in .the girl and her attitude toward sex. tion of the mutual feelings of Cyprus may not be the first University officials, sociologists, education. We are not accusing em,ancipation frOim Brit a in, fir.st place. Wake Forest could create a more dislike that were· .. ?;·;·:·:. .,. system with a multi-racial, mul ministers and parents have ex anyone of advocating such a balanced faculty with a wider nurtured for so · ti-ethnic ror multi-lingual setup. pressed alarm over the modern policy, but the absence of any scope, thus giving the students long. lit is tragic Ten hundred miles to ithe east, young girl's attitude toward pre Jewish or Catholic professors at an opportunity for a more com fuart both Turkey : Lebanon has avoided any defi marital sex relations. ·wake Forest College is quite plete liberal arts education. and Greece have , nitive disintegration de!Spilte a The ·Current Thing But while a great deal of at-. conspicious. There are several Finally, this policy would con almost no other ·: no leSIS heterogeneous popula tention has been given to what deductions which can be drawn stitute a hardship for many of choice but to take · tion. Cyprus however tried to a cOllege girl thinks about SeX, from this week's investigation. our intellectually-inclined faculty seriously the exist wirth a syiS!tem where dis nobody seems to have bothered ; -It is more than a mere coin murderoUIS met aproportionate distribution of Whimsey to ask college men how they feel. members. The real intellectual dents in Cyprus. To right :this wrong we have cidence that Wake Forest has tries to take in all the divergent power, rather ;than proportion To expec,t the TABmiAN ality chal'acterized politics. :By DONIA WHITELEY spent three days asking college never had a Catholic ·or Jew on views and opinions of his col Greek tand Turkish govern FEATURE t:DITOR men their opinions on free love; the faculty. There have been leagues. This is impossible on a ments to ignore the ;pleas for CO'll.flicting Groups chastity, and sexual emancipa with name-stampers for golf reported cases of qualified men campus that prohibits Catholic help of their blood brothers While strict propor:tionality A blissful, enthusiastic friend tion. of mine came bouncing up balls, jeweled ice-picks, and 'who applied for faculty posts and Jewish professors. and witness the massacres in regulates the share of conflict to me in her accustomed manner mink coasters. Men's Views :and were turned down after In order for ·wake Forest to cold blood would be somewhat ing groups in -a multi-confes similar to expecting the United the minute I got back from it was learned that they we·re fully live up to her educational sional Lebanon, in Cypl'UIS, the "A gift from Santa?" I com A Yale senior, asked if he be-: StaJtes government to sit idle Christmas vacation, bedraggled mented at last, hesitating to lieved a man should submit to non-Protestants. It seems rather responsibilities she must avoid Turkish milllority of about 14 from a nine-hour southbound while Americ,ans were being per cent w.as guaranteed about commit myself further. relations before marriage said, strange. considering the promi any policy or attitude that im murdered, say in Cuba or journey in a drafty MG. She nent roles Jews and Catholics 40 per cent of the pie. "Yep," !She went on gleefully. "Absolutely not. College girl~ pedes academic progress in a Jamaica. caught up to me as I staggered may call me old-fashioned, but I have played in the American search for real knowledge. To Britain must have been aware up to my door, arms laden with "You have to come see it. It's Unfair, Unrealistic of the potentially dilsruptive na so great. My dentist said I had think a nice boy should rem~ educational system, that every disavow a policy of discrimina boots, socks, apples, and suitcas pure.I'm not against necking if ture of this gross di!sproportion. es, searching vainly for my key; to have one for my teeth." time a non-Protestant anplies for tion against employing non-Pro The problel;m. lies in the fact But not only British policy made it doesn't go too far, but I feel a .iob, the college is able to find testants on the facultv would be that there -are no Cypr:i!.sts, but no conscious effort to avoid this "What's green and yellow and As I trudged down the hall a boy should be able to say 'no; Greeks and Turks. Imagine hav blue and pink and hums?" she to her room to see the new pre· to a girl without hurting her feel a better qualified man. a step in 1 the right direction. .situation, on the contrary, it ing Mexicans and Americans1 was the intention of Britain to bubbled gaily. sent, I made a mental note to ings," on a Cal1ribean island killing perpetuate its ilnfluence over "An electric lime and an add dentists to the category of A University of Southern Cali~ each other. The situation would the Island through the Turkish electric banana and an electric eccentric millionaires, Santa fornia football player said, "I be an explosive to say the minority and block Cyprus' blueberry and an electric pa-. Claus and degenerate Romans. think there has been an over-, For Wake Forest, 1963 Sad least. Th·at is why it seems eventual u n if i c a t i o n with paya," I guessed. As I stood looking down at it in emphasis on promiscuity on col-. its shining plastic storage case, rather unfair and unrealistic to Greece. Thls unification would "Nope," she said. "My new lege campuses. It's true there are I had visions of togas, Bacchus, sue~ 1963 was a sad year for Wake When he was speaking in chapel ask for restraint ·and modera have been inevitable, if the family-style electric toothbrush a few weak men who may Forest in some respects. Aside the students didn't .have much tion and non-interference from principle of self-determination with four separate brushes." and Patrician orgies. cumb to a persistent co-ed, but the majority of college men be~ from the expected growing pains desire to cut." governments and people of An were given a chance and ·the I tumbled into my room final~ "But Janie," I said solemnly, kars and AthelliS'. majority of the population on "what are you going to do with lieve in chastity and would no~ and routine difficulties, the col~ The New York Times de ly, letting the family-style elec think of having an affair." the island voted over the issue. triC toothbrlish with four separ four separate brushes and no lege witnessed the death of four scribed him as "one of the 'Rather, I believe, efforts A Georgetown sophomore tolq of her family. South's most respected orators, ISh:ould be concentrated in find Thil5 populati0111 haJS still three ate brushes sink in slowlY. family?" options: one, annexation to Actually, I had heard of such a us: When I go on a date wit.Q R. ing a "modus vivendi" on the She looked at me and said with a girl, I always take someone Dr. W. Cullom died in known for precision and fele Greece, two, independent exist contraption vaguely, but had island of Cyprus itself. This by great ceremony, "I'm going to along with me, either a professor O_ctob~r, Dr. Charles M. Ramsey city of expression." In the 1940's no means is •an easy job. I am ence with a balanced pOlitical classed it in a category along d1ed m November, Dr. Daniel he received albout 400 invitations let you be part of my family. or an older person. A lot of girls Bunyon Bryan died in December. a year to speak at functions I'm going to let you and my. get mad at me, but I promised roommate each choose one of the. my mommy and daddy I would And on the last day of the throughout the country. In a Frank Wood brushes for your very own, and never do anything in school to year Dr. Francis Pendleton normal year he made about 40 use it any time you want to." make them ashamed of me" Gaines, 71, died at his home in major addresses in 20 states. I was overwhelmed. "Oh, ~ Lexington, Va. His· death marked Princeton Man Idealistic A former student, recalling Academics Demand Equality just couldn't," I protested, bu~ the passing of the· last living him as a professor of English at to no avail. "But what if it A Princeton man said: ex-president of Wake Forest. He Purman University in Greenville, shocks me?" I said, having By FRANK WOOD and Doug Elam who are spend ets an interest in liberal educa "I think it's all right for college served the colleg·e from 1927 always been a little reluctant girls to be emancipated-after S. C. in 1927, said, "His wit ing .a lot of their own time and tion and in promoting culture. until 1930, at which time he was delighted his classes, he had lots "Where your money is, there to use electrical appliances all, they have nothing to los~ trouble illl trying to improve The need for a more compre around running water and that called to Washington and Lee of stories and he was very kind also is your heart," is the kind the situation. We can be grate hensive and complete library; but as a man, I'm very idealistic sort of thing. about such things. Besides, I University as its president. to students." of insight so typical of Jesus: ful that people are willing to the need for a general faculty it knifes straight into 'the guts "It's insulated," she assured think girls think so much less of Dr. A. Lewis Aycock, asso In 1947, Dr. Gaines warned be that illlterested in the Col pay raise, if for IIlO other rea of reality, ripping easily through son than to put college teach me, "and it runs by battery: you when you give in." ciate professor of English who of "the strange and fictitious lege, See? Right now it's charging." A Harvard man said: "When I all philosophies, preachments, ing in its rightful place but taught during Dr. Gaines' ad~ calm that follows the world's and pretelli.Ses. The trouble simply is that She set the base in the case, first came to Harvard, several also in order ;to continue ministration, recalled the man as greatest u p h e a v a 1." Several Wake Forest is not making to plugged it in, and watched it ~d that inlsight is making attract good professors; the of the students asked me if I "a brilliant teacher of English this kind of effort in other charge. would 'go all the way with a years later he said: "War, with its devastating force felt around need to pay students more than literature." its tidal waves of destruction, areaJS' !Of its program, areas "I really like my old manual girl.' I didn't even know what here these days in a subtle, which, if they are not more 75c an hour at 'a college that "He was also an excellent slaughter and grief, is the answer whispered, nagging uncertainty red one," I said feebly. it meant, but when I found out impolll:ant than athletics, _are professes a unique regard for I reported them to the dean. I speaker, very much in demand. to no human problem, and it is which many have but few ex not less important. the worth of .the individual stu "But this one is twice as good, Not only ·was he popular with press about Wake Forest's ideals because the brush goes back and believe a school is judged by its ~n insult to the intelligence God We cannot escape the conclu dent and his time. students and would hate to be ~dults, but he was also interest gave us that we cannot find as compared to her practices sion that the College :iJs not We could go 10n and on with forth twice as many times and when it comes to big time ath lieve the girls from Vassar; mg to the students as well. other answers." really as .illlter~sted in some of the list, but it serves rto point besides it massages the gums." letics. she insisted. Smith and Radcliffe would think ·the other ideals it professes as up the situatiOill. The list of Harvard men had such thoughts CHARLES OSOLIN .JIM SINKWAY The College is sparing no ef it is in the ideal of winning in course does not imply that "How 'about if I just hum and in their heads." fort to secure the best football brush faster?" I tried one last Editor Business Manager big time athletics, because that nothing ils being done in these A University of Michigan half coach it can find in the country na•gging insight tells UISI that if areas; ·all of them are at least time, but when she ever offered back said: "I was going steady ~fun~efsd January 16, 1916, as the stud.ent newspaper of Wake Forest College, Old Gold and and is apparently willing to .the College really were, it would "under study," a fact which if to let me use her own toothpaste. with a girl from Ohio State. One . ac published each Monday durmg the school year excerot during examinations and spend a considerable amount of be making the same kind of we let it could !Salve our con I succumbed. A heart as gener· hollday periods as directed by' the Wake Forest Publications Board. night she asked me the question, money on him and ron the foot efforts, including financial ef science instead of calling us to ous ·as hers is just not eaJsily dis and I made her get out of my ADRIAN KING, Associate Editor CHARLES WINBERRY, Senior Editor ball program in order rto "be forts, a·s it is making in foot account for ·the relatively in couraged. After a period of care car. I cried all night long. But come more competitive." ful consideration, her roommate LINETA CRAVEN, Managing Editor BILL BENTZ, Sports Editor ball. significant effor.ts we -are mak- the next day my fraternity broth 'These areas go alm.()st with ing, chose the blue one and I picked RACHEL FLOYD, .JO DeYOUNG, DONIA WHITELEY, Feature Editor The disturbing! thing, how ers told me I had done the right out saying: the need for much yellow brush. · Assistant Editors ever, is not that the College a Those who are proud of 'Wake thing." DENNIS HOFF, Associate Sports Editor considers athletics important, more adequate academic schol Forest, devoted to its heritage The green one is still not We talked to at least 200 male LEON SPENCER, Circulation Manager nor even that a lot of time and tarship program, with features and hopeful for its future, are spoken for, in case there are any college students and not one oti money :ils being spent to shore to attract top students; the indeed called upon from time degenerate Roman-type running them admitted to misbehaving.. Memdber of the Ass~ciated Collegiate Press. Represented for national advertisine: by Nation· ai tliA_ vertiSing Sern.ce. Inc. Subscnpti~n r_ate: $2.50 per year. Second-class ma!l orivtleees up .the athletic program. As a need for an ar.t department to time to cOID.Sider whether in around in search for new thrills. It was a very encouraging thin~ au ortzed at Winston-Salem, N. C. Pnntea by The Nashville Graphic, Nashville, N. c. matter of fact, we c·an laud and an expanded music pro everyday reality we 'are fulfill The only thing is, you have to and gave us faith in the youth such men aiS Dr. Jack Sawyer gra;m in a college that profess- ing that heritage and hope_ take turns. of America. OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, Jan.13, 1963 PAGE FIVB Competition Registration Is Unchanged For Political Rabbi Asher To Visit Efforts Fail To Gain Privileges Jobs Is Set WF, Lecture Tues~day Wake Forest students are eli Rabbi Joseph Asher of Temple: By_ CHARLES WINBERRY class had to be reopened. gible for statewide competition, and London. He also attended SENIOR EDITOR Guarantee was also made that Emanuel in Greensboro will dis Hebrew Union College in. Cinci for six politics internships this nnati, Ohio. Student efforts to make sub athletes would have afternoon summer in a program sponsor-: cuss "The Role of the Jews a~ classes only if they were taking He served in. the Australian stantial changes in the revised ed by the North Carolina Centen the Time of Jesus" in a lecture registration plans for the sprin!lj a science course with labs only for Education in Politics. Army [or several Years and then in the afternoon and working at 8 p. m. Tuesday in the audi became spiritual ·leader of the semester have apparently been. Each intern will be placed in torium of the Humanities Build to no avail. A strong protesb students were guaranteed that Hebrew Congregation in Tas solutions to their problems would one of three positions: the ing. mania. From 1944 to 1948, h~ adopted by the Student Legis-· Washington office of a United Asher's lecture is sponsored lature against the new proced be worked out by the sectioners. was associate rabbi at Temple The Committee and Dean o£ States Senator or Congressman, by the College Union, through. Beth Israel in Melbourne Aus- ures met with a critical re-1 The staff of the North Carolina. the cooperation of the Jewish tralia ' sponse from the Faculty Curri the College Edwin G: Wilson whq Democratic or Republican par.:. Chautauqua Society. He will Asher lectures under the aus culum Committee. called the group together, said students should report any ties in Raleigh, or the campaigllj spend the day on campus and pic~s of the Je'Yish Chautauqua, The new procedures would organization of a North Carotin~ will visit some religion classes. Soc1ety, an organization to cut the registration period from, problems they encounter to the Dean's Office so they can be gubernatorial candidate. Asher was born in. Heilbrown,' create better understanding oi two days to a day and a haU. It RABBI JOSEPH ASHER cleared up in the future. In addition, a stipend of $500 Germany. He attended Yeshiv~ Jews and Judaism through edu• would not allow early registra.. . . . to speak TUesday • • • Colleges in Frankfort, Hamburg cation. · tion by seniors, athletes, work Legislator Ann Hunt, sopho will be awarded each intern, ing students, ~and those groups more of Greenville and a mem-: This stipend is sufficient to that in the past have been al ber of the committee, added that cover normal expenses during Med .School Development lowed early registration privi there was "little basis for com the ten week internship period. leges. plaints Meet St. Joe's In Palestra Sat. Cherry at 6th St. • Phone P A 5-8791 By BOB LIPPER at the Coliseum still, St. Joe's Holiday Festival during the Frame Sale-200fo Off SPORTS WRITER recovered and went on to the Christmas vacation. While the Piedmont North Carolina's " Oh when the Hawks com~ Mid-Atlantic Conference title Hawks do not have a prepon JANUARY 2ND THRU JANUARY 17TH flyin' in, oh when the Hawks and a 23-5 season record. derance of talent, they do ex come flyin' in; I want to be in Also, the contest vnce again hibit the hustle and pressing de:., Most Complete Ski Shop that number, when the Hawks will bring together two of the: fense that have typified Ram OUR COMPLETE STOCK OF FINE FRAMES WILL BE come flyin' in." finest. most personable coaches• sey's teams. Featuring Such will be the greeting St. in the country in Jack Ramsey Cavaliers Play Here DISCOUNTED FOR THIS SHORT PERIOD ONLY! Parkas and Other Ski Wear Joseph's College will receive and Bones McKinney, Two years Tonight, the Deacons will en when it enters the Palestra floor ago, McKinney vowed that never tertain Virginia in a conference; by to take on Wake Forest in Phila again would he return to the game at the Memorial Coliseum.; White Stag, Remi Woolrich and Beconta delphia Saturday night. We Frame , Photographs- Portraits-Diplomas- Certificates Palestra. Bones, however, has New Cavalier coach Bill GibSODj by The meeting of the two teams reconsidered and will appear in inherits a squad with a stand and Prints of All Types. Don't Miss Out- Come In Today. , Skis has developed into an intense in that arena where he was once out in Chip Conner. Conner ha~ Hart, Northland and Others {tersectional battle, ei.Specially admonished for using "greasy been among the top ten scorers Boots by in the pa1;t five years. In that kid ISttuff." Ramsey concedes and rebounders in the ACC for span, the teams have met sixi that "it is always a pleasure to the past two years. Mac Cald Koflach times. The Hawks hold a 4-2 play a Bones McKinney team," well, Jay Lambiotte, and KeilJ Wake Forest Campus edge in games (St. Joseph's but he makes no bones (no pun Goble are other top players for. Phone 723-4640 See our Ski Equipment and Apparel Display holds an overall 6-3 edge in the intended) about the fact that he the Cavaliers. If 6' 9" Dick Kat At BEN'S OF WAKE FOREST rivalry). is out to avenge !rust year's stra could come through, Vir: Last year, the Deacons com humiliating defeat. ginias' chances for bettering last Ask wbout our weekend charter busses pletely demolished the Hawks This reporter had the oppor season's 5-20 record would be to the Blowing Rock Ski Lodge with a resounding 75-46 victory t-unity to see St. Joseph's in tht:~ markedly greater. FOR THE BEST IN COMBOS THE Reynolda Manor Cafeteria KEYNOTES LOCATED AT THE REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPING CENTER Built with you in mind-The world's best food at prices the college stu dent can easily afford. Come out and see our new ultra.modern facilities. Pleasant surroundings! Music while you eat! Private ta·bles! 1Excellent staff to serve you! Wake Foresters, this place is for you. SPECIAL for Wednesday Night, Nov. 6: 114 fried chicken, choice of 2 For an Ice Cream Treat Where All The vegetables, bread and butter, coffee or tea, egg custard pie, all for $1.00. Town's People FOR RATES AND Meet and Greet ENGAGEMENTS ••• Say hello to·the managers ••• Kitchen-Fresh Custom-Packed lunch, 10:451o 2:15, Supper, 4:451o 8:00 SAM, :ERN~~T, and JIMMY Old Dominion Candies