SJB Reform Decision Pending - WakeSpace … to testify when witnesses The Stude.nt Government were...

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I . a ucould hwhile, ." o better fficial a play;, ked by md its ot likely 1 1ere the cussed. valuate· · me and t would es: each network aer. y would and not What's an who eon a f's.nose got to to that .. g fater \ . (\, . ! l I' TODAY INSIDE * EMILY WILSON * 'DEFENDANTS' . RIGHTS. ·. Bathroomitems Missing By JACK NALES U Staff Writer . - Although · custodians are permitted by the university to re.move any item from the · bathrooms in the men's dorms, they are not allowed to throw any penional items away, Housing Director Ed Cunnings said this ·week. Many. compl8irits ·concerning losses of predomiriantly bathroom items have come from both Taylor and Kitchin Houses although the other men's residences have. also cited cases where similar losses have occurred. · . "Our current policy, which has been established in the last three or four months, has been that the first thing (the custodians) do is to take anything that is left in the bathroom and set it outside the bathroom door," CUnnings said. "If the stuff is not removed the next time around, they can Put the stuff in a plastic bag and take it with them-not throw it away- and store it in a janitor's closet. "Then if the stuff is asked for, they can return it," continued Cunnings. "I discourage that second step from happening at all." ' .. Yet many students complain of continuous losses of · soap, shampoo, towels and other items. · Of a random 50 suites surveyed, few · knew · that any missing property taken by the custodial staff would be returned. Some students cited instances where they found their ·shampoo or towels thrown in the trash can.. "There are several avenues to solvilig this problem," Cunnings said. "First of all, the custodial. people · could be. spoken to directly. If the student · feels in_t1lat position, he could speak to his RA or head resident and they could speak to the custodian. Or the student · could speak to the custodial supervisor and if that doesn't work, they can see me." Cunnings said that the custodians allio have several avenues to take In handling probl,ems .with students. "If they feel they are abused by a student or group of students, they can go, first of all, to the students, then to , their supervisor, and then, to me. I encourage students and I encourage custodians to deal with their own hassles," he said. Ctumings said that in the past, there has been some conflict between students and custodians, but the custodians have expressed feelings that there is less tension this year.' an Item& iUeh as these have heea dlsappearlDg from tbe batllrvoms ID the mea's hoaes aloug with other tblugs left Jn the rooms ovemlght. . Photo by Morel SJB Reform Decision Pending .•· TODAY EDITORIALLY * JUDICIAL REFORM * . SJB Gives Serbai· Social Junior Gene Serba was entry into or occupation (If the: sentenced to a semester of social University facilities which are. probation by the Student Judicial locked, closed to student. Board last Thursday night for activities, or otherwise restrl'cteQ. "unauthorized entry" into as to use, is prohibited." . Bostwick Dormitory after closing Social probation prohii>UJ a: hours one night last semester. student from representiniJ $he Serba had pleaded guilty to the university in any way, iml)UJI a charge. stricter sentence if pe is Serba said that lie entered the convicted by the boa'rd aga!Q, and building while a resident who had is noted on his permanent just opened the entrance door In a closed trial held the aw;ne with a pass key was standing night, a sophomore male and a outside talking to · two freslunan female were found nOt companions. He then went up to guilty of violating the Code' of the second floor where he · Student Conduct, having been knocked on a few doors and found in a ·parked car by a returned downstairs. He said he campus security guard. . was not in the building for more The SJB also gave four than a minute. students a warning for setting off . Second floor Resident Advisor fireworks, but did not try the Anne Forrest testified on second- offense. hand information that the woman Student RI.ghts at the door called oUt to Serba and tried to catch his coat as he Proposal T'- LJed ran in the door. However, the iUJ first-hand witness left the trial during the. first board In SG Meetmg• :. deliberations and so was not there to testify when witnesses The Stude.nt Government were recalled a few minutes Tuesday tabled a proposal for a later. . student bill of rights to allow Serba said that ,his original more time for debate. · By MARK LEUCHTENBERGER Asslstaot Editor defense attorney was a law Proposed by the Judiciarf student, but he was infonned the Committee after what SG Vice good·faith." recommendations should be · haveareallybiglegalissuehere, reformsitmightneed.Adecision_,. first," he said. "Then can night the trial that the President Andy Ciriaco termed Among the areas studied by the cbannel.ed 'through SG. as well as and we have a reasonable in this area by the president is proceed rest m an defense attorney had to be an "over two months of hard ·reform .committee, said White, through the administration for argument to back us up," said expected within a few weeks orderly fashion. undergraduate student. He said the bill will be considered at a was that of the "parameters of · work on reforming the Cromer. · After this decision has been he had been previbusly informed special meeting next Tuesday. Student leaders Knox White the university as landlord" and constitution. He added that no fee had been "I think that it's appropriate reached, said Hills, "the next by prosecutor Kent Brown that a was tabled by a 21-18 count. - and Andy Cromer · expressed how this related to the manner "It seems that the student paid yet to the lawyer. that a decision be taken on·the step will be for due proceSs to be law sc)lool.attorney was allowed. The proposed bill of rights will concern this week over the delay of offeliSllS brought before the members of the committee Hills _ appeals business first," said clarified as it exists in other Knox White represented Serba at enumerate rights for the firSt in the form!Jlation of a policy for . SJB. takrealizelathat reform should also is a member of a .. Hills. . areasThison camhapus." the open trial. time breakrdin newto· thestudentjlidicialsystem. Relatedto1hisquestionwasthe ep ceintheconstitution.'I'm specially appointed Straughan, the university's " · will ppen. It's not a The official charge was groun m po cy, acco g Administrators' Dr. David Hills problem of . whether . not sure whether the non-student by Scales to study the student legal counsel, agreed. "You have matter of whether, but of when violation of the following Student Bruce Harshbarger, Judiciary and William straughan said, intervisitation should be members know whether this appeals court and possible to get the top court cleared away and how," he said. Handbook rule: "Unauthorized Committee chairman. . : however, that a "basic decision" regarded as a violation of the should be done or not," he said. Members of the committee conceliling judicial policy would social code or the housing Commenting on the length of c ' Cl Pl d studied similar bills from other probably be made by university contract, he said. time being taken to reach . a ree· rs ass· a n·n e universities throughout the President .James Ralph Scales "The administration is trying decisions . regarding judicial country along with a national bill within the next two weeks. to say that it's not a social policy, Cromer said, "It seems of rights used by universitY White, . a member of a . matu!r-, but a contractual one, the committee working on this is .. ' officials to establish a guideline - .... ;!:0:. electrical. .. ' . ' .. - s:·parts, bill study possible Student Judicial White' ·said should- work make.'! · Pl'9bably shared by other. faculty said. .. report" journal; and a "where- setsdfortl_l "minimalf dstandards off Board reforms, stressed the need through legislative action to e•re· working on this, trying · The Placement and Career · members, to increase the bulk of The winter term Russell action plan aca em1c ree om o for action on judicial policy by "consolidate the gains they've to get these people to tell us Development Office·· and the lower division requirements. coordinates along with Ron due the last day of class. Two students ... essential to any Student Government. · made as solid underpinnings for what's going oq," he said. · Center for Psychological She said the faculty, who make Davis, also of the psych center, vocational inventory tests are community of scholars." "Judicial matters are really future change" iil the judicial Cromer also Siid SG bad been Services are sponsoring a joint any final curriculmn decisions, meets two )lours daily and has 38 also taken and analyzed by the The parts include freedom of the most important issues going process system. in contact with a Winston-Salem proposal to have a Life-Career may have some qualms as to the students. It has two formats: ,... students. access to higher education; these , days," said. "It's Cromer· said action had not lawyer, who had agreed to act as Exploration class made a place of such a course in a liberal small groups of eight to ten meet Russell explained that the evaluation of disclosure in the unfortunate that they are an been contemplated by SG its adviser. . standard 15-week course and-or a arts school. However, she said, "I three days a week, and lectures, course and almost '·lill career classroom; freedom of student uncharlsmatic subject." because White's committee, "He's agreed to sit down with . lower level requirement. think that the Life-Career panels and guest speakers are counseling is run by the pysch affairs in association with White Sliid that at the heart of · which is headed by Hills, bad not us and examine the judicial According to Cathy Russell, Exploration course fits in ·scheduled the other two days. center because placement and organizations, opinions ·returned any recommendations process and to offer. psych center counselor, the beautifully with the concept of Panels have . included careerdevelopmentisonlyaone- publications; off-campus matter of fair treatment for to it. " suggestions," said Cromer. course would be modeled after liberal arts." She feels the course professionals such as lawyers, man office. The center has freedom; on-campus freed9#lrfif _ students, and the "idea of "I really don't know why they to act our ·adviser if the new winter term psyChology would broaden the students as doctors and business people, sponsored educational vocational conduct and codes of searches· whether or not the student haven't come up with any certain cases anse where we feel 102 of the same name, and would people and broadening is more artistic career people, and groups for several years because and seizures; and disciplinary is nothing but a scrap suggestions," said Cromer. "I due process is not being delivered meet once or twice a week for one essentially what the concept of deans and students from the four "the need has been presented so actions. · of paper. had the impression that they here." or two credits. liberal arts is all about. graduate schools here. strongly by students coming here It differs from current policy)n. "I think that the university was knew they were going to be doing He said the lawyer was a recent · Although Russell feels fairly "I don't want departments to Requirements for the course, in droves with career-related calling for juries composed only insensitive to the fact that it was this." .graduate of the university and confident that it will be possible feel they have to be threatened by which is worth four credits and is problems," she said. of students. Amendments be an agreement in good faith with Cromer added that he was not the School of Law. for the course to become part of this progi'alQ-it's to their gain. pass-fail unless the student She does not feel the course made TuesdS;Y· - he said. "This (the certain if there was ID!animous "He realizes the different the regular curriculum, she We don't discourage students wishes to be graded, include a would be a great drain on the establishment of the Housing agreement among the members that we face here. He realizes there may 'be some fromlow-jobopportunitymajors. work-autobiography; a one-day . monthly domutory Committee) was a breach of this of the committee as to whether might be able to help us if we proplems about making the I encourage people to gravitate stint at an actual job, with a , . cont.'d on p. s meetings by legislators to get JPublishing Pressure Moderate or Pro s I -!•. ·By KEVIN QUINLEY staHWrlter point that the faculty must publish. We try to evaluate the professional growth or "Publish or perish" is not an achievement of each individual accurate description of professor, looking for tlie quality of work. university policy, but '·subtle "In many institutions the pressures are exerted to h encourage faculty members' faculty believes t ey must publication in their respective publish, period," said. The emphasis is then placed on fields, according to a number of publishing articles of dubious faculty. Pressures for publishing quality in obscure journals, are more in the form of the according to Mullen. . "carrot" of recognition, rather Wake Forest takes a middle than the ·"stick". of dismissal, position, he continued. It is not they said. · Dr. Michael \Hazen of . the indifferent to publicatiol\, but speech · communications publication is not a goal to be pursued at all costs. department noted that "indirect "We've been extremely clear encouragement for publishing" is in saying to the faculty that we common at the university. "It is judge one's success as a teacher more of a positive form of to be the first and primary pressure," Hazen noted: criterion," he said. Professional The university has small achievement, which includes grants available for those who P ublish, and every six months the is not limited to publishing, runs a close second. Opinions on 'the relationship between publishing and tenure were mixed. Dr. J. Van Wagstaff, piofessor of economics, observed that there has been some change in the university's publishing policy within the past ten years. "In that time," he said, "Wake Forest moved from being· a college to a university. Gradually, there also a greater emphasis on publication." He said that when he first came to the university, publication was supported but it was not a requirement for appOintment or tenure. Such is not the case now, he believes. "When we talk with prospective faculty members, we are very candid. We tell them that if they expect to get tenure, the .chances are improved if they publish," Wagstaff said. Office for Research recognizes There are some faculty those faculty members who have members, Mullen said, who do . Teaching is foremost at the published articles. not publish but have ideas on unive!'sity, said, Hazen's view was corroborated symposia, guest speakers and teaching alone IS not enough if bv William Moss, assistant meetings for national you Wll;Dt new contract or a pt'Ofessor of English. Moss said 0 r g ani z a t i 0 n s. Mu 11 en . promotmn: that the for publishing emphasized that "there are Moss satd .that one often needs· are more m the form of rewards alternatives to publication that to have eVIdence of- scholarly those publish. " . we should not lose !!fght of." activity in order to get .on the Of course, Moss Hazen, who said he had been at faculty.. 'Yhll-: he may argue that Withholding universities where "publish or believes that publishing 1s .a of .a IS actually a perish" was the I'lile, felt that the greater factor tenure m . university's , view of the departments wlth graduate U t 1 u m s . between paramountcy of teaching is a programs, he emphasized that publishing or leavmg are not better attitude. "Here there is a pressure not great. presented to the faculty, better balance between teaching Wake Forest IS not a research however. Dean of and publishing," he said. sai.d. l!nlike Thomas Mullen said, The But how important is some institutions, there IS no institution does not say at any publication in gaining tenure? pressure for publishing here just for the sake of publishing, he said, adding that "the university is most interested in teaching." Hazen feels that publishing plays a part in the decisions about.tenure, but said he does not know exactly why he feels that way. Mullen agreed that the university publication. Twice a year, he ·noted, the Office for Research publishes a mimeograph sheet which lists faculty articles, talks, conference papers, and .faculty- directed theses and dissertations. In addition, the Institutional Research and Records · Office keeps an up-to-date me on each faculty member. Quality of writing is what the administration looks for, Mullen · said. When the administration looks at an article, it notes whether the article changes the way, of viewing a discipline, whether the ideas presented are sound and · original, the reputation of the journal and whether new material is used or old material is used in a novel way. "There is probably not enough of a commitment to research at Wake Forest," Mullen said. But he rejected the idea of a trade-off between teaching and scholarship. "The question is not teaching or scholarship," he said. "One can be both a fine teacher and a scholar." Achieving such a balance, Mullen said, is the goal. :* ".:. .<;...:·'. ., '( '···.··, '' The "publish or perish" syndrome for faculty members does not appear to be Oourilhfng at Wake Forest, according to iotemews tillS week with several faculty members and De8n Thomas Mullen. · Photo by Smith :

Transcript of SJB Reform Decision Pending - WakeSpace … to testify when witnesses The Stude.nt Government were...

I .

a wors~ oucould ·thwhile, e." to better )fficial a IS~ play;, eked by md its

ot likely ~ameras 1 1ere the scussed.

!valuate· · me and lt would .es: each network .aer. y would and not What's

ran who ;eon a f's.nose ~ got to to that ..

~est g

~es

fater

\ .

(\,

. !

l I'

TODAY INSIDE

* EMILY WILSON

* 'DEFENDANTS' . RIGHTS.

·.

Bathroomitems Missing By JACK NALES U

Staff Writer

. - Although · custodians are permitted by the university to re.move any item from the

· bathrooms in the men's dorms, they are not allowed to throw any penional items away, Housing Director Ed Cunnings said this

·week.

Many. compl8irits ·concerning losses of predomiriantly bathroom items have come from both Taylor and Kitchin Houses although the other men's residences have. also cited cases where similar losses have occurred.

· . "Our current policy, which has been established in the last three or four months, has been that the first thing (the custodians) do is to take anything that is left in the bathroom and set it outside the bathroom door," CUnnings said.

"If the stuff is not removed the next time around, they can Put the stuff in a plastic bag and take it with them-not throw it away­and store it in a janitor's closet.

"Then if the stuff is asked for, they can return it," continued Cunnings. "I discourage that second step from happening at all." ' ..

Yet many students complain of continuous losses of · soap, shampoo, towels and other items.

· Of a random 50 suites surveyed, few · knew · that any missing property taken by the custodial staff would be returned.

Some students cited instances where they found their ·shampoo or towels thrown in the trash can..

"There are several avenues to solvilig this problem," Cunnings said. "First of all, the custodial. people · could be. spoken to

directly. If the student · feels uncomfo~bl~ in_t1lat position, he could speak to his RA or head resident and they could speak to the custodian. Or the student · could speak to the custodial supervisor and if that doesn't work, they can see me."

Cunnings said that the custodians allio have several avenues to take In handling probl,ems .with students. "If they feel they are ~ abused by a student or group of students, they can go, first of all, to the students, then to , their supervisor, and then, to me. I encourage students and I encourage custodians to deal with their own hassles," he said.

Ctumings said that in the past, there has been some conflict between students and custodians, but the custodians have expressed feelings that there is less tension this year.'

an

Item& iUeh as these have heea eo~~~lsteotly dlsappearlDg from tbe batllrvoms ID the mea's hoaes aloug with other tblugs left Jn the rooms ovemlght. . Photo by Morel

SJB Reform Decision Pending

.•·

TODAY EDITORIALLY

* JUDICIAL REFORM

* SPORTSMANSHIP~ .

SJB Gives Serbai· Social Probation~::

Junior Gene Serba was entry into or occupation (If the: sentenced to a semester of social University facilities which are. probation by the Student Judicial locked, closed to student. Board last Thursday night for activities, or otherwise restrl'cteQ. "unauthorized entry" into as to use, is prohibited." . Bostwick Dormitory after closing Social probation prohii>UJ a: hours one night last semester. student from representiniJ $he Serba had pleaded guilty to the university in any way, iml)UJI a charge. stricter sentence if pe is

Serba said that lie entered the convicted by the boa'rd aga!Q, and building while a resident who had is noted on his permanent ~cl; just opened the entrance door In a closed trial held the aw;ne with a pass key was standing night, a sophomore male and a outside talking to · two freslunan female were found nOt companions. He then went up to guilty of violating the Code' of the second floor where he · Student Conduct, having been knocked on a few doors and found in a ·parked car by a returned downstairs. He said he campus security guard. . was not in the building for more The SJB also gave four ~ than a minute. students a warning for setting off . Second floor Resident Advisor fireworks, but did not try the Anne Forrest testified on second- offense. hand information that the woman Student RI.ghts at the door called oUt to Serba and tried to catch his coat as he Proposal T'-LJed ran in the door. However, the iUJ first-hand witness left the trial during the. first board In SG Meetmg• :. deliberations and so was not there to testify when witnesses The Stude.nt Government were recalled a few minutes Tuesday tabled a proposal for a later. . student bill of rights to allow

Serba said that ,his original more time for debate. ·

By MARK LEUCHTENBERGER

Asslstaot Editor

defense attorney was a law Proposed by the Judiciarf student, but he was infonned the Committee after what SG Vice

good·faith." recommendations should be · haveareallybiglegalissuehere, reformsitmightneed.Adecision_,. first," he said. "Then yo~ can night ~ore the trial that the President Andy Ciriaco termed Among the areas studied by the cbannel.ed 'through SG. as well as and we have a reasonable in this area by the president is proceed wi~ ~e rest m an defense attorney had to be an "over two months of hard work,~'

·reform .committee, said White, through the administration for argument to back us up," said expected within a few weeks orderly fashion. undergraduate student. He said the bill will be considered at a was that of the "parameters of · work on reforming the Cromer. · After this decision has been he had been previbusly informed special meeting next Tuesday. f~

Student leaders Knox White the university as landlord" and constitution. He added that no fee had been "I think that it's appropriate reached, said Hills, "the next by prosecutor Kent Brown that a was tabled by a 21-18 count. -and Andy Cromer · expressed how this related to the manner "It seems that the student paid yet to the lawyer. that a decision be taken on·the step will be for due proceSs to be law sc)lool.attorney was allowed. The proposed bill of rights will concern this week over the delay of offeliSllS brought before the members of the committee Hills _ appeals business first," said clarified as it exists in other Knox White represented Serba at enumerate rights for the firSt in the form!Jlation of a policy for . SJB. takrealizelathat reform should also is a member of a .. Hills. . areasThison camhapus." the open trial. time dra~er li~han breakrdin newto· thestudentjlidicialsystem. Relatedto1hisquestionwasthe ep ceintheconstitution.'I'm ~~e· specially appointed Straughan, the university's " · will ppen. It's not a The official charge was groun m po cy, acco g

Administrators' Dr. David Hills problem of . whether . not sure whether the non-student by Scales to study the student legal counsel, agreed. "You have matter of whether, but of when violation of the following Student Bruce Harshbarger, Judiciary and William straughan said, intervisitation should be members know whether this appeals court and possible to get the top court cleared away and how," he said. Handbook rule: "Unauthorized Committee chairman. . : however, that a "basic decision" regarded as a violation of the should be done or not," he said. Members of the committee conceliling judicial policy would social code or the housing Commenting on the length of c ' Cl Pl d studied similar bills from other probably be made by university contract, he said. time being taken to reach . a ree· rs ass· a n·n e universities throughout the President .James Ralph Scales "The administration is trying decisions . regarding judicial country along with a national bill within the next two weeks. to say that it's not a social policy, Cromer said, "It seems of rights used by universitY

White, . a member of a . matu!r-, but a contractual one, the committee working on this is .. ' officials to establish a guideline

-.... ~c:r~wens:~~ ~ls ;!:0:. :;~ia':c!:~ ~;tns!tt electrical. ~:!~tr/::nr.m'Z!i!!'.t:i .. ' . ' Jl~w':t:O .. -~~~~?s~~~~~r~::Wi·at~~~. t~~~===;·~t J:e~ ~~c~~:w :~a ~r:~!: fo~~~· ~:a s:·parts, ~e bill study possible Student Judicial White' ·said ~ should- work d~W·on·to make.'! · Pl'9bably shared by other. faculty said. .. report" journal; and a "where- setsdfortl_l "minimalf dstandards off Board reforms, stressed the need through legislative action to e•re· working on this, trying · The Placement and Career · members, to increase the bulk of The winter term Russell d~l-g~from·here?" action plan aca em1c ree om o for action on judicial policy by "consolidate the gains they've to get these people to tell us Development Office·· and the lower division requirements. coordinates along with Ron due the last day of class. Two students ... essential to any Student Government. · made as solid underpinnings for what's going oq," he said. · Center for Psychological She said the faculty, who make Davis, also of the psych center, vocational inventory tests are community of scholars."

"Judicial matters are really future change" iil the judicial Cromer also Siid SG bad been Services are sponsoring a joint any final curriculmn decisions, meets two )lours daily and has 38 also taken and analyzed by the The parts include freedom of the most important issues going process system. in contact with a Winston-Salem proposal to have a Life-Career may have some qualms as to the students. It has two formats: ,... students. access to higher education; these , days," h~ said. "It's Cromer· said action had not lawyer, who had agreed to act as Exploration class made a place of such a course in a liberal small groups of eight to ten meet Russell explained that the evaluation of disclosure in the unfortunate that they are an been contemplated by SG its adviser. . standard 15-week course and-or a arts school. However, she said, "I three days a week, and lectures, course and almost '·lill career classroom; freedom of student uncharlsmatic subject." because White's committee, "He's agreed to sit down with . lower level requirement. think that the Life-Career panels and guest speakers are counseling is run by the pysch affairs in association with

White Sliid that at the heart of · which is headed by Hills, bad not us and examine the judicial According to Cathy Russell, Exploration course fits in ·scheduled the other two days. center because placement and organizations, opinions ~~ thej~dlclalprocessissuewasthe ·returned any recommendations process and to offer. psych center counselor, the beautifully with the concept of Panels have . included careerdevelopmentisonlyaone- publications; off-campus matter of fair treatment for to it. " suggestions," said Cromer. course would be modeled after liberal arts." She feels the course professionals such as lawyers, man office. The center has freedom; on-campus freed9#lrfif

_ students, and the "idea of "I really don't know why they "He'~ to act ~ our ·adviser if the new winter term psyChology would broaden the students as doctors and business people, sponsored educational vocational conduct and codes of searches· whether or not the student haven't come up with any certain cases anse where we feel 102 of the same name, and would people and broadening is more artistic career people, and groups for several years because and seizures; and disciplinary const~tlltion is nothing but a scrap suggestions," said Cromer. "I due process is not being delivered meet once or twice a week for one essentially what the concept of deans and students from the four "the need has been presented so actions. · of paper. had the impression that they here." or two credits. liberal arts is all about. graduate schools here. strongly by students coming here It differs from current policy)n.

"I think that the university was knew they were going to be doing He said the lawyer was a recent · Although Russell feels fairly "I don't want departments to Requirements for the course, in droves with career-related calling for juries composed only insensitive to the fact that it was this." .graduate of the university and confident that it will be possible feel they have to be threatened by which is worth four credits and is problems," she said. of students. Amendments ~Y be an agreement in good faith with Cromer added that he was not the School of Law. for the course to become part of this progi'alQ-it's to their gain. pass-fail unless the student She does not feel the course made TuesdS;Y· -stud~ts," he said. "This (the certain if there was ID!animous "He realizes the different the regular curriculum, she We don't discourage students wishes to be graded, include a would be a great drain on the lno~eraction,SGpassed~~ill establishment of the Housing agreement among the members P~blems that we face here. He realizes there may 'be some fromlow-jobopportunitymajors. work-autobiography; a one-day . crea~mg monthly domutory Committee) was a breach of this of the committee as to whether might be able to help us if we proplems about making the I encourage people to gravitate stint at an actual job, with a , . cont.'d on p. s meetings by legislators to get

JPublishing Pressure Moderate or Pro s I -!•.

·By KEVIN QUINLEY staHWrlter

point that the faculty must publish. We try to evaluate the professional growth or

"Publish or perish" is not an achievement of each individual accurate description of professor, looking for tlie quality

of work. university policy, but '·subtle "In many institutions the pressures are exerted to h encourage faculty members' faculty believes t ey must publication in their respective publish, period," ~ said. The

emphasis is then placed on fields, according to a number of publishing articles of dubious faculty. Pressures for publishing quality in obscure journals, are more in the form of the according to Mullen. . "carrot" of recognition, rather Wake Forest takes a middle than the ·"stick". of dismissal, position, he continued. It is not they said. ·

Dr. Michael \Hazen of . the indifferent to publicatiol\, but speech · communications publication is not a goal to be

pursued at all costs. department noted that "indirect "We've been extremely clear encouragement for publishing" is in saying to the faculty that we common at the university. "It is judge one's success as a teacher more of a positive form of to be the first and primary pressure," Hazen noted: criterion," he said. Professional

The university has small achievement, which includes ~ut grants available for those who Publish, and every six months the is not limited to publishing, runs

a close second.

Opinions on 'the relationship between publishing and tenure were mixed.

Dr. J. Van Wagstaff, piofessor of economics, observed that there has been some change in the university's publishing policy within the past ten years.

"In that time," he said, "Wake Forest moved from being· a college to a university. Gradually, there also ~eveloped a greater emphasis on publication."

He said that when he first came to the university, publication was supported but it was not a requirement for appOintment or tenure. Such is not the case now, he believes.

"When we talk with prospective faculty members, we are very candid. We tell them that if they expect to get tenure, the .chances are improved if they publish," Wagstaff said.

Office for Research recognizes There are some faculty those faculty members who have members, Mullen said, who do . Teaching is foremost at the published articles. not publish but have ideas on unive!'sity, Wa~~ said, b~t

Hazen's view was corroborated symposia, guest speakers and teaching alone IS not enough if bv William Moss, assistant meetings for national you Wll;Dt ~ new contract or a pt'Ofessor of English. Moss said 0 r g ani z a t i 0 n s. M u 11 en . promotmn: that the p~essures for publishing emphasized that "there are Moss satd .that one often needs· are more m the form of rewards alternatives to publication that to have eVIdence of- scholarly fo~. those wh~,do publish. " . we should not lose !!fght of." activity in order to get .on the

Of course, Moss a~ded, ~ne Hazen, who said he had been at gr~duate faculty.. 'Yhll-: he may argue that ~e Withholding universities where "publish or believes that publishing 1s . a of .a rewa.~d IS actually a perish" was the I'lile, felt that the greater factor ~or tenure m pun~ent. . university's , view of the departments wlth graduate

U ~ t 1 ~at u m s . between paramountcy of teaching is a programs, he emphasized that publishing or leavmg are not better attitude. "Here there is a su.~h pressure w~s not great. presented to the faculty, better balance between teaching Wake Forest IS not a research however. Dean of ~e C?~ege and publishing," he said. hothou~,". ~oss sai.d. l!nlike Thomas Mullen said, The But how important is some institutions, there IS no institution does not say at any publication in gaining tenure? pressure for publishing here just

for the sake of publishing, he said, adding that "the university is most interested in teaching."

Hazen feels that publishing plays a part in the decisions about.tenure, but said he does not know exactly why he feels that way.

Mullen agreed that the university recogni~es publication. Twice a year, he

·noted, the Office for Research publishes a mimeograph sheet which lists faculty articles, talks, conference papers, and .faculty­directed theses and dissertations. In addition, the Institutional Research and Records · Office keeps an up-to-date me on each faculty member.

Quality of writing is what the administration looks for, Mullen

· said. When the administration looks at an article, it notes whether the article changes the way, of viewing a discipline, whether the ideas presented are sound and · original, the reputation of the journal and whether new material is used or old material is used in a novel way.

"There is probably not enough of a commitment to research at Wake Forest," Mullen said. But he rejected the idea of a trade-off between teaching and scholarship.

"The question is not teaching or scholarship," he said. "One can be both a fine teacher and a scholar." Achieving such a balance, Mullen said, is the ~dministration's goal.

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The "publish or perish" syndrome for faculty members does not appear to be Oourilhfng at Wake Forest, according to iotemews tillS week with several faculty members and De8n Thomas Mullen. · Photo by Smith :

. .,

PAGE TWO Friday, January 30, 1976, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Poet Emily Wilson Escapes lntQ posterity-! appreciate a small, student tinder Writer and critic Wilson's style is refreshing, simple- idea . or image, and South, deplcteihi' 'poor,loat and -

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By CRAIG SHAFFER . StaHWriter

Tbe quiet house at the bottom of Timberlake Lane appears to support the n~tion that ,poets and artists are creatures of solitude and meditative siltmce. Local poet and teacher Emily Wilson. wife of Provost Edwin Wilson, has a different conception of an artist's life. .

"I love to work in chaos," she said, as her two children assaulted her with demands. "I couldn't .work in an office or studio. I have an office but I rarely use it. Partly because of being part-time housewife, I'm used to a distracted, fragmented

·.>existence. Housework, teachiRg, tleing a mother and poet are all parts of my life--each is important, while none takes a dominant thrust all of the time."

Another misconception· labels poets as 'strange pariahs,' said Wilson. "I don't want to be

. thought of as strange-my special interests are no weirder than playing basketball or teaching. · "Becoming a major poet is not the motivation behind my work. There are so many good poets, and there is· a growing audience fot: . I am not so much

in potential fame and

grateful audience. Most ·or my Randali_JBITell. "You really felt sparkling. A conscious effort examine it carefully for wlique or deprived,' and tbe ·people who books are circulated around - praised if he Uked your work," Steers her away from the trap of wtiversal impressions. read it don~t Uve 'that life. It friends and the locality. ' she said. "But' in college, it artistic obscurity where a WilSOn is disturbed with the belongs to the ·farmers the

''There is a certain· amount of seemed more important to me W craftsman dwells in the heights of trends that influence writers to craftsmen, the simple folk, and fear involved · here," she dabble in politics rather than intellectualism;, rather than drift Into the obscure Instead of: they rarely read it because it li continued. When you write, you poetry." · produces material relatively the clear and understandable. 'too darn hi' falutin'.' we must invest your private life; your Oneofhersteadyinglnfluences' accessible to a large group of ~·Art must come out of the reduce the distance from· the defenses are down. If some of . was working with A:R. Ammons, people. · . · museum and into people's lives, reader. your work is considered poor by who simply told her once, "You Subtly gleaning from nature not just for the appreciation of an · "We've got to-get away from critics or reviews, that hurts. are ready."- :. and from the world of elite few. For exat_nple, Imagine the sacred attitude EngUsb Editors devastated Emily Her first book, Down Zion'a . Insignificant people and events, how the quality of life would be teachers haveaboutllterature.ln Dickinson by wanting to change Alley _was· published-· in 1972, Wilson prov.es that ·there is impJ;'Oved if. the major pasttime graduate ·school; one of my her work drastically or not . meeting with regional success. In something valuable and precious was reading poetry- mstead of teachers bowed lter head accept it at all. That is why she the meantime . her work has in everything. For example, in watching TV. Many people are· everytime Keats was mentioned. never attempted to publish much appeared in NewSoutbem Poets, "Eloise Ishmael" she praises an not willing to take the mental Tbe conCeption of -poets as gods poetry within her lifetime. You and she has recently published a old . friend who had faithfully _rigor to figure out a complex must be removect to decrease the let your ego run a risk. That is new book Balauclug on Stones. helped care for her children._ poem. when they can confortably alienation of att from ·the J1e9ple •. why it is necessary to develop a The recent collection strongly ·Wilson considers .the poem and watch 'All in the Family' and "I tbillk students grow lip In toughness, a thick skin if you suggests her growing perception those of its kind a tribute to the immediately~ grasp every show school with the notion that you write to others.'' · and maturity. interior richness of people. like instant ~play." This is can't deviate from the norm. For

POETESS "I was UD.P.tepared for the ORDINARY PEQPLE partly ~e fault of the poets wbo example, an EngUsh major is experience of the fir~ book. I was . . · do not always want to be ·pressured to the· extent that

GRANDMOTHER very sell$itive because the poerils · wtderstood, she ~d. Sometimes grammatical errors are like Wils.on began writing seriously felt vulnerable and undressed "I am concerned With how critics consider good what they warts in ·his conscfowmesil. You

ten years ago, but ba.s written againSt the sacred values -of people live, with the quality of cannot understand. find yourself w.lncing when you sporadically since elementary contemporary poetry. · life. My themes are ~Rections of "Clearly we need better hear bad grammar in a school. She began under the "It pleased me a great "deal to my experience with irony in the readers· and listeners," she conversation ·with the grilcer," encouragement of her poetess think . that in the five years lives of seemingly OJ;"dinary continued. "'lbls is ~otto say that she laughed. · grandmother, . who bought her between books the facility to people. I gravitate toward the level of IDlderstandlng must CHILDREN'S · stacks of writing pads and write inore good poems and be . subjects of loss,· of people be reduced to where it must be . . .. pencils. At Wake Forest and the more self-critical has increased growing old, of what happens to a completely tinderstood by the guy WRITING University of North Carolina at considerably," she continued. "I country during change. I think at · the filling· station, but Wllson is involved In the state's Greensboro she ."majored in am more aware of both success about the . trade-off from compromise the standards for Poetry in the Schools Program, English and worked on the and failure now, and feel a little childhood to maturity4he loss of ordinary people. '11le irony is, you bas taugllt at Salem College and, student publications. tougher from building strengths innocenCJe in order to gain. read many poems abOut the Wake Forest, and presently." ·

At Greensboro, she was a from weaknesses." knowled,ge. I tty to develop a simple life, especially in the _directs a ·course in Recent

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American Poetry at .Reynolda ·T'' House. She is. also partially Photu by Yandle ·- .!f,n

Emiiy ·wilson

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responsible for the recent of poetry out of everyone._"Write . eXperience.· If. someone says tO l opening of the Jackplne Press, a · about what you· know with me 'how can I be a good poet?' I private local publishing conviction," she S!lid, "what tell them to live a'good life, Try to company. b ood th than .

"There _ needs to be an seems to you as the essential e a g _ person, ra er a . . . ~ emphasis on children's writing, issues. There can be a gooil_poem gOod poet. Try to experience a 1 where they are comfortable using on any subject; it is. a inatter .of quality of l!fe. ' · lan until 1 st th beiDg imaginative With lariguage. "Many students consider sex, -~,

guage. Up at ea · e TheartoflanguageisnOt_onlyfor drinking· and carousin(!l as the >rll . 1 fourth grade, children retain a private comm. unication. It is for whole spectrum; but that can be 'YJq natural spontaneity. They begin fin u• being Competitively graded, and mass participation. Pqetry Ofl«:nedinto an even er ,...e that ;;W

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,develop a right and wrong magaziiles, anthologies, leCtures, pefhaps does not leave them so 'lt.: consciousness. When papers contests, seminars and claSses often frustrated and deprived. · ~!T return with red marks, they feel are attracting larger audiences, .Television requires a great 4eal ,,)?.

1 Ed ti working toward a broadening of of you.~ books, a!'ts, e:rhiblts ~_,_::. bad about themse ves. uca on this notion. can all e""'and your scope, enrich . ''\l must be freed of the restraints -.-that are carried to an extreme in "Decide if you really want to life and your art.-. ·

d i first of write or not, as yoiUlg as you can. "Family· and ed.ucation. ean the colleges. E ucat on, My own failing was not taking begin giving positive ideas about ' all, must stop S"llbjecting fresh students to work under old myself seriously Wltil a sh(!rt the idiom _of .the good· life_ to

while ago. Take an attitude thst · include strong personal . sy~s~ne attitude of child's art everythfng you write is relationships and showing your is usually exhileration. If that imj!ortant, even if it is just to care. Have concern · about same. confident joy could be yourself. Be your own judge.The strangers, orphans, the-poor, ~e

f din university is a place of natural happy and unhappy," she said. retained instead of force-, a g intimidation with standards and· . Wilson is now involved in free­under the discouragement of self-righteous intellect11alism, poetry peer pressure in. terms· of lan~ market; ~~ is presently coilld become much more of a personal acbievemfmt, grad~, ·working on· an article for Wake universal-communication. deg~s and titles. Yqu'll never . Forest Magazine.· She hopes to

"For !.Jie, ·wntir;lg becomes a blive the arts nourishing in tllis ~.the ~ackplne.~ss eJP!Dd to . private pleasure by trying to be atmoSphere. an operative tl!at could pu~lish as clear as possible, by not trying "Wake Forest is a good place-. gOod . work from anywhere. It to hide the theme in elaborate they try to minimize the presently caters particularly to symbolism," she ·said. "The , Intrusion. Listen to the wisdom of North Carolina and the locality. complicated poems thst I hardly ot11er people but never need tO "This is 110 e.l~borate dream, of understand myself never get out feel threatened. The notion thst course," sh~ S8ld. B1,1t she shook of the drawer."· an artist must experien~ pain in her head glinning, "We have a

· terested · order to create, holds just as true low budget, but have operated so Wilson is very m m for creating out of comfortable far without financial loss." teacbing and coaxing the streak

Sess.ion in Paris. Offered museums, Robinson said. -A trip to Paris and a study of

the ·city as cultural center of France will be offered In the first summer session with Franch professor Mary Frances Robinson.

required books for the course .. It doesn't inClude travel.from the student's home· to New York or -personal ~xpenses such !lS laundry.

It will also" include one-<lay · , trips to. · Versailles, ~ . l Fontainebleau, St. ·Denis and l

Students · will be housed in · student pensions near the center of Paris within walking distance of many points of interest. .

other sites. · j • · Before departure, each student l

The four-credit course, French 18ij, will · explore Paris chronologically and will require a project on some aspect of Paris for its pass-fail grade. The cost will be approximately $1,000;

is expeCted to read a book on the .1

The course will explore P.aris chronologically, visiting sites where important historical .e~ents took place and correlating the sites with trips to Paris

history of Franee, .which .will l serv~ as a reference work while l the class is In Paris, she said. \

Roblnson.lived in Paris for one .....

Deadline for applications is February 15. ·There is no language

prerequisite for the course, according to Robinson, but "It will be very convenient if some of the participants know some French."

and a Jialf years; She ·has visited the city several times, m!)8t recently last. summer.

Director Picks Cast For · Dinner· Theatre Musical

. " - --

l -

Approximate dates for the trip are May 26 to JIDle 23. Students may stay longer on their own, but the travel costs will be higher.

The cost for the trip Includes round-trip passage from New York to Paris; room, breakfast and dinner in a. student pension (boarding house); a modest allowance for lunch, group excursions and entrance fees to museums and· monuments; and

Second year SCTA graduate girl; Sharon Baldwin, the Negro; stJ~dent and director Jeanne stuart Gordon, the bully; and Murp}jy has announced the cast Kathie 'Bahry, Ginger Blake, for the dinner theatre musiCal Rick Brown, Donna ~orey,. , . "The Roar of the Greasepaint, Katherine Meiburg, Bill Rodgers, TheSmelloftheCrowd"tobeco- Colleen Snavely, and·. Karen spon'sored by tbe Uni"ersity Wyatt, the urchins.· · Theatre and College Union. Set design will. be done by

Leslie Radford; lights, Blake;· · GeOrge ~peer will portray Sir; costumes, Jean Moore; mUsic, ~ Bruce Fhnt, Cocky; Denise John Fulcher; arid Williams; Kid; Ellen Coats, the . ~oreography, Williams.

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In the sum · received a t

Mildred Tu friend. and Wake Fores Babcock scheduled.to a housemothc tomovetoth a vacancy in

After deliberation, accept the pc

Her ties w back to n "Toodley" E college. A na1

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As Women's Housemother

Jo· Holding·Sees Changes By ANNE.JACKSON

Staff Writer

She agreed to take the job of housemother at Wake Forest only after much persuasion from her brother-in-law and her best friend. The only previous experience she'd had with young people was five years of teaching· first grade before she was married.

But now Jo Holding is devoted completely to her freshmen girls in Johnson.

Widowed in 1961, Holding ran her late husband's oil distributorship for a year after his death. She said, "I just wanted to prove to myself I could do it."

In the summer of 1962, Holding received a telephone call from Mildred Turner, a long-time friend and a housemother at Wake Forest. A new wing. of Babcock Dormitory was scheduled to open in the fall, and a housemother from Johnson was to move to the new dorm, leaving a vacancy in Johnson.

After considerable deliberation, Holding decided to accept the position.

Her ties with Wake Forest go back to 1932, when Edwin "Toodley" Holding entered the college. A native of Wake Forest,

N.C., the young quarterback had played higlr school football in Williamston, the hometown of his future wife. 'she met him there when she was sponsor for the football team, and many of their dates found her drilling Toodley on the signals he had to learn in order to call the team's plays.

Toodley Holding played end after he came to Wake Forest College, but he suffered a knee injury during his sophomore year, and it ended his football career. But it didn't diminish his wife's zest for the sport.

The housemother laughed when she recalled that last season the RA's in Johnson presented her with a pacifier and gave Jessica Gibbs (who attends many of the games with her) a rope wlth which to tie Holding down during the games. ·

Reflecting on her 15 years at Wake Forest, Holding said, "There's been a lot of changes" regarding privileges of freslunen women." When she arrived in 1962, "The WGA (Women's Government Association) handbook was as thick as your regular catalog, almost."

Rule violations were punished by one or more calldowns, and five calldowns resulted in a weekend campus. In turn, accumulation of a few weekend

campuses resulted in a strict campus, under which even the girl's movement on campus was severely restricted.

Freslunen women had required closed study in their rooms from 7:30-10 p.m. Monday through Thursday. During these hours girls were not allowed to leav~ the donn, and visitors and phone calls were prohibited. Special permission to go to the library was limited and had to be approved by the housemother.

"It was quiet as death from 7:30 to 10," Holding said with a frown, "and it gave me the heebie-jeebies."

And so, although she was breaking the rules by doing so, the housemother would go around the dorm visiting in various rooms. She'd knock on a door, "and the girl couldn't even say, 'Come in' because it was a violation." Holding claims that she was given a calldown when her wanderings were discovered.

Male visitors were allowed in the formal parlor of Johnson between 10 and 10:30 on weeknights. Since no men were permitted on the halls, the girls were paged over the intercom. Holding allowed the men inside the dorm at 9:45, enabling her to

Notices Tickets go on sale Monday for

the University Theatre's production of "Happy Birthday, Wanda June." Reservations may be made through extension 265. Tickets are two dollars for students, faculty members, and staff, and three dollars for the public. ·

Bikecentennial is seeking 1400 people to lead groups of cyclists on tours of America this summer. Group leaders will receive food, lodging, and all other tour services, as well as a small daily expense allowance.

Leader training courses are offered at four centers in Oregon, Colorado, Ohio, and Virginia. The seven-day sessions include classroom and field instruction in

bicycling and touring techniques, safety, repair, group dynamics, special bicycle and camping skills, and first aid. Cost, including food, lodging, instruction, books, and materials, is $75.

The summer tours vary in length from 12 to 82 days.

Bikecentennial is a non-profit, publicly supported organization. For further details on leadership training courses and an application, one may write: BIKECENTENNIAL . Dept. L.T.P. . P.O. Box 1034 Missoula, MT 59801

Six months of planning and preparation will culminate February 6 and 9 in a free community and campus-wide

Co~rse Drop-Adds Deadlines to drop-add four- or Hi-week courses have

passed. February 9 • Last day to drop 15-week courses - without

permission of dean. February 23 ·Last day to add 11-week course. March 9 • Last day to drop 11-week course - without

permission of dean. Th~ North Carolina Legislative Tuition Grant regulations

reqwre that a qualified North Carolina resident must enroll for 14 credits each semester to establish full-time status and to qualify ~or a tuition grant. The qualifying and reporting date for this grant was the official registration for 14 credits filed in the registrar's office January 23. Course changes made prior to this date but filed no later than today will be honored.

program to detect high blood pressure. The Wake Forest Circle K, sponsor of the project, urges residents of the greater Winston community to have their blood pressure checked at the Benton Convention Center next Friday, 4-8 p.m. The campus program will be held in the ballroom' February 9, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

Cooperating with the Circle K in carrying out the "Save-A-Life" program are the Forsyth County Heart Association and Bowman Gray.

Terry Hayworth, president of Circle K, explained that high blood pressure is a common problem, occurring in about ten to 15 per cent of the adult population. It frequently leads to heart disease, the number one cause of death in the nation, and increases the risk of stroke and kidney disease, he said. Hayworth added that hypertension is known as the silent killer, often starting in early youth.

A meeting for all students interested in organizing Challenge '77 will be held Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. in the new dorm lounge. Challenge is a campus symposium conducted every other spring in which speakers from all over the country are invited to speak on a prearranged topic. Students are responsible for choosing the topic, inviting the speakers, and planning the programs.

make a list of the girls to be paged before 10. She would open the intercom "as soon as the hand (of the clock) hit 10 and call the names.

Holding said she always started with names of the girls on the third floor since they had the longest distance to come.

One of the most serious violations of all during the 1960's was UP A or undue public affection. Holding remembers several girls who were put on probation for that offense. ·

St.e said, "It was just like it was when I was in college .... It was just as bad."

She feels that much of the "Dark Ages stuff" that limited Wake Forest women's activities in the early 60's has been improved over the last few years. She said college life is "better and freer" as a result of the liberalization of some of the rules.

Holding enjoys keepingtrack.of the women she has known over the last 15 years. Each fall, the names and room numbers of the Johnson B-side freslunen are registered in the same notebook 1i she's always used f~~.; riJlN~ purpose. &he sends. ·.a · walt'it Forest T-shirt to ~e 'first~j child of each of the Women·from1. · B-side, and said that in doilig'8Q\;~ "I start 'em 6~ ~ht!" ::,:;>' ':;~;~. :=. ·,~~~~~~~!'.]~ According ;Ita

Studen.lf'''ftl;711li';•·; .• :.. ·.i-~1 ' -lfJ. . •,' ... s' .

~ . ~ ~--.. --~~ ... :> -. ~':: . . -: ... :. By BRIAN ECKERT

Associate Editor

First in a series.

You're in your room studying some night when the phone rings. It is the chairman of an Honor Council or Judicial Board investigating committee informing you that you have been charged with a violation of the Honor Code or the Code of Student Conduct.

What do you do? Unfortunately, says senior

Honor Council member Knox White, almost nobody knows. With "no basic orientation in the judicial process," defendants in campus cases cannot properly prepare their defenses or participate correctly in their trials, he explained.

The resultant "mysticism of the judicial process" thwarts the very purpose of the student court system, White said, i.e. to establish justice and to protect the university community.

A major contribution to the lack of public information about campus courts' procedures was the exclusion of the Student Government constitution from the 1975-76 Student Handbook, White said. "This year's handbook doesn't have it, and it's what contains the spelling out of a student's rights," he said.

Presently, the source of

more smoothly for thein, he said.: "The responsibility of the

boards can only go so far" in educating defendants of how best to defend themselves, he warned.

"As prosecutor for the Honor Council, I can't tell someone what his defense should be," White said. The ten elected student members of each board rotate duty as a kind of "district attorney" responsible for prosecuting cases.

White feels that the first step toward stronger judicial procedure is widespread publication of trial and investigation rights, a point-by­point listing of trial process, and a thorough explanation of the appeal practice.

"I feel like there's an unfair advantage in these things for the boards," White said. "I' would like to start a student defense board to be a first person to turn to." Such a board would function as a public defender, providing advice and defense counselors, he said. "But the people would have to have been on a board and know the people on it to establish credibility.

"This all looks very good in the Old Gold and Black," White said, "but students should ask

Registrar Margaret Perry said all students who have made course section, or grade mode changes should file the "chang~ form" immediately. Adjustments in the schedules are made daily in·the coiJ!puter.

Re:vnol<ia will student tights is thel97f.75

Devriolcla Thursda,vat,5 .. whicli ·are . ni.><O.>i.i

several years, the Piacetnrurt director has been

the seniors in the them of the services by the placement

office and to notify them of personal information they should mail.

Anyone may be excluded from the mailing, but the office has yet to receive such a request. It

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PAGE. THREE Friday, January 30, ~976, OLD GO~D AND BLACtc

they Sei!; charged with something. they would find the consequences and the time involved would : warrant such an organization " he concluded. '

Next week: Honor .Council charges.

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G~ide ~o ·m~re than 250,000 Scholarships and Financial Aid Source - items valued at over $500 million dollars.

February ·18-Piedmont Sports Arena 8:00 p.m.

Tickets: s 5.00 Advance s6.00 Day of Show

TiCkets Are Available From Wake Forest

· · ·.·college· Union ~ 2-5 Daily

* BEER WILL BE SERVED *

PAGE FOUR Friday, January 30, 1976, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

. . . ......

DEBORAH RICHARDSON Editor · - ' -

RICHARD CARLSON CONNIE COLE BRIAN-ECKERT Associate Editors

CHARLES JOHNSON Managing Editor

JULIA DRAKE MARK LEUCHTENBERGER

Assistant Editors

" ... and the truth shall make you free."

Wake Forest Unlwrsity, Wlnstun-satem, North Catolfua

Jud~cial Quagmire

SG.made with legal a definition -: of process iS- going limited. ·.. .

'And finally, a student o~'gt rigtlt!;i,..:;,:WO:f!i presented. · by -:. tne~: Committee, was tabled in ~ruesruty legislatitiv~ nieetirig. ·_

Just what is SG uoimt? agend;:~. so full time

of iJUtilm r~n'ru~,. than vistt:ltkm

At rate, it is time for all parties concerned to cease looking for answers elsewhere .and to hammer out a resolution. enly three real months of classes remain and the judicial system is where it was in September.

No Sportsmanship "In our play we reveal what kind

of people we are," writes Ovid in his "The Art of Love." If that is true than Wednesday 's North

teams and denigrate themselves in support of them. Spectacles of poor sportsmans~ip at North Carolina, South Carolma, Ml~r'\J•lar•rt

· pJuab~~s~r:d ~~c~l~~-~s the student newspaper of Wake Forest University, Old Gold and ,...,.,,; ... periods as directed 1b~{hdu~n~ the school ye_ar ~xcept during e~amination, summer and

Ass.oci.ated Colle iate Pr e a e Forest Publications Board. Ma1led each W;!ek. Members ;5 ; ng Service ·l.;c Subs:s\Represented for National Advertising by Natio.nal Educational

3579 should b: mai.led to ~~P 1~5n rate: S6.00 Second class postage paid, Winston-Salem, N.C . ley Publishing co., lncorp~~te~7 • ~~ynolda Station~ Winston-Salem, N.C. ~7109. Printed by

necessarily those of the univers·r • ng, N.C. Op1n1ons expressed on th1s page are not I Y or student body.

_ ~ Iff. WAKE FOR.£5T ? lfA ItA A "f\ . :·. - ·.. -~-- ,.;··

IIJ, IIA • • •

. ·._. ... ~ ;·" <: ~ Letters to the Editor

....... ~::-..... ......... . > -.-.r:.-~ ~. ~~~--·. >: >:-' -. . "'I-f • • : Tunnelers .·Trespass

not_~ tire only theft victim, Wbile 1JD¢icking her car after

Christmas V!lcation, ~ean Gordon returned from her 00imil9ry room for the second load and found her televisfon set missing from the front floor of her .. car. Theft from cars on campus ~s not ootommon, and C.B. radios and _ tllpe players are popular pick-ups. T~levision sets _are popular, too, as some fraternity memoers will attest.

During hot weather, male students often returned from the showers to find their wallets missing. Another run on wallets occurred during the first few days freshman were here, according to Upson. Dean of Men Mark Reece said a student's credit card disappeared, but it did find its way home again after being used.

Women's handbags are also popular targets, as are their owners. Upson said one woman on campus was followed and another "touched." Leake said a woman was attacked but fought off her attacker. What really happened is unclear. As an aside, Leake said

on campus where she will not

\ I I ' , -"c.,"., f(,v({F' .

· Last fall, The Student. Magazine ran· ·an article on the ''Wake Forest Tunnel Authority" for those "Diggin' Deacons" who enjoy exploring the system of t~els rwming beneath the campus. Having been a Wake Forest undergrad myself (Class of '75) I know that "tunnel_ing". has been a sport for several ye~rs . .lt IS still, apparently, if The Student article and current conversation are any proof. But I am surprised to find that Deacon "tunnelers" still do not appreciate the shaky legal status of what they're doing. I ain also surprised that The Studeiit was. irresponsible e~o!lgh tQ -'publicize and encourage this activity. Legaily 'the "tunnelers" ~re trespassers. The only ~nels that the ordmary student has pennission to use are the twmel between Bostwick donn and Johnson, and its coiUlterpart connecting new dorm and Babcock. Students do not have invitation or licerise to be anywhere else in the tunnel system. So as the university doesn'tset up .~~~--~l-~ftpY(.~ nothing to a

. ~· tunneling. ·- .- ·:.>'the nni'versihr'~

Legal, Issues which deal with the tension existing

between the propensity of the state to control and the desire of the individual to remain free have a way of becoming muddled very quickly when argued. The only problem which should be considered when such issues are raised- that is, whether the state ought to have control over the individual with regard to the activity in question - usually becomes smothered by a barrage of distracting words which express passions, personal mores, and accusations based on stereotypes. The result of this insensitive handling of sensitive issues is that battle lines are drawn where philosophical lines should be sought - and, perhaps, no popular debate of our time is more given to this type of struggle than is the C'on,tro•~Pr••ll over the extent to which al'li'IM:i,oo

even en~~O\JI'B!lf this fact; which they sm::tnot't: i1l

If the real for tlie a~~:~~:~ opposed to legal abortions' Is iS murder, the crux of the pro-abortion stand is that anti-abortion legislation stifles the freedom of women and families .- and, of course, this contention also is corn!Ct. No law

;.,. - :· .. lil . . . ' ~.

From the Soap~ox

By BILL BROWN

- I 4\ • -~~

you fracture your skull on,a low ceiling, tougti luck. You should remember this. I advise the "tunnelers" to go spelunking somewhere else.

A Friend in the Law School

Videotape Nixed

Congratulations to Bruce Harshbarger for his timely article on officiating in the A.C.C. It comes at a time when the rabid A.C.C; fans are working thelnselves into a frenzy over officiating and wondering if Dean Smith's hip pocket is large enough to accomodate 33 referees. One can clearly see that the competition to officiate in the A. C. C. is fierce enough for the conference to benefit by having the best available referees.

However, I must disagree with his support co_rJcelrQi~Jg the introduction of video-taping as

This is

f. '

'C'Oine, sodety one ·more ind.i~ whOse murder must be considered by tlie -.: state as a prosecutable crime. A mother: and . ," her doctor who abort a child after he has '-. '"· entered society's realm, eVeil thOugh the child ~ , · remains in the womb· ought to be tried fw >' ,, dllttder just as if . We· crime had beeh ·:1 '; -~ cii'iaifu1ted after the . umbillCal cord was :: severed. Society, always, is responsible for _:~ . tlnr lives of its members. ~-...

A mother who aborts the being in her womb before that being becomes independent of her

of course, the most

Jgh the ere

the ool

for ~.c.

!~ .-er hi R 33

the rce by

ort

r. ,

tal':, lie .· . -. ad.···,-~ · as '-/•. ild 1•

::~~,:i as ,: or :\ ·

llb

'·· ~' ' .J ' ~

' .; ~ >· . . ~~

. ::, .. ~·\· .• :jj

CONCERT-- North Carolina School of the Arts orchestra will present a concert tonil!ht at 8:15 featuring works by Mendelssohn, Suderbu~ and Ravel. Nicholas Harsanyi will conduct with Bela Siki as piano soloist.

EXHIBIT-- The Wake Forest University Theatre in conjunction with the department of Speech Communication and Theatre Arts will present the Collegiate Costume and Scene Design traveling exhibit beginning Tuesday and continuing through February 24 in DeTamble Gallery. Hours: Monday-Friday, 10-6; Saturday and Sunday, 2-6.

-:-' WORKSHOP-- The Placement and Career Develo~ment Office will sponsor a job placement workshop ~esday in room 202, Reynolda Hall. The six one-hour sessions will focus on job interviewing and

and is limited to seniors and . · P!ii:tjcip~~~·ttrq~. ~~ up:ift

~"morro"•• .. · ), · ' · • ·" ·'· · ·. w . ·. w ... ~ .. ~~ ·r ~.,(:·· ~ ... · ' ~ ' • 't' I II • ' • '

' ..- '. < ~I ' • 7, ,:, • ' •

. On of tb.·e·Englisb his best-known album on Takoma Records; ·

presented another

- .

However, .Lang minimizes the iilfluence the two artists have had on him.

Muse monthly . nrt><tr·<in•<i

Reynolda House Jallmai~

Speaking ··during the hour-iong "Evening ·of Shakespeare," Fossa said that the Bard's poetry "goes everywhere ... far too much for any evening." In the space of his discussion, he demonstrated through selected passages how the "wooden '0' " of the Shakespearean stage "becomes not nothing but

"The people who influenced me most are Dave Ray, Dave Von Rank, John Koerner and Pete Seeger.," lie sai(j.. Like Lang, Ray and Koerner are Minneapolis musicians steeped in country and

·ethnic blues.

llourl-1: ~~a.m. 'UI9 p.m. 'lundo~: t.hru l'aturday

. W.e feature a complete and · varied menu·· that's sure t-o- -=·.:

please the entire ... student body. Come and See!

SEI!\'I:<il; Ql',\I.ITY FIU)f)S r\1' l'ol'n. 11t Pllln:s

~;nul\\ it·ht',, l.unc.·ht'~. 7 \ al'iNit·' nr P:nl('akt''

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""'"'"'"' : italian lti..,hMo · Bruilt'd l'ucKI"

the

Band Change~, :Style, PAGE FIYE Friday, Januarv lUJ, 1976, OLD GOLD AND BLACK .

Maintains Quality Some recent criticism of The

Band's new album, "Northern Lights-Southern Cross '' (Capitol ST-11440), demands a response.

"Northern Lights-Southern Cross" sounds different-the mix is clear, the vocals are distinct and Garth Hudson and Richard Manuel play electronic keyboards. All this departs from The Band's traditional earthy, old-time sound, and. the

·· .... . . ·· . ~ ·:-:~::,·\: t

modernization isn't necessarily . : i~er.than most recent rock fare for the better. · . . ~~~~;q~t UP.. to the standards of

But Robbie Robertson an.d.?~.·~; From Big Pi~" or "~e company should be judged· on;:11B~~l;:;.:t:wo recordmgs whtch their . music, not on rifiiy ~er be matched by any preconceptions of what the Ainencan gro~p. group's sound should be. The. Band ts the archetypal

And the new album The Band's Amertcan rock group even ' though four of its five members

first new collection of original are originally from Canada. material since the disappointing Their grasp of American culture "Cahoots" in 1971, remains and history, conditioned by years

January. Malady Strikes Seniors

on the road, captures he Arilerican folk flavor in the rock 'n' ·roll tradition.

Nostalgia has characterized the beSt of The Band's music.

Songs like "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," "King Harvest" and "The Weight" are set in a simpler, richer era deep in America's past. The Civil War

care. , ·-}::t=::~.; So you sit at home, watch tlllt ·

"Gilligan's Island," bounce your frisbee off the wall, wear away the grooves in your old Beatles records. Tomorrow is your first exam of the semester. Take the Beatles record off and put on the Rolling Stones. Your first assignment was returned this afternoon with a grade of C. You are elated: you are well on your

to 142 hours

Home of Beautiful Fashions for tbe

Junior and Missy Customer

THRUWAY

always served as a fcical for Robertson's

quality of the earlier albums for a full studio production sound, replete with layers of overdubbing.

However, this change in sound doesn't mark a complete change in style for The Band. The well­worn lyrics and folk melodies are

migration of 'Robertson, Htck Danko, Manuel and Hudson.

Along with Robertson's moving lyrics, it has a. beautifully haunting melody which makes the song one of his classics. Guest Byron Berline weaves a Cajun fiddle in and out of the melody,

lu Ou e .l:.'ar .

By CHARLES JOHNSON

still there, though sometimes awash in a sea of synthesizers.

Songs like "Jupiter Hollow" and "Rags and Bones" evince the universal strengths of the group as well as the crisper production and 1970's keyboard style.

Some of Robertson's eight songs, however, are hampered by the innovations. Still, the. album doesn't contain a bad cut; .and it

one

which is shared by vocalists Manuel, Levon Helm and Danko. Manuel's clavinette is surprisingly effective, and Hudson contributes accordion, piccolo and chanter (the reed pipe of a bagpipe) tD create a remarkable folk sound.

The rest of the material doesn't m~asure up to this, ·but it is l,lllifonrily good. · . , .

"Jupiter. Hollow't. ·is. an· up-_.,...-.. ¥ tune relaiea ·f.eel . . .

. -~ another nostalgic scene in a I· : .. distinctly modern setting. l Manuel's vocal has the right ~ . degree of emotion and \; detachment and shows why he is .,. numbered among the finest · · singers in rock, though he doesn't possess a great voice in a technical sense.

Three funky upbeat numbers and two slow ballads comprise the rest of the album.

Helm's twangy vocal about the "Smoky bars and souped cars­Where we drowned all sorrow" carries "Ring Your Bell," which features Hudson's dubbed brass section, while "Forbidden Fruit" opens with Robertson's guitar augmented by phase-shifter and wah-wah peddle. ' Whil~ .}lot without its flaws, '

whil;ft~ , e11:acerbated by the : · clear.l'\'·"')t'oduction and mix ·• :t

"~!)rtll.ern Lights-SoutherJ- \ Cros,s"·Js a- major effort by• · poS'sibly the most important ·"' American rock ·band.

The Band has come ,back with · · that satiSfies fu.Ore than ·

·or · .diSap~ints. The · -abandQj!S' the

ba.!lli!P.J~ soUfid of . ~ ilroup!s ·but it retains their

~-liSI:I!:::i!J'ISiight and flavor.

122 "Great,:,Soit,_d At The· Right Price"

OAKWOOD DRIVE' · 722-9201

PAGE SIX Friday, January 30, 1976, OLD GOI.D AND BLACK

Wake Seeks Win at St. J?rancis By TOMMIE O'TOOLE

Staff Writer

The Wake Forest basketball team tries to end a near­disastrous January campaign with a face-saving victory when it treks to St. Francis College in Loretto, Pa., tomorrow night for an 8 o'clock contest with the Red Flash.

Despite St. francis' relative anonymity, the Deacs cannot

merely expect to show up in

Maurice Stokes Physical Education Building and daim their victory. The Red Flash has been flaming hot at home over the past four years and has lost only two horne games so far this season. It is 24-4 in Loretto over the last four years and that streak comes despite playing a major college schedule against such teams as Notre Dame, St. Bonaventure and Penn State.

Head Coach Pete Lonergan's

squad, which has all but one

letterman returning, now sports a deceiving 9-9 record.

According to assistant coach Dave MaGarity, St. Francis is the smallest school enrollment wise in the nation to play a major college schedule. They compete m the Southern Division of the East Coast Athletic Conference with such teams as Villanova Georgetown, and previous Wak~ victims West Virginia and George Washington.

St. Francis lost to an ever-

improving GW team · 89-75 last week.

This quaiut little school with an enrollment of only 1,350 is nestled among the Alleghany Mountains of western Pennsylvania. A beautiful setting, yes-a basketball hotbed, no way. For this is football country and St. Francis receives little or no support for its respectable basketball program from the neighboring metropolises of Altoona and Johnstown.

Where Now for theDeacs? By LANE ALDERMAN

Sports Edit1lr

For the first three days of this week, every Wake Forest basketball fan was asking the same question- What's happened to Wake Forest?

Two weeks earlier the Deacons had surged to a legitimate fifth place in the national polls after a sterling 10-0 record but had fallen to a not-so-legitimate twentieth place after losing five or their next six ballgames.

season. On Wednesday night in

Memorial Coliseum, an inspired Deacon team brought back to the program a faint glimmer of hope. The badly needed vittory got away from tllem, but they did display the poise and aggressiveness that had escaped them so often in the last few games.

But the game was still a loss, and Wake Forest is still1-5 in the conference. For many, the question still persists- What's happened to Wake Forest?

suggested that perhaps the team has turned the corner and dispelled some of the critics' rationale.

Certainly one of the most popular criticisms has been that reserves weren't getting adequate playing time and that when they did get in, their response was somewhat less than adequate.

dissension that was spreading among the team.

Whether or not this attack was warranted, it does point out the delicate position in which a basketball coach finds himself. As the leader of approximately thirteen athletes all competing

against each other for playing time, he must mold his team into an effective and winning unit when the game time rolls around. In such a small and closely knit group, the dissati~faction of one player can quickly and easily become the dissatisfaction of the entire team.

Nonetheless, the Wake game this game cannot be counted a has been sold out tor over a sure victory. month and despite heavy snow, Next Wednesday Wake MaGarity thinks that the fans resumes its conference schedule "will find some way to get here." with a grudge match against

"Notre Dame and the Wake are Duke. The Blue Devils upset the probably the best teams we then fourteenth ranked Deacs in play," MaGarity · explained. overtime on Jan. 21 in Durham. "And the players and fans are Wake plays its first February pretty excited. Wake Forest is game of the year with the hopes about the best team to play here of doing somewhat better than since our new gym was opened they did in January. and I think our players may be Skip Brown hit a season-high 33 even more psyched for this game points in that first Duke game but than they were for the Notre got relatively no help from Dame game because that one anyone except Charlie Floyd who was away." had22 points, 14 of which came in

Sophomore Ralph Ledbetter the first half. leads the Red Flash with a 17 The Deacs got in foul trouble points per game average while and all but one of the players who snatching 12 rebounds a contest made the trip were pressed into as well. Jack Phelan is next with service. a 14 point average and Bob Conversely, the Blue Devils Nichols is third with 11 points and placed their five starters in seven rebounds. double figures and outrebounded

Nichols, a 6-6 returning starter the Deacs 45-33. from Gaithersburg, Md., scored Of all the differences in the first 41 points in one game last year Duke game, the most and he has the ability to come up embarrassing was the Deac's with a big night at any time. meager 57 per cent from the free

At 6-8, Pat Sweeney is the throw line, while Duke hit 75 per tallest St. Francis player and he cent from the stripe. has a 10 point average. February is the last month of

The Red Flash matches very the regular season play. Thus well in heighth with the Deacons begins "the stretch," where but their overall quickness could many post-season births are be a deterrent. detennin ed. Many people think

The last time the Deacons took that the Deacs' fate was sealed in a break from their rigorous ACC the last three weeks of January. schedule the result was a loss to Whether it was remains to be Illinois State. While the Deacs seen in - the next four crucial should win handily at St. Fran~s. weeks,·

.. \

' '

I '

Rod Griffin lays In two of the Deacs' overtime points In Wednesday's • loss to Carolina. Griffin finished with a team leading total of twenty-

two points. Photo by Smith

Call it a slwnp, a losing streak, a skid. whatever you want, it all meant the same thing-an 11-5 record and last place in the ACC. It looked like the balloon was broken, and reality had finally broken through. Fans pointed with despair to last 'year, when the Deacs moved into the polls after winning the Big Four Tournament only to fade back into the mediocrity of a 13-13

It's common knowledge that when a team is losing, it looks like everything is going wrong, and to a critic of a losing team, nothing is sacred enough to be left without some attack. Everybody has their own reason as to why the Deacs have been losing, but Wednesday night

"I think a large factor in our slump has been the bench play," said Head Coach Carl Tacy preceeding Wednesday. night's game. "We have not been getting any scoring off of the bench." The loss to Carolina saw an abrupt turn around in reserve play, however, as Tacy substituted freely even when not pressured with foul trouble. Nine Deacons saw more than ten minutes of playing time in the contest.

In his free use of reserves Wednesday night, Tacy certainly aided the team unity by allowing more of the players to feel a part of the game. They responded well, and again-although they didn't capture a victory - that faint glirruner of hope for a unified team began to show through.

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In explaining this move, Tacy admitted that "In looking at the films we could see that we are not nearly as agressive nor do we play with the same intensity as we did earlier in the yar_ That's why we went to more people. The reserves knew they were going to play, and that certainly helped."

When all the self acclaimed critics attacked the Deacons' lack of bench strength, they invariably pointed to the loss of Lee Foye earlier last week. Foye, who had been an often used reserve forward left the team under somewhat clouded conditions. The only explanation given was that he left the squad for "personal reasons."

Rwnors spread quickly about Faye's departure, and when the Deacons suffered in the next two games with foul trouble, the response of many fans was that

.. Foye's loss had been a monwnental one. Many said that it wasn't just the physical loss of Foye that had hurt the team, but the fact that he represented

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Certainly the Wake Forest crowd seemed more unified than ever. Wake Forest's lack of a home court advantage- another one of the critics' major gripes­seemed to lose a little water Wednesday night.

"The crowd was one of the best we've seen in a long time," said Tacy following the game. The enthusiasm and excitement of the crowd was in proportions not usually seen in Winston's Memorial Coliseum except perhaps on the nights professional wrestling comes to town .

ByPAULRICCI Staff Writer

After three consecutive road meets, the Wake Forest swim team returns home on Saturday to face a challenge from Furman University. The meet, originally scheduled for 2:00, has been switched to a 1:00 starting time at the Deacon pool.

The Deacons are now 5-2 after losing two of three road meets last week_ The defeats came against A.C.C. powers Carolina and Maryland, while their lone win was over V.M.I. Coach Leo Ellison hopes his squad can regain its winning ways against Furman, but he expects the meet to be a struggle.

"Ftirman has improved very much since last year, just as it has been improving for the past few seasons," explained Ellison. "Their coach, Pete Anderson, swam at Indiana under Doc Counsilman, and he has added a lot of knowledge and enthusiasm to the Funnan program. It could be a very tight swim meet."

Ellison's charges don't need another close meet, as they have been involved in two during the past two weeks. The Deacs nipped Clemson 61-52 two weeks ago, and last Sunday they were beaten by Maryland 67-46 in a contest that was much closer than the score indicates.

Of the thirteen events in the Maryland meet, ien contained

It seemed at times Wednesday night that the noise intimidated not only the Tar Heels but also the referees. Their calls demonstrated a lack of consistency which in no way aided either team. When the final whistle was blown, however, it was the Deacons that came out on the short end. Sixteen fouls were called against Carolina, and twenty-six against Wake Forest.

Britts, Heatley Lead Wake Karate Club

By GREG SLATON Staff Writer

How many people at Wake Forest have brown belts? Not many, according to the Southeastern Karate Association which recognizes only two.

Now that it is all over, the question of many fans should perhaps become, what will happen now for Wake Forest? In the record book, the Deacons continue to slump with their sixth loss in seven games, but the inspired play of the team demonstrated that the desire to win is still as alive as ever. The game provided hope that much of the controversy and criticism can_ .. .M .. t'"''" aside and that the· team . ·:

concentrate on .

Brothers Van and Bill Britt are the students with legitimate brown belts, and along with black belt Rick Heatley, classics professor, and a nwnber of other students, they have formed the Karate Club.

Also, the student should gain confidence in his capabilities. However, this confidence should have the effect of making the individual less passive and less emotional, they said.

"Hopefully, personal development will occur within the individual as he moves higher through each level that is represented by a colored belt," said Bill.

''A real brown or black belt, the two highest levels of karate, does not around showing off and

hurting but

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\~~~:t~fi~RiiEK ;':~~~~=~~~ "The· team .-teaches ·.l ~"::>:!~'~.f>':~:·I; ~, ·.but wnaf·we ··should ,reSii»ecl·

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·~tJ.~tN~f}f4li\1~~;J:~~biJf\i~ii·~·l ~·~·s}:R· ;·oti~~~~i. cam~ ·~~a dtll .;~~:~i~i~f.i~t~~~ -'V~>atfoi:i'illlly· i~d:Jgriiied c;oastal boys' and. girls' dl'ltips on

~-··u-. ...... ~·,r.t.,.,r~ Atlantic Beach and New Bern. 2'9'th season. Camps feature sailing, motorboating and seamanship plus all usual camping activities (including skin-diving and golf course at Sea Gull and horse­back riding at Seafarer) . Opportllilities for students (college men and women} , coaches and teachers who are LOOKING FOR MORE THAN ~'just another summer job". Openings for NURSES (RN). June 8 - August 20. We seek highly qualified (ability to instruct in one phuse of c;--:.mp's program) , dedicated and enthU3iastic staff members with exemplary character and offer good salurins, roorr and board, plus the opportunity of s~aring in a meaningful and purposeful experience. Quick answer upon receipt of a letter of application which should include a brief resume' of training and experience in area(s) of camp program in which you are best qualified to instruct. Apply to Hyatt Taylor, Director, Camp Sea Gull/Seafarer, P. 0. Box 10976, Raleigh, North Carolina 27605.

finishes that were decided by mere tenths of seconds. Unfortunately for the Deacs, their attempt. at an upset was thwarted as the Terps won most of the tight races.

Two examples of the tightness of the Maryland meet are the

·results of the two relays. In the 400 yard medley relay, Maryland edged Wake Forest by .7 of a second, with a winning time of 3:.41.0 to the Deacs' 3:41.7. The 400 yard freestyle relay was even closer, with the Terps getting the decision, 3:23.2 to 3:23.5.

Two Deacon swimmers were involved in races so close that the results were decided by the meet judge instead of the stop­watches.

In the 200 yard

•• 4' , .. #-

~ ·~·· - ~~~--.

Wake's co-captain Don Gilchrist was timed at 2:04.0, the same as Maryland's McGough. The judge ruled McGough the winner.

An even more spectacular finish occurred in the always­exciting 50 yard freestyle, which was won in a time of 23.0. Three swimmers, includir.g Deacon Bruce Copus, tied for second at 23.1. Once again, Wake Forest lost out on the decision.

The Deacons will have another chance at the Terps in the A.C.C. Swimming and Diving Championships in early March. According to Coach Ellison, the Championships will be the !Jest ever. "Every race, in positions one through twelve, will be the fastest this conference has ever seen."

. '; . --..... --

'-'----"----Jerry .SCbeUe~berg w~~. back in fomi Wednesday night collecfu;'g. > · , · eighteen points for Wake F~rest. Photo by Yandle -. , ., _

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\ ·I

\ Deacon Spotlight

ACC Coaches Hold Back Tricks

By WARREN STEEN Sports Editor

:, With all the int,ense rivalries that abound in Atlantic Coast Conference basketball, it is hard to imagine that any coach wouldhold back anything in a close game. But that is exactly what happens, because in the ACC the whole season is a warm-up for the annual

' ' tournament.

'

A case in point is last Sunday~s nationally televised game between North Carolina and Maryland at Chapel Hill. With five seconds left in regulation and the conference lead on the line, Carolina had possession of the ball.

If Dean Smith ever pulled a special play out of his bag of tricks, th~s would certainly be the time. Right?

Wrong. Walter Davis attempted a 35 foot shot as time expired, and the game went into overtime. Carolina ultimately won the con~st, 96-93, and after it was over . Smith was questioned about Davis' desperation· shot.

The veteran coach admitted his· team had a better ' · play it could have used, but he said they .were holding it

for some other time. Anyone who saw Wake Forest's losses to DUke and

Illinois State must realize that Deacon coach Carl Tacy is also saving his best last-second plays for the ACC Tournament. In the overtime loss at Duke, Jerry Schellenberg took an off-balance jumper from the top of the key with three seconds remaining in regulation.

·.Then three nights .later against Illinois State, Rod Griffin fired up a 22 footer in the final ten secondS that would have sent the game mto overtime. ·

Basketball coaches, like their counterparts in football, save special plays for use in key games.

. Remember last year's tournament game in which · Tacy called a special in-bounds play against Carolina that ran a Tar Heel defender into a pick along_ the baseline?

That play worked perfectly, but it went unnoticed by the officials.

The very next weekend, Carolina tried the same play in its Eastern Regionals- game with Syracuse. Once again the play developed as just as the coach intended, but once again no call was made by the referees.

Undoubtedly, this year's tournament games will feature the unveiling of similar plays ... ones the coaches have been waiting all season to use. ·

************************* With the season more than half over, ma~y members

of the Atlantic Coast Conference Sportswriters Association are beginning to think about who they will vote for on the All-ACC team.

Actually, choosing the first team is not really difficult. Most of the first team ballots will probably look like this: Kenny Carr (N.C. State) and John Lucas (Maryland) at forwards, Phil Ford (North Carolina) and Skip Brown (Wake Forest) at guards, and Mitch Kupchak (North Carolina) in the pivot.

Selecting the second team is not such an easy task. For instance, how does a voter choose two forwards from the likes of UNC's Walter Davis, Wake's Rod Griffin, Maryland's Steve Shepard, Virginia's Wally

. Walker, and UNC's Tommy LaGarde? Likewise, how does a voter choose between backcourt

stars Brad Davis and Mo Howard (Maryland), Tate Armstrong (Duke), and AI Green (State)?

The second team center likely will be Clemson's Tree Rollins,. but he is the only certain member of the second five.

**************************

For the first time in several years, there is no clear-cut choice for national Player of the Year honors. Despite the fact that there is no single player who has reaped the attention that David Thompson or Bill Walton did during the past four collegiate basketball season, there are several players who stand head and shoulders above the rest of this year's athletes.

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.•

.- .

..--

This was one of the rare times last Saturday that llllnoll State's Jeff Wilkens did not come down with a rebound. - Photo by Smith

Lady Deacs Off To Slow Start

By JEFF KENTNER Staff Writer

The Wake Forest women's basketball team fell to 1-3 on the season Wednesday night when they dropped a 78-65 decision to Elon College. The Fighting Christians played an agressive game, particularly punishing the Lady Deacs inside.

overcome is their lack of practice time so lar this season. They have only been playing together for two weeks because the Volleyball season overlapped with the start of Basketball season. ''Most schools have had at least twice as much practice as we have," said Coach Perkins. "When we played Mars Hill they already had five games of regular season experience to their credit."

The season opened last Friday night with an ~0 loss at the hands of Mars Hill College. Gwen Williams and Roper Osborne In addition to lack of each had 14 points in the losing experience, Coach Perkins. also cause. Coach Sharron Perkins expressed her concern abOut the· was Wlhappy with the sloppy lack of scoring balance that the ballhandling and the porous team has shown. Williams and defense that the Deacons Osborne are great scorers but if displayed and hoped to improve the team is to be successful more upon these areas in Saturday's players must get into the scoring game at Western Carolina colwnn. Perkins noted, "we have University. However, the many fine shooters but we are not Deacons were soundly beaten by moving the ball well enough yet powerful WCU, 98-53. Williams to get a sati;!factory scoring and Osborne again paced the balance. We need better ball Deacons with 16 and 14 points, movement from the guards as respectively. well as more movement away

The .Deacons then showed signs from the ball." of improvement last Tuesday The team starts three seniors niglif at home against Pfeiffer but is a relatively y01mg squad. College when Wake won a There are many underclassmen thriller, 67-65. The consistent duo on the team including five of Osborne and Williams freshmen. If these _younger combined for 50 points to once playe~ can gain experience and again provide for the bulk of complim~nt the· veterans, then scoring for Wake Forest. the team IS bound for a successful

Mter the team's first victory . season •. Freshrna~ M~ ~ Coach Perkins commented "I'm Black re1terated this sentiment m quite pleased with the improved saying! "Even tho~gh we (the play that the girls showed, but we young_ players) don t -~ve much still have a long way to go before ~xpenence, we are willing to get we'llreach our potential. We will m. there and hustle." She· also be a lot more polished in another added, "The losses we suffered month or so." last weekend taught us a lot. We '-lOne disadvantag~ that the are now ready to get out there women's basketball team must and play as we are capable."

Skip No.3 ACC Scorer

tUecting·;_·_ · <. Yandle.-<· · --.·", .::.-., ..

Depending on how their respective teams do in the NCAA playoffs, the four players with the best chance to be chosen best in the country are Notre Dame's Adrian Dantley, Indiana's Scott May, UCLA's Richard Washington, and Maryland's John Lucas.

Wake Forest's Skip Brown is the third leading scorer in the Atlantic Coast Conference according to official statistics through last Sunday's games.

Brown is averaging 21.6 points per game, well behind Kenny Carr of N.C. State at 29.8. Virginia's Wally Walker is second with 22.5 per game. • c''··

·' ~-

Four longshot candidates who could conceivably cop the award iftheir clubs advance to the NCAA Finals in

' Philadelphia are Marquette's Bo Ellis, Tennessee's Bernard King, Alabama's Leon Douglas, and N.C . State's Kenny Carr. In addition, Skip is the ACC's

leading free thrower with 60 of 70 attempts for an .857 percentage.

_Go Deacs

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By BRUCE HARSHBARGER and he, along with Skip Brown Sports Editor and Jerry Schellenberg, ran the

clock down to nine seconds before 111 basketball terminology, it calling time out. When · time

wollld be said that Wake Forest reswned, Brown missed with a just can't buy a break. Coach jwnper, but the Deacs got a Carl Tacy would have probably second chance when the ball went paid any price for one last out of' bounds off a Tar Heel Wednesday night when the player with two seconds left. A Deacons dropped yet another desperation shot at the buzzer hectrtbreaker, this time to the was no good, and Schellenberg's University of North Carolina, 88- follow-up was late by a second, as 85 in overtime. was Rod Griffin's a week earlier

For the second time in seven at Duke. days, the Deacs had the ball, a tie "We had our chances," said game, and a chance to win on a Tacy, "we just didn't make the last-second shot, and instead, lost most of them, When you've been in overtime. Wake's record is winning, you have a better now 11-6, and its ACC mark has chance of winning a game like slumpeii to 1-5. that. I think if we had won our

With a minute and thirty last few games, we might have seconds left in the game and the won tonight." score tied 77-77, tiny Mark Dale The teams traded baskets in outjumped Carolina's Phil Ford, overtime, and with 42 seconds to ***********************************************

Duke/U. Va. Pickup A combined pickup will be held for student tickets to

the Duke and University of Virginia games on Monday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the gymnasium. Two hundred guest tickets will be offered for sale at five dollars each durin~ ~he pickup on a first come-first served basis. Any remammg space reserved for guest tickets will be distributed to students.

The Student Athletic Committee would like to thank those students who stayed overnight for tickets to the Carolina game for the orderly way in which went the rough of the ticket distribution procedure. *******************************************·~·

. ' -~ ~if,., • .. '·:·

-u. • '~.-:::

Senior Gwen Wmtams fires over an Elon defender as Roper Osborne (33) gets set to rebound. Photo by Morel

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go, Carolina led 83-81 and John Kuester was at the line for the Heels. His first shot bounced high off the back of the rim, but was tapped back out to Carolina. Wake was forced to foul in order to get the ball back, and Carolina's Tom Zaliagiris and Phil Ford sank their free throws to keep the Tar Heels out of reach.

The Deacs had . a filiai chance with nine seconds left and North Carolina ahead 87-85, when Daryl Peterson rebounded a missed Tar Heel free· throw, but Zaliagiri.s knocked both the ball and the ballgame out of Peterson's grasp and .Carolina's Mitch Kupchak came away with them.

The loss .:ontinues an incredible streak of bad luck and terrible breaks for Wake Forest, which bas now lost three consecutive games by a total of four points. The Deacs played well enough to have won on most any other night, and even held the explosive Ford to ten points and a three-for-ten shooting perfdrmance, but fell pi'ey to a front line that seemed unableJo miss. Kllpchak, Tom LaGar~. and Walter Davis combined for 62 points, pulled 21 re boWld.s, and hit on 24 of 33 shots between them.

"I know that the losses are tough on Wake Forest," said Tar Heel Coach Dean ·smith, "because they haveri't really played that poorly thrOugh the losses. Our players needed a lot of poise to win, and we were fortllnate to come out ·with a victory."

. The worst break of all came with 1:54 left in regulation and the score knotted at 77 -all, when Schellenberg was assessed a technical foul for kicking Tar Heel John Kuester. The call sent Ford to the line for Carolina, gave the Heels possession of the ball, and most importantly, nullified a Deacon basket by Brown.

"I'm certain that the kick was not intentional," said Tacy. "Knowing Jerry as I do, I'm sure that it was unintentional, but it's up to the referee's judgement."

The game was a masterpiece of basketball, with Carolina shooting over 62 percent from the floor, and Wake Forest employing the zone press spectacularly. The only mar in the contest was the inept officiating of Jim Russell, who seemed constantly to be watching something other than the game in progress. He missed calls each way, from allowing a Wake Forest player to dribble out of bounds before making a shot, to foiling a Deacon breakaway by standing in the way of the ballhandler.

Kupchak was the game's leading scorer with 26 points desp_ite playing with four personal fouls most of the second half: Griffin led the Deacs with 22, hitting on ten of 16 shots from ~e floor. Schellenberg had a big mght for Wake Forest with 18 points, and Henry Hicks was four-for~four from the field, with all of his shots from twenty feet­or farther.

Soccer Team Organizing The ~ake Fo~st .Club Soc~r UNC-C, and Chapel Hill. ·

Team will. have Its first practice Wake is a member of the North of the Spnng season on SWl<!aY. Carolina Soccer League, which is Feb. 1, at 2 p.m. on the f1eld becoming a stronger and more behind the gym, Anyone who ~s balanced league each year, and played organized soccer 1s the WFU club feels confident that welcol?e tp come and play. . interest on campus will continue

Havmg finished a fa1rly to increase once people are made ~ccessful fall schedule, the team aware of the relatively high will play approximately 13 games quality of the soccer that is being this Spring, starting in late Feb. played. or early March. Among the teams to be played are the club team at Duke, and the varsity ~ at High Point, UNCGJ.

Anyone who has any questions about the team can call Mike Matossian at 725-2682.

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' .• ·' . •

PAGE EIGHT Friday, January 30, 1976, OLD GOLD AND BLACK --IPNC Sets· Slate Plans

~BRIAN ECKERT · Associate Editor

Editor's Note: In the neld few weeks, we will run 1976 presidential election previews as the various state-wide parties soUdtly their plans. This Issue will deal with the Independence Party of North CaroUna.

~oblessness, education, crime, mterest rates, the ever rising cost of food and utilities and production at the fimn level."

The group predicts "that in 1976 literally hundreds of legislators will be turned out of office across the land " and that .. , many more will not seek re-

election as they can read the handwriting on· the wall."

The Independence Party of . An I N . . North Carolina bas announced . P C c~rcular sa1d recently that it· is making plans to place that m the fall election "people candidates on the state's ballot in will finally demand a the November general election. representative government and

we believe they will elect truly The group indicates that the honest men who cannot be bought

possibilities of George Wallace by the unions, the utilities, and Ronald Reagan as third ~rporations, and other special party presidential candidates mterest groups. The time is now bave compelled them to organize. · for America."

Unequivocal support for both Party members believe that candidates, regardless of party most current officeholders are label, has been announced by corrupted and cite that bell~ as IPNC's leaders. the driving force in forming the

In seeking candidates for state government offices, . the Independence Party plans to draw people from all occupations prov~ded they value "common sense" over special interest.

"We intend to solicit and endorse good men of both major parties, elected or otherwise," a" party spokesman said last week. "We will solicit from the ranks of farmers, tradesmen, white and blue collar workers, educators, and men of the clergy who are willing and qualified to hold public office.

"The main goal of our party " he added, "is to replace evecy special interest legislator with a common sense legislator in every state house in the country, and in the Congress."

Although no actual written platform has yet been announced, party members of the state's steering committee say it "will contain constructive legislative proposals which will remedy most of the problems we face today."

· faction. In a recent release, they stress that tenet.

"Perhaps the basic reason why · we are fonning the Independence Party of North Carolina is that many of us are £ired of working our butts off for a bunch of hypocrites of the two major parties," it said. With few exceptions they enter public office, and in a· relatively short period, become just as unstable as their predecessors or colleagues. Looking back to the 1960's until now, one can truthfully say that all the terrible situations that we have endured and which we are still enduring, are directly traceable to legislation passed by the sometinies incompetent or not so honest legislators of the two major parties. In spite of what they say, all the promises they . make, local and national conditions only worsen."

Reagan and Wallace are the answer to corruption in·

-government, IPNC feels.

"One of the most compelling reasons we are forming this new party is the rumor that Governor Reagan and Governor Wallace

offices ill 1976 through a party oth~r than their own. Clearly, options must be held open for these men and other good men wh~ now stand a good chance of havmg their constitutional rights abri~ged . through political marupulation," the party release states.

"0 . ~ party stands for. honor, m~egnty, responsibility - I don't think the incumbents can wage mu~h of a battle against that with their . record of lies, broken proMises, and their record of sp~cia~ interest and rip-off legiSlation. We are going to hit the people with the truth and most modern day politicians have no d~fense against that. Another umque thing about our ~rty_that I think the people will like IS that we will have a 'Consumer Division' right from the onset," party chairman Edward E. Stallings said this week.

Stallings said that voter.apathy and lack of youth support will

different than the major parties in the 1976 elections. The major parties will elect their candidates through primary elections while -our candidates will be elec'ted by nominating conimittees, as by­law we cannot participate in the primary elections of 1976."

Stallings gives the GOP little chance for holding ·on to control of Raleigh.

"Frankly, after what's bappened I don't see how anyone in .the · Anderson-Holshouser administration can be taken seriously as a candidate for · anything," explained the chairman. "With few exceptions, all the good men in their administration have long since departed. Holshouser bas proven beyond a doubt that North Carolina can go four years ~thout a governor."

Stallings was asked to evaluate some major party gubernatorial candidates including Wake Forest graduate Coy Privette and Lt. Gov. Jim Hunt.

Wedaelday Dlght'sloss to (:&rG,IfDa ~no~ ~e to Jack of 1111PP0rt 88 _aU proved.

i : r I . ~urt the. ~dependence Party in · "How about Coy Privette?

1ts election bids. Well, I think if the Republican

"By mid-April, when the pieces of our puzzle haye fallen into place, I . think most people will .agree that voter apathy is the· only thing that can beat us " Stallings said. "Sp~k.irig only ~f North Carolina I would say that our party will have very little in· put if we cannot turnout more than 35 per cent of the registered voters in 1976. Give us a 50 per · cent turn-out and we will win more seats than the Republicans~ Give us a 60 per cent turn-out and we will give North Carolina ~ great governo~ and many

Party bas any chance at all for the state's top job that responsibility will rest 'on his shoulders. He is an outstanding man," he said.

New Language; Values , _.

Students -Explore Venice!\ Photo by Yandle<

' '

About Jim Hunt, stallings said, "Here's a guy who is anti­nothing, he is for everything. One of the most nauseating things I By RICHARD CARLSON some incidental learning bave ever had to witness was the Associate Editor opportunities. Many students actions of Mr. Hunt and Jimmy cited the pressure of living (Insurance) Green during The Grand Canal of Venice has together constanUy in a limited Governor Wallace's visit to attracted one of the wildest group. ~.'It's a test of your ability address the General Assembly. assortments of international to get along with others," said They stayed so close that had the tourists and vacationers ever Scott Franey. governor's wheel chair stopped gathered on one waterfront. It • On the other hand, the close suddenly. there is a good was only a matter of time before social ~teraction of the group,

"Further, our part finn! possibilitY these two genUemen the Baptists got into the act. - accordmg to Nancy Rodda believes that America•% youth ~ would not be around to bug us in Sandwiched between the homes "gave us a chance to get to knoV: her greatest asset. How dare self- 1976· · - of Peggy Guggenhiem and the people better."

outstanding legislators.

ser.v.i~g and incompetent "I intend to ask Mr. Hunt some Who is Casa Artom, home each It was · the acquaintance politic181ls destroy their future? very sensitive and probing semester for a handful of the afforded with Venice itself Is their legacy and inheritance to questions regarding some of bis Wake Forest student body. however, that students counted be only the illness of a wasted and committee appointments and bis Last fall ~8 students, led by Dr. as the most beneficial aspect of corrupt society? We say no and famous mini-Watergate probe James Barefield of the history the program. Marlene Hyatt we sincerely hope our youth will into the "Holshouser-Anderson d~partment, . combined study emphasized the opportunity "to

ranged from "comparable to the course load at Wake," to "greater than the usual load." According to Rodda "living with the same people you went to class with created more competition, since you could- see how hard everyone else was studying."

"I got a lot out of the academic side of the program," said Barbara HQ!land. "To increase the academic pressure any more

, would defeat the purpose of the ·program. It's sad to have to sit in Venice and not have time to look around."·

Wake Forest in Venice i :, semesters, a nwnber of studenta.~ : . favored a more travel-oriented~· approach to the program that~ : would allow students to study the1 : cities they visited. ; : -

David Hawthorne suggested~ · the creation of an orientation~ .~ han~book for-students arriving in~ : Ven~ce. "There's a pretty sizableiJ : adjustment to make in terms oft­lifestyle," he said. "The~: handbook would des::rlbe how to:; : ge~ around, where and how to &uy ~ . , things, and the best places -to~ : · eat." '' · . r

~ee fit to join our ranks and help patronage special" which with experience in their· see a foreign culture from an us save this great nation " featured state Senator Bob (this exploration of- the Venetian American viewpoint, and to know

!J:DIII:D~I:IZIIZII:ICI:DCI:DCEID::IDDZIIZ:DDCia .Stallings continued. ' away and that) Barker as lifestyle. Within walking distance the culture well enough to see it IJ chairman," Stallings said. "I'll of their extended comer of the from-its own viewpoint." 1 0 Per Cent Discount For WFU The Independence Party will go out on a limb on this one • Wake Forest campus were many She said, "I think it changed

promote candidates for North When the smoke clears in 1976 of the · world's greatest many of. ~Y values - middle

may seek the nation's two top

' The groups says it will take positions regarding "the building mdustry, dignity for the aged,

Students often found time to travel outside Venice during weekends or. during the fall break. Many spent their vacations in cities as far away as London or Stockholm.

Franey conclL ·~d, "No one~· should pass up an opportunity to·· attend Wake F<'-est in Venice simply because they're afraid of missing the social life of the campus·. Anyone who would pass up Venice for Wake Forest is losing a great chance to enrich !hemselyes."

. Students ·on ALL PEDAL BIKES Ca~~lina ·state government your next governor wni not~ masterpieces of painting,, classAir!encanvaluesthatlhad positions as well, concentrating Jim (Hubert) Hunt. He will, sculpture, and architecture as before .. It gave me a new

41p ~ on the gubernatorial and however, take the primary." well as the remains of the ~nee persp~ve on America." ~ · N' h k legislative races. fabulously r'ch Venetl'an Learmng to adapt to the

• 1s i i · Takara s f th • E Asked if a particular candidate uccess o e Independence merchant empire. uropean environment also • Azukl' • V'lsta seemed ttr ti t th n Party in the state has been For nearly four months the proved to be a considerable

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faction, ~tal~~g~~e~li~, ~~e: "tremendous from everyone students attended classes in chall~nge. Lan~uage. barriers been contacted by severa! except the college community " Venetian history Venetian art and lifestyle -differences were prominent people whom I have said stallings last week. "The Italian, Italian ' literature (ui ofl:en a problem. Asked what they adv~d to ge! involved in party lack of r~sponse from the cpllege translation) and Renaissance ml~se~ .mo~t about America affmrs and try to get nominated conunumty leaves me feeling and Reformation history while y.rhile hvmg m ~urope, students for whatever public office they r~ther ~oolish and wondering if supplementing their lecture notes mclud_ed Amencan food, long may seek Our "t' . littl I m trying to save someone who with a firsthand view shoppmg hours, and simple day-

. posl ton IS a e doesn't want to be rescued." The experience als~ provided to-day. conveniences.

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Russell is also writing a proposal for a peer career counsl:lling program. Students would make a two-year commitment and go through a training process. She sees the purpose as two-fold.

"This is a concept of outreach and a matter of numbers, to reach more students in their own environment where they'll be more honest. The peer­counselors would be helped because they would probably be interested in careers in social­service fields and this would be good experience for them."

Italian 1ce cream and German beer and sausages were most -frequently mentioned.

It was the accessibility of the European culture, though, that s~udents enjoyed most. The Sidewalk cafes, open air markets and the artistic life of Europear: cities offered a fresh alternative to American life, "Everything is so far apart in America," said. Hyatt. "In Venice you can visit everything by foot easily. The closeness of the culture makes it a more human experience."

The more typical- aspects of Wake Forest academics co~tinued much as they do in Wmston·Salem. · Student

. evaluations of the work load :·~~*****************************************•

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£ STOP BY.AND BROWSE THRU THESE ! : N·EW RELEASES: : .. ... .. . .. . : lOGGINS & MESSINA ·Native Sons : .. . ~ .. t CAROL KING Thoroughbred : • • .. ... . ... • • .- . £ LATEST PERSONALITY POSTERS £ t OF ROCK STARS NOW AvAILABLE : .. . .. . .. ... .. ... .. . .. . ,: : : AT TWO LOCATIONS : .. . : Thruway ., Dowritown :

As. a s~,~ggestion for future

For C.rry OutS Ph0111725..oB48

Best Place to Eat in Town

Priced 99~ to $3 69 From . • .

Join. us at FAMILY STEAK PIT in Reyno Ida .Manor Shopping Center

We Are Open Sund8ys

i''·'

., t:

<ircatcr .-( itt.'-.11SI)(-Ill ()JX.11 March 29..;

April4, 1976 ~ Shopping Center - N. Ub:~~ Street i : . . . : ******************~***************************: ~------------~------------~----------~J

1 I•

Vol. LIX

Man Plan

ARA Food proposed a new which may take if the response is

Doug McCallie, services, described would cost $60 current "club provide 20 meals unlimited seconds steak. The plan mandatory for residents, be and good for cafeteria only. and Magnolia operated on a cash

"Sales would go Mag Room and McCallie said, ' are subsidized they are not nrnfit.j

McCallie said could offer a rPrl""·•l mandatory plan profit because oniy the students could eat all the purchased. He cent don't eat, enough to pay for provide a profit."

Other schools mandatory food