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TODAY INSIDE TODAY EDITORIALLY

-* SEX SERIES * CAREER PLANNING * DIXIE CLASSIC FAIR an

Vol. LIX _Wake Forest University, Wlnstoo.Salem, North CaroUna, October 10, 1975 No. 6 ,.. 'Damage' Fears Parents Look At ~. i Cause Denials Social Problems By MARK ATKINSON ENTAM, Ltd. a promotion By MARK university. They also agreed to write to from five to ten other Staff writer company in Charleston, W. Va., LEUCHTENBERGER which also handles the Assistant Editor couples. f .Athletic Director Gene Hooks Greensboro concerts, according Mills said that the council wa~:~ [ said this week that the ·College to. Hooks. . The newly-formed university especially concerned about the need for improved Union had sought the use of The contract obligates the Parents' Council held its first communication between parents I Groves Stadium for concerts in athletic department for four meeting here on Parents' concerts in Groves Stadium Weekend, stating one of its main and the administration. [ recent years, but had always "They wanted a dialogue in . been denied the requests by the which Hooks said will probably objectives to be developing "a be held in May, June, July, and closer relationship between Wake explicit terms," he said. i athletic department. "They did not view themselves He said the denials were due to August of next year. Forest and the parents of her 1 students." as a group that should have any a lack ·of knowledge as to the specific powers at Wake Forest, damages that might be sustained Hooks said that the athletic According to Bob Mills, department did not sign with assistant director of alumni but they do want to express their and to the athletic department's interest in the vital issues of the 11. unwillingness to let the stadium ENTAM to entertain the students affairs who helped organize the but to utilize the stadium to its group, many of the parents in the university", Mills said. I. be used without pay. ·Thirty of the 36 couples who are Hooks went on to say that the fullest extent. According to council expressed a strong Hooks, the stadium must be paid interest in learning about social members of the Parents' Council athletic department would rent attended the weekend's Groves Stadium to CU or other for by 1985. problems such as intervisitation Robertson said that Hooks had and the alcohol policy. meetings. All present council groups in much the same way as members are the parents of also the Greensboro Coliseum does. come by to seek his opinion "They definitely wanted to talk before he signed with ENTAM about current social issues," current students. in Dave Robertson, College Union At the opening meeting Friday . way director, reaffirmed his earlier and there had been Mills said. communication between them on Mills .said some council afternoon, council members • the position by Saying that CU was heard remarks from Earle mif not planning to seek the use of· the issue. members stayed after the first Robertson pointed out that meeting to question President Connelly, chairman of the in. Groves Stadium for a concert this Parent's Association; Scales; >ver ENTAM could definitely offer a James Ralph Scales and Provost year as it did in the past. He S!iid Wilson; and Director of •ere better guarantee than the Union Edwin Wilson about the he does not feel that the Admissions and Financial Aid ood could, but added that the intervisitation policy. After the university pays him to put on William Starling. A question and we concerts for the community. company would also take a final meeting that Saturday, bigger percentage of the profits. Mills said, many of the parents answer session followed. The ~by. "My job is to work with the Trying to get one last shrimp for supper, this Wake Forest woman meeting concluded with a ions Both he and Hooks said there member of tbe group which travelled to Beaufort, N.C., last weekend engaged in a discussion of social facilities I have," he added. tediously works with the net used by Dr. Ronald Dimmock's presentation by administrators of lg." The athletic department will probably be -no conflict in to study marine life. Photo by Yandle issues with Dr. David Hills, their schedules. vertebrate zoology and Dr. Peter Weigl's ecology classes. She was a coordinator of student services. the proposed organizational recently signed a contract with constitution. '. \- Mills said that the council, a form of which was first established in 1972 with then Poor Attendance House majority leader Gerald Ford as its chairman, had a Threatens Unio.& Dr. Ray Defends Nuclear P Ower "three-fold purpose: to open up new avenues of fund-raising, to open up new avenues of com­ increased public understanding By BARBARA CLEARY Energy Commission and in Wait Chapel. She was the first challenged her on several points. munication between parents and Movie Schedule Staff Writer assistant secretary of state for to erase the fear of radioactive (Bidwell's counterarguments speaker in the College Union Their exchange grew heated as the administration, and to open If student attendance is not Oceans and International Lecture Series. contamination. may be found in his letter to the she flatly denied several of his editor, page four.) Wake Forest to a wider better at the weekend movies, the Deeming nuclear fission as the Environment and Scientific Dr. Ray called the current However, not everyone in the audience agreed with Dr. Ray's charges including an accusation Dr. Ray reaffirmed her belief audience." £ibn schedule will have to be present most important alternate Affairs, addressed energy shortage "a crisis in In the area of fund-raising, drastically cut, said Janine energy source, Dr. Dixy Lee Ray, approximately 100 students and assertions as to the safety of that the AEC had promoted news in the safety of nuclear power and survival" intertwined with the blackouts following major Mills said, each couple agreed to Tillett, chairman of the College former chairperson of the Atomic faculty members Monday night world's major problems of food, nuclear power plants. Dr. Miles stressed a need for scientists in Bidwell, economics professor, nuclear power accidents. government. personally solicit two other Union Film Committee. environment, raw materials and couples on behalf of the "We lost at least $100 just on human population. She 'The Way We Were,' " she said, emphasized that the need for Dr. G. McLeod Bryan: ' . - and no movie has done as well as energy will increase in "the futm·e expected. if the people in this country desire The film budget for this year a decent standard of living. In \ was curtailed because of 'I 1985 there will be 34 per cent overspending last year, and "we more households than today, sh£ Power Loss Irreversible have to make up for that," said said. By JAN WARD the administration for a number The whole concept of the Ms. Tillett. As a result, the film She said scientists have themselves" for a government Staff Writer of years. This trend, which he university depends on the grant. schedule that the committee developed the technology for prepared this summer had to be more efficient engines, improved said is decisively negative, is individual faculty member and Editor's Note: One faculty "water over the dam, which you his interaction with the individual --The growth of the revised. Cheaper films had to industrial processes and member agreed this week to give administration. Wake Forest had replace others and some had to recycling, particularly of human can't push back again." student, without interference his views on the faculty· only ten administrators when the be cut entirely. sewage. With proper respect for The mainstay of the university from outside forces, he said. administration relationship system for 1000 years in the "It is not police, trustees, FBI college moved to Winston.Salem, The highlights of tllis year's the environment, this country discussed in last week's Issue. but now has about 60. The more film program will be a D.W. can also utilize untapped oil western world is the direct informants or administration Followups from other faculty relationship between teacher and that keeps the university under control, or interference between Griffith festival in October, a reserves in Wyoming and an members may be forthcoming. the teacher and the student, that Roman Polanski festival in __ abundance of coal resources. student, according to Bryan. control," Bryan said, "but the Dr. G. McLeod Bryan, religion "The university was founded faculty-student relationship." the administration has, the more December, a week of Francois High costs and the ready professor, said he feels that the damaging it is to the university, Truffaut in January, a week of availability of other energy on this relationship and the Bryan said the damage that faculty has been losing ground to rewards of teaching and the has been done to this he said. animation in February, and a sources has suppressed energy Kurosawa (Japanese) film I creative maturity of the students relationshi{i, and thus to the -Emergency control powers. ; \ diversification and conserving festival, in April. methods in the past, she said .. depends on that factor alone. All university as a whole, is The riots of the 1960's were other intervening agencies essentially irreparable and noted Some of the weekend films will Citing the human mind as a interpreted as a danger sign by be "Deliverance," "Willie Wonka cannot preserve that relationship the administration who called for "resource without limit," Dr. and mostly pervert it," he said. the following causes: and the Chocolate Factory," Ray said she believes that the -Faculty irresponsibility, both emergency powers to handle the "Brewster McCloud," "That's U.S. should develop and utilize as He explained that the trend of in the value the faculty assigned situation. However, Bryan said, Entertainment," "Chinatown," many diverse energy sources as administration taking faculty to its relationship to the students the students were right. "Lenny," "Blazing Saddles," possible. This includes solar, power gained momentum in the and also in its giving powers -The rise of the "professional "," "Serpico," "Five neothermal and hydroelectric · '60's when the administration athlete" on the college campus Easy Pieces," "The Last energy, bioconversions, and even took emergency powers to deal away to cooperate with the and the implications it carries. Detail," "Pat Garrett and Billy windmills. with rioting. Bryan recalled that growth of the modern university. Bryan said he will continue to the Kid," "Mean Streets," Since nuclear technology is · he was the only professor who Bryan said that when faculty say what he thinks without "Hearts and Minds" (Academy currently available, Dr. Ray said spoke on Kent State Day; he said members had to depend on "prostituting himself," and will Award-winning film on the that expansion of nuclear plants then that the Wake Forest outside support to carry out their continue writing letters to others, Vietnam controversy), is the most effective method to administration would have shot research or other work, they including administrators and "Magnum Force," "Lady Sings immediately increase energy too, because that's what the trustees, who share his concern the Blues," "Day for Night," output. Fifty-six nuclear plants - often had to make concessions to society wanted them to do. their integrity, "prostituting for the university and keep them "Camelot," and "Singing in the presently produce Blh per cent of posted on his views. Rain." Photo by Yandle this country's total electricity. Dixy Lee Ray She emphasized the safety of G. ,McLeod Bryan nuclear power and the need for Photo by Yandle So .. zhenitsyn 'Backed Out' By CONNIE COLE statement," Scales said. Rather, were mailed out, and all of them department, were called back to Associate Editor the university would be voted in favor of conferring the the states from a vacation in Italy recognizing "a titan in world distinction. to be interpreters, but were News Feature literature," he said. Preparations for the pageantry reached before boarding a plane I Helms and his staff had visited and festivities were hastily made in Paris when Scales called to say ------1 Solzhenitsyn previously while on by Mrs. Scales and a catering that Solzhenitsyn would not be What if you planned a party a trip to Sweden. "Because of staff. coming to the campus. and the guest of honor backed out Helms' well-known status as an Rick' Heatley of the classics On June 27, Solzhenitsyn ' at the last minute? anti-Communist leader, this was department helped write a arrived in Washington, D.C. That . I In a manner of speaking, that is a bona fide relationship between special ceremony in Latin for the evening he talked with Scales by what happened this summer them," Scales said. occasion. The rationale for this, telephone. With the aid of an when the university was set for a Upon arriving in the United &ales said, was that Slavic and interpreter, Solzhenitsyn presentation of the honorary States, Solzhenitsyn had been in other languages shared a explained that he was hot and Doctor of Letters degree to Alaska and at the Stanford "common meeting ground" in tired from the trans-continental Russian novelist Alexandre University campus in California, Latin. trip, and that he could not come Solzhenitsyn. where he was involved in to North Carolina. In President James Ralph Scales research work. According to The Winston-salem Symphony Solzhenitsyn's words, "An honor was contacted in early June by Scales, the Wake Forest visit orchestra conducted by John such as this demands a prepared Senator Jesse Helms, Wake would have been Solzhenitsyn's Iuele was hurriedly engaged and and original speech," which he Forest student in 1940, who was at first public appearance on a was to play selections of didn't feel up to preparing. the time sponsoring Solzhenitsyn college campus since his exile Prokofieff, Dvorak, Wagner and The invitations had already for honorary from the Soviet Union in Tchaikovsky, among others. been mailed to numer.ous citizenship. February 1974. political and literary notables, "Of course we were As plans for the July 2 Solzhenitsyn's remarks were to the menu was planned, the enthusiastic about this," Scales convocation progressed, the include selections from his pageantry scheduled, the genuine ~ - ' said, and plans went forward for Honorary Degree Committee met undelivered Nobel Lecture on sheepskin diploma from ·~~if{~t~ J,' . . an elaborate presentation and agreed to award the author Literature as interpreted by Australiawasordered.Itsitsnow .' ,, ceremony and convocation at the Doctor of Letters degree. The Anne Tillett, professor of with the doctoral hood, waiting .... . _ . 4 which Solzhenitsyn would make university Senate also acted Romance languages. in the registrar's office for The two men who set up a tent outside their room in the new dorm Bill McD~~ott borrowed the tent f111m Keith Jolly to go camping at informal remarks. favorable on consideration of the Ms. Tillet, and her husband Dr. Sou:nenJLsyn to rece1ve 1L m last week weren't really testing the lntervisitation policy, but they Myrtle Beach. He said, "It always smells better if you air It out first." 1--".:.Th~i:::s:..:w:.::a:::s.::in:.:...:.:,no:::..!!w~aL..!:ya~po:!!lit::!ic~a::!l_allo..llJwarda.~.~.~ ... · B.w.~aloi.WIIn.L1:i!..tsf~·o:L..lv '1 By STEVE CARPENTER the women students. sex with him on the first date, he ~< (,. Staff Writer One upperclassman said that would "probably ask her out Sixty-two per cent of those intercourse. o-t' \).(,;) questioned admitted that they homosexuality as a social there are too many women on again," he also said that it Reactions to the subject of disease, and one man ~v ~ Last In a series .. campus who were reared in have gone to bars or taverns Se1 matters to him whether he homosexuality were both acknowledged homosexuality as one . conservative homes. marries a virgin. looking for a "pick-up," but 16 ~0 !LJ" per cent of these said they had negative and positive. One junior a viable sexual relationship. Despite the university's rigid "The problem with Wake said that homosexuality is a A freshman said that the 'x,~ ~<" ban on intervisitation, a On the subject of birth control never been successful. ~ A large Forest girls," he said, "is that the survey indicated that "disorientation of sexual intervisltation policy is the main substantial amount of sexual they can't decide whether they On premarital sex, 68 per cent 1 freshman ~ ·~' everything from withdrawal to of the men surveyed said that priorities caused in childhood," cause of homosexuality'at Wake. . Wake For ~ :<: ~ activity takes place on campus, a should run their affairs with all whole another student said that Of the men surveyed, 18 per great deal of it in the dormitories, diaphragms is used. Birth control they think sex before marriage · attending ~· P'

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1, THREE Friday, October 10, 1975, OLD GOLD A~D BLACK ~n Legal Counseling Begins By STEVE CARPENTER without ever having had any McPherson, will be available for Staff Writer years in the undergraduate as a social exposure to a legal environment. counseling Thursday afternoons school doesn't stand a very good l one man Meyressa H. Schoonmaker, a 2-5 p.m. If a student cannot come chance of admission to law Second in a series Winston-salem attorney who was for counseling during those :omosexuallty as on career planning. school, although he has relationship. recently named assistant to the hours, he may contact Patricia demonstrated his ability through president for legal affairs at the Sidney in President James Ralph his recent higher grades. said that the ~ A large percentage of each olicy is the main university, plans to institute a Scales's office for an According to Herring, students of r freshman class which enters appointment. 'xuality'at Wake. Wake Forest is interested in counseling program for those this type are often advised to :urveyed, 18 per students who plan to enter ilie Ms. Schoonmaker said that one enroll in graduate school "just to : attending law· school upon legal profession. d to having . graduation. For various reasons, of her goals will be to helD show that they can handle the ~al relations with : many law-oriented students alter Ms. Schoonmaker said that her university students gain ad­ work." Herring said that such least once. Only mission to the best law schools students are then reconsidered their career plans by the time guidance staff, which presently in the country. She added that she for admission. : those surveyed ; they are senior~. many of them includes English instructor Dolly ine their sexuai p~s to send questionnaires to The admissions procedure for to males. other law schools to determine ·the Wake Forest Law School does their admissions standards, so not require a formal interview, , Profs Contribute that.she might have a base from according to Jeanne Wilson, which to work. admissions director. Ms. Wilson Ms. Schoonmaker is married to said that people who don't really Dr. Donald Schoonmaker, want to be lawyers should not Essays To .Book associate politics professor. apply for admission to Wake By BU.L ROEBUCK mternat1onally- known scholars. According to Buddy Herring, Forest's Law School, since the Eleven of the 15 essays are assistant dean at the Wake StaffWrlter appearing in print for the first application requires that a or Forest Law School, Wake Forest student explain why he is Three university professors, time. Four were originally has never before had any type of applying and why he wants to be velopment and bJames O'Flaherty, Timothy written in German, two of which formalized guidance program for a lawyer. n.ities are being ,,Sellner, and Robert Helm, are co­ were translated by Sellner. pre-law students. Het;ring said The undertaking received its that other major universities "If a student can't answer this douts on study ,~editing a book to be published eparation, use of impetus from a lecture have had programs of this sort question with sincerity, then his }·next January. for a nwnber of years. chances of gaining admission to th academic and i The book, Nietzsche and the O'Flaherty gave at Princeton University in 1970 to the Herring said that admission to the law school are slim," she The Clogging Club demonstrated some of their moves to the music of a blue grass band on Reyno Ida terrace Saturday afternoon. The concert lems, and other ;classical Tradition, is a was sponsored by the International Club. · Photo by Cranford f concern among ,collection of 15 essays on International Conference of law school is getting more said. . . German Scholars. The lectUre, difficult each year. Students who are mterested m available, along ~ietzsche's relationship to the later revised into. one c:if the 15 - applying for admission to the on decisions in , I, • ;various understandings of Greek "There are so many law Babcock Graduate School of g, cassettes and ,and Roman culture which have essays, showed how Nietzsche >out women's interpreted Socrates and the applicants," he said, "that we Management will find that there Carswell Norms Modified .:emerged since the beginning of have to base our admissions on is no formal guidance program .!-actualization, 'the Christian era . entire Greco-Roman tradition in ByDEBBIEOWENS The Guy T. Carswell aclcordin~ tgo nefed. h see Tom Phillips in the I . grade-point averages and LSAT available, according to a mcy, relaxation, a manner different from the StaHWriter Scholarship Program was n~omm . res men. :'lre admissions office. ol. . O'Flaherty, and Helm, along standard "golden mean­ scores." spokesman for the .school. established by the late Carswell. req!ill'ed to fill out an applicatiOn, There are presently 53 with professors Ralph Fraser and moderation" interpretation of his He estimated that fewer than According to the source, students The Committee on and his wife. Each scholar while. upper~lassmen must upperclassmen who are Carswell JStin said, "we Marcus Hester wrote essays for contemporaries. 100 of the law school's 1,200 should visit the management receives an honorary stipend of subm.1t. a written statement scholars, the majority of whom >le to work in 'the book. The other essays, O'Flaherty applicants last year were from school admissions office and Scholarships and Student Aid has 1 modified its standards, allowing $1,000andmay obtain up to $3700, explammg why they deserve the have at least a 3.4 over!ill ith the entire "This is the first time that this said, deal with Nietzsche's Wake Forest, and of those obtain a catalog. They might also grant. Interested persons may academic average. 'many Wake Forest people have response to the classical tradition appliciUlts, only about .40 were talk to the admissions director for more flexibility in choosing nunity to serve students to receive Carswell ! :coll~borated on a work being as it expressed· itself in such accepted for admission. who can acquaint them with students." The Scholarships, according to ·, he said, is that ~ublished in this country,"· said historical developments as the Because of fierce competition, some graduate students so that Tenth Muse Backs Jleadings lly advantage of ,P'Flaherty. The other Renaissance, the Enlightenment, a student who has improved his they might get a first-hand look committee chairman Dr. Fossa _January .B. Enghsh programofreadingsgivenbyDr. facilities. contributors are nationally-and and Romanticism. grades after one or two poor at the school and its programs. Raymond Kuhn. A program of poetry readings Romantic poetry will be read by Michael Roman, April B. open from 8:30 Kuhn said that in the past, a sponsored by The Tenth Muse is R. Lance Snyder on. February 12. The year's activities will be p.m. daily; student's eligibility depended now underway at Reynolds Dolly McPherson will read works concluded on May 6 with a e encouraged but entirely upon his grade point House. by bl~ck poets on March 11. reading by Jerald Bullis, writer- '. Any group , average. Under the new selection The readings are given by "Sort.mg Out Som~ Recent in-residence at the university. system, the average of those members of the English Amencan will be the nning a seminar ' I, ' Ford Proposes Tax Cut er should call students in the top ten per cent of department and by poets from 417. the school will be used as a Winston-salem. Dr. Dale Bon­ TAX CUTS • President Ford bank. In return for the hostages' spending reforms will be Rockefeller said, "you could tell guideline rather than the nette of the English faculty has proposed tax cuts Monday freedom he demanded the examined. The justices will hear him it began right here." inflexible numerical value. By planned the series to include amounting to $28 billion to take release of Patricia Hearst, Emily the case in November. using this percentile as a poetry by new, local poets and effect in 1976. He is asking that and William Harris, and Wendy · The Court will also decide RETIREMENT· Senator John 0. standard, the committee can poetry by established poets of eak . Pastore, D • R.I., announced that permit grade average Congress agree to cut federal 1Yo.o;..shim-·.ur_a,;., "'a•q~u;,;an-ti~ty:..;,o;;.f.:ig:;ol•d•, ...lw.:h:e::;:th:e:,r,:::a~w~o:;man:=~m:,::;ust~ha;:v~e~he~r different periods and cultures. spending by the same amount. he will retire in January 1977. His fluctuations in various years, and - Dr. Dillon Johnston, English Treasury Secretary William career has spanned 26 years and award the scholarships more professor, will read selections Simon said the President would World Headlines This Week six presidents. · fairly, he said. from Irish poetry Thursday. A sm veto any Congressional tax Pastore, chairman of the Joint Other factors such as reading in honor of the reduction bill if the Congress did ·Committee on Atomic Energy, contributions to college life, inauguration of The JackPine not agree to the $395 billion By KATHY LEE was the first Italian-American extracurricular activities and Press will be held November 13. ibed the facets spending ceiling. · elected to the Senate. The overall character will be Senior citizens are invited to read including their and an.airplane. powerful Democrat said his considered in addition to grades. their own work December 11. st theology. He Criticism has come from two husband's . consent to get an. greatest accomplishment was 1$ ~uhn .~d that many stud!lnts "An Evening of Shakespeare" A police officer was able to gain abortion an!f. whether a single do not rJalize -.that they are illle way that an 1 powerful Democratic House entrance through a back door-and W.QJ;'k J9.WIP'~ ..the, Ngclear .Test will be presented by Dr. Doyle tust feel that he committee chairmen, Chairman woman iinder 18 must iuive a Ban Treaty. eligible "'"to .. receive 'these capture the bandit. All hostages parent's consent for an·abortion. scholarships; ·slf'"they do not All we can tell you Is that >too, a minister AI Ullman of the House Ways and were unharmed. at he is doing Means Committee and Chairman bother to apply. The committee men who don't smoke live RESOURCES • According to a then has to select the recipients about 6 years longer than men getting them to Brock Adams of the House RALEIGH VISIT - President 'To do the work Budget Committee. new estimate issued by the U.S. on the basis of their transcripts who do smoke. MIUTARY BASES· Secretary of Ford will address a fund-raising Geological Survey, the United only. He said, "We miss some you must give dinner in Raleigh November 14 If you want someone and accept SPAIN • Violence continued to State Henry Kissinger and States has 23 per cent more coal good students that way, I'm sure. Foreign Minister Pedro Cortina during the Republican State than previously thought. Using You just can't take a mark and to help you stop smoking f evangelism is escalate in Spain with the murder Convention. your. followers, of a Basque by extreme rightists. of Spain have reached a new present technology, only 5. ~?er judge a person. What we are cigarettes, contact your It appeared the action was taken agreement to maintain four cent of the estimated 3,96B billion looking for is a scholar, not just American Cancer Society. in retaliation for the bombing major American military bases COMMEMORATION • Vt'ce- ·tons of coal can be recovered. someone with l!ood grades." was followed by deaths of three civil guardsmen. in Spain. ,. answer period. President Nelson Rockefeller Seven have lost their lives in five The White House considered · ------~-~---, ne, university days. Last week in Madrid spoke Tuesday at the 195th I EMPLOYMENT I ; Ralph Scales retention of the bases essential to anniversary of the Battle of I · I ! thousands of Spaniards staged a U.S. defense. a steward of a rally in support of General. KingsMountain,N.C.In1780,900 1 QP. PQRJUNIJY I AMERICAN stitution, should Americans volunteers fought and I 1 CANCER SOCIETY Franco during which three SUPREME COURT - The beat a British force under Colonel I I ;tin movements policemen were killed. •This faet takPn from a n•st•art·h ern religions. Supreme Court will review Patrick Ferguson. stud\' is hOo!«<•d un tlH• smok<•!· said generally 1 campaign reform in its 1975-76 "If a foreigner were to ask you I Student Security Officer I \\'hi; at a~t> 2fJ smukt•s al•oul otto be afraid of '· In Barcelona Tuesday term. The constitutionality of where a great nation began," ,I 1 a pat'k and a half of t of ideas," but thousands demonstrated, 1 Approximately 16 Hours Per Week 1 ci,.;an•ttt•s ada) .. d remembering started the .~-~~~~ ¥~~~=~=~=~11 D~g~ad~icY~fucl~g ••• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~ pMoiDweDr.LE EAST· The Senatent·dg ntl\p~ W 1 Holidays. Nights and Week-ends 1 Foreign Relations Committee TOP LP'S I Duty. I The fever that won't break: IOW8U'Md agreed Tuesday to send 200 I Apply: Placement Office, I iDabopJtn& American technicians to the Sinai This week for I I THE RISING COST OFA MEDICAL EDUCATION. to help monitor the interim $6.98 LP'S- $4.99 only$4.49 : I RM 118 Reynolda Hall 1 Art Gar.funkel· Break Away agreement between Egypt and $7 98 TAPES $5 99 I Like most things. the cost of Israel .. Final authorization by · - · Paul Simon- Still Alive I An Equal Opportunity Employer .J attending medical school ~· ,Congress is expected soon. HEADGEAR & CLOTHES OtherTopLP's L--•-••••--•••••-••--• has risen sharply over the last eautiful STRIKE • The nearly 900 Kansas Dave Mason· Solit Coconut decade. To many RIDGETOP ~ Bonnie Raitt· H.ome Plate medical students for the City firemen whQ had been on \ Leo Kottke- Chewing Pine I Missy strike four days returned to work that cost repre· Cl ~i Montrose- Warner Bros. sents a heavy ner Tuesday. Eight hundred t:HURTON ST. ~ Presents volunteers and National Herbie Hancock- Manchild burden. a financial ·. ~? Linda Ronstadt­ problem thai can · NAY Guardsmen have been fighting PfTtlrS CREEIC "KW. Prisoner in Disquise affecl your con­ the fires. The firemen are Kiss- Alive centration. PING seeking pay parity with the Graham Edge- Kick off your II needn'l be . SOUTH. that way. The police. Muddy Boots WINSTON SALEM Armed Forces TER Health Professions Night 'Til 9 -· A gunman Scholarship Program ~ugh Friday held ten people hostage for eight Hours: 10 A.M. - 10 P.M. Daily was originated to :0 to 5:30 hours Monday in a New York City tree you from those .. worries. Men and women who qualify will have the cosls of ====~·' their medical educa­ tion covered, and }' will also receive a ,; substantial monlhly ly allowance. " The program offers STALEY'S more than tuition and salary; it offers you the n. opportunily to begin Open Hearth Restaurant your practice under very Armed Forces Health Core favorable conditions. As a health care officer in DEDICATED TO HEALTH CARE AND Reynolda Road lhe military branch of your choice. you'll find THE PEOPLE Vi!HO PRACTICE IT yourself with responsibiiities fully 1n keeping with your training, and wilh the time and opportumty lo ~ -::::-::.;;-::-: :-::;: ~.-;:-,------:: --.;.~.; i observe a full of medical specialties. I •·.. ::;· ·: .,,, I The Favorite of WFU Students! When you decide on lhe specially you wish lo I ,... ,...... '. ·.. ~. , ,.. -.... , ,...... I pursue. you may find yourself taking those •.·•. 1.. , ... 1 •.· '" .•• : ·•_,.,, ... ,, .• :·:,c· lOIC" ~~ graduate medical studies at one of our many :. •": -· - i :. 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I · · - 1- : , ••• ",·· ::. , l WE WELCOME YOUR BUSINESS 'AN INir.'OQUCTIQt,: hJ J,~f -,iUCl '-'r 1•1:{·\ ·f. ;t~.,::.,., -~."'!~-. :--~~:J·a..... ---····1 PU£lL1ShE D B'!'lE.'\ & FtBil.".f r, __ fHILJ.\Df l Plitt.. L~·~~~,~-~-·~·_:_'~:.~:·.:.:::::·: __ j PAGE FOt"H Friday, (ktobl'r 10, 19;:,, OLD GOLD AND BLACK I lark PIRG· Ad Unethical the public interest. And thus with no DEBORAH RICHARDSON When the consumer advocate's ethics take SCOTI BOTIENUS a · vacation, who's going to protect Joe monetary gain in the offing, it is interesting to Editor NANCY CONRADS consider just how someone having trouble Business Managers · Sixpack's interests from the advocate himself? making ends meet could find the solution to LECTl CHARLES JOHNSON his financial worries by volunteering his Managing Editor Those of us who went through Reynolda Collect RICHARD CARLSON Hall's main entrance awake last week were spare time to PIRG instead of selling it CONNIE COLE JULIA DRAKE asking ourselves that question: PIRG now somewhere else. Twenti BRIAN ECKERT MARK LEUCHTENBERGER claims on its posters that participation in a Equipr Associate Editors The fact is that the poster sought consumer .Reyno! Assistant Editors motivation by appeal to fear, in this case fear of financial distress. Its conclusion that one PLAN " ... and the truth shall make you free." might ease his money woes by volunteering Rubber Hose time to PIRG is unjustified at best and sponso unethical at worst. ' Hall w Wake fo'orest University, Winston-salem, North Carolina By BRIAN ECKERT That such an advertisement could originate . from a source which· claims authority in PSYCI consumer protection (and that includes profes~ unit pricing survey is the answer to financial protection from false and misleading and ed troubles. advertisements) implies one of two things: "Worried about prices?" the ad asks with presen -that PIRG is unethical in its practices and status Career Opportunities the sincerity of a midwestern medicine show thus unqualified to receive student financial salesman. "Having trouble making ends support; or, · psycho You're gonna rnelt down meet? - that PIRG's members are careless in . "Then NC PIRG has just the thing for you," their position of trust and thus unqualified to WORSI At a school like Wake Forest The appointment of an assistant to 1t announces. And with all the insight of the receive student financial support. which provides a liberal arts the president for law school coun­ I +ell ya! Wizard of Oz, it counsels passers-by to "get Perhaps the university chapter of PIRG Islandl background as opposed to training seling is another administrative involved with the unit pricing survey." should clean up its own small-time Madison for a job or profession, the student Now, NC PIRG does not hire Its Avenue tactics before seeking to straighten LAB T effort to aid students in attaining investigators. They are volunteers who act in theatre must take it upon himself to plan for out the world's. their' goals after they leave the most f~ his career. It is very tempting to university. The university's obvious Thursd limit one's concentration now to concern for providing the student 25 cent graduating with distinction, and with more than a well-rounded holders worry about the job market after education is evident in the provision school is safely ended. But, as many of these services. MUSEl graduates have already discovered anthroJ for themselves, the job market Many administrators feel that Big Governme!l_t_l'_'!J!. Jli:.JilJ~~~wo" ··· "Arche , simply does not open up because one perhaps some university students An interesting filler story - the kind which saw fit· to close down "Steve's Bike have enough. are going on to graduate school newspapers run that serves both to plug Shop" for having no license to operate, just The various government agencies and Thursd · has completed college successfully. Village because they don't know where else ~oles in the layout and to add a touch of From the Soapbox like scores of agencies nationwide which commissions, of course, will want to know The university is doing all it can to lightness to the page- came from Van Nuys, regulate America's businesses, is of itself a what recourse Steve Shalita's "wronged" to turn. With approximately one California, over the UPI wire last week. By BILL BROWN legislative, executive, and judicial body; employe would have had available to him had CU FL help the student actually plan a third of a graduating class going to The article told of a businessman, Steve unlike our federal govenunent, it is a body there· not been the Labor Relations Board, Sunday career rather than fall into a job graduate school, this seems a Shalita, and the quandary he faced in dealing devoid of checks and balances on itself. Thus, and the question is indeed a valid one. The (even this is lucky) after Farme1 reasonable , assumption. Joseph with a "goofing off" employe who also Shop," and - now get ready - be is only 11 the Labor Relations Board makes its own answer to the problem lies in the fact that the Flows 1 graduation. The psych center and Bumbrey, director of placement and happened to be his friend. Steve, realizing years old! Now does that not make thP. entire regulations, exercises the power of enforcement of contracts is one of the very the placement office ca:Q help guide career development, said that grad that his position as a business administrator nauseating mess hilarious? encorcement, and decides the guilt or few powers to which a just state may have demanded that matters such as this be innocence of those accused of violating its access; thus, any employe who feels that his a student all the way through finding school is a bad alternative for No, the fact that the businessman who has edicts - as well as assigning and collecting employment contract has been violated resolved from a position of total harassed by an agency of the State of his vocational interest to in­ someone who doesn't know what he fines in cases where "guilty" is the verdict. should turn to the courts for a resolution of the '( disinterestedness, did. the textbook· terviewing with potential em­ California was only 11 years old does not wants to do. He said that often management thing and fired the employe - make the story hilarious -nor does that fact The people of this country should conflict. At the bar, and only at the bar, is due ployers. Co-ordinator of Student students who can't get a job with · though a sensitive heart did insist that fair make Steve Shalita's brush with bureaucracy vehemently oppose government agencies process of law a workable ideal. If you which regulate American businesses, simply Little Steve Shalita, then, has undergone an 1 discrimi Services David Hills estimated that their undergraduate degrees go on severance pay accompany the dismissal. "cute," "trivial," or "light." Rather, this 1 because such regulation is imposed at our oppressive experience of unjust government movie COl the psych center alone offers $100- Well, the ex-employe (and, it should be account of a child's industrious efforts being to get a Master's degree in the same expense, "we" being the consuming public. bureaucracy. He was forced, without trial, to th~ year $200 worth of career counseling free subject and then wonder why they added, the ex-friend) felt that more quelled by state decree makes for dreary, depressing readling. 'fhe cost of a business of obtaining licenses, pay to his former employe one pair of numerou: of charge to the student. The remuneration was due him and he filed a call the still can't find a .iob. complaint to that effect with the Labor Poignancy is a characteristic of the story as complying with govenunent operational handlebars (in addition to the original placement office too, by bringing Regardless, of whether he attends well, however; the unjust, oppressive nature requireme~ts, and processing the deluge of sever~ce pay o~ $6) and t~ clos~ down for Televisio Relations Board of California. That agency, qtliz is interviewers to the school, offers a graduate school or not, at some po~t in turn, sent an inspector to the Shalita of state (and federal) agencies which exert bureaucratic paper work is not absorbed by good his small btcycle repa1r busmess. control over private enterprise is made the business itself (as indeed it should not be), He has a darkroom ~ow where ~e bi!te shop memory substantial savings in time, effort, the student is going to have to begm business, forced a payment which satisfied Moments and financial expenses to the the complaining party, and shut down the painfully clear by the fact that the oppressed but is reflected in the price of the commodity used t? be, and he IS dev~lopmg film for plans for a career. The university or service offered on the market. The greater peop~e m th~ area; no longer IS there a charge great. student. Career Awareness Week, small operation - all in one smooth, swift, in this case is a pre-adolescent child. This is can only do so much. And apparently bureaucratic sweep. not another of those efforts by a guardian the regulation, the more unbearable the for his semces. sponsored by the office this week, students aren't taking full Most readers are probably still searching government to make some massive price. Nor is all the cost of government "I learned all a!Jout that stuff," he says. WhenJ1 also enabled students to talk to advantage of the opportunities the for the "punch line" that makes this story the corporation "responsive" to the people; it is interference in business borne at the check- What Steve Shal1ta learned, he learned not be blown people already in their field. school offers. humorous account it was intended to be. Here the atrocity of a little boy, repairing bicycles out line. Taxes are collected to finance the by an education in the principles of business, "WhiteHt it is, delivered in true comic style: Steve paper work, public hearings, buildings, but by an indoct~ation to !he ab~olutism of at a profit, being told that he must do so no A. "Uh· Shalita owned and operated "Steve's Bi!l:e , . longer...... , transportation· fleets, and countless oth~r govenunent ag~n~1es. Such 1s a painf111.leS;Son elements that make up a modem, solid, ~or a young, stnvmg entrepreneur to recetve.

... ,. Mor4 Letters to the Editor ..... ::.

Professor Calls Ray's Speech 'Smooth' I am Sl administl Also, contrary to Dr. Ray's claim that solar On the evening of October 6, Dr. Dixy Lee billion dollars to 280 billion. This was the Ferry, Dr. Ray replied, with some show of like to at least point to a few more outstanding think some clues can be found in her Industry Ray presented a smooth, two-hour study that said that an area the size of the errors lest they go unchallenged. energy is impractical or not available, many economic statements, such as the statement to have t anger at me, that there had been no news propaganda talk arguing for the expansion of state of could be contaminated. Dr. Ray started her talk by referring to the companies have started making solar that the U.S. can not afford to pay for im­ speaker I nuclear generated power. I regret that this This report was suppressed by the AEC until blackout. I would like to quote from an article collectors in the last year. In fact, several ported oil. What does that mean? Do we not Indepem entitled "16 Hours of Nuclear Mayham- How number of scientists who had signed a petition topic was not presented in the form of a 1973 when it was finally released under the supporting nuclear power. While I think that solar water beaters are operating . in the have enough dollars? Will the Arabs buy Power ( We Almost Lost Alabama" on the first page of debate so that members of the community threat of a Freedom of Information suit. this kind of numbers game is futile, it should Winston.Salem area. She quoted a figure of 13 more than we can produce? This kind of together) could have the opportunity to hear both sides the 2nd section of the Tribune of be pointed out that several thousand leading per cent efficiency. I am told that NASA has statement is never heard from economists, Wake Fo1 of the arguments and come to their own Dixy Lee Ray repeatedly assured her August 31, 1975. "The resulting fire, which some collectors operating at over 80 per cent only politicians with vested interests. In fact, dollars. audience that the reactors are safe beyond scientists, also including Nobel Loriates, conclusions. Since only the pro nuclear took place last March 22, came close to signed a petition recently questioning nuclear efficiency. Because solar energy collectors a majority of U.S. oil does not even come from LasUy, industry side was presented, I would like to any reasonable question, and that the safety causing a major accident at the TV A Plant, power and calling for a re-examination of the are not consuming a non-renewable resource, the Middle East. This is the third rhetoric of number ask to be allowed to answer some of Dr. Ray's questions are being raised by misguided, an accident which could have resulted in the efficiency comparisons are irrelevant as well Nixon's Operation Independence. It was officials l ignorant people who do not understand the nuclear program. Additionally, about 25 per assertions in your newspaper. deaths of thousands of people and could have cent of the U.S. Senate is co-sponsoring a bill as misleading. It is this kind of misleading nonsense when the Nixon administration Dr. Ray technology. In 1973, an internal AE_C task caused the radiation contamination of a large by Senator Gravel, calling for a complete figure which it is unscrupulous to present to proposed it, and it is still nonsense. Basically, matters the argument depends on bad economics First, I would like to point out th~t Dr. Ray force completed a study on the Commission's part of Alabama and Tennessee. moratorium on the building of nuclear plants. an audience in which there is likely to be no individua .efforts to provide safe reactors. I would like to one who knows better. heavily loaded with emotional appeals as - from tl is not a disinterested observer m energy "The fire has cast doubt on the reliability of matters, but devotes a considerable amount quote the conclusion of the original version of Among other high points of her talk was the highlighted in Dr. Ray's concluding remarks individua this reiJOrt which the AEC also tried to safety systems on the 53 nuclear plants statement that using up coal resources would Dixy Lee Ray's economics made the that the future health of the United States hands of of her energies to promoting nuclear power. already operating in the United States and the She is presently a director of an organization suppress. "The large number of reactor be an unacceptable legacy to leave future biggest impression on me, by being virtually Economy, employment, and our standard of officials. ' incidents, couples with the fact that many of 75 under construction. An investigation is generations. On the other hand, she does not entirely wrong. Her dislike of coal and living all depend on the growth of nuclear or not to called Americans for Energy Independence. underway to determine whether major design power. (She also, and quite appropriately, did This organization proportedly was formed to them had real safety significance, were mind leaving them nuclear wastes which will favoring of nuclear power showed in her individua generic in nature, and were not identified changes, costing billions of dollars, will be amount to about 10 million pounds of statements that nuclear generation of mention the need for courage in developing bureaucr: encourage all forms of energy development, necessary to improve nuclear plant safety. the nuclear program.) . but in recent weeks, its Chairman, Admiral during normal design fabrication, erection, plutonium alone by the year 2000. Plutonium electricity is cheaper than coal. This is individua and pre-operational testing phases, raises a Immediately after the fire, the TV A and the is one of the most poisonous deadly simply not true when the vastly greater Those Operation Independence argum~nts Zumwalt, and a number of the staff have U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission resigned. Several of these ex-staff members series question regarding the current review substances ever known to man. It has a half capital cost of the nuclear plants is included are based on pseudo-economic problems, and inspection practices both on the part of imposed a tight news blackout. Details were life of 24,000 years and must be stored for in the comparison instead of just the which are inevitably conjured up by someone have charged that the organization is no more withheld for four months." than a front for the nuclear power industry. the nuclear industry and the A.E.C." 500,000 years until it is safe to handle. By difference in fuel cost. Dr. Ray specifically like Dr. Ray whose fields of technical s~ Of A.E.I.'s $200,000 budget, Westinghouse comparison, the last ice age was about 10,000 referred to the saving that had been realized competence do not include any economics. Dr. Ray, in her talk, stated that it was Dr. Ray also told her audience that safety by Coounonwealth Edison due to its nuclear The ones who stand to gain from such a and General Electric, the two major worries were no longer necessary because the years ago. The fact is that there is now no obvious that the lack of serious accidents was operational waste disposal method or facility plants. In fact, last year Commonwealth program are not the American people, but (] builders of nuclear reactors, have each g1ven due to inherent safety and certainly "not to recent Rasmussen report showed that the "$25,000. The remaining $150,000 has come for the commercial nuclear program. It is not Edison's nuclear generation cost it more than only the big oil companies and the nuclear luck." I would like to contrast this assertion probability of an accident was minute. The enough to produce the stuff first with Dixy did its coal generation. power industry and related construction mostly from public utilities. A.E.I. 's with that in a suppressed AEC report. This small probability of a serious accident secretary, Mr. Peabody, is a registered Lee Ray's blithe assurance that we will business section, October 5, 1975, page 1, unions. This gain to an already wealthy few s report was written by the AEC in 1969 and predicted in the Rasmussen report is not an "come up with something." discusses the Utilities industry's move away will be paid for out of everyone's pockets in lobbyist for Westinghouse! tilled "Operating Errors." The conclusion reassuring as Dixy Lee Ray would have us Over from nuclear power in an article, "Is Nuclear the form of vastly higher energy prices. In fello\1 reads as follows. "In the recent past, there believe. '1'hi.r! report is based on a statistical Speaking of coal, on several occasions Dixy Power too costly?". For that matter, addition to this blatent transfer of wealth The Atomic Energy Commission that was have been a number of occurrences at method that was discarded by NASA after it Lee Ray referred to the hindering of coal from the non-rich to the rich can be added the these chaired by Dr. Ray was recently split into two Commonwealth Edison devotes several pages reactors where human error resulted in predicted a theoretical failure ~ate of 1 in production by the environmentalists. She of its 1974 "Report to Stockholders" to additional rip-off in the form of added tax UNC groups after it became clear that the ~ttempt undesirable situations. None of the situations 10,000 for a rocket engine which when tested seemed to imply that the environmentalists burdens to pay for schemes like the recently at having the same agency responsible for explaining its problems with nuclear power. 1127! represented a threat to the health and safety failed four times in 100 tests. were virtually preventing coal mining. The There is more, but I think that I have announced federal plan to give away 100 both regulating and promoting nuclear power of the public. The absence of more serious Dixy Lee Ray's talk was so full of sad fact is that Dr. Ray's friend, President billion dollars to the energy industry. This is 0 Ia had caused the regulatory aspect to suffer. established that Dr. Ray did present us with a effects is largely the result of good luck." innuendoes and slight distortions that a Ford, vetoed the recent bill that would have less-than-impartial discussion on energy. The in addition to the ·already substantial discussion of them all is impossible in limited regulated strip mining and made the coal question remains, why? What exactly did subsidies given the nuclear sector. --· Numerous stories have appeared in the The Price-Anderson Act places limits on the space. The above examples give, I think, an companies pay to repair the damage they national press about the suppression of safety Dizy Lee Ray say? If her talk was not about I PLEI financial liability of utilities using nuclear indication of the type of distortion. I would caused. energy alternatives, what was it about? I Continued on Page 5 reports by the AEC. Indeed, this was reactors. It is considered necessary to the I UNC discussed at length at public hearings before industry because the nuclear plants are not the AEC was disbanded. Dixy Lee Ray tried considered safe enough to insure. Could it be ~~~~~~~~ I NamE to deny the entire problem when asked about that Dr. Ray was being somewhat less than it. Dr. Ray.,responded to the question by candid? When a member of the audience ~- I Addr' referring to an outdated study done in 1956, asked her about the accident at Brown's City_ which estimated that the worst possible Ferry Plant last spring, she dismissed it as a I I (Califc accident at a nuclear reactor could kill 3,400 fire. The "fire" at Brown's Ferry was the people and injure 43,000. She did not mention most serious accident yet, in the largest L--· that this 1956 report was repeated by the AEC nuclear power plant in the U.S. The reactor in 1965. The 1965 study found that a major went out of control and the safety procedures reactor accident could kill as many as 45,000 were inoperable due to the fire. When I asked people, with property damage of from 17 her about the news blackout on Brown's 1. • p. Founded January 15, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest University, Old Gold and • c: Blaci< is published each Friday during the school year except during examination, summer and, .--~-~- .. _ holiday periods as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board. Mailed each week. Members .. - -- -- . ... -~. ·- N of the Associated Collegiate Press, Representpd for National Advertising by National Educational - ·.. . - Advertisihg Serv;ce, Inc. Subscription rate: $6.00 Second class postage paid, Winston-Salem, N.C. From 3579 should 'le mailed to Box 7567, Reynalda Station, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109. Printed by Community Press, Incorporated, King, N.C. • G th no tingto rouble ~ion to LECTURE·· Dr. Joshua Taylor, director of the National weapOns. Now just where is the lg his Collection of Fine Arts, will speak on "The Art of the Not long ago I flew to Geneva to The British representative The Syrian stood up again. then th~ American stood up. "I'd yelled, "We must extennlnate ing it listen in on the first t and llkely big deal? What's everybody so up raised his hand. "Excuse me," he "That's something else. We got like to know when the price of the Israel before we talk about oil Twenties" at the unveiling of the painting "Dough Boys' last)' meeting of the International ·in thl! Jir about~" began, "but I really ... " no brass tacks! Or steel tacks! Or crude oil will go down." prices!" Equipment" by Charles Meurer tonight at 8 p.m. in Delegation of Industrial a.11d Oil At that the delegate from Syria "Yes, you may go to the any kind of tacks, for that Blithely, the Egyptian delegate Someone whispered, "I think :swner Reynolda House. Trading States, usually referred stood up, "Everybody is up in the bathroom," said the Kuwaiti. matter! And tacks are vital to our turned and replied, "I'd like to the CIA ought to extennlnate sefear to by its acronym, IDIOTS. alr but my air force. We have no "No," continued the Briton. "I war effort. Anybody knows that know when your aid to Israel will Amin." at one 'lbe purpose of the conference you got to have tacks to fight, go down." The American pointed at the ;eering PLANT SALE-- Tri-B~ta, biology honor society will "That's not fair," pointed out ·sponsor a plant sale in the greenhouse behind Wi~ston was "to reach a common because that is how you mark a Arabs. "If you raise the price, we t, and understanding between the oil· map. You give us brass tacks and the American. "We have treaty won't ship you any nuclear power Hall tomorrow 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. consuming and the oil-producing Some t..:ommon Sensing we will give you oil." obligations." plants, heavy machinery, or "Well, then," countered the lginate states, for the further bettennent Before anybody could make a computer parts. And no more ~SYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIUM-· Dr. Phyllis A. Katz of mankind," or some similar By DON SENSING reply, Idi Amin wandered in. Egyptian, "how does gasoline at American cigarettes!" ity in ballyhoo like that. Actually, this?" this $1.10 per gallon sound?" :eludes professor of education at City University of New York "What's he asked. "Is "No American cigarettes!" everyone was out to make a buck the UN?" "Okay, we'll cut out the deal on exclaimed the Arabs, shocked. !a ding and editor of Sex Roles: A Journal of Research will at the expense of everyone else. hings: "No. This is the first annual the Pershing missiles if you don't "And that aih't all, buster. No present "Sex roles and sex stereotypes: the cui-rent The delegate from Saudi planes!" meant to say that this is really meeting of the IDIOTS." raise the price of oil for the next more Kissinger diplomacy!" 'esand status of research," Wednesd~y at 3:45 p.m. in the Arabia opened the meeting. 1ancial Then the Israeli delegate stood getting us nowhere. We ought to "The IDlOTS?" Amin three days." "We give!" shouted the Arabs. psychology lounge, room 236, Winston Hall. "Gentlemen, let us not kid up and yelled at the Syrian, "You be getting down to brass tacks." exclaimed. "Great! I fit right Shaking my head, I left for the ourselves. We got oil. You want have no pilots to fly them, so what "I quite agree," concurred the into that." "Wait a minute!" wailed the airport, riding in a British car ess in oil. You got weapons. We want Iranian. "You can't do that. I fied to do you care?" American. Several people shrugged and powered by Arab oil, with a WORSHIP SERIES- "News From Across the Sea, Not have to raise the price of oil so we Japanese tape player. I was Island News" Thursday at 11 a.m. in Davis Chapel. PffiG can pay for our Bell helicopters." smoking American tobacco in .an ''And we have to raise the price adison LAB THEATRE·· "Return to Dr. Suess," a reader's Italian made pipe, an~ wonde~g ighten so we can pay for our F·14 if any terrorists w1th Russ181l theatre adaption of three of the noted children's author's Whitmore Plays Truman fighters," said the Saudi rifles would shoot at me. Arabian. most famous stories, will be presented Wednesday and enjoyed much sucC1lss at the . Whitmore comers the qualities He offers bits of Independence, Thursday at 7:15 p.m. Admission is 50 cents for adults, By STEVE FUTRELL The Soviet delegate started Staff Writer height of the nostalgia boom. and idiosyncrasies of the man - Missouri wisdom and hwnor and pounding his shoe on the table, 25 cents for children, and free for theatre season ticket However, because of poor the pursed lips, the constant keep~ the viewer comfortable "The peace-loving people of the Terisio Pignatti holders. 'lbe advertisement says that filming and sound difficulties, the energy, the pointing finger, and with his easy affability. He lights Soviet Union are repelled at the James Whitmore is Harry movie comes off as the filming of little-boy likeabillty that made upon the American psyche and massive arms trade going on a stage production. The him the giant he was. He weaves defends its former simplicity and • \ ,, ' MUSEUM OF MAN SERIES-- Dr. Ned Woodall of the Truman. Margaret Truman says between the imperialist capitalist ~ anthropology department will present the program that James Whitmore is her inappropriate audience in and out of his reminiscences of universality. nations." To Give Lecture father. And after seeing James responses, muffled bits of days back in "Missourah," his Truman's stories about his wife "Hey Ivan," yelled the Libyan, :es we "Archeological Research in the American Southwest," Whitmore in "Give 'Em Hell, speeches and lighting Senate speeches, and days of the Bess, the "Boss," mix with those "where are those MIG 25's you Thursday at 7:30p.m. in the Museum of Man, Reynolda Harry!", one might also believe irregularities leave a cinema Presidency with "you are there" about his family of "lightfoot s and promised? And what about the Village. that he is the man himself. audience uncomfortable. reality. Baptists" to assure one that Sagger missiles and tanks that On Italian Artist . know A veteran actor who is known It is a history lesson like no though he would fight to the death mged" A popular stage production last were supposed to be delivered year, the one-man show was for his recent WUl Rogers other, as he speaks of his history- to defend the American dream last year?" imhad CU FLICKS-- "Deliverance," today, tomorrow and performance, Whitmore. guides making decisions and certain ideals, he is wise enough not to Dr. Terisio Pignatti, director of filmed before a live audience After awhile a recess was Board, Sunday at 7:30 and 9:30p.m. (admission 50 cents). "The with the hope of giving viewers in the reliving of the people who affected them. He take \hem too seriously. the university art program in e. The Farmer's Daughter," Monday at 8 p.m. "And Quiet major incidences of Truman's quips about Churchill's drinking, Towards the end of the film, he called and the Industrial nation's Venice, will give a lecture on the immediacy to this tour de force. delegates went outside to plan tat the Flows the Don," Wednesday at 8 p.m. Written by Samuel Culler, it life. defends Hoover as an inheritor of recalls '·his ''whistlestop Italian Renaissance artist Titian every the Depression, and rails against campaign" of 1~48 as the their strategy. Thursday at 8 p.m. in DeTamble When they came back inside, r have Senator Joseph McCarthy and his "happiest time of my life.~· As he Auditorium. tat his Committee on Un·American digs at the Republican Party and the chairman of the oil men Plgnatti has published widely lola ted Activities. its Presidential candidate Tom announced, "Tomorrow the price on Italian artists such as of crude goes up $11 per barrel." 1of the 'Great Moments' Relived Perhaps his most popular dig Dewey, he speaks of the need for Girogione and Titian, and is an is due ·is at that "little Congressman faith - faith in ourselves as "Okay then," shot back the If you consider yourself a regards to Broadway." C. "Eat strep throat in an attempt .at detective who was confiiled to:-A. Frenciunan, "the price of Mirage authority on all aspects of A skateboard. B. A portable from California," . people, faith in the government Venetian art. He has written one an II discriminating television or your heart out KiiJg_,Faisal." D. biological warfare by Tony Truman says, "Richard is a lying as a workable system, and faith fighters goes up six million . toilet. C. A wheelchair. D. A several guide books to the art nment movie connoisseur, no doubt over "Is this the eM oi Rico?" Bennett. C. Killed by Ernest son-of-a-bitch; if he ever caught in our ideals as worthy of the dollars apiece." monuments of Venice, and has ial, to th\! years you have stored up In the movie "From Here to Borgnine. D. Made to eat a yellow mental insittution. himself telling the truth, he'd tell people and the system they nwnerous memories of what we In the film "The Caine Mutiny" "The price still goes up $11 per been closely associated with the air of Eternity" Frank Sinatra played snowball by a reporter from the a lie just to keep his hand in." represent. Pointing to the voting Correr · and the city museums riginal call the "Great Moments of Toronto Star. Humphrey Bogart as Captain barrel." Perhaps the most moving and · booth, he says, "Without that, it'd "Ah, then," said the Japanese, there. iVIl for Television and Movies." This Queeg is accused of: A. Wearing most effective moment of the all be down the drain." quiz is designed to test your leotards. B. Shoving toothpicks "we raise price of stereo systems Pignatti has. lectured at maior l. play-film is at the end of the first On that same train tour, he 3000 per cent." universities and museums in this eshop memory and see if those "Great Den of Iniquity up his nose. C. Not changing bis act when he flashes back to a talks about the saying "Give 'em Moments" really were all that underwear for three months. D. · "It still goes up." country, as well as in Europe, rn for local election in which the Ku hell, Harry!" He says, "I don't and his visit to Wake Forest is barge great. Being paranoid. "I say, if you do that, we'll not Klux Klan threatened his life give 'em hell. I just tell the truth let Rolls-Royce sell you any more part of a current lecture series in By MIKE SPRAG INS Batman's sidekick was: A. because of bis stance on civil on 'em, and that makes it seem When James Cagney is about to Walter Cronkite. B. Ed limousines." the United States. ;ays. rights. Whitmore sizzles here, as like hell!" There will be an informal ~d not be blown up with an oil tank in McMahon. C. Robin. D. Wllliam The Arab faltered a moment at he polemicizes their so-called · "Give 'Em Hell, Harry!" is that, but remained resolute. reception after the lecture in iness, \" "White Heat" his last words are: an Italian soldier; Maggie,, who In the television series "Star F · Buckley. "Invisible kingdom" as one of presently showing at Reynolda DeTamble lobby. smof ~ was: A. Forced to eat two tons of Trek" a crew of more than 400 Superman was deathly afraid Idi Amin stood up again and '; A. "Uh·oh!" B. "Give my fear and stupidity. Cinema 2. Admission is $3.00. lesson Ragu by Enio Stuarti. B. Given people fly through space in: •. A of: A. ~acking into .a doorknob. i:::::!:::::::::::;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~;;;::::::::;::::::;::;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::§::::::;:;:::;:;:::::::: c:eive. · · . · Honda Civic. B. A telephone B. Movmg to . C. Frank N ~ More Letters · · ·- .. ·--- - -··· ·------booth, c.... The starsbip..!!f:itanie,!!- ...sin&tra._Jk~nJ~...... ~-- ; .. '!?"·------·-~-·--· .. --~ - -~- --~·-·------~-·~··--··. '!~: -- D. 'lbe "Enterprise." .In the ~vie Jaws Martha s N M IS · ' John Wayne played a fat, aging Vmeyard a~cked by: A. IN IM cowboy in the film: A.. "True flound~. B. S~ Creole. C. A X ~ ~ Grit." B. "Rio Bravo." c. crab With a thyroid condition. D. H M 'Smooth Speech .N M "Cowboys." D. All of the above. A shark. In the film "The Petrified Howdy Doody was: A. A I I cont. from p. 4 be exposed to mortal risk, no Forest" Lauren Bacall tells puppet. B. A plumber. ~· A . ~ I I matter how small, in order to Humphrey Bogart she won't newscaster for ABC. D. An idiot. H ~ I am sure that either the Ford marry him unless he: A. Quits In the movie "Good Earth" prote.ct the profits of some ~ administration or the. Nuclear industry is a blatant example of wearing leotards. B. Takes a Paul Muni prevents a locust .~ '~ .~ « 11 her Industry would have been happy the worst aspects of totalitarian shower. C. Changes his att:-ck by: A. P~ting garlic. B. ~ ~ ement to have the chance to provide a government, and a denial of the underwear. D. Goes honest.· Us~g RAID. C. ~~gJng ~chorus t I 1r im· speaker to argue for Operation entire tradition of western In the movie "Gone With the of ' Rose Marie. D. Building a X ~ ~e not Independence and · Nuclear hwnanistic values. This bothers Wind" Clark Gable plays the fire wall. ~ ~ Q ~ ; buy Power (the two seem to go me more than any of the factual dashing: A. Calvin Coolidge. B. In the movie "Psycho" a » ~ ~ nd of together), without charging the distortions in Dixy Lee Ray's Truman Capote. C. Earl Butz. D. woman is murdered in a thrilling NX ~ mists, Wake Forest College Union 1,500 presentation. Rhett Butler. scene that takes place in: A. A X ~ 1fact, dollars. I would like to suggest that in In the TV show "Ironside" used car lot. B. The back seat of a ~from Lastly, I find it chilling that a the future when the College Union Raymon_!l Burr P?rtrayed a Vega. C. The shower. D. The Pit. 1ric of number of high government wants to bring in. a proponent of was officials and recent ofricials like one side of a highly controversial ration Dr. Ray are proposing that issue, that in the interest of .cally, matters concerning an fairness and in the spirit of an omics individual's safety be taken away institution devoted to the pursuit STEVE'S lis as from the purview of the of truth, invite at the same time a narks individual and placed in the representative of the opposing Italian Ristorante States hands of a panel of Government point of view and structure the ard of officials. This right to take a risk event as a forma! debate or Best in Italian Food 1clear or not to take a risk is a basic symposium. SPAGHETTI and PIZZA ly, did individual right. For government ~ N loping bureaucrats ·to decide that an Mlles 0. Bidwell Also An American Menu ·, individual citizen or citizens will J)ept.of~onoJDJcs ments )lems, Open 11:00 A.M.· 10:00 P.M. :neone CLOSED SUNDAYS 8 N N hnical 112 Oakwood Drive i I 33.,500.,000 ~ ~ >mics. ~ I uch a Across From Thruway Shopping Center NX •N e, but Unelaiuted ~ ~ ~clear uction 1y few Seholarships ~~-~... ~.------·1 Save up to $3.00! I :ets in N N Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and N N es. In fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Current list of N N vealth X X edthe these sources researched and compiled as of Sept. 15, 1975. The Nearest d tax UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS ~ently 11275 Massachusetts Ave., , CA 90025 Cleaner To I Major label LP' s! Top artists! I y 100 ~ ~ 'his is 0 I am enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling. Wake Forest antial 1!11 Many, many selections in this special purchase. Classics included! ll~ ~ ~ 1 ------PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF · 1 I ~ I UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS SOURCES TO: I 1 DAY 1\11 Hundreds of records! Come early for best selection! 1~~! ~ ~ ~ M I Name I SERVICE ~ ~ I I « ~ I Address I TUES.-SAT. I City State Zip I 111~ Sale starts today! ~li ·:·:N :::.~ •• (California residents please add 6% sales tax. J - •• ....» ..~...

L~------~ 1 FREE EISENHOWER S.llver J)ollar For Each four Dollars Dry Cleaning brought I COLLEGE BOOK STORE I in Tues., Wed. or Thurs. 1j1l llll Lighthouse Grill M A • Ask The Ones That Eat With Us 5 Shirts Folded or On • Good Food at Economical Prices Hangers for $1.75 I Get your favorites at Big I More Bread etc. C !- ~ At No Extra Charge · ~ . 2885 Reynolda Road • Quick Service Comer of Burke and Brookstown Streets Directly Across From Reynolda Manor ONE BLOCK FROM SEARS t,_,~,.;-;««<'»»"'"'*""'""~''"~!~«<~~!!!!~,!'X<~%X;;>\>><<<""*''"'~~%'='>1 SIX Friday, October 10, 1975, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Deacs Look or2nd Win By LANE ALDERMAN Tigers' home field, known as Sports Editor Death v.~lley. In that contest as well as catching it. Even with this season, but much like their Clemson lost to the Green Wave Cunningham's weight however, offense, are highly ranked in the Tommorrow is homecoming at byonlyfourpoints, 17·13. The last the Clemson offensive line passing statistics. Mills com­ Clemson University, and three games have been on the averages 226 pounds. mented on the Clemson defense· highlighting the weekend's road and include a 5IHI loss to Set up against that line will be a that ''they're a tough unit, and we festivities will be a clash between Alabama and a 3~7 setback at Deacon defense described by can't take them lightly. ·We a hungry Tiger team and a rested the hands of the University of ·head coach Chuck Mills as being respect them very much." Wake Forest team. Game time in . "consistent." Injuries have The Deacon offense is expected Clemson's Memorial Stadiwn is Despite these losses however, plagued the unit, but it still to regain the services of fullback scheduled for 1:00 P.M., and the Clemson ranks first in the ACC in continues to be ranked Frank Harsh, who has not seen game will be broadcast in the pass offense. The statistic that statistically as the second best action since the fifth game of the Winston-salem area over the explains their dismal start overalt defensive team in the 1974 season due to a knee injury Deacon Sports Network. however, is the rushing yardage, conference. and a broken hand. "I thought For Clemson, which has playedl where Clemson has only gained The injuries have hit hardest at about red·shirting,but I want to four games this season and lost 529 yards in four games. This the linebackers, where the Deacs play now," said Harsh. "We have them all, the game with Wake is a inability to establish a running have lost their two starters­ a chance .to do well in the chance to demonstrate that those game has been a serious problem Randy Carroll and Lou Tilley- in conference and I wanted to be a people who feel they are the best primarily because the Tiger the last two games. Sophomore part of it." in the conference are not wrong. offense is a veer attack and is Don Cervi and senior Gerald Just how much of a chance~the The Deacons on the other hand, designed to be a running offense. Hopkins have stepped into the Deacs have in the conference have had two weeks since their Leading this unbalanced starting roles in those spots. Bill depends a great deal on liow well last game, and view Clemson offense is freshman Armstrong, who currently .leads they fare in tommorrow's con· Wake's linemen used the off week to work on fundamentals. Photo by cranford the team in tackles, has tomorrow's outing as a chance Willie Jordan, who has an able FraDk Harsh test. It's been two years since to prove that they really aren't set of receivers to which he can continued to play up to his pre­ Clemson has lost to a conference the worst team in the ACC. throw. The top receiver on the . American. season expectatios . team in Death Valley, however, Harriers Lose to Duke, Va. · The !l-4 record of Clemson is not team is sophomore basketball Bennie Cimningham, the 6-0, The Tigers have had trot~.ble and the Tiger fans have no·plans this season not just gaining By Virginia took the Deacons 11J:43,. Virginia took fifth, sixth. and completely an accurate measure standout Stan Rome, who after 252 pound All-American tight of beginning a losing tradition RStaiCf~WARiC.HER yardage on the ground but also this season. r ter However, the match ended w1th a ninth places. The Cavaliers are of their strength. Only one of not playing last season has end, has proved that he is those games-the season opener returned to one of the three sports stopping other teams on the new course record set and with also a top team as Coach Dave extremely dangerous on the field ground. They have yielded 323.7 When the cr~ss .c~Wltry. teams definite improvement shown by Arnesy calls them "the best team against Tulane- was held on the in which he was a high school All· and gains yards carrying the ball of Duke and V1rgm_1a amved at the Deacon harriers. he has ever had." yards per game against the rush FF Rolls On Wake 1ast week, 1t seemed as The new course record was set The Deacons' top finisher was though the De~co~1s were doomed by Robbie Perkins of Duke, who Gaithersburg, Md. freshman ..,*******************************************************************************************~ Bruce Harshbarger· recorded fr~m. the .begmnmg. Duke was ran the five and one-half miles in Kevin Amigh. Amigh had a brmgmg. m some of th~ ~e~t 27:08. The Blue Devils also had finishing time of 28:52. Other i Fearless Forecast i ~~~~~ho~::~h~~arain1!~ rWlners ~~ the ~CC and V1rgm1a the second, third, and fourth Wake finishers were Jim Stevens : y : slate last week, to move from last .., LECRONE ALDERMAN HARSHBARGER STEEN RICCI SLATER -t1 place into a tie for second behind came With 1_ts best cross finishers. The powerful Duke in 13th place, Mike Tyner in 17th 4 2 country team m recent Y7ars. team is considered the best in the place, and Jack Kavanaugh, : 47·19 45-21 5- 1 44-ZZ 43-23 : Jon LeCrone. Harshbarger The score showed no surprises; ACC, having beaten Maryland Denny Dolny, Tommy Rae and • CJ Cl 10 k 7 Cl : missed only South Carolina's : Wake at Clemson Clem by 6 Wake 5 w 7 .,. upset over Baylor, prompting Duke beat Wakr: 15-49 and earlier this year. Tom Jeffries finishing '21st ~~ ~ ~~ 14 D~: 21 D~r: 17 : Duke at Army Duke 15 Duke 10 Md Md Md Md : Lane Alderman to say, "Hey, big through 24th. ..., N.C. State at Maryland Md 3 Md 5 7 7 7 3 1! deal!" · Coach Jim Dellastatious was "" N0 tr D t Car 0 lin ND 21 ND 10 ND 24 ND 24 ND 10 ND 17 ,. 10 Per Cent Discount For WFU not disappointed by the meet, : e arne a a 2 Miami' 3 7 1 Miami 3 Colo 3 • Wake Sports Information Students On ALL PEDAL BIKES however. He says, "This is a ~ ~~~~: ~t ~a: J['> :~ MSU 3 ~~ 2 ~~ ~ Mich 1 Mich 10 • Director Charlie Dayton posted a training year, and we will be t Okla. State at Missouri Mo 1 OSU 2 Mo 2 Mo 17 OSU 3 Mo 5 : fine 12·3 record, which might - Nishiki • Takara working hard to improve our • 4 6 Syra 3 Syra 8 • have been 13-2, had he not times." Dellastatious says that : ~:~:aa!t.;;:as Navy 4 Navy ~;};; 1~ ~! Io Texas 7 Okla 10 : predicted a tie between Missouri • Azuki • Vista the team is definitely improved. ot~. Okla Okla lO PSU 11 PSU 10 PSU 2 PSU 2 ~ and Michigan. He notes the team's improved : ~cik~~~!~nn St. ~~~04 PSU 4 6 UCLA 21 UCLA 14 UCLA 7 UCLA 10 _,. This week, FF welcomes • Garelli times and noticible depth as a t Texas A&M at Tex. Tech A&M 7 ¥;c~4 A&M 4 A&M 7 A&M 10 A&M 7 : Charles Slatery, winner of the Pur measure for this improvement. -tcot~ w·1sconsm · a t Purdue w·1sc 12 Pur 5 Wt'sc 11 Pur 10 3 Pur 1 1!... OldCo testGold andh Blackwill ·Sports k Trivia· I Dellastatious is also impressed • Auburn at Kentucky Aub 7 Aub 3 _Aub 9 Aub 10 Ky 6 Aub 6 : n • w 0 . PIC ~ames m I with the rapid improvement of -41 thplace of guefstthpredictor for his freshman runners. : ************************'*'***"'"'***************"********************************************' e remam~de er o e season. • Motobecane Injuries have been a main factor in the weak start of the Deacons. Tommy Rae's injured 1M\ kpee has caused his early season Slatery Wins Trivia Contest ~ times to suffer, and Denny Dolny's ankle injury will sideline "We also service all models and him for the rest of the year. Charles Slatery held off a stiff Indeed the team cannot afford Charles and wishes to thank first makes of Bikes" challenge by Bob Brett and Don 3. Wake Forest won the any more injuries. "If we can everyone who took Ute time to Gator Bowl, beating South hold together, we can be Nicholson to win the Old Gold and compete in the contest. Carolina 26-U. surprising," says freshman Black Trivia Contest by two Tyner. questions. Brett and Nicholson Fred's Bicycle Shop October 3 Trivia Answers: 4. Pole-vaulter Bob Seagren If the team does hold together got all ten questio~ co.rrect this upset Joe Frazier in the first &Oi Oak Summit Rd. Te. 767-2868 Left on University Pkwy week, and appeared to have a ·· · Right at Znd Stoplight 2 miles on left · and their improvement Superstars weightlifting continues, they will not be large lead until Slatety turned in 1. Pembroke Burrows ill was competition. liti::IDDZIIZZ3DIZ31ZD~D:XD:ZD:ZI:IZIIZD~ doomed to defeat against any of his entry, missing only question the second seven-footer on ... their ACC rivals. 10. With a final score of 40 out of Jacksonville University's super­ 5. Yales's Albie Booth was 50, Slatery earns himself a team. known as "Little Boy Blue." permanent spot on the OG&B Fearless Forecast football 2. The football coach, Heisman · 6. Cookie Lavagetto's double predictions. Trophy winner, and world record broke up Floyd Beven8' "almost The sports staff congratulates holder are all named Walker n4>-hitter" in the 1947 Series. (Peahead, Doak, and John). 7. was ·the last major college football team to score 100 points in a game (Houston 100, Tulsa 6). 8. Jim and Gaylord Perry have combined for the most pitching victories of any major league brothers.

9. Howard, Ehmke was the surprise starter of the 1929 Tuesday's field hockey game saw !Ugbly-regarded UNC-G take a 3-1 Series. win over Wake Forest. Photo by sears

10. Harmon Killebrew batted over 7000 times in the major Hockey leagues * * * * * Defeated

By JEFF KENTNER Staff Writer

B & M GRILL Facing its biggest challenge of 209 N. Marshall the young season,.Wake Forest's Womens field hockey team was SPECIALIZING IN THICK defeated on Tuesday by perennially powerful UNC-G, 3-1. ,. HAMBURGER STEAKS The loss dropped the Deacons•· record to 2-3-1. Now Available in· -HOMEMADE PIES- Coach Pamela Wiegardt was '. ·.. . . satisfied with the Deacons' effort MON.- FRI.6A.M.-4 P.M. SAT. 7A.M.-2P.M. against UNC-G, a team rated at PRE~ WASHED the top of the Deep South Region last year. She cited the play of goalie Ginny Espenshade as being particularly outstanding. DENIMS.·, ..• . . Wake trailed 1-0 when Sandy Miller hit a brillant comer shot !Ia that turned out to be the Deacs' IT'S for keeps: IT'S, the Levi's ... so every ride won't have Khaki~'s · only score of the afternoon. After Place. has a Yamaha DT 100 falling behind 3·1 midway to be blue. a~·. through the second half, the trail bike for you! Plus lots of Grey, Navy & Tan'· LIVEI ON STAGE! Get on to ITS and ride, with Deacs never generated any IT'S t-shirts as second prizes; serious offensive threat. UNC-G the IT'S free Yamaha Ride­ THE- COMPLETE THEATRICAL PRODUCTION and, free Levi's and Yamaha Fully Staged & Costumed Direct from New York kept the ball in Wake territory for away! And. ride away with CORDUROY· alniost the entire final period to posters when you register Sizes27 to 38 · win some super Levi's jeans too! . ' insure their victory. The (as long as they last). Nothing pushed UNC-G's record to five to buy! Drawing: Saturday, Nobody knows more about wins and no losses. FUN and LEVI'S®than There was much optimism on November 15, six o'clock. Get the part of the Deacs even after a chance at IT'S with each V'.'l-iAT LOOKS GREAT ON THE GUYS. the loss. Coach Wiegardt was LOOKS GREATER ON THE GALS' visit. Browse through the happy that Wake held its own perfect bike jeans and jackets: against "the best team we will Now Showing At: face this year." With eight games Levi's. We've got over 12,000 remaining on the schedule, the pairs of them. Heavy-weight team is confident of a winning '5 ·'JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR' II season. straight leg denims in every INCLUDING FULL IS A TRIUMPH'" lH8 LENI'S"'Pl.ACe ORCHESTRA & CHOIR -/1·.-a•,.l• llo~·/ \ ~. /1.,.", \, •., The strength of the field hockey size for guys. ITS fits gals and MILLER'S Broadway combines Rock and the Gospel into a "SPECTACLE" team will be tested again this kids too in Levi's bells, big Bike includes 500 miles free service, VARIETY·· SIORE that'll Blow You Away! · Friday when Wake Forest plays bells and cords in great colors from Cycle Inn. Greensboro. On display . . 620 N. IRADISI. host to East Carolina. Scouting at both locations and at Cycle Inn. . :'. - '. Wed., Oct. IS 2shows6:JOp.m.&9:30p,m. Ticket Locations- Convention Ctr.; Coliseum BoK office, reports indicate ECU to be much FREE PARKING. Reznicks Record Shop, and Record Bar. , improved over last year and it Friendly Shopping Ce;"Jter, Greensboro. Peters Creek Parkway at 1-40, Winston-Salem. ca\.n Parl

,,J Deacon Spotlight PAGE SEVEN Friday, October 10, 1975, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

like their 1970 ted in the By BRUCE HARSHBARGER- The Fairy Tale That Came True ills com- · Sports Editor Wake had a respectable game at Nebraska and lost 36- Godmother, and captured the imagination of football opponents. and we weren't real fast, but we did what we 1 defense' It, and we 12. The next week was the opening of the ACC season · fans across the nation. It all started when Wake clob- had to do. " ttly. ·We The story is an old and f~miliar one. b~t right now it again!St South Carolina, but the Deacs were not so bered Virginia 27-7. The Deacons were even at 3-3 now, with Carolina h." seems as if it should be granted a retelhng. respectable. Living up to expectations, they lost 43-7. A Larry Russell, a small, left-handed quarterback who scheduled to come to Groves the next weekend. "The expected It all started humbly enough. The Demon Deacons w~ek later, Florida State ran into a little trouble against threw the ball erratically but ran an offense brilliantly, fans were excited, we were excited, there was a lot of fullback opened their 1970 football season at Nebraska, a school not seen Wake,Forest, but won 19-14, and the Deacons were 0-3. first felt the turnaround coming at Florida State. "We pressure building up and a great deal of enthusiasm," ne of the that was predicted to finish in the top ten at the season's True; Wake was not the worst team in the country. A got our stuff together there, and decided to make it says Headley. "Everyone was involved, the excitement ~e injury end. The game was an obvious mismatch- everyone syndicated column had reserved that spot for hapless work," he explains. "We were all very close, and we had was snowballing.'' thought knew the Cornhuskers had a powerhouse that year (they Navy. It had picked Wake Forest second worst in the worked so hard together that we just decided to go out Wake came out for the second half against UNC, ·want to ·were eventually national champions) and Wake Forest, nation and a seven-point. underdog to their next op- and do the job." behind 13-o. They cut the score to 13-7 and with three 'We have ' '. well the Deacs had posted a 3-8 record the year before in the ' . ponent, Vfrginia. Win Headley, now an assistant coach with the Deacs, minutes left got the ball at their own seven yard line. Ito be a and ~ould probably be hard pressed to finish that well in What began on October 3, 19'70 should be remembered was named All-American at defensive tackle after the The most spectacular drive in Wake Forest history took 1970. The ACC title race that year was wide open, but the now, on the eve of a string of conference games for the season. He felt the difference as soon as the team had the ball to the Tar Heel two with 12 seconds left, where ance·the preseason choice for the cellar was a unanimous pick. best and most explosive Deacon team in recent years. It begun practice. "We had had a good spring practice the Hopkins hulled it in, and Tracy Lounsbury booted the nference fulfilled the classic tale of Cinderella and her Fairy year before, and when we came back I could feel an air extra point. Wake won 14-13. how well w's con­ about the team. It's hard to put your finger on it, but it Number nine Tennessee routed the Deacs the next rs since Fall Baseball was a good feeling- a confident feeling that the guy next week, but the miracles continued the next Saturday. nference to you had worked as hard as you had, and that he was Duke, undefeated in conference play, fell to the in­ 1owever, going to do his job." . credible Deacons, 28-14, setting up a match with N.C. no plans The team had worked hard, and it had paid off at State to tie for the ACC lead. tradition Shows Promise Charlottesville, but few people were really impressed. The Pack outplayed Wake for 54 minutes. before ' By JON LeCRONE The Old Gold and Black ran the unspectacular headline Russell engineered yet another miracle-drive. At the an outstanding catcher, and Staff Writer pitchers Kent Kornhaus and Bob "Deacons Down Virginia For First Victory," and gave State 10, with two and one-half minutes remaining, and 'Jn some pats on the back for what they termed "the high the Deacs behind 13-10, Russell sprinted to his left, was Contrary to popular belief, the Laughton." Add to these young throwers experienced starters .point of a very frustrating season." trapped, and at the last moment shoved the ball to Ken baseball program at Wake Forest Merle Henkle, Pete Dillinger, and recorded is alive and well, and according The OG&B wasn't particularly overawed by the next Garrett, who drove into the end zone. Unbelieveably, !ar in the short reliever Jimmy "Spud" weekend's victory over winless Virginia Tech, either... Wake had toppled its fifth ACC foe. to Coach Gene Hooks the Demon Moore, and the Deacons have a ~ a 14-1 Deacon diamondmen are well on The account begins "To the average Wake Forest "We lost down in Houston the next week/' says from last more than adequate array of their way back to respectibility. hurlers. football fan, two wins in a row is a little hard to believe." Russell, "but winning the title all depended upon 1d behind "We had a six week workout," hbarger Spring of 1976 should be an The next few weeks would all be a little hard to Carolina beating Duke. Duke had played one more said ~. "We experimented a arolina's interesting year for Coaches believe. conference game than we had, so they would have been lot, but overall I think we played Hooks, Crater and Company. The :-omptlng sound baseball. If we get some A Homecoming crowd packed Groves Stadium to the champs had they won." Carolina beat the Blue 'Hey, big Deacons introduce an watch Wake battle the tough Clemson Tigers. Larry Devils. offensive help from several inexperienced team that must get players who plan to come out in by on guts, enthusiasm, and Hopkins ran wild that day, claiming a new conference Does history repeat? "I listened to Doug Benfield talk· rmation the. spring we could be real posted a young, raw talent. A healthy, record with 230 yards. He broke loose for second half on Coach Mills' show," said Headley, "and he men­ good." optimistic attitude · is obvioUs h might Wake's fall schedule included runs of 35, 23, 50, and 44 yards, and two touchdowns, tioned the atmosphere around here, that same confident he not among the ranks of the while Russell added an electrifying 62 yard gallop and feeling we had in 1970. We knew how hard we had tilts with Guilford College, High diamondmen. The young Deacs Missouri Point, Pfeiffer, and Liberty two touchdowns. The offense that no one had believed worked and what we could accomplish. I think it's a hope this outlook can carry Wake Wake Forest quarterback Larry Russell eludes the grasp of an N.C. College. The Deacons ended their Forest bas'eball out of the celler­ existed a month earlier now couldn't be stopped, and the similar feeling this year. I'm not saying we should win elcomes September-October CBI!lpaign State tackler and heads upfield in the 1970 gBiiile against the WoHpack. r of the syndrome and into conference The All-ACC performer led Wake to a 16-13 win as well as to the Deacs won 36-20. the title, but if we can stay away from injuries, I think with a 3-4 slate, which· included a contention. "We had some talent, but not a lot," remembers we can keep on winning." ts Trivia I two game sweep over Guilford, conference championship. :ames in I and a single game win over Russell. "We were generally smaller than most of our Cinderella- it could be a timely fairy tale. ictor for Liberty College. ason. Newly activated baseball YiJlill coach Gene Hooks was particularly pleased with the LaCrosse Rallies Defense _J --: Deacons defensive improvement. ./ "Defensively we have a very By WARREN STEEN difficult this week, due to injwies Willie Jordan and the other Tiger . good Qutfield. We're counting on Sports Editor sustained by Wake's starting running backs long enough to Ken Gerrity, Ken Wood, Ken linebackers, Randy Carroll and think about tomorrow's game Baker, and Doug Hall. Of course ' Throt~thout the football season, Lou Tilley. between Maryland and N.C. we can't count out Jerry. the Wake Forest Sports Infor­ "A defensive end has two State. That encounter should go a Schellenberg, AI Zykowski, and mation Office ranks defensive responsibilities," claims long way in determining the 1975 John Zeglinski, when they come players on the basis of a unique LaCrosse, "to contain the run­ ACC champion. out in the spring. system which awards points for ners on end sweeps and to drop "Right now we're primary tackles, assisted back for pass coverage on certain "I think Maryland will win," experimenting in the infield. tackles, fumble ·recoveries, in­ plays. Against. Clemson, we will predicts LaCrosse. · "But I sure co*oN We've been .switching Ken Jones terceptions, pass deflections, and .. ; , have to take up more of the slack wish State would win, since that and Ken Miller between second quarterback sackings. on pass coverage, since the would give ea~;~9f them a cori_. Tooh.U and short. We're interested in Given this information, most linebackers are relatively new." ference loss." seeing what Bob Hely and Doug anyone who has watched the ....,. Despite the injury situation and As for the remainder of the Henley can do in the spring." Deacons in action could guess ~ Clemson's obvious advantage of season, LaCrosse believes the Rounding out the infield for the that hard-hitting All-American playing before a Homecoming key word for the Deacs is con­ diamond Deacs are first basemen candidate Bill Armstrong tops crowd at Death Valley, LaCrosse sistency. "If we can establish Bill Conwell (last year's leading the defensive checklist. and the rest of the Deacons consistency on both offense and hitter), and Pete Dillinger; But wno holds second place remain confident. defense, I really think we have a catchers Stan .Tohnson and Steve behind Armstrong? LaCrosse sums up the con­ shot at the ACC title." Latham; and top pitchers Merle The answer is Dave LaCrosse, ference clash by saying, "We're Henkle, Kurt Kornhaus, and Bob a 210 pound defensive end from . - all looking forward to playing Laughton. who has the knack Dave LaCrosse Clemson. They're pretty big in .;r According to Hooks, the Deacs for coming up with big plays on the line, but they're·young. It's • ********************•• have vastly improved on the defense. Prime target for LaCrosse and really hard to judge how good t t mound and behind the plate. Already this season, the quick­ the rest of the Deacon defense they are. Sure they haven't won a • POTE ·41 "Our top baseball signees this footed junior has made his will be Tiger signal caller Willie game, but they've played some t AT t year were a catcher and two presence known by leading the Jordan, an explosive freshman pretty tough teams in Tulane, : t pitchers. We signed Stan team in sacking opposing from Griffin, Ga. Georgia Tech, Alabama, and i< .., .· ::.0 ..... "From looking at the game G · 11 a1iz th t th • • •-i<-...... Johnson, who has the makings of quarterbacks. films of Clemson," states eorglB. we a re e a ey • SAYS • ke a 3-1 '· And tomorrow afternoon won seven games last year, plus ; t Big 4 Tickets against Clemson, it will take LaCrosse, "Jordan is super we know it won't be easy playing • • f Sears more of those heroics for the quick. I'd compare him to Ricky in Death Valley." ; POUN ; There will be a sign-up for Deacons to retain their perfect Wesson, the SMU quarterback." AllofLaCrosse'sthoughtshave • D • students interested in purchasing Atlantic Coast Conference LaCrosse's job a~ defensive not been focused on Clemson, t t tickets for the Big Four worksheet. end, always tough, will be doubly however. His mind wanders off ; THE ; basketball tournament on Thursday and Friday, the 23rd and 24th of October at the ticket UNC Tickets ·······················•!I It :t R office in the lobby of the I Ever hod a Really Good Pizza? · I t PUSSYCATS gymnasium. Tickets will be sold The Wake Forest Athletic I t at $20 per book (admission for all Department has acquired 200 I Try one wlyour next Sub At... ••1 t •t enge of four games) on a first-come, more tickets for the Wake Forest­ 1orest's first-serve basis with each North Carolina football game on I It t m was student allowed to sign for one Nov. 1 at Kenan Stadium in y by book. The tournament will be Chapel Hill. The previous PIZZA GARDEN !"********************• ., ! :..G, 3-1. held at the Greensboro Coliseum allotment of tickets had been sold eacons•· on January 2nd and 3rd between out. The seats, located in the end defending champion Wake zone stands, may be purchased dt was Forest, Duke, North Carolina and for $8 apiece at the ticket office in ;'effort North Carolina State. .the gymnasiwn. ~::::!!~~~.!::::: j Peugeot Bicycle Sale ated at l ... __ Region play of tde as AT mding. Sandy er shot OLD SALEM BICYCLE CTR. Deacs' 1. After 1415 S: Main St. 724·7832 tid way lf, the d any UNCG uos :ory for 0 0 riod to U018C 1e win The Finest In Concert Entertainment R~G.l6 9° NO! 147° to five featuring: ism on n after Oct. 10 Jimmy Buffett Feb. 16-21 Dizzy Gillespie 0 It was Nov. 16 Papa John Creach Nov.18-22 N.Y. Jazz Quartet $ 0ffReg.Retail :sown Nov. 3 and 4 Doc Watson Return date pending Peter Nero SAVE 22° ve will Recording live Oct. 29-Nov.'1 Arthur, Harley & Gottlieb games le, the Nov. 12-16 Steve Martin 0 0 l'inning Oct. 10-12 Wendy Waldman Nov. 5-9 Red, White & Blue

Lights, Music Allure Folks to Fairground TODAY I By TOM BLAND happe~ing over th~re," someone kept. dipping its head and of.the fair, the James E. Strates the spectator as he walked along, won was the satisfaction of strolled into the tent, while * BICEN Staff Writer entermg the fa1r asked the ambling toward the center of the Midway. It was from here that his head turned skyward. dumping Bobo, who jeered at the The last entertainment along younger women stood outside and gatekeeper. ring, while the girl struggled the discordant, yet somehow Flanking the rides were the contestants as they threw at- the midway was in the fonn of the The spectacular chuckled to one another. "That's Joie Chitwood and the futilely to pull it back to the ring's harmonious melody of light and sideshows, where one could see tempting to rattle them in~ an classic carousel. The who conglomeration of lights, colors, man ISC PI Hell Drivers, or Hell's Angels, or edge. sounds emanated. The hwn of 30 the anatomical wonders of the errant throw. Another side show featured operated it sat in the center of the * and music emanating from the something like that," replied the One empathetic farmer wat- mobile power generators and the world, and the various game Two men, one stout and the "the world's smallest man," all merry-go-round smoking a pipe. Dixie Classic Fairgrounds gatekeeper, alluding to the ching the contest mumbled ad· criss-crossing of miles and miles stands, where prizes were other gaunt, strolled up and 16 inches and 32 pounds of him. He studied a road map as the next Tuesday night may have been for evening's thrill show. "Danger vice,thoughhewellknewthatthe of cable gave the sideshows a awardedtopersonswithluckand prepared to pitch balls at the He leisurely reclined in his tiny ride loaded up. All the parents the sake of allurement, but it Devils, that's it," he said, in girl could not hear him. curious kind of oneness. skills. targets. Bobo simply smirked easy chair and told about him· and their children smiled when aptly displayed the diversity Vol. UX afterthought. :'smack her in the head," he Essentially, the rides offered One of the games was ap- and began to insult them. self, while incredulous spectators the carousel and its music began. within. There was something at Near the grandstand was the said. "She'll straighten up." one the opportunity of being propriately called "Dump Bobo." "Fatty and Skinny laying in the loo~ed on. Leaving the fair was hard for at the fair for everyone, if nothing Beef Cattle Barn, where several Eventually, the girl drew back lifted, spun, jostled, and rotated A clown sat encaged over a tub of bed," be sang, "Fatty rolled over least one child. A little girl cried more than a handful of images "You want to ask any huge cows were being led around her fist and struck the animal. to the music of the Captain and· water, and a red target extended and Skinny was dead." questions?" he said, after having and cried as her father bore her and a tired pair of feet. a ring and being judged on their The cow did, indeed, "straighten Tenille or some neo-classical from each side of the cage. The And Bobo was wet, and em­ given the essential facts about to the gate. Her mother carried a From the grandstand, on the physical attributes. One young up," and went on to win second organ-grinder. The occasional object was to hit the target with a barrassed, as "Fatty" hit his himself. "You want to buy a balloon and a bag of cotton 'Pr~ outer perimeter of the lady was having a particularly place. screams from high atop the ball from a distance of 30 feet, mark. ' picture (of me)? They're only a candy. The light of the carousel . ' fairgrounds, came the rude noise difficult time in keeping her cow A leisurely stroll from the double ferris wheel and the thus triggering- a device which The sideshow attracting most dime." · danced in the little girl's eyes as of engines being revved. "What's aligned with the others. The beast cattle barn brought one to the hub constant rumbling of the roller- unseated Bobo and sent him attention along the midway was Finding no takers, he simply she looked upon the midway for coaster cars. served only to tumbling into the water. the "Broadway Playgirls." Men, yawned and waited for his next the last time. There was enhance the vtSual awareness of The only prize that could be clutched closely by their wives, audience. It was getting late. something for everyone . . . Me By COli 'Temporary Bridge' Ooses Gap As soc: Although a By JULIA DRAKE trouble~ waters th~t divide us." peril," he said, "the fact that time joining the right club or He said the movement toward would place fa Assistant Editor " Tl_le btannu,~l semmar acts a~ a college campuses have just fraternity was the students' main elitism will strike with increasing Christmas h1 thmk-tank for ~ommumty passed ~ough a re~olution." concern. This was followed in force at the higher education discussed amo Speaking on the problems l~ders across th~ n~tion to share He wd in the 1950 s the "skies order by a vocational culture, level. "If we are true to what we the Calend between different generations diverse opm10ns on were cloudless" just as today's intellectualism, political con- profess, we are going to have to committee me and the culture gap on today's cont.emporary values. The seem to be. ~ut ~e campus cerns in the Kennedy era, and . remain selective," Scales said. Baird, asso collegecampus,PresidentJames partlci~ants stay at the ~~r ap~thy was an.illus1on, he said, then the revolutionary coun- "Butit'samatterofeconomics." professor anc Ralph Scales told a gathering at House m Tanglewood which Is hiding the teDSlons which would terculture. Citing the decrease in college proposal, thinll the Center for the Study of home for the study center. erupt in violence a decade late.r, enrollment across the nation '·'' will not go Human Values Sunday night that Scales spoke on today~ "If violence goes in cycles 1• Today, he said, severe job Scales said it was possible by 19115 nothing to wo1 . . "We have thrown only a -educational scene. . Scales said, "inevitably it will shortages have returned us to a that "we could be clawing for Baird said tli temporary bridge across the "We would ignore at our own rise. again. We would be well vocational culture. Students new students., member had' calendar proJ)l ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ :!~:~s~~nt~~~u~~;st!: ~~:ro~!~~:~%U:o~~~~:C~~~ Grad Students came _up t • :::: will never be the same again." "We are, in fact, back in the '50's. , different." Hi ;:;: N was prese ~~ 0 ICeS 1~11 re~~:~n l~~ne~e "!:O!scs:pu: a~;~~~ t~~:e =~~:eca: Set Invotvment departments physics, psycll il =.:1=.:1 religious fundamentalist going to insist on recovering the As Top Pn·on•ty movement. "Materialism was last vestige of the authority we was regarded The Circle K Club and Any student interested in out," he said, "idealism was in. once held?" he said, by ft.. Scabbard and Blade, the ROTC volunteering for Dial.Sundial, a Nationalism was replaced by The recently-established department, " This young man In the bamp car was only one of many happy people at the Dixie Classic Fair this fraternity, are sponsoring a telephone counseling service internationalism." Scales expressed concern over Graduate . Student Association members i week. The fair continues tonight and tomorrow. , Photo by Yandle blood donation drive Tuesday may contact the Urban Services The revolutionists .Qf the '60's the declining standards in today's held its second monthly meeti11g departments from 11 a.m. to 4:30p.m. in the Referral Bureau office or Jeff were the first generation raised colleges. "The nationwide SAT last week, setting forth its goals having anythi: gym. Calvert, 203A Kitchin (723-2125). with television, automation, birth scores have dropped 70 points," for the fall semester as increased fall semester control pills and Vietnam. Scales he said. "We are all grading involvement of graduate students Baird said tl more generously. in GSA activities in the areas of i Ouh Slates Motorcross said today's campus generation I, sponsoring th· "I wonder if we are inspiring emphasized. never knew the Depression, but social life, athletics, and basically arot By TOMMIE O'TOOLE Depending on the number of The military science depart­ students to excellence " Scales university policies. · "Autocrossing is not a race, a Volunteers for the USRB Super then "we can't know the psychic start the fall Staff Writer entries, Bunn hopes to give each ment is sponsoring a winter term said. "I'm glad Wake Forest has Member Mary Pickens said the drag or anything like that," Bunn Saturday October 25 may sign up burden of being young in today's escaping the car at least three or four tries. course primarily for freshmen policy committee would begin said. "It's mostly for enjoyment to be big brothers or sisters world," he adder.l. · kept the traditional requirements August and all The Triad Sportscar Club Ltd., Club representatives will not enrolled in military science. work concerning grad student in conjuntion with the College and to test your driving skill Monday and Tuesday at the · In Scale's.vlew, the dominant for a liberal arts education-the holiday. J. inspect each car, beginning at 11 The course will place emphasis information desk in Reynolds • cultures ·of campus life go sciences, language and representation on university Union, will sponsor a motorcross against other people. If you know a.m. Sunday. Registration is at influential in 1 on mountaineering tec!miques, in the Pit. Super Saturday will through cycles. He said at . one mathematics. •• committees, library usage, and said, is that pl competition Sunday at 12: 30 p.m. your car and what it can do, 10:30 a.m. with actual timings aerobic exercises, student fees. in the parking lot next to the Fine chances are that you will do beginning at 12:30 p.m. marksmanship training, and lastfromua.m.to4p.m. Pickens said that the GSA Arts Building. well." Debaters Take Ms. A car that doesn't pass orienteering. was originally organized last Despite the many rumors The event will be scored with inspection will not be allowed to Freshmen who .complete the year, but that it only "came into Fac surrounding motorcross, the regard to total elapsed time and run. All competitors must wear course will be eligible to Makeup pictures for the its own at the end of the spring the number of pylons knocked seat belts and helmets which will complete all freshman military Howler will be taken November 3 term." competitor does not have to own a Top Honors By DEBORA souped-up, formula-type racing down. Trophies will be given in be provided. science requirements by taking and 4 in Reynolda Hall. Anyone Membership was extended to The club was founded in 1964 as J car. Classes will range from each category, as well as to the MS 112 during the 11-week term. who still wishes to have his The debate team took honors in Under the direction of, new all those university graduate modified, ready-to-race overall winner. a non-profit organization and now Further information may be portrait in the annual should coach Fred Mclean, the debate students who do not attend has 100 members. It sponsors ten pre-season tournaments last Eleven co machines to Volkswagons, obtained from the military contact the Howler office to weekend and gained recognition team competed against teams professional schools. This in­ combination A similar event was held on rallies and 12 motorcross events science department. Datsuns and even big sedans. schedule an appointment for one as one of this year's more from Emory, Michigan, eludes the 246 non-medical school approved b) campus last spring and drew each year. of these two days. There is a special class for promising teams. College, Harvard, and other graduate students at Bowman . Monday's 1 about 65 cars. Few, however, According to Bunn, par­ . Only those students with ap­ sch Is Gray as well as the 85 grad women with no restrictions on the were driven by students. Mary Thomson and Tod meeting. A,' type of car. ticipants from Virginia, pointments will be able to have a ~ debaters hope to compete students on the Reynolda cam­ "We were pleased with the Tennessee and South Carolina Woodbury took first and second major was sitting with the photographer. place, respectively, at the Middle in the Henry Clay Invitational at pus. The entrance fee is five dollars turnout," said Bunn, "but we had are regular subscribers to the Open curriculum applications and club Secretary Don Bunn hoped to get more students. Of are now available to freshmen for Tennessee State University the University of Kentucky this The. Jru7in p~e IM;bind ~e club's activities. weekend where more than 100 SBJ.d Pickens, lS vows that the event will be held in course, there was a rugby the November admissions period. _ Earlybird Tournament last orgaruzat~ taken at the st It shows the blasted violen the fatal s '·,:{~{~ inconsistent .,- .,, location. A sE ,~~ ·~t demonstrate ( 0) ~. 0 . -(~~~· .· :"' ~

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