.f"t; ~~ {.:~~ f"""o ~. '- ' ·'-"-' L <. ( •I < .,.,., ,., 'lwi'BR.t.... n...... ·~_ ...... !.c.<. ·---., ~--4 .. \: ..... ··~.~ ... ' ' ' liAR l 0 19Sa - . : . . ; ... ~ ~ ~.. . ' 'Arti~l~· In Student·· . . ,. Edw.ard Hairfield, Object Of Attack -.·. : ROTC Riflemen ' . ' .
From WF Junior .. ' Take T ournani(mt lb'- . . •. .. : lurk ' . Page, Four Pa.geThree ;.. "e~. 11-' e~ i!ihe _Vote .:flat;med · A Student Union program-desi'gned to adg zest to on-camp_us recreational and cul 1 tural life-was in the embryonic stages of organization here last week. If established On . Aniendme:itt it would. be si~lar tcY- ~tud~nt '£!nions now ~n Of!eration at most of the nation~s large; schools, mcludmg puke: Up.tversity, !he Umverstty of North Carolina and N. c. State. A student c?mn;nttee IS now outhmng the program and will SO?D present the idea to student ~rgamzat10ns.· .~f the~e grqups approve, the proposal wllJ be sent to the·· Stu- dent .Le-gislature and w1ll ultimately be put to a student body vote. . Earl Shaw, committee chairman and one of the .originatprs of the move, said the Student Union could "guarantee. that there W'Ould be somethmg to . Reynolds Awards. do on campus every Friday and ·Saturday nights." Social Even:j;s It would sponsor such things 3, Get Medical Grants, as movies, talent shows, an ex panded concert.lecture series, a television lounge and at le.ast one major social function, perhapS a homecoming dance for . all stu- dents.· ' Every student would pay his fee at registration and ·be entitled to partiCipate in the ·en tire union program without further charges, Shav; said. At schoolS where the programs· ~ave been in operation many years, buildings have been con structed to provide space for ac tivities they sponsor. One of the most elabortudent undertaking, ranging from dances to literary oo::ieties. ·.It serves, Shaw said, to organi:z:e and strengthen the entire extxa cunicular. program. Shaw said that hi addition to sponsoring social and reCreational events, ·the program could arSo · t.;ring wiill-knovm speakers· and . . . her¢ ana bolster the pres,. .ent : lectur.e.--·series.-· . · ' ~· · .. · --·· · · ··The 'Program at Wake·· Forest ·y.•ould, · cif" necessity, "start ·ozi a. · small ~cale,!' Spaw said, "but it could devefop into a hig ·thing." The movement began, ·accord- · ing to Shaw, when a small group · of non-fraternity men got to gether to "discuss . ·the social situation ·for . independents on campus." These men formed ·a committee and sent delegations to Duke and North Carolina to study programs in operation there.. · · ' He e1~phasized, however. that the · Student Union "would be for ~verybody, not just indepen. dents." Using other schools as examples, Shaw also, expressed! (Continued on Page 51
Scotsmen Willr • Debate' • BSU Skeptics,. Hour Wake Forest ·_Tonight A Scottish debate team will meet versity Union and . the Scottish To Hear ·Profs Clash Wa.ke Forest ·~ters tonight'· for Union of Students. a. demonstration · debate ·.in Wait Anderson .served 83 ·president of The Clu::istian side and the The religious argument will fol- Chapel at a·o'clook. the ·Glasgow University conserva- skeptic's side of religious debate, low a BSU-sponsored supper in the ·will be heard tonight at the BSU . '11l.e topic for debate is "This tive Club (1956-57) and was a Skeptic's Hour at 5:15p.m. lower auditorium of Wmga.te Hall. house '.believes: Gr:at Britain, has ·member of the winning team in Dr. G. McLeod Bryan of the Chr!.stm.an said tickets to the sup become the 49th state." National student Debating Cob~ David. Hughes and Dick Burle- petition in 1956. . religion department will uphold per are Prioed at 75c each and the Christian apologist's point of are being sold at the information .son -will makie up the Wake Forest The ScottiSh debaters are part view, and Dr. Timot!by Murphy des!t in Reynolda. Hall. · debate team, taking · the negative of a pre:g:oom sponsored by a com side. Jr. of the psychology-. J , '•
PAGE TWO Monday, March 10, 1958· OLD' GOLD AND BLACK 1 WGA' To Hold Election Registrar High School Seniors DE· ROSE- f ~. ~- • Hankins Finalists Coming Friday FOR THE BEST ,IJ Grad List F,:~· ~~~?.~!~}~~.?~~ II Forty-One high school seniors determined by 'the competitive Ite~ued ,by Dr. J. Allen Easley ation ~ll oil its election machin- en?- of the: spring· se:mester. They. JN . ,JI will make the second half of examinatiJC>ns and other .rna- Of the religion department will er~: thlS we~k and sta~t on fl will. be_ lil~talled m. a formal HAIR ,STYLING Is P()sted their try for· a George Foster terials submitted to the bursar. interview the applicants during ser1es. of ac.tiOW! ~hat wlll cul~- ceremony/ . ll Hankins scholarship here Fri- The awards range uv to $1200 their stay on campus. Other nate m the selection of new .offl- WGA officers make up the The names of candidates for I day and Saturday. in value fot' one year. They can members of :the committee are cers for the group. organization's Executive Council, 924 Bur~e PA 4-&lft·· . il graduation at the end of tile The students are the semi- be ·renewed to cover a student's Dr. C. H. Richards, Miss Jane A co~pulsory meeting of· _all which is the official ,body reP- spring semester have been posted finalists in the scholarship com- total four years in college if Owen, Dr. ·c. S. Black, MiSs coeds wxll-be held Wednesday a'\ resenting the coeds as well as -===::==:jt=::=~=::== ·e on the bulletin board of Reynolda petition, and they will come he .stays in the upper one-third Lois. Johnson, Dean W. C. 5 p. ffi: in ,Wait ~ha!'el to sel~t the coed "Supreme Court." - ·:-- " " 1J Hall, according to the Registrar's to "the campus for a round of . of his class. · · 1\.rchie, Worth H. Copeland, and an officers nommating comnut- (bffee Hour li Office. examinations and interviews. The scholarship· fund conies J. L: rvr~mOrY _Jr. tee. The WGA Soeial Standards . t! Mrs. Percival Perry, assistant No kt rmmber of scholarship from th~ estate of the late Col. ~n~rtl!inmei:Jt ~lanned for Two representatives from each Committee is sponsoring a coffeE!~ registrar, has requested that recipients is 'chosen each year. George Foster Hankins of Lex- the guests will include a ban- class will .be chosen for the com- hour Friday night froni 8:30 p. :f, seniors check the list for any Assistant Bursar J. B. Cook ington. qllet in the Magnolia Room .Fri- mittee. Ex. officio members of the m. to 9:30 p .. m.. · With serrii- r mistakes, including mistakes in said We_dnesday that he did Twenty-one o.f the· seniors day night, follo':"ed by a .cof~es group include WGA . president finalists .comJ)etfng :her~ for Hank-· t! the spelling of names.· · not know how many will be due here this week end are. hour in Bostwick Dormitory. Joan Owen and ·social Standards ins scholarships as gtiests. · - · ·•. c• Seniors not . on the list, she selected. Twenty-five students boys, and 20. are girls. Only one Committee chairman Jane Aycock. Other guests invited include • :& said, should come by the Regis received the award last year. . student, v.rhose home is in Miss Lois Johnson, Dean of ·W~ the college ~olarship . commit~ ·. ]3 trar's Office to ask the reason The awards, made only to Washjngton, D. c., is ·from ·out;.. IRC Members . men, also meets with the commit- tee. and students act1ve in various for the omission. The list does prospective freshmen, are on side North Carolina. tee. - campus organizations~ Th~ event not include some seniors who the basis of need and· ability as A scholarship committee After selection by the coeds will be h~ld in the formal parlor p may graduate but who, at the To Consider Wednesday, the committee Wil~ of Bostwick DOnnitory. . : : s· moment, lack the fulfillment of nominate two candidates for. The College's scholarship. com'- a certain necessary conditions. . Jks -WGA president. The Executiva mittee of.·, the fa date. ; dl 21 earned B.B.A. degrees, nine !ed by four members of the club. WGA officials have explained A Baptist Student Union "work earned B.S. degrees, and nine will · The ·two foreigners were Ariel that "the double election enables a camp'' has been set ~or May 28- .... Y• receive B.A. degrees. .. Eilan, First Secretary of the defeated presidential candidate to ;June 3 at · the Np:rrth . Carolina f< Permanent Mission of Israel to the run for another· office. · • -Baptist' retreat at.· Caswell, ac ~··l •• United Nations, and Dr. Fayez A. ~oth elections must ·be held by •cording to Charles Deane of rthe N Sayegh, acting director of the April 15 this year, WGA presi- College BSU. -· oj UNC To Open.. Arab ·states Delegations ·office dent Owen pointed out Thursday. Only a limited. nurr:.be~· of stu- - in N:ew York. The new officers ' will take up (lents: CllJil.. attend the ~amp, 'so f< Eilan was here Feb. 11 to speak application. must be made early, ti Easter Series to two audiences of history and Ar. , d. · ·/ Deane said, · · _ 2l "Easter, the Awakening," a new 'Jolitical science students. He de- . m_y·pon. ers .Tames 0 .. Cansler, BSU director program at the University of fined Israel as "a bridge between . at the University of North Caro- North Carolina's Morehead Plane E&-;t and West" and "an island of 'ROTC-'s Fate lina, and .Tames ·Greene, BSU 'W tarium, will open tomorrow in cJemocracy in the East." director at .Appalachian State Tt Chapel Hill -at 8:30 p. m. He called the 800,000 Arab refu- Teachers. College, will be in o1 gees in his country "the most High military leaders are con. charge -of the eamp. ila The program, a tribute to thf, nefarious hoax that has been sidering "drastically reducing or The week-long.· camp will in Resurrection which has already w: nlayed on any nation in years. even eli.m.inciting" the ROTC elude periods of .·work, individual been viewed by more than 165, . "'1 Ai·ab o_fficials. have made them pi-.ogram on· the nation's college and group meditations and ·recrea . t;_ ·a 000. persons in the past eight >tay in refugee camps in order campuses,, an artide in the tion. Campers will .rise at 6:45 years, will be given !furough April .Combe_d Poli$hed · ki 14. that they might be used as po-' latest issue of Look Magazine a.- m.; and curfew will be ·at 11 p. :PI 1itical and propaganda tools." ·claims. • - · m. Study groups will meet at Cofton Sl~cks Acc'ording to planetarium Dr. Sayegh, called the princi· Failure of ROTC. to produce a night. · ;S8 · ficials the program concerns pal spokesman for the Arab sUfficient number of high-cali- . The morning work peri~ ta "ageless story of Easter a;nd the states in this country, was on ·--ber officers is causing the ser- begins at ·s a. m. and continues :M Resurrecti-on and will be com the campus Feb. 21. He spoke to vices. to take "a nervous new to 1 p, m. with a rest bre:lk a~ 'T.! Pl€mented by an inspiring pa 'l student audience in Reynolda . ·look" :at the entire RoTC. s~- 10;30 ·a. m. ... . ·. geant of lights and music." T·he luster lOok tapered Duke Vocalist- The young lady· at the microphone is Jan Hall. In addition to his position tern, the magazine said. The afternoons will be :free time in. ·-re :Iv~ styling. -~l)Se llfld spot Shows for school childre~ will Forrest, a vocalist with the Duke Am- ';lS director of the delegation, he According to Look, "the Ari:ny for recreation. Another recrea- ti-~ he given at 11 a. m. and 1 p. m. res1stant. 2 easy::c&re , WBsh.., ir1 bassa.dors, dance band which will furidsh musie for the annual ROTC \s chief of research and public has assigned n civilian team ·to tion period begins at 9:30 p. ·m. able colors. Sizes: ,28"-· 40.": · daily. The publi~ will be admitted: liason and c~unselor of f:be .Ye- determine why the ROT.<;: is .not· The· program for Sunday will . : i'•. ' . ( so to them after all chilren and reser Military Ball here this weekend in the Army Reserve Armory. The 'Tle"l delegation to the Umted attracting higher quality stu- include Stinday . School services tli; vations have been seated. Ambassadors are a well-known unit from Duke University. Nations. dents.'!. It also says ·"the -Navy at SouthPort. Baptist .Church; ~ ' he • ! -'------;,;,------...:~<-.------...,._..- ..,..., ...... ,--,:..._-,--..,...... ,_ .---:------is worried" about its failure tb pic~c lunch, and a boat ride. A f.~ \ • ·' • 1 • • • ' ·, · get enough officers from · its sunset worship will ·be held on 1 - • • ·w F D D.· 65 0 a·..· n· . T..· .. h.. ~ e~ .. D • a· I va~7:e~-~:~: ~f~~ral~la~h: arti· th~;::ch~lso ann~unced a. tour . 1 cal says, are considering re-. to the Fifth Youth Congress of the r1nt1ng placing ROTC with a program Baptist World Alliance. The dates Today 6:30--Twilight Time 11:15--Deaconlight Serenade · that would give selected col- of"the event are June 23 through 3:00 p. m.-Musie in the After 7:()().,.-Lucky Strike News 1 lege graduates a four-month July 6. DIAL l'Ark 5-3511 12:00-The Old Gold and Black noon, Stage 1 7:15--Pop Showcase Show Officers. Candidate School A $7.50 fee must be se?1t with. a 4:00--News Headlines 8:00-IIqrn.ortal Port.t-ait.s. Thursday ('()'l:rse fcllo"wed by flying train~ s;tudent's registration application, 4:01-Music in the Afternoon, 9:00-The ·Ninth Hour 3:00 p. m.-Music in the After- ing. he said. · "Pete" KEIGER Stage 2 9:30--Date on Disk (Part 1) noon, Stage 1 6:00--News Headlines lO:OQ-Date on Disk (Part 2) 4:00--News Headlines Printing Company 5:01-Music in tihe Afternoon, lO :30--Late Date 4:01-Music in the Afternoon, .. ·.' -~HRU-WAY T-V AND 410 Brookstown Ave. Stage 3 ll: 15...... i>eaconlight Serenade . Stage 2 I 6:00--The Woman's World l2 :00-Sign. Off 5:00-News Headlines __..,_ 5:01-Music in the Afternoon, · APPLIANCE CO. ·- Tomorrow Stage 3 I - 3:00 p. m.-Music in the After 6:00-Tihe Woman's World noon, Stage 1 6:30-Twilight Time RCA AND ,ADMIRAL 7:00-Lticky Strike ·News ·SPRING HATS 4:00--News Headlines HI-FIDELITY HEADQUAllTERS FOR Sportiest of All; 7:15--Pop Showcase $5.00- $15.00 4:01-Music in the Afternoon, WINSTON-SALEM CoHon Cord Jacket Stage 2 8:00-Campus Opinion ALL LOVELY SPRING SHADES 8:30-Immortal Portl."tlits OPEN NIGHTLY TIL 9 P. M. STRAWS, FLOWERS, AND l'RUITS . 5:00-News Headlines 9:00--The Ninth Hour 5:01-::-Music in the Afternoon, At 9:30--Date on Disk (Part 1) Easy Terms ,498· Stage 3 10:00-Date on Disk (Part 2) 6:00--'llb.e Woman's World 10:30-Late Date ,... Cardigans in 'popular Ivy 6:80-Twilight Time 11 :15--Deaconlight Serenade fin.e-stripes, many ·colors. SYLVIA'S 7:00-Lucky Strike News 12:00--The Old Gold and Black Handsome and ,hand-washable. 21i W. 3rd St. Phone 2-1033 7:15--Pop Sbo\vcase Show Zip-front, knit trim. S-XL. i· 8:00-Immortal Portraits Friday. SUMMIT STREJET PHARMACY, Inc. 9:00-The Ninth Hour ' . ' 3:00 p. m.-Music in tpe After Foot Summit Street Overlpoking Hanes Park .Phone P A 2·1144 9:30--Date on Disk (Part 1) noon. . Stage 1 lO:OO-Date on Disk (Part 2) 4:00---News Headline.; everybody enjoys '• 10:3()...... Late Date 4:01-Music in ·the Afternoon, YOUR PRESCRIPTION OUR FIRST CONSIDERATION 11: 15--Deaconlight Serenade Stage 2 Milk So Fresh N' Pure 12:09---Sign Off 5 :00-News Headlines Three Licensed Pharmacists T9 Serve You 4 from Wedne~day 5:01-Music in the Afternoon, Stage 3 · 3:0i p. m.-Music in the After Pro1ppt Delivery - 6:00-The Woman's World FARMERS DAIRY LAND noon, Stage 1 6:30-Twilight Time 4:00-News Headlines drink more 7 :00-Lucky Strike News 4:01-Music in the· Afternoon, 7:15--Pop' Showcase Stage 2 . 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FOURTH PA 3-2241 CHERRY AND INDIAWA STREETS 801 WEST FOURTH ST. - ' . .._,_ ·.-· ''' '., '\ OLD GOLD AND BLACK Monday, March 10, 1958 PAGE TuREE .One-ACt Play' DaT· ectors , State ROTC Rifle Champions Prof's Remarks Critic Will Hold ·ca$t · ryouts ~ In 'Peyton Place' Talk - Tryouts for/a . series of one- "Auto da Fe," one of· Tennessee .. act plays will be cond)lcted in the Willial!ls' works, .has only two By CHARLES WALDROP he said, and the author "doesn't arena. theater from 3 p. m. to 6 p. roles. J-immy · Icard lan4,ed the . "Peyton Place," the eontroversial select the most pertinent deails.'' . m. today ·and tomorrow. role of Eclor. Lela Faye Coltrain best-seller by Grace Metalious is "Most of :the characters are The series is .the, second to ~ will play <>pposite ,him as · Mme. not a literary masterpiece. stereotypes.'' he said. As examples ' · prese~ted by student members of Duvenet. Bill Smith is directOr This opinion was expresseed ~e mention~d Nonnan Page; the ·Prof. James Walton's play' direct- and· Martha Erwin is _producti~n Tuesday night by Prof. R R mother ndden boy;" Rodney · ing cla.ss this year. · · manager. _ Howr-en of lthe English dePart. Harrington, "the spoiled rich The first series will face a.udi- Willie R. Kimberlin will direct ment. He was speaking to the man's son;" Allison MacKensie, · ~nces March 20 and 21. Tbe series the actors and actress -of "Moon Philomatbesian LiterarY society. ·~e sensitive adolescent;" and being .~ast . today and tomorrow light Escape." Harold Odom as Prof. Howren crilticized the MISs Thornton, "the dedicated Viin take the stage of the arena Jeff •. Budd Ga1fney as Dootor and novel as "lacking I·n taste • f orm, teacher."So P ts ' , ·theater April 1 and z. Nancy Long as Kathie w.ill form and originality" and for containing me a.r Powerful · · . · his cast. Miss Long is serving as Casts Will· be chosen this week technical director of the play. an ''excess of characters events But the novel, according >to the £?r "Another Way Out,'''. by Law sex, and words." ' ' professor, is not completely bad. rence La~gner; "Glass Mena- ' T.he student actors and actress- Lacks Sell6ibility He termed some passages "power- gerie," ·by: Tennessee Williams; eS appearing in ·.the. play series He ~thinks the author lacks tha ful" an~ n;.entioned two good ••The Loving Train," by Jerry were eh.osen on the )lasis of. their "sensibility for a sensitive hand- characterizations, those of Selena MS.th~rly, ·and "Judge Lynch,". by f!.ppearances in recent tryouts... ~ ling" of her material. "A story on Cross and Kenny Steans. He feels E. S. Rogers. · All the ph•ys· lire. ·one-act pro- sex,'' he said, "can be, in the ~ . author shows , flashes of Writt,en ' By Student ductio11s. ·The theater's ima-ginary hands of. a Chaucer. an enduring Insight" and talent . a~d ma:r "The Loving Train" is the first curtain rises _at 7:30 p. m'. for each part of the 11terary tra.ditioiL The become a good novehst. play written by a . Wake Forest play. All foul" plays will· be ·pre same material, in the hands of a stud·ent to be produced on , the sented both night~.:-- person with the instincts of a arena theater stage. The author · · " country bUillkin, can be crude. . ·is .a ,j~ni-or from .Greensboro and ·s· .~; .. ', B":·, s· u She approaces a <:ountry bumkin, . . managing editor of The .Student . ta· te"·- '·. .· . ~d can be vecy crude.,. magazine,.; · Most of the sex and some l.trl- .Andy Smi.th, a .freshman fro·m RIFLEMEN: _of the Wake ForeSt ROTC team are shown ori the· Reynolds Gym firing range necessary events, Prof. Howren. w!~h trophies and medals they collected in winning the N. C. Invitational Tournament here last week. thinkS. were sensationalized and - ~reensboro •. -will direct "All-other Map~s· :WaY. out." Tlli-ee women and two · T__ o_u_ r ___ _ Sh~~· left to right, are Erle-'Thomas, Sfc. William DeLoach, caach ~t the t,eam, Horaee Steadman, Ed included for ttheir "shock value.'' men'aie needed for roles. . Hairfield .and B.:;Lrry Daviso~ (Grigg Photo) Can't Select Details . · TW.O. men and two women are Students who wouia. like to at- There is a lac)t of fonn, he de l1eeaild far "Giass Menagerie.", tend the Fif:th Youth congress clared, because there are too many RO~ella Jewel will direct the pro-· of l!:he BaptiSt World Alliance in 3rd Straight Year characters and no distinct ttheme. duction, ·which was presented last Toronto, canada. next summer "Fonn is a matter of selection," year bY' the· play·· directing class. can -~t in sOme sight-seeing on a i·., ·Small casts are being sought special t 9ur b.~tng planned. by the Hairfield Leads. ·Tou-rn_ainent _.Win . 'for ~'The · Loving . Train" and State BSU Office. · · tJudge Lynch." Linda Willard and . Leaving ·Raleigh June 23. tthe ' N~z;cy Long )Vill.direct production tour will include such points of Led by the record-breaking fir- tourney. He scored 387 of a possi- 34.74; Drike University, 3471; N. o! the -two plays. · interest in Washington, New York ing of Ed HairfjeJd of Morganton, ble 400 points in the final stage ~. State (Anny>) 3353;. North THE COLLEGE INN· RESTAURANT · Casts have already been chosen d N Wake Forest's ROTC rifle team of firing to set a new school re- Carolina A & T (Air Force) 3243; AND f,or the . four "laboratory :produc an i:agara Falls. After the swept to first place honors here cord. The first round of the tour- and North Carolina A & T tions" to be given. March 20 and Youth: Conferen<:e ends, li:he No:th last weekend in the North Caro- nament was fired ihere three '(Ann") 2929. ·· 21. . ! baCwolineans k . R .are h Juldue to arnve rma R OTc 1nV1tat10nal · · Rifle· Tour- weeks ago. Faustjn' WirkUs of North Car~ . 'First_ Warning' · c In a 1eig Y 6 • · nament SPAGHETTI HOUSE . August Strindberg's "First Last For 20 Years · 6 TealllS Compete lina ·was runner-up to· Hairfield~ . WarDing" ihas four <:haracters. The Youth Conference will per- Hairfield fired a 761-point total Small bore rifle teams frfelt _tbe\3524; N. C. State (Air Force) the squad. l.PPUCATIOfl-lS MUST BE RENDERED her as production manager. From Raleigh, the group will go H~alth Department did the ngbt directly to New York. Then the lthmg. - ASOF . "'". - ~.:-~-- •. .-. -. · buses will continue. to Ne-w:.Haven, ·Ass9Ci9:ted_ Collegiate Press 1 Stewart Buick Co. C~I?-n,-. where ~he ~tudents . wm 1 ask~ t;bis que~tion of ?- cross APRIL 3, i958 USED CARS v1s1t Yale Uruv!'!rSityt Harvard. section of Amencan colleg\ans: COt". l;t· & Br ad.- Sts. University also will be toured as j !'Do you think tlle. Pub_Iic H?alth 1 · • 0 the group- m!)ves on to Boston and 1Departm~nt was Wise m Widely 1 TO BE ~UBJECT TO OUR EMPLOYMENT PLACE ·USED: CAR ~RIVE-IN to Concord, Mass. Rochester, N. I publicizing the possibility of · an M:,llNT AS STATE:P IN OUR PREVIOUS AN~OUNCE . .' 133 N. Ma1n St. Y.,. ,will be the next stop, ·and IAsian flu epidemic. -or do you BaT Where You Can from there ihe students will go hink it should not hav.e given the · MENT Co~t On'· The Cars Being directly to Toronto. problem so much publicity? WbY? e · C~EAN · . On the trip home, the buses will · Results of a tabulation of the THE COLLEGE SURVEY . • RECONDITIOI'(ED: come back by way of Niagar-a answers .indicated that most stu- -· : ~Y; Falls, then on to Buffclo rto spend dents think the publi,;;ity pr6gram BOX 625, Charlottesville, Va.. Compare. That's A.ll. the nigh:l. Philadelphia is the next was a good idea. We· .Ask! stop, and then the group will . The answer sho\ved ... this: spen' - ~ ' ' . . REGISTER' ' STALE.Y'S ~ ' ' ·charcoal Steak. House •. . I •• •
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' ' { •well, ·1 MisS'ed ··The ;aig,ORe' ®lb ~nlb nub ~lark ·• Magn'Oil~ ····· · • • Wake Forest College • • WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., MONDAY, 'i'IARCH 10, 1958 Leaves=· By Edie Hutchins A coed was ea-ting 'su_pper at .ihe Union Needs Support K&W. cafetel'ia and a huge pile of trays was stacked· by the ·tab~e A Student Union can be far more of the student body. at W:bich she was sittiz}g. Suddenly than ping-pong tables, card games Because of financial and numerical I · ·there was a 'loud. cra.Sh''.. and' j!O}ie limitations, the program will have to turned to see an eHlerly lady and pop machines. If given a chance, sprawled on t,ll,e··- floor .sur~ start off on a scale somewhat smaller it can be the co-ordinator of a dyna rounded by scattered. trays. than that of nearby schools. But the · · 'Dhe lady .waved away ~11 mic, well-rounded activities program early days will be the most iii?-portant \ ,gentlemen. who .had jumped and the basis of a contented, well in the life of the Student Umon, and - ·help her and said, "Those:·~;tu.deJlts rounded student body. unless it is supported in its infancy it ·a-t· Wake. Forest. · could conceivably die before it has ean ride .on these ,. For years untold, Wake Forest has trays, so I guess been one of the few large schools in begun. We are told that it sometimes takes . I c~n,. tOhit her. She. pulled her hair to relieve the situation is understand back jnto two one above the Knowing Wake For~st as we do, tufts, able. It is not the school's business to other; coriihed them together and we cannot believe something so badly \ ·. -presto-she had a "pony-tail.'' entertain its students, but is rather the needed can be refused. It needs your responsibility of the students to han support. dle such matters themselves. This A member of the Stttd~nt Leiis latest movement originated with stu ·lature has a.n idea whiCh ·he ia dents and now has gained support . considering introducing a.t some future meeting. He. says· that from the administration, giving it even A Reminder JOHN ALFORD he better chances for success. believes if Wake Forest is going. to A greying old gentleman ap have the honor .syst'!'.ll'i at all it The Student Union, however, is far pr<'ached the Reynolda Hall informa should be carried to · its · fullest from being a reality on this campus. tion desk. He pulled from his pocket -eXtent, . which .he defines as coed It is going to take more than casual a five-dollar bill and handed it to the (All letters to the editor m'ust be signed; n,ames will be with dormitories. interest; it will require active support clerk. Then he. explained. held oR request. The right to edit )etters is reserved. Letters from every area of student life. "I had a wreck near here the 'other. Letters do net necessarily. ~eflect the opinions of the edi~rs.) The . students aren't the only So, if our many factions· are to be night, my first in years. Two of your culprits: around the campus, it united in the cause, it must be made students happened along and helped To the Editor: Many of us still·belie•·e ·"Faith, seems.· Two colored- boys. 'employ clear just what the Student Union is must be born again through faith . ey ' by' the ; cafeteria w:ere seen me with my car. I couldn't have roan Ohristian.i.ty is certainly con· comes by hearing, and hearing in the shed blood of Christ, who NOT.. walking down the hall giggling, \' \. fronting a crisi~ on the campus of by the Word of God;" whereas aged without them. Their names are I!l.ade a subStitutionary !!acrifi.ce · .rolliilg .their eyes, and whispering, It is not, for example, an anti-fra Wake Forest College. We were Archie Morris and David Barefoot, the "author states "Faith, then is for our eternal a·tonement; before ''Do you see Mrs. Sheridan a.ny ternity move by independent men. and I'd like for them to have this." mad~ aware of this fact last week not believing in the infallibilitY' he can ·become a member of the .where?: · The idea originated with these men, "1'11 see they get the gift," said the with the religious emphasis, 'but of a book, nor giving in~ellectual Body of ·Christ'. which is his even more so through an article a.ssent to doctrines, nor having Church. ·. :. The reason for all the -giggles and they· doubtless ·would benefit more desk clerk. Then the visitor, who lives . and secrecy· was soon discovered. than fraternity men, but the move in our. February 27 issue of The -the minii overcome by extrava 'Rebaptislng inexcusable' in New En·gland, thanked her and Student. gant and spectacular marvels. Baptists through the . centuries. •. Orie boy, .holding :his arm a~iffly ment does not intend to infringe upon 1 illis· side, was a .dlsh on turned to leave. All of this J'esus rejected." have been known for converting - tO c~ng fraternities in any respect. Rather than writing :to th.& . whl~ was place1f-a·big piece of But he paused to make one parting editor of The Stitdent which will Should Know Doctrille and · rebaptizing by . ~nup,ersjon· :frosted cake. Other schools, with fraternity sys co.mment. "Years ago," h~ said, "I "What basis does J:U;. have for members of other · denominations. . tems far ·stronger than Wake Forest's, not be published until the end of went to scho.ol, at Columbia with Dr. the month, I am writing to you.in such a statement? .'JesUs said not "ChristianitY Coilironts Crisis'' A boy, all dressed up· in his have also developed effective. student jot nor a tittle would pass from Hubert Poteatz (former Latin proft!s- hopes that :y<>U will print this in a . oonde'nll:\S US for this BS. Ul~XCUS~.. ~'Sunday . best,'!,_ complete .. ·-witl1 unions. The two are, in fact, remark the Word of God; He said if one able. We are even told that ;~e a.re . sor here); and he always told me that Old Gold right away.. 1 White. shirt and ·:tie; was 'being · - ably compatible as f i g u r e s from the friendliness at Wake· Forest First I wish to state· that the wills to do.' the will of His Father. ·standing' under the·· judgttient of . plagui'ld 'by a' grOup·of boyslJlied Davidson, Duke and State College will author· of "Christianity Confronts he shall know of the doctrine; and\ God for such·· aloofness from the prove. couldn't be matched anywhere. Now Jesus certainly did nat reject up on a w:all outside the Sigma 'i, I know he must have been right." Crisis" was very .unkind and un ecumenical movement. , . Phi Epsilon house. Amid all the , Bas_ically, the Student Union would fair to all of us who know by sl)e!!tacular marvels, for he .did Many .of us back home have · ~Cat-calls and other commotion a ~!: We know, too, that he must have manv himself, proving that he is profesSed in. churches. be designed to provide recreational ~perience that the BU,Jle iS. the ' our b~fP;r&. voicie., .. rose, .~Iearly.,i/~That's :the .;fa: been right. But somehow we had be God~ manifest in. tlle. flesh. ~a;riy ' Witnesses that we 'bel~eye facilities, lectures, concerts, dances, Word of God;' rather: than just a . soor,P:eSf thing' rve 'seen since the •f gun to forget, and we are grateful for hook that may contain the Wocd ThOse of us who still believe the Bible is God's inerrant Word. can opener." and dozens of other thin·gs, not for the reminder. And proud, too, that Dr. the Bible is the inspired and iner Is it good to cast off our faith · cert~in groups, but for every member of God should He see fit to use it Hubert's point was proved. to speak to 'men that way some rant Word of God do not feel we. . because some try to teJ..l, . us . tha~ are committing idolatry. but .we A coed working at the desk..cin '{· times. the Bible on which our glorious one of the girl's dormitories -wa:S believe we are :following the Lor~ college; as well as our blessed asked by a grot:.p- of boys, none of , I refer to his paragraph in vmich fTom Glory, who said those who America, was founded is shot full Mail Box Grem]ins he tries to bring .out contradictions whom she recognized, if she would, believe Moses will believe Him. of holes and now can hold no show them. around the dormitory. m the Bible and then writes that The Southern Baptist Conven. water· compared ·"with our en The mysterious little gremlins with through." these are "enough to show that no They . explained they were from which every campus abounds have tion has so far remained free from lightened intellect? out of. town and they had a They have also pointed out the thinking, intellectually honest the world ecumenical movement To follow the advice of the done it again. Those ever-present, al_.. · danger of losin'g mail in this manner person ean be expected to accept friend who was thinking. about ways-invisible little men who trample that yokes up Christ-rejecting article in The Student may lead · ;coming -to· Wake Forest so they and the punishment sure to fall on the view that the Bible is verbally Unitarian-s right along with to chaos in our personal .lives as wante.d to be , i;l'ble to tell her down a muddy path around the the gremlin . caugoht in the act. Ul:SPired and v.'ithout error. Those Method~sts and Presbyterians' as well as in our coll~ge. something about'. the girl~s dorms. 'Keep Off the Grass" sign and snitch The threats sound serious, but what who hold that the Bible is iru;ai being all members of .one body; J. Alex Bahnson cafeteria trays on which to snow-slide libly inspired confuse the mean Uinsuspectmgly, ..the coed led probably sounds more important to a because Baptists stress a man Junior Class them on a guided tour through have given fresh evidence of fbeir gremlin. is the post office's, warnin·g ing of 'the Bible . with the words presence. m which that meaning was ex .. several roQmS; poiliting out dif that if the tampering doesn't stop the )lreSsed two thousand years ago:: ferent things as they went along, This time they've picked on the U. post office will be locked at night and S. mails and the campus post office. Bible Is Inerrant All along, she was gratified. by during most of the week end. Dr. A. C. Reid last summer let ·their relriarks of "Oh, ho;:.v nice." They aren't holding up the Pony That means no love letters, no 11-nd "We"U have to be sure to tell Express or picketing the office for some of us read his autographed HUGHES' VIEWS . checks from home, no job offers and copy of Why i am a Baptist, By DAVlD HUGHES Marv about this." lack of letters. They are merely tak no bills during the evenings and week given to hlm personally by the •# She was very embarrassed ing an opportunity conveniently pro- ends, and there are hardly any grem author, Louie Newton. Dr. New Williams Pleas To Students when Rhe late.,. found out that the 1-"ided by careless students to have lills these days that can get along ton in his book quotes mall)" boys from ccout of to\vn" were. '' some fun. without at least one of these. leading Baptists in different fields To Give WF Good Publicity pledges of a local fraternity. They are showing up at night, We think the problem can be solved of professi-on who state that they '· --- . ' when. the official eye of Uncle Sam in two ways: students can start mak became Baptists and have con ·'Or. P>:eseren wa-s assigning a is not watching over his property, and tinued so because they believe the quii tohis Audio-ViSual class and ing sure their boxes are locked after (This week's column is writ asked the class w~ich day th~y ~re opening' all the mailboxes they can opening them, and gremlins can stop Bible to he an inerrant book, the pep rally for ':the · Carolina. find unlocked. · every whit of it inspired by God ten by Student Bcd.y President 'basketball game, initiated NA• pre-ferred ,to have the quiz. gremling. • through the HolY Spirit's speak Larry Williams. Da.vi.d Hughes TIONAL NOISE NIGHT and has A boy sitting in the back of the -Not content with satisfying their The nightly trip to the post office ing · through human vessels. It i:s will miss !illevera.l installments kept us in stitches at all athletic class . sooke up, "St,mday w~k." curosity as to the contents of the may not yield much in the way of their sole rille of faith. · while traveling with the debate contests. Dr. Preseren pointed his finger boxes, they have started addin·g to checks and letters, but we like to keep Also I wish to refute several team this month, and Williams If academic standards remain out . the wmtlow at .the chapel. the contents-with trash from the looking anyho.w. There's always the statements which the author tried will handle the column while he the same, Bill may 't!e around and said, "All right, 'yau'll have office waste basket. chance our Donald Duck and Playboy to make with no Scriptural basis is a.wa:y,-Ed.) several more years. Wonder if : your' quiz. a week fr()m SWlday \ ~ The gremlins probably have no cri subscriptions have come. and yet ro positively declared he'll break Dock . Murphy's re rriorhing." minal ideas whatsoever in mind. The And we give all gremlins fair warn that the re.ader might think tl:).ey , A 0-10 RECORD IN FOOT record.... post office authorities, however, point have the authority of a papal bulL BALL, a 6-16 recOrd in basketball, A nrofeS5or toln "hiS class he ing: no paltry pranks are going to . an act outlawing dancing, and a ed out that such actions do constitute stamd in the way of our Pluto and pul He writes. "The church must BUT GETTING BACK TO wanted to show· them an indica 7 come to terms with the critical controversy concerning o'Ur presi BAD PUBLICITY, just what are·. ' tion of ·the :fast. age.v.•e; are·· living. a federal offense. As everyone, even chritude. dent are certainly no:t the best a gremlin, knows, "the mails must go approach to the ·Bible ~nd with we ·going ·to do about it? ODK is. in. He then Oointecl out to them a -H. M. the advance in scientific know publicity for a school wi},i~h has taking a step :forward toward 'coed who, chewing hungrily, was. ledge . . . The Biblical writers be just moved to a new location. better public relations. They are eating her l~ch in class. BlL.L CONNELLY ROWLAND THOMAS lieved that the earth was flat, We wauld all agree that ath planning a leadership conferenc.,e :Edi~GJ' BusiD.eae Manager tha.t the sky was a ~olid dome ..." letics and· social life should be here next year for high school Dr. Rooort J:la.nes, -.,ducation The Word of God 5C!YS just tha only by-products of a college ar:d students. Leac1.ers iri student professor, laughingly joked that Founded January 18. 1918, as the student newspa.pe~ of Wake Fo~est College, Old Gold opposite. Isaiah ·40:22 says there '!lOt th.e main ingredient; acadeinlc govemmen:t, · N.ational H on o ·r it has ·been !'laid if thl! mimeo- standards· should be our· main graph machine should break ' /. and Black is published eaeh J.fonday during the sclulol year e:xoept: darlBg examination is a "circle- of the Earth", and Society, Key Club, etc., :froin all concern. down he would haye to _quit and holiday peri~ds as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board. Job 26:7 decl:are9, "He stretcheth over the state will be ''invited to out the north over the empty But at the same time I wonder :the campus for a weekend. teaching: place, and hangeth the earth what high school seniors consider ·While they are here we will not HANNAH MILLER, lfanaglng Editor CARTER HEDRICK, Associate EditOl' upon nothing.'' . ing college are thinking abou11 Trlnit~· Universitv students de JEAN MOORE, Ofti.ee Manager only show them over our beauti~l I GERALD TAYLOR, Circulation Manager . Given By Inspiration Wake Forest' right now. Most new campus, but also try to in fine modesty as the art of en With regard. to tht; creati~ high school students al.'e more in terest them in Wake Forest as . c~..rrag!ng }:leC'ple to find out for EDITORIAL STAFF: John Alford, Howard Bnnn, Dan Church, Jeb Davis, Sid Eagles, stories in Genesis the author m terested in · social life than ac3,d.e. their college choice. themselves how simply won.derf'lll 1 Leon Gatlin, Ann Griffin, Donnie Griffin, Wayne Gnnn, Maly Jo Hipple, Ed Jones, Ann The Student writes "we must call nti.c standards. · When we do bring visitors to YOU are. these stories sym:bols, parables, or Julian, Carol Landmesser, Joann Mask, Ann Melvin. Cecil Merritt, Bettie Mobley, Sarah While passing we might ask the campus, one· of the first things m~'"ths and not history . . .'' In ot.rselves the question: How High they will see is the grassless path some ''Sticklers" from an ex Murphy, Ray Rollins, Don Schoonmaker, Janet Shields, Virginia Staples, Horace Stead the same poragraph he says, man, Jim Turner, .Qharles Waldrop, Millison Wbiteh~d. Are Academic Standards At Wake on the ph!za. I wish a few 1 of change pa.per: "There is nothing inspired about Forest? A gUnion Plan 1 - ~e -::::N;:H:-C::O;;:T-:X-:~ -~ ile (Continued from page 1) I GOOD FOR ·~e the opini()n that "the Union I ly would not _affect in any way the I FREE AD.MISSIOft tie s-tatus of soeial fraternities." I • :l:y . • Davidson College, he pointed FOR WAKE FOREST STUDENTS I Jr~ out, has "a strong Student Un ion and over 75 p·er cent of the I b.e students still · are in fratern To The FLAMINGO' DRIVE-IN THEATRE · II to ities.:• And a-t Duke, he said, half ,1;5 the male students are fraternity L -·------~ me:ri and the schO{)l :has a power / ful Union program. Members of Shaw's commit PATRONIZE. OG&B ADVERTISERS tee represent every faction of the s-tudent body. Included are Oscar Kafer, Interfraternity. " Council ·president; C bar I e s · Deane,· independent; Larry Wil "THE COLLEGE. SHOP" liams, student body president; 'i and · Jane Aycock and Joan lit. Owen, Woman's Government. w. These students met Thursday. ~:·5HNJ4 es with Dean W. C. Archie, associ : ate deans E. G. Wilson and J. 1 W. Nowell, and members of th'e ~r l)ft studen~faculty committee. Let's· All Dress I ir- Dean Archie has said the Stu t.ir OSCAR. TURNER:SMITH. ·CHARLES LEE SMITH dent Union "can be a very· real lle · · . ·. . portrait by Rembski and wonderful thing if students .. ·_ •'. ._ ' . . •• artist, Howard C. C~isty . Up For !ld will support it," and other ad- . ministrative officials have " piedged support to the move ment. is· .WHEN DOWNTOWN-·AND HUNGRY.. /Bmiths Like BoOks, Easter is ·Initiating the ·movement !here and studying the programs of he . PAY ;A VISIT TO SUITS b8 IWake Forest College other. -schools have been Oscar to Jones, Bob Tatum, Bill Owens, Dacron-Wool it Eddie Allen and Buddy Young. =st l By HANNAH MILLER · tention' of giving tlle College the Others working with :the plan from $55.00 Tne men behind the books collection in 1941. His brother are Don Sc.hoOBmaker and Ro ed _·:The·--~'Biiss··R·estaurant''_-... ~ . . . . - ' forming the •College's soon-to-be- Oscar died in 1945. Included in bert Fitzgerald. SPORT COATS-· '· .W•. 5th St., Opposite Robert E. Lee Hotel dedicated Smith collecrtion loved hls will was provision for a trus-t~ both books and Wake Forest.· fund, the net income and part Featherweights tly Dr. ·Charles Lee Smith' ·and of the principle of· which would it .' Gci~d Food ~ Fine. serVice -'Reasonable Oscar Turner Smith, brothers1 go to the College for rare books. · Military Ball from $35.00 •Y- and alumni of the College, de- Charles ·Smith managed his en Rates cided to bring two of their chief brother's fmid until his death in SLAX- .g. \' \. loves together in a distinctive 1951. A gyoup of College pro Will Be·Heid· Dacron-Wool Lg, ALWAYS, .AN APPEALING MENU rare-book library to be given t<>.. fessors now directs the buyin'g :y- • the College. of [looks. ' from $12.95 · 'Charles Smith, the elder of the The shelves upon shelves of On Saturday '$. ft'aturing · ~s two,· was ou:ts·tanding in the valuable first editions and other (Continued from page I) of !d. fields education and printing volumes on the third floor.of the 011 active duty. We are .also showing a 'ly Homei:Dade Pies. • Breads ~ P~stries · after he left Wake Forest· in library will not be the only' re- ; .• ,•, J ·very fine selection of on 1884. At one time- president of minder to th~ students of the Col: and Mrs. Wythe M. Pey- of . WE BELIEVE YOU WILL ENJOY YOUR V~_~IT Mercer University in Georgia, Smith brothers' generosity. ton will chaperon the event. Cotton-Dacron.· he ended up a ·varied career in Two large. portraits of the Other members of ~he College -OPEN 'TIL,10:00 :P: M ....:_ · Raleigh 'where he was ownet of donors will be un-yeiled during cadre also will attend. lis ·Edwards and Broughton Print- ceremonies. tomorrow. The port· In addition to Kennedy, chair- SUITS _____ from $39.. 95 · lth ing Company. · ·. · raits will -hang in the' library. men o! other committees are ng Throughou.t his life, Dr. Smith The well-known portrait paint- Bob Williams, membership; Nor- ed collected books, especially' vol- . ·er, Howard Chandler Christy, man Kellum, decorations; Dick 'SPORT COATS na umns that had "the -personal· painted the picture of Dr.' Avery, arrangements, Horace \ from $29.50 he :,·The-· ~~~'DEACONil touch." ·His gift· to the College Chai·les Smith. The . artist has Steadman, refreshments; Bob a ~~ ·inc I u des autographed manu- · ·paintings hanging-_;in--,the White ~Ieilrick, sponsors; and Carter he ·scripts, ·documents. and- letters.'·· uou~e, the.Capitol,.and in· many a. !_:l~dric~, publicity.- Maj. Stewart -SLA·X -~-~~·~ _ _:__.~_ ··$10:.95~: · · ·by~: $895' --· f.· .. ' '-' ',• he ~,, Educator;:·: : Dr.; Smith am:i:ounced h s '1zi-' .i#ies· abro·ad:· .. ' ·-- .- · ·_,. ·H. 'Davies is_'- a·qvisor to the· --~·------~·------~------"~roup. "THE COLLEGE SHOP" .-in "' BY LARRY INGLE YOUNG DEMOCRATS ·~::·. ;as ..Louis Allen, Burlington law of. yer, will be guest speaker to lld .Scales· Trial Displays motTOW. night at the . regular -:y. meeting of the Yotmg Demo- )ffi a mt Need For Smith Act ~cr~a~~~~c~lu~b~.::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.- ~ .ey In U. S. 1\'riddle District Court ter ' ·;have a new trial after the n.s. in Greensboro recently Jun'ius r .Tencks decision ooened F.B.I-. .ed Irving Scales ?las convicted for I files. - gh the secoJ?-d -time .of belonging to The Justice Dept. set out to prove that Scales knowingly be j\Kclt;' lif- an or6aniza-tion (the Commun J.g. ist Party) w·hich teaches and ad longed· to the Communist Party by vocates violent overthrow of the \vhi:·h did not only abstractly e." gw'e,.~-ment. He is now under t.each and advocate the violent wlnslan -salem .ell .$20,000 bond awaiting an appeal - overthrow of the government, to the Fourth Circuit Court. but also incited action toward that end. ;ed · T-his was the fir~t case under :he two untried rulings 'of the Su Jn line with this think:ng wit- . ~re preme· Court: that defendants nesses who had belonged to the in such cases Party \\:ere heard. Naturally. they aJl said that the Party .' are entitled· to · a " see F.B.I.. files ·taught the action-inciting over J 0 GREY .BUCK throw. :nd ., ! 717!-218!8Y219I9Y2!10ilOY2l11 pertaining · to t~Y ·o DIRTY BU~ their cases a-nd The defense argued that the I I I I' I I I I I I that abstract'. Party did not teach such a t;he 0 BlACK ·BUCK p r e a c h ing ' of I doctrine and .introduced witness k." 0 BlACK: LfAMR NOTEf Ch.c:k size and style wanted. \' i olen t ()Ver .11 es who had kriown Scales. when ger Add JSc for postage. throw is not a he was a student .at Carolina. p~l a campu_s _favorite-••• and a crime. '"They testified that' Scales had lV6' After Scales i never in their hearing. advocated \ ~ bear for. wear ••• try· ci -pair ! lay . ' was convicted in · · overthrow of the government. ' 1955, he appeal- INGLE·. The jury came to three far 417-419 ed to the Circuit Court where his ;ranging conclusions: ·that the he . TRADE STREET appeal was denied. While ap Communist Party during the ca- pearling to the Supreme Court, 1951-5.4 period advocated the ing- the Justice Dept. allowed him,to violent destruction of the' gov n.a ernment, that Scales ·was a vas. member and had the same in tent; and that revolution was taught in an adion-inciting _na ion l:fappy 'newsl ture. hat ·- ' · Jw:ig:e Albert Bryan therefore· eo- sentenced &ales to six years ~k }, \i ·th, ARROW in prison, even though the ac luit ' cused was no longeJ; a membet· of the Party . . , University Glen This case (as with all- the de- eases of convicted Communists) en- raises a significant question of whether an American citizen for ,ean belong to an organization in ful cr'his brand-new shirt style com whkh he Jsincerely , believes. Many peopre -hoped that the bines your favorite featur~:-but• anti-Communist scare would be ex· over with ''the death of Senator ton at rear o£ collar, box pleat lHcCartlly. er? in back and Mitoga®-tapered tit. Scales' appeal will no doubt cotton tim,e. ••• ~ b€ upheld by the Supreme Court, red (See illustration.) In stripes, as it is one of the first cases and the fashions are lovely! concerned with the membership so~ids, and a hosf of fashions in >ud checks, $5.00 up •. clause of the Smith Act. Free the late~t.styles ... shop Cluett, Peabody (:1 Co., Im•. dom of speech includes uttering now whtle the selection PT'Y that which is unpopular with the majority of the people; this the is best! · .es? aut'!tors of the Smith Ad seem ed to have forgotten. ,_. .es? Many times· it would seem that ·we the people have also ARROW..:a.. ·forgotten this fact in allowing self-styled "patriots" to make us am the winston shop -first. in fashiO'n · - believe that the .Bill of Rights f)ya . faskionable second la.te only holds for those who con- ___.;.. ___ ~----~~-~------I form t~ the will-of the majority• ...... '' \"-- .. ii"AGE SIX llfonday. 1\farch 10, 1958 OLD GOLD AND BLACK Sears Has ~LITTLE .MM~CAMPUS ~ :lCJJeacs Whq Are· Greeks Part-Time Od~IIMift&ewsMotOtS By DOUG GRAHAM The warm weather last week brought on several lake -~ DeSoto-Plymouth :parties and plans for annual spring· dances among the Work Plan :fraternities. Brothers of two chapters Kappa Alpha Students who want to earn while , GOOD .SELECTION OF: u.d Alpha Sigma Phi, have begun gro·~ing beards for GUARANTEED· 11u~ spring festivities. learning and prepare for a career USED CARS .Some of the fraternities chose their outstanding after gTaduation will have the · 638 W. ha ST. ' . ._,':~P:A·· 2-o3M,. : . l • f ...... -:.:_--- -~-- pled·ges for th~ year and others got new pledges. One opportunity· to apply for a work jl'.roup, Delta Sigma Phi, .elected new officers. study program with the local Sears Alpha Sigma Phi Roebuck store. ; ' . ist An informal supper was held for prospective pledges Thursday Designed primarily to train BEST IN TAILORING ,days ' ' ' ~ :might in the Baptist Hospital cafeteria. store managers for the Sears tiriif~ Joe Featheroon has been elect chain, the ·program allows Wake new Coa( 'ltd ~aptain of the volleyball team. Forest students to work part-time doul: Delta Sigma Phi in the local store while taking the Harry Southerland The fraternity el~ted Howard seas~ company's trainee program. :Eunn president last week. Dick· · .. oii1 M. Winfry, personnel direct Made J" o Me·asure Clothes .:!.!len was named vice president · , R. SOOD l or at Sears, says the pr<>gram 4lrui Henry Finch will be secre eompe seeks to "give practical business ·Alterations 'i:acy. Ronnie Thomas was elected nine, training" and "give the student ' 624 W. 4tll St. PA 2-%«113 -treasurer and Jim Philpott' will an opportunity to earn a good - serval ltiel'Ve as sergeant-at-arms. The portion of his college expenses." squad oflfficers will assume their duties Grads Usually Chosen .The tis week. Normally, college graduates are worn Freshmen who pledged last selected for Sears' training pro GIFts· FOR. ,ALL OCCASION~S mean. -.o-eek were Bob Smith, Bill Baker gram. Each man spends a full . ' could !lind Joe Fileis of Laurel Springs, year as a trainee before taking 'TYPICAL. ~W ~HeR' P'~1..eM..:.... 'GH~~ 'AO~I~J/ AOOur ri~R. WATCHES - .DIAAIONDS - SILVER Ben ~- .J., Tom Self, Atlanta, Ga.; his place at some Sears' store. At'-11-ITY 10 HOI-[] tH~IR Al'feNIION fOR A WHOI.! HOL!R'fl LUGGAGE - CHJNA form) Larry Ward, H1mtington, W. Va., ,....----~------· ------~---·--~-·------Under -the student program, a ~OLD' JEWELRY.. FOit-1\IENjAND .WOMEN ~er ad Bruce Nations, Hartford, Conn. prospect can complete a third of A masquerade party was iheld his trainee requirements for each· Dix; at Shelton's Lake Saturday night. year of part-time work while' in EXPERT WATCH REPAIR SERVIC;E school. Sophomores, juniors and Greensboro· Preachers Whl HOWARD BUNN - . ' / Kappa Alpha . studen Buck Kitchin has been awarded ... heads Delta Sigs . _ • seniors are eligible for .the jobs. rJlte title -of "most outstanding pledge" of Tau chapter. A student joining the program game, Will Meet Here Today McPHAIL'S . ,;;:::;:~... tbey ~ The Old South committee met in Charlotte last week to conclude in his sophomore year could finish J)lans f<>r the annual Old South Ball. ' . all llis trainee work and, at grad withE uation, be eligible immediately for "What We Expect of a •Baptist Alumnus Jack Bailey of Rocky l\llount visited the chapter last Dr. E. W. Hamrick of there- ~iiiiii=ii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiii~iiii:! wru an assignment. His pay rate would College" will be the topic of a ligion department will conduct a i \' •eek. pastors' c.onference meeting on devotional period and President third be somewhat hgher tbfm the reg cousin Kappa Sigma ular training program would pro~ the campus today. Tribble will welcome the group. . Plall Malcolm Lanier has been chosen t.lre chapter"s pledge of the year. vide. The Greensboro Baptist Pastors' A period · of general discussion Ed Gresham was recently elected pledgemaster. Can Reduce Training Conference, meeting in Davis has been provided for, which will ·Easter Campus; Parade Wake Chapel at 11 a. m., 'Will comin~ Lambda Chi Alpha Men starting in the junior or include "any question about Wake Priscilla Hamrick, coed pinned to Bob Crumpler, was serenaded senior years could reduce their hear the question discussed by Forest College, its program of In t 11onday night. trainee period by two-thirds or f~ve Greensboro ministers and education and _service." meets I . . • . Alligator K~it Emblem Shirts _ $2-.95 one-thi d frve members of the Wake Forest The ministers will be guests of . . ' the De Theta Tau was host to the Iota Phi chapter of High Point College r · faculty . and administration. .at a basketball game Wednesday night. the College at lunch ::1 the Col- "IVY;·, Enrol~ment in the prGgram does ' The Rev. William L. Bennett lege cafeteria. · e Sport qoats -:- ____ .:_ ____ 22.50 Oil 1 An infornml party was held Saturday night at Reynolda Park. not obligate the_ student or the of Greensboro will moderate the The next· pastors' conference to .. winner March 22 ba~ been set as the date for the fraternitv's annual company rer:ardmg employment panel discussion. Bringing up the which the College will be host v.ill e "Ivy" T rousers ____. .,_,__.:_____ 7 . 50 up. the coi ~· . . . 'White Rose Ball and Founder's Day ~lebration. . after graduat10n. But st_udents ~re questions will be these ministers: be held here March 17. n.ing a1 Sigma Phi Epsilon guaranteed s_umme:; J<)bs w1th Dr. A. LeRoy Parker, president -• ·"Ivy" Sport Shirts ~----~---- 2.95-up · urawn Dan Churcil, Statesville freshman, and Paul Kelly, Sanftil•d fresh- Sea:J;s stores m the1r home town of the Baptist State Convention; o.f two :man, were initiated in eeremol\ies held last w-eek. · or college town. the Rev. Woodrow Hill, Dr. Claud Orders Prepared to Take Out 1 • 4-Holder Ca~~igan~ ___ ...: ___ 3.~5up pionshi Capt. and Mrs. Bernard DesRoches served as chaperons for an in Dr. Ralph Heath of the School B. Bowen, the Rev. Troy Robbins Plan of Business. Administration is co- and the Rev. W. L. Bennett. fonnal party held in Winston-Salem's Amerie:m Legion Hut Satur New Asia Restaurant. SHOP FRID,AY NIGHTS TIL 9 P. Ill•. go,ing 1 . -Gay night. ordinator for the program. In- . College personnel attempting to terested persons can contact him a.n!lwer the questions will be Pre . \ _ing out A large delegation of Sig Eps headed by president HarV-ey Dur at his office in room 307C of Rey- sident Harold W. Tribble, Dr. J. lnc. · We'I: ll&m will attend the SPE District Leadership School to be conducted nolda Hall. Glenn Blackburn, College chaP- Our Chinese Family Dinners teams i ·.a& High Point College Saturday. Dr. U. G. Dubauch, the fraternity's The work-study program was lain; Dr. G. Mc-Leod Bryan, as Are The Talk Of . The Tow~ staged :Dational scholarship chairman, will be the ··main speaker at. the begun last year in Winston-Salem socia-te professor of religion; Dr. LUNCH ...... ':: ... 65e Robert~s Me~'s $hop top~: -event. Dr. Dubauch also will speak the local chapter next to Mo~day. shortly after the College moved C. Sylvester Green, vice presi DINNER ...... ~------_ 95e · · · · · · "Your.. lvy:'Leagu~ Stile.Celiter" · : ( . · It has been announced that the annual· Sig Ep Ball will be held in here. It is employed by Sears dent in charge of public relations; ilarj stores in and near college towns and Dean Gaines M. Rogers of the ·I Oharlotte M.arch 29. SPE's from Carolina, Dul;.e, State, Lenior-Rhyne, W. Di Tarn, Manager 0P:P· Post OffiCe on W. 5th: street Swik High Point, South Carolina and Wake Fore5t will attend. During throughout the area. ' School of Business Administra- •' Phone PA 4-1356 315 W. 5th St.. ._, i Jiey's ~a the Ball Linda Kinlaw, Zeta Chapter sweetheart, will be the Wake 1 tlon. Forest entry in the Queen of the Ball contest. Appeals Granted The: The Sig Ep Lamp, Ioeal chapter newspaper, will be published and thr "Friday, editor Carter Hedrick announced last week. Key personnel on Larry Ingle, chairman of the '\ I totem·p the paper, published once a semester, are Bob Williams, Paul Ken College Traffic Board of Appeals, ·Hart, w: revealed Wednesday, that the three -~_. "Aedy, Buddy McCorkie and Doug Graham. and a 2 Theta Chi appeals made to the Board at its ...... ~, meeting Monday were granted., ·Jerry Initiatt'd into the fraternity Tuesday were Henry Beveridge of and a 1 Three students did not show up Gastonia, James; Fagg of Roanoke, Va., and· Rhodes Rumsey of manage Reidsville. . . to make their appeals. The char man said the next chance to ap Kins-ton Robert Fitzgerald of Lexington, James Pope of. Salisbury, Lou peal will come at some time dur Paul Wj (~ ' Sohwortz of Brooklyn, N. Y., and Cliff Reel of Elizebeth City were ing the early part of May. Fines pledged Tuesday· night. ' must be paid and V\'Titten appeals A far ' Ben TenCh, recently appointed social chairman of t.he chapter. issued before the offenders meet baseball ~- IUlllOUDCed preliminary plans for ~ Dream Girl week end with the Board. coach ( :\ pril' 25-26'- . THE REALLY GREAT. MEN of history are forgotten men_ Who did throw his cage An, informal open house· ;was held for members and pledges ~f "Barr here? the• High Point College chapter of Theta Chi Wedneeday night the overalls in Mrs. Murphy's chowder? Is Kilroy still Does Hooks. · :fofi6wing a basketball game between the High Point chapter and NEW anyone remember Dear. John's last name? No, friends, they're all wanted.' the Wake Forest chapter. The local chapter took a 53-49 victory (Sob!) forgotten. So right now, let's pay homage to the greatest of them :it! the annual game. all-the man who k~ps cigarette machllie :filled :with Luckies! t ~s Glenn ~ p~nned Mary Lon Macemore of Elkin, elegance rhe Let's honor the guy who supplies the one cigarette that's packed end: to end with fine; light, good-tasting tobacco, toasted to taste even Study A~ards a-foot better. Let's salute (Fanfare!) the Vender Teiuler! 'fouching, isri't it?
.Boo·klet Lists Grants: WHAT'S A NBlVOU$ RECEIVER WHAT IS A CHILD'.S SCOOTER? Wore tllan 25,000 scholarships programs, describes· American and Of STOlEN GOODSl -!i>r Ameriiia.ns w'ho wish to study II foreign education, e.nd discusses .U.:road- and' foreign students who government regulations affecting I -want :0 stu~y in the Unite~ ~tates !the international students. .are hsted m the 1958 · edrtron of The s<:holarship programs listed 1l!e "Handbook on Internatklnal range from grants for mature spe St.udy," published by the Institute 1cialists to programs for teenagers. 1Jf International Educ~ti~. I 'I1he 450-page book gives other The handbook, now m rts seeondt information valuable to the student ~dition, .is a "how-~" gu~de ~>n who wants to study in a foreign MALVIN GOODE. JR. Tike Bike. ICEHHETII, IIETZG~R. Tense Fence· m~t1onal ~ducat10n w1th m- land. There is a comprehensive ~£1111. SlATE NEBRASKA WESLE'YAII iorma.tio.n rangmg from where to listing of colleges and universities study nuclear physics in Sweden in 74 C01JD.tries around the world. to the exchange rate of the Indian Also given are the names and the 'f WHAT ARE IVY LEAGUERS? WHAT 15 A BREWERY'S GRAIN El.EV ATOll! :rupee. . Iservices of organizations willing It lists the 25,000 aw~da and to help the "exchallgee" find liv grants of more than 250 different ing quartel"S o:r meet new people lllllholarship programs, and also 1n the eommunity where he is .K'MM8i·· lists the requirements for these :iltudying. bv SEBAGO-MOC ',I WITH PATENTED WUT CONSTRUCTION Long, lo~, '.'Continental";, with · Stuck for dough? smart high-riding vamp ••• UWR!:IICE MILOSCIA, ~ · .START snCKLINGI ROBERT JONES. Tweed Breed IIEWAAII COLLEGE MaitVcudt Camel Pawn Shop, Inc. thi5 buoya~t new Patented Welt BROW II OF ENGINEERING ."HOME OF LOW PBlCE8" frees and flexes the forepart ~..§ MAK£$25 for easier walking while it . We'll pay $25 for every Stickler WHAT'ARE lliE CAHM>IAH MOUHTIE~ .TyPewriters neatly snugs the heel. we print...:!...and for hundreds Mellow-rich leathers, hand morethatnevergetuse'd!Sohart (Upright & Portables) ___ $29.95 Up lasted, hand-rolled collar, Stickling-they're so easy you M , .. S • hand-sewn vamp. can think 'of dozens in secondS! 9.95Up try ·1em! Sticklers are simple riddles with B Come in •.• and ens· uds ------two-word rhyming answers. *Big M: Radios & Phonographs 9.95Up_ Brawn, black. · Both words must have the Same Smoolh leather- $12.95 number of syllab'les. (Don't do treats tl drawings.) Send 'em all With Luggage:· Pebble grain - $12.95 your name, address, college and with ch~ class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box JOHN IIEitltHAUS, . ZELIIA SeKWAR-rt' . and a lil Men's 2-Suiters (New) 12.50 111.\'IER u. 0# .,,., , 67A,MountVE!l'Don,N, Y. don•t ha _Ladies 3-Pc. Set (New) __ '14.95 popular. Belcher's ~( Coke. P1 "Money To Loan On Anything-of Value" NISSEN BLDG. LIGHT UPA lig}!l SMOKE-LIGHT:UP A WCKYI 16 E. .fTH ST. PHONE PA '2-44711 Open til 9 Friday Nigbt .Ptoduct of c..f{:~J'~-.,cf~i.s m~rmidlkntu~~e~ a . ' . ' ··'' .. ,
'\' OLD GOLD-AND BLACK llonday, lfarch 10, 1958 PAGE~ By-CARTER HEDRICK Thincla.ds TO Begin Workouts Town Steal{. House By JEB DAVIS event with a six-feet effort, his STRATFORD RD. 109 LOCKLAN.D Wake · Forest's ··track team is best indoor performance of the SHOPPING CENTER AVENU. oow \busy ·preparing for tn.e year. .Deacen D~pe PHONE PA 2·9&85 opening meet of. the c-utdpor seil- Sar:1. Jordan also did weir ifl. the son ·vv:ith ·clemson ·here on Mareh dist!ince events although he could 26, · although f&cing a manpower not match the more experienced WINSTON.SALE~'S ilNEST RESTAURANT. shortage. · · · · l"\..Ilners. FAMC)tTS FoR QY.AuTY FOOD AND SERVJCE_ ' , · · · si~ that spring is. abouJ to b~ sprung these The squad will .rt'm in seven Another bright spot for Wake , days isthe appearance of so!lle. 25. men 1n grey-flann~l u,niforms ·goulg through· daily dTills on the. qollege~ meetsli.eets .Jordanwith' :Clemson says, withand CarO-home Forest·White, whowas. troshfinished dash second ·man in the ,•~======~ new : baseball diamond. ~nly· 11 da:ys rem!).m u_nbl lina. Both these meets will prob- : 60-yard dash and he.d an unoffi- CoacH Gene·Hooks ~nds his crew agamst, V. P~ I .. m a ably be scheduled for Reyholds . cial time of 6 ..1 seconds in the double-hea~er on_ the new diam.ond to launch the ·1958 High 'school. · semi-finals.· Jord:m thought his season. . . . Freshmen also will enter·• seven· \ time was rem3rkable. considering obty time will te)l but' right now i~ R})pears ~h~t D!!acon fans may. meets. Jordan says the ft"osh wUl .. that he -had been in bed with .t4e lilOOD have more to holler. about ·concerning the. re.sults of varsit~ '. m~t .C~tawba and. Carolina in .they d~~;t ... h&v~ much ~xperi- flu ail week. . . . dual meets,•. while triangular . · ·1 To :wan;n\UP for tl_le me~ .Tor- competition. \WhUe. only·-three ·ata~rs return from.. last season's events .are· set with Duke ··and ence. ' dan took the squad to· tlie annual nine w,hicib. finisHed ·second in .. ConfereJ!c:e play, Dr. Hooks has Chowan at Durham'".and Guilford · In the. ~CC Indoor· Games _.at Big FoUr Meet in Raleigh where 2·%018 6erv~l promising tra_n~feri-~nd freslimen out which shoul~ give the .. and Atlaqtic Christian"-at 'Gull-: Gha~l:.HllJ:- lasL.&iturcla~ .Dick ll!.edlin ·set ·a new school mark squad fine balanre. ford. The frosh also will nm , at Frazter · and Bob ~edlin fims~ed the tw~mile event. The Monroe · . The diamond squad won't ,b.e as fast' as some. squ:!ds that have State, the Big Four Meet·.and the fifth in· ·tbe 60~Y8;X'd run a~d. junior :won .that race \7ith a 9: AAU race. two-mile run. res~tively. Fr8Zler. 57.3 mark . . . . worn the .gold ~nd black uniforms~ past_years. But that· doesn:t . 90 Invited was one ot· five men· to break th~ Heath .also took first place bY mean.there will be .no speed. If several hopeful!! come through 1t On Wednesday Jordan sent old record ai?-d .l\1:edl~n came from oUltj\nnping·alJ entries from D11lt~~ could be rough on opponents. letters to. 90 students with pre- last place ~r · bem.g ··knocked. Carolina and State. Winning mark Ben Tench and Bill Lovingwood return to the mound corps to vious track experience. "If these down on the first turn. The en- for the meet was. 5:10. · form a· nuCleus for ~at ·could be a str~ng group, if one or two and other students , rill. try out tire field pa5sed him before 'he other. pitcllers perform as expected~ for the team and work hard" says could re~in his feet: · / TOP CLOTHING CO. Jordan they can .help :themselves "H~ showed me as much cour- H ' F t and the team. age as any man I have ever seen," 0fi0rary ra U9 N. MAl~ ST. Dixie Classic • .• Deacs -Third There have been only five men said Coach Jordan of Medlin, When Big Four rival N. C. State visits Winston-Salem ,May 6, · -four on t_he varsity and one would students will have to wand~r over to Ernie Shore)i'ield for the night "~e ~ve proba~ly gotte~ Is·sues Charter . freshman-in competition this win- tlitrd. place if he . hadn t fallen. ..A GOOD PLACE TO EAT" game, the only home tiLt to be played ~der lights. To· compensate, ter. "But we did pretty good,'' I Wake's only points in the_meet k M Center they will be· able to stay f~r the Winston~Salem Red Birds_ contest says ·Jordan, "considering thaJt came when high jum}~r .Julian To Wa .e en with High Point at no cost. · we don't get the' best boys and, (Deac) Heath placed thu·d m that- , What promises t~ be the big attraction of the schedule is the Wake Forest has received a Liberty ·Luncheonette \' third annual Dixie BaseBall Claflsic, modeled after its !amous charter to establish a chapter of '• . "~IGGEST LITTLE PLACE IN TOWN" cousin for cage teams. _Four Volleyball ·Tilts· Delta. Sigma · Psi, honorary ~th Plans now call for the host teams of Stat~, .Carolina, Duke and letic fraternity, it was learned last week. I Wake Forest to play the- opening round on ~heir· home campuses, "Purpose o! the fraternity will OPEN ALL NIGHT coming to' WinstOn-Salem for the secoJ1d and third r-ounds. Set. ITJ; Murf:Jls. be to promote physical, mental and Today Ow~ & Operated By Connette Johnsoa In that first ~ound Connecticut goes·· against. Duke; Lafayette nioral development of college stu meets State; Princeton engages Carolina' and Massachusetts battles , Intramural volleyball got off to top. of the small independent lea- dents/' according to 'Bill Jordan 2200 N. LIBEkTY ST. WINSTON-SALEM ' ••• ""l • • • the Deacons. . a roaring ·start last week as some gue with a 2-0 record. who has been designated as patron ~::;:::;:::;::;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::! 16 sets were played in Reynolds. The independent league-marks (advisor) for the Wake Forest - On the following day .. all --~~mes will be playeIanagers o:f .. f'r~tE!rn!ty t~!..J'!lS coach; and Warren (Floogfe) 440. N •. LIBERTY .:DIAL__ 2-U~ ·-,.....;ng'i'rcrsh~me-!!OlYhomnres;--:-::--- ,,._ -~.·~·--:-..;...,,_, __~- ,--. -e.. ,.,...... -· · ~ Kil.plfa Sigma-vs~·PiKA····;:-~~ ······ should· eheck tJe bulletin board Ariail, ·athletic. trainer,· plan to The Deaclets had five meri' to average over 12-points per game Theta Chi vs· .. Sig Eps Dodson· said. assist in the prog-ram. and three othE-rs had respectable marks. Big man on the scoring Sigma Chi vs Lambda Clli Turning to . other intramurals To become a member a student ·totem pole was~ the ·squad's shorty, guard· Alh:iy Hart ;of Kinston·.. · Taylor- vs. Le~al Eagles Dr. Dodson, . .the~~eellege•s· intr,a- must pass•. tests in . track, field,jjfiiiliiiilliliiiliilililillliaililalilillliiilillllllllilllllliililill · Hart, who missed only one of the .23 tilts, hit the nets for 451 points · Wednesday mural director, said·: second-round swi;mming, tumbling, football and and a 20.5 average. , Taylor vs. ,P .. E: K. matches in badminton must be baseball. He must also have good ·. ·Jerry Steele, 6-8 center from Elkin, was second with 358 markers Fraternity League 'play.offs· c-ompleted today. ·., posture and satisfactory s.chool (first round) ' . ' . _ 'Ilhursday will be the last day marks. Letters in two varsity IT'S ~PRING AGAIN AT and a 15~6 average. Norm Snead, who played. in only 15 ·contests, Thursday for ,students to enter mixed golf sports may be substituted for two managed a 12.6 mark while Dave Adkins, Hart's running mate from ·Taylor vs. Legal Eagles and mixed tennis. Play- will begin physical requirements. Kinston, finished at 12.5: Other .scorers were cBill nnnell at 9.7, Fraternity League playoffs in both events next Monday.. "We're going ·to set aside a Paul Wilner at\8.6, and Eddie Holbrook a,t 5.5. t·. (second 1:ound) Several ·deadlines for entering 11•eek later on for Delta Sigma . *. * ~ * Last Week's Results teams ht spring intramurals have Psi," says Jordan, "when we will A familiarc face to Deacon fans worked out with the freshman been set. Team horseshoe entries give the tests to any students who NATIONAL baseball team Iiist week when Bill Barnes took over for f:reshmaJ'l PiKA def. Sigma Pi, 1-0 (for- must be in Thursday, while so:f.t- hink they can pass." coach Ch!U'lie Bryant. ·Bryant was helping_.Bones McKinney get feit) . ball squads have until March 20 to "In the mean time students IVY! REGULAR! RACK MO·DELS'! ihis cagers ready for the ACC Tournament in Raleigh. Kappa Sigs def. Delta Slvs, 2-0 file team rosters in the intramural ~hoald practice until they can pass "Barnes really did a -good job," said varsity baseball coach Gene Sig Eps def. Lambda Chi, 2-0 office. Play is scheduled to begin .h·e tests," said Jordan. Require P. E. K .. def i•Ionogram, 1·0 Hooks. "He got· them in fine shape; and he did it just· because ,he March 24. A round robin, tour- nents for the fraternity are post- (forfeit) nam~nt will be played. .:!d in Reynolds Gymnasium. wanted to.'~ · P. E. K. def. Legal Eagles, 2-0 Walking Sh.orts: Stripes, Kappa Alpha def. Sig Eps, 2-1 Delta Sigs. def. Sigma Pi; 1-0 Dine And Dance Plaids, Solid Colors, Cotton (forfeit) HILLCREST SUPPER CLUB Kappa Sigma def. Alpha Sigs, Cords, Dacron Cords, all 2-0 . Mon•. - Fri. - No Cover Charge Every S!lt. - Rock & Roll Combo $2.40 eo~·er Per Couple Theta Chi def. Sigma Cru, ~-1 Completely Washable-Ivy Lambda Chi def. Kappa Alpha, Highway 158 West 2!-'Z -Mi. From' City Limits 2-1 PiKA def.· Delta Sig, 2-0 ·And Regular Styles at $2.99 P.E.K. def. Monogram, 1-0. To $6.99. League Standing's / . I Fraternity League Sport Shirts: Something New In Knit Division ,A. Royal Typewriters Pr Kappa Alpha ...... 3 o Sport Shirts, Slip-Over and Button-Up Kapp!!- Sigma -...... 2 0· All Way With Band On Bottom And Also Delta" Sigma Phi ...... ! 2 SALES AND SERVICE Alpha Sigma Phk.:::...... O 2 Sleeves. We Have A New Stock Of Form Sigma Pi ...... 0 2 New And Used~ Typewriters Fit\ Short Sleeve Sport Shirts - -Colors Division B Theta Chi ...... 2 0 And Styles You Nave Never Seen. Sigma Phi Epsilon ---··----- .. 1 1 1~DA Y SERVICE ON ALL ')lAKES AND MODELS Sigrna Chi ...... ______1 1 At $2.99 To $4.99 Kappa Alpha ...... ! 2 Lambda Chi Alpha ...... 1 2 Independent League Kelly Typewriter Co. Jackets: The.New 4- Legal Eagles ...... 2 0 Phi Epsilon Kappa ------· 2 1 Button Jacket. These Monogram Club ...... 0 2 618 W. 4TH ST. PA 3-7373 Jackets Are Complete Taylor ...... : ...... 0 0 ly New, Solid Go'lors And Stripes, Spring REGISTERED BARBERS Weight, Just Right For Campus W em.'. At $3.99 FOUR TO SERVE YOU FOUR· To $8.99. PHONE PHONE PA 2-3615 PA 2-3615 ------BMOC*" See Our New Line Of Spring Pants, •Big Man On Campus-yea man! He Belts, Ties, Etc. treats the gals to Coke~ Who can compete with charm like that•. so if yo~'re s•on . and a little underweight, remember-you don't have to be a football hero to be M: G. LAWING DALTON KDNG popular. Just rely on the good taste of We speeiaUze in cutting hair correctly JIM KENNEDY CLIFF WEISNER Coke. Put in a big supply today! . • . . the way you like it. SIGN OF GOOD TASTE Let us serve you today!
Bo~lecf und_pr authority of The' Coca-Cola' Company by Shoe Shine 431 N. TRADE ST. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. WINSTON· COCA COLA BOTTLING CO. ~=~(~ t :: CAROLINA HOTEL BARBER SHOP Service · Winsto~-Sal~m, N. c. ' \ ·- '• '•·· -";,' .. ·. -, .. :,.- ·, •.· PAGE EIGHT Monday,: ~ar~?!O, )958 OLD. GOLD AND BLACK 1.·.
DINE AND·· DANCE AT . ·' HooKS Steps Up Dialllond Drills . ' •' lflorkouts Moun.t~in Spdhgs Stressing Du~eTops ·RESTAURANt WF,51-44 ' Pitching. A~C Tou~nament· . -. By LEON GATLIN Ends Cage Season Baseball Coach Gene Hooks got ·SUN.-WED., MARCH 9-12. . '.' l1is first chance to aria.lyze the II RALEIGH-The Blue Devils from 1958 edition of the Deacon ~r-. Duke' dlew the curtain · on the ,·"EneRiy Down Belo~" :sity last week as he sent the Deacon's 1!}58 basketball season FIRST DRIVE-IN RUN - · 6QU.ad thro\18'.h a full week of out Thursday as t.l:ley defeated Wake With ROBERT MITCHUM. door practice, ending in intrasquad Forest 51-44 in 'the opening round games Friday and Saturday_. of the ACC basketball· tourna ·'.~Spook Chasers"". ment. In Friday's game Ben Tench With THE _B(}WERY BOYS.· and Bill Lovinglke. The game · was nip and "Sad Sack" Matthews .worked on· the mound. tuck until the last three minutes With ,JERRY LEWIS when the Blue Devils finally foUJidl Hooks said that lMt week's prac · · the range and ·Pulled olllt 47-36. ...:..:.AND- tice emphasized pitching, with the Wake almost pulled up to the hurlers also being drilled on field Dukes just before the game ended .· · ing bunt.s, and ooveri.ng bases. In "Sil~er Lod~" but a Blue Devil surge put .the addition, the regula.r infield, out · .. With JOHN WAYNE · game on ice. Number bwo scorer in· ~. "" . '- ~ Fir~t baseman .Jack Phillips connects for a hit during battin~ pract,ice. field and battir.g practices >~'ere Phillips Connects-- t:ne conf-erence, Dave Budd, ·clbalk b,eld. Phillips, Dam·ille, Va., junior, was chosen to the ACC's second team at ed up 16 points for the Deacs, "The real emphasis so ·far has the end of last season and is expected to play an important role in the Deacon plans this spring. At while little Bobby Joe Harris led -NOTICE-. left is catcher Marion Miller. (Harmon Photo). been on pitching," said the Dea Duke's a.ilt.ack with 12. - con mentor, "because pitching, in "We had a ·.gooi:l. chance to win a short college .season, is very im- B t IT C h that game: 'I thought so all week portant--at least 65 per cent of 0 ryan oac during practices," Bones contin . "Raintre8 County''" ... .u-~. "Thooe ·boys looked in fine STARTS' . I' sha.J>ti during the practice session 24 Renort For Deaclet Sq.u.ad · .. here yesterday." SUNJ?.A Y, MARCH lG ;:}1;,::"~~:-,:, ~!.':::!:;::I \ . . .. rell, a transfer from . Wmgate, as, . ".#:' · . · -Both teams got ·'the same num the most promising of the mound . 1st 'Winston-Salem Showing crew a.t the present. "They've Some 24 hopefuls an:swered l the squad's potential 'except that State; 14-at Oak P..idge; 18- ber of field goals-15; but the looked real sharp," he .said. The the initial call to freshman base- the Dooclets should have a Pfeiffer; 22--at Carolina, (dou- free throws made the diference. Wake Forest had 14 of 21 'While . . pitchers have been working out ball last week a.s the squad strong mound corps. According ble header); 24--0ak Ridge·; 25 Duke made 21 of 26. for a month now, pr-acticing in begins preparation for its fir!!t to head Coach Gene Hooks, ·-at Pfeiffer; 29-at Duke.. · · When asked about the scoring, the gym during bad weather. game against Duke here April four of the pillohens have out- . May 1-Wi;.lgate; 6-at N. C. McKinne;v iaid: "I always hate P · · s h 10 · standing high school records. ronusrng op s . S~ate; 8-Reynolds High School; to see a coach comp!ain ~We had S 1 l f l t The four-all righthanders- WAKE FOREST evera Payers up rom as Coach Charlie Bryant will 9--Chowan; 10-C h o vi an at more field goals than they did !!'ear's .strong fre.sihl!nan team are take over the reins today from :are Bob Kruthoffer, Jack Karc- Thomasville; 13--at Wingate; and we lost the game.' The free expected to help the team. "Bo· b her, Je-rry Galehouse ·and Bob : 15-N'orth .. do u b 1 e Bill Barnes, who sent the Deac- .._....v"'--~Jt'na throws are . points just like · field Brown, at second base•.. has looked Plemmons. Jim Smith also is hea·'-'er). . lets through conditioning drills u goals." In summing it up: "They ··DRIVE-IN··· THEATER , ,good," Hooks said, ''and Jerry I last week while Bryant worked expected to help. simply pUt 'that ball thraugh the . , . N. CHERRY' ST. EXTENSION West (pitcher). Also Dave Budd I with the De a c 0 nl baseball At first base is Paul Wilner The , college fraternity· ,system netS more than we did." · (pitcher> and Chao:lie Forte (third team. · and Howard Bullard, while base) will come out and should Jackie Medlin, Tommy Cra.w-· in the .United States dates back It was the first time a Wake l1elp us. There're two pitcl1ei'S, Not too much :::s known about ford and Joe Fielis are 'V.'orking to 177S, when Phi Beta Kappa Fore,s.t . tea.m has lost an opening was organized in Virginia. round ga.me in the ACC tourney. Walt Long and Wade Paschal, I , at the keystone post. At 'third ._;.; ~ :';!;-. '"'. ·.:r• • ''-:-. ,r', 'i· ~ ...~' 'ot who haven't had much OPP'micll team was the l Paul Amen to miss spring drills to f(}r the shorl:.sltop position in tails, chignons, buns, etc.) Slenderizing treatments (spot reduc A ~asterpiece 9f · Screen Entertainment one to beat in the ACC, the Dea-~ join the diamond team, was prais-~ Larrs1 Ward, Winston Futch and tion or all over). Free .consultation on any beauty problem. Choose con coach · quickly answered ed by Hooks fOT his defensive Billy Cox. · the finest.beauty shop in town. · 1'HE STORY OF; LOVE. AND WA~ ':Tii:AT HAS "Duke. But State has a real good abillty and speed. "He's looked Bryant will have th'l"ee catch ' THE HAIRDESIGNERS A PLACE OF HONOR .ALL IT'S 0\VN~ . chance, and I definitely think we l sharp so far," .said Gene, "and ers from .which to pick his no. 1 416 N. Spruce St. , · · Open Evenings have a chance," he said. "Per-/has a lot of speed which we need receiver. Bill Kirkpatrick, Jim Phon~ PA 42411 !laps we have a few question in centerfield." Pfohl and JelTY Gause lead that David 0. Selznick's parade. L'l the o:J.tfiel.d are Ken Metz- PRODUCTION OF ger, Marvin Toggett, Jim Liven goo and Jack Phillips. Ernest Hemin~ay's The frosh schedule: April 10--Duke; 12-N. C. The Varsity Grill POLO GRILL . ''A To~ ·Farewell. .. - . . . l Arms-". . . '. OUR. SPECIALTY: .. Pizza Pies ·.· featuring ·Charcoal Steaks' STARRING Italian Spaghetti Rock SANDWICHES OF ALL KINDS REYNOLDA , GRILL And Restaurant Jennifer • e MILK SHAKES HUDSON .JONES e PIZZA PIE COR-NER POLO ROAD AND CHERRY ST. EXT. Vittorio i:>e Siea WE SPECIALIZE IN (Nominated As Best Support:ng · AetOi') and ALL KINDS Olf REPAIRS Spec~alizing In See It From The Beginning. Featu~es at 1:05; 8:45; &:zS; 9:05 e A VARIETY OF PLATES Watches, G. E. Cloeks, Jewelry, Ring Restyling, Stones ReplaC- Steaks - Fried Chicken - Seafoods ed, Lighters, Fountain Pens. ADULT ENTERTAINMENT Razors . . 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