.. Omega Wilson Suspended

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1 (P \... ll TODAY NSDE TODAY, EDTORALLY nr *WFU, 1963 SUSPENSON PLEDGNG FACULTY MEETNGS n QUEENS.A Prze Wnnng Newspaper FLM SERES * * * * VOLUME LV W~eFore~U~nrs~,W~~on~~em, NorthCu~u.~r~~d~a;y~.~M~u~c~hl6~.~197~~.~o.~ ~N~~-~~-r~l~ 9 - * * ~ng.. Omega Wlson Suspended rt Of ng. or Thrs.),,,,, BY JOHN ELLOTT Staff Wrter Omega Wlson, sophomore of Mebane, left the Unversty campus Saturday nght after the executve commttee suspended hm from school ndefntely for refusng to be tred by the Honor Councl. Wlson had been ordered to leave the campus by 2 p.m. Saturday, and left only after a temporary restranng order was ssued aganst hm by Judge Harvey Lupton. Wlson had walked out of hs tral Feb. 25 after a fellow. member of the Afro-Amercan Socety read an appeal by Wlsrm to the executve commttee. whch asked the commttee F acuty Defnes Lberty Of Unversty Students The faculty has gven ts approval " n prncple" to the Jont Statement on Rghts and Freedoms of Students, a document drafted n June, 1967, by representatves of fve natonal educatonal and student assocatons. The faculty also voted to appont a commttee to formulate a conduct code consstent wth and ncludng the jont statement, and the student responsblty statement a dopted by the Unversty n The natk... Ll jont statement s wrtten n the form of a consttuton, wth a preamble contanng generaltes about student rghts and freedoms and specfc artcles concernng on a~d off campus behavor n academc and socal lfe. t was drafted and endorsed by the Amercan Assocaton of Unversty Professors, U.S. Natonal Student Assocaton, Assocaton of Amercan Colleges, Natonal Assocaton of Student Personnel Admnstrators, and Natonal Assocaton of Women Deans and Counselors. Snce ts formulatons, t has been endorsed by a number of. other professonal assocatons. The pr.earnble says that "students should be encouraged to - develop the capacty for crtcal judgment and to engage n a sustaned and ndependent search for truth." t says that the "mnmal standards" for achevng ths are outlned n the body of the statement. "The freedom to teach and freedom to learn are nseparable facets ofacademcfreedom, accordng to the preamble. "Students should exercse ther freedom wth responsblty." "The purpose of ths statement s to enumerate provsons for student freedom to learn " the preamble concludes. - Th~ frst of the sx sectons s "Freedom of Access to Hgher Educaton," whch concerns admssons polces of the colleges. t says that each college should make clear "the characterstcs and expectatons of ;tudepts whch t consdered relevant to success. n the nsttutons program." The slcond secton s "n the Classroom " and contans three subdvsons protecton of freedom of expresson, protecton aganst mproper academc evaluaton and protecton aganst mproper dsclosure. "Student Records" s the thrd secton. To mnmze the rsk of mproper dsclosure " ths secton says," academc and dscplna~y records should be separate." Also, "no records should be kept whch reflect the poltcal actvtes or belef of students. The fourth secton, "Stuoent Affars" contans four subdvsons. "Freedom of Assocaton" says that students "should be free to organze and jon assocatons to promote common nterests," and "they should not be requred to submt a membershp lst as a condton of nsttutonal recognton. Freedom of nqury and Expresson" reads n part "Students and student organzatons should be free to examne and dscuss all questons of nterest to them, and to express opnons publcly and prvately. They should always be free to support causes by orderly Dck Gregory Stressed A Pont. means whch do not dsrupt the regular and essental operaton of the nsttuton. students should be allowed to nvte and to hear any person of ther own choosng." The other two subdvsons of secton four are student partcpaton n nsttutonal government, and student publcatons. Both sectons generally support the rght of students to express themselves and to be free of censorshp~ The ffth secton s Off-Campus Freedom of Students," whch s subdvded nto exercse of rghts of ctzenshp, and nsttutonal authorty and cvl penaltes. The last secton. s Procedural Standards n Dl\)cplnary Proceedngs. "n the exceptonal crcumstances when the prefewd means fal to resolve problems of student conduct," the statement reads, "proper procedural safeguards shoulq be observed to protect the student fron the unfar mposton of serous penaltes. "The admnstraton of dscplne should guarantee procedural farness to an accused student." The jursdctons of student ard faculty bodes "should be clearly formulated and communcated n advance," Ths secton s specfcally subdvded nto standards of conduct expected of students, nvestgaton of student conduct, status of student pendng fnal acton, and hearng commttee procedures,. whch says, among other thngs "the student appearng before the hearng commttee should h.ve the rght to be asssted n hs defense by an advsor of hs choce." Comedan Tred Of Whte System for permsson to bypass an Honor Councl tral on the grounds that the present members of the councl were prejudced n hs case. Steve Bowden, also a member of the socety, was suspended by the councl after havng been found gulty of cheatng on a hstory examnaton, but hs penalty was reduced to probaton by the executve commttee after the socety appealed the case. The ex!lcutve commttee rejected Wlsons appeal, however, and suspended hm ndefntely. Dean Thomas E. Mullen, dean of the College and charman of the executve commttee, sad an ndefnte suspenson means that Wson can re-enter the Unversty only wth the approval of the executve commttee. When Wlson remaned on the campus past the 2 p.m. deadlne, the Unversty obtaned the restranng order from Judge Lupton, and two sherffs deputes were sent to the campus about 8 p.m. to serve a cvl summons on Wlson. Wlson bad been sttng on the Plaza n front of Reynolda Hall snce 2 p.m. wth other members of the socety, He fnally accepted the papers n the hall outsde the dormtory room, and left the campus about 1 p.m. Besdes orderng Wlson to leave the campus mmedately, the judge ordered hm to appear n Superor Court March 9 to show why the restranng order should not hp. made oermanent Freemon Mark, junor of Elan College and past presdent of tle Afro-Amercan Socety, sad that the socety wll attempt "to get Omega Wlson back n school" and to convnce the Unversty that what happened at Wlsons tral was not Wlsons fault, but the fault of the socety. Mark sad that Wlson wanted to go through wth the tral, but that the other socety members!hreatened to carry hm out of the tral room f he dd not walk out wth them. Dr. James Ralph Scales, presdent of the Unversty, descrbed the restranng order ncdent as " regrettable" and sad that ths was the frst tme snce he becarne presdent that a cvl court order had been nec!lssary to enforce a suspenson. Hw sad that the restranng order was not, however, "a use of emergency executve powers," but the normal procedure for a unversty as a corporate nsttuton. We The Unversty Theatres producton of Jose_ph Hellers "We Bombed n New Haven opens tonght at 815p.m. The play, concernng the ant-v.ar movement, descrbes a group Bombed Opens Tonght of mltary men who are sent to an Ar Force base to carry out bombng mssons all over the world. These ndvduals do not understand who s send~g them on the mssons or why. Performances wll be at 815p.m. agan tomorrow nght, at 3 p.m. on Sunday, and at 815 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday, WGA Revses Campus,"Call-Downs Unversty coeds wll no longer receve a call-down for not makng ther beds every mornng by 1 a. m.1 Whle the above "cleanlness and tdy" rule has not been rgdly enforced (except for warnngs dealt out to the freshmen women) for some tme, the Womens Government Assocaton announced ths week that Gregory No More Ngger Games BY SUE ENGLSH Accordng to well-knownauthor, comedan, and lecturer, we are now lvng n a dfferent world, and "the ngger game played by Mom and Dad would get todays youngsters n trouble." "No more trcks," he sad. Gregory spoke to an attentve, enthusastc audence that half-flled Wat Chapel Sunday nght. He arrved at the Unversty a half-hour late. due to a delay n hs flght from Calforna~ Freemon Mark, junor of Elon College and a member of the Afro-Amercan Socety. ntroduced the speaker and announced that the profts from the lecture would go to the fnancal and legal assstance of Omega Wlson, sophomore of Mebane, who was suspended from the Unversty last Frday. Grego, y emphaszed that he s tred of" the whte racst system and" tred of these nsults." "Black folks n Amerca dont hate whte folks, They hate the stnkng whte system of the nsttuton. ndvdual racsm wouldnt affect me, but nsttutonal racsm s whats chokng me to death, he sad. Examples of whte racsm he gave ncluded the college entrance exam, propaganda n hs- Photo By Beery tory texts, ndoctrnaton of young black chldren wth whte sex moves, and government programs that emphasze foregn ad and space technology nstead of spendng the money on hungry people at home. "The whtes number one hang-up s ther falure to learn that no one wants the whte woman but them," he sad. "Ever snce was four years old ve seen moves at black theaters about whte people makng love. Nggers werent born wantng your whte women. As long as you feel the way you do about t, why dont you keep her out of my face?" Gregory crtczed the captalst system, backng up hs belef that t does not concern tself wth the Amercans health by ctng facts such as coffee beng a major cause of stomach cancer yet stll remanng on the market. "As long as the captalsts are n front, theyll put emphass on property rghts nstead of human rghts," he sad. Gregory sad that Nxon got n the Whte House on the last trck of the country. He got nto offce by hdng bgotry under conservatsm-." Crtczng Nxons nomnatons to the Supreme Court, Gregory sad that "pckng Carswell s an nsult to all decent-thnkng people on the face of the earth. Gregory s vew of the" mad, slmy, degenerate Amercan system was exemplfed by hs statement "f my black daddy had been klled by a German n World War 11, that same German could come to ths country and move nto Board Decsons Fve sentences of socal probaton were ncluded n decsons handed down by the Mens Judcal Board n two separate trals on Tuesday. n the frst case, four stuaents receved probaton for the remander of the second semester for dsorderly conduct on campus. n addton, the volators were requred to wrte publc apologes for ther actons, to be publshed n the Old Gold and Black"~ n the second tral, a student was placed on socal probaton for the remander of the second semester for breakng the Sgma Ch socal fraterntys composte pcture. He was also requred to pay for the pctures repar. a neghborhood my momma and wouldnt be welcome n." One of the most emoton-packed moments of the speech came when Gregory read part of the Declaraton of ndependence; "But when n a long Tran of Abuses and Usurpaton, pursung nvarably the same Object, evnces a Desgn to reduce them under absolute Despotsm, t s ther Rght t s ther Duty, to throw off such Govern~ rnent, and to provde new Guards for ther future securty.." "The whte folks who wrote ths law forgot to say that t was for whtes only", Gregory sad, "The ngger s stupd e nough to beleve ts for everyone." "The whole country was upset when we ddnt rse last July and August. They had the tanks watng, An advocate of peace and non-volence Gregory and hs famly sustan from eat~ ng meat of any knd, " would fnd more joy n beng klled by an ndvdual than kllng an ndvdual myself," he sad. "One of the most beautful songs wrtten s the Battle Hymn of!he Republc, n whch t says, As He ded to make men holy, let us de to set men free." "The most mportant queston you youngsters have to ask yourselves s, f democracy s as good as you say t s, why do you run all over the world tryng to cram t down people wth a gun?" Attackng the draft system, Gregory sad, "Dean Rusks srn has been out of college for fve years but hasnt left Washngton yet." Gregory crtczed the Amercan judcal system by sayng that some ndvduals have not been gven the chance to defend themselves. n reference to the case nvolvng Bobby Seal, a Black Panther, he sad "Because he was tryng to defend hmself, he ended up shackled to the char, hands cuffed, and mouth taped." Gregory ended hs speech on a more optmstc note by dependng on the young people of Amerca to slhlpe the <;ountrys future. "The older folks have used up all the trcks. We have no more, The fath and destny of the whole country depends on you." "You youngsters use the power you have to shape the country. f you want to change ths country do t from a moral, etlcal standpont. Wt.en t comes to dealng from the degenerate level, you cant outdo these old fools." ther handbook had been revsed and the changes would go nto effect mmedately." other changes n the handbook nclude A call-down wll not be gven for breakng a busy sgn. (A cal -down s the penaly for commtng a mnor offense. Accumulaton of fve call-downs results n a House campus.) Double late mnutes wll not be gven when a coed s late when late permsson (for ball games) has been gven. Coeds wll not receve a campus f they forget to sgn out on overnght slps f they call the house mother on the day they leave campus. lf they call on a day after they leave, they wll be gven a two-day campus. Falure to call results n a fourday campus. Upperclassmen wll not be requred to have ther overnght slps ntaled by the housemother or house presdents. Freshmen are requred to have ther overnght slps ntaled. The WGA councl also revsed the campus, "Realzng the faults of a campus" th_e councl decded that grls on a campu~ wrll be restrcted to the dorm from 73 p.m. untl the dorm opens the next mornng. No datng prvleges wll be allowed and a grl cannot receve callers. Prevous~ ly coeds were not allowed to receve phone calls or go off campus durng the day but these provsons have been reversprl h~ th" new rules. A campus may be put off for one week wthout havng to take two campuses. Sun W t;~rshpers Preparng For -Blackout Phenomenon BY DOUG WALLER Staff Wrter f you mssed the.last total eclpse n you now have a chance to wtness the solar wonder on Saturday, Marcb 7, 197- tomorrow. The perfect locaton for scentfc observaton wll be n Oaxaca, Mexco where supersttous vllagers wll perform last rtes and recte prayers to the phenomenon. For the more conventonal rtualst Vrgna Beach s already accomodatng conventons, vacatoners, scentsts, ard amateur astronomers. Hotels and motels are already full for the weekend wth one esfablshment sellng beer at seven cents a draft to celebrate the occason. Other areas to catch the total ~clpse nclude Perry, Fla., Jesup, Savannah and Fort Stewart, Ga.; Walterboro, and Maron, S.C. and Elzabethtown, Wallace, Knston and.gregory Ponders... Greenvlle. Scentfc study of the eclpse vares from observng the suns corona to measurng the low-frequency atmospherc shock waves set off by the moonscoolngshadow.astronomers n the southeastern Unted States wll be able to see Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Saturn. Sun worshppers are advsed not to look tll ectly at the eclpse even wth sun glasses an? sooted glass. The nfra-red rays can qmckly burn the retna causng rreparable damage, and possble blndness, The safeest way to vew the event s to osberve the mage through a pnhole. n one pece of cardboard onto a second pece of whte cardboard. For those who mss the rare event the next vsble eclpse wll be n 1984 however t wll be an annular eclpse ~nd not as spectacular as Saturdays blackout. Photo By Beery

2 PAGE TWO Frday, March 6, 197, OLD GOLD AND BLACr\ WANTED WATRESSES, CHAMBERMADS, WATERS, BARTENDERS, BAR WATERS, BELL BOYS. f NTRESTED PLEASE APPLY N WRTNG TO ROARNG GAP CLUB, ROARNG GAP, N. C Wake Restve Baptst Hollow. By GRAY LAWRENCE (Ths artcle, the fourth n a seres uu Unversty hstory snce 196, delves nto the academc year The college entered the 1962 school year wth an enrollment of 2,881. One of these was Edward Reynolds, the Ghanan WOULD YOU LKE TO START students. whose applcaton had once been vetoed by the board YOUR OWN CHURCH? of trustees. Hs enrollment was quet and wthout ncdent. An We wll furnsh you wth a \.burch Charter and you can unexpected number of students, start your own church. Headquaters of UNVERSAL caused by delays n payng regstraton deposts, created a tght LFE CHvRSH wll keep records of your church and m~ wth the federal government and furnsh you a tax housng stuaton. exempt status - all you have to do s report your actvtes to headquarters four tmes a year. Enclose a free azne had "merged wth the n July, the "Student" mag wll offerng. new alumn publcaton, "The Wake Forest Magazne". College admnstrators sad that the UNVERSAL LFE CHURCH "Students" decrept fnancal condton has nspred the dea BOX 6575 of ts amalgamaton wth the alumn magazne, but some students wondered how much Baptst HOLLYWOOD, FLORDA attacks necessarly on the obscene," "Student "vulgar" as" un- "Sttll tkt aost HGtlfl Ardmore Tap Room 1314 S.Htwtbrae Rd. llplftc lfe ucept drl1k" STEVES talan Rstorante Best a llal11 Footl SPAGHEnl ud PZZ ALSO AN AMERCAN MENll Open 11 A. M. 1 P. M. CLOSED SUDAY 112 Oakwood Drve lacross FROM mruway SHOPPNG CENL"l When you know ts for keeps All your sharng, all your specal memores wll be forever symbolzed by your damond engagement rng. f the name, Keepsake s n the rng and on the tag, you are assured of fne qualty and lastng satsfacton. The engagement damond s flawless, of superb color and precse modern cut. Your Keepsake Jeweler has a choce selecton of many lovely styles. Hes lsted n the yellow pages under "Jewelers." ~P-8Eake OAMONO qtngs and " crtcal of conservatve theology" had fgured n the decson. Ron T. Weatherman, a 195 College graduate, was apponted the new alumn drector at about the same tme Dr. Calvn R. Huber be;ame drector of nstrumental musc and bands. The Wake Forest laundry completed a $1,CO laundromat n the lounge of Taylor dormtory. Dr. Thomas M. Elmore, a 1956 Wake Forest graduate, was becomng accustomed to hs new job as assstant dean of the College. KNG SPEAKS n the latter part of September, the student Legslature a dopted a resoluton favorng the re-establshment of the "Student." The Rev. Martn Luther Kng, Jr., urged a Wat Chapel audence to gve the Negro ts "work, cooperaton and concern." At a meetng n October, the faculty renstated a readng day durng exam perods; permtted junor women wth a "C average to operate cars on campus; and abjured an earler regulaton whch exacted qualty ponts for students absences on the frst class meetng mmedately before or after a holday or on the day an an announced quz. SG Electons By Oct. 19, four students had been suspended for volatng the Colleges automoble regulatons. n a late October ssue of the "Bblcal Recorder," the North Carolna Baptst news magazne, 21 Baptst mnsters unleashed an attack on the College--whch they clamed was drawng away from a Baptst-Chrstan orbt. To rectfy the Colleges alleged aberraton, they proposed ther own canddates for upcomng vacances on the board of trustees. Baptsts grmaced partcular Jy at Russell Brantley s "The Educaton ofjonathanbeam," whch they clamed was ndescrbable flth." They charged the student body wth "dsregard for sacred thngs, dsrespect for the presdent of the college, and dsgraceful conduct at chapel. They ponted to the small percentage of North Carolna Baptsts among the freshman class (29.4 per cent) But after the Baptst State Conventon met n Ralegh n md November, the College clamed a "defnte vctory". The 21 mnsters had wthdrawn ther alternatve trustee canddates and thrown ther support to a study of "ponts of tenson between Conventon and College. MSS UMVERSE Three Mss Unverse contestants dd much to brghten a Campagnng for student body Because of the changes made and class offces wll begn by the legslatve reorganzaton bll passed last sprng, vot campus severely shaken by a Tuesday, March 17. Speeches 5- football loss to Duke wll be delvered on Thursday, ng wll be only for class and Unversty. The defeat was the March 19, at 1 a.m. n Wat student government offces. Deac s worst snce 1945, when Chapel. Votng wll be conducted Legslatures wll be elected Doc Blanchard led Army to a March 23 n Reynolds Hall. next fall by lvng unts. 54- cloutng of the Deacons. n order to qualfy as a n the next two weeks the As a matter of fact, the entre canddate for a class offce, two campus poltcal partes, season (-1) was a lttle a student must have a 2. average. A canddate for stu Student Acton Movement (SAM) shakng too. and Better Poltcs on Campus n early December, campus dent body presdent must have (BPOC) wll meet to nomnate polce nabbed a student who served as a commttee charman or an elected offcer. canddates and wrte platforms. admtted stealng $2--17 wallets dormtores. worth--from the... mens A Shoaf, Stanley Whtley 2 Na111ed Wlson Fellows Two Unversty senors, Rchard Allen Shoaf of Lexngton and Melvn Stanley Whtely of Southern Pnes, have been desgnated Woodrow Wlson Fellows. The Woodrow Wlson Natonal Fellowshp Foundaton annually desgnates approxmately 1, graduatng senors as "the most ntellectually promsng" of those plannng careers as college teachers. A lst of the desgnates s sent to all graduate school daans wth the recommendaton that the schools provde the wnners wth graduate fellowshps. f the fellow does not receve a grant from hs chosen school, the foundaton consders hm for one of the 15 fellowshps t reserves for that purpose. Both Shoaf and Whtley hold Guy T. Carswell Scholarshps here and have been students n the nterdscplnary honors program. The desgnates were selected by regonal commttees on the bass of recommendatons by professors, a 1, word statement of ther ntellectual nterests, and ntervews. Shoaf s edt{)r of the "The Student magazne, presdent of Omkron Delta Kappa, and has been academc coordnator for the Mens Resdence Councl. Shoaf s also a Danforth and Marshall Scholarshp Fnalst. Shaof s plans are not fnal but hs mmedate preferences nclude ether work on the staff of "Realtes" magazne or graduate work n England. He s presently edtor of the "Student magazne. Whtely s a language major wtt nterests n musc. He plans to specalze n lngustcs. Whtely has studed at the Unverstys Overseas Research Cente! n Belze, Brts~ Honduras, and n.m exchange program wth the Unversdad de los Andes n Columba. Both desgnees stress We nvte All Wake Forest Students To Vst STALEYS OPEN HEARTH RESTAURANT The house that servce and qualty bult - the favorte of Wake Forest students and faculty. We specalze n steaks, short orders, sandwches and dnners. that the award was manly honorfc, but could play an mportant role n ther wnnng other grants. Nether Whtely nor Shoaf are sure tha.t they wll be able. to. take mmedate advantage of the Wlson. Whtelys draft numter s wthn.. the danger zone n the lottery. Shoaf wll probably not attend graduate school n the States, he sad. Both sad, however, they were very please~! at ther selecton.. A couple of weeks later, grants totallng $55, from the Mary Reynolds Babcock and Natonal Scence foundatons. enabled the Colle gl to. buy ts frst computer.. Speakng of money, the Legslature heard a report from a commttee especally formed to study the fscal actvtes of the bookstore. The commttee found no evdence so far to prohbt lower prces beng charged," but dd pont out that the "refusal" of bookstore offcals to dscuss ther.fnancal records made t mpossble to tell how much proft the operaton was garnerng. Seven years ago.. Bestsellers were Katherne Porters Shp of Fools" and Rachel Carsons "Slent Sprng. Move fare ncluded "The Manchuran Canddate".. Dr. Mary Taylor of the College nfrmary sad that 12-to-15 severe stomach aches were NOT caused--as.rumors. supposed - by turkey stortcake served n the cafetera. The Legslature decreed that student conduct at athletc events and campus vandalsm had reached an "ntolerable" pont. A standards commttee was establshed to look nto the problem. At the same meetng, a moton was ntroduced to create a Mens ndependent Councl. Students. were asked to con.. trbute to the $2 mllon fund drve the College was conductng throughout the state. Dr, A.L. Aycock, assocate professor of Englsh, began teachng a course n Amercan apprecaton second semester. Josh Whte, the noted black folk snger, played n Wat Chapel. MANSFELD VST Classes mght as well have been called off when Jayne Mansfeld --whose measurements were quoted at the tme as a breathtakng vsted the campus at the nvtaton of Lambda Ch Alpha socal fraternty. Mss Mansfeld spent the entre perod sgnng autographs n Dr. Davd L. Smleys hstory class (even from students and workmen hangng nto the classroom through wndows). Afterward, the cafetera. pre- pared a specal salad.for her. n March the Legslature accepted a lst of Honor Councl revsons, ncludng provsons requrng regular meetngs and the physcal presen ce of the accused at hs tral. The typcal 1963 male college student, sad a Playboy sur- Shoaf (Left) And Whtley Are Wlson Fellows. vey, was 2,6 years old. He spent $68 refurbshng hs backto-campus wardrobe. Twelve chances out of a hundred he was marred per cent possessed ther cars full-tme. 6.5 per cent sad they drank beer, 25.3 per cent wne and 5 per cent lquor. The Wake basketball earn ended the season 16-1 overall and 13-4 n the Atlantc Coast.Conference. Pror to student body electons n the sprng, the old Unted Party faled to caucus. As a result, one set of canddates afflated wth the new Student Party (essentally an amalgam of P Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sgma, Theta Ch, and Sgma Ph Epslon socal fraterntes) whle another set ran unattached The unafflated canddate Bll Constangy (now head of Forsyth Countys legal ad socety) won. $69 MLLON n Aprl College trustees approved a record $9,95,492 for , an ncrease of some $1,2, over the budget for the prevous year. Dr. Harold W. Trbble, presdent of the College, predcted that $69 mllon would be needed to make the transton from a college to a unversty, The trustees also presented a resoluton callng for modfcatons n the system for ther electon. Subject to the approval of the Baptst State Conventon, the resoluton provded for the nomnaton of 16 of the 36 trustees by three "boards of vstors" and the alumn assocaton. The remanng 2 would be nomnated, and all 36 wo1.1ld be elected, by the Conventon. An Old Gold a.nd Black" new analyss commented on the Colleges lnes of authorty, all pulled by the Baptst State Conventon. When the Reynolds Foundaton frst offered to fnance the mgraton of the College to Wnston-Salem n 1946, Baptsts woefully predcted an eventual name for the nsttuton--"camel College."... The actual acceptance of such a pseudonym, however, was specfcally prevented n an~ agreement drawn between the~ College and the foundaton on Nob. 17, The agreement states that the name of the College shall not be changed or altered. The Baptst State Conventon would contnue 1 to exercse control over the College n the form of trustees "as apponted or elected by the Baptst State Conventon. n May, senate bll 252, prohbtng the procuremej\l of academc credt by fraudulent 1 means, was passed by the North Carolna General Assembly. t 1 s now general statute 14-ll8.2. l The bll, proposed by Sen. John R. Jordan, Jr., of Ralegh, charged wth a msdemeanor- punshable by fne or mprson- r ment--anyone, for nstance, who, attempted to obtan the servces of another person for the prepa- raton of a term paper or the. takng of an examnaton. The bll was amed partcularly at frms, corporatons; or assocatons" whch offered to assst any student n the llegal~ procurement of a dploma or J degree. ~ Paradoxcally, however, the CJ bll dd not apply "to the actons... of one student regstered at a unversty and subject to. the dscplnary authorty of that nsttuton." The baseball team 25-9) overall and 11-3 n the Atlantc Coast Conference) and the golf team were conference champons n Archaeology Course To Be Taught Here l, Durng the frst summer term, the department of socology and anthropology wll conduct a feld school n archaeologcal research methods. The sx-hour course (anthropology 381, 382) s desgned to acquant both graduate and undergraduate students wth the fundamentals of excavaton and nterpretaton, The feld school settng wll be the Sangre de Crsto mountans of New Mexco, near the modern town and ndan pueblo of Taos. The ste to be excavated s known as Pot Creek, a large runed Anasaz pueblo of the perod A.D Dor. mtory space, eatng facltes and laboratory wll be provded by the Ft. Burgwn Research Center located adjacent to the ste. Students wll be engaged n excavaton, the recordng of data, and tbe preparaton and analyss of the specmens n the laboratory. Unversty YRC s Plannng For State Conventon The 197 sprng state conventon of the North Carolna Federaton of College Young Republcans wll be held Aprl 3rd and 4th n Ralegh. Unversty Young Republcan Presdent Sam Currn, who was recently apponted publcty charman of the North Carolna Federaton of College Young Republcans, announced that all members of the WFU YRs who are nterested n attendng the conventon shouldcontacthm for any addtonal nformaton. The club wll cover regstratror, costs for all ts delegates. No members from the WFU YR club are seekng state offce. Tuton, transportaton, room and board wll be pad by the student, Lvng expenses should total approxmately $13 for the, fve-week sesson, begnnng June 8. nterested students should contact Dr. J. Ned Woodall, department of socology; and anthropology. WESTERN OUTFTTERS 331 Wagtow St. LET US OUTFT YOU HEAD TO TOE MEN AND LADES WESTERN tla.ts SHRTS, TES, BLOUSES, PANTS, BELTS, BOOTS, tndan MOCCASNS ALL TYPE WE8fERN RDNG EQUPMENT MEN-LADES-LEE JEANS AND JACKETS For Det th!dp to wear net relued aaburbu ahopphtl tfatt ~k -... a Thruway Shoppng Center a,...._,mtemm vftrllllltt...,.,. \ PRESTON... Syracu Syra To~ Dr. Preston fessor of geo1 cuse Unverst lectures here 1 He wll spe "Geography n luton" and at Geographc Ba dle East Confl, wll be n DeT a.nd are open tc James s a Vstng Schol the Pedmont l He has repr1 States at a nu tona! conferer and s a forn ~lty n 1945 ~ 13 One hundn coeds pledged socetes las Pledge nght < of two weeks of and room rush, New pledges.. otherwse, are FDEL Coeds who pl cety nclude Alexandra, V ~ Mam Beach, of Greensboro Lberty; Kathy bury, Md.; Betl te.falls; V.ll Decatur, Ga.; Macon, Ga. Jeanne Melv $] CH! FS OUR NEW HOURS r HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDNG 1 J P!..H~ ~~,. ~~"" 2~ lj! t )~u!+ P~..,,.,J Y,.r E"o;,<J!~""~~~~ Jnd Weddng" 1,~f ~~ 1!!.- 1 ~ J!. br,t. ~ j~ 1 2)c A1s? ~~ ~ -<- ~o,., -=» c-t 1J.., th.. b~utlvt 44!>)l~ B~ -1~ s l("r!>~,t! ~=- 1 ~;,f rr " - S-7, , L ~ ~..-. ~ _, ~......~ ~ ~...!2. d Mon thru Thurs Fr. and Sat 7 A.M. tl 1 A.M. 7 A.M. tl 2 A.M. Sun 8 A.M.tl REYNOLOA ROAD (Across from Reynoldo Manor) PAJ-973 Al DLLARD, Manager. KATHY SRKEL The Perfect Portrat WTH THE MASTERFUl TOUCH OF McNABB STUDO WAKE foklst UNVERSTY PHONE "Bob & Carol led & Alce" Best comedy et the year! (R) c....

3 was an~ tle~ on l room by tle should $13 for tle, begnnng students J. Ned ofsocolcgy;, ~\~;;.~_-.,..., j;,.-; PRESTON E. JAMES... Syracuse Prof... Socdes Fght For Grls Rushees Fnd Lfe Hectc lly PATT ALLEN The ~rs uurms may have seem~d unusually quet frum all Syracuse Professor To Speak Tuesday Dr. Preston E. James, professor of geography at Syra cuse Unversty, wll gve two lectures here Tuesday.. He wll speak at Z p.m. on "Geography n an Age of Revoluton" and at 8 p.m. on "The Geographc Bass of the Mddle East Conflct." Both lectures, wll be n DeTarnble Audtorum and are open to the publc. James s a speaker for the Vstng Scholars Program of the Pedmont Unversty Center. He has represented the Unted States at a number of nternatona! conferences on geography and s a former presdent of ~tty n 1945 and has been uonns. Th~ 172 1\rb whu sgned up for rush urluded l!lanly freshmen, a l1audful of sophomores and a wu.,le u! junors. <Httwar<l appear;~nces fur the Ther vsts were pau to t!ach p<~st three weeks,but ns1le jlrobably the must actvty anyone separate rounrls. of the sx socetes n sx h<~<l seen all year was takng After the frst seres of gettogethers, clubs narrowed ther place. No one could avod the Rush choces and went drectly to whch began Sunday Feb. 15 wth the grls rooms to rush them, "nformal partes" or "smokers" n the rec rooms and for taken up wth ths a.tvty. Most ofa three day perod was mal parlors of allthree grls The center of the room-rush porton was the freshman dorm where socety members stood n u~s outsde the doors of the rushees rooms. -Rushees narrowed ther choces before phase ll of socety rush. They went to three or four socetes open-houses. Here the seal, crest, scrapbooks and varous trophes were the Assocaton of Amercan dsplayed proudly n borrowed Geographers. He has receved rooms nsde Reynolda Hall. The dstngushed wrtng and ds- best was yet to come, however, tngushed servce awards from as socety grls put the fnshng the Natonal Councl of Geo- touches on ther costumes for graphc Educaton. the bg event of the rush the Hs books nclude "The Wde formal party. World A Geography," "A Ths party s the fnal event Geography of Man," "One World of rush and s the dsplay of all Dvded," and a seres of grade the hdden talent a socety can school geographes. uncover. Rec rooms are deco- James joned the Syracuse fac- rated for twelve hours at a tme ulty n 1945 and has been~ wth huge panted sets on wooden department charman snce stands. Even make-shft celngs He was Fulbrght professor at are constructed whch sometmes the Unversty of Ednburgh n last and sometmes dont qute He holds B.A. and M.A. make t through the entre party. degrees from Harvard Unver- Each socety gves three persty and the Ph. D. from Clark formances of ther specal skt Unversty. about lfe as a member of that partcular socety. Usually the ;kt ; based on a move or TV show. Favorte themes chosen thls year nclude "Funny Grl," Olver" and a specal verson u! Laugh-n Last Frday, club presdents met to fnd out who ther new pledges would be. Each socety had a quota of grls accordng to the number of senors that would be graduated. The newest and smallest socety, Thymes, added 17 to ts membershp. Strngs Socety had around 2 wth S.O.P.H, and Laurels next wth about 25 each. Fdeles am Les Soeurs took slghtly over 25 each. The celebraton dnners were held last Frday at varous restaurants n Wnston-Salem. Now that the rushees are pledges the ssters wll have someone to entertan them for the next few weeks untl ntaton, whch usually start n Aprl, Correcton n last weeks "Old Gold and Black," three Sgma Ph Epslon pledges were ncorrectly lsted under the pledges of Lambda Ch Alpha due to several transposed lnes. The Sg Ep pledges ncorrectly lsted are James Grover, freshman o! Stocton, N.J.; Douglas Sullvan, freshman of Surrrnl. N.J.; and Rck Deaton, frpshrnan vf Southern Pn~s. RCHARD CLAYTON Electons Are Planned For WGA Offcers Electons for the Womens Government Assocaton are scheduled for March 24andAprl 7, accordng to Betty Hyder, WGA presdent. Nomnatons wll be made by the executve commttee March 17 and pettons wll be due n the offce of the dean of women by noon, March 19, Class representatves are requred to have 1 per cent of the class enrollment sgn ther pettons, and general offcers must have 6 sgnatures. Offces of presdent, secretary and treasurer, and class representatves wll be held on March 24. The house presdents, socal functons charman and the vce presdent wll be selected on Aprl Coeds Pledge Sx Socetes One hundred-thrty seven N.J.; Suzanne Shumate, of coeds pledged the campus sx Farfax, Va.; Judy Reed, of socetes last Frday nght. Alexandra, Va.; da Grace Jennngs, Pledge nght carne at the end of Taylorsvlle; Cyntha of two weeks of formal gatherngs Newton, of Narrows, Va.; Beth and room rush. Houpt, of Huntngdon Valley, New pledges, unless ndcated Penn.; Laney Shackleford, of.. otherwse, are freshmen. Fayettevlle; Clauda Humphres, of Alexandra, Va.; Wendy FDELES Adams, of Danvlle, Va.; Cat Bggs, of Lumberton; Suse Rodgers, Coeds who pledged Fdeles socety of Martnsvlle, Va.; anrl nclude Sue Stark, of Jean Schulken, of Knsport, Tenn. Alexandra, Va.; Pat F allan, of Other Fdeles pledges are Mam Beach, Fla.; Kay Perry, of Greensboro; Nancy Kuhn, of Lberty; Kathy Fncher, of Salsbury, Md.; Beth Mller, of Grante.Falls; Ktty Chandler, of Clemmons; Mary Alce Warren, of Wake Forest; Cathey Kale, of Charlotte; Susan Wllams, of Rome, Vkk Wllams, of. Ga.; Cathy Jones, lf Levt Decatur, Ga.; Sandy Eschen, of town, Puerto Rco; Shaun Rley, Macon, Ga. Jeanne Melvlle, of Whppany, of Kngsport, Tenn.; Cathy Walker, of Burlngton; June Ste-... ( WEEKEND SPECAL $1.25 Dnner Packs Only 97 CHCKEN DNNER 3 Pes. Golden-Brown Chckn Cole Slaw Tater Tots Hot Bscuts & Honey FSH DNNER 2 Pes. Flounder Flets Cole Slaw Tater Tots Hot Bscuts & Honey.. Offer s Good Frday, Saturday, And Sunday Wth Wake Forest. D. FRED CHCKEN Corner W. End Boulevard & Summt St. ;Tl1e Dfference ls Delcous" PHONE [++; vens, of Lynchburg, Va.; Karen Curry, of Lexngton, Ky.; Sara W etch, of Char lotte; and Kathy Moore, of Lr nor. LAURELS Pledges of Laurt>ls socetv are Cheryl Blanehard, of Bur~ ln~tun; Sandy Contral. of Bakersvllf>; Carol Moody, of APXandra, Va.; Gem1y Raney. of Wellesl<>y Hlls. Mass.; Terry More, of Ralegh; Sandy Chdester. of Ashevlle; Olva Nelson, of Roanoke, Va.; Marsha Braun, of Wnston-Salem; Paula Potocazk,. of Gar!eld, N.J.; Betsy Lews, of Sprngfeld, Pa. Other Laurel pledges are Barbara Moore, of Wnston-Salem; Jance Gruber, of Kngsport, Tenn.; Nancy Hggns, of Slver Sprng, Md.; Cela Hooper, of Thomasvlle; Judy Hartsfeld, of Wake Forest; Lynda Fowler of Charlotte; and Debby Crag, of Hundson LES SOUERS Coeds wt1 pledged Les Souers nclude Judy Wyers, junor of Geneva, Swtzerland; Jacke Moore, sophomore of Lexngton; Beth Frtz, of Ossung, N. Y.; Beverly Callaway, of Laurel, Del.; Joyce Desch, of Lvngston, N.J.; Barbara Nxon, of Savannah, Ga.;Sandy Fsher, of Laurel, Del.; June Sabuh, of Brooklyn N.Y.; and Dense Pratt, of Martnsvlle, Va, Others are Bev McCraw, sophomore of Durham; Kathy Anderson, of Spartanburg, S.C.; Ange Smth, of Hllsborough; Nancy Ramsey, of Old Fort; Mary Tedder, sophomore of Ellenboro; Lnda Dxon, of Charlotte; J~net Beavers, ofwn;ton- Salem; Martha Wseman, of Malvern. Pa.; Alexs Anderson, of Wlmngton, DeL; and JuleSarnoff. of Basknp; Rd!!e, N.J. S.O.P H. Anung S.O.P.H. pledges are Lnrl;t Henshaw, of Greensboro; A!llw Rollers, of Burlngton; Jan Wats,1n, of Greensboro; Jeanne Heller, of Charleston, S.C.; Carolyn Rape, of Mt. Ulna; Deborah Head, of Lexngton; Laura Montgomery, of Tampa, Fla; Sandra Grant, of Charlotte; Mary Hale, of Greensboro; Joan Ray, of Greensboro; Gayle Brumbaugh, of Catonsvlle, Md.; and Carolne Hoke, of Burlngton. Other S,O.P.H. pledges are Sandy Watts, of Atlanta, Ga.; Scotte Sweet, of Wlmngton, Del.; Jance Pope, of Wlson; Jance Mortmer, of Rocky Mt.; Nancy Sellers, of Charlotte; Jane L~onard, of Le!_(ngton; Lee Shockley, of Snow Hll, Md.; Jane Alexand,,r, of Burlngton; Pat Wlson, of Tar Heel; Susan Holloway, of Greenvlle, S.C.; Carolyn Kornegay, of Greensboro; Jane Munro, of Haleah, Fla.; and Carol Ard, of Burke, Va STRNGS Strng socety pledged up Ann Culp, of Gastona; Ellen Thompson, of Severna Park, Md.; Carroll Ann Betzbold, of Atlanta, Ga.; Dnah Whte, of Plymouth; Sand Lemmerman, of Salsbury. Md,; Peggy Cage, of Aberdeen. Md.; Debbe Nancy, of Clnton; Karen Page, of Shelby; Ruth Berkleman, of Atlanta, Ga.; Deb Walck, of Langley AFB, Va.; and Theresa Currn, of Oxford, Others are Stefan F NOMNATED FOR 7 ACADEMY AWARDS ~ PAUl NEWMAN S ~ t> BUTCH CASSDY AND THE SUNDANCE KD " S ROBERT REDfORD. of Seaford, N.Y.; Myra DeLapp, of of Lexngton; Maran Davs, of Black Mountan; Lee Foster, of Greensburg, Pa.; Kathey Brelsford, of Aken, S.C.; Jennfer Brode, of Martnsvlle, Va,; Mary Adar, of Newton; Susan Edwards, of Ralegh; Sandy Cummngs, of Ptman, N.J.; Carol Jenkns, of Mtchellvlle, Md.; Lnda Matson, of Yorktown, Va.; Jacke Brandon, of Lexngton; Kay Watson, of Fral\klnton; and Nancy Garlck of Kannapols, THYMES Coeds who. pledged Thymes are Karen Keppler, of Ralegh; Rhonda Payne;- otfrmklnton; Carol Smth, of SlelbY; Joan Russell, of Rchmond, Va.; Terry Duffeld, of Ptman, N.J.; Nancy Ash, of Mnneapols, Mnn.; Peggy Welch, of Alexandra, Va.; Karen P!acey, of Ashevlle; Anne Dorsett, of Greensboro; Dors Russell, of Rchmond, Va.; and Judy Scruggs, of Lttle Rock, Ark Other Thyme pledges are Debbe Harts, of Charlotte; Jane Lee, of Norwood; Kath Pep, of Charlotte; Karen Farclothe, of Fayettevlle; B,J, Johnson, of Greensboro; and Nada Carrell, of Bethesda, Md. Pstol Shot Fatal To WF Junor Donn Rchard Clayton, junor of Bushy Fork, derl late Saturday nght of a wound receved from a pstol swt.. Claytons father was showng hs son how to use a pstol when t msfred and ht Clayton n the chest. He was dead on arrval at the hosptal n Roxboro. Hosptal autllottes attrouted death to Joss of blood. The funeral was held Monday at Clement Baptst Church n Bushy Fork. Bural was n the Roxboro cemetery. Clayton, an actve member of. Ktchen house, helped rebuld the lounge last summer. He was a busnes.s major. Well You pay the other SPECAl HAlf PRCE RATE FOR FACULTY, STUDENTS, SCHOOL LBRARES 1 year$13 9 mos. $ mos. $6.5 Check or money order enclosed OBll me Name Address Cty State Zp p.cn THE CHlQSTAN SCENCE MONTOR Box 125, Astor Staton Boston, Massachusetts 2~23 Late Show Sat. Hght PAGE Tl!HEE Frday THEFFFF S OLD GOLD AND BL..<.;J\ COMNG MARCH 15TH THRU 21ST He Sad "Come and Get Me!" Hes CONTROVERSAL! Hes RADCAL! You may agree You may dsagree, BUT. Yott!( never forget Wlle Boy! Young People wll understand Wlle Wll you~ Todays "Hottest" Star Combnaton!. Two lovers on the run from a two gun shertf and hs lynch mnded ~c.sc The lght s o\\ over DUSTN HOFFMANS co-star n "THE GRADUATE" (o gal worth fghtng for).,, Ther bggest crme was beng n love!~ "ONE OF THE YEtR~ to BEST!" RJBE~ REDFORD 1 h~ Sundanc9 Kd~ l<~ HP..lNE ROSS "1 ~1c (,raduote Grl" T "}FRT p,vc l<.t.r ln._.~!d t u~ ct REYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPNG CENTER N O W SHOWS P.M. -COLOR THE HFAMous chcago oemoc"ratc convenfo~n, ROTs....ARE THE BACKGROUND FOR THS HUMAN NTEREST STORY! Haskell Wellers Rated X * Theres A "SPECAL FEELNG" About A MEDUM COOL Dowa aad Drty No * Northwestern Savngs.. a specal feelng llf known~ wh,re 1 our rnon~y s,.. exactly how much y,;u have... that Lt s earnng nterest. En"Y ltw pt e;tge nf a "orthwestern Savngs Accounl, l ~ JUs a short drve to Reyno!Ja hbnor and the new offce openm~ September 27 at OLtown Shopnng Center. OPEN YOlJR A(COt.NT TllDAY! 16 for Mature AaltlL ~ NORTHWESTERN BAN~(

4 PAGE FOUR Frday, March 6, 197, OLD GOLD AND blact\. GRAY LAWRENCE, BARRY ROBNSON Co-Edtors DANNE JONES Managng Edtor BEV t;haw Busness Manager latk BLL BENNETT Advertsng Manager PATT ALLEN Assstant Edtor Wnston-Salem, N. C., Frday, March 6, 197 Three weeks ago, the Unverstys executve commttee, dsplayng some tortured logc, saw ft to reduce the penalty for cheatng. n smple terms, that v.as what the Bowden cast amounted to the executve commttee dd not strongly dffer from the Honor Councls decson of Bowdens gult; yet, for reasons t alone knows, t mtgated the strongly.entrenched precedents for va~ latons of the honor coed. The maelstorm of crtcsm that descended on that body was somethng t brought on tself. ts abstruse poston cud nothng to strengthen the Honor Councl. Vaellaton among the campus herarchy, and the precarous poston nto whch t put the councl, were undoubtedly responsble--n part, at least--for Omega Wlsons refusal to be tred by that body. By that tme, some students were begnnng to wonder f cheatng would serously jeopardze ther college careers anymore. A campus nsttuton, never perfect to begn wth, had become even less perfect because t was gnored. The exllcutve commttee, however, acted wth commendable decson n suspendng Wlson after he had refused to be tred by the honor councl. Unverstv regula- Tradton tons specfcally demand dscp lnary acton for nterference wth councl procedures and, for once, t was good to see that somebody around here abded by a tradton. Perhaps that tradton was not above reproach, but at least t provded some sort of standardand t was precsely the events nto such confuson. There was much talk of" justce" and "mercy", of "race" and "nequalty, durng the last three weeks. What so severely complcated. Bowdens and Wlsons trals, however, was the falure--and t was wdespread- to see the ssue as anythng but one between whte and black. Justce", after all, nvolves more than bendng over backwards to keep from offendng the black communty. As much or more, t entals a party between the sprt and letter of -the law. Smlarly, there s more than one type of nequalty; and sometmes, dscrepances between what s and ought to be are as dscrmnatory n one drecton as n another. ts tme factons stopped tryng to splt the campus along blackwhte lnes. ts tme that students were treated equally, no matter what ther race, creed or color. ts tme, n short, for blacks and whtes to learn to lve together. Behnd Closed Doors On the agenda for Mondays faculty meetng are two ssues whch have been crculatng around campus for a long tme currculum reform. and vstaton. The faculty may not have tme to consder both ssues, n one meetng, but f t does, ts decsons wll have long range sgnfcance for the Unversty n regard to academcs and socal lfe. And you can bet that a lot of students wll be awatng the outcome. Fortunately, students wll not have to wat too long for that outcome due to a resoluton passed at the last faculty meetng whch permts nterested students access to nformaton about what goes ou behnd the facultys closed doors. Before, students had to squeeze bts of nformaton from varous professors, even though some of the faculty at the same tme hypocrtcally deplored the lack of communcaton between students and faculty at such a small" college. Gvng students nformaton about the meetngs closes tha gap Flm From TheWnston-SalemJournal The flm has emerged front and center n the land of art and meda. On the campus at Wake Forest Unversty the College Unon s rght n step wth the tmes; n fact, Wake Forest s leadng the way. The WFU flm seres has been judged best among colleges and unverstes n the nat;.-n. The Amercan Federaton of Flm Socetes awarded Wake Forest frst place over larger compettors lke Dartmouth, UCLA, and Harvard. Almost every nght of the week some of the more than 1 flms selected by senor Doug Lemza unwnd before an audence of st.udents and faculty who have become educated flm buffs because of the Unverstys program developed n the past several years. The deas and mages of Orson Welles, Federco Felln, Alfred Htchcock, ngmar Bergman and somewhat, but t s stll there. Students can fnd out what happens now, but they cannot fnd out why a certan acton was taken. Openng meetngs to certan selected students would clear up a great deal of possble msunderstandng. The faculty says t has a rght to prvate meetngs n whch members can argue and fuss. Some professors probably would not lke to have students hear what they have to say on some subjects, lke vstaton, and that s where the problem les. That atttude s lke an unsgned letter to the edtor; t demonstrates a lack of e nough character to stand behnd what one beleves-openly. The faculty has a rght to closed meetngs n many nstances, because students are not nvolved n much of what transpres, and could care less. However, they do not have such a rght when what they do wll have tremendous consequences for the future of the entre Unversty communty currculum reform and vstaton, for example. Seres Mchelangelo Antonon are demonstratng Marshall McLuhan s thess that we are n a new age of vsual stmulaton. The fact that Felln and Bergman are reachng the young n a way Chaucer and Shakespeare may not s bound to shake up tradtonal approaches to educaton. The flm seres at Wake Forest s closed to the publc because of lmted space, but one may hope word of ts success wll encourage those theater managers already offerng qualty flms to buld up audences as Wakl! Forest has done. The addton of several new theaters n Wnston Salem has been a grett boon to local move fans, who are now gettng a good share of the the excellent flms made n ths country and abroad. ndeed, at Wake Forest and n the communty moves ARE gettng better than ever. Founded January 15, 1916, as the student newspaper of Wake Forest Unversty, Old Gold and Black s publshed each Frday durng tlle school vear exr.p.ot dur~ eyamnaton summer and holday perods as drected by the Wake r oresl.!ublcat1ns Board. Maled each week. Members of the Assocated Collegate Press. Represented for Natonal Advertsng by Natonal Educatonal Advertsng Servce, nc., a dvson of Readers Dgest Sales anrl ServlcP, Subscrpton rate $4.. Second-class postage pad, Wnston Salem, N.C. F Jrm 359 should be maled to Box Reynolda Staton. Wnston Salem. N.C. moo. Prnted by Communty Press, ncorporated, Kng, N.C. To The Edtors Last week had the unfortunate experence of eatng n the "pt." t was unfortunate because when left the "pt" notced that my organc chemstry book had been stolen. Snce t was a $13.95 book l was a lttle hacked off, n fact f would have caught the person l would have wrung hs neck. t took me about one week to cool off from that. Last nght had a smlar experence n a Wake Forest parkng lot. went out to my car Sunday evenng and t had been strpped of over $75. worth of equpment, plus one wndow had been smashed. have parked my car n the worst sectons of Atlanta and never had anythng stolen, but leave t one damn nght n the "All Amercan Cty" and t gets strpped. Fantastc. Maybe all the bad luck s httng me, dont know. t doesnt appear that way. When went to the supervsor of specal servces, Mr. Marshall, he showed me a stack of recent complants of major thefts wthn the dorms of ths great nsttuton. To say the least was shocked. The crme rate on ths campus s probably hgher than n Harlem. All know s that am completely dsllusoned wth the people attendng ths school. To get n ths school t says one "must furnsh testmonals of good moral character"; apparently somebody hasnt been furnshng these testmonals. am so appalled at the degenerate people attendng Wake For est Hgh School that feel that wll not be able to return to ths hole next year. Thank God. Pat Rce Class of 72 Attack! To The Edtors Last week the Old Gold and Black" attrbuted the followng statement to student body presdent Jm Cross "The Legslatures acton on vstaton (passng exactly the same bll tllat Scales vetoed) was NOT an attack on presdent Scales, nor dd t renege our commtment to the qualty of lfe commttee. SAY T WAS AN ATTACK on Scales AND the damn commttee whch has not even met n formal sesson. feel that ths type of statement by student government leaders s a classc exampled of bussng the bottoms of the admnstraton, whle they say they are more mnstraton, whle they sa,y. they are workng for the students "through the system". feel that more rgorous statements and actons (n the form of peaceful student government-led demonstratons) would have a faster, more postve effect than work~ ng "through the systems" here at Wake Forest. Wllam deweese Class of 72 Davs To The Edtors.. As far as am concerned Charle Davs can qut basketball at Wake Forest and go elsewhere. feel that C.D. s a terrfc athlete and bas been the backbone of our team ths year. But a man wthout schoolsprtshouldnt play. The artcle "Vewng the Deacs" of Frday, Feb. 27, 197, really shocked me.davs portrays hmself as a black who had. to cheat hs way through school, attend classes where no one lkes hm personally, and play basketball to the tune of fake" cheers. have occasonally nodded to C.D., not because he scored 2 or 3 ponts the nght before, but because he represents our school. feel that a student who seems to hate the majorty of tlle people at Wake Forest has prde only n hmself and not the school and doesnt seem to care f the team w~ or loses--except for fnancal reasons- should not play on a team of our qualty. feel. sorry for the complex Charle Davs has. Personally, wll contnue to nod to hm -- just as wll to any other Wake Forest athlete, whte or black. The man purpose for schools to have teams s to create sprt n the communty and the student body. ts sad to thnk that our, athletc assocaton wll keep a player on our team who s not out there for that purpose. Randall Somers Harmon Class of 7 ntegrty To The Edtors The ntegrty of Wake Forest bas been challenged. The crss whch s upon us now s nnt solely a crucal oerod for the Honor Councu or executve commmee but for the entre Unversty system, wllat t stands for and what ts reputaton may one day become. Crses whch arse from orderly controversy are healthy, for they test the soundness of the nsttutons structure. and functon. Analogous s the judcary system; the valdty of a new law. s not respected untl tested n court. Further, Wake Forest s wthout queston a conservatve unversty, ts current phlosophy, purpose, and objectves are nfluenced by ts relgous afflaton. The Unversty wshes ts students to behave n a mature and responsble manner. On tlle other hand the Unverslty s educatonal purpose s to assst students n buldng a system of values whch takes full account of the thngs Algeras Z s Best Flm Of 1969 BY DOUG LEMZA A REVEW Comng out of the UA Rvol Theatre n New York after a Chrstmas performance of "Hello, Dolly!" heard ths comment pass from the lps of an over-thrty move vewer "Gee, that was a great show! thought t was the best flm of They just dont make flms lke that any more! wonder why; they should!" Now, "Hello, Dolly!" s not bad, t just fals n tryng the old Holly..\ood hokum act of puttng on somethng l>fgger and better than ever." For those who lke ths theory, extend my condolences and apolges; there s just so much one can take after ths rerun of "The Son of Sound of Musc. (Those who want to see a good, talented, refned muscal should see Mss Stresand n "Funny Grl." Make tracks for the Pa!kway when that flm lands there n a few weekshopefully!) For those who just want to see a damn gqod thrller wth poltcal and emotonal suspense, make tracks for the Wnston Theatre where Costa-Garvas "Z" s playng. (The orgnal one-week engagement has been extended due to the support of the Wnston-Salem (and hope, Wake Forest) area resdents and flm buffs.) "Z" s a re-tellng of the events of the LamJraks murder and the coup d etat of the colonels of the early and md-sxtes. However, the flm chooses to work wth the thrller genre and explot that type of flm for ts own emotonal release and poltcal propagrandaton. t s a clever dea and drector Costa-Garvas explodes the genre left and rght--no poltcal leanngs meant here--to gve the audence exactly what t wants and what he, Costa-Garvas, wants to show. As a poltcal tract (and t s here m runnng nto trouble wth the thrd floor of the C secton of Trbble Hall and wth my Greek frend-neghbor), Z" and ts creators--costa-garvas, drector; Jorge Semprun, the co-scenarst wth Costa-Garvas; and Jacques Perrn and Hamed Raclled, the producers--propound a dfferent, too free governmental structure where "good" regns rampant and the mobs of both factons, left and rght, become pawns n an exctng, realstc (so the creators say) game of power and legtmacy. The flm warms the hearts of "us lberas;; as we see the rght ( -mean left) sde trumph after all the poltcal mayhem of the controllng colonels and ther "phlosophy. Of course, the endng s calculated to make us feel sorry for what s currently exstng n Greece and make us bolster our own awareness of the evls of any type of dctatorshp. The flm s based on the novel by Vassl Vasslkos but ts mood and conjecturng of poltcal opnons comes from the Lambraks ajtlr of the early sxtes (several years before the actual coup). Ths s fhe frst and most mportant "mstakeuntruth" n the flm. The character Yves Montand plays n the flm s supposed to be Lambraks. Montand s a pacfstc-doctor and deputy of the countrys legslatve organ. He s the defntve "good" of the flm as opposed to the "evl" of the colonels, However, Lambraks was a communst (some say an anarchst) and the holder of the Lenn Peace Prze. Although tlls department feels that n a true democracy communsm could have a place as a poltcal party, ths noton s not ev!n confronted n the flm. By makng Montand a regular leftst, the flm avods controversy and compells the audence to feel for the hero and hs groups plght. t s also a perverson of a truth, thus Move s Poltcal And Emotonal negatng the "ntentonal" at. the begnnng of the flm. What comes out s not sympathetc factual nformaton, but Costa-Garvas and Semprun s poltcal asprng hopes. Another, though more theoretcal, queston s the way Costa-Garvas handles the mob sequences on both sdes. The rghtst "God-fearng" mobs are full of werdos and freaks, funny, repellent and satrcal, whereas the leftst groups are all straght P.eople. workng JQgetbllr-for a good cause. ene s~ould. gueston. the. u~e~~b!> \Jh any sde--ther place n socety and Jher poltcal actvtes whch usually do not compensate for the law no matter how bad that law or law-controllng group s. Ths, then, s another product of the Costa-Garvas-Semprun poltcal mnd and not the truth. However, as a flm "Z" sets ts sghts on producng a story that enfolds ts vewers n poltcal and emotonal complcatons and teases us wth an old-fashoned mystery devod of clches and sentmental pap. t delvers and expounds; pulls us n and then spews us out. The audence s spent emotonally exhausted. Costa-Garvas has made one nterestngly slck flm --The Sleepng Car Murders " and one ths department does not know ~ bout and Costa -Garvas would lke to forget. n "Z," both plot and message (whether t be verbal or vsual) merge nto an exctngly frantc war of nerves. Costa-Garvas keeps our attenton and has made a flm "full of lfe" and of relevancy. Although not a cnematcally ambtous flm lke "They Shoot Horses, Dont They?, "Z" fulflls ts expectatons and the medums potentaltes. Sempruns structure for the screenplay (t was he who structured tlle flm and dd m~st of the dalogue) s taut and hghly pollshed, although one questons the zsbang - boom end where serousness. dssolves nto cartoon fantasy. Yves Montand as the pacfstc doctor rene Papas as hs wfe, Jean-Lous Trnt~, gnant as the honest nvestgator and Jacques Perrn as the journalst wth a Davd Axle McWhee! Sounds Off Hemmngs hang-up gve polshed performances. Renata Salvator, Charles Denner and P_erre Dux back them up. A fnal Kudo goes to cnematographer Raoul Coutard (of Truffaut and.goddard fame) for hs fne color photography and help n makng "Z" the best flm of n The Pursut ; l.,....,. J t of the sprt as well as thngs materal that we may become constructve and useful members of socety." To ths pont n tme, Wake Forest las acheved ts objectves. The qualty educaton and the genre of men and women the Unversty has produced speaks for tself. However, the recent dsruptve acton of one organzaton on campus s hardly what one would call mature or responsble. Wbat they are hopng to acheve s only speculaton. Accordng to ther consttuton, the 1 purpose of the socety s "to promote respect, unty, dgnty, -and recognton of the black student, hs race, culture, and.hertage." Orderly and level-headed thnkng promotes respect, not forces of unreason. Educaton s an orderlyprocess. Changes n the system are not brought about by racal and emotonal protests. Chapel was abolshed because we appealed n a responsble and mature manner. nter vstaton wll e ventually pass for the same reasons. We are buldng a system of values wth every confrontaton of crss on tlls campus. t s our respons~lty to be organzed, mature, and sens1ble wllen we do confront these problems. n dong so we are becomng constructve and useful members of socety. say lets put order and decency back nto educaton. Houck M. Medford Class of 72 Columnst To Tlle Edtors am occasonally led to wonder bow the "Old Gold and Blacks" columnsts are chosen. specfcally queston a column whch graces us all wth ts regular appearance on tlle Doug Lemza page--oh, excuse me, mean the edtoral page. -The column to whch refer s none other than the Axle McWheel column. Snce am.a freshman and have no knowledge of the Axle McWheel columns of the past, must ask questons to learn. What, pray tell, s the crteron used for pckng Axle McWheel? Must he be ant-everythng? Must he be able to offer only destructve crtcsm? (Must he never have heard of constructve crtcsm. or s he annually (Contnued on page 5) ~ CoJ -~ ;-~;.,~-.~~.,. ~ ~-~;.;.3 Clques Busy Wth Recrtnra tons BY CLAUDE MCNELL the RCS togetherness, but loathed ther Rake Frost Unversty and Bble College company for some reasonsoranother.(could has ts problems.. t have ~en th!) socks?) So the MFCs got The hgh-rse quas-georgan dormtores together, and turned out to be more num are fallng down (whch, guess, s all rght- erous than even the RCs. and tlle MFCs they werent ft to lve n anyhow. But they started. carryng testaments larger than the sure are purdy), the long-leaf pnes on the lrcs bbles and st.opped wearng socks also; plaza are dyng~> the Astro-grass s beng The GDs were the peq,le who wanted fused together by the Wlderground steam to jon nether lrc or MFC, or who werent ppes, and the relgon department has lost allowed to jon ether; anyhow, all these ts key to the Kng James Bble. ended up GDs whether they wanted to or But even more serous. the men on camppus have gathered nto clques and refuse to not. The terms of vocalty, the lrcs, beng have anythng to do wth each other. older, had more experence at verbalzng, The three ~oups, the RCs (nspd Re- but the MFCs were louder. The GDs dont tard Councl), the MFCs (Motley Foozle take much srock n vocal quantty or qual Desma!S), eventually formed, and have ever ty, but try to slently destroy the RCs snce been at each others throats for no and MFCs wth guerlla tactcs. GDs can obvous reason. ( dont know what Foozles be recognzed by ther songbooks. or Desmans are, but they sound nce!) The MFCs and RCs really dont worry Hstory, thnk, s approprate. The RCs much about the GDs because they really were for many years the most promnent hate each other too much to worry about a group on the campus. You could alwaystell, subve~sve GD or two. So the RCs throw an RC from anyone e!ee by hs "snap- ~ebrs from the crumblng buldngs at the py" dress (wthout socks of course) and the MFCs, and vce-versa. and they wrte nasty ever present bble that each RC carred wth t.m at all tmes. thngs about each other. lke "Plate was your faculty advsor.; and "Judas,was your Then the MFC s came. The MFC s con- f~undng father.", ssted largely of those whosecretl,lf admred -But even more nterestng s wllen the two are gven equal space n the caupus pa,~~~~r, The Old Smut and Lust. Then they really cut loose.,.tbe MRC s copyng _us," the RCs cry defantly. "They are nferor. And they are the pets of the prests, and we are not. t s not far," they say wth eloquence. "But, but," retort the MFCs. "You are old and establshed and we are young and proud. We need help from our superors to serve everyone. For we wll let everyone come wth us." "Ah, ah, glower ~he RCs. "but ww you let the RCs jon you? "Oh, heavens no," sneer back the MFCs, "U your clque s u great as you say. why dont you stay?" sncker the MFCs. "Because ~ ou have our money," leer the RCs,,.Let us jon or gve us the money." "But you gave up the rght to your monel when you were so prvledged to jol the MFCs. Meanwhle, the GDs are gettng gddy agan. "Why. "they sad, "U the RCs and the MFCs dont get along, dont they just leave each other ;~.lone? The only thng ths banterng does s waste prnt. Leteachgohls separate way. mcs and MFCs w1ll always fall apart 1 but GWs wll always be."... ;1, ~ r W1 l Contnued s11 ll nut rut llt!-he lt 11U( an dla JtSStll ll sprea11. An sall!l na r n he han t<!jonts wher ur, mure once tll tlle wrter But,. qute rghteous e objectve e wurld, To The Edl The Ame1 has rated tt ber one" f1 ment we ap1 Unon, How run a gross cr our perenn Old Gold a ng mstake n the sxt Fox schedu on campus, changed. B released n NOT Carol We deplore slght to a g To The Edtc As one wl the justce c sbltv act. za datrbe The conce fnances wal ference dur FC money Worl Res( Wll An exhbl prnts by R artst-n-re5 run to Maret Prohaska exhbton be The exht faculty and s Prohaska rtgton and 1 Wake Foresl of the Arne Hs pant Natonal Aca the Pe,,nsy l1 represented cago and San, Prohaska! Saturday Ev.c Holday and 1 He bas rec Award from one from tb A natve,~naturalzed at the CalJ San Francsc { {

5 s materal and use~ ths pont n ts obthe genre has pro~ are a column regular appage- oh, page. The other than... <1 ~.;-~;,.~-.~~!(- ~-~;.,, ;, Letters To. The Edtor~.., What Are Colutn.nsts~ Cred.ent.als? t Contnu~d from Page 4) s11nru!ht to u~t> such an unheard-of-arotll<l ht>tt tel ce.) l\1ust he always spread out an dt a that llu!tl easly be amp!} exprt!s~etl n one paragraph to fll a two-column sprt>atl. Am must he occasonally prnt the saml narrow dt>a two weeks n a row Does he have to deal wth only the rrelevant ponts when attemptng to cover an event... or, more approprately, part of an event l once thought l would someday lke to be the wrter of the Axle McWheel column. But,.qute frankly, dont thnk m selfrghteous enough, destructve enough, unobjectve enough, or mad enough _at the wurld, Steve Lttle Class of 73 Gross Era To The Edtors; The Amercan Federaton of Flm Socetes has rated the Wake F ores! flm seres" number one" for For ths achevement we applaud Doug Lemza and the College Unon. How ronc, then, n ths communty that a gross cnematc error should be made by our perennal all-amercan" newspaper, Old Gold and Black. We refer to the shockng mstake n the seres on the Unversty n the sxtes. t s true that 2th Century Fox scheduled producton of "Hgh Tme" on campus, and that the plans were later changed. But wher the flm was fnally released n the fall of 196, Tu~sday Weld, NOT Carol Lynley was the femnne star. We deplore ths dstorton of facts and ths slght to a great talent.. John E. Roberts Jon Renhardt Don Schoonmaker James Stentrager R.D. Sears Neal Thornton Fnancal Act To The Edtors As one who beleves n the need for and the justce of the student fnancal respon, sbltv act. wsh to reply to the Doug Lemza datrbe n the last ssue of ths paper. The concept of student control of student fnances was ntroduced at the summt conference durng a revval of the old MRC FC money squabble, There seemed to be Works Of WF Resdenf.~ttftlst Wll Be Shown An exhbton of pantngs, drawngs and prnts by Ray Prohaska, the Unverstys. artst-n-resdence, wll begn Monday and run to March 25. Prohaska wll be at a recepton the day the exhbton begns from 8 to 1 p.m. The exhbton s open to all students, faculty and staff of the Unversty. Prohaska was artst-n-resdence at Washngton and Lee Unversty before comng t.o Wake Forest ths fall. He s past presdent of the Amercan Socety of llustrators. Hs pantngs have been exhbted n the Natonal Academy, the Whtney Museum ancl the Pensylvana Academy. Hs works are represented n collectons n New York, Chcago and San Francsco. Prohaskas llustratons have appeared n,, Saturday Ev.enng Post, Good Housekeepng, Holday and Esqure. He has receved the John Marn Memoral Awat d from the Socety of llustrators and one from the New York Cty Art Center. A natve of Yugoslava, Prohaska s a naturalzed Amercan ctzen. He studed lat the Calforna School. of Fne Arts n San Francsco, ~t llt>ra sunstnsns at tlu.t tme that tlw preselt.take a rrrf, postve Stt!V 1 that drecton, systet!l Whtltby tlt> adtl!lllstrahun lajus uut aj\tf wh admnstraton support, the CU stutlt>ut nlllllt;} to ~tudttts shuuhl bt> <!lt~rt>l. ralses v.oce.n opposton. Certanly the job Student guwrnnltut ll<ultrs talk~~~ wth Un- wll be a hard one, certanly arguments wll vt>rsty fnancal autlwrt~s ant! the tltan ttf develop, certanly mstakes wll be made, stuth.!nts am! llt!~an tu g-jthlr nfurmllun un but -t wll be students.who wll spend the S}Stt!ms. n use at jjtltl llhu!ls. Beful;e. Ume students who.wll do the a rgu n g. Chrstmas, the head 11f t;vt.!} ur~duza tton bar~nlng and compromsng, and students covered by the bll was conta.ct~d a1t1 n- who wl make the mstakes. But they wll formet that a bll woult! be utrrtll!tell to be our mstakes and we wll learn from place! tbe appropraton uf stu;ltnt funls them and we wll all be better off for t. n the hands uf tht studtnt!-~~slatlu e. Opnons were asked, consdtretl and ncur- SAM LONG porated n the!jll. W.hell thd>ll was draft-. Class of 7 ed, all concernet..l ur;anzatuls were no fed of a publc t~t!arng both by. letter and "Old Gold and Black" ptblcty. Opnvns Un~versty Prof were expressed and changes were.made n the bll, Lkewse at the frst. Legslature meetng at whch the bll was consdered organzaton representatves were nvted and expressed themselves at length about the bll, and addtonal alteratons were made. No, not all suggestons wer~ accepted, but then does the College Unon accept.all suggestons for ts concert choces. t should be noted that Mr. Lemza s ony sugg~ston, at- that early pont of the bll, was that we hold t off for anothe.r year... No, we dd not ask for CU assstance n draftng the bll--remember Mr. Lemza, the CU s not a pot1cal organzato.n.no we. dd not talk to all admnstrators, we talked wth Gene Lucas, vce-presdent of bus. ness and Fnance, Dr. Edwn Wlson, Unversty provost; and Thomas Elmore, dean of students--all of whom encouraged us to pursue passage of ~e. bll. The bll was not ntended as a means to extend student government contrpl OY.er the CU, but rather as a means of securng ~tudent control of ther own money. feel corn pelled to answer some of Mr. Lemzasstatements about the cu and the SG. No, the CU s not a poltcal organzaton. t ~s not to the extent that although t spends over $4Z, of the students money annually, not one of ts tap offfcers was elected by the student body, and no stuclent outsde the CU had one thng to say about the sze of that budget. Thngs werent always ths way. Untl. last year..... Voted Presdent Of A.ssocaon D~. Harold. M. Bar.row, professor and charman of the department of physcal educaton, has been named presdent-elect of the South Dstrct of the Assocaton of Health, Physcal Educaton and Recreaton. Barrow was elected recently.at the closng sesson of the ~!strct conventon at Columba, S.C. After a year as presdent-elect, he wll serve a two-year term as presdent. The dstrct ncludes 13 Southern states.. Dr. Mchael L. Pollock, assstant professor of physcal educaton, and Mrs. Sharon Danel, a graduate student, presented a paper ttled Effects or Dancng Tranng on Cardovascular Effcency and Body Composton of Young Obese Women." About 2,1 college and hgh school physcal educaton teachers attended the. conventon. others attendng from Wake Forest were Mss Marjore Crsp, Mss Dorpthy. Casey. Mrs. Ron Stark, Dr. Harold C. Rhea, John Claugherty and Perry Le feavers.- A CC students. eected CU offcers. Now the C{lhas.. ~... Tourney_. decded that students are unable to select competent. people to. run the CU so the organzaton perpetuates tself from wthn and the Unversty has removed the student. voce from money matters. Mr. Lemza - and hs frends seem to have an atttude of Wake Forest ~ - ~ 81 "noblesse oblge" --they know what students Duke...,.. 73 want and what students should ta~~. Perhaps bs atttude should be tempered by the voce of other students who. can and must look at the total spectrum of student actvtes. Mr. Lemzas fear of tqe emasculaton of the <;!.1. PtQgram.,s, llogcal at.best. No group of students, s, gong, to wreck the organzatqn whch provdes the heart.of th~ campus entertanment opportuntes. Maybe he fears some embarrassng questons mght be asked --.lke how come a speaker- span sored by the non-unversty subsdzed Afro Amercan Socety drew more persons than all the CU lectures ths year combned?. All of ths however s auxlary to. the real queston unversty students must decde. Who s to set the prortes for the dsperson of student funds? Gven a lmted amount of funds for student actvtes, prortes must be set for ts dsperson. Currently those prortes are set by admnstrators. Organzatons wth a lobbyst n the admnstraton, e.g., CU advsor Mark Reece, get frst and best shot at. the pe. Organzatons wth no pull,.e. Challenge, Honor Councl, Afro-Amercan Socety, FC, etc., are lkely to be left n the cold, We say students should decde f t s more mportant to fly _fve CU people to a book- ng conventon n Memphs or send Honor Councl members to a conference on the. ~.. reform and mprovement of campus!ldcal systems. We have all been workng toward an end to n loco parents Ol) ths campus. Yet, when the student Legslature, the only body on ths campus elected by and responsble to every studel)t on campus tres to,. "*" South Carol na. ~~ C ems11, " Vlrgn a.-. ~. 95 North Carolnc ~~ N ~.. c. state Maryland ~. 57 SHAKEYS 975 Peter Creek Plrkwr Specal Student Dscount (Wt~ WFU.D.) 25 off small Pzza. 5 off double Pzza 7 5 off Famly Pzza We serve Fun (Also Pzza) Entomology Prof To Speak Here On Wednesday Or. ller!j~rt. Hoss, profes~or uf entomology at the Unversty of Georga, wll speak at 63 p.m. Wednes1lay n Lecture Room A of Wnston HalL Ross wll dscuss varous forms of lfe on a prare and how they relate to each other. The lecture s sponsored by the bology department anrl s open to the publc. Before jonng the Georga faculty, Ross headed the entomologcal secton of the llnos State Natural Hstory Survey and taught at the Unversty of llnos. He has wrtten a number of books n the felds of entomology and evoluton. Entomology s the branch of zoology that deals wth nsects. Ross receved the B.A. degree from the Unversty of Brtsh Columba; the M.A. and Ph. D. degrees from llnos.!a,).~!v. lnd~y. A Commentary Women Defy BY ljlll.ll.kehson four - htll]p<l scrlamng, sltlvf ru~ worneu, hostu~ s~ns awl wh~t cottrag! t takes to step unt <Jf a <fll<1> durmtorv at 121~ a.m. t;u a Thnrs<lay,;!glt u wtu~r. openly defed tl1er culle~~ s <tlrft<w n~er;u atun. The women of Wake Furest. Harlly. Tlte scene was the Queens CcJege campus n Charlotte. Anrl t s doujtftrl that the warmer weather 9 nules ~<nth of Wnston Salem pruvoked the tjravajo of tt< CJWf Us grls, for the chlln~ dl ~~ ol <J<!rl curtew regulatons s the same wttuev1r suclt rule~ are nvoked. Yet Queens had k<ked away the cold. Monday aft e r the de m or 5 t raton,.. Presdent Smley okayed a mr.ve lu ajolsll at Queens a curfew systt=rn tat prevously concded wth the hours now mposed at Mltary Rado System Begun Sophomore To Send Mes~ages BY CHARLE DECKER The Navy s back on campus. After three years of "nactvty" the Mltary Afflate Rado System, a publc servce volunteer faclty for handlng per. sonal morale messages between mltary personnel overseas and relatves and frends at home, has begun operaton under the. drecton of Houck Medford, sophomore of Waynesburg. New Offcers Are Elected By Sgma Ch Dupuy Sears, junor of Farmvlle, Va., was recently elected presdent of Smga Ch socal fraternty. Other new offcers nclude Rchard Horton, junor of Hamlton, N.Y., vce pres ~ dent; Larry Chamberlan, junor of Butler, Pa., recordng secretary; Russ Mayer, junor of l!lp, N.Y., correspondng secretary; Steve Sandrdge, sophomore of Rchmond, o/a... assstant treasurer; and Sam Lews, junor of Burlngton, pledge traner. Paul Bullock, junor of Sumter, S,C., and Scott Trauth, sophomore of Seaford, Del., were named nterfraternty Councl representatves. Also elected were Bob Stone, sophomore of Kngsport, Tenn., socal charman; Pete Smone, sophomare of Unon, N.J., house charman; Sm Seeloff, sophomore of Lexngton, chapter hstoran; and Ed Johnson, sophomore of Hgh Pont, chapter edtor. ntroducng..,. the elegant new PENTHOUSE COLLECTON by The Navy, whc;h used to have an admnstratve unt n the basement of Trbble Hall; had to leav e campus to make room for the Unverstys art department. But the equpment for a communcaton staton n the attc of Trbble was left lo establsh a M.A.R.S. staton. Houck, a ham operator for fve years, asked last year f he could operate the volunteer faclty here at school. After brngng hs own equpment to school, Houck joned the. Navy M.A.R.S. net whch operates n North Carolna. Every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday nght, Houck mans the staton from 8 to 83 p.m. n 42-C Trbble. The MARS GRAM---a message of 25 words or less- can be sent free of charge to any mltary personnel overseas. The message wll be receved wthn two days, whereas regular mal generally takes between one and three weeks to be delvered. Houck sad he also wll transmt messages to anyone wthr hs net. whch ncludes 25 other ham operators n the state, or anywhere n the Unted States. Blood Drve About 15 students, faculty and Wnston - Salem townspeovle donated blood Tuesday afternoon n Reynolds gymnasum. The blood drve was sponsored bv Scabbard and Blade, natonal honorary mltary fraternty, and conducterl by tl~ A mercan Red Cross Major. Raymond E. Burrell, assstant professor of -mltary seence, sad that 169 persons donated blood durng the Scabbard and Blade drve last semester. Mar</1 G, 1n, ULJ GUL!J ANJ Hl.f.L.,, Curfew Rules Wak~ hm~l. Tb., J< a c"j <ot,ds have gven sorne thoug!jt tu ajjjjtlllllg tletr <UrfW restrcton, but tt1e stuue las u v r flally Jet;un to roll, and tllr, llloss ~,n,w~ heaver. Th" JJ~ tutc;h SlWS tu be the feasblty of a pla11 that would allow women students tu <<Jll" all<! go at any lwur of the day. Talk ; <J se~urty, awl the eomnwn opnon s that hrtng ll"!~ securty offcers wr;ulrj be ne<<essa ry t" nsure safety aganst the many J!f ves, l""ljjlg Torns, etc., who wr;uld have a f1-ld day t the W<Jmens dorms were left JJP. at al JtJUS, Wltetll r tlte.se awrehensons are warrant;<l 1s a consderaton that has been placf!d secowlary tr; thoughts of the added ~xpense that would suvposedly be necessary tj mplement a method of keepng the d<;rms lutked, whle allowng late-nght entrance to wumen who come n after the present curfew huurs. The grls at Queens, however, feel that settng up a system that facltates securty, yet allows students, and students only, to enter the dorms at all hours, poses no problem. When asked f the mechancs of such a system had veen an ssue n dong away wth hours, one Queens student answered "Of course not. That was the easy part," And su t seems. Startng March 16, students at Queens wll be freed from all tme restrctons. Grls enterng the dorms after the present curfew hours of 12 on Sunday through Thursday, one, (ln Frday, and two on Saturday, must Jtnan a clorm key from lhe securty guards offce once they return to the campus. After enterng the dorm, the student must, wthn 15 mnutes of the tme at whch she obtaned the key from the securty guard, place.the key n a lock box n the dorm and call the securty offce to confrm her entrance nto the buldng. The keys wll be pcked up perodcally throughout the nght by the securty offcers. Thus th=!re s no problem wth loss or duplcaton of dormtory keys. Furthermore, the chores of latenght key dstrbuton wll be handled by the present securty staff, ancl no added expense wll be ncurred. Students under 21 years of age wll need parental permsson n order to take advantage of the new "no hours" system. Thus those parents who prefer to mantan some control over ther chldren at school wll stll be able to do so, t s noteworthy that Queens s not by far the frst nsttuton to abolsh curfew regulatons for coed students. The Queens student who commented that actually mplementng the no-hours system was "the easy part, went on to say that student desre for the change was the crtcal element. Apparently the women at Queens had the rlesre. the abolsh one system and mplement another. whch s. to them more.feasble by. overall.consderatons. But. as. a noth~r Queens student commented, "Freedum s for thuse who want t." "You are young and superors to let everyone "but ww { for The fnest of. champagnes mported w-nes beer BEER BY THE CASE AT SPECAL PRCES A "royal" groupng of London-nspred shrt stylngs n a smashng range of colors, patterns, collar and cuff deas. All exclusve wth Sera n crsp durable press Kodel polyester and cotton. We have the Penthouse Collecton for you to see rght now... along wth an opportunty to wn a LONDON HOLDAY FOR TWO There are entry forms at our store for you to enter Seras London Sweepstakes, Youll fly aboard a fabulous BOAC arlner... spend seven days and nghts at the lavsh LON DON HLTON... dne and dance nghtly at the luxurous new PENTHOUSE KEY CLUB... and enjoy London ht shows and sghtseeng trps. Phone Radfo.rd Street Next to MacDonalds

6 PAGE SX Frday, March 6, 197, OLD GOLD AND BLAC" THE FFFF S COMNG MARCH 15TH THRU 21ST MackS Sportswear & Clothng Hghway 52 ot Mtdway Route 19 Wnstan,SOlem, N. C STOU HOURS TUESDAY thru FRO~! 12 to 9 p m. SATURDAY 1 to 6. p m. Closed Sunday ond Mandoy Frend OJ The Student Complete Lne Of Qualty Clothng At Money Savng Values. A. MdAM PHONE Cleopatra, Dark CU Weekend Flms Ths week the College Unon presents three moves whch by ther qualfcatons, have no! thng n common wth each other and represent a wde varety of actng styles, drectoral flourshes and flmc sensbltes on the screen, "Wat Untl Dark" s based on a md-sxtes stage thrller about a blnd woman trapped n a house wth three dfferent types of thugs who are tryng to get at a doll flled wth smuggled heron, They thnk she has t, and she knows she doesnt. The results of the trcky games they play on the woman wreak havoc on her and most or the audences who have seen ths flm, Terrence Young (who dd three of the "James Bond" flms} drected ths "stagey translaton of Frederck Knotts play n 1967, ("Dark" s the last flm ~$~~;!!~~~~!~!~~~;-=;;;~ ; -= ~;~ ~=!!~~t~ to carry the old Warner Brothers sheld trademark.) Hw photography n the!11m and hs utlzaton of a small basement a. partment add extra susp~n~" ~nr! fury to ths drama, Audrey Hepburn s the blnd wfe trapped for what seems lke an eternty (a role orgnally played by Lee Remck on Broadway), and Alan Arkn, Jack West on and Rchrd Crelll are her assalants. The suspense s occasonally marred by Efrem Zmbalsts appearance as Hepburns husband. An exctng color flm, Wat Untl Dark" wll be shown today at 7 and 9 p,m, and tomorrow at 73 p,m, AU shows are n De Tamble Audtorum and there s no admsson charged for attendng. 1 Completely dfferent.d. out ;look, ana flmc pacng, s Joseph L. Mankewcz producton of "Cleopatra," Ths s the flm that almost broke 2oth Century- Foxscorporatestructure, defntely forced the Burton-Burton-Fsher-Taylor marrages to ht the rocks and caused about a thousand ulcers n Hollywood and Rome. The Wake Forest presentaton of ths 1963 color and Todd AO spectacular runs 186 mnutes and stars Elzabeth Taylor as Cleopatra, Rchard Burton as Mark Anthony, Rex HArrson as Julus Caesar and a host of others such as Pamela Brown, Roddy McDowall and Hume Cronyn brngng up the rear "Cleopatra" naugurates the College Unons "Sunday Cnema" seres of unrelated flms from Hollywood and abroad and!! XL CLEANERS \\ ft~~~~r~~?rbt~~. ~ the shows Wll be 25 cents. ~ ;~ otto Premngers classc, and ; probably bestflm "Laura " wll ~ ~. EXCELS -o be shown Monday n DeTamble ~ at 8 P.me j;~ 1. Laura was done n 1944 and = s ~onsdered by many crt-. 1~ cs as the last word-n "hgh- ~.1..1 N PROFESSONAL DRY CLEANNG ~~ ~~~.~~~~~~t~~a~~~d d psychologcal motvatons, Gene -=~~ an ~~![ Terney, Dana Andrews, Clfton SHRT L AUNDERNG ~-=~ ; Webb, Vncent Prce (pre-man- (!; ster) and Judth Anderson star ; ft ;; n ths murder mystery where ;jj /. ~; the vctm shows up alve and 1 _.../ 31 North Cherry - Near the Campus ~~ c~ges the entre nvest- ~~~~;~~!;;_~;;.- ~====;;~ ~~-!!!=-====~~=~~. gat1on....~~~~",,; -.._..., You wouldnt want to lose a voce n Congress, would you?, You can very easly, by not.- ; fllng n your Census Form. Thats because legslatures, both notonal ond stole, are based on populaton. And f you, and enough of your negh. bors, feel the Census s a nusance nstead of a necessty, you may not be counted. And f that happens, t may be just enollgh to lose you o representatve. And thats only one reason you should fll n your Census Form. Because the nformaton you gve -about yourself, your house, and your famly-s used by the government to determne the needs of your cty, county, or neghborhood. t con mean better schools better recreatonal facltes, and better housng-as well as a greater voce n Congress. So dont hestate to fll n your Census Form. ts not only absolutely prvate (not even the FB s allowed to see tl-but ts also one good way to help make your communty o better place to lve. CENSUS DAY S APRL 1 We cant know where were gong f we dont know where we are...-~ts,ooor.?~~ _,. \;!_ " ". ~ advertsng contrbuted for 1he publc good ~ ~ ~ < atjnc.." \,.. r,./...,o~ Goya~ Renor Art Works On Exhbt An exhblton of orgnal graphcs by classc and contemporary artsts wll be on dsplay n the gallery lounge n Trbble Hall each day from 1.m. to 5 p.m. The collecton s presented by Ferdnand Roten Galleres of Baltmore, Md, t ncludes over 1, orgnal etchngs, lthographs and woodcuts by such artsts as Pcasso Chagall M ra, Goya, Renor Rouault and Kollwtz, A gr~up of outstandngwestern and onental manuscrpt pages ~rom 13~h to 2th century works 1s also mcluded n the exhbton, Robert McElman, a representattve of Roten Galleres wll be present at the exhbto~ to answer any questons vstors have on graphc art and prntmakng. Prces range from $5 to $1,, wth the majorty prced under $1, The sale s sponsored by the College Unon. Jeff Tweel Records 2 Folk Blues A recordng whch appears n the College bookstore and wll soon reach area record stores was cut by a Unversty student. MATSsE PRNT n CU Dsplay Med Record Lbraran Ranks Frst n Naton A 1969 graduate of the med cal record admnstraton prq gram of the Bowman Gray School lf Medcne and North Carolna Baptst Hosptal has posted the blghest score n the naton on the examnaton for regstraton as a medcal record lbraran.. Mrs. James Y. Volk was notfed by the AmercanAssocaton of Medcal Record Lbrarans of her achevement as hghest scorer among the 229 applcants for regstraton status, Her Summer Sesson By JACKE BARTHOLOMEW nformaton about the Unverstys two summer school terms has been released. Regstraton for the frst sesson wll be held June 15, Fnal examnatons for the frst term wll be July 17 and 18, and the second term wll begn wth regstraton on July 2. Second term fnal exams are Conventon Tqt busness students from 39 colleges ncludng WakeForest wll be n Atlanta ths weekenf to make some key management decsons for fcttous corporatons. The teams must make such decsons as the prce or ther product, and the amount of advertsng at the ffth annual ntercollegate Busness Game and Conference at Emory U nversty. scheduled for Aug. 21 and 22. Undergraduate courses n such areas as Englsh, foregn languages, the scences, busness phlosq~hy, socology, relgon socology-anthropology, and speech, Course descrptons may be found n the Summer Sesson Bulletn. to be ssued n March. The bulletn wll also contan descrptons of specal programs for 197, Copes of the Summer Sesson Bulletn may be obtaned by wrtng to Percval Perry, dean of the summer sesson Box 7293, Reynolda Staton Wnston-Salem. The summer concert seres wll present three concerts June 23, The Mar lowes, duo pansts; July 8, Jorge Morel Duo, gutar and percusson; and July 28, New York Brass Quntet. Undergraduate tuton and fees for a fve-week term of fourto-seven semester hours credt s $12.. For three hours or less the charge s $2. per hour plus a $5. regstraton fee. score was not dsclosed. Shortly after her graduaton n August, Mrs. Yolk was ap ponted assstant drector of the Meacal Record Admnstraton Program, whch s operated by the medcal centers Dvson of Alled Health Programs, Mrs. Yolk and her husband, a second -year medcal student at the Bowman (rayschool of Medcne, are natves of Palos Heghts, ll. Both hold the B.A. degree from Valparaso Unversty, As a college student, Mrs. Yolk became nterested n medcal record admnstraton as a career possblty. She held summer jobs at Presbyteran St. lukes Hosptal n Chcago, where she worked as a record clerk n the medcal records department. She descrbed the feld of medcal record admnstraton as one of opportunty -- " a good payng feld that offers pleasant workng. condtons." Flm Contest A natonal student flm competton, open to students anywhere, wll be held at the U Dversty of Lousvlle, Lousvlle, Ky., t~e week of May 11, The competton s beng held n honor of slent flm poneer D. W, Grffth, A prze of $2,5 wll go to the wnners n each of fve flm categores. Further nformaton may be obtaned by wrtng the D, W, Grffth Stu dent Flm Festval, Unversty of Lousvlle, Unversty College, Belknap Campus, Lousvlle, Ky., 428, Jeff Tweel, junor of Huntngton, W, Va., and a member of Lambda Ch Alpha socal fraternty, s "Jeff Todd," the name whch appears on the labels of "Look What Losn You Has Done" and "Whats The Robn TODAY 1969) Contemporary com- 8-Swedsh Folk Musc Musc from the South. Gonna Do?" Both tunes appear postons. on a 45 rpm sngle on the Stop" 13--The Goon Show label, a subsdary of Tree 2-- Concert Hall Beethoven--Concerto No. 4 n G 11-Deaconlght Serenade Ten Years Later," "Shangr-la Agan." 815-At ssue "Castros Cuba Publshng, nc., n Nashvlle, Tenn. major; Schubert--Sonata n D; Dave Hartley, Brahms--Symphony No Musc n Our Tme 755-Ths Week n Cty Accordng to "Bllboard Maazne," Tree s the number one SUNDAY Beatrce Wtkn--Trads and Government Frank Styers, superntendent of plants for the 11-Wake Forest Baptst Man Song; Larry Austn--Brass. Thngs; Tom Paxton--The ron publshng house n Nashvlle. Wnston-Salem water and sewer Church. _. The two songs are blue-ballad dvson, 4-Collectors., C.orner... 1-A Federal Case "Martypes. They were recorded- last 8-Specal Of The Week Musc by Bbald, -.Bruckaet;-~ ;qu!?..,~~~ds_. Talks A)x>!lt fall. "Revolt n the Justce De- Brahms, Havaness,.Cbopn,,.. ~r,,~~c.hatq.jj!on.~.,..,,. partment" --lawyer Larry 8 -Showcase , Greenburg, leader of the protest 9 -BBC World Theatre 13-SpectruJ_D aganst postponement of the Strndberg--"Tbere are crmes _11-Deaconhght Serenade GOLDEN September, 1969, school desegregaton deadlne n Msssspp. 11-Deaconlght Serenade and there are crmes," T1m Shouse. 1-World Day of Prayer Rchard Honeycutt. WEDNESDAY Ltany servce from the Farvew Moravan Church--the Strndberg--"There are crmes BOAR MONDAY 2-BBC World Theatre speaker s Dr. James Ralph 4 -Amercan Profles. and there are crmes." Scales, presdent of the Unversty. 755-Focusng On The Arts 2th Century. 555-Art Buchwald. 73-Dutch Composers OfTbe LOUNGE 11-Deaconlght Serenade Cultural calendar. 83-Evenng Concert Slavonc dances and pano peces. Rchard Honeycutt, 8-Campus Report. 815-Wake Forest Sports, 1-The Asa Socety Presents F. Sonl Jose, Fl SATURDAY 1-Reynolda Hall Lecture pno author--" Ant-Amercan 8-The Art of Glenn Gould "The dea of North, a specal documentary. 93-Forty-thrd WorldMusc Festval (Hamburg, Germany, Dr. Carlos Rojas, Emory U nversty--"the Brth of a Novel." 11-Deaconlght Vaud Travs. TUESDAY 7 55-Flmcast Move vew. Sales and Sales Management Tranng Program Ths Program s desgned to develop young college graduates for careers n lfe nsurance sales and sales management. t provdes an ntal tranng perod of 3 months (ncludng 2 weeks at a Home Offce School) before movng nto full sales work. Those tranees who are nterested n and who are found. qualfed for management responsblty are assured of ample opportunty to move on to such work n ether our feld offces or n the Home Offce after an ntal perod n sales. Aggressve expanson plans provde unusual opportuntes for those accepted. Arrange wth the placement offce for an ntervew wth van C. Hnrchs, C. L. U. Agency Supervsor Thursday, March 12, 197 Connectcut Mutual Lfe NSURANCE COMPANY HARTFORD The Blue Chp Company Snce 1846 Serenade 2-Metropoltan Opera Matnee Puccn--Madame Butterfly. re- sm n the Phlppnes. 13-Contemporary Composers Gerald 11 -Deaconlght George Bryan. THURSDAY rsh Vctory. Serenade 755-Topc North Carolna Carrol Whte--Cherokee government. 8 -A Nest of Sngng Brds Heroc Couplet. 1-Book Beat Farfax M, Cone--"Wth All ts Faults." 13-The Drum News and commentary from the black communty n Amerca. 11-Deaconlght Serenade Dck Norrs. Kck up )OUr heels Go dancng, enjoy the K111 Kal Lounge, Dne n the otc Kana Ka Restaurant, Af!er a long week c studyll( you deserve to relax. And lets face t-sheratons thl best clace around for realn&. Wed., Frl., andsat.danet to the musc of THE FOUR "TURAl-. Sheraton NTERSTATE 4o, KNOLLWOOO STREET SHERATON HOTELS AND MOTOR NNS A WORLDWOF SFRVCE OFlr < \ " J ~~ ;; ; VE the By Pre, For the olna ths son. Sure, to wn the Carolnas, than the na By the t rgorous t. \ expectng four more onals and For tne played n th " s cons pc s wealthy one of the he mght for the thre Scalpers,. $2 per t be even hr son. The E each year. cepton. Fortunah games and agan ths~ wll decde the ~our fl spend the 1.,,. of the telev After f1 fantastc 1 Carolna C,. tourney. 1 team werr schedule t n ex1ten( Stll, tne the other Gures po1 lottery s. teams look the repres ther scho( the regula1 tournament to gan the llo1-th C1 the only tw cocks. The Charle Da1 sary to del Carolna lu On the a style of ba Gures sqt sde shootl too many 1 problem s beatng he clemen Johr Steve Ht vllh South 1 country, he ment. The 1 Allmond, a n one or tl foul trouble Althvugh fchls sele wont he tl popular off gest ham a bm, but t ref who ret wll work c up north bul \{ Ths past Atlantc Co expected, C the second shy of ben c.d. off th who faled play n the. 1 Even VaD ford s.a State bas~e comparson and Davs. The Dst Basketball am stlllc frst two te No one c Charle Sc1 frst team. Arts Gl along wth Andy Owen r"ve pla, the frst t selected, U rated baske Wake For ng the ACC con unforn All-Amerc s chao!, ntt Gtlmore., ACC had 1 rulng. n changed th1 to make th rules are had been pr,,. Accordn 1, Sawyer, wl mttee, "s, got left ou soon as l was change

7 rzan t"ton VEWNG the DEACS PAGE SEVEN Frday, March 6, 197, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Deacs Top Duke Play S.C. Tonght MuscMu- "Mar Apo!lt Serenade Theatre crmes Slav- rsh Vctory. Serenade Farfax All ts.~ j" f By DOUG BUCKLEY Sports Edtor Pre-Tourney Tdbts For the people ol the states ox North and South Carolna ths s the bggest basketball weekend of the season. Sure, the goa! of every college basketball team s to wn the NCAA tournament, but to the fans of the two Carolnas, the ACC tourney s probably more mportant than the natonal champonshp. By the tme one of the conference teams survves the rgorous three day, three game ACC tourney, t s almost,, expectng too much for the champon to go on and wn four more dffcult games n the NCAA Eastern Regonals and the Natonal Fnals.. For tne thrd straght year, the ACC tourney wlh~e played n tle Charlotte Colseum where the playng floor " s conspcuously panted Carolna. Blue. Unless a fan s wealthy enough to contrb!lte af least $5 per year to one of the eght conference schools athletc programs, he mght just as well forget about- tryng to get tckets for the three day event. Scalpers were sellng ducats to the ~em fnals for $2 per tcket last year. t s expected that prces wll be even hgher ths tourney,.and nflaton s not the rea son. The enthusasm for the ACC tourney gets greater each year. Ths weekends tourney fgures to be no txcepton. Fortunately for the average fan,_ the two sem-fnals games and the champonshp contest wll be on televsuu agan ths year. t remans to be seen when the co_nfere~ce. wll decde to have the entre tourney on the tube, mcludmg the four frst round games. Obvously, most fans would spend the entre Thursday afternoon and evenng n front. of the televson nervously watchng tbe acton.! * * * * After fnshng the regular season schedule wth a fantastc 14- conference record, the thrd raked South Carolna Gamecocks are everybodys choce to wn the tourney. Only the 1963 Duke squad and the 1957 Carolna team were able to complete the 14 game conference schedule unbeaten n the 16 years the ACC has been n ex1tence. Stll, tnerll s an excellent possblty that one of the other seven ACC teams could upset Frank Mc Gures powerful Gamecocks. The tourney lke the draft lottery s. a far, yet unfar system. Allthe ~on!erence teams look forward to the annual event, whch determnes the representatve for the NCAA tourney, except when ther school s at the top of the standngs at the end of the regular season. Only seven tmes n the 16 ACC tournaments played has the number one seeded team faled. to gan the NCAA berth..!lorth Carolna State and Wake Forest appear to be the only two teams wth a chance of upsettng the Gamecocks. The W olfpack wth Ed Lefty,ch and the _Deacs w1th Charle Davs each have the knd _of explosveness neces-- _ sary to defeat a team as consstent n ther play as South Carolna has heen all season. On the other hand, Carolna and Duke do not play the style of basketball t wll take to elmnate Frank t.1c Gures squad. The Tar Heels may be the weakest out- sde shootng team n the ACC and do not fgure to score too many ponts nsde aganst the Gamecocks. Dukes problem s that 6-1 Randy Denton does not enjoy the beatng he receves under the boards from U.S.C. musclemen John Rbock and Tom Rker. * * ** Steve Honzo, who offcated the Deacs home game lllth South Carolna and would.be. the best referee n the country, heads the lst ol offcals assgned to the tourw.. ment. The other refs are Ea!ph Stout, Jm Hernjak, Ots., Allmond, and George Conley. f -the Deacons get Conley n one of ther games, look for Gl McGregor to rur. nto foul trouble... Although there s nothng wrong wth the calber of offc-als selected for the tourney, the three day event just wont he the same wthout the antcs of Lou Bello, ~he popular offcal from Ralegh. Bello s prot;>ably the blggest ham around when the televson camera focuses qn hm, but t does not affect hs of~catng. He s the besl ref who regularly works ACC games. Undoubtably, Bello wll work one of the Eastern Regonal frst round game up north but doesnt the ACC tourney come frst? \ * * * *. Ths past week the ACC sportwrters pcked the Al- Atlantc Coast Conference basketball team. As had b~en expected, Charle Davs was s_elected to the _team for the second consecutve year. Stlll, C.D. was etght votes shy of beng a unanmous choce. How could anyone l~ave c.d. off ther All-ACC squad? The eght sportswr1te~l, who faled to vote for Davs.must have only seen htm play n the. two Vrgna games,..... Even Vann Wllford got more votes than DavlS. Wllford s.a fne player and the key to the North Car_o!na State basketball success ths season. But there ]s -nd comparson between the basketball tale11ts of Wllford and Davs... The Dstrct 3 team of the Natonal Assoc1atwn of Basketball Cooches was also announced durng the we~k. am stll lookng for Charle Davs name on ether of the frst two teams. No one can quarrel wth the selectons of Dan sse,-_ Charle Scott, John Roche, and Pete Maravch ~o. the frst team. But Bob Lenhard?. Arts Glmore was only named to the second squad along wth Mke Pratt, Rch Yunkus, Mke ~aloy, and Andy Owens. Fve players from the Southeastern Conference made the frst two teams whle only two ACC athletes. were selected, Unbelevabe; The SEC has to be the most overrated basketball conference n the country. * ** * Wake Forest would be m mucn better poston ent~rng the ACC tourney f Arts Glmore were wearng a Deacon unform. The 7-2. gant made the second team n.p All-Amercan squad after. turnng Jacksonvlle, a nothmg school nto a natonal power.. G1l~ore wuuta oe anenamg Wake Forest today f tne ACC had not made a mstake n changng the transfer rulng. n December of 1968,. the ACC.Faculty Co?Jmttee changed the rules pertanng to transfer students m order to make tl!em conform wth NCAA standards. The NCAA rules are far more lberal than. what the ACC polcts had been pror to that tme.. Accordng to Wake For est. representatjve Dr. John who s now Presdent of the Faculty Commttee "some of the key sentences from tl)e. old rule got left out whch had the effect of. nullfyng them. As soon as t was realzed what. had happened, the rule was changed back." ; Sawyer DCKE WALKER Pumps n Jumper As Blue Devls Watch Photo By Beery Terrapns Capture ndoor Ttle, George Posts Only Deac Pont By CHARUE DAYTON broke conference records whle Staff Wrter dong so. One of the records occurred when hgh jumper Joe Last Saturdays Atlantc Coast Davd bettered hs own mark Conference ndoor Track Meet wth a leap of 6-1 1/2. Hs was won by the Unversty of prevous record was 6-1 1/4. Maryland as the Terps pled up The other record breakers were 76 1/2 ponts to easly out-ds- dstant runnlrs Russel Pantor, tance second place North Car- who ran the two mle race n olna. Marylands wnmarkedthe 9.5, and John Baker, who ran 16th tme the Terps have won the the mle n ttle snce the conference was North Ca ro!na was the only formed 17 years ago. other scl!ool to wn n more than The runner-up Tar Heels one event as the Tar Heels capscored 34 1/2 ponts to overcome lured both the 6-yard run and South Carolnas Gamecocks, who the shot put.. fnshed thrd wth 24 talles. The Deacons only pomt was Other team scores wereduke won by shot putter Ed George 21, Clemson 18, Vrgna 11, who placed ffth wth a heave of North Carolna State 6, and Wake 5-1 S/4. Wnner n the event Forest 1.. was North Carolnas John Jes. The el"tapj[jgtwon 7;tfl~ ~- sup wth a tremendous toss -of. ". 1 " l. } l. vents as they corppletely out classed the rest of. the feld. Altho.lgh no other Deacons Three of Marylands partcpants were able to wn ponts, several not only won ther events, but Wake For est performers turned Lghthouse Grll e Where You Meet Your Frends e Good Food at Economcal Prces More bread etc. at no extra char Quck Servce / Corner of Burke and Brookstown S*reeta ONE BLOCK FROM SEARS THE F F F F S COMNG MARCH 15TH THRU 21ST New Shpment Of Lev. Bells Szes Also New Buckskns Leather Vests All At Mllers.Varety Store n outstandng performances. One of these was John Danforth, who, accordng to Deac Coach Harold Rhea, ran the best race of hs lfe." Danforth won hs prelmnary heat of the 6-yard run wth a tme of 114,8, but stll dd not qualfy for the fnals. Another Deacon who performed well n defeat was Jack Dolbn whose prelmnary tmf;!. n the 6-yard dash was faster then some of those who qualfed for the fnals. However, he qad the msfortune of runnng n the fastest prelmnary heat. And next ThursdaytheDeacons wll fnd out just how successful ther ndoor season has been when they meet the Panthers of Hgh Pont College n the frst outdoor meet of the season. The meet wll be held.ol the Wake For est track wth feld events begnnng at 33 and track events startng at 43, THE By CHARLES DAYTON After. three straght heartbreakng losses to Duke durng the regular season. the Demo~ Deacons ralled from an eght pont frst half detet to upset the favored Blue.!Jevls, 81-73; n the frst rounq or the Atlantc Coast Conference Tournament, Many observers had prematurely counted the ffth seeded Deacs out of contentlonafterthey dropped sx of ther last seven regular season contests, but the determned underdogs came up wth one of ther!)est team ef forts of the year to defeat the Blue Dukes. As usual, tb& Wake Forest searng was led by Charle but every Deacon flayed a vtal role to the wn. Dtcke Walker was brlllant n the frst half as he led the Deac surge to overcome the Slue Devls. Center Gl McGregor ht for 17 ponts, but ma<le hs bggest contrbuton on def~nse where he blocked numerous shots and made several key steals. The wn sends th~ Deacons nto the sem-fnal round tonght aganst number one seeded South Carolna, but wth fve mn11tes remanng n the trst half t looked as though t would be the Blue Devls meetl)g the Gamecocks. Duke had lltst opened up ~ eght pont ;bulge, 28-2, after D1ck DeVenz1o stclle the ball from John Lewkowcz and scored on an uncontested layup. Wth 456 rematnng n the frst stanza, the Deacons called for a tme out to fgure out some way to stop the surgng Blue Devls. Stoppng Duke was not the only dlemma facnlt Wake; the Deacons also had to fnd out some way to mak,e ther own offense effectve. After openng n a man to man d~fense. the Blue Devls quckly swtched to a zone when the Deacons scored ther frst three tmes down the court. Durng the ensung fourteen mnutes of play aganst the zone; the Deacs had been able to score only 14 ponts whle the Dukes tar off 28 markers. Partcularly dsturbng to Wake Forest supporters wasthp nablty of Charle Davs to connect. CD had taken fve shots and connected once. END ZONE GREENSBORO 2114 Walker Avenue 6 Blocks West Of UNC G Fr., Mar. 6 Tassels Sat., Mar. 7 Kallabash Corp. Sun., Mar. 8 The Flamng Embers C.D. MSSES only but Followng the tme out s appeared that the stuaton was gong from bad to worst for Coach Jack McCloskeys charges as C.D. stepped to the foul lne and mssed hs frst charty toss of the evenng. Duke rebounded the mss and went down court wth an opportunty to fatten ther margn to ten,. but the Blue Devls mssed and the Deacons took over for the rest of the nght. Dan Ackley ht on a jumper to whttle the lead to sx, Then. wth 322 left n the half. Walker followed up a Davs mss and was fouled. Walker ht the foul- shot and suddenly the Deacs were back n the game, Duke agatned mssed and Walker scored once more to slce the Blue Devl advantage to one, 28-27, wth 24 left n the openng perod. At ths pont, t was Dukes turn to call tme out to try to stop the chargng Deacons. However, ther effort proved to be futle as the Deacs contnued to overwhelm the stunned Blue Devls. McGregClr ht to put Wake n front wth 21 remalnlng, but Don Blackman converted a free throw to te-up the contest, The Deacons countered wth sx more ponts as Walker frst scored two feld gools n a row, and when be fnally dd mss, Gl McGregor was. there to follow up. Another Duke freethrow cut the defct to fve wth 18 seconds left n the half, but Walker scored just before the buzzer to gve the Deacs ther largest lead of the nght. 37-3, WALKER LEADS RALLY n the fve mnute span after Wakes tme out, thedemondeacons outscored the Blue Dukes, all wthout CD scorng a pont. For the half, Walker had 15 ponts, eleven ol whch came n the Wake seventeen pont surge. McGregor was close behnd wth 12 talles for the ntal frame. n the second half. t Vllll the (Detrot Mch. "Mad, Body & Soul) Tues., Mar. 1 The Embers LADES FREE Fr., Sat., Sun., Mar. 13 The Swngng Medallons Mar. 14 The Charman Of The Board.-- Mar. 15 The Georga Prophets L-_.....,..,.,.,.. J " t 4 Come _n Out OJ The Ran And Enjoy The Cafetera Snack Shop And Magnola Room ARA SERVCES SCHOOL-AND COLLEGE other Deacon co-captan, Charle Davs who led the Deacs as thty repeatedly turned back Duke comeback attempts. After scorng only one feld goal n the rjpenng perod, the elusve All Conference performer ht from everywhere n the second half as he snged the nets for 23 ponts, ncludng from the charty strpe. Followng a Larry Saunders basket whch cut the Wake Forest margn down to two, 43-41, C.D. ht on two free throws to gve tbe Deacs a four pont advantage wth 1515 left n the contest. Wakethenncreased ther margn to eght. but Duke ralled to trm t down to four agan wth 135 remanng. However. C,D, ht onajumper to put the Deacs up by sx, and the Dukes could never draw any closer. The Deacons cause was helped wth 944 left on the clock when Larry Saunders commtted hs fourth personal foul, The 6-9 llnos natve seared 29 ponts and hurt the Deacons tme after tme wth clutch baskets to keep Duke n the game. The only other Blue Devl to ht n double fgures was Randy Denton, who had 16 ponts. Rck Katherman, who had klled the Deacons wth long rang~ shootng n the second meeh.. l; at Durham. had only four ponts, and was so neffectve on defense aganst Walker that he only played a few mnutes n the second stanza. Duke had come nto the tournament wth the momentum of wnnng eght of ther last ten games durng the regular season. ncluded n these vctores were wns over natonally ranked Davdson, North Carolna State, and North Carolna, On the other hand, The Deacons bad lost to teams such as Vrgna. Tech and Clemson durng the fnlf weeks of the season. But the Deacons played the game they had to play to wn. Gl McGregor stayed out of the foul trouble w.hch bad plagued~ hm n the ear,le~ losses to the ~.,... Blue Devls. And just as m portant n the Wake Forest success was ther balanced scorng attack, Sweaters And Flares ~ all at CRANES 44c ltade OPP.1. PO$TOFFC~

8 PAGE EGHT Frday, March 6, 197, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Deacons Blow Hug_e Lead; Turnover Wn To CleDson BY ACE LYON Staff Wrter Tralng by as many as 16 ponts n the frst half, Clemsons basketball squad turned Tger n the second half and throughly shocked Wake Forest nto a defeat last Saturday nght at Clemson. The Tgers, obvously nspred for resgnng Coach Bobby Roberts last home game, took control of the lead wth 11 mnutes remanng and never gave t back. They hardly resembled a team that was 1-12 nacc play pror to the contest. On the other hand, Wake Forest hardly resembled a team that had beaten natonally ranked Davdson, and strong North Carolna twce. The Deacons were content just to play offense and chose to take a rest perod when the supposedly hapless Tgers had the ball. The Tgers receved superlatve performances from departng senors Rche Mahaffey and Butch Zatezalo. Mahaffey talled 26 ponts and led all rebound ers wth 16, whle Zatezalo put on one of hs second half shows, pourng n 23 ponts to fnsh wth 25. Wake Forests Charle Davs turned n another scntllatng outng wth 3S markers, 26 n the fnal perod. Davs personally accounted for the Deacons last 15 ponts, when they were desperately tryng to avod the embarrassment of losng to cellar dweller Clemson. C.D.s 38 ponts gave hm an average of over 31 ponts a game From Your Heart To Her Hand w N -T w N E R M T R Unque, modern stylng. Fne damond. Budget Term over the last 5 -ontest of the season. Clemsons vctory broke ther nne game losng strng and gave the Tgers ther second conference wn. Only two weeks ago the Deacs coasted to a home trumph over Bobby Roberts squad, A bref fght between Clemsons Dcke Foster and Wakes Dan Ackley marked the openng mnutes of the contest. Ackley brllantly playd up to hs nck-. name, Savage, as Foster n"ever dd return to acton because Qf a sore jaw. Wake Forest pulled away mdway n the frst half behnd the scorng ofdcke Walker and John Lewkowcz, openng up a advantage. The Tgers managed to narrow the defct down to at ntermsson, stll an apparently safe, comfortable lead over a, last place team. ;After s~ mnutes ofthe second half, that apparently safe, comfortable lead had turned nto a most uncomfortable lead of three ponts, Clemson had gone nto a full court zone press and t was causng nothng but chaos as far as the Deacs were concerned. Zatezalo knotted the score at 67 wth hs seventh bucket of the second half and at the sght of the te score, Wake Forest pancked. Clemson quckly got two baskets on steals off the full court press and the Deacons had seen ther last lead of the 197 regular season evaporate. The Tgers opened a advantage wth 554 left butwake was not about to fold completely From $75. BYERLY & STEELE Jewelers "Where Qualty s Paramount" 418 W. 4th St. Phone nd & Ch.,rry Street Phone RESTAURANT OPEN DALY 6 A.M. to 1 P.M. FEATURNG Open Hearth Steaks Lve Man Lobster FOUR FLAME S RESTAURANT Phone Vst the New Four Flames Lounge 15 Seats Fountan Bar Lve Entertanmem Nghtly Featurng Blly.Mack Du!J.NO 1-over CharpP. Monday Thru Thursday $1. Per.Per sou Frday and Saturday R E s T A u R A N T L u N G E to a perer.nal loser. The Deacs, behnd the marvelous shootng of Davs, drew wthn four ponts a couple of tmes. But the Tgers scored the last sx ponts of the contest and ran up the most ponts scored aganst Wake Forest ths year. Lewkowcz and Walker. who had been su not n the frst half wth 34 ponts between them, chalked up only 7 combued ponts n the second half. Y osh dd not score at all n the second half and after takng 12 shots n the ntal stanza, fred only four shots after ntermsson. One of the dfferences causng the fnal outcome was the shootng percentages. Wake, after httng 62% ofther felds hots n the frst half, shot only 39% the rest of the game to wnd up at 43%. Clemson had 43% before half tme and 6% after, endng wth a 51% effort. Another mportant dfference was n turnovers, where the Tgers press caused 19 Deacon turnovers whle the home forces were commttng only 8, excellent consderng the runand-shoot game the Tgers always play. Photo By Jeery McGREGOR Taps Over Dukes Denton Two Assstant Coaches Nebraska Game Opens By GEORGE WRGHT Assstant Sports Edtor The Wake Forest football program has been affected recently by the resgnaton of two assstant coaches and the addton of an eleventh game to the 197 schedule, a season opener wth Nebraska on September 12. Ted Guthard, last seasons defensve lne coach, resgned hs poston at Wake Forest to return to hs hometown of Detrot where he wll contnue coachng. Guthard attended Mchgan State Unversty, where he earned hs B.S. and M.A. degrees n physcal educaton. There he played football under Duffy Daugherty and present Wake Forest coach Cal Stoll. Last seasons offensve coordnator, Tom Moore, has also resgned from the Deacon staff. He wll resume hs coachng at Georga Tech. Moore attended the Unversty of owa where he was a quarterback and punter. n hs sophomore season, owa defeated Calforna, n the Rose Bowl. Coach Stoll has announced that a replacement for Moore wll be determned n the near future. To replace Guthard, Coach Stoll has hred last seasons part tme freshman coach, Norman Parker, as a full tme assstant. Parker, a graduate of Eastern Mchgan, was descrbed by Coach Stoll as a "Young, enthu- sastc coach who wll ft n wth our staff very well." Co~ch Stoll sad that the staff changes posed no serous problem--that thev were "normal thngs. Snce the frst week n January, Coach Stoll has been puttng hs squad through a rgorous tranng-condtonng program. Throughout January the squad worked three days a week, then n February, began drllng sx days a week. The prmary purpose of ths wnter program s to ready the players for sprng practce whch begns March 14 and wll run through the frst three weeks n Aprl, "ve never been nvolved wth a bunch of boys who have worked harder, sad Coach Stoll about hs squad. "Were stronger, qucker, and n better shape than we were a year ago." The Deacons wll probably need all the extra strength and quckness they can muster for next seasons opener wth Nebraska Unversty. The addton of Nebraska to the Deacs schedule wll gve them eleven games to play next season. Many Deacons fans are probably wonderng, why Netraska, a Sherwood Plaza Restaurant (where qualty preva.ls) OPEN 63 SHERWOOD SERVNG THREE COMPLETE MEALS A DAY 83 MONDAY-SATURDAY PLAZA SHOPPNG CENTER PASCHAL SHOE REPAR Ear. ltj AltYNcJLDA MANCl ~AUtWAY.. LAZAf DHcJ.. llnc CEHTa... 56!1&1 PA tlore comforr. lon1q,r r, beller loolt.e Jn ry Jobl WANT DELVERY SERVCE? CTY BEVERAGE CAN HELP YOU! Resgn; Season powerhouse that humbled a strong Georga team, 45-6 n last seasons Sun Bowl? Coach Stoll explans that ts very dffcult to schedule the teams youd lke to play on the dates that are avalable. Nebraska was avalable and should prove to be a good fnancal venture. The Nebraska contest wll replace. the tradtonal opener wth N.C. State. The State game has been rescheduled for later n the season. There wll be no open date ths year as n past seasons. The addton of an eleventh game, an acton approved by the NCAA whch s becomng natonally popular, was prompted for fnancal reasons. Due to nflaton, ether a hke n tcket prces s necessary, or more games must be played. Posted on a bulletn board outsde of Coach Stolls offce s a newspaper clppng whch offers the vew of the Nebraska players and coaches conc-ernng playng an eleventh game aganst Wake Forest, They seem to favor t as a warm up to Bg Eght competton. One squad member states, t can make our record look better--eleven or twelve wns nstead of ten/ After the opener wth Nebraska, whch fnshed last season ranked n the natons top twenty teams, the Deacons wll play sx conference games and four other non - conference games wth Tennessee, Florda State, Vrgna Tech, and Houston, Of the eleven games next season, only four are at home. T S THE PLACE TO GO FOR THE BEST PRCES ON ALL OF YOUR FAVORTE BRANDS OF CE COLD "BEVERAGES" Ths means the Deacons wll be facng four teams whch played n bowls last season. n addton to Nebraskas bowl apperance, Houston played n the Bluebonnet Bowl, Tennessee appeared n the Gator Bowl, and conference foe South Carolna met West Vrgna n the Peach Bowl. Coach Stoll has already sgned sx junor college transfer players to provde mmedate help for next years team. naddton, 26 players, ncludng seven lnemen over 6-3, 225, have been reunted for the 197 Baby Deacs. Tankmen Fnsh Sxth n ACC; Ten WF Records Fall n Fnals. By TOM JENNNGS Assocate Sports Edltor The Deacon swmmng team set ten school records and fnshed sxth n the Atlantc Coast Conference swmmngchamponshps at Chapel Hll last Thursday through Saturday. The tankmen scored 113 ponts through three days of competton and were edged out of ffth place by the Unversty of Vrgna. The Deacons led the Cavalers after two days, but Vrgna made a fne performance on the fnal day to pull ahead. The Unversty of Maryland also made a strong showng on the fnal day to upend perennal champons N.C. State, The Terrapns fnshed wth a team score of 46 whle N.C. State had 452. Host North Carolna was thrd n a tght battle wth Maryland and N.c. State, tallyng 399 ponts, South Carolna was too strong for the lower dvson teams but defntely not strong enough to challenge the top three. The Gamecocks fnshed wth 246 ponts. Vrgna traled the frst four wth 126 ponts, whle Duke 49 and Clemson 28 fnshed n seventh and eghth places. Accordng to champonshp rules set up by the NCAA, each team s allowed to take eghteen men to the meet, Each swmmer may swm n as many as fve events but only three of those events may be ndvdual races. The other two must be relays. Twelve postons are awarded ponts, frst place recevng sxteen and twelfth place recevng one pont. An ncredble number of school records, ten, were set by the Deacon swmmers. "Practcally everyone swam the best tmes of ther lves," sad Coach Leo Ellson. George Bell and Andy Anderson, both freshmen, dd swm the best n ther lves. Both set school records n au fve events they competed n. Bell set ndvdual records n the 2-yard freestyle, 1-yard freestyle, and the 5-yard freestyle. Hs 2-yard freestyle tme of broke the prevous record of 152,4 that he had set earler ths season. Hs record of 49;47 n the 1- yard freestyle broke hs prevous work of 5, aganst N.C. State ths year. n the 5_ yard freestyle, hs tme of 22.3S broke the old record of set last year by Rchard Whttngton. Andersop_ s.~t. m!vdual records n the 1-yard freestyle 2-yard butterfly, and 5-yard freestyle. He held the old records set earler n the season n ~ach event. Hs tme of the 1-yard freestyle bettered the old mark by almost seven seconds. He swam the 2- yard butterfly n to better tlop old mark of 21.5 and bettered the old mark of n the 5-yard freestyle wth a tme. Jm -Hogan set an ndvdual record and swam on a record settng relay team. Hs tme of n the 2-yard backstroke topped the old mark of set by Bruce Lamb n 196"7.. The BOO-yard freestyle relay team swam an excellent to better the old mark of set n Paul Trvette, Larry Chamberlan, Andy Anderson and George Bell were the swm~ mers. Three of the four swam ther leg faster then the exstng 2-yard freestyle record. The fourth mght have done so too had he not had the flu. Jm Hogan, Jm Rchardson, Andy Anderson, and Ernest Glass surpassed the old record set last year n the 4-yard medley relay. Ther tme was as compared to the old record of n the fnal event of the meet, the 4-yard freestyle relay, the Deacons bettered the old mark of set last wth a clockng of Ernest Glass, Paul Trvette, Jeff Davs, and George Bell swam n the race. Bell swam hs anchor leg n the fantastc tme of Accordng to Coach Ellson, "The meet was the tghtest \ and the competton was the best ever. Maryland, N.C. State, and North Carolna had a terrfc battle for frst place." Ellson was dsapponted but not dejected that Vrgna fnshed, ahead of the Deacons n the lower dvson. "Our boys gave a super human performance be~ cause dd not thnk they could swm that well. "ON THE NN CROWD AT Plzzalnn Amercas Favorte Pzza Restaurant 275 REYNOLDA RD. Tel DNE N or TAKE OUT YOUR FAVORTE BEVERAGE ON TAP TRY OUR DELCOUS GARDEN FRESH SALAD COME SEE US For the aest Car Wash n Town and Receve 1 Fr Wax Job... Clp ths ad and brng t to Reyno da Mn t Car Wash Reynolda Manor Hours Mon.-Thur. 11 l.m.-12 p.m. fr.-sal fl.m. 11.m. Sun. 4 pm. l p.m. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Center Experence Dry cleanng SERVCE 1 Stt Or Dress Cletad Free Wt~ by Dry Cleaaag Order Upoa Prueatatoa Of n s Ad 5 Sllrts Ftr $1.25 (f lro Tues. Wed. Or Thrs. MASTER K.JEEN OPE TUES. SAT. 7 A.M. 63 P.M EYNOLDA RD. ACOSS FOM EYNOLDA MANOR SHOPPNG CENTER ~~~~,---~><8-... SLAS CREEK RESTAURANT PARKWAY AT STRATFORD ROAD ~ ~ w;nson-salems Newest anj Ftnest Restaurant Welcomes Your Patronage and the Opportunty to Serve You- m p \a Burke Street PA5 14Sl NOW SEYMG LURCH AND DNNER 11 A.M.-11 P.M. /, ( / TO~ VOLUl B A nun members group to Wlson, a by the el to be tr Wlson, scheduled terday m1 stranng hg to the made pe1 restran campus 1 set by the Wlson, code vol Councl t member executve The apj Wlson t, Honor C< Fa 4-l The 4-1 rnester" l semester, faculty Mo The pla tral bas The pro for over t1 wnter ses ects. The and sprng The 4-1 recommejj um study e. aton Me of delberl ever, actc poned for called n defnte, ft Stll to tons for B.A. anc commttee of course system b3 Under t Ho An hono Afrc.-Amer The execut course und destroyed 1 zaton and and restore explanaton ths acton too_ a ne "lberty" a t r the abl confusng, the foggy 1 las hung controvers} body has be ton. often tve comm general ha tons. The or@ Amercan tve comm was n ar body tself. appeal to tl Honor Cour precedentec Anyone of Collegt asked to desk befo representl commttee All ntl consder parucpatl

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