FAMED NUDIST RUGBY: YOU ALUMNUS DIES GOTTA LOVE IT W&* Bmriitecmum o Page Rv The News And Editorial Voice Of Davidson College Students Lvni I'AVIDSON lOH.Ki.K KAVIDSON. N C 'JHO3f., FRIDAY. JAM ARY 1M. IWiU "RKH THIRTEEN EXAM CHA\GE STALLED ACADEMIC CALENDAR, 1969-1970 Fall Term Faculty Vote Opens Dorm Doors In 1BZJ Thurulis thnw«li Tih-mIuj Orlrnini.on 'Trnt«r Muni),!', '.'itmigh Ti>' Kr*Utran B, JOHN MeLEAN ipriim \.i
,,| ' Creeping Along Slui I'"' id ■ iiiHi' ilucn Spring Term i. in < pii Aii '.!""! CotlUHMlM ««" J'lWOI |f II " > Ihi ■" ■ . rulr thi i.i hi II h Hi 1 lilir.it > nilM .ind (riJtl< rri ii* \m miuin ■ ntii". ... > .1 nl ilUlMtt* ■ I I'lv .Si.iil.-nl- Klrh.iui I I nl'i tin' rtttirr r-\nm urti ■ In Mm.r ■ .Hid tiiiiki ■ ml \Vriti>i'"iu«hi]i > < mii In Um(ii il I ;iuK ilhrr ntuci. ■ tlwti m inmt like R.Mniund Martin vni<- Mtttlin would M ti' I'm- SALYER RESIGNS ' Gets Overwhelming """irfrrui 0 Amt\ phiycd Iiitv in ihi- hr»i Coeducation (I Wilt! MMiKiiiilj FMlBl In ."diilttuM tu $UH "'" ■ ' Mirr (mctimtf itt '■' ■ W Utw* ■"■ iat) pn Todd Hobbie ■)" Fills In Student-Faculty Poll t.ir UMI V1NM t'i< liintiil of | Support nurnbrr not be tuck w H< "urwl foruin ami <*»"> vntil thai l>r M l MNUitht Ami uulll Ucl , I9« rth«i By ROBBIE HOOKER rtdmwsiun tumterd* to atuwer ■ queaUiMMvatrr Ilirrr tludvnK Id hrrr fnculty tut Runuin An o**T»tirlroin4 returning Culholir cvrnlil hnvt l-rrnn»' Todd HoWnr «uci:(vdeil latrd hnu "iimini»irati\ p dr. faculty "»» out <*S prr to ha«p thr benefit of H» n- A lr» [irulcwwr* scoldrd udwiu and »«»*■> »l n fncultv mMnbrr »i«)i irn- S\*Yv Salyer a-v Krrvhitiati partmeno of th* tmd the "dmWfcm cwit of Uir HM«1 SGA vour port* ol the «mmiMi'in> THK MV1DS0N1AN fur «■» ilul uratrr UH h> collefr paimily Uvor ouviihoit's granta! "M^ Class preitdrnt TurMUy Wther rrfuwtf to act or ttixi «ul ">i«rr win! (emaic stu oiii! Truiite* PrenWent qm-Mluit oiPCltmlim thr H nf Irnwtlr student* Turtdnv - "' Mtr It win dim Itml ttlr when «hc Mudeni Smit'.r them ibp runaround %1iKtrotli to dirii% (or DavMaun IK lar I t.«n*lr Jr. in « tetter ml»»l"'' murr ijualifliii tlic Boiird «»r Tru«r«« lru> thm mtn.
THE MEWS AND EDITORIAL VOICE OF DAVIDSON COLLEGE STUDENTS
Pubhiiied weekh by the students of Davidson College during the school year, except a; during hnlUlj and examinationperiods Entered as second class matter Davidson. N. C. 28036 By CHARLES McEWEN ROBPI! li^KLR MlKI J Associate Editor IJttormChief Business Manager PACE TWO FRIDAY. JANUARY 24 IMS ThePowerOf TheStudentNigger The position of the student is analogous to that of the nigger. The nigger that ludicrous Southernism for the Fraternities' Itinerary inferiority, black man The term implies disenfran- general, political impotence. have been handed chisement and, in No mental patient ever had a strait hocus-pocus thai In the black revolution which is jacket so confining as the one that down for years by a bunch of slightly nigger has fogeys at year- now taking place, the is being imposed on Davidson frater- tight,back-slapping old the surest way for him M m ly fraternal conventions And. o f found that nities by their national offices to become a Black Man. with rights Admittedly there are a few things course, we would be spared all the power paperwork oc- and equality, is to exercise his that can be" said for national frater superfluous and the coercion, creation of political visits of national grand dra- of the nities. but they are very few indeed casional which intimi- V k- n gons and other assorted big-wigs. and economic tensions When you start listing their advan- date the white establishment. This tages, you run out of items pretty going local Most of all. though, tension brings results v quickly — would be a long stride toward fixing Escalate these tensions to a fever j V For all that nationals require— what isgrievously wrong inDavidsons pitch, and create the ultimate wea- many dollars and many rules they one-sided social picture Freed from pon. the riot. I Wk , offer comparatively little in return the shackles of national offices, the Students have this same sort of ■^""i ■■" A gaudy pin. a name that makes con- Davidson houses would be in an in- coercion and, home, power, the power of versation fodder back perhaps finitely better position to work for if necessary, the scare the-hell-out-of-'em power of the some house furniture, a few scholar- alternative outlets that provide social riot. ships and funds from which to borrow opportunities for every student on But, paradoxically, these student powers at David- It's hardly worth the price campus, it through 100 percent amorphous term, be son are cloaked" in that student Emancipation from national bond- affiliation or what-have-you. ■government hand, age, on the other would do start " much for Patterson Court. In fact if going local— doesn't Student "government i.s no government, mainly thing, money that could be opening other doors for all students the real legislative power at Davidson resides For one — worth tho trip. It because >pent locally would not be sunk into then it's not not with the students, but with the faculty and admin "f national coffer> one should never be con an end i.stration. and ultimately with the trustees. the - — a start toward other " house here estimates it would in itself only Sure, student "government can provide more itself over $4,000 annually For an- ends. - phones in the dorms, more vending machines. And not ■ r. Davidson houses could abandon We would be slightly deranged it can draw up a new constitution and a code of re- jacket. NCAA Scholarship the anachronistic rules and ritual to try to shed the strait sponsibility. But when major changes occur, they are brought about by the vote of the faculty and then, finally, by a vote of the trustees. In The Bologna Class Endangered At best, student "government" can only be a lob- Rights pressure bying force, an organized group that will the faculty who in turn will pressure the trustees. presi- In most cases a salesman is only By BOB DUNHAM student athletes from the personality conflict with the power brings One of the candidates for SGA unpredictable coa- coach is going to be the one This pressure, this coercion is the that dent recommended this week the hir- as good as his product. Naturally, it Sports Editor whims of about change on this campus. sell steak over bologna ches, and after careful con- who suffers. then, ing of a professional admissions re- is easier to In a marvelous display of Student "government," is merely a euphem- over Davidson, j>o mat- siderationof allof the under Byers. the NCAA's cruiter "Student recruiters from here and Harvard apathy within its member- can Walter ism. A students' lobby would be more accurately de- to follow a profes- ter if the salesman is a student or full- lying intents which be executive secretary, was re- scriptive. have found it hard ship, the National Collegiate in the law. one sional recruiter from a place like Har time professional. This will continue understood ported recently to have re- Iam convinced that if changes are to be made on case, Athletic Association national must agree. vard." he said. "We need one our- to be the until Davidson's name ago sponded to this suggestion this campus, they will be the result of scaring hell spread and convention two weeks selves." is north of the Potomac stirredonly 43 percent of its Robert Lipsyte. in a na- of coaches' ill-usage of the out of the faculty, administration and trustees. Granted. Harvard is a tough act to west of the Catawba. to vote on a propo tionally syndicated column, rule by saying "Oh, that's a The changes of the past seew»!o have been brought follow, members especially for a college with sal would change the suggested recently that the lot of hogwash. There are about in this same manner. Simple coercion was recruiter would help. which violence, a pronounced regional atmosphere. Of course a entire relationship between rule was "ostensibly passed no such coaches." enough in each case. Nobody threatened but But the problem of recruiting invol- In fact, we hope the college will hire to give coaches a bigger student niggers could have. future, student athletes and the uni One doesn't have to go ves more than hiring a traveling rep- one in the near and we under- whip versities. The result was one over the rambunctious very far before he finds a required vespers, resentative In fact, the Admissions stand such a move is being consider black scholarship athletes Take the abolition of for instance. which could spell trouble. It contradiction to that state- niggers slept through vespers, Office here has found that many high ed.But. on the other hand, this is not whose have The student who who might be disastrous. disobediences ment. A lot of coaches are during service, school counselors hold professional going to be a solution to admission ranged from the growing of wrote letters the who came dressed one of the most radical upset they made re- recruiters in low regard Many would woes. Until Davidson undertakes the In the boy- because in blue jeans, and best yet, who passed out drunk on and controversial decisions bushman haircuts to cruiting errors, picked guys balcony College prefer mature, well-prepared student bold steps which have been debated rotling of matches with col the floor of the of the Davidson Pres- since the punt coverage who aren't as good as they byterian during vespers, representatives over professional in the last few years, its representa- leges that practice racial Church first of all convinced bologna class. rule passed its membership, " thought. The fact of the mat the student "government," if it needed convincing, salesman types. tives will still be"in the follow, discrimination. the NCAA passed the ter is that the NCAA has that the vespers services added nothing to religiosity ing rule: The rule in this sense subjected student-athletes to at Davidson. So the process of coercion began. The "A member institution gives the black athletes lit ruthless power in many faculty became convinced that vespers should be Possible Merger Mate may terminate the financial tie opportunity to express cases, when the student-ath- abolished, and then the factulty convinced the trus- aid of a student-athlete if their feelings about racial letes had absolutely no voice tees. Voila, no more vespers. he is ajudged to have befn prejudice. This is severe in the matter. The same thing goes for the of Responsibility, good Mary Bald- college which would establish a co- Code There are deals at guilty of manifest disobefli enough. But it alro goes fur- which is another Davidson euphemism that translates ordinate campus adjacent to it. Bald- It seems that the NCAA, win. ence through violation of in- ther. "drinking on campus" and "women in the dorms." win looks like good deals. which has long championed The Virginia girls' college, former stitutional regulations or Student niggers first showed their power of coer Davidson College has been follow- implication the cause of the student home of President Spencer, has ap established athletic depart The of the rule cion by flagrantly disobeying the faculty's drinking ing a policy of educational virginity athletic departments athletes in America, has pointed a new president. William Kel- ment policies and rules ap is that rule. And the administration really couldn't exercise long enough. Drinking in our rooms for excuse, finally turned on the student. ly, currently head of the honors col- plicable to all s'.udent-ath can. the smallest their power for the rule's enforcement. lege at Michigan State. And in news- is no substitute for feminine com- take away scholarships from The NCAA is now thinking panionship. lusty letes." of paper interviews last week. Dr. Kelly The bookish but Of the 610 member oal boys who have failed to per more its member institu- Student niggers continue to show their power of young scholars who throng the halls form up the coaching tions than of the students by fornicating — admittedly, expressed his interest in the idea of leges, only 24fi me.i to coercion in the dorms day who possi MaryBaldwin's going coed by merger of Chambers each and the cam- ballots, and the final staff's expectations. An ath make the NCAA this violation is not nearly so openly observable as puses Queens, et al each cast ble. Indeed, as Lipsyte sug- drinking with a men's school. of Converse in favor of passage was late can no longer maintain violations were in the past. need a social outlet closer vote gested, the have weekend 167-79. The result is revolu his scholarship merely by students But the fact is that Davidson had "open dorms" Baldwin is a merger mate that any to home, trying now been reclassified as one that will foster less nonary to say the least. out for the team. Now before anyone ever thought about a CRAP report haughty bachelor would be proud to superficial attitudes toward the op- he must please the coach "employes." A reporter So, in abolishing the drinking rule and opening the get. It has satisfactory academic stan posite sex than we now have. We need DAVIDSONIAN every respect, for it he questioned Dr. Frontis John in It's time for someone to dorms, the same processes of coercion brought about dards and a student body of 750 to learn that girls are people, too. crosses him in any way. the ston. chairman of the facul speak for the athletes, and change.The catch to all of this is that students merely women. It has no room for further It cannot be maintained that the hatchet meets his scholar- legislative "y committee oh athletics, even if it takes a student appear to have power when in reality stu- expansion at its present campus and process of education proceeds most ship support rope. only power. to move to merge. about Davidson's reaction to nationwide boycott of NCAA dents have coercive would have rapidly in a unisexual environment elected, For a men's college considering Davidson College will never have a the rule, and though John- It would indeed be nice if events to effect the change So, now that everybody is duly student going coed by merging with a women's diverse student body until it has girls. ston declined to say how the students could trust every the rule should be overruled. "government" can continue to perpetuate its own college voted, he indicated coach to use good sense and Soon. myth. that Davidson favored the fairness to all athletes un- change in the rule. der the new rule.But human Fair Weather Friend To many observers the nature just isn't that way. rule seems to tear down the and under the new rule the Faculty Exam Decision It probably won't make the Alumni he was many things: Davidson drop- shield which has protected student athlete who has a Bulletin,but a recent event in alumni out (but so was Woodrow Wilsoni. circles deserves at least a passing Baptist minister, magazine publisher 9 note. And that would be the demise, and nudist. The Way Of AllFlesh at the age of 89. of Dr Ilsley Boone. Precisely why he left Davidson Draws Williams Fire '03.— perhaps Davidson's— most unique around 1900 has never been clear and most ignored son. Perhaps he found it too confining. To The Editor: exams or that they should What makes the faculty's Diversity must have been thrust At any rate, from that On Tuesday the faculty have learned the material ;utinn seem even more un day on he ig- semester, on Ilsley Boone. for in his long life nored the college, and the college voted down a proposal during the but In.irable is that the plan ill apparently ignored him right back whereby students might there are still some students pKiimsfd only on a trial two exams on the li isis II tlvy did not like it Such a waste of potential college schedule their own examina who have per same day or two extremely ■fl*r trying it for a ye.ir Bare Shelves propoganda! Here was an alumnus tions within a four-day or whose unique contributions iud approximately corn's hard exams back to-back evM for une term, they could have If examinations are m could simply do awa\ \wtli Not since the disappearance of the been exploited. ponding with the pn period. tended to make the student il and return to the original great American frontier has anything At i \.im first Boone was a Baptist minis- ihe chief author of tlii "- organize the course maun \\ Mem. vanished like the books in the college ter, but for some reason he found mind, In library plan and a student member al in his own he can n era when student^ the cloth unsuitable and discarded it "iinl l.uulty year of themdisappear of the faculty Educational best do this by having ade- are working Each dozens in 1931. becoming a nudist Popular Committee, quate time to prepare for ver\ closeh on college poli- from the shelves, most never to re- legend Policy which re. has it that he was struck commended it unanimously the exam the day before Ojr. there remains one un- turn. Right now the library staff down on the road to Damascus and missing pre- to the faculty. I would be that exam It would he very iT.isahle distinction between counts ai least 160 and all his clothes were burned off. Ihe sumed lost, and at 10 dollars per putting it mildly to s.u that hard for any faculty mem- two groups: students arc Thereafter, though,he accumulated incens;-d to reft:tf this argument payaig to get < book, a estimate, 1 Min greatly over her their educa conservative that's number of accomplishments- hastily and nearly two thousand bucks. a foun- their action. This plan was not tion. faculty members der of the in committee are bring paid library faculty Sunshine Park nudist camp The purpose of this pi. conceived The to help them The staff and the in Mays Landing. N J.; leader working it smee git it Library Committee shouldn't be the of the Ml to take some of the has been on National Nudist Council; and publisher during the beginning of the year For this reason the (amit) only onej they lire off students concerned. After all. >! "Sunshineand Health." official mag- per and has studied the details ought to think long and hard won't desperately need the books for iin rspei-jiilly traumatic azine for the American Sunbathing iod of time and allow them carefully enough to iron out about wan to jmpnnr the- a paper, or be resentful of a book met Association. Hardly a bare existence to do the best possible job .ill the wrinkl' hod of educating stu (heck-point blocking the exits, or be dents, by sys- that on their exams. Since tv.im- Similar plans are Mi in simply because it is inconvenienced a closed stack colleges quite their job faculty tem (both measures are being dis- Boone never let his nudism conceal sometimes count as much as effect at other Those his interests, however, and in a 1952 two thirds of the grade in a similar to Davidson, sun members who voted against cussed*. But the student body will be this proposal Let's face it— the students are most speech, he came up with a sure-fired course and since grades Havcrford College, and are because it way to end war that the Paris negotia- be so important in apparently working quite might decrease their vaca- to blame. Attribute some of the losses V * seem to tors would do well to heed. vv S the modern world, it seems successfully. In fact, the tion by a coupleof days have to absent-minded professors and thiev in ing townies, if you like, but most of "It would be hard to tell which man only fair to give the student first material Iused con done so on mighty shaky- — was your enemy," said he, "if a chance to do his best on ceiving this plan was gotten grounds and ought to consi- the blame rests squarely on us and all Spencer der forgetfulness, out- the soldiers wore no clothes." each exam. through President their duty toward stu our selfishness and at Mary dents filching say Some faculty members from'a friend of his more carefully. and-out We dare Woodrow Wilson and Baldwin, where the system John P. William* '«* What was that again about student Dean Rusk themselves could do no protest that students have responsibility? better. plenty of time to study for works very well. Davidson Colteoe "I*Jtatri&tflUtiMS January 24. 1969 Page Three
Presidential candidates Peter Hobbie, Dan Herd and Phil Hazel answer questions at Open End.
Elections Chairman Frank Murphy oversees polls.
1* 1n^^gytLO AID ITS BMSFT UVlRtKI »^' T *tutbrwiti«s, FAcoLmre its outwal itfoativi Arrr-or rciAaas jwst aboot tvmrmvot 2. TO* SCCTT; * 3. TR0S1 PEOPLE «IO BBUITI T»T ALrSTTOTfTS AV SCTIALLT KPAU-aOKE OOTS tU SLICK, DATE A LCT. AID LTJCI SGA (nil classes) Ballot TC FA^TT, A!D 1RI REST A^l IirDK?E!rOE»T5. TH1 ST3TS» IS Hrcle ONE MOM for oriL-h office
,,GA Prer:i it-nt SGA Vice-1 n .iacnt \. ST01TT OCVKS!fMI«fT A!O ITS PMMHWC9S IWCTiriTf; d Phil Hrzrl /3 / *-Ed Dobbs 3/i> . c. (OAV-TDSCT'S lur.-IT SFA^ROf «TD CCHC1T5 AlS»r» TC Dan Herd MO **"'*■lorn Opic 3/0 £LtC7£2?(£cter Hobble 5"6j_J Jim Trurnell i3£> e. AIL :a?DIDATS5 ?CH T.TST C»?ICB. T^*:'HF A§n;Ll IS.-EJlALJf SHCRT. CCCKY IKDBFEXDKVTS, CVSa»A3E lUI'lTIS. Unior. Poard Ir- "; lr.< nl x\r 7.?.n»:;at ka»Si Ton r ?. JKVRDS ATO 0SCHE3, 1HE yJYS «5C "CIL TC CClTmriJATS i^ictivzit aia creiR h^max biiks. The announcement.
TAVC3: "*1. THOSE 3CY3 »B0 CA5 CUT HAL» THEIR CLA33BS, DIVE XHfx C? THEIR HSVIBiS. 30 CUT SIX KIQRTS A »EKK, A.WD COVE CV? *I"3! A HCCK AID A HAL'i 2. EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE 0 TSIDE THE CLASSROOM AKC
CVrSI?E STRUCTOSED STODETT ACTIVin. l.:t TSE CDLTURX ,SOCIAL, *: 0 THE IKMCRAL; Campaign
i 3. COMPULS:*T Vr^PERS WTCE A WFKK; '69- L. AKTI-SDIIT
IN SJXMARYi IFLZL THAT ICAIf RON THE STUDBtT aOVIRintERT lit H ASSOCIATION PROM BIRMIHOHAM. ALABAMA AS «ELL AS ANYBODY ELSB Davidson CAN RUN IT »ROK DAVIDSOII COLLEOE. ZlQto+My Platform of a last-minute write-in candidate.
Stoff Photos by
John Davidson The decision, ballot by ballot.
HARRELL RENTZ BOB DUNHAM FRANKLIN ANDERSON Qups and Cranks Editor DAVIDSONIAN Co-Editor DAVIDSONIAN Co Editor
...and The Elected
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.„ __._ BILL TRAXLER JIM MAY ISocial Council Prttldtnt Union President Vic* presidential candidate Ed Dobbs (r.) asks for a vote. Page Four January 24, 1969 8fh* 3B«trto0OMUUt ■ Recruiting:AnInvolved f^ SPORTS W DESK Man-hunt For The Best
By RUSS MERRITT i around 2.000 sey. lias i \ pressed some in- "Wl ' Sports Writer prospects a year." Driesell in Davidson. BOB DUNHAM ■aW. "Since we give only Recruiting in collegiate Another outstanding five scholarships each year. BflM athletics has been called we cant afford to make tial future Cat is another everything Hryan from the "name any mistakes. Therefore, New .U-rsean. Taylor, of the game college points in we've got to be very cue who scored
By BILL ;i BERRY ■ad Iom loss to Mm innhu of the strongest points <>| and Gammon to remark that Astt. Sports Editor touted Sigmas Nut. the oflen-e has been the the Betas Ail! 'decimate" Skin Team, Sip The Revisited The Rp's and the the pla> of til.' Mm Miis free throw shooting In the the undefeated Pikas in their ■etas haw In-en of the been anything Last year the word "skin team" became synonymous two nut less Ihiin \ utory over the Kappa Sifis coming encounter on Mon- team, scrubs, (All you big surprises in the early imprcssi\c They have lieen the Bftas made 14 of M free day night with the second the the AYOs of IMAC basketball others), or whatever you want to call those players Ifff^^ astal unselfish on offi-n.se. re. throws to insure the «mi who sit and watch. This year, now that half the sea- competition. hounded exceptionally will |K)int win gone. The Sig Eps are priscir for then m/c. and played Besides Maker and Cul son is Ican evaluate the '69 version of the 1 IMAC Davidson skins. ly tied for tin league lead temendous defense breth the other starters are and arc defying tin- Berrv Tlie defense am probiibly Ed Terry. Charles Cowseri. STANDINGS aBL-lM^ key t(i Sigma Nu 3 0 Hi I'oll with their underfealed Choosing a skin team is different from finding tat the victories Th«- and Henry Marrow Bill very Eps 2-0 a starting five. Instead of picking out the players from record. Bttal play ■1-1-1 zone which Gammon. Matkey Kea\i-. Sic a group at the beginning of the season, you take The SPK s are just barely *hifts rapidly t-noiiKli to and Hunter Rice have played I'ik.i- 20 what's left. This year the remains are Tony Orsbon, UtMktfeeted however. as Force most outside shuts very well in reserve roles Phi HeIts |I Fox DeMoisey, Jan Postma, Duncan Postma, and my- * " both of their vu■tones havr Mike Culhrcih and .Johnny Hue excited the crowd be Betas 2 I self. Billy Pierce is a skin team skin. Iguess that's been by a single point. 41- Baker lave controlled the fore the .Sig name with his SAK 2 1 P^^aaal I Ik WE *■ B^ over (iamms KA 1 1 hard to beat. ■j I\flk 1wj J 40 the Phi and defensive backboards and dunk shots in warm-up. 4^9RP"' 4fi45 BVfr the Independents M'ldom iillow than The Betas riding high Machis 12 Duncan, more me are With the exception of the members of this Both victories were team shot with their victories over the ATO 1 2 year's skin team are veterans. Tony and Iare two efforts, the indivi offense has highly Delts and Sigs. Kappa Sii!^ 12 year (Staff Photo by Davidsoni but bin The been tin- rated year letter skins while Fox and Jan have one of duals for the SPE's were iM.iHcular but steady H.i They are enthusiastically J'i Kapps 02 skin experience under their belts. Duncan and Billy KENT RHODES PULLS DOWN REBOUND KlctihtT llartscll and Kent IMT usually leads the SMS Cunning for the league Indie-. 0-2 starting to get the hang of the type of game we Gamms 0.1 are Surprising Rhodes Hhodcs has carried tag. but th.' other starters championship Their enthu work. Sig Eps win two openers. i play but they still need a little Mr reaoaoetafl load in both have scored fairly well One si.ism has prompted Baker Gone from last year's skin team are Tom Youngdale games, while HartseU b and Bob Pickens. In practice we miss Tiger Tom's tiir offenae ability to rebound using his head, arms and feet. Also The team's stcoasj point at wish Bob was back to throw in his running Wildcats Tackle has been tin- defense The times I tip's arc nnc liw left handed hook shot from the comer. Still, despite S\£ Of Sigma Nus StillLeading what Ifeel is one learns In the league to plaj the absence of these two we have defense, of the better skin teams in the nation. a nan Ui-nian and Citadel thus far it has bean SUCCeiss Improved lur Tony Orsbon is our All-American skin team candi- ILit tluin Dave Shi'plei date this year. Last year he took all-conference skin Itaa be* n the bin man on de- In IMAC Basketball honors easily and its hard to find a more dedicated With li\t returnees this feaae, u be has engine* n d country. Tony By BILL BERRY kepi the tiKiiMin of victors tin- victory with some fine skin anywhere in this part of the re- ■n. iiiciiidinn the lean's nunureus steals tht glory Rebounding ixith Astt. Sports Editor from bcitiK much larger outside Bfcaolfnf m SS ceives no scholarship and plays strictly for the ii,ost valuable player and tlir on tne oJ cond half. of the skin team, whatever that is. At times, different nation's leader in field goal Pensive and defensive boards Only three undtfi'.ilrd The F'lkiis ;irc also undc- get their chance to play with the starters and precentagr this season. The is the major problem the. skins in imac ftjitid. only tend to lose their identity. Tony always knows where Citadel brings its Bulldogs Sin Bp iface, Rhodes is the teaeta remain at 2 0. In their as the they he's best suited and even if he gets a chance to play to Johnston Gym tomorrow only tall man and cannot basketball week's encounter of the week rebounding load the D0NT with the shirts he probably will refuse night. handle the com|H'tition spread out trounced the Kappa Sigs. alone. short-stopped the process of standings. 8768. with ,i fourth quarter This year Lefty has Davidson will be seeking The Other starters for the practice scrim- up winning rally in which they outscor- naming the skins in when we have a to run its long SPEs Wade Shepherd The Sigma Nus are Bt the LOOK tells me to get "my are mage. He just looks at me and streak on its home floor and George Steel. Marvin top of the league with a 3 0 ed the- Sirs M 10 The Sigs tells me what to run cadets, team" out on the floor. He then against the who show- Bethune and Gary Sijimon record In their only fame aitually led by four at the excellent chances a win- soundly and we roll into action. for are the top reserves of the wee* they quarter, but NOW end of the third ning season after last year's whipped ihe l'hi (;.u»ms. The skins usually run through the opposition's of- The SPK s are hoping to Joe Lansinger and Mark Af- 11 14 season. improve their I!' «iH -4H. with an outstanding But you fensive plays the day before Davidson is scheduled on record feldt took Kintrol of the de get to know their plays of last year, but only the dlsplav of unsclhsh b.iskct- to play a game. In this way we Most valuable player Ter fi-nsi; backboard, Af may be about rest of the season will tell ball. Toby Wi'stmonland. <■ aad and offense sometimes better than the opposition does. Hooper. "). inls Bal)*ager bUstcrad the Sins the nized b) most students as Murpln cU-aifil yourlife run the opposing team's of- The Hi :.i have a -'-! tv and Calvin \utli the fast nreiik wrap fun if the skins would The Citadels number one - r<- to cord tmi1 tai. Including the boards, as only the fense. It might surprise somebody, including ourselves. singles tennis champion. In tin Mill. pn isive victories over the mpval of all the starters at UP A difference between this year's skins and and Kappa the end of the third quarter iInMHinilhing number of The main Also with the team is Al Phi Delta Sin-- The sic Bp's sta the other last season's bench boys is that we lack height. Tony people make .i Muptl and ir*gu up guarding Maloy or Cook along with Kroboth. who in recent of uiulcliatrd team, but they mistake Ib put it dimply, tlu-v ends either ficial statistics led the na- Jan tries to stop Kroll while Duncan draws O'Neill did not sef action this week. lump into careers :.ittuwt rttUty me. tion in field goal accuracy, — dreary or Huckel. The starters usually overpower us with Lack Depth The Betas came on strong liwki'in Tlii result » life hitting on nearly 70 per cent and but we do have some pride and at times Of to of frustration anger. their height, Wednesday night hand the of his shots. happen to you? llnuM we give them a good game. the Con this Sigs their second loss of you 1 he unless tan answerques- Six-seven Hoke Hi! ,a sop Before the Wake Forest game last week when the week. 53-4«. Johnny Baker tions like these to your ownsatis- introducing the starting line- willhave the honors Tankmen television announcer was homorc. Slows led the scoring with 17 points factionbc/ortyoumake yourmove: thought lining up in front of or an ups we about the skins of facing Davidson's Mike By ALEX GORDON iners However. Coach Ste- and Mike Culbreth followed Are you really a Chief and have each player sit down when Ical- the bench Maloy under the basket, Sports Wrllar vens feels that these boys with 12. Indian? Likewise, whenever you ask a skin how organi- led his name. while the outside scoring have some outstanding ahi Do you belong in a big did in a game he'll probably say he hit 60 or 70 Lack of depth appears to zation? Or a smallone? Or doyou he threat is providedby lity and potential. The Phi Delts brought percent, warmups. Incidentily, Jan's been hav- another principal obstacle belongby yourself? in the be the Leading the group are let. 21 with a percent, sophomore. Ben th.ir record to 5 ing a bad year, hitting only about 50 but Ledbetter. standing in the way of suc- UTincn Mac Davis, a junior, Can you really standpressure COOK going away victory over the he's been taking tough shots, so we excuse him. who led the freshman team oaaa for Davidson's swim and Jack Steele and Bill There arc 3 great many serious injured game. an- After Kroll and Cook were in the VMI in scoring l.-sst y«ar with a ... healed ming team. WcmkIsom. sophomores These SAE's. 71-53. It was the first questions you must ask— and Lefty told the team in a meetingMonday that he want- three arc especially strong loss for tin- SAE's John Mr swer—about acareer But themost 34 point average. The Wildcat tankmen win all of us ready to go on Thursday "in case our in critical arc the ones vou ask your- ed outpointed by William an
per- best results among By DICK ANDERSON Hobble i'lso no: 81 Haeel'i came ill Kap- cent ironi Sir.nia Nn the fraternities ] ( j t » ay] Ant. Managing Editor Kap only 1.) Mm handed in IMM pa MgBM. SAK and f'i Independents and pa l'hi. each of which Uave Penalties Sought The liiinii i three fraternities produced K.ippa Alpli.i. Kftpp* Sig- him about n percent of their majority th. ovcrwhelminK ma. I'hi Delta Thel.i and \otes. Tor SGA President-elect l'e Sigma Alpha Kpsilon MM* Hazel received votes on on By New Court Tuesday llobbie m 's the only groups which did ly two of the questionnaires which saw Hobble majority marked Independent out of ileition. not I'.ivc llobbie a By PAUL ROWLAND basically the MOM as the fi". percent of the vote the 37 turned in. and he got IHill of th. ir votes. KA is e.mili Staff Writer Honor Court." according to against opponents fraternity only 16 of 97 forms on which MO date Dan Herds Cenrl mmmj stagg New him 8fi percent, no fraternity status was The newly organized Kcgu On the basis of a DAVID .ind g.ive man. Newman said the dif- hut questionnaires marked marked. Hobbie received lations Court has just com- SONIAN questionnaire which about 60 percent of the lat pleted the task of formula! ferences are minor and add KA formed only 4 percent of ed that the Regulations was distributed at the Cham- ter's votes. ing trial procedures is the DAVIDSONIAN poll. and Court- function with bers polling place. Hobbie The fraternity with the working on a system of would llobbie got majorities in the Investigating Com. apparently received about 90 most voters apparently was punishments. same Independent all classes, with the fresh- mitte eand Defense Adviser percent of the SPE Court procedures will be vote. 87 percent of the Alpha men (who eat with him in as the Honor Court. polled. 83 per the College Union Cafeteria) Tau Omegas Newman said 10 colleges cent from Sigma Phi Epsilon voting 71 percent for him. 63 . Coeducation (including Vanderbilt. Duke, HUNGRY d HEADLINERS and 82 percent from Pi Kap the sophomores percent, .. percent (Continued From Page 1) freshmen who voted favor the University of South and Trace, a country "candy rock," pa Alpha. the juniors 77 and Natchez two guitars, ban and drums that feature rock and (16) admitting girls. the University of Virginia i Answering poll were the seniors 56 percent. Phil ing it as such or with 86 percent will appear next Monday through Saturday at the Hungry d in the Morrison Room of the the (11). of the have been contacted by the students, or about 45 Hazel was strongest among certain modifications seniors favor it. College Union. Performances begin nightly at 7:30, and admission will be 91 cents for men Mi Seventy-seven gather ideas those voting. sophomoresand seniors with Twelve wouW favor reiect percent of the court to for a and 49 cents far girls, according to Charlie Page, director. percent of system punishments tO and 28 percent respec ing it sophomores and 80 percent of lively, while Herd's top per- A hundred and seventy of the juniors also favor it. 9 renlage was 20 percent, five students were familiar Concerning the adjustment Plan of admitting ...Elections Talk 'GoingLocal Increases; among the freshmen. with the Five Vear enrollment fe Of Hazel, who is married and and 139 weren't. Over 80 male students would proba (Continued From Page 1) lives off campus, received percent, however, favor im- bly necessitate, student u"d Stelzer. Dave Stimson and only one-eleventh of the plementirrg it as such (158) faculty opinion appears di- Jim Wright. (61). freshmen's votes. Herd ran or with modifications vided. National Candidates for VMCA sec- relatively poorly in his own rift, would reject it Whju> Of Questioned most are l.ee Fowlkes. Benefits retary a step class, pulling 15 percent, The older a student gets By ED SHOAF another problem in the prc- discussion was lairly pre cal would be to M t) John Kcnyon and Steve Sal form, would be only a while Ha/el, who first mntri the more he favors the ad Staff Writer "i-iit system. He pointed ou! v alent at his house. it enrollment bv over yer. and for YMCA trea -tep as such, (Ul;Ued at Davidson with the mission of female students , .,, that thi- year the ATO'l Cooley said that Icom "Fraternities m mM f.H ltv mem. Hirer, Gene Guill. Charlie national, per according to the Forming local fraternities will send about $4,600 in mittee had been formed local or must be Iof '65. got only 8 at least u Billy Stagg. Ray- poll. 66 percent of the Heiner. MM whimpered about for pledge and initiation MM among the ATOs to study examined." cent of the juniors. While wmj]d .^^ mond Sweetenburg, Rick some time Proponents of their national office. Vet he such an action and that a 500 and 1.000 students Van de Water and Gene going local" fire now be said this money brough*. n- decision to remain national Williams. Seventy two students 137 coming more utteakttc and latively little benefit to the or go local would be mat Chaos Makes percent) agreed with the fa- The defense adviser elec nui.spokrn. Emotional chapter ed by April. local culty tion will repeat of last fraternity Clemmons said that a lo- majority, while 25 be a For several The solutions to these pro would hold it under 500 and Tuesday's election between men. uoing local would sat cal movement could proba blems are varied in number 18 would keep the present .lolin Bryant and Tom their objection of the support. bly only come if several Drama and Dave Clem EngrossingFilm size. faculty Wheatley. The election was of national fraterni- fraternities acted together Seven members m mons. president of Sigma would also keep it under nullified because the names it now exists here Even in the face of such ac like children, doting mi his Frank D. Gilroy's movie as Chi. said the problem of A Raviaw two would increase it were on the junior ballot For others, going local would tton. Clemmons stated that By ROBERT PYEATT approval and attention and is fast-moving and engros- 500. membership can be solved over 1.000 and one would only, instead of the ballot merely be one step in a without major changes in the he belived some fraternities Associate Editor having tantrums when he sing, employing original the idea. technique in ex- keep the present figure. for all classes. more sweepiru social re system. Clemmons said he still would reject "The Subject Was Roses" favors the other parent. cinematic form. favors a program of com- Bud Cousar. president of is a deep,delicate and beau It is fascinating to watch tremely swift transitions President of Sigma Phi plete affiliation through a Beta Theta Pi. said that tiful movie about the dis Timmy vacillate between from pathos to humor. The KITCHEN HELP WANTED sentiment for going local was poignancy and humor are Kpsilon. Randy Phillips strong extended rush pro solution of a family and the his parents. alternately $2.25 per hr. among the Thousand said. "I think then- is only gram. not widespread emotional chaos of three lavishing sympathy and reminiscent of "A Apply HEREFORD BARN RESTAURANT minority who can Beta's. He said that their na- dismembered persons, each scorn on each of them. They Clowns." and while this mo a small Clemmons pointed out 4320 Interstate IS N. enthusiastically the tional organization does not one of them very much a treat him the same way, vie does not have the direct SU-M54 Sunday defend that the fraterni Closed national restrict the chapter to the part of the other forming a vicious circle that social comment of "Clowns." system as it really is." to be hW ties often do not seem point that it would want to The dissolution of the fami steadily squeezes itself it compares very favorably. AI a member completely the uni- MMMW. aware of go local. ly does not occur during the smaller and smaller. A trip to the theater in the of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. fraternity situation que at But he did siiy th.it m\ movie It has occurred long last coupleof years has usual cited two major defects a Patricia Seal gives a Davidson. Jfoc Kearfott. mrmbers MM inactive be before, and the old fissures ly meant a plunge into hack- he sees in the present Theta Pi. beautiful performance as member of Beta fore or during rush. are only reopened by the re- neyed banality, but not this GALLEY FISH CAMP system: The selection re chapters of fra Mrs. Cleary. a weak and in said national All of the people inter turn of the son. Timmy time. This is one of the best jection procedure and what ternities sometimes tended to secure woman who spends v u-wed said that the reform Cleary < Martin Sheen) ;il! films to come along in a he termed I prevailing at the differ bar human resources on TAPROOM "institutionalize iment was most wide- from World War II. long time. titude" of "anti-intellectual" ences between social life Inr mother, crippled brother sentiment that he feels is spread among the upper Timmy has grown up dur- and MB. Wher-Rena Marina and academics." ing his absence, while his perpetuated b\ the fraterni classmen. Jack Albertson is the fan — great parents have moved more "You wrack'am ty system Going teal has rea Sentiment for even a tight fisted old barfly Highway 73 change can be found. Var- and more toward a state of er. We fix'em" Jim Cooley. a member of -iime discussion around the er who tafcM out thv frustra- said that while going lo emotional infancy They ire 4 miles from Davidson Alpha Tau Omega, cited court. Clcmmons said the ner tions or fear failure and re- MOORESVILLE jection in a consistent career of drinking and whoring. Body Shop Church And College The lives of the parents 131 East Moore Ava. ... are so twisted that they ap Mooresville, N. C. Open 'til 12:30 a.m. hi- said. Davidson: pear hopeless. But the story (Continued From Page 1) church." recognize Davidson Asked if the tenure re Polley said that this com "Society neeuN MOM col- of the movie is the attempt We dean facultj Faculty of quirements had been a hind- hinalion of faith and learn. leges of high academic of the son to escape the en Students & — In regard to the tntak Telephone 6643345 Monday Friday rance in Davidson's secur ipk might be brought about standing needs them so trapment of his childhood religious stipulations for fa ing qualified members.John, in several ways: long as the church has any and his family. culty employment. "I do not ston "I could not say But "the way this is dum- dominance as it docs at the always discuss this with said. that it's been detrimental to best is by the personnel in present time." Jackson said. everybody — Idon't make a the overall quality of the fa- the college." Polley said. But "I expect it is harder great point ot this." John " culty. But "in the last 10 However, he added that to be a church-related col ston said of his interview years, there have been peo he did not "believe that lege of high quality" than it The Cellar ing prospective faculty The is be simply a church-re — Hub pie we might have got" if every faculty member must to OPEN WEEK DAYS 4:30 -11:45 members. religious stipulations for be a Christian.' In a learn lated college or a strictly se- — Of Davidsons relationship the SUNDAYS 2:30-11:45 facuty were different. ing situation. Polley said cular institution." to the church in general. Being church related OPEN NIGHTLY In contrast to Martin's that it is "essentialand high a — Johnston said. "I've never college of high Wed., Frl., Sat., Sun. criticisms. Dr. Max Polley. ly desirable" that students standardsin- Band* really found anybody who volves the maintenance a often imitated never duplicated professor of Bible and reli- be confronted with view- of TRY OUR BUCKET SPECIAL says he objects to the col for the points than a Christian delicate balance. Jackson ■ gion, spoke favorably other 300 E. Morehead Behind ContM Ige's being related to th Davidson church relation- viewpoint. added. Some colleges have up Charlotte Soda Shop ship, although he did criti- Dr. Frank Bliss, profes given sound academic cize of the particulars sor of English, noted another standards in order to remain some schools, OPEN HOUSE of that relationship. disadvantage. This disad- church and others have $4.85 plus These hovtei will be "Being a church related vantage is that a church-re divorced themselves tax span Sunday night atI: from their sponsoring chur H^^7 college involves trying to lated college often does not an institution both of attract nor recruit students ches. Jackson said. R. C. Cole create " "I'm Food for 5 to 7 faith and of learning Pol- from a wide variety of back not sure we can do Crescent it. but then again, maybe Da\id C. Gr ley said grounds. "To know who you are. we can.'^ Jackson said. Service 5S0 Lorimer The value of this relation- Cashion Gulf Brown Patterson ship is that un attempt is you have to be confronted with people who are differ- COLONEL SANDERS' RECIPE 412 Concord made "to Ms that the Chris " WESTERN AUTO Complete Auto Service T. A. Williams tian faith is getting a hear ent. Bliss said. 609 N. Main ing in the free market of Dr. R. Bruce Jackson Jr.. WESTERN UNION Phone 892-9306 Open 6:30 a.m. " 9:00 p.m. Kmttdty James M. Fredericksen ideas." he continued. professor of mathematics, TELEGRAMS friedChicktn* Phone 192-149* 129 Cresent 'How to accomplish this is cited several strengths of a 503 S. Bread St. Mooresville,N. C. churchrelated college like