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University of Central STARS

The Rollins Sandspur Newspapers and Weeklies of Central Florida

2-21-1969

Sandspur, Vol. 75 No. 16, February 21, 1969

Rollins College

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STARS Citation , "Sandspur, Vol. 75 No. 16, February 21, 1969" (1969). The Rollins Sandspur. 1345. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-sandspur/1345 sar±*spiiR 0L.75 NO. 16 THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR WINTER PARK. FLORIDA F riday, February 21, 1969 Stay On Bill !n an unprecedented move make the correction at the Council H-164 VISITATION BILL SEC­ iednesday night, Deans Howden meeting. He neglected to do so, ud Hicks and Faculty member TION I: and the Council passed the Visita­ That each residence shall legis­ jr. Meisel put the first unre­ tion Bill unaware of the amend­ lated Faculy Stay on a Student late its own visitation hours with a ment. Towards the end of the meet­ simple majority of the total Association bill. The action, which ing Joel Dick remedied the situation Lraingly contradicts the student membership of the residence deci­ and a suggestion was made by Bob ding the rules for the trial period Ltonomy role in college life which Glass that the College Re-Evalua­ lie two Student Deans have tires lasting until May 8,1969. Visitation tion Committee would draw up a Hours shall not extend past 15 min­ persuade the students they have: suggested set of guidelines for Vis- utes before Junior Women's closing lie Visitation Bill allowing the istation regulations to be passed hour. Each residence shall adver­ [dividual residence halls to decide by the House as a separate bill con­ tise its rules in the Sandspur and jieir own visitation hours for a trial cerning Visitation. It was decided file them with the Dean of Student kiod will go to the Faculty Ad­ that the Visitation Bill did not have Affairs Office. A simple majority ministration Committee. to be sent back to the House for can alter the visitation rules at ie three sections of the Visit- further change. any time. A report will be re­ in Bill had been formally divid- If the Bill does pass the Faculty, quested from each residence hall in the Council meeting last it will be up to the students to make to the College Re-Evaluation Com­ Eleven Rollins upper classmen were presented Algernon Sydney Sullivan Wednesday, and sent back to the mature use of this trial period of mittee on the problems and before (louse because such division is con- April 1, 1969. awards in a ceremony in the Francis Chapel, Tuesday February 18. visitation privileges, for this is not They were chosen for their "admirable spiritual qualities, outstanding Jidered an amendment, and any the final, permanent implement­ Amendments made by the Council H-165 VISITATION BILL SEC­ and practically demonstrated in daily living with other people." Those ation of visitation, but a trial and TION II: honored were, from left: Rick Camp, Linda Long, Jane Fuller, Barbara aiist be sent back to the House adjustment period which lasts only pr approval. In the House, Sect- All previous rules concerning Canady, Lucia Turnbull, Jane Carrison , David Knutson, Jo Anne Bur­ until May 8, 1969. Then a perma­ open houses are suspended by the roughs, John Kest, and Mary Carter. Not pictured is Rich Westfal. DS I and n passed, but a revis- nent bill will be passed-if the stu­ Iversion of Section III (the Room Rollins Student Association until dents have demonstrated that they Mav 8. 1969. Entrance Bill dealing with the can use the privilege wisely and sarching of dormintory rooms), with the maturity expected of \is defeated U the Council meet- college students. Wednesday night, Sections I Visitation is a privilege, which, ANIMAG Published Sunday II were passed by a vote of like all other privileges, may be to 4, and the faculty stay was revoked upon misuse. ced upon the the Bill. The Visitation Bill in the form The 1969 edition of the Ani­ and will be the second article on "Faculty Stay" is not clearly be followed by math teacher Dr. passed by Council appears below: mated Mazine, "the magazine that the music page. Polcyn, Dr. Cochran in the chemis­ fed in the documents of either comes alive," will be published Wernher von Braun, the de­ Faculty or student Association. try department, Mr. Scheer, repre­ House Council Sunday with a unique production signer of the missile system that senting biology and Dr. Brian Kay Student Association Constit- schedule. ANIMAG,VOL XLIII, will is carrying U.S. astronauts to the lon states that if the faculty does will wind up the science portion not be presented solely in the Know- moon, will write the third article, with "A Synoptic View." disapprove of a bill within Comes les Memorial Chapel as in pre­ "Space Voyaguers," at 3 p.m. in "History at a Crossroads" [' days of its passage through the vious years. The different "pages" the Bush Science Center auditor­ Mcil it will go into effect. Two will be the topic of the Latin Under Fire will be in various locations around ium. American expert, Peter Robinson. ?mbers of the Faculty may place campus. President of the college, The famous cartoonist who Faculty Stay on a bill within Ross Evans will expound on Busi­ Hugh McKean, is editor and pub­ "socked it to 'em " in the Field ness in the Modern World. I* week of its passage through the Important steps have now been lisher of the magizine. House Tuesday, will do the same at pent - Faculty - Administration taken toward formulating more "The Essence of Literature" will Peter Shaffer, whose hit play, 4 p.m.. Sunday in the fourth part be explained by Dr. Frank Wind­ Neil, thereby referring it to equitable campus dormregulations. "Black Comedy," is being per­ of the magazine. Al Capp will faculty. The R-Book reveals that a rather ham. Doctors Hugh McKean and formed by the Rollins Players, speak on "The Youth Revolution Bruce Wavell will complete the fa­ Faculty By-Laws state that hazy and easily adjustable struct­ will present acolloquiumon "THE As I See It." ure is employed in the organiza­ m in tne culty, speaking on "The Visual fe members of the Faculty are Theater Today" at 1 P- - The newest "Feature Article" Message" and "The Strategy of to put the one of two possible tion of House Councils, due basic­ Annie Russell theater. The second of ANIMAG will be the conferring Knowledge." Mini-diplomas, see fculty Stays" on a bill. This ally to the fact that the resid­ page of the magazine will be in the of "60 -minute degrees" in the below, will be awarded. rs it to the Faculty Adminis- ences on campus vary so greatly Knowles Memorial chapel. The bachelor of Liberal Arts in the in size, lay-out, class status of Another first for ANIMAG Committee, which has two Rollins Chorale, under the direc­ School of Instant Education. The will be the baby sitting service Hemic weeks in which to con- residents, and affiliation of re­ tion of Dr. Ward Woodbury, will Dean of the School will be Char­ er sponsored by the members of the the bill and discuss it. If sidents. In the case of Women's sing Howard Hanson's "Song of les Welsh, and eleven Rollins Order of the Libra. Children can st)ody approves the bill, it goes House Councils, the R-Book states Democracy," the setting for a professors will present the curri­ be lef t in the rec room of effect and no other type of that only five members are re­ poem by Walt Whitman. Randall culum. Dr. Robert Juergens will Elizabeth Hall while their parents y Stay is placed upon it. quired: Thompson's "Frostiana" is based be chairman of Orientation and will attend the publication. ever, if the Facuity-Adminis- ". . .at least three voting mem­ on several poems by Robert Frost 10« Committee disapproves the bers, the non-voting student leg­ islature representative, and the sident Head on that floor. This °r decides that it should be system was discarded because it t0 House Council Chairman, who is a vote of the entire Faculty, divided the Freshmen Women into l-Jond type of Faculty Stay may elected for a period of one year." How many of these functions one three distinct subgroups. The aced on the bill referring it to counselors on each floor distribut­ lee member alone may serve is un­ ting of the entire Faculty. ed varying penalties, and this dis- Upon the recommendation of the "Instant Education* Faculty ^ Faculty has to take positive specified. Nor is there any pro­ has conferred most beneficently upon vision that these members must be crepency kept the Dean of Women's dative action, or approve the Office very busy that year. The residents of the dormitory itself - the esteemed "sixty-minute degree" of kfore it may go into effect, counselors had no specific admin­ or any other than the Resident Head lartalor of literal Arts acuity has unlimited time in istrative duties. to and Counselors or Resident with all the rights, honours, and privileges thereunto pertaining; consider the bill. In the year following, due to the and let it be furthermore noted that this brave soul has entered Advisors of the dormitory - as unto the sacred temple of knowledge and enlightenment with reverent heart, [;* House Monday night, Stacey size of the entering Freshman has listened with rapt attention at the altar of the ANIMATED MAGAZINE, r was the case in the Elizabeth Hall °nis, the proponent and au- class , more rooms in Elizabeth and has ascended with joy the path of light, of the Visitation Bill, ac- House Council until recently. guided by our distinguished lecturers here today. a Hall were allocated to Freshmen In witness whereof, the seal of the College and my signature friendly amendment to Before the days of the Hourglass and half as many counselors. The are hereunto affixed. W which stated that Visitation Curriculum, there were approx­ Given at Winter Park, Florida, on 5 administrative functions of the Sunday, the twenty-third day of February, Nay not extend past fifteen imately twice as many counselors in this year of Our Lord nineteen hundred and sixty-nine. s council were defined along with before Junior Women's in Elizabeth Hall - and with quite a system of "uniform" penalties. 8 hour. The Secretary of the different duties. Each floor had This was the year in which the New H^l *rtmj& however, neglected to put its own "H^ouse Council" equi­ Curriculum was implemented, and aendment in the House Mem- valent with representatives elected the problems incurred deterred (the record of House Bus- from the Freshman residents dur­ w the counselors and Resident Heads . hich is presented to all ing the first week of school. On from allowing Freshmen to be re­ |J members). Realizing the third floor of Elizabeth Hall, this presented on their House Council, whe sent a note to the arrangement resulted in a total as this new "coalition" was called. *&t of the Student Associa- membership of eleven: sixFresh- See RULES (Page Two) Dick, reminding him to men, four counselors, and the Re- February 21. IQ Page Two THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR RQ Let's Look Harder Letters to the Editor

There is nothing more unbearable than an Old Guard Republican. Unless, Dear Editor, presenting him as soloist with a a learning process, nonetheless of course, its a New Left Militant . It's very partially accurate and ex­ full symphony orchestra. It must I believe it is being mishand£ tremely almost true-to-life to make a small game out of diametric op­ It has bothered me for some time have put a considerable strain on in this case. To your argument posite s. A few examples: that the name of political action the resources of the Student Com­ Dr. Hitchens, that the papers must For every intellectual scholar like Robert Shelton there is a rational has been smeared by those who mittee to open their Fine Arts be completed early so that the oral mind like H. Rap Brown. For every Ayn Rand there is a Norman Mailer. would use it for destructive rather Week with such a gala performance presentations may be given, I sav * For every college library there is a Mills Memorial. And for every than other type organizations seem but the prestige gained 'outweighs le t the students learn from the crit­ Dean Howden there is a Stacey Margaronis. to be getting space which should all other considerations. It leads icisms of their fellows and in" There are much more subtle games to play with people and things. be reserved for those of us who one to believe that Fine Arts Week, corporate them into their papers' Have you ever noticed how many people are worshipped for their weak are in favor of legitimate, const­ originated and directed entirely Your attitude that the students points and hated for their good ones? And, of course, isn't interpretation ructive political action. by the students, may well become in the class will merely listen of a person's qualities pretty much a moot point anyway? For example: Therefore, I propose to create an one of Rollins' outstanding attract­ and not be urged to comment and Courage is sometimes mistaken for gall, and determination and high organization which is somewhat ions. I am sure the college and criticize is a gross insult to col- principle for disrespect and impudence. But melodramatics are some­ similar to the now-historic com­ the community felt a surge of pride lege-level education. times taken for total personal involvement and ego self-inflation for a mittees of correspondence of the in the electrifying performance I am indeed surprised that this sort of charisma. Continuing, verbosity is sometimes confused with revolutionary war period. We Sunday evening. was done, and I must challenge" confidence and knowledge lost under a title's sheen. And of course, shall set up committees to com­ the motive behind such a move how often has a terrific offense been used to cover up a soft stomach. municate with important members Edwin Granberry Dr. Hitchens, for I can see in the It's interesting. of both the House and Senate of the decision no genuine regard for the United States. We shall also es­ When situations are bad people tend, quite naturally to look for help Dear Editor: students' best interests. The but grab the biggest mouth. In many respects, Rollins is in a great deal tablish a group to concentrate on grades mean something to most in of trouble now, and people are beginning to look around. the White House and its major the class, and the students have components Before beginning any One never ceases to be amazed - Let's look harder. in this case appalled - by the every right to the full four weeks of this, we shall become aware which the College originally grant­ of the current issues and in our handling of the learning process at Rollins. I understand that Dr. ed them. After all, six credits "Sandspur"Will Not Print Next Week communications we shall make re­ is not a plaything. commendations as to what action Hitchens, for whom I hold much shall be taken. The idea depends respect as an educator, has ad­ Out of a desire to continue in my upon building up a reputation which vanced the deadline one week for regard for you as a most compet­ Constitutional Amendments rests upon students being constru­ the papers of his current directed ent professor , I urge you, Dr. ctive in action. This has the pot­ study. This is a move which I can Hitchens, to grant your students ential of spreading to other cam­ consider no less than arbitrary, the full four weeks, so that they To Amend by Substitution: Student member of the Student House until may produce meaningful work. Association Bylaws be has attended three consecutive puses and of placing Rollins on the selfish, and totally devoid of pur­ map as being a center for legit­ pose. Spring vacation will come soon meetings of the House and has enough. The Following Sentences would be passed the Constitution and Bylaws imate political action. In the first place, has the thought deleted: Examination, administered by that not occurred to Dr. Hitchens that committee and covering the Student Thank you, there lies a difficult task in nar­ Respectfully, It is required that he has at­ J. Lawrence Witzleben tended three consecutive meetings Association Constitution and Ken Kohn rowing down a broad subject, sel­ of the body to which he or she de­ Bylaws and the fundamentals of P.O. Box 480 ecting a given topic of interest, sires membership and has passed parliamentary procedure. A per­ Dear Editor: researching it, THINKING about Dear Rollins, an examination administered by the son may not become a voting mem­ what one is doing, and writing a Rules Committee upon completion ber of the Student-Faculty-Admin­ I can not praise too highly the meaningful term paper - all in I sure appreciate all the cards of the above requirements. Also: istration Council until he has Fine Arts Committee of the Rollins the course of but four weeks? and letters thateverybodytherehas Committee Chairmen must attend passed the Constitution and Bylaws Student Center for sponsoring the The problem is further complicated sent and am sorry I can't write three consecutive meetings of the test. Also; House committee concert Sunday evening in the Field by the inadequacy of available mat­ back to you all, so will try to House and then pass an examin­ chairmen must attend three con­ .'House., In launching Fine Arts erial in our library; and is the write as much in one letter and ation administered by the Rules secutive meetings of the House and Week with such a distinguished Orlando Library all that adequate? hope that everybody that's interest­ Committee. pass the Constitution and Bylaws event, the Student Committee firm­ For Dr. Hitchens to allot the ed can hear about it. Test prior to becoming chairman. ly establishes its seriousness, wis­ students a mere three weeks for Am doing very little studying The following sentences would be dom, and good taste. their work - after two weeks have these days except for trying to added: Robert L. Glass It is remarkable enough, in a passed - is disgraceful. More­ pick up a little French from a A person may not become a voting Constitution and Bylaws Committee student body the size of Rollins, over, to make the advanced dead­ text and some French records. To the House Feb. 17. to find such a dazzling talent as line known by telling a student to Otherwise, I mostly just watch Stefan Young. It is equally re­ "pass the word" shows me noth­ T.V. or sleep. Editor, markable, and a matter I think for ing. Pont-Ball Library." Inside of this great pride, that his fellow stud­ Though I mean in no way to refute Appreciatively, After some diligent searching structure I found so many period­ ents would wish to honor him by the validity of the directed study as Kirby Morgan through the Mills Memorial Mon­ icals that my education almost ster, I found myself havingextreme made me miss Al Capp. A truly difficulty finding periodicals on my traumatic experience. Winter Term B subject matter. I would like to take this opport­ RULES (continued from Page One) Being that Dr. Windham is inter­ unity to condemn Stetson and Dr. ested in my education, I found it Windham for causing me such a Last year, the campus was so in­ 5) That one Freshman Represen­ detailed records or notes specify­ necessary to make a disdainful traumatic experience and making volved with the question of the tative to the Elizabeth Hall House ing the charge or offense, the dates, visit to the inferior campus of me waste my afternoon on educat­ extension of women's hours that Council be elected from each floor; and descriptions of the offense in (the basketball ion. I would also like to praise the question of Freshmen repre­ 6) That one of these three elected all cases. This record shall be 5eo game was a fluke). As I had Rollins for its fine atmosphere of sentation on the Elizabeth Hall Representatives to the Elizabeth carefully edited (the bare essent­ expected, the Stetson campus was relaxation and the brilliant idea House Council did not arise. But Hall House Council be appointed ials - in order to keep as little purely second rate. Their archit­ of a campus swimming pool. The this year-despite the current issue as the Representative of the Eli­ detail o n record as possible), ectural structures had no gold let­ Rollins Administration must know of visitiation-this inequity was re­ zabeth Hall House Council to the and shall also contain a descript­ medied. tering or fountains and their dorm­ that "What you don't know, can't Rules Committee; ion of the events leading up to the Oec< itories appeared very run down. In hurt you." On Monday night, February 17, 7) That twenty-four hours public offense. Pres fact the only decent looking build­ elections were held on all three notice before the election be given. These suggestions were adopted ing on campus was labelled "Du- Proudly submitted, floors of Elizabeth Hall to elect Earlier this month, Lower Court by the Elizabeth Hall House Coun­ Robert Ruland representatives to the House-Cou­ Chairman Phil Marion presented cil and will be retained as stand­ ncil-one of whom will be appointed several suggestions to the ard procedure. r to membership on the Rules Com­ Elizabeth Hall House Council re­ As in most matters of human mittee. On February 19. a list of garding the procedure for investi­ relations, the problems ofgreatest STAFF hd _ suggestions concerning tne lormai- gation and jurisdiction on cases complexity and apparent insol­ Editor Richard MacLeod ization and permanent imple­ brought before the House Council: ubility stem from a breakdown mentation of these elections was or clogging in communications. Managing Editor. M. Curtis Perez presented to the Elizabeth Hall 1) That limited but thorough In our own system of government, House Council, after these suggest­ investigation procedure be im­ a solution to thecommunications Associate Editor Gwen von Stetten ions had been discussed as to plemented for each case to be problem could be facilitated by a their possible merit with Dean considered by the House Council. greater awareness on the part News Editor Barb Parsky Howden. Each Counselor who has a girl of concerned students of the These suggestions were as on her floor with a case to be structures in our system of re­ Feature Editor Roy Caffrey follows: considered by the House Council gulation and legislation • ^ 1) That during the third week will make an investigation deter­ the level of the House CouncU to Business Manager Seth Feigenbaum of Winter Term each year, ele­ mining the circumstances con­ that of the Board of Trustees. ctions be held for Representatives cerning the offense and report It is not only up to the individual Art Editor Connie Hirschman to the House Council of Elizabeth her findings to the House Council to acquire such an awareness - Hall out of the ranks of the Fresh­ prior to consideration of the case. it is also the responsibility Contributing Editor E. G. White men residents of Elizabeth Hallj She will also advise the defendant those who are involved in studeni 2) That nominations for this of her rights to appeal. government to make known tin Photography Don Robins election be made at least one 2) In all cases where mitigat­ available functioning systems. week before the elections are held; ing circumstances appear to exist Circulation Manager Nelson Diener 3) That to be nominated for Re­ the defendant shall be required Dorm Open House presentative to Elizabeth Hall by the House Council to appear Sports Editor Bob Taylor House Council a Freshman woman before the House Council when it Saturday night from 7:00 J STAFF: George Brown, Barry Benjamin, Bob McLaugnlin, must have a cumulative grade aver­ considers her case. In other cases, 11:00 p.m. Elizabeth Hall will no Karen Payne, Jessica Waddell. age of at least 6.0; which may be determined as rout­ its first Open House this J* Published weekly at Rollins College, Winter Park, Florida, by the 4) That nominees for election ine by the House Council, the de­ All floors will be open to maj Winter Park Sun Herald. Publication office — Student Center basement. submit to the Elizabeth Hall House fendant will be invited to appear visitors, and refreshments « Entered as second class matter November 14, 1925, at the Post Office Council an application for approval and be made aware of her right be served on each floor. Allfrien at Winter Park, Florida under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription and have an interview before the to do so. of Elizabeth Hall Freshmen ai House Council prior to elections; **» price — $5.00 annually. 3) The House Council shall keep welcome. February 21, 1969 THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR Page_ Three Lester's War

By Howard Cox and originality which have disting­ Since the birth of the film in­ uished him as a rising director dustry the theme of men at war in other films(HELP! THE KNACK has been the subject of countless PETULIA ) is again present in numbers of films, ranging in qual­ WA.R. For example, as each man ity from the mediocre to the near in the regiment dies, they remain brilliant. Richard Lester's "How in the film with one alteration: I Won the War" comes close to each is solid color from helmet the near brilliant category. In fact, to boots: orange, pink, yellow, WAR would be "just another war green, and blue. WILLY FLOHR film " if it were not for Lester's HOW I WON THE WAR is a black superb talents in directing and his comedy, and an anti-war film at JACK MEYERS keen eye for satire. that. Somehow after seeing it, war WAR is the story of a British regi­ can not be viewed as something ment stationed in Africa during between us and them. It is diffi­ Sen/or World War II. The entire film is cult to explain why the audience told through a series of flash­ feels repulsed by Peabody and the backs and glimpses into the fu­ manner in which he gets his regi­ ture. The story follows the regi­ ment across the Rhine. WAR serves ment from the time they come to­ as a very able reminder that the O.O.O.O. gether for training, glimpses at conflict is between men, men who their past civilian life (In one are more alike in their feelings scene a ball used for cricket sud­ and desires than unlike. denly explodes as if it were a The film is not without its Members mine.), and follows them through comic moments, however. The the war until its end. scene in which Peabody's Com­ Michael Crawford (the school­ manding Officer shoots a disabled teacher in THE KNACK) plays the tank as if it were a dying horse role of Lt. Ernest Peabody, regi­ is one of the funniest ever made. ment leader, on whom the ultimate Portions of war speeches by Win­ Revealed as o - spends. Beatle ston Churchill and Montgomery are John Lennon has a minor part dubbed in various places, and the in the film, and does well, demon­ result is effective as well as comic. strating his ability for a semi- HOW I WON THE WAR will be dramatic role, as he plays the Thursday, February 28th, at 8:00 loner in the regiment. P.M. The Fiir~" Committee is re­ Richard Lester has again questing a V.i, donation, part of produced a film filled with mayhem which is to go toward the com­ and absurdity. The inventiveness pletion of the coffeehouse.

"Who's Who Among Students in Varsity Soccer Team 1968, 1969; American Colleges and Univer­ All FIC Soccer; All State Soccer, sities", Recipient of the Algernon All South Soccer, Author of the mi / i "Flohr Almanac of Soccer Greats" GEORGE DRAPER Sydney Sullivan Award, Chapel GEORGE LAMB Usher, Vespers Committee, Presi­ Terry Father Law dent, Student Faculty Administra­ Rush chairman of Lambda Chi Alpha, New Hall Counselor, Res­ WILLIAM HARTOG tion Committee, Student Court Member, Resident Advisor to the ident Advisor, Comptroller of the Kappa Kappa Gamma House, Social Student Association, member of the Entertainment Committee, IFC Student Court. delegate and co-chairman of the Orientation Committee. Joel S. Dick The eight senior members of William Fund Hartog David Suchso Lord President of the Rollins College i.O.O.O. are disclosed each year Vice-President of SigmaNu 1968- President, Rush Chairman and Wilson H. Flohr, Jr. Student Association, president of bring Founder's Week. O.O.O.O. IFC delegate of Sigma Nu, Recip­ ; 1969, Recipient of the Algenon Rush Chairman and Pledge Lambda Chi Alpha, chairman of • a secret honorary group whose Sydney Sullivan Award, Resident ient of the Algernon Sydney Sul­ Trainer of Sigma Nu Fraternity, the Student-Faculty-Administration iimsare to foster and pre serve the Advisor, Vice-President of the livan Award,"Who's Who among Social Entertainment Committee, committee, member of the Student- :eals of Rollins College. Members Chapel Staff, Chapel Usher,member Students in American Colleges and Chapel Usher, Counselor and Res­ Faculty-Trustee committee, I.F.C. chosen secretly from the men of the Student Court, Representa­ Universities," IFC President,Stu­ ident Advisor, R-Club, Sweetheart delegate, representative to the he student body and seniors are tive to the Student Legislature and dent Legislature Representative, of Pi Beta Phi, Assistant Editor Student Legislature, "Who's Who sealed this week. When the Thun- Sigma Nu delegate to the IFC. Editor of the R-Book, Assistant of the R-Book, Treasurer of the in American Colleges and Univer­ :erbird flies from the flag pole President of the Senior Class, Editor of the Sandspur 1966-1967, Senior Class and Vice President sities," More the library, this signifies member of the X-Club, New Hall New Hall Counselor, Chapel Staff,; of Junior Class, Captain of the tot a meeting has taken place. Counselor, Vice-President of Soph­ Member of the Student Court, Mem­ omore Class, all F.I.C. and member ber of the Investigating Committee, tose chosen for the honor were: of the Rollins Chapter of the Trin­ Student Center Board of Directors, ity - Pawling Alumni Association. Rally Committee, Publications iorge Bhonom Draper Board, Member of Rollins "Let President of the X-Club 1968- George Lamb Slim Out" Club. Vice-President of the IFC. President of Delta Chi, Soc­ Alness manager of the Sandspur, ial Member of Kappa Alpha, Rol­ *M968, Counselor September- lins Art Guild, Fine Arts Com­ member, Chapel Usher, Vice- mittee, IFC delegate, Co-Captain John C. Meyers HI ?sident of the Student Center, of the Varsity Golf Team and Vice-President of the X-Club, •'tins Fund Drive, and Chairman Chairman of Attendance and Ab­ Treasurer, Social Chairman and the College Pub Committee. sence Committee. rush Chairman, President of ODK,

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Berg Presents Beggar's Bowl The Story Of An Actor* By Debbie Edney "The word is out that film is coming Film Makers Lecture Bur­ interested in communicating his art in!" Norm Berg, who is consid- eau Catalog: "Mr. Berg is the to people than in accumulating e red by many to be THE New Amer­ recipient of a grant from the Fourth money for it, which to him would ROGER MILLER ican Cinema Filmmaker, describ­ International Film Festival, (Brus­ be "prostituting" himself, . In ed the films he will present Friday sels, 1967-68), and the 1967 Peace his words, he is "like a Buddist By Debbie Edney night after the National Student Merit Award. He has lectured in beggar, who carries his bowl." Association Films (they start at Film Study projects at Fordham Since this IS Fine Arts Week, "Success in an acting career is 7:30). Mr. Berg's films include: and National Film Study projects and we are supporting artistic 98 percent work and two percent "Oh Say Can You See (U.S. & CO.)'; and National Film Study Confer­ work in all fields, it seems that luck - if you have a little talent and "Hollywood The Beautiful", ence (Summer '68) University, M. the least we could do is to pass thrown in," says Roger Miller, "The F!ck Censorship Series", I.T. Smith College "Week of the the hat after Mr. Berg's show to currently working in Peter Shaf­ "I Have Not Come To Teach, But Concerned Artist" '68, University further the work of a concerned and fer's smash, "Black Comedy," in To Awaken," "Coca-Cola For Ev­ of Mass., and New England Col­ intensely creative man who has the lead role as Brindsley Miller. eryone", and "Timothy Leary and lege." shared his id< as and his art with Roger exemplifies the successful the Movement". He will present Norm Berg describes his films us. application of this formula. An two of these films, "Oh Say Can as "an unlearning process called intensely talented and interesting You See (U.S. & CO.)" and "Tim­ feedback." The main element in En Garde! actor, Roger began his work in the othy Leary and the Movement" his study of American culture today theatre in the ninth grade with his with the sponsorship of the Fine is people - interacting, commun­ first role as the "prince" in A.A. Arts Committee. An intensely icating, and becoming more aware FLAMINGO! Milne's "Ugly Duckling". During artistic individual with a unique of their modern world. "Mutual his senior year at Northwestern idea of man and the modern cul­ interaction and interdependence The Rollins College FLAMINGO, Senior High School in Hyattsville, ture, Norm Berg is currently tour­ of people IS the feedback process. the Students' creative arts mag­ Maryland, Roger was the President ing the country with his program We can make an agreement either azine is a showcase for any form of the school's chapter of the series on "The Verbal American to agree or to disagree, but at of student talent: photography, National Thespian Society and was Landscape" He nas conducted least we have made an agreement art, design, essays, prose, poetry, producer-director of the musical seminars on filmmaking at New to be involved." and plays. A limited number "My Fair Lady", which Roger ROGER MILLER College in Sarasota, Harper, and of individual FLAMINGO sub­ describes as "one of the best, There will be no admission charge scriptions are available for $2.50, Honorary Dramatics Fraternity Goddard. According to the forth­ of these films - Mr. Berg is more if not the best in musicals that Theta Alpha Phi. postage included. If you would like Northwestern has ever done." A- to participate in our program, Next year, Roger plans to attend mong his favorite high-school graduate school, and has applied please fill in below and send to: dramatic experiences was his Dudley Wilson to three prominent institutions: The Rollins to FSU Tournament portrayal of Mercuccio in "Romeo University of Michigan, where the Business Manager, FLAMINGO and Juliet". Rollins College Varsity Debaters Mardi Gras Invitational Tourna­ Box 1062 Tyrone Guthrie Theatre islocated; and Forensics Students travel to ment, earned top speaker points Roger came to Rollins with the New York University; and Wayne Rollins College intention to major in History. His Tallahassee for one of their last of the Rollins contingent). John Winter Park, Florida 32789 State UniversityinDetroit,whichh "two percent luck" came when associated with the Hillberrv tournaments of the season, this Kennedy and Victoria Hartmanwill Thank You. week-end, February 20-23. Those compete in After Dinner Speaking; he became involved with the ex­ _Classic Theatre. He has been scheduled to attend the 20th Annual VerlieMayo and David Mitchell in ceptional theatre arts department nominated to receive a Mc_. Seminole Invitational Debate Tou­ Impromptu Speaking, and Cynthia at Rollins - and with several small Fellowship, which would enabl rnament are: Michael Dornish and Grubbs in Persuasive Speaking, NAME parts and a lot of experience in to attend the University of William Manthorne, negative de­ speech professor Dean F. Graunke ADDRESS- his Freshman year, decided to igan, his first choice. This baters; Pam Smithand Lorrie Ball, will accompany the squads and act change his major to Theatre Arts. iversity offers a unique program affirmative' squad. (Miss Ball, as a judge at the meet. His proverbial "big break" came for graduate work in the theatre; a freshmen, in tne recent Tulane (Make checks payable to the when he received the role of Finch a teaching assistantship and cour­ FLAMINGO). in "How to Succeed in Business ses towards the M.A. degree the Without Really Trying." first year, and only one terra in One of the most interesting shows class with three terms in the in which Roger has been involved "field" at the Tyrone Guthrie The­ World Campus Afloat was "Oh, What a Lovely War", a atre the second year. Of course, musical parody on World War I, Roger's goal is to go into pro­ is a college that does more which was written by Joan Little- fessional theatre, but if this wood and her associate actors in "doesn't work out" he would like London and produced by David Mer­ to teach dramatics at the college than broaden horizons. rick in New York. level. In regards to teaching dra­ A prime element in this play matics, Roger commented: "It is the background, which consists is hard for people to believe that of a screen upon which slides of you actually have to learn it. Good It sails to them and beyond World War I action pictures are* body movement and a nice voice Once again, beginning in October of 1969, the projected. In front of this a cast help, but they're not the most World Campus Afloat program of Chapman of twelve sings songs of World important thing." College and Associated Colleges and Universities War I and presents a bitingly sat­ Dramatics training relies on the will take qualified students, faculty and staff irical dialogue which leaves the application of what is learned in into the world laboratory. audience with a feeling of horror class in the actual stage situat­ In-port programs relevant to fully-accredited at the climax. ion. Character roles are espec­ coursework taught aboard ship add the dimension The role that had the most "meat" ially functional for the student of of personal experience to formal learning. in it for Roger was Private Gar the theatre: they offer an intri­ cate skeleton upon which the actor's Classes are held six days a week at sea in Philadelphia, Here I Come!" Roger commented: "it stretched individual style of interpretation aboard the s.s. Ryndam which has been equipped me from the sublime to the rid­ may be moulded. "Straight roles with classrooms, laboratories, library, student iculous", and his success in tackl­ can be used to the greatest extent, union, dining room and dormitories. ing it was witnessed by all who to directl y apply what is learned Chapman College now is accepting applica­ saw the play. in class." tions for the Fall and Spring semesters of the Roger is a very active member of Asked for a final comment on his 1969-70 academic year. Fall semesters depart the Rollins Players, the "lead­ promising career in acting, Roger New York for ports in Western Europe and the ers" of Theatre Arts productions, mused: "If you want to beanactor Mediterranean, Africa and South America, ending who produce every show at the you have to wait many years. It in iLos Angeles. Spring semesters circle the Art student Leana Leach of Long Beach takes experience. And it takes sketches ruins of once-buried city during Annie Russell and Fred Stone The­ world from Los Angeles through the Orient, India World Campus Afloat visit to Pompeii. atres. He is also a member of the guts." and South Africa to New York. For a catalog and other information, complete and wrorfPW mail the coupon below.

SAFETY INFORMATION: The s.s. Ryndam, registered in The Netherlands, meets International Safety Standards for new ships developed in For that special dress..* 1948 and meets 1966 fire safety requirements.

**** WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT " Director of Admissions Chapman College, Orange, Calif. 92666 Please send your catalog and any other facts I need to know. SCHOOL INFORMATION HOME INFORMATION Mr. Miss Mrs. Last Name First Initial Home Address Street * Casual fifogance mQfcsori Sfastotf Name of School City State Zip Campus Address Street Home Phone ( _J 258 PARK AVENUE NORTH City State Zip Area Code UntiL -info should be sent to campus Q home • WINTER PARK. FLA. Campus Phone ( ) approx. date Area Code I am interested in rj Fall Spring • 19 Miami Beach j>alm Beacb Year in School Approx. GPA on 4.0 Scale • I would like to talk to a representative of WORLD Delray Beacb CAMPUS AFLOAT Ft. Lauderdale WCA-21 Lake Placid, N. Y. >bruary 21, 1969 THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR Page Five Page Six THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR February 21.1969 'Doc' Cochran: Total Involvement Dr. Cochran's only regret is that and the myriad personality types ion, Cochran's most disappointing is that he benefits more from the As an outstanding graduate of experience was with his high school association than do his advisees. he is not able to do as much re­ which occur within a network of search as he would like " three impressive universities: four class divisions and an age teaching colleagues. "I had to No doubt, he would be embarrass­ pre Richmond, , and Clem- leave that teaching because of the ed to know precisely how much sently. His last paper* ^s span of at least five years. Short published in the spring of '67 an son, Dr. George Cochran is nat­ of regeneration into his own post depressing situation it was becom­ he is respected, admired and need­ urally expected to be highly ing. Most of the other teachers ed. His involvement applies to he is now working with coordinat­ high school being, Dr. Cochran has ion compounds of monovalent mem competent as a professional in his achieved a many-sided involve­ obviously did not want to better his position as a member of the field of chemistry. He is, very. themselves and the atmosphere Student - Faculty - Administration ions, with emphasis on complex ment with, and understanding of the diamine molecules. There is a He might not be expected to be a total student. was stultifying. Most of them Council also, as well as his great teacher of the most effective kind, strong possiblity that he will be Arlington, Va., where Cochran seemed to be content to merely activity with the Admissions Com­ or to immerse himself in labor for make it through each day, and then mittee. During the Spring break, able to publish on this study also Rollins and students individually, was born , served as the site of but he is the first to point out his first teaching post. It was a to go home and forget about the in fact, while many of us are al­ but he meets all of the highest students, or the furthering of their ternately relaxing or recovering, that his duties of teaching and gen ideals in these areas, too. dual official role of being a chem­ e rally bettering the situation of the istry and a German instructor shareable knowledge. Then, as a Cochran will be visiting high sc­ Students, their drives, problems, side light, there was also the dis­ hools to speak with science faculty college is his most important and and behavior are the mainsprings and Cochran has said that it was desired responsibility. Glory in there that he gained experience, agreement I had with the laws re­ and students. Dr. Mulson and Dr. in any four-year, educational time quiring a certain number of "Ed­ Hellwege will also be traveling. publication may have to rest for piece. Curriculums, books, and maturity, and zest for aiding stud­ a time. ents. Other than teaching his ucation" courses demanded of As all college professors, theyare course plans are only as good as teachers. The courses were very concerned about what is being Total involvement with college that which is distilled in the courses, he also worked with student groups and was a coach for shallow" and repetitive, but my taught in the high schools, and and students, while maintaining students minds after actual educat­ largest complaint was that a teach­ one method of gaining well based professional excellence and furth­ ional experiences have been run the track team. "When you see an athlete knocking himself out er could benefit more by studying students is to reach the teachers ering man's knowledge is Dr through the senses and filtered by his subject area." For two years who prepare our future under­ Cochran's goal, and his is an the brain. Teachers who obtain for you in competition, or even in practice, and you know that it after that, the University of graduates. inspiring example. the best results are those who can Tennessee was the scene of in­ empathize and identify with the must hurt, it fills you with grat­ ification and appreciation and tensive, grueling study for Co­ learning process as seen from the chran. Dr. Cochran received his student's viewpoint, while remain­ brings home the knowledge of your Hitchens, Robinson responsibility." Cochran tried to Ph.D. three years later from ing at enough distance to provide Clemson University, graduating in guidance. Being able to do this partially explain his deep respect and empathy for students with those the spring of '67 and then coming implies that the professor would to Rollins. Cool it for Coffee need to comprehend more of the words, but the obvious sincerity shown in his tone and expression After chemistry, Cochran's most A tremor of excitement ripples medium of satire. They are back­ undergraduates' lives than class­ through the campus as the final ed by the Drambuies in what will room dynamics. He must be able communicated even more than his cherished activity is his happy words. involvement with the Delta Chi preparations spring into action for be a risque, musical comedy hour. to absorb sports, literature, arts the launching of the new Coffee All funds from this will go towards student government, journalism, Not surprisingly, for a man of fraternity as their faculty advis­ his dedication and high motivat­ or. His only anxiety, typically, House. At present, the committee helping the Coffee House open the consists of: Jane Tipping, Ric first week of next term. Gardner, Pierre Magnan, Mary This, we hope, is just a fore­ Fuller, and Terry Robbins. Fa­ runner of many of the ideas we culty advisors include; Dr. Wind­ have planned for the future, such ham, Dr. Hitchens, Dr. Epley and as: fashion shows by John Stev­ Mr. Robinson. ens, art and photographic displays, Already many enthusiastic poetry readings and musical soir­ helpers have been out in the streets ees. But, much more importantly, of Winter Park soliciting support, we want this Coffee House to be­ negotiating with other coffee cent­ come a casual meeting place, where ers and checking last minute pre­ people can come together, relax, parations with electricians, plum­ drink coffee and chat. If this bers, and interior decorators. last objective is achieved then we One of the first enterprises under­ believe that we will have satisfied taken by the Coffee House a need which has been long overdue Committee is to put on a light on this campus. Perhaps one entertainment show, "Only Toucan of the unusual features about this Play," featuring Peter Robinson Coffee House is that it will serve and David Hitchens as they take beer to all those students over 21. a cool look at Rollins through the This is another way in which we hope faculty, students and alumni will get together. Still, all the work is not yet TRAVEL RITE fully completed. We need a fur­ ther $500, and there is time left for any help anybody wants to of- TOURS fer. If you have just a free half-hour, you can make in that AIRLINE RESERVATIONS time a worthwhile contribution in I some simple job. We do need 1 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS 171 W«tt Fairbanks your support. Even if you can't Phone 647-4034 make the Hitchens and Robinson comedy hour because it conflicts W r M*dcalf — Jwn« Krtmwilk with some other pressing event, your dollar contribution could long way.

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Undecided about your future? UNITED STATES AIR FORCE Box A, Dept. SCP »2 It's no disgrace. Randolph Air Force Base, Texas 78148 Even Einstein couldn't make up his mind for quite awhile. Van Gogh took time to get on the track. The Wright brothers didn't start concentrating on aeroplanes NAME AGt •rjr-" PLEASE PRINT right away. COLLEGE So, if you're graduating from college and you still don't know what to do with your future...chin up. 'CWkekp Cleaning in an A*t' GRADUATION DATE PHONE You can go to Officer Training School. Become an officer. Get ADDRESS officer's pay and prestige. Travel. All while you're learning to fly. See? You can do something constructive, exciting, profitable />'• CITY STATE ZIP and patriotic. Be an Air Force pilot. ONE BLOCK FROM CAMPUS I UNDERSTAND TflERE IS NO OBLIGATION. They'll say you're just another genius who has made up his mind. ON PARK AVENUE rebruary 21, 1969 THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR Page Seven

-that which is 4estroymq the church fenottheoutoard*. grob'uuf of those ithin it nor the inward orcein Lose without, but the bro£ who control it and w the bells f ill

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•«& February 21.1969 Page Eight THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR Is the 'Christ Trip' a Failure?

sonal health, he said yes, and that Is the church being destroyed, included mental health." and if so what is taking its place? "Then you're admitting he really Do college students believe in God, didn't say anything." and if no t what DO they believe in? "The whole way I see it was that In order to answer some of these he was irresponsible for an in- questions, the Sandspur organized telligent person and responsible a series of informal discussions for an unintelligent person." two weeks ago with the topic of Contemporary Belief. A repre­ "As a responsible theologian, he sentative student segment was in­ couldn't do anything else butwafct he did." vited -- those labelled as radicals by their fellow students, ardent "An intelligent person shouldn't church goers, and many in-bet­ even bother to criticize the Pope weens, seeking answers themsel­ because he should be emancipated ves. enough not to even worry about The majority of the participants that." l fell in the latter catagory, which is not surprising, as college is the "No, I don't think that. I think time to reevaluate and formulate they should KNOW, very basically personal philosophy away from what their faith entails. But when parental influence. the encyclical came out people All of the students believed in misinterpreted it because they something higher up, although the wanted a condonment for whatever word "God" was not often men­ they wanted to do. They were tioned. One boy declared him­ arguing authority, that's what it self to be a Primal Believer, while comes down to." others suggested the names of deit­ ies of Eastern religions. "But the thing is, that it's one There was an interesting em­ human being deciding the fate of phasis on Eastern religions, which millions through one institution." was explained by: "I think the As the discussion sessions drew main difference between your to a close, the group attempted Western cat and your Eastern cat to define religion, so me thing which is that the church is going to teach it had been impossible to do at the the Westerner the meaning of God beginning. while the Eastern cat is going to "Religion is an ethics based on go out and experience the void faith." himself. Believing in God is the "That's not necessarily a relig­ easy way out. Somebody else ion. Religion is a set of beliefs tells you what to do." a faith, yes, but not just a faith Coming at, the beginning of the Is Religion Out of Focus? in an ethical system — faith in a first session, this statement was Supreme Being, whether it be im­ the springboard for much of the with the realities of today, such defended the ritual and ceremony manent or transcendant, which in­ remaining discussion. It brought way and as a counter argument as starvation and wars. I don't of the church, and, as in the case corporates that faith in you." up the question of th e position she offered the example of her fian­ think people can take the tradi- of the simplified Catholic service of the Church in the Western wor­ cee who had only recently started ional morality and put it in the regretted the streamlining: "Religion is based on man's en­ ld, as well as belief in God. attending church with her and now counter with the holy, and is the The statement of the "easy way "liked it." She explained how he context of today's world." Another ". . .now that our mass is so expression of that encounter in out" was immediately countered began to recognize the presence student elaborated and suggested stripped of ritural, I miss the emot­ terms of the universal and the with, "Why do you think that's of a superior being in the uni­ a change in religion: "Provincial ional reaction. . .it's beautiful to manner in which he is to respond." the easy way out? I think the verse when he was in Viet Nam. morality is not valid any longer, me because the mass is the mean­ Christian doctrine is pretty hard to This story resulted in an inter­ because it does not apply to all ing of our religion right there. It The "show stopper" of the dis­ follow." It was agreed that the esting definition by a non-church situations. It's part of relativity. has to be a group thing. . .mass cussion series was a statement by Christian doctrine that Christ ex­ goer. "I know the feeling your What is necessary now is a social embodies God for me, or helps Dr. Wettstein, assistant Dean of the emplified was difficult to approx­ fiancee had when he was on the religion, because man has evolved me to commincate with Him. It Chapel, which occurred during the 'Sun si£ imate, but that many people of mod­ fighter plane and it was really to this level." helps to give me a religious ex­ following dialogue: should iccurre ern times do take the easy way too bad he had to institutionalize perience. I can't go to aProstest- "Religion's role in the future, if Many students had ideas on the my Sur out. "Not many Christians are it because pretty soon there is go­ ant church and listen to some guy it has any role, is to make man ways that such a social religion ind dep willing to go out in the wilderness ing to be a shape around his feel­ mouth off about morals. When I see what he is, and grow up. It's could be developed, or ways in Sun left three days to experience the void ings and church is going to put go I become as part of the group, time that man realized that when which the church could reform. other d like Christ did. . .most go to their words in this feeling and it was part of the mass. It's sweeping." he set up a God, he was really "People are looking for a funct­ impossi particular church and follow the so pure before. He experienced talking about himself. This deceit, ional church that deals with pro­ "I know what you mean -- the tolf Lit defined ways of their congregat­ it himself." of saving God was not himself, blems they face." "The church idea of communion. I've gone to sample ion. . .they are TRAINED." has made him a child. Once he Along with attempting to put de­ going out into the streets is indic­ mass in South America and I know Me zorj Church attendance was discussed realizes himself, he'll come ofage finitions on feelings, the question ative of the reforms that are ne­ that a lot of what this priest and the and the obvious was stated: "You and he'll be a father and adminis­ of the ideas of heaven and hell was cessary." "I think we should have is saying is propaganda, but this iccordin can have religion without going to ter to his children." Church. Contrary to the belief of raised. Do students believe in what I call community centers. is man's limitations. If you get The oft many people in the United States, the fiery place and in the float­ Not like churches where you step around that to the simple nitty "But he can't. Once he admits fttertnin you can believe in something with­ ing golden harps? "I think it's into the realm of morality. Com­ gritty existence of the peasant that he is God, or whatever you Krcent < out going to Church." here on earth." munity centers where people can wh o holds his breath to see the call it, lie is admitting that he soon, eij That brought up the question of the go and do nothing but talk. . .about potatoes come up, you'll feel the creates his own purpose in life." *om eac "Heaven and hell was establish­ man. Where anybody can get up and link between church and society. same sense that he does in mass. "The purpose is man himself. Ms), a ed by the church that believed that say anything they want. Once people Whe n he takes the eucharist and Pendant What is the Church's responsib­ the earch was the center of the All religion is basically to make ility to the people? An excellent begin to talk they begin to see, drinks from the cup and you see living on, this earth with men. astern ] universe. Heaven was that place through dialog, how the church differentiation was posited in the this blissful look come over his "A preparation for something ,'feath wj above the sphere that held the has failed them. When you listen question, "Are we talking about the face you understand for a moment else." ^uence i stars and hell was that place be­ to a minister it's not benefiting the what it means. If you can look failure of the Church in American neath the ground. Modern tech­ "NO! Religion is to make liv­ society, or the failure of the Church total group because there's no dis­ past the limitations of people and nology has told us that this is cussion. If you talk purposefully, try to melt into their existence ing with other people as^pleasant to man's mind? . . .domostpeople not so. It's all in the mind now." go to church because it's the thing like we're talking tonight, about how then that's good." as possible for everyone." "Heaven isn't defined as a place religion has failed us, you would to do, or because they have cons­ anymore. Heaven is eternal life "Dr. Wettstein, are you saying cientiously thought about their faith realize some of the mistakes you've The Catholic Church naturally that the purpose of Christianity with Christ and hell is eternal life been making. As an individual you and decided that their religion was without Christ." received a great amount of crit­ is this life on earth NOW?" an important part of their total have misconceptions. For in­ icism, ranging from the pill to the "Oh, yes, the purpose of the­ living." stance, you (indicating another basic structure. Many seemed to ". . .if you believe in heaven student), corrected me on one thing ology is to show man howheshouK you're a damn fool. . .no one is think that a decentralized Catholic The answers to this question in­ about Christianity. I've gotten church would be much more effect­ live, how he should be." ferred more than what was actually going to give you a helping hand something out of it, butifl had gone and pull you through the clouds to ive in the modern world. Ideally, Community centers, rap sessions, stated. One girl, although she to church, I might have gained ten Rome would set up guidelines, but dicussions in a student newspajx would not admit it directly, re­ the other side of the womb." misconceptions instead of losing each country would be able to de­ office - all examples of the fran* vealed the Psychology of that por­ Perhaps this crystallized one one." cide policy, and then working down tion of the U.S. that goes to church discursive interchange of I of the main undercurrents of the to the local levels, the decisions which is the most effective way« because "it's the thing to do." "My senior year in high school discussions which hadn't been would be more relevant to the correcting misconceptions. Ce Her mother was a member of the I was doing rock services and all people of that particular area. women of the church, the children openly stated before: the tradit­ tainly these discussions J' ional church does not relate to the the ministers I met were working Birth control was an excellent part of the young people's group for the abolishment of the Church. Contemporary Belief we re enliv­ every day problems of young peo­ example of why this should be in­ ening and interesting. All the pa and father is head of the ushers. These services were really great stituted. When the discussion turn­ "We go because we like to, our ple. To illustrate this one boy -- like Quaker meetings. The re 'd icipants indicated that studentsar questioned the necessity of wear­ ed to the fallacy of the Pope's beginning to look for deeper ans» friends are members of the Church be somebody to rap back at you. encyclical on birth control, it was and maybe it's just our society, ing a coat and tie to church. "That They'd say, 'Why do you believe ers than are traditionally assw has nothing to do with the problems defended as pertinant to the maj­ ated with Christian theology, « but we all have gone to church that?' and you'd have to answer ority of Catholics. because we like to." I'm facing right now." The stud­ back. It's an exciting interaction. to seek the way toward an W' ent also agreed that there was an self discovery. The maiorW Church can't handle people in a big "After all, the Pope couldn't say, She was asked if she would have abyss between the positions on group " the group felt that the answ- willingly continued going to church morality. "Traditional morality 'Go ahead, use it, everybody use weren't to be found in the tram if she hadn't been brought up this will no longer let a person cope it.' People wanted a justification. ional Christian concept. There were those, however, who But when it comes down to per­ Lniary 21, 1969 THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR Page Nine Twinkle, Twunkle Silly Star Maggie's Mystics- By M. Curtis Perez A Look at the Zodiac 'You'll never tune in with them sonal identity of the individual con­ A Spiritualist Healer is one who, By Judy Kiersky if you don't believe," I screamed tinues. Contrary to the dis­ either through his own inherent £ en the greatest skeptic has as the door slammed in my face. believers, the Spiritualists affirm powers or through his mediumship, V sonal appearance and it forms the is able to impart vital, curative pgned a daily newspaper and This unreasonable outburst of tem­ that communication with the so- true inner nature upon which the per was the result of an authori­ called dead is a fact, scientifically force to pathologic conditions. llanced curiouslyat the predictions motivations of the sun sign are jade by the local astrologer. Hav­ tative statement by the "knowledge­ proven by the phenomena of Spirit­ Those who persist in not be­ based. The ascendant and the moon ualism. ing some background knowledge able" Editor of the Sandspur: "No lieving, should have watched the sign are the two greatest influen­ CBS special two years ago which jbout the Daily Horoscopes, often intelligent, logical college student This little understood group is ces after the Sun. of the twentieth century would be­ actually classified into three types, analyzed andexplained the phenom­ results in a less skeptical attitude, For a complete personality in­ ena of spiritualism through experi­ t is the Zodiac? How accurate lieve that #$%*!!" The argument according to the degree of ability terpretation, a natal chart may be they possess. The Spiritualist is ments with control and exper­ jre these brief predictions? Why began when I suggested that along drawn up by an astrologer. This with the issue on Contemporary one who believes, as the basis of imental groups, and came to the ire there numerous variations chart is like a photograph of his religion, in the communication conclusion that such myth was fact. mder a single sign? Before pass- Belief, the "Sandspur" should in­ the exact position of all the planets clude an article on spiritualists, between this and the spirit world A trip to Casadega can be very the entire science off as pure in the sky at the moment of birth, by means of a mediumship, and who interesting and give one an eerie laystical fantasy, a shortexplanat- who gather for three months in established by precise mathemati- Casadaga, 30 odd miles from the endeavors to mold his character feeling (which is compounded by the with facts from Linda Good- ical calculations. Any mediocre and conduct in accordance with the dripping Spanish moss and peeling I'S book, "Sun Signs," may Rollins campus, for the annual astrologer can easily do this, al­ "camp meeting." highest teachings derived from clap board houses). One word of i?rove there is some validity in though it takes an expert for an such common communion. caution--a medium can instantly listrology. The first time I went to Casa- accurate interpretation. One must dega, five years ago, I was uncon­ A Medium is one whose being detect a person who comes merely The Zodiac consists of twelve consider the different houses of the vinced that the spiritualists were is sensitive to vibrations from the to ridicule or out of curiosity. ;un signs — Aries, Taurus, Gem­ horoscope. Each house has a nothing but fakes. My first read­ spirit world and through whose in­ Whether one becomes a believer ini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, specific influence over different ing and subsequent events which strumentality intelligencies in that or not, it must be realized that jcorpio, Sagitarrius, Capricorn, areas of the life. They are math­ proved the predictions true were world are able to convey messages Spiritualism is a religion just like Aquarius, and Pisces. At the ematically computed locations in enough to convince that there was and produce the phenomena of Spi­ any other and must be respected moment of birth, the sun is located the natal chart, the first house be­ SOME basis for belief. "But ev­ ritualism. as such. •jjdthin one of these zones, design­ ing influenced by the individual's erything they tell you is so gener­ s' the individual's particular ascendant, and so on, in counter- al that it could pertain to anyone," asserts skeptical Editor. "Pardon me, the first spiritual­ ist I went to told me things which would never happen to anyone but myself, ever." Editor, refusing to yield one inch says, "But 80 percent of ev­ erything they say is false, and they're bound to get some things right, it's the law of averages." "Check your figures--it's more like 50 percent of the things are right, and even with the law of averages heavily balanced on your side I bet you couldn't tell me one one-hundredth of the things spirit­ ualists have told me through the years." StQflPlO "Well, he grudgingly concedes, "there may be some validity in spiritual vibrations." Knowing that many college stu­ Because the Sun is the most clockwise order around the circle, dents make the trip to Casadega to liwerful of all the stellar bodies, forming the horoscope. play pranks on the spiritualists, ersonality traits can be predicted or to try to cross them up, and know Realizing the possible variations, little of the tenets and theory of ith approximately eighty percent it is not hard to understand why curacy by merely knowing the their beliefs, a little research was two Leos could never be carbon deemed appropriate and the follow­ sign. The exact time of birth copies. The most important thing ing information was uncovered: " be determined if the birth to comprehend is that there are Spiritualists believe in an In­ ncurred on the first or last dayof basic underlying traits which relate finite Intelligence and that the ex­ Iay Sun period. This is "cusp," Leos to Leos, ScorpiostoScorpios, pression of this is the phenomenon 1 depending upon what time the etc. These traits will eventually of nature, both physical and spirit­ i left one sign and entered the come to the surface, no matter ual. They have constituted a true ier determines the sign. It is how much control a person at­ religion based on the correct un­ possible for a person to be tempts to superimpose. derstanding of such expression and JIf Libra and half Scorpio, for Although thev are rather super­ on living in accordance therewith. "nple. The sun was either in ficial daily indications in the news­ Death to them is merely a change, zone or the next at birth, paper cannot be entirely discount­ after which the existence and per- the personality is influenced ed. They are not arbitrary and Ijordingly. cannot be switched from sign to lie other stellar bodies which sign. They are written by compet­ '•M^rmine the remaining twenty ent professionals based on mathe­ "Comedy" Fun Out in the Dark pent of the personality are the matical calculations of the aspects TOO, eight planets, their distance formed between the natal Sun and By Nancy Wayman transformation to the Rollins stage. is always riotously funny in his the planets moving overhead. They The director and cast were fort­ never ending attempts to turn a. "" each other by degrees (as- There's a lot of fun in the dark :ts), and the ascendant. The cannot be a precise daily deline­ unate in having the playwright, Pet- bad situation to advantage. Karer ation for every person born under this, week at the Annie Russell er Shaffer, present during rehear­ Kreider in her fantastic wardrobe endant is the sign rising on the Theatre. The new play is Brit­ pern horizon when the first that sign, because the secondary sals to explain his conception of of facial expressions, is properly influences are not taken into con­ ish playwright, Peter Shaffer's, the play, and offer suggestions for confused and hysterical as the lawath was taken. This specific "Black Comedy," and it's the fun­ pence greatly modifies theper- sideration. the ART production. Director fiancee. Rick Camp gives another niest show done at Rollins in many Robert Juergens has rehearsed solid performance as the father - seasons. The show depends upon an and Chris Forrest completely sub­ original gimmick. It opens in a merges herself in her excellen udience Capp-tivated blackout, with the actors behaving characterization of a prudish spin­ as though the stage were brightly ster. lit. In the course of the play a Warner Shook shouldn't be missec' fuse blows, and the lights come as the effeminate neighbor. Hfci By Apple Pie up, revealing the actors to the aud­ speeches and movements are es­ ience for the first time. While the pecially funny and well timed. Mar­ audience can see all the action on sometimes serious discussion, cy Edwards as the mistress, pro­ Through sixteen inches of stage, the actors behave as though vides a good time with her "kink; and numerous flight delays Capp touched on a variety of top­ they were in total darkness. ics. But even though his wit per - games" and Carl Johnson as tht? imous cartoonist struggled to Next there's a complicated plot. millionaire disappears with grea I an appearance at Rollins. meated the program, a strong dose An artist and his debutante fian­ of conservative, apple pie, "Up style. Larry Mercier deserve' ?n Al Capp appeared at the cee move an absent neighbor's mention as the electrician who jus of the Field House, the long with America" theme underlined furniture into the artists' studio. his talk. happens to look like Hitler. aWMes of waiting were erased They hope to impress the girl's The set designed by Dale Am- tremendous applause of a Calling those who participated father and a wealthy, deaf, art in the Harvard incident "hoodlums" lund could be a student's flat wit) Patient, eagerly awaiting collector who are both scheduled to pop and psychdelic posters on th- referring to the legalization of pot arrive. The fuse blows, a spin­ , forming his presentation with "Yeah, and let's legalize rape, walls. The costumes are effective ster, the father, the neighbor, the KAREN KREIDER E specially noticable is Warne i sstions previously collect- murder and theft- then we won't artists' mistress, electrician, and m have any crime," and then stating the actors well in the slapstick Shook's blond wig and Karen Kre - • ™ the student body, captured the collector arrive. Many laughs iders mini dress. aa^Eence by his first remark. his foreign policy as "If anyone gags which dominate the action, er arise from the artist's frantic at­ The show runs tonight, and Sat to some coed's question, shoots an American, shoot back," tempts to keep everyone from dis­ sit on furniture which isn't there, slide down stairs, and fall urday as well as Thursday, Fridaj ; !••• you think of an 11:00 Capp lost part of his audience. covering his secrets. Clever )'a^l*^»he replied, "Well, if you But with all his objections to into traps doors. and Saturday of next week, dialogue and many sight gags keep it, but only if you are prer^ ,—_£ore fey H:00 you might as the young rebel, Capp strongly the laughs coming. The actors grope about the stage d^WVe up instead of making a backed the "thinker" in coUeges with completely believable con­ to laugh all the way into Spring w The show, a hit in London and cern. Roger Miller as the artist vacation. • ' yourself." and received a warm applause New York, loses nothing in its 1 ^gh his hour-long, comical as he finished his program. Page Ten THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR February 21. iafiQ Wood Examines Student Rights

interests, viewing the youth move­ "My advice to today's college and most effective cry against accelerate their athletic program ments which backed such candidates student is to get in, get your ed­ the establishment. in order to maintain national re­ as Robert Kennedy and Eugene ucation, and get out!" so said Once a student gets with the new cognition. He warns that the educa­ McCarthy. Also, no Republican Leonard Wood, an Orlando attor­ left element, he is eaily led as­ tional committee is considering a in the state can win more than 5% ney and Congressman to the Florida tray as to his actual rights and subsidy bill that will benefit private of the vote in Negro districts, State Legislature. priorities and just how much say colleges. He is against this pro­ where the allegiance is sometimes posal, for he foresees that this Mr. Wood's rather startling re­ he has in telling the administrat­ mistakenly-Democratic. would harm the autonomy of the mark also appeared a bit contra­ ion where to go. In fact, campus Wood feels that the constant as­ private coUege, who might other- -i dictory to his interviewers, consid­ issues become totally disoriented sociation of the Republican Party wise become suject to the dictates ering that he served as President by leftist groups concerning the with business and the Democratic of the taxpayers. Also, to streng­ of the student body at Rollins and in real academic issues that could be Party with the individual is fall­ then the private colleges position, his senior year was chosen Pre­ promoted by campus organizations. acious. Wood upholds the prin­ he proposes that state universities sident of the Student Government As an member of the Legislature's ciples of Barry Goldwater who should limit their admittance to Association in Florida. Student Committee on Higher Education, out-of state students would have involvement in campus activities Wood has become increasingly in­ was motivated towards "what's to seriously consider attending a is reflected throughout Wood's car­ volved with the unrest promoted by right for the individual." A system private Florida college whose eer at Rollins until his graduation a minority of students on this known phrase, "If you are old where the individual relies on the tuition rate would be matched by in 1959. He favors now as he did state's university campuses. He enough to die for your country..." government due to welfare is the increased rate of the out-of- then strong student associations feels that these disrupting activit­ The 18 year old vote would seem ies are unjustified, and he feels a damaging in Wood's mind. state fee for the universities. with monetary autonomy in main­ to offset the aimless meanderings responsibility to the taxpayers and On the future of the private col­ Finally, Wood hopes that allstud- taining and issuing funds raised by of the campus leftists and give to de tuition-paying parents in cases lege in Florida Wood did not sound ents will value their educational the students for student services responsible students a construct­ st where students overstep their too encouraging. He feels Rollins experience highly and use advanta­ and functions. Wood is appalled ive voice in selecting national lead­ a boundaries. Thus,. Wood's opening will be greatly harmed by Florida geously the opportunities presented at the move of university adminis­ ership. However, Mr. Wood at­ th advice to students and his plea tempted to ammend the bill his Technological University , must them. trations in the last few years to­ to them to take advantage of the af wards depriving students of their committee of 8 was preparing by idi academic doors that are opened stipulating the necessity that the elected voice in university matters. to them. tei It is the congressman's contention 18 year old voter have the equival­ Czech Mi Working also with the Voting Com­ ent of a high school diploma. This Resistance that this situation is the core of the mittee, Wood has come indirect sh recent student uprisings through­ ammendment is conceivable, for :ie contact with the issue of lowering the U.S. Supreme Court declares Lingers out the U.S. - students simply not the voting age to 18, of which he Mc having strong elected campus lead­ that voting restrictions can not be In the early days of last year it university students held a 'sit- SI is in favor. Wood is confident placed on a person of majority in" lasting for several days. This ership, which they resolve by fol­ in the enthusiasm and intellectual was the young Czechs especially sir lowing people like Mark Rudd, who age (21)-the young voters being ex- who caused the "Czechoslovakian took place at the same time as the exc maturity which many 18 year olds exempt from this ruling. What work o f the Communist Party seem to be making the loudest possess, upholding also the well- question" to burst upon the west­ eve "seems unfair, in this case, is ern press. They were the creat­ Central Committee, which was to ser ff really a protection of the rights ors, or at least the promoters, of end with acceptance of the course Mr of the 18 year old minor, who the "new trend" for that country of action laid down by Moscow. leg Blackjack's stands to gain the right to vote, of eastern Europe. On the 16th of the month the uni­ and but who would retain his legal In August it was youth, workers versities of Olomouc and Leberec per protection under the law. Bill and students together, who op­ were occupied, as well as the Agri­ stui 99 James, a representative from West posed desperate scorn to the Rus­ cultural College in Prague where acti Paradise- Palm Beach, argued that the major­ sian tanks invading the national 3,500 students are enrolled. oft ity age should be lowered to 18 territory. At the start of this There were continual meetings in Bes since, if a student col year it is from them again, the the occupied faculties, action com­ since, if a student could vote, he unyielding university students of mittees for cooperation between should be able to drink, enter into Prague, that protest is heard - universities and factories. This legal contracts and be legally re­ even if less loud - against the unrest seemed to show that the The Ugly Bahamas sponsible for his actions in society. directives laid down for the govern­ policy of liberalization begun in The bill and its ammendment was ment and the Czechoslovak party January and brusquely interrupt­ voted down by the Committee and by the Soviet occupiers. ed by the Russian tanks was still will need revision. Wood's pre­ Recent news gives some exam­ alive and kicking. diction of the Legislature's react­ ] ples. Halfway through October At a strictly university level - ion to the bill appeared quite un­ Sand teaching was resumed in the Czech­ which is all that is at present Reprinted From "THE GUARDIAN" favorable . The state' s Republicans ?rou oslovakian universities; the stud­ conceded to the combative young see the bill as a threat to their and I ents at once organized - with dis­ Czechs - students and professors to a cretion- a check of the entrances have drawn up a "list of claims" also to all the faculties to prevent cit­ in view of the proposed reform idea ther, when you discover that the glasses behing the ritzy cocktail izens from other Warsaw Pact law. Such concepts as autonomy, vide By Peter Robinson pound sterling is no longer legal bar before begrudingly serving you countries from mixing with the co-management, and participation educi tender and conversation around the a drink. At first, it's hard to students. are insisted upon. bar i As the sun sets on one of the hotel pool, where nobody swims, understand the attitude, but then In the Faculty of Law (Pravnicka In Czechoslovakia there exist How last outposts of the British Empire, runs something like: suddenly like a karate cut from Fakulta), among the 1200 students student parliaments at university, such no doubt many from Rollins will Odd Job, it hits you in the back enrolled in the five-year course, city and national levels. The most Pub • fly south in early Mrach to catch "To me, England is just another of the neck. support for Dubcek was still very politically-orientated organizat­ a glimpse of its fleeting rays as nalia Bahamian island and not one Really, the American tourist strong. ions, they were formed last May >'ould it sinks into the tepid waters of the of the most attractive," or from the split with the Union of Caribbean. Beware! There's a side wants to cry out; 'You lazy black In November, when they were t the "I call myself a refugee for bastard,' but can't because Bri­ forced to abandon a mass anti- Socialist Youth to emphasize the As CI to every island that no travel bro­ new trends toward democratizat­ chure reveals. the sun." tish paternalism allows no colour soviet demonstration, the Prague 1 WOlj bar. However, that is just the ion. But the base committees, • "Darling, your film was divine." Two beautiful people lie side »n mi: fringe of the problem and when you springing from the November oc­ I watched with amazement, tilted by side motionless and eyeless, be­ Degree was the leader of the refere talk to the millionaire owner of cupations, do not recognize this the broad brim of my sombrero ing worshipped by the sun, mummi­ mainly black Progressive Liberal about Lyford Cay,whereeverydodywho's association which is now headed forward to shade my eyes from that fied like Pharaoh's effigies in living Party. In 1965, he made news F; anybody is seen sipping a rum by obscure provincials who are December sun and waited a s a colour. A Wall Street Stockbroker when he tossed the Speaker's mace Colleg punch, you learn: cautious and reformist and who Jompe lanky blonde raced towards me a- takes me by the arm and says he out of the window of the House of have replaced the leaders of 1968 Winter cross the foyer of the Grand Lu- knows just the place for 'me and 'We make no distinction be­ Assembly as a protest against the such as Tous, Zboril, Kovanda, | the cuna Beach hotel and then she him' -- so we wind up in Charley's tween black and white Bahamians, white government's restrictions on you see we don't care what colour Jana Kohnova, who were all from to have threw her arms around the man Charley's, a packed, deafening, debate. At a press conference held ; Prague. araphi Greenwich Village-type bar. Out­ we employ.' in December, he told a group of behind. These were two come­ Tous says: "We should like to Vpical side, a fat black tout, a Buddha 'But how do you explain,' I journalists that "this is a peace­ dians playing at Christmas, but establish contact and collaboration :: h then Nassau is full of comedians made of old tyres solicits for his asked, 'to the man who has been ful, relaxed community, perhaps ave with other students and young peo- indent: and for them Christmas lasts aU girls. made to serve in the past for too peaceful for we have a lot to pie of the world. We have been ; the year. free, that he should suddenly enjoy do." A noisy fellow from 'The cup c "You want action, man?" doing his job because he gets isolated for too long. But we are :acas After more than 300 years of Manchester Guardian' tossed a "No. I'm too tired," I paid?' definitely critical of a certain ideo- ;mes> white rule, dominated by the famous reply. My Wall Street friend's question from the back of the room, D T say, old boy,' he replies, logical imperialism evinced /^ 'Bay Street Boys' who were pirates, face drops and I escape martini- "What happened to the man who 'you must be the only socialist on groups of the Student Movement in then rum-runners, land specula­ fied into the night. threw the mace?" he asked. the island, so have another rum western Europe." Last spring tors, international financiers anas The climate in Nassau is "I tried to find him the other day," punch and we'll drink to it.' In­ Prauge was invaded by scores ° well as be ing part-time politicians, bouyed up by money flowing in Pindling answered, "but he is ra­ h stantly, I remembered a line from members of the German Socialist the Bahamas is an independent na­ from all over the world. It floats ther elusive. But I think he will tion in the British Commonwealth Yeats about the Irish —"being turn up again if we need him." League, followers of Rf on money and the air is thick with Dutschke, who were all convinced PI with a black native government. the smell of it. Wall Street in 1929 freeand yet men still break stones," I sauntered back to my hotel The 700 islands and 200 islets are and it all made sense. Indeed, where the plumbing was broken, they could teach the young Cacns must have felt something like this. "how to start a revolution." "BJ the playground of ex-king^: of Everybody is buying dreams in hard this was a wild, whirling party life, the air conditioner noisjandme just we," continues Tous, "have no England, tired actresses, operation factual terms' of real estate. They but it was also inbred and gossip- a little merry, and I wondered how Pre; matchmakers from a Greek cruise even take calmly the news that their ridden not unlike an American col­ to satisfy my host, The Bahamas intention of freeing ourselvesfWJ ship, and--dare I say it -- the plots are underwater or that there lege. Its members were all propa­Tourist Board, and still file some the Stalinistic myth to fall atooj Regi same old faces who were in Aca- is no hope of telephones, sewage, gandists for the new classless, copy back home. For me, there was of the totalitarian Maoist concept. pulco in July and Mi^mi in Sept­ transport, or piped water for years. moneyed, expanding, open-air so something indefinably tragic about Thus it appears that Czech uni­ ember. Today these 'democrats' The value must increase, they say, ciety. From pontoon to black­ the postcard beauty of Prospero's versity studentsare aiming to de­ are served by the independent black it is an immutable law. jack, from Cooper's Creek to Para - Islands. mocratize the socialist society natives. dise Island, from sea lions to which they live. But the facts in wi The Black taxi driver smokes But then, I was the millionth dolphins, from snorkel to water- seem to give the lie to such aw "See Santa feed the dolphins and a cigar longer than a Chicago po­ tourist in 1968, and surely a mil­ skis, this is a crazy, mixed-up so­ bitions and the students as we T/ play with Ricky the sea lion. Free liceman's truncheon, and then waits lion tourists can't be wrong, so ciety whose values are upside down seem to be in for heavy pressor Candy" was one of the posters up impatiently for a tip, which however I began: '« N last Christmas in Bay Street. But At 38, Prime Minister, Lyn- "to normalize the situation also Pi large, is inadequate. The Black 'As the sun sets on the last outpost the Americanization goes e«nfur­ waiter spends more time polishing den Pindling (son of a Jamaican the Czech universities." policeman) with a London Law of the British Empire....' bruary 21, 1969 THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR Page Eleven ols To visit wind song Would You Believe, Symposium?

3n January 13, the House passed of the meeting, the opportunity of Resolution which directed that a viewing the beauty of Wind Song is arises. A man alone cannot effect­ ability to share viewpoints and en­ counter fresh personalities, organ­ Bquest be sent to the President in itself enough of a magnet to draw The Classroom often often inhibits ively teach by pure example or in­ [ the College, Mr. McKean, many more students than the home freely associating thought or dependent writing alone. Know­ izations of experience. siting him to attend a meeting of could hold. The invitation, for that extended creative pursuit of sub­ ledge cannot be practical on a I have been attending some dis­ ie House at his earliest conveni­ reason, is not open to any and all ject matter because of its limitat­ widely applicable basis until many cussion-parties, symposiums if ng. The intent of the bill was students who wish to attend, but only ions of time and the general lack people can participate in joint tech­ you will, under the hospitality of a )gather first hand information on to the members of the House and of relaxed familiarity and com­ nical exercises utilizing a jointly Dr. Hammerick, who is a Ph.D. ie present and long-range pro- Council and those additional mem­ munication between students. This held language of thought and as­ in psychology teaching at Florida lems of the college and to seek bers who would be needed to con­ problem has been solved histor­ sumptions and formulas. To the Technological University. There dvice concerning the areas in duct normal business at the next ically in several ways. Perhaps despair of many stuoentsand pro­ were other faculty present also, ,hich the Student Government could meeting. the first and most necessary was fessors, the class room concept some from sociology, and some oncertrate in order to most bene- that of withdrawal and isolation for has come into widespread use from other departments. In a re­ Earlier in the year, President through the centuries, always in­ laxed atmosphere and with time to it the students and the institution McKean, in a private conversation, contemplation, observation, and in­ (self. Unfortunately, the President trospection. Many ancient relig­ creasing in scope and scale. Ever follow and expand upon lines of stated that he would like to work since Alfred the Great, during thought, the amount of cogent fact ,as committed to appointments closely with some members of the ions, significantly including Bud­ ihich required that he leave the dhism, which hasbeenressurected the Middle Ages, ordered to school and theory which could be brought Student Government. This is not "all those children who are not bet­ to bear on any number of subjects ollege and, up to this time, the to say that the students would func­ in intellectual thought to a high louse and the President have not point in this century, emphasized ter fit for any other occupation," was fascinating. At one meeting, tion as a group of listeners or im- the process of educational orient­ a police officer was present to sen able to get together. plementors of tne views of Mr Mc­ the growth of wisdom which could Taking advantage of the Presi­ occur in autonomous consideration ation has been continuing on a. per­ speak on the relations of the police Kean. According, to McKean, quite haps more inclusive, but try as with the community.. His presence dent's weekly confrontation with the a diffe rent relationship would exist; of oneself and the surrounding en­ students at his Wednesday morning vironment of the earth and heav­ we may, a limited and at times and willingless to allow himself he feels that the students have fresh dreary course. The great chall­ to engage in discussion brought coffee, Roy Caffery, who presented and significant thought to contribute ens. Knowledge in the sciences the Resolution to the House, and Philosophy attained great enge of the classroom is to make about a night of inquiry which rang­ to the flow of information which he the class entertaining enough to ed from the demonstrations at the approached Mr. McKean with the already receives from his ad­ heights through the use of this idea. Forever to the credit of gen­ method, some of the first the or- keep the students awake, and, per­ Chicago Democratic Convention to visors. This is a remarkable ex­ haps, to cause them to read the the philosophical relationship of teel Southern hospitality, President ample of a near-perfect opportuni­ ization and systematized thought McKean invited the entire member­ must have come in such a way. assigned material. government to laws and the people ty which exists in few universities who make and live by them. At ship of the House to conduct their or even small, close-knit colleges. Eariy Greek philosophers, whose A symposium situation is one next meeting at Wind Song, Mr. thoughts are stimulating even in which combines the advantages of every gathering, we -have all been This confrontation could mark the at ease, while retaining social de­ McKean's residence. beginning of a new era of imme­ the present, developed their learn­ all of the above mentioned appro­ Student Council members who de­ ing through keen personal obser­ aches. First of all, a symposium corum, buttherewas anelectric diate communicaiton at Rollins: a vibrancy which filled the rooms in sire to attend this meeting will be hot-line to the "power structure". vation and contemplation. A se­ is an informal discussion which exceedingly welcome. They might cond method is personified in the ranges into various subjects upon which 'we were sitting on the floor even consider it a duty to be pre­ It would be logically evident very ancient Sumerian civilization which a group might touch, a kind and in 'chairs, or standing, always sent at this historic discussion with that students such as we are and the course of European and of free-association in group dy­ listening, learning and contribut­ Mr. McKean because, since the col- should begin thinking of possible American methods of obtaining and namics. Historically, a symposium ing. has the student representation solutions, overall or partial, to using knowledge. For these so­ has also meant the partaking Our college is in need of just such participation ticket, it is im­ school problems. The expansion cieties, knowledge has always had in weak or strong intoxicating opportunities for symposium type perative that the members of the of the channels of communicaitor. a more practical orientation. In drink, but that is not at all gatherings, not just drinking bouts, tudent government understand the within the college provides the op­ general, learning has notbeenpur- essential. Consisting of students and not just frivolous,' wasted ictual problems and potentialities portunity for such vital thought sued as an end in itself, but rather of various rank and interests, and evenings. We have many faculty hf the college. to be implemented through legis­ as a method of measuring land, teachers, scholars, the sympos­ and students who would intensely Besides the serious importance lation and become a functional part the volume of corn grain which ium has as its goal and purpose enjoy this type of relaxing, yet of campus life. could be held in a certain cylin­ tne exchange, debate, and pursuit thoroughly stimulating con­ gregation. A conglomeration of der, the work which could be done of thought, whether purely acad­ : by a piston exploding from a cy­ emic or strictly topical and cur­ Rollins and FTU professors and COFFEEHOUSE vs PUB: linder, or the optimum thickness rent. In this way, an entire even­ students would be doubly exciting, of a' miniature electronic circuit ing can be spent in communicating for then it would be drawing upon wafer. thought and in being continually two reservoirs to thought. Many "Mixing The Unmixables" After thought has been developed stimulated by the ideas and re­ of the FTU professors have indicat­ By George Draper and the will to apply it to pract> sponses of the others who are in ed to me. at sorne of Dr. Ham_- be enjoyed. The College Pub was ical situations and the betterment the group. Such conversation merick's parties that they can In a recent editorial by the not meant to offer an atmosphere jointly taste their desire to meet iandspur (February 7, 1969),two of others has come to be a common stimulates introspective thought, which would cater to the "rowdy expression, the problem of com­ alerts the mind to keener percep­ and discourse with Rollins students roups on campus, the Coffeehouse drunks of Rollins". Then we would and Faculty. I the College Pub, were referred munication and further systematiz- tion, and motivates students to as "unmixables". There were be competing with the local bars. ation of the fields of knowledge study. One statement or train of It is past-time that we lifted as ilso such statements as "The whole By walking across the library lawn thought might cause a person to many educators and students as flea of the Coffeehouse is to pro- or into the Union I have been able read a book recommended or pur­ possible from the educ. tional mass an atmosphere for informal to detect "rumors" floating around pie who drink coffee and people pose found to further research an of student and faculty, and admin­ ducation by communication: no campus. (Woe the day that a rumor who would drink beer can tolerate idea or method of approach. Only istration, underworld subcultures ar can make that statement. ... sha'n't be started at Rollins). It each other in the proper atmo­ one book is a significant achieve­ which lead away from the develop­ jlow do you tastefully decorate seems that everyone knows every­ sphere. (Let it be known that on ment, just as long as persons are mental, personal and mental grow­ diverse atmospheres? The thing about the feud between the occasion the writer of this article being encouraged to analyze or th goals of higher education ?ub would suggest the parapher­ Coffeehouse and the College Pub, has had the experience of drink­ express thought, a great deal has Let us think, Let us speak. Let nal to a bar. The Coffeehouse ana that once the two are together ing both beer and coffee at the been accomplished. Sections may, us think upon learning and its uld lean toward the utilization beneath the Beanery that the Col­ same time. One was brought about and should, appear in the group. personal and mutual benefits the talents of our art students." lege Pub is going to push the Cof­ because of the other. I am not They may discuss a certain subject over again. Chairman of the College Pub, feehouse aside and become another suggesting this to be the purpose of common interest for a few would like to end all rumors Harpers. (Wait a minute! This of the Coffeehouse. The Dobbs minutes or hours, or they might tnis groHp-infested campus with doesn't seem logical! The minor­ House and the Pancake House han­ continue to work and exchange tference as to what is being done ity taking over the Establishment! dle this sufficiently.) readings and other information for months. As long as the part­ "mixing the unmixables". Point of Order: The College Pub Jane Tipping, the Chairman of LUGGAGE CENTER is not a guise for the New Left.) icipating number is recurrently [ First of all, the idea of the the Coffeehouse, and I have been 704 P*rW Avenue. N allege Pub was not meant to If this fear is still present working together and we believe refreshed, each individual is giv­ en cause for reflection, intros­ Winter P«rW "npete with the local bars of may I suggest a solution.Either we have worked out a solution. iter Park or Orlando, nor was The only thing still needed is more pection, academic interest and re­ the Coffeehouse or the College Pub search material, as well as the the idea of the College Pub must go. Right! How about this. money and approval by the Board [have the atmosphere filled with of Trustees. It is my opinion that ir Have a Coffeehouse with an aca­ aphernalia associated with a demic atmosphere which serves these two should be brought closer ical bar. The main reasonwas coffee and beer. As a member of together. There are enough factions have a place on campus where the so-called minority (those of us on this campus already. Let's at I*nts could go either to have 21 and over) I can guarantee that least try to overcome the communi­ up of coffee or a glass of beer such an atmosphere will not at­ cations gap, not only between stu­ i casual atmosphere where at all tract the "rowdies", yet I think dents and faculty, but between stu­ % local entertainment could you'll be surprised how easily peo- dents and students.

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Let me tell you. been turned over to two old NSA good use of money given to them First, ask this question: Can sity structure into a warmly human staffers, Phil Werdell and Al Re­ States is experiencing its first and socially responsible com­ major constitutional change since as benefactions. Meanwhile students control their own affairs, cord. NSA could never be accus­ streams of students applying for influence curricular decisions, and munity. At its root the unrest ed of doing things the easy way" Harvard University was founded in on our exploding campuses is a 1636. By disorderly methpds the college admission swell the campus participate in policy formations Picking on NSA is like critic population. And parents place basic to university life? The stud­ groping of the student to resolve izing your wife. To do it in structure of authority on the un­ the alienation of man in this mass iversity campuses of America is the highest value on having their ents want "in." Second, students public is to expose yourself to rid­ being challenged. Power is being children go on to college. Well, want to play a part in shaping the society into which bigness has so icule. People connected with this restructured. On two out of five four years have gone by since the curriculum. This includes grad­ suddenly catapulted us all. The newsletter were once associated < college and university campuses University of California in Berkley ing policies, teacher-student relat­ whole process on the campus is with the organization and there­ during the last year demonstrations experienced the transfer of the ionships, the state of discipline, disorderly - yes - but understand­ fore feel a certain loyalty Read­ disrupted academic studies. And principle of civil disobedience from freshmen orientation, and fresh­ able if we recognize the direction ers of this newsletterare develop­ the Columbias and the University the Southern lunch counters to the men year programs. The student in which student power is moving. ing programs similar to NSA and of Californias and the San Fran­ university campus. This winter as a consumer wants to have some­ The Center for Educational reform have a vested interest in seeing cisco States of this nation do not the United States Student Associa­ thing to say about the product of the United States National Stud­ the CER do well — including com­ settle back to be like they were tion has deliberately joined the which he consumes. Third, the ent Association makes the current petitors and enemies. ranks of activist students con­ students want to establish a sense illogical processes clear by a quot­ before. They have changed. They Why CER floundered for the past are different. cerned with the relationship of the of community in a relationship ation from Gandhi in a commun­ campus to the world at large. between our mass society and our ication addressed to "Brothers and five months can be attributed to What is happening in the colleges The Students for Democratic So­ mass multi-universities. Student Sisters," a phrase used by old- several factors, not the least of and universities of America? Who ciety were already leading battles power, as a battle cry, demands which was a kind of success; CER fashioned Methodists in the early received more than 10 times the causes the disturbances? Who in­ on this terrain. The weekly news that students be accepted in an church. Gandhi said: "My aid cites the riots? Who participates bulletin issued by the National entirely new relationship with ad­ amount of mail phone calls, ap­ is not to be consistent with my plications, proposals for campus in the disorders? And why? As Student Association to college body ministrators and faculty and be previous statement on a given of this January of 1969 some presidents reads like a police doc­ given a place as "people" in the projects, pleas for money than it question, but to be consistent with could possibly handle. The Wash­ 6,700,000 students are enrolled ket as it reports disorders on cam­ decision-making and committee- the truth as it may present itself in America's institutions of high­ pus after campus. As a matter functioning operations of the cam­ ington office, whose normal lack of to me at a given moment." These efficiency is something to behold, er education. These students are of fact, the list has become too pus. One of the innovations of the words of Gandhi, says the news taught by half a million profess­ long to print even in summary. student power movement is "The quickly ground down to a halt, caus­ letter, are "strong ones," as stud­ ing a great deal of disappointment ors. Within the student bodies On November 1 the National Stud­ Growing Book." "The Growing ent power works toward student- something like 2 per cent of the ent Association began the publica­ Book" has its own mechanics. and antagonism toward CER at the centered educational reform. The campus level. men and women are activists. Their tion of a monthly "College Law Ideas are circulated as memoran­ university, let me say in con­ leadership draws sympathy from Bulletin." This publication deals dums among students and faculty Other reasons for getting off to a clusion, is a mirror of what is bad start are typical consequences perhaps another 10 per cent more. with the growing body of "new" members with ideas. Idea collides happening in our mass society of That involves at best 15 per cent law related to the legal rights of with idea. Out of the process "The of assigning administrative tasks affluence and concern for equal­ to people whose interests are main­ of students. But reverse the fig­ students. Student law is becoming Growing Book" emerges. "The ity. The campus is reacting to ure. We can perhaps better say one of the livliest areas of law Growing Book" is really some­ ly program planning, fie Id work and that 85 per cent of the students being tested in the courts. Some thing new. social forces which are new" in activism. No one knew how to in America want to avoid disorder of the legal questions are these: history. The unrest, however re­ take care of the nitty gritty. which the Congress of the United Who are members of the university Now let me give you one example presents a new political aware­ Bob Powell reported that the in­ States directs to the ivied halls of community? How and for what rea­ of the kind of litigation being test­ ness. It utilizes new tools in: itial difficulties in getting CER the hallowed spots which we have son can members be excluded from ed in the courts Take the case of dealing with what it calls "the under way have been straighten­ heretofore belie vedwe re dedicated the university community? The "Dickey V. Alabama State Board establishment." The revolt in the ed out. He seems to have real­ to the things of the mind. Why, courts are struggling with a theory of Education." Dickey was the universities confronts us all with ized what many NSA people have we ask? Why? That's the quest­ t° guide them. Is the relation­ editorial page editor of a student issues which go to the very core known for years but never acted ion we ask and propose to answer. ship of the student to university newspaper a Troy State University of our contemporary existence. upon, namely that NSA's campus Yes, the language of Congress defined by contract? Does the un­ in Alabama. As a student editor Everyone at the last NSA Summer constituency in general is unreli­ strikes a sour note on the affairs iversity legally stand in the place he was subject to a college rule Congress in Manhattan, Kansas, able, lacking in depth of interest of the ivied halls, the headquart­ of a parent "in loco parentis" that "there could be no editorials was too busy either reacting or and unable to carry off a sustain­ ers of America's knowledge indust­ as the phrase goes. Or is the written in the college newspaper trying not to react to Senator Mc­ ed program such as educational re­ ry. Legal works' like "use of theory of relationships an exten­ which were critical of the gover­ Carthy's copout on a speaking en­ form. Before programs can be force," "disruption." "seizure sion of the law of trusts, the fid­ nor of the State of Alabama or of gagement there just prior to the fostered at the campus level a of property," willful disobedience uciary theory as the new phrase the Alabama Legislature." The Democratic Convention in Chica­ structure must be built around well to lawful regulations," and "dis­ goes? What of the application rule did not prohibit comments of go. Electoral politics became trained campus leaders. This ruption," are serious ones in the of the first and fourteenth amend­ a laudatory nature. Dickey propos­ a dead issue, the Children's Cru­ responsibility has been delegated to vocabulary of criminal justice. The ments to campus relationships? ed to write an editorial commenting sade was lost at sea before reach­ Werdell and Record. Werdell will Congressional definition of new What of the rights to privacy? on the narrow view which various ing the Holy Land, tension choked develop a body of literature on ed­ legal campus crimes reflects the What of the procedural liberalism? state legislators entertained about the air, two kids freaked out, ucational reform by taking charge trend of our times. The events What of due process, the right to academic freedom. The faculty and delegates were turning to the of publications. Record will estab­ on campuses, moreover, are fair trial? What of equal rights advisor at Troy State invoked the grasses growing freely around lish training schools where pro­ shaking the confidence of the public. for all disadvantaged groups? What rule and ordered the student editor Kansas State University. mising students can sharpen their Individual and organizational poc- is the significance of the new black to substitute in lieu thereof an art­ The memory of last August is skills not only in the curriculum ketbooks are tightening up their theology which holds that Christ­ icle on "Raising Dogs in North rather bizarre. One person who of educational reform but also in giving to colleges and universities. ianity is a black religion and that Carolina." Dickey refused. He saved the scene from disintegrat­ leadership, organizing other stud­ Even institutions like Emory Un­ whites are interlopers who falsely proceeded to print a blank column ion was Mike Vozick, a nonstop ents and the tactics of dealing ef­ iversity - one which has exper­ have colored it white? What of with his old headline crossed out walker and talker, who pinned fectively with faculty and admin­ ienced no marches in the last four war - and especially the war in with the word "CENSORED." The people to the wall, the floor, istrators. years - feels the pinch of public Vietnam? What does student un­ college expelled Dickey. Dickey and in some cases in midair by Powell said that he will shortly and private anxiety. Donors are rest on our exploding campuses then obtained a federal court order the thrust of his lively finger. be issuing announcements of CER holding back. They are waiting to mean? What does student power reinstating him. He had $315,000 from the Ford training schools planned "thisH see whether the colleges and un- The institution appealed the case Foundation to establish in Wash­ coming summer plus a lew pro­ to the 5th Circuit, United States ington the "Center For Education­ grams in strategic areas where Court o f Appeals. This is the al Reform." He was talking about student-administration conflicts "kind of litigation in our courts. issues around which to unify stud­ are at the point of violence. Student power on our exploding ents, programs to sustain a move­ We referred earlier to loyalties. campuses is forcing constitutional ment, and plans for regional co­ For those who are interested,here academic change. It is forcing ordination. are mine (DG): Last year and the Your faculty a "new law." Most of all, it Just how much Vozick harnessed year before I put together two vol­ is bringing about a psychic shift the frustrated energies of NSA umes of "Student Travel in Amer­ by which the people and mech­ delegates remains to be seen. ica," an informal guidebook, on a anics of the university are being Right now he's on a combination freelance commission for NSA. advisor asks you looked at through different emot­ leave-of-absence and inspection As for Larry Handel; he is a ional glasses in terms of educat­ tour in California, while the lead­ former NSA Services Director. ional innovation. The cardinal ad­ ership of the Center for Educational Contrary to opinions at NSA and jective is "change." The object­ Reform has passed temporarily a few other student groups, SON is for advice? ive is to change the legally ori­ into the hands of NSA chief Bob not out to plant the knife in any­ Powell; other responsibilities have one. What you don't know does hurt you. Our concern for the progress BILL BAER of CER to date is based on our 1 belief that it represents potent­ "MR. COLOR TV" ially the most significant program CENTRAL FLORIDA'S LARGEST for responsible student activism to SELECTION OP TAPES & RECORDS emerge from the student commun­ ity. As such, NSA has an obli­ gation to maintain communicatio with other student organizations, George Washington which means overcoming its auto­ Think it over, over coffee. matic suspicion of the outside wor Rec and taking a chance on having ie TheThink Drink. actions judged in public. Otherwise ~/?.# °rdBASH the organization leaves itself wi f* HI-FI AND STEREO LP's open to a repetition of ordeals sin g£^m a/9 JW T°P ARTISTS " ALL LABELS' ilar to the troubles with the CIA- 0VER 10 00( no lessons learned. . , *jd42rO » >SELECTIONS Our hope for the future II $5,98 K9 $3 98 For your own Think Drink Muf. send 75C »nd your name and address to: OF WINTER PARK * - Student organizations will realize Think Dr.nk Mug. Oept. N. P.O. Box 559. New York. N.V. 10046. The International Coffee Organ.zation. WINTER PARK MALL C Al C <1 07 that they can help each otherJJ MLK sharing experiences in dealings WINTER PARK. FLORIDA ^ ^••^X their problems. .bruary 21, 1969 THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR Page Thirteen

And They (We?) All LOSt Computers Destroyed $1,000,000 Worth

But whatever the verdict of the MONTREAL, Quebec (CUP-CPS) ing committee and to set another visible for three city blocks. Thick years. „A two-week-old occupation at Sir At least 20 of the 79 arrested disputed committee was, it would one in its place that would be black smoke filled the corridors never be accepted by students; a 3eorge Williams University ended agreeable to both parties. But and at least five policemen and were women. The group is almost violently Tuesday (Feb. 11) after equally mixed, black and white. new one, which the administration this plan, which would have ended firemen were overcome with smoke was willing to form but which was police arrested 79 students -- the occupation, was rejected early and rushed to the hospital. The damage: at least $1 million black and whites--in the school's worth of computers. The centre thwarted by the faculty, will now Tuesday morning by the faculty, The students, ringed by fire, stay­ never convene. computer centre. who favored a more militant stand ed in a back room near an open itself won't be functional again un­ til next October. It was vital Anderson, who wanted to resume The arrests and final clearance toward the occupation. window. Out in the corridors, his teaching this month, was tem­ of the centre took over 10 hours Shortly after the faculty's decis­ newsmen and other students fled to the university's apparatus: all paychecks, class lists, schedules porarily suspended (for his own and, before the process ended, the ion was announced, the students the area to get away from the safety) by University Principal (eq­ occupiers had smashed over a seized the Hall Building (which smoke, unendurable even two floors and examinations went through the computer. The university rented uivalent of President or Chan­ million dollars' worth of comput­ houses the computer centre on its away. Dozens retched in nausea. cellor) Douglas Clarke, who said he ers, set fire to the ninth floor ninth floor) and barricaded all en­ The fire began to move in on the the huge bank of machines for $1,000 an hour, and contracted an feared Anderson might be killed of the school's Hall Building and trances, exits and escalators. The students. The riot squad managed by students if he went back to the (destroyed a complete set of the police were called immediately to put out the fire and get the stud­ enormous amount of industrial computer work for it. classroom. school's academic records. and fought an hour's pitched battle ents out before they were alleither And, since the exams in quest­ The occupation began two weeks against fire hoses and barricades. burned or overcome by smoke. In addition, the whole ninth floor of the building is gutted. Walls ion were essay-type, a number of igo after students, primarily black, They finally drove the students The police seized 79 and kept professors at Sir George, fearing |?ave up on a hearing committee back to the computer centre, and them lined up against a wall for are down, floorboards torn up, windows smashed. Water damage similar charges against them­ livestigating charges of racism when Montreal's riot squad moved two hours as they put out fires selves, say-they will give only IBM- aid against a biology professor by in for the kill, the occupiers set and awaited instructions. has wrecked at least five other floors. Valuable research pro­ graded ''objective" tests in the |six blacks some months ago. fire to the barricades and took Only a few of the occupiers manag­ future. The faculty hearing committee axes to the computers (of which jects were destroyed, some acad­ ed to evade arrest. (The number emic records and exam marks It's a story of frustration, weak­ nitially had the student's approval, they had taken excellent care dur­ of students in the building at the ness, rigidity and absurdity. An ing the two-week occupation). are forever lost. Animals in mt after two members resigned, time of the bust was only 150; Psychology experiments o n the administration roundly scorned by lie administration appointed re­ They tossed IBM cards, print­ the ranks were down from the 11th floor all died. students for mishandling the affair placements without consulting the outs, papers, research documents usual 400 because the students Total damage is estimated at $8 finally came to grips with the sit­ Istudents. The committee, which --anything they could find--out the thought, victory was close and million. uation--and lost out to the faculty. Lid its hearings the week of Feb­ 'windows. These were followed by were planning to celebrate Tues­ The university will be shut down The faculty, never militant and at ruary 2, was considered illegit­ typewriters, portable computers day.) at least until Monday and may take no time leaders in the dispute, rais­ imate by the black students. adding machines. Nine floors down, The university will press charges months to get back to normal op­ ed its hackles at the worst possible 1 They took over the computer cen- the city streets, now cordoned off against all the 79. One official eration. time. The students, who had taken jlre and five days later were backed by police for three blocks, were said, "We'll hit them with every And the charges against Biology such delicate care of the computers |ip by another 200 whites who seized thick with paper. Bystanders, at possible criminal charge." Professor Perry Anderson may for two weeks, finally destroyed school's faculty club. least 1,000 strong and mostly on The students have been charged never be properly handled. He had them and lost any chance of leg­ J Over the weekend, it appeared the students' side, waded through with conspiracy, arson and public been accused by black students of itimacy. lis if agreement might be reached reams of it. mischief. Arson alone carries "racism," based on his grading of And everybody loses - in a dispute lit the dispute. The administrat- Flames shot out 15 feet and the a maximum sentence of life im­ their examination papers. over the composition of a agreed to repudiate the hear- police drew back. The blaze was prisonment, a minimum of seven Before the disputed hearing com­ committee. mittee, in a session recorded on closed-circuit television, Ander­ son said he had "searched his conscience" and was sure the race of his students did not enter into his grading procedure. A com­ mittee of other biology instructors examined the tests in question and said they agreed with Anderson's evaluation of them. According to student observers FLOWER SHOP not directly connected with the Picture Pretty dispute, Anderson is an "old-line Petal Perfect Marxist" in politics, and inoffen­ .31 Park Av«. H. sive to most students.

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The week's soccer action was four minutes gone in the third per­ The Physical Education Depart­ kicked off last Thursday with a iod, a fine cross from right wing ment has announced that water match between the once beaten Terry Leech allowed Jim Mohan's skiing will be offered in Spring Delta Chi and a persistent Sig Ep score to break the deadlock in favor Term. The new instructor is Jud eleven. Strong defense was the of the TKE's. A stubborn defense- Curtis, former assistant instruct­ game's keynote as the Sig Eps one which hasn't given up a goal or and captain of the team. The pulled out a 2-1 victory. A goal this year -- by the TKE's held on program is open to all students, by Bob Khouri with 7:20 in the the win and undisputed league lead­ but the number is limited so stu­ first quarter started the action for ership. dents are advised to sign up by the Sig Eps . Carlos Lanzeni Action continued on Tuesday Monday for the classes. Instruct­ got the assist on the play. No as the Sigma Nus completely dom­ ion will range from beginners to team could score again until the inated the Club in their 4-0 win. coaching of this year's team, and fourth quarter when Chris Taylor's The Snakes revealed a well round­ the development of a water ski marker assisted by Fred Tone ed scoring punch, making a goal show. With the completion of the knotted the score with five minutes in first period by Bob Abbey new jump, plans are for Rollins remaining. Just two minutes later, and three goals in the third period to hold its first ski meet on Lake Lanzeni place d a beautiful shot :by John Ross, Lee Coogan, and Virginia. The cost is $45.00 for from the right wing position into Neil McFadden. Ross and Laidet the term with each class skiing the upper left goal for the win­ got assists on the goals by Abbey twice a week. ning margin. and Coogan respectively. On Friday the KA's picked up This week's final game featured their fourth win by a forfeit the Indies and KA's on Wednesday. from the Phi Delt's. On Monday The Indies dominated the game the action resumed with the most but were unable to force across a important game of the season be­ goal against the KA defense. Spe­ Sigma Nu's Retain Lead tween the TKE's and the Lambda cial credit goes to KA goalie Chis -- both teams being unde­ Leo Malboef for an excellent job "Hey, Fittante, catch! You've got feated this season. Both teams which allowed the KA's to preserve In Intramural Bowling an open field- their whole D— a 0-0 tie. team's on me!"' fought hard for in the first half but were unable to score. With Monday's bowling action this week In other action, the Delts weren't Rollins' Golfers turned out to be somewhat antic- up to par either as they dropped limactic after the good bowling of 5 points to the Indies-this being the previous week. Only one bowl- first team victory. Sam Ferree Women's Softball er, Tris Colket, of the Lambda was high for the Indies with a Go Scotch Chi's, could break 500 with a 505 486 set. Another first took place set. The big events were the as Mike Corbett's 476 set led the Last Monday, February 17, the victories-both by 4-1 margins-of KA's to their first win, a 4-1 women's golf team and the men's the Lambda's and the Sigma Nu's victory over the X-Club. In the golf team paired for a Scotch over the Phi Delts and TKE's final match, the Sig Eps downed Foursome tournament. In this type respectively. .These wins vaulted a rough Faculty Grad trio led by of tournament both the boy and the the two teams into a first place Jim Hardee. girl hit a tee shot on each hold, tie, just two points ahead of pre­ Next week starts the major league and then choose the best and al­ vious leader, Sig Ep. The Lamb­ action as the Lambda's and Snakes ternate hitting one ball until com­ meet head on in the battle for pletion of the hole. da's Phi Delts fought a tight match throughout the entire series. Mark first place. The Sig Eps roll the The team of Mike Brelsford and McGuire nearly matched Colket's TKE's and are looking forward to Meezie Pritchett won the tourna­ series with a 496 of his own, their final two matches with the ment with a five over par 77. but again it was a well rounded two leaders after spring break. Tied for second were the teams effort that the Lambda's to take the of Taylor Metcalfe and Connie BOWLING victory. Hirschman, and Tom Caricchi and SN 22 Lynn Mercer at sever over par Marty Mathews wasn't up to his LCA 2? 79. The scores for the size usual 500 plus series but strong SFE 20 pairs were as follows: support by teammates Rix and DX 12 Mike Brelsford and Meezie Prit­ Montgomery brought the Snakes X-CLUB 11.5 chett: 38-39:77 their victory. Rix was high man INDIES 11.5 Tom Caricchi and Lynn Mercer: for the Snakes with a 483 set. TKE 8 38-41:79 Schwoebel's 479 was the best TKE KA 7 Taylor Metcalfe and Connie Hir­ score in their losing effort. PDT 6 schman: 38-41:79 Brad Butner and Doll Story: 42-38- 80 Fred Schick and Jane Fitz-gerald- 39-42:81 Snakes Add Two John Latimer and Preston Aleseius: 39-45:84 Roundball Victories

An abbreviated Intramural er Phi Delts found the second half basketball schedule limited action even tougher as the hot handed to just three games this pastweek. Snake five scored 29 points in The Sigma Nu's notched two of the the half to notch the victory. Jim victories, downing the X-Club and Rudy with 12 and Craig Johnson the Phi Delts, as the Sig Eps edged with 10 points sparked the Sigma the latter in the other contest. Nu attack. The Phi Delts were Against the Club, the Snakes laun­ lead in scoring by John Gorman and ched a balanced offensive attack Jim Ryan with 7 points each. in a 62-38 romp. Mick Buxbaum, In a tense low-scoring overtime Stan Gale, and Craig Johnson not­ battle the Sig Eps edged out the ched 16 points each. The first half Phi Delts, 38-36, for their second of the game saw a close contest season victory. Regulation play Beauties with the Snakes holding only a mid­ ended with the score knotted at 32 way lead of 6 points. The third all. In the overtime period, Bob quarter was a different story as Taylor scored twice and Mike Seago the Snakes amassed 21 points to once while Greg VanGuntenscored take a firm lead. The Club was four marker for the Phi Delts. able to make only 6 markers in Bob Taylor, one of the league s For All Your Party Needs! the final quarter and wee unable better scorers turned in a 20 poin to get back into contention. Harry effort and was aided by John Fel­ Johnson led the Clubbers with 12 ler's 10 points. Greg Van Gunten Fraternity and Sororities CUSTOM MADE points while Buzz Friend added 9 accounted for 14 of the losers HANDBAGS points to the losing effort. points. . Try Our Delicatessen In their second win, the Sigma Next week's action ends seasoi NEEDLEPOINT, CREWEL Nu's outdistanced the Phi Delts, play, the fanal game matching th FLORAL; 48-30. Ice cold in the first quar­ X-Club and the Lambda Chi's and Bakery ter with only 5 points, the Snakes Wednesday following the league- JEWELED OR pulled away in the second period leading TKE's final game with th to a 19-11 midway lead. The weak­ FAIRWAY MARKETS NOVELTY. Club that Tuesday night. 170 W. FAIRBANKS Buy the Kits and we'll assist you — Thanks for your business . . KEGS AVAILABLE — LOW PRICE BALDWIN HARDWARE COMPANY II ACROSS FROM COLONY THEATRE 106 EAST CANTON AVENUE : bruary 21, 1969 e THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR Page Fifteen Crew Opens Against Alabama

The crew has been working six All of the names of oarsmen are Doug Pendrey, and Bob Fitzpat- days a week on Lake Maitland in then shuffled before every other rick. preparation for their first race a- practice. Oarsmen are picked gainst University of Alabama on at random to row against each other March 6. in four-oared shells. A point Coach Jim Lyden has had to handle system is used to keep tract of which double duty because of Frosh coach oarsmen are in the winning boats Bill Blackburn's trip abroad with the most. The eight oarsmen who the Crummer School. Varsity cox­ have won the most races will be swain, Don Robins , has been help­ picked for the varsity. ing coach Lyden immensely with The advantages of this system are this task. This year, as has not to increase the sense of competit­ always been the case, quite a few ion and winning in the individual of the freshmen rowed in high oarsmen and, by keeping the oars­ school. The coaches hope that a men working hard every day for a good enough frosh boat will be seat in the Varsity boat, get them developed so that the Tars could in the best possible physical con­ enter a Frosh eight in the Dad Vail dition. Regatta to be held in Philadelph­ Added to the craining program ia on May 11 and 12. The fresh­ this year is a work-out in the new men that are currently working field house every afternoon. The hard toward the Dad Vail are: men going through this strenuous Ted Bretschger, John Reiman, Bob training period for seats in the Selton, Neil Campbell, Ed Stiles, Varsity J.V. boats are: Co-Captain Mark Gralvin, Bert Martin, Diego David Nix, Co-Captain George Kuta, De la Guardia, Bill Bandle, Bill Ta­ Sandy Duncan, Robin Roberts, John bor, Frank Triconi, Richard Tremaine, Tony Tremaine, Clyde Stanley, John Gastings, Mark Fritz, John Jenks, Tom Cutler, Lewis, and coxswains Diego And- Jim Murphy, Steve Richards, Steve rade and Mack Arnold. Bacon, John Hanson, Wally Gam- For selecting the Junior Varsity, ber, Jeff Bestic, Fred Margeson, and varsity boats coach Lyden is using a methods developed by Un­ iversity of Pennslyvania's Coach, Joe Burk, last year. LOSING AK EXTENDED The Tars extended their los­ Cliff Livingston and Jim Murphy 80-63. ing stint to six games this past each notched 10. Stetson's six-foot, seven-inch reek, dropping contests to Mer- Florida Southern, who rinded senior, Chris Ralston hit his first ter, , and the Tars their first loss of the nine shots from the floor en route irch - rival Stetson University, season on December 11, 80-70, pro­ to a 26-point shelling, establish­ "hough the Tars had lost earlier vided Rollins with its fifth con­ ing a new Hatter game percentage iithe season to both Mercer and secutive defeat and ninth of the record. When the game was over, •lorida Southern, they did defeat campaign, winning by a substan­ Ralston had hit 10 of 11 field goals ie Hatters in the initial game of tial 95-78 margin last Saturday. while adding six points from the ie campaign. Tied at half time with 37 points line in eight attempts. Teammates apiece, Southern roared by the Ernie Killum poured in 25 and On the Tars' recent three-game freshman RonBeal, 21 points. Down foadtrip through Alabama and Tars in the second period with 58 points while the Tars were getting by 11 at half time, 55-44, the Tars feorgia, Mercer dumped Rollins could not counter the Hatter's 14 points when the Tars were 41. Early in the second half, the Moccasins outscored the Tars, shooting attack which amounted to a Peking their sixth straight win; 56% from the floor in the first st Friday, the Bears duplicated 24-12, to pull away by twelve points and continued their strong period. The Tars hit 39% of « feat in handing the Tars an their field goals in the game. »-71 loss on the Tars' Home finish on the strength of guard Fred Lewis' 16 points and forward There was one consolation, how­ »urt The defeat was Rollins' ever, for the Tars. Shophomore urth of six consecutive losses. Josh High's 15. Lewis led the Southern attack with 31 points while Laurence Martinez scored 15 1 After leading 9-8 early in the points in the game: before com­ latest, Mercer scored nine Josh High added 19. Larry Mar­ tinez paced Rollins for the thirt­ mitting his fifth foul, pushing his ?ht points to take the lead, season total to 493 points, and sur­ Perfect symbol ['•8. The Bears were never head- eenth time this season, scoring 28 points while Frank Valenti added passing a record of 485 set in of the love you share after this point , taking a the 1950's by his own coach, Boyd •28 lead at half. The second 13 and Denny Scott, former stand­ out at Evand High School chipped Coffie. Frank Valenti led the riod provided more of the same in with 10. Tars with 17 points as Rich West­ ft Mercer outscoring Rollins The Hatters of Stetson double- fal contributed 12. !•' in the first six minutes to With only two games remaining Being with each other, doing things together know­ defeated the Tars Wednesday, while ing that your affection is growing in*o precious and are the victory. Guards Robert the varsity team dropped its sixth on the schedule, Rollins cannot toir, who hit 12 of 25 field straight, bringing its record to equal the season high record of enduring love. Happily, all these cherished moments and Jud Roberts, who proved 14-10, and evening the Rollins -Stet­ 17 victories set also in the 1950's. will be forever symbolized by your diamond engagement the Tars' undoing in Macon l! son rivalry at one win each, the Games remaining are against ring. If the name. Keepsake, is in the ring and on the tag,, [ h a 36-point barrage, combined junior varsity, still reeling from Mississippi Colleg on Friday and you are assured of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. " 51 points, 31 and 20 respect- a i33-76 bombarament by Brevard the tough , The engagement diamond is flawless, of superb color, sty. Larry Martinez and Frank Junior College, lost the opener, Saturday; both are home contests. Mi scored 15 points apiece as and precise modern cut. Your Keepsake Jeweler will assist you in making your selection ... He's in the yellow pages under "Jewelers." Rings from $100 to $10,000. Illustrations enlarged to show detail*Trade-mark reg. REG ISTERED A. H. Pond Co., Inc., Est. 1892.

REGISTERED Doc" O'Brien's DIAMOND RINGS Pharmacy DIAMOND RINGS N*»LL O'BRIEN, lUg Ph HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Irving Rollins Students Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engage­ For 28 Years ment and Wedding" and new 12-page full color folder, both for only 25c. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book.

Charge Accounts [ Name. Checks Cashed Address. I City- 3 Doors South of First National Bank • State. -Zip- on Park Avenue OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT I KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX 90, SYRACUSE, N. Y. 13201 PHONE MI7-1739 I I Page Sixteen February 21, 1969 THE ROLLINS SANDSPUR

Roiims Ahmni Return For Reunion? "Rjrje And Shine On The Dinky Line"

1969 ALUMNI REUNION SCHEDULE The Rollins College Alumni FRIDAY - APRIL 25 Association has announced the 9:00 a. m. - 5:00 p. m. REGISTRATION-Alumni House dates for their 1969 Annual Alumni 3:30 p. m. BASE BALL-Rollins vs. Florida Southern Reunion as Friday-Sunday, April Harper Shepherd Field 25-27, 1969. Co-chairman for the 6:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m. LUAU DINNER-E nyart-Alumni Field House Reunion are Mrs. H. Brown And­ 7:00 p.m.-8:00p.m. STUDENT TALENT SHOW-SENIOR AWARDS rews, class of 1938 and B. T. Enyart-Alumni Field House Heineman, class of 1964. Heine- 9:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m. CLASS PARTIES-Dubsdread Country Club man said: "Though we enjoyed a record attendance at our 1968 SATURDAY- APRIL 26 Reunion, we are looking forward to 8:30 a.m.-9:30 a.m. COMPLIMENTARY BREAKFAST-Rose Skillman an even greater crowd this year. 9:00 a.m.-3:00 a.m. REGISTRATION-Alumni House One of the highlights of this year's 10:00 a. m.-11:00a.m. GUIDED TOUR - Bush Science Center Reuntion will be our Saturday night 11:00 a. m.-11:45 a. m. SCIENCE DEMONSTRATIONS dinner-dance at which Buddy Mor­ 12:30 p.m. row's "Night Train" orchestra will PRESIDENT'S LUNCHEON-Rose Skillman Hall 1:30 p.m.-2:30 p.m. ANNUAL MEETING provide music for dancing." 5:30 p.m. Several hundred Rollins Alumni SOCIAL HOUR-Maitland Civic Center 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. REUNION DINNER from throughout the country are ex­ 9:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m. pected to attend the weekend fest­ DANCE - Buddy Morrow's "Night Train" ivities. A tour of the new $3 orchestra, Maitland Civic Center. 1/2 million Bush Science Center SUNDAY- APRIL 27 is planned for returning alums, 8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. COMPLIMENTARY BREAKF AST-Rose Skillman as well as a full schedule to week­ 9:45 a m. ALUMNI CHAPEL SERVICE-Knowles Chapel end festivities. 11:30 a. m. PIONEER'S and GAY 90' S LUNCHEON - For more information contact: "TBS SEA GULL": Anton Chekhov's roastervork of pre-revolutionary Russia is brought Entertainment by The Rollins Singers -Student to the screen by producer-director Sidney Lurcet for Warner Bros.-Seveo Arts, with Mrs. B. T. Heineman, Publicity a stellar cast that includes (L. to R,, foreground) Situone Signoret, Jamtts Mason, Union Harry Andrews, Vanessa Hedgrave and David Warner. Oct the steps are (X.. to K») Chairman - 644-0439 or Rollins Alired Lynch, Kathleen Widdoes, Eileen Berlie^ Ronald Radd and Denho}~ 211 2:30 p. m. "FACULTY ARTISTS OF ROLLINS' CONCERT- College Alumni Association - 646- Eola Band Shell, Orlando 2266. ROLLINS' RESIDENT HIPPIE RETURNS

The "OWMan"On The Lawn (We love you, Peter Shaw!) His disease is not incurable: its By Debbie Edney replenish and revitalize the ^tock By Roy Caffery or Content of his Knowledge. course may be stopped with a con­ As a pale, wrinkled scholar with Most of us remember Peter we fail to appreciate that he made It might well be forgiven that his centrated dose of rather expensive Miguel (Shaw). We used to see Tioss-grey locks, the Mills Library medicine. It is, however, not only a leather-covered album for Pre­ Mind is not up to date; he has been him traveling around campus in a reclines sedately on its carpet of in poor health and in such dire the Old Scholar himself thatwe are sident McKean and sold it to him for lush green overlooking the busy rejuvenating - but the Minds of black van truck upon whose sides $85? His fortes were leatercraft­ financial straits (such is the evid­ he had painted, "New and Used thoroughfares of Winter Park ent lot of those who profess to those with whom he shares his ing and writing, but his ability as and the Outside World. Rising each be Scholars and Teachers) that Knowledge. Dinosaurs." It was the inside of the an inventor has been overlookedby truck, however which always stir­ morning early and retiring at the he cannot afford the Tonic or In­ And so we can only watch and hope even some of us who knew him best. very proper hour of 11:00 p. m. jection which might enable him to in anticipation that our Scholarly red so much interest and post- Was it not he who invented the on week-nights, our Scholar and resume his absorption of Know­ Mass of Knowledge on the edge of weekend conversation. The, too, seven string guitar, and the im­ Teacher makes his Choice Stock ledge and join the 20th century. his green carpet can be plucked we recall his annual participation provised kazoo holder. of Knowledge available to the fledg­ It seems that his previous Bene­ from the clutches of a critical in the sidewalk Arts festival in He has been living in New Hope, ling pupils just taking off on their factors have abandoned him in his disease - that of Vegetation - in the streets of Winter Park. He Pennsylvania since his graduation "intellectual voyage" at Rollins. old age; it is through the Sacri­ time to make Mills a Library in­ would set up a display of his hand­ last year, owning and operating He is old: and his age becomes fices of his Pupils (who recently stead of a Memorial to one. made leather goods and then pro­ a small leather works shop. Life apparent in his Content of Ideas, gave up a Heated Swimming Pool National Library Week is April duce a guitar from his magical guit­ in the "outside world" has mel­ which was mainly determined dur­ in order to provide some sort of 20-26 this year. Those who are ar case which he would play to lowed our comrade, though, my ing his raucous Youth, when , full Medicine to treat his senility) that friends of our Old Scholar hope accompany with his zesty voice. dear cabaret companions , Peter pf vitality, curiosity and a genuine his disease might be cured. that he is well enough by then to Crowds would gather around his Miguel has sold his infamous, flat Quest for Intellectual Answers, he Our venerable Scholar has beck­ join in the celebration of National display, and Peter would entertain black truck and purchased a new was motivated to fill his Mind with oned with an arthritic finger; and Library Week with us - so that the buyers as they exchanged money sports car. This is not bad in a store house of knowledge which, it seems as though someone has the observation of this Week will for his hand work and the lookers itself, understand, it's just that in accordance with his Humanitar­ it. Age might have given a mal­ be Jield at Rollins in the spirit would be relived for awhile during his action seems foreign to what ian Virtue, he would share with ignant smell to his ancient Know­ of vital knowledge rather than that their otherwise dull and dry walk we thought of formerly as a neo- those who joined him in his Quest. ledge; but the Spirit which moved of a funeral dirge. through the park. At the Library montagnard. But that was in his Youth. Now him to accumulate it in the first lawn teach-in this year we had some Go to see him in New Hope, but his storehouse has been dog-eared place remains- burning as the lights melancholy memories of his per­ call him Peter Miguel, not Shaw, by overeager Voyagers; the validity through his windows at night. The formance during the women's hours and be sure to have acquired a of his great Content questioned and Aged Scholar has not lost the in­ library sit-in two years ago. Can look of depth in your eyes. even disproven by Contemporary tellectual spirit-but the vitality and Thought and Science - but he can­ HEARTS! newness of its expression in mod­ FREE TRANSPORTATION not find it within his means to ern lifp. The "King and Queen of Hearts'* If you are 21 or over you will be eligible to drive Contest, sponsored by the Alpha NOW OPEN Phis, was held from February one of our late model cars to points North or West. 10-15. Eleven contestants, one from NO CHARGE! Reserve yours now. each social group, were pictured on the Union bulletin board and AUTO DELIVERY CO. of ORLANDO - 2924 Corrine Dr. 841-4591 competed for the titles to be given to the candidate who drew in the most money-or "votes." About $200.00 was collected; all proceeds PUTTING were given to the Heart Fund, Edith, Fred and Dick Barnett conducting its annual drive this month. The reigning King and Queen of Hearts are Sue Steiner, Theta, Welcome you to — and DRIVING RANGE and Jeremy Hartley, Sig Ep. The other candidates were: Susan Greg­ 8850 E. CQLONIAL DR. Vh MILES E. of 15A ory, Pi Phi; Pam Smith, Phi Mu; ORLANDO, FLA. 32807 Pam Hans, Gamma Phi; Steve Alt- im) house, Independent Men; Anita Thomas, Unaffiliated Women; ^ Jn Lindsay Job, Lambda Chi; Larry Harpers witkleben, TKE; Fred Crean, s^* Phi Delt; and Michelle Deltarono, ,'LTAVERN -iBS^' * Chi Omega. F Classified *&